TERDIK o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-12-11 published
TERDIK, Joseph (Superintendent, Peel Regional Police, Ret'd)
Joe died December 9th, with dignity, in the warmth of his family's
love. He was most proud of his service to the community of Mississauga/Peel
the officers he commanded and his warm Friendship with Hazel.
An Federal Bureau of Investigation Graduate (Pres. Fit. Award),
Medal of Bravery (Miss. Disaster, Personnel Deployment) Exemplary
Service Award, Exec. Officer to the Chief, Cmdr. 11 Div., Cmdr.
Spec. Services, Crim. Intel. Bureau, Cdn Police College Lecturer,
Author: Mgmt. Audit Manual, founding Pres. Sr. Officers Assoc.
Born Windsor, March 1943, resident in Peel till 1997, adoring
husband of Barbara
DOWDALL-
TERDIK, father of Robert (Jessica,
Meaghan, Ashley); Jodey (Paul)
LITTLE (Caleb, Taelor); Susan
CORNWELL;
Proud
son of John (dec.) and Irene
TERDIK, brother
of Bill (Karen;) John (Donna) Irene (Aimo)
MANNINEN.
Cherished
brother-in-law to David (Paul); Susan (Shane); Peggy (Don, Tom,
Mimi) Catherine (Rob, Graeme, Iain, Allison, Colleen) and special
Joanna DOWDALL.
Friends will be received at the C. Stuart Sykes
Funeral Home, 91 Division St. S., Kingsville from 2: 00 to 4:00
p.m. and 7: 00 to 9:00 p.m., Friday. Funeral service from the
funeral home Saturday, December 13th at 11: 00 a.m. Remembrances:
Palliative Care, Hotel-Dieu Grace Hospital, 1030 Ouellette Ave.,
Windsor, Ontario N9A 1E1
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TERHUNE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-10-25 published
GIBSON,
James
Alexander, C.M., M.A., M.Litt., (D.Phil.Oxon,)
LL.D President Emeritus, Brock University
After a long and useful life, clear-headed to the end, died in
Ottawa on October 23, 2003. Born in Ottawa in 1912, elder son
of John Wesley
GIBSON and Belle Crawford
McGEE; school and college
in Victoria, Rhodes Scholar from British Columbia in 1931; Foreign
Service Officer, Department of External Affairs (1938-47); served
with the Prime Minister on missions to Washington, Quebec Conferences,
San Francisco, London and Paris.
Original member of Faculty of Carleton College, (1942); from
1952, first Dean of Arts and Science, Carleton University; later
Dean of Arts and Deputy to the President; in 1963, named Founding
President of Brock University.
A founding member of the Canadian Association of Rhodes Scholars,
he held various offices and served as editor of the newsletter
for 19 years. For over 60 years, he was a member of the Canadian
Historical Association and of the Canadian Institute for International
Affairs, as well as national and regional voluntary organizations.
He is survived by his daughters, Julia
MATTHEWS and Eleanor S.
JOLY
(Gerald,) and his son Peter James; grandchildren Alison
MATTHEWS-
DAVID (Jean Marc), Colin
MATTHEWS (Nathalia), Micheline,
Nina (Jean-Marc
BERNIER) and Gerald
JOLY,
Anna
GIBSON (Robert)
and Hilary
TERHUNE
(Peter;) two great-grandchildren. His wife
Caroline died in 1995; also surviving are his brother William
and his sister Isobel
SEARLS in Victoria.
Memorial services will be held in Ottawa (December) and in St.
Catharines at Brock University on November 7th, at 3 p.m. If
desired, memorial remembrances may be made to the James A. Gibson
Library, Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario L2S 3A1.
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TERRON o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-08-21 published
HOUSTON,
Neil
Ritchie
78, of North Vancouver, British Columbia, amiable entrepreneur,
avid golfer and bridge partner, long-time horse-racing fan, armed
forces veteran, one-time owner of a thoroughbred racehorse in
Toronto, a hotel in Leamington, Ontario, a fishing lodge on the
French River, a clothing store in Burlington, Ontario, an antique/collectibles
store in Waterdown, Ontario. Born in Toronto on October 11, 1924,
husband of the late Helen
HOUSTON (née
CHARLTON) and the late
Dorothy HOUSTON (née
LAKE,) brother of Archie of West Vancouver,
Bob of Toronto and the late Colin
HOUSTON, father of Gail
TERRON
of Windsor, Ontario, and John
HOUSTON of Toronto, stepfather
of Ron JOINER of Victoria, British Columbia, Lynda
JOINER of
Burlington,
Ontario,
Elizabeth
HADDOCK of Chatham, Ontario, grandfather
of six, uncle to many nieces and nephews. Died peacefully Monday,
August 18, 2003 in Lion's Gate Hospital, North Vancouver, following
a lengthy illness. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made
to the Heart and Stroke Foundation of British Columbia or a charity
of your choice. Special thanks to the doctors, nurses and staff
at Lion's Gate and St. Paul's Hospital. Arrangements will be
made for burial service in Aylmer, Ontario.
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TERRY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-10-07 published
Jonathan SWALLOW
By Chris MALETTE
Tuesday,
October 7, 2003 - Page A24
Teacher, educational software consultant, ski and soccer coach,
and dad. Born in Glenn Ridge, N.J., on April 20, 1958. Died April
27 in Stirling, Ontario, of sudden heart failure, aged 45.
Kids who love a cold day on a fast ski hill, somewhat sedentary
soccer moms and dads who liked to break an occasional sweat and,
strangely, frogs everywhere will miss Jonathan
SWALLOW.
Jonathan
was 45 when, in the prime of an athletic and active life, his
heart -- harbouring a hidden, undiagnosed ailment that affected
the rhythm of the organ -- betrayed an otherwise vibrant man
in his prime.
Born in suburban New Jersey and educated at Syracuse University,
Jonathan came to Canada in the 1980s to undertake graduate studies
at McMaster University where he met the woman who would become
his wife, Mary Ellen
THOMPSON/THOMSON/TOMPSON/TOMSON. He went on to achieve his PhD
at the University of Toronto.
In his professional career, Jonathan was lauded by scholars for
his cutting-edge work in interactive learning software. At Waterloo,
he collaborated with professor Norm
SCOTT and the Centre for
Learning and Teaching Through Technology -- or LT3 -- to create
a program that allows biology students to dissect frogs in a
virtual environment, on computer, without harming a single amphibian.
After moving to Stirling, north of Belleville, Ontario, and beginning
a family there, Jonathan made fast and strong Friends in the
local amateur theatre community. He helped get couch-potato parents
off the sofa for an adult soccer league and coached in the Stirling
and District Minor Soccer League. But Jonathan truly came to
the fore on the ski slopes of Ontario.
Batawa Ski Club holds many memories of Jonathan. During the winter
he was either on the road, at a ski race, over by the fireplace
talking earnestly with a parent, sitting at a table with his
family and Friends or on the hill having a great time with his
racers.
At a moving and funny, yet surreal, memorial service for Jonathan
at the tatty but active ski club in May, one of Jonathan's closest
Friends and fellow Batawa racing coach, Jeff
DURISH, remembered
Jonathan's dual sense of duty and of fun: "The Rookie program,
for children not old enough to travel with a league team, had
fallen on hard times and nobody had run it for a number of years.
Jonathan phoned me and talked me into helping him revive the
program. Helping Jonathan was one of the best decisions that
I have ever made. I always meant to thank him for it, now I wish
I had."
Jonathan would always show up to practice with a backpack full
of beanbags, ropes and bungee cords, his arms full of bamboo
poles and his head full of crazy ideas. All the other coaches
would scratch their heads and marvel at the weird and wonderful
drills he came up with -- four kids hanging onto a bamboo pole
doing 360s down the hill, racers hanging onto long ropes as they
carved big turns around beanbags. Those crazy beanbags were always
strewn across the hill.
Of course there were always the weird songs and dances to go
along with the drills. It was effective, it was amazing, it was
silly, it was fun, it was wonderful and full of joy -- it was
Jonathan.
"Jonathan was an exceptional coach because he was a great teacher,
an inventor and a child at heart," said brother-in-law Rob
TERRY.
Jonathan leaves wife Mary Ellen, daughter Jenny Lee and son Joseph,
as well as scores of grateful soccer kids, skiers and leopard
frogs everywhere who croak their thanks for a life well lived.
Chris MALETTE is a ski dad who shared a mug or two of hot chocolate
with Jonathan
SWALLOW.
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