MCULLAGH
MCULLIGH
MCULLOCH
MCULLOCK
MCULLOUGH
McCULLAGH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-09-24 published
Died
This
Day -- William H.
WRIGHT, 1951
Wednesday, September 24, 2003 - Page R9
Financier, miner and publisher born in Lincolnshire, England,
on April 21, 1876; left school at 14 to be apprenticed to a butcher
1895, enlisted in British Army and served in India and in Boer
War; 1907, immigrated to Canada; 1911, joined brother-in-law
Ed HARGREAVES and went prospecting near Porcupine, Ontario; on
rabbit-shooting expedition, discovered vein of silver; developed
Wright-Hargreaves mine into world's richest silver deposit; 1916,
enlisted in Canadian Army and served in First World War in France
as "millionaire private"; 1920, invested in insurance, banking
and horse breeding; 1936, bought Toronto's Globe newspaper and
then Mail and Empire; month later, merged both under publisher
George McCULLAGH; financed construction of William H. Wright
building to house Globe and Mail at King and York in downtown
Toronto; 1945, retired to estate in Barrie, Ontario
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McCULLIGH o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2003-04-09 published
McCULLIGH
-In loving memory of a dear husband, father and grandfather, Dougal who passed away April 11, 1997.
If roses grow in heaven Lord
Please pick a bunch for us
Place them in his arms
Tell him they are from us.
Tell him we love and miss him
And when he turns and smiles
Place a kiss upon his cheek
And hold him for a while.
Remembering him is easy
We do it every day
But there is an ache within or hearts
That will never go away.
They say memories are golden
And although this may be true
We never wanted memories
We only wanted you.
Till we meet again
Love and miss you every day,
-Shirley, Rob and Laurie, Sally and Les, Doug and Dar, Ed, Keith and Ruthann, Kelly and Wayne, Eldonna and grandchildren.
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McCULLIGH o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2003-04-09 published
John Orval
TAILOR/TAYLOR
In loving memory of John Orval
TAILOR/TAYLOR "
Jack" who passed away at his
home on Monday, April 7, 2003 at the age of 72 years.
Predeceased by parents William and Elizabeth. Predeceased by
brothers Orion (wife Doreen) and special brother Lindsey (wife
Irene.)
Lovingly remembered by sisters "Mary" Lillian
TAILOR/TAYLOR of
Little
Current,
Shirley
McCULLIGH (husband Dougal predeceased) of
Little
Current,
Elva
TAILOR/TAYLOR (husband Clarence predeceased) of
Espanola, and brother "Windy" William Senior (wife Doreen) of
Wikwemikong. Will be greatly missed by special niece Christine
TAILOR/TAYLOR and numerous nephews and nieces.
Visitation from 7-9p.m. Wednesday, April 9, 2003. Funeral Service
will be held at 11: 00 am Thursday, April 10, 2003 at Island Funeral
Home. Burial in Holy Trinity Cemetery at a later date.
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McCULLIGH o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2003-04-16 published
Lillian Milinda
VINEY
In loving memory of Lillian Milinda
VINEY, who passed away peacefully
at Manitoulin Health Centre on Friday, April 11, 2003 at the age of 82 years.
Beloved wife of Charles
VINEY. Dear mother of Shirley
VINEY of
Little
Current,
George
VINEY of Manitowaning, Sandra and husband
Bruce POPE of Manitowaning, Lyla
VINEY of Orillia. Loved grandmother
of Stephanie and Mark
MacDONALD (fiancée Holly,) Andrew and Katherine
POPE,
Kimberley,
Laura and Marianne
MENARD. Special great
grandmother of Jonathan and Jessica
ORR,
Justin,
Destanie
(BAILEY)
and Liliana
MacDONALD.
Remembered by brother and sisters Violet
HUBBARD-
McALLISTER (predeceased,) Harry
JAGGARD (wife
Gladys
predeceased,) Bessie
LOCKYER (husband James predeceased,) Florence
LENSON (husband Walter predeceased,) Madeleine
CHARLTON (husband John
predeceased), predeceased by sisters Beulah and Iris and parents Guy and
Evalena JAGGARD.
Sister-in-law of Harry
VINEY, Ruth
McCULLIGH
(predeceased,) Lauretta
McGILLIS (predeceased,) Grace
HUNTER
(predeceased,) Joyce and husband Howard
HOLMES,
Glenn and wife
Margaret VINEY, predeceased by Joe, Bob and Edith. Will be missed by
numerous nephews and nieces. Visitation was held Sunday, April 13,
2003. Funeral service was held Monday, April 14, 2003. Both at Knox
United Church, Manitowaning. Burial in Hilly Grove Cemetery at a
later date. Arrangements in care of Island Funeral Home.
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McCULLIGH o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2003-06-04 published
Raymond
Kenneth "
Ken"
HAGEN
In loving memory of Raymond Kenneth "Ken"
HAGEN who passed away
Monday evening, May 26th, 2003 at Mindemoya Hospital at the age of 87 years.
Beloved husband of Pearl
(SEWELL)
HAGEN predeceased 1982 and Florence
(McCULLIGH)
HAGEN of Mindemoya. Loving father of Mary
BEAULIEU
(husband Guil) of Toronto, George
HAGEN (wife
Sharon.)
Bob
HAGEN
(wife Linda) both of Lively, Daniel
HAGEN (wife Suzanne) of Calgary,
Susan RICHER and infant baby Martha Jane both predeceased,
stepchildren Leila
THURESON (husband Peter,) Karen
VANZANT (husband Clyde
predeceased,) Harley
BAYER (wife
Lorraine) and Shirley
PHILLIPS predeceased.
Cherished grandfather of 24 grandchildren, 17 great grandchildren and
4 great great grandchildren. Dear son of Dan and May
HAGEN,
predeceased. Dear brother of Edna
JACKSON of Sault Ste. Marie and
Alex HAGEN predeceased. Sadly missed by many nieces and nephews.
Rested at the Jackson and Barnard Funeral Home, 233 Larch St.
Sudbury. Funeral service was held in the R. J. Barnard Chapel on
Thursday May 29, 2003 at 1p.m. Interment was held in the Lakeview
Cemetery, Meaford, Friday at 11 a.m. A memorial service was held on
Saturday, May 31 in the Mindemoya United Church.
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McCULLIGH o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2003-06-11 published
Mary Elizabeth
McCULLIGH (née
HANER)
In loving memory of Mary Elizabeth
McCULLIGH who passed away peacefully at
the Welland Hospital, on Thursday, June 5, 2003 at the age of 54 years.
Predeceased by husband Roy (Nov. 17, 1999). Loving mother of Sharon
GIBSON (predeceased,) Robert
GIBSON,
Lloyd and Michelle
GIBSON and
Mary
Lynn.
Step mother of Catherine and Bill
GRAHAM and George and
Diane McCULLIGH. Cherished grandma of Jesse, Jamilee, Kyle, Ashley,
Jessica and Jason. Step grandma of Aaron
GRAHAM,
Ashley,
George,
Sebastian McCULLIGH. Dear daughter of Lloyd and Mae
HANER.
Will be
missed by brothers and sisters Bill and Marion
HANER,
Gertrude and
Evan MORRELL, Marilyn
HANER, Frank and Anne
HANER, Charlie
HANER,
Nancy and Dale
SAGLE and Susan and Derek
STEPHENS.
Remembered by
many nieces and nephews. Visitation was held on Saturday, June 7,
2003. Funeral Service was held on Sunday, June 8, 2003 both at
Island Funeral Home, Little Current, Ontario. Burial in Nairn Cemetery.
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McCULLIGH o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2003-07-02 published
Lilliean "Mary"
TAILOR/TAYLOR
In loving memory of Lilliean "Mary"
TAILOR/TAYLOR who passed away at Saint
Joseph's Hospital, Sudbury on Tuesday, June 24, 2003 at the age of 76 years.
Loving friend of James
ESSERY (predeceased.) Cherished mother of Kim
and husband Neil
ANDERSON of Blezzard Valley, Janet and husband Bruce
FOX of Azilda, Marlene (predeceased) (husband Lawrence
HOWARD,)
Lindsey (predeceased) (wife Irene), Michael (predeceased)(close
friend Sherry). Special grandmother of Tammy (husband Steve), Cory
(wife Krystal), Chantelle, Wanda (husband Larry), Dwayne (wife
Heidi), Rob, Shane (wife Holly), Lori (husband Neil), Sandra,
Raymond, Darren, Stephanie. Will be missed by great grandchildren
Mathew, Brianna, Jamie, Nathan, Carter, Caitlyn, Tyler, Nathan,
Natasha, Tamara, Lindsey, Chance, Brittany, Tiffany. Dear sister of
Shirley McCULLIGH (husband Dougal predeceased) of Little Current,
Elva TAILOR/TAYLOR (husband Clarence predeceased) of Espanola, "Windy"
William Sr. (wife Doreen) of Wikwemikong, predeceased by brothers
John TAILOR/TAYLOR, and Orion (wife
Doreen.)
Remembered by many nieces and
nephews. Visitation was held on Friday, June 27, 2003. Funeral
Service was held on Saturday, June 28, 2003 at Island Funeral Home.
Burial in Holy Trinity Anglican Cemetery.
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McCULLIGH o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2003-11-12 published
McCULLIGH--In memory of Roy, August 30, 1942 to November 17, 1999.
Dad it has been four years since that tragic night we lost you.
We think of you in silence,
and often speak your name.
All we have are memories and your picture in a frame.
Our hearts continue to ache,
and secret tears still flow.
In life we loved you deeply,
so in death we do the same.
You might be gone,
but you will never be forgotten.
We miss and love you Dad.
--Sadly missed by your daughter Catherine, son George (Diane) and
your grandchildren, Aaron, Ashley, Georgie and Sebastian.
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McCULLOCH o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2003-04-16 published
McCULLOCH
-In loving memory of Charlie, who passed away April 23, 1997.
We cannot Lord, Thy purpose see,
But all is well that's done by Thee.
Loving and kind in all his ways,
Upright and just to the end of his days,
Sincere and kind in heart and mind,
What a beautiful memory he left behind.
-Heather and Larry.
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McCULLOCH o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2003-04-23 published
McCULLOCH--Charlie
Those whom we love go out of sight,
But never out of mind
They are cherished in the hearts
Of those they leave behind.
Loving and kind in all his ways,
Upright and just in all his days
Sincere and true in heart and mind,
Beautiful memories he left behind.
--Lovingly remembered by Joyce and family.
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McCULLOCH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-04-21 published
The soul of Canadian basketball
The coach who led national teams to Olympics, world championships,
was a well-loved motivator on and off the court
By James CHRISTIE
Monday,
April 21, 2003 - Page R5
Jack DONOHUE knew how to win. His underdog Canadian basketball
teams won games against National Basketball Association-bound
superstars -- and Mr.
DONOHUE won every heart he touched.
The former national basketball coach and famed motivator was
arguably the most beloved figure in Canadian amateur and Olympic
sport. Mr.
DONOHUE died Wednesday in Ottawa after a battle with
cancer. He was 71.
With his trademark New York Irish accent and gift for telling
inspirational and humorous stories, Mr.
DONOHUE was the soul
of basketball in Canada for almost two decades and led the national
team to three Olympic Games and three world championship tournaments.
His great players included a high schooler in New York named
Lew ALCINDOR (later Kareem
ABDUL-
JABBAR;)
Canadian centres Bill
WENNINGTON and Mike
SMREK, who went on to get National Basketball
Association championship rings with Chicago and Los Angeles respectively
Leo RAUTINS, a first-round draft pick of Philadelphia 76ers in
1983; guards Eli
PASQUALE and Jay
TRIANO, who is now assistant
coach with the Toronto Raptors.
"For all he's done for basketball in this country -- not just
with the national team, but with clinics and all his public speaking
he should get the Order of Canada," Mr.
TRIANO said.
Under Mr. DONOHUE,
Canadian teams stayed among the top six in
the world for 18 years. Canada finished fourth at the 1976 Montreal
and 1984 Los Angeles Olympics and claimed gold at the 1983 World
University Games in Edmonton. In the process they beat a team
of U.S. college talents that included future National Basketball
Association stars Charles
BARKLEY, Karl
MALONE, Kevin
WILLIS,
Ed PINCKNEY and Johnny
DAWKINS.
The monumental win over the United
States came in the semi-final. The gold medal match was just
as much a stunner, as Canada beat a Yugoslavian team built with
members of the world championship squad.
Globe and Mail columnist Trent
FRAYNE recorded how the loquacious
Mr. DONOHUE had steered the Canucks to the improbable triumph,
making them believe in themselves:
"You've got to appreciate how much talent you have," Jack would
say, hunkering down beside a centre or a guard or, every now
and then, an unwary newshound (Jack is ready for anybody). "You
are unique. Think about that: there's nobody else in the world
like you. If you want to be happy, try to make other people happy.
Hey, if you want to be loved, you must love others. The way to
improve is to do something you have never done. Don't be afraid
of your emotions. Let 'em all hang out. Emotions are your generator.
The intellect is the governor...."
And now, in the seventh month of July, it has all come about
just as Jack promised. On Saturday night in Edmonton, his players,
Jack's Guys, hoisted him upon their shoulders, and, for once,
Jack's jaw was still. Blue eyes blinking rapidly behind silver-rimmed
spectacles, white hair tousled, Jack put the scissors to that
final strand and held the net aloft.
Coaching was a passion, not so much for the trophies, but for
the human victories, personal challenges and little triumphs.
"I remember my father coming home tired and dirty every night.
That's not for me. I love what I'm doing, so it doesn't seem
like work and never will," he said.
Since retiring as national coach in 1988, Mr.
DONOHUE has been
the darling of the motivational speakers' circuit. In that regard,
Mr. DONOHUE never quit being The Coach. He urged captains of
industry to get the most out of themselves and build teamwork
among employees as he did his players.
Often, Mr.
DONOHUE told them to find opportunity even in the
midst of problems: "It's all a matter of attitude. A guy leaves
the house wearing his new, expensive suit for the first time,
trips and falls in a puddle. He can get up and curse; or he can
get up and check his pockets to see if he caught any fish, "
he said in an interview with The Globe and Mail before the Los
Angeles Olympics.
Mr. DONOHUE, who was born June 4, 1931, received a bachelor's
degree in economics at New York's Fordham University and a master
of arts in health education before serving with the U.S. Army
in the Korean War. He began teaching in American high schools
in 1954 and eventually wound up at New York's Power Memorial
Academy, where he coached Mr.
ABDUL-
JABBAR and amassed a 163-30
record.
He later moved up to Holy Cross College in Worcester, Massachusetts.,
before taking the reins of the Canadian program -- at first coaching
both the men's and women's teams. Mr.
DONOHUE was inducted into
the Canadian Basketball Hall of Fame in 1992. He is also in the
New York City Basketball Hall of Fame, and was awarded a Canada
125 medal by the Governor-General.
When the National Basketball Association expanded north into
Canada in 1995, Mr.
DONOHUE became director of international
public relations and director of Canadian player development
for the Vancouver Grizzlies.
One of Mr.
DONOHUE's proudest times in basketball came when Mr.
TRIANO followed in his path as a national coach. At the 2000
Olympics, Canada -- with Steve
NASH and Todd
MacCULLOCH -- finished
with a 5-2 record, defeating mighty Yugoslavia once again, as
it had in 1983.
"We talked about everything from how to guard guys on the perimeter
to dying. I think he's at peace with it," Mr.
TRIANO said of
his mentor at a recent Raptor practice.
"He taught with humour," Mr.
TRIANO said of Mr.
DONOHUE's coaching
style. "We learned a lot because we were laughing all the time."
A colourful broadcaster, naming names -- at least pronouncing
them correctly -- wasn't one of Mr.
DONOHUE's many strengths.
He didn't earn the nickname "Jack Dontknowho" for no reason,
Mr. TRIANO said. "It was always, 'that guy,' or 'you over there,'"
he said. "I've seen him struggle to introduce his kids because
he couldn't remember their names. He always told me he liked
doing colour for the European teams, because no one knew if he
wasn't saying their names right."
He travelled the world, but the dearest sight for Mr.
DONOHUE
was always his own front door, in Kanata, Ontario, where he spent
his last days. Behind that door were wife Mary Jane, his six
kids and his grandchildren.
"We're asking you to hug your families, extra special, and we're
asking you to enjoy life, because we sure did and we still are,"
Mary Jane DONOHUE said this week.
Somewhere, the busy coach found time for all he needed to do.
He used to keep a block on his desk reminding him that there
are 86,400 seconds in a day, time enough if he organized himself.
Family was a priority. At least five minutes of Mr.
DONOHUE's
day had to be reserved for hugging his kids. He was a believer
in family and in human contact. In his coaching years, when he
returned from a road journey, there would be a lineup awaiting
him at home, the kids taking their turns to make up for the lost
minutes of hugging during his absence.
"I met him at a dance he didn't go to," Mary Jane
DONOHUE said
in the pre-Los Angeles Games article. "My girlfriend and I went
and he had several Friends who were very up on it. But Jack said
he'd rather go to a movie and would meet them later. He came
through the door as my girlfriend and I were walking out.
"He asked why we were leaving so soon, and said there were two
gentlemen he wanted us to meet. He introduced my friend to one
of his, then I asked who the other gentleman was supposed to
be. Guess who?"
Mary Jane DONOHUE felt trust instantly. "I could have gone across
the country with him that night and felt safe. If he's for you,
he's for you all the way."
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McCULLOCH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-07-08 published
VILA,
Helen
Jeanette
59, died on Sunday, July 6, 2003, at her home in Scotch Hill,
Pictou Co., Nova Scotia. Born in Hamilton, Ontario, she was a
daughter of the late Alan P.
VILA and Jeanette
(McVICAR)
VILA.
Helen attended schools in Chippawa, Ontario, and Baldwin, New
York, where she excelled in sports and music. She graduated with
Honours in English from McGill University and with a master teacher
certificate from the Ontario College of Education at the University
of Toronto. For several years, Helen taught English at Lawrence
Park Collegiate Institute and film arts at Sheridan College in
Toronto.
Later, she and her late companion Trini
PEREZ had a
home craft business in woodworking and jewelry in Stoney Creek,
Ontario, which they continued in Pictou. In recent years, Helen
sang in the Hosannah Gospel Choir at the United Church of Canada,
Lyons Brook, served as a volunteer at the Maritime Odd Fellows
home, and worked at the job placement center and the library.
She is survived by her sisters and brothers, Mary
SHAW and her
husband Robert of Palo Alto, California; John
VILA and his partner
Terry BISHOP of Guttenberg, New Jersey; James
VILA and his wife
Tanya of Tilton, New Hampshire; Elizabeth
ROGAN and her husband
Edward of Glastonbury, Connecticut; and Anne
VILA and her husband
Steven JACOBS of Needham, Massachusetts; and by five nieces --
Catherine VILA,
Carolyn
ROGAN, Jenny
ROGAN, Julia
JACOBS, and
Anne ROGAN; four nephews -- Mark
SHAW,
Andrew
SHAW, Jonathan
SHAW and Daniel
JACOBS; four grandnieces -- Jessica, Kaeli, Alissa
and Zoë; one grandnephew -- Max; and two stepnieces -- Tracy
MESSINGER and Kerri
PACHOMOW.
Helen will be dearly missed by
her companion, Margaret
MacCULLOCH, who cared for her during
her long illness. Visitation will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. on
Friday, July 11, at the McLaren Funeral Home, 246 Faulkland Street,
Pictou. The funeral will be held at the United Church in Lyons
Brook at 2 p.m. on Saturday, July 12, Mary
MacDERMID officiating.
Interment at the Scotch Hill Cemetery will be followed by a reception
at the church hall. Her family requests that, in lieu of flowers,
memorial donations be made to the Canadian Cancer Society --
Nova Scotia Division, the Humane Society of Canada, or to Palliative
Care of the Aberdeen Hospital.
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McCULLOCH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-07-23 published
WIESMAN,
Brahm▼
Died peacefully and with dignity July 20, 2003. He leaves his
wife Madge,▼ brother-in-law Alan
BERNSTEIN of Montreal, nephew
Robert and his wife
Judy▼ of Ottawa, niece Janet
MENDELSON and
her husband Stephen and their family of Nepean, Ontario, nephew
Mark MADRAS and his wife
Eva▼ of Toronto, niece Karen
MADRAS-
STOPA
and her husband Ed and family of East Greenwich, Rhode Island,
brother-in-law David
McCULLOCH and his wife
Janet▼ of Glasgow,
Scotland,▼ brother-in-law George
McCULLOCH and his wife
Ina▼ and
family of Glasgow, niece Helen
FARMER and her husband Stewart
and family of Glasgow, and nephew Gordon
McCULLOCK and his wife
Linda and family of Glossop, England. Born on June 13, 1926,
Brahm lived his rich life with the greatest consideration and
care for others. He studied architecture and community planning
at McGill University in preparation for what was to become a
distinguished career in the field of city planning. After taking
on senior management positions in the Cities of Edmonton, Victoria,
and Vancouver, he was asked to join the faculty of University
of British Columbia's School of Community and Regional Planning
in 1967. He went on to serve as Director of the School for 12
years. In that position, he was much loved as a colleague and
teacher, and provided internationally admired leadership to the
planning profession. In retirement, Brahm continued to actively
promote good planning by advising universities in Asia on planning
curricula, consulting to cities in China, and speaking out forcefully
as a citizen on Vancouver area issues. A service will be held,
11 a.m. on Wednesday, July 23, at Schara Tzedeck Cemetery in
New Westminster, 2345 Marine Drive. In lieu of flowers, donations
may be sent to ''Prostate Cancer Research at Vancouver General
Hospital'', Vancouver General Hospital and University of British
Columbia Hospitals Foundation, 855 West 12th Avenue, Vancouver,
V5Z 1M9.
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McCULLOCH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-08-01 published
McCULLOCH,
Peter
Blair, M.D., Fellow of the Royal College of
Physicians of Canada
On July 31, Dr. Peter
McCULLOCH died peacefully at home in Hamilton,
in his 65th year. Peter was the loving husband of Judith (Craig),
devoted father of Peter and his financée Christine
KELLY of Westport,
Connecticut, Paul and his wife
Daphne
BONAR of Toronto, Colin
and his wife Marie (Hooey) of Charlton, New York, and gentle
''Bwana'' of Ian
McCULLOCH. In 1968, just after five years of
marrige, he lost his first wife, Sally Ann
MARSHALL, mother of
Peter and Paul, in a car accident. Peter was the only and dearly
loved son of the late Velma and Peter
McCULLOCH, the much admired
and appreciated son-in-law of the late Charlotte and William
CRAIG of Cambridge (Galt) and the late Grace and Frank
MARSHALL
of Orillia, and dear brother-in-law of Patricia and Ross
HUTCHINSON/HUTCHISON
of Oakville. A graduate of the University of Toronto (1964),
he did his residency in Internal Medicine and Clinical Haemotology
at the Montreal General Hospital, earning his Fellowship in the
Royal College of Physicians of Canada in 1969. This was followed
by two years in Kenya where he was seconded to the University
of Nairobi by McGill University for the Canadian International
Development Agency/Kenya Medical Development Program. While in
Kenya, he taught medical students, served as a medical consultant,
undertook various study projects for the United Nations International
Agency for Research on Cancer and climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro. Dr.
McCULLOCH returned to his hometown in 1972, becoming the first
medical oncologist and establishing his systemic treatment program
at the Hamilton Regional Cancer Centre. He cared skilfully and
compassionately for his patients, collaborated on research projects,
coordinated provincial clinical trials, mentored colleagues and
inspired students until April 2003 when his own cancer was diagnosed.
He was a Professor of Medicine at McMaster University and over
the years served on many committees locally and nationally. He
was particularly proud of his work as Chair of the Research Ethics
Board of McMaster University/Hamilton Health Sciences. Peter
was an enthusiastic skier, fisherman, photographer and student
of history, science and world affairs, and he travelled extensively
in pursuit of these interests. He will be sorely missed by his
family, Friends, colleagues and patients, and by people whose
lives he touched around the world. A funeral service will be
held at Central Presbyterian Church, 165 Charlton Avenue West
(at Caroline), Hamilton on Tuesday, August 5 at 11 a.m. The family
will receive visitors at Dodsworth and Brown Funeral Home, Robinson
Chapel (King Street East at Wellington, Hamilton) on Monday,
August 4 from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. In lieu of flowers, memorial
gifts to the Hamilton Regional Cancer Centre Foundation, Hamilton
Community Foundation or charity of your choice would be appreciated.
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McCULLOCH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-09-18 published
HOPE,
Ann
Leslie (née
McCULLOCH)
In Charlottetown on Tuesday, September 16th, 2003 aged 77 years.
Daughter of Hugh Leslie and Barbara
McCULLOCH of Galt, Ontario.
Ann died peacefully after a brief illness. Predeceased by her
husband Frank. Survived by her three children, Robin (Robert
PATERSON), William (Amanda
PARFITT) and Barclay (Lindsay
COLLINS)
and seven grandchildren.
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McCULLOCK o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-07-23 published
WIESMAN,
Brahm▲
Died peacefully and with dignity July 20, 2003. He leaves his
wife Madge,▲ brother-in-law Alan
BERNSTEIN of Montreal, nephew
Robert and his wife
Judy▲ of Ottawa, niece Janet
MENDELSON and
her husband Stephen and their family of Nepean, Ontario, nephew
Mark MADRAS and his wife
Eva▲ of Toronto, niece Karen
MADRAS-
STOPA
and her husband Ed and family of East Greenwich, Rhode Island,
brother-in-law David
McCULLOCH and his wife
Janet▲ of Glasgow,
Scotland,▲ brother-in-law George
McCULLOCH and his wife
Ina▲ and
family of Glasgow, niece Helen
FARMER and her husband Stewart
and family of Glasgow, and nephew Gordon
McCULLOCK and his wife
Linda and family of Glossop, England. Born on June 13, 1926,
Brahm lived his rich life with the greatest consideration and
care for others. He studied architecture and community planning
at McGill University in preparation for what was to become a
distinguished career in the field of city planning. After taking
on senior management positions in the Cities of Edmonton, Victoria,
and Vancouver, he was asked to join the faculty of University
of British Columbia's School of Community and Regional Planning
in 1967. He went on to serve as Director of the School for 12
years. In that position, he was much loved as a colleague and
teacher, and provided internationally admired leadership to the
planning profession. In retirement, Brahm continued to actively
promote good planning by advising universities in Asia on planning
curricula, consulting to cities in China, and speaking out forcefully
as a citizen on Vancouver area issues. A service will be held,
11 a.m. on Wednesday, July 23, at Schara Tzedeck Cemetery in
New Westminster, 2345 Marine Drive. In lieu of flowers, donations
may be sent to ''Prostate Cancer Research at Vancouver General
Hospital'', Vancouver General Hospital and University of British
Columbia Hospitals Foundation, 855 West 12th Avenue, Vancouver,
V5Z 1M9.
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McCULLOUGH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-03-06 published
SAYERS,
Marion
Frances (née
GRAVER)
At her home, surrounded by her family on Wednesday, March 5th,
2003. She will be sadly missed by her partner Anne
PLOWRIGHT,
her sister Lorraine and her husband Bob
McCULLOUGH, her sons
and daughters-in-law, Chris and Carol, and Scott and Judy, and
her grand_sons David, Jeffrey, Mark and Matthew. Family and Friends
will be received at the Ward Funeral Home, 2035 Weston Road,
Weston, (416) 241-4618 on Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
and Saturday in St. Philips Anglican Church, 25 St. Phillips
Road, Weston from 10 a.m. until the time of the Funeral Service
at 11: 30 a.m. Interment St. Philips Cemetery.
''Heaven is in for a real treat''
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McCULLOUGH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-04-02 published
An active life of kindness and empathy
The wife of former Globe and Mail editor and senator always reached
out to others
By Allison
LAWLOR
Wednesday,
April 2, 2003 - Page R7
In Florence
DOYLE,
Friends and family saw someone who throughout
her life actively lived her Catholic faith and embodied the qualities
of kindness and compassion.
"My mom was always very concerned about the people in her immediate
reach," said her daughter Judith
DOYLE. "
Her sense of empathy
and concern for others guided her. People felt safe near her."
Whether it was chauffeuring her family around or taking an elderly
neighbour on an outing to the horse races, Mrs.
DOYLE, wife of
former Globe and Mail editor and senator Richard (Dic)
DOYLE,
was always conscious of others. Mrs.
DOYLE died on March 20 in
a Toronto hospital after suffering a stroke. She was 78.
Known as Flo to family and Friends, Mrs.
DOYLE also earned the
affectionate nickname of "Sarge" from her family for her knack
of keeping watch over their schedules and well-being. At one
point, she was the only family member with a driver's licence
and would faithfully drive her husband to work and their children
to various places. She also kept track of the family's money
matters and would ensure at tax season that everyone filed on
time. Later, she nursed her husband through a bout with throat
cancer and with diabetes.
"Her family was the centrepiece of her life," said Colin
McCULLOUGH,
a former Globe reporter and newspaper publisher.
Sharing in her husband's professional life, Mrs.
DOYLE travelled
with him, attended functions and opened their home to Friends
and colleagues. "I didn't enjoy myself without her," Mr.
DOYLE
said.
Aside from her responsibilities at home and at church, where
she helped with various charitable works, Mrs.
DOYLE enjoyed
a good game of cards. Her bridge club met regularly for 40 years.
One favourite memory was from a trip she and Mr.
DOYLE took to
China in the early 1980s, when she travelled down the Yangtze
River playing cards with their guides.
Florence Barbara
CHANDA was born on November 30, 1924 in Lynedoch,
Ontario, the youngest of six children to farmers Frank and Franis
CHANDA.
Her early ancestors had cleared the land in this southwestern
part of the province using workhorses. They grew turnips and
later tobacco. Mrs.
DOYLE was very close to her mother, who considered
her last child "a gift" because she had her later in life, Judith
DOYLE said.
After her father was killed in a car accident when she was about
eight years old, Florence was put to work in the tobacco fields
and remained on the farm until her older brother took over and
she and her mother moved to nearby Chatham. In town, she attended
a Catholic high school but soon suffered another tragedy when
her mother died. Left without parents, she moved into a local
boarding house run by a generous woman remembered as Mrs. Con
SHAY/SHEA.
After high school, she found work at Libby's Foods and rose to
the rank of office manager. Around that time, she met Dic
DOYLE,
a young reporter at The Chatham Daily News. The couple married
in Chatham in January, 1953.
Not long after they were married, Mrs.
DOYLE moved to Toronto,
where her husband was by that time at The Globe and Mail. Hired
as a copy reader on the news desk in 1951, Mr.
DOYLE became editor
and then the paper's editor-in-chief from 1963 to 1983.
Judith DOYLE remembers her parent's house as an open and welcoming
place. Late at night after Mr.
DOYLE and his colleagues left
The Globe's office, they would often venture over to the house
to talk and unwind from a busy day.
Cameron SMITH, a former editor at The Globe, said of Mrs.
DOYLE:
"She was one of the most welcoming people that I've known. She
made me feel good about whatever I was doing."
Judith will never forget the only Christmas she experienced away
from her mother. It was the early 1980s and Judith was in Nicaragua
to make a documentary. Mrs.
DOYLE managed to track her down and
sent a Christmas cake. When the cake arrived, Judith remembers
the joy of slicing it into slivers for a group of foreign journalists.
Years later when Judith made another documentary about an Ojibway
reserve in Northern Ontario, Mrs.
DOYLE befriended some of the
people from the reserve when they visited Toronto.
Mrs. DOYLE extended her kindness to animals. Working in the garden
of her Toronto home, Mrs.
DOYLE could be heard chattering away
to the birds and animals, Judith said. The family has photographs
of her feeding foxes in the backyard.
"She was the kind of person who had raccoons following her around,
" Judith said.
After Mr. DOYLE was appointed to the Senate in 1985, the couple
moved to Ottawa. Their years in the capital were among their
happiest. They made close Friends and Mrs.
DOYLE enjoyed heading
across the river to Hull with a friend and a few rolls of quarters
to do some gambling. "She had the capacity for developing Friendships
that went on throughout her life," Mr.
DOYLE said. "She was
interested in people."
Florence DOYLE leaves her husband Richard, sister Clara
HILLIARD,
son Sean and daughter Judith.
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McCULLOUGH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-08-16 published
HUBBS,
Ruby
Catherine (née
McCULLOUGH)
Died peacefully on July 30, 2003 at Vancouver General Hospital
She is remembered with love and sorrow and will live in our hearts
always. Ruby
HUBBS was born Ruby
McCULLOUGH in Patterson, New
Jersey, U.S.A. December 29, 1912. She lived with her family in
Toronto during the Great Depression and World War 2. In 1947
she became a farmer's wife and later on a mother, first in Ameliasburgh,
in Prince Edward County, Ontario and later on near Dundalk, Ontario.
Ruby became a widow and single mother after the sudden death
of her husband Harry Bruce
HUBBS in 1955 and returned to Toronto
where she lived most of the rest of her life. Ruby worked for
Macmillan Publishing Company of Canada for 17 years. Following
that, she was a devoted nanny for the small children of many
families in Toronto for over twenty years. She was predeceased
by her sister Constance
McCULLOUGH, whom she cared for during
the last ten years of her life. She is sadly missed by her daughter
Connie HUBBS, grandchildren Kevin and Camille all of Vancouver,
her brother Robert James
McCULLOUGH of Toronto, nieces Leslie
MIDDLETON of Markham and Lynda
FITZSIMMONS of Florida, and nephew
James McCULLOUGH of Mississauga and their families. Friends and
family will gather for a Celebration of her Life Saturday September
13 at 3 p.m. at Humphrey Funeral Home on 1403 Bayview Avenue.
In lieu of flowers, please consider an 'in memoriam' donation
to Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario 1920 Yonge Street,
4th Floor Toronto, Ontario M4S 3E2 Telephone (416) 489-7111 mail@hsf.on.ca
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McCULLOUGH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2003-12-01 published
'Curtain up, laugh, laugh, laugh, curtain down'
Versatile comic actor appeared in a string of hit revues, as
well as at the Shaw and Stratford festivals, in London and on
Broadway
By Allison
LAWLOR,
Special to The Globe and Mail Monday, December
1, 2003 - Page R7
At the mere mention of his name some people would just start
giggling. In fact, wherever the wonderfully comic actor Tom
KNEEBONE
went there was laughter. He loved not only to make other people
laugh but also to let out his own deep laugh, which Friends say
seemed to start in his gut and make its way up through his body,
gathering force as it went.
"Tom could make me laugh longer and harder than anyone else,"
said Gary KRAWFORD, a long-time friend who first worked with
him in the mid-1960s. "He was without a doubt the funniest man
I've ever met in my life."
Mr. KNEEBONE, who has been described by some critics as one of
the world's top cabaret performers, died in a Toronto hospital
on November 15 after suffering a heart attack and other complications.
He was 71.
The versatile performer appeared for many years at the Shaw Festival
and the Stratford Festival of Canada, where during the 1976 season
he played Puck opposite Jessica
TANDY in A Midsummer Night's
Dream. He also performed at London's Old Vic, the Charlottetown
Festival and
on Broadway. He was a guest with the Canadian Opera
Company and the National Ballet of Canada, a company he greatly
admired.
Toronto audiences may remember him best for the string of hit
revues he performed with Dinah
CHRISTIE, which included Ding
Dong at the Dell, The Apple Tree and
Oh Coward! "I was absolutely
in awe of the man," Ms.
CHRISTIE said, recalling the first time
they performed together 38 years ago.
They developed an enduring partnership that resulted in appearances
across the country performing everywhere from cabarets to big
concert halls with symphony orchestras. In Toronto, they performed
together at Massey Hall and Roy Thomson Hall. Over the years,
working with Mr.
KNEEBONE became like "working with kith and
kin," Ms. CHRISTIE said.
"We made each other laugh," she said, adding that they worked
so well together because they were complete opposites.
While Mr. KNEEBONE was happy living and working in the big city,
Ms. CHRISTIE feels more at home on her farm in rural Ontario
with her animals and open space.
Born in Auckland, New Zealand, on May 12, 1932, Mr.
KNEEBONE
later moved to England to study at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre
School. After graduation, he went with the company on a 1963
North
American tour. When the tour folded in New York, Mr.
KNEEBONE
went out looking for work. He travelled to Toronto and joined
the Crest Theatre Company, where he got a job performing in a
production of She Stoops to Conquer. He later starred with the
Canadian comic actor Barbara
HAMILTON in the hit revue That Hamilton
Woman. The road was paved for him after that and, as he was quoted
as saying, it was 40 years of "curtain up, laugh, laugh, laugh,
curtain down."
Over the years, several critics remarked on Mr.
KNEEBONE's unique
facial features. Walter
KERR in The New York Times once wrote:
"His eyes are all right, but I think his nose is crossed."
In Time magazine, comparisons were made between Mr.
KNEEBONE,
Pinocchio and Charlie Brown. "With leprechaun whimsy, and a pace
as assured as the Dominion Observatory Time Signal, his major
weapon is a wonderfully mobile face that he seems never to have
grown accustomed to. Small wonder," the writer wrote. "His features
might have been drawn by a child. Eyes like silver dollars, a
nose that wobbles to a Pinocchio point, and a mouth tight and
tiny as Charlie Brown's when he is sad."
The moment the sun came up in the morning, Mr.
KNEEBONE was up
and out of bed, opening his curtains and declaring: "Let's get
on with the show," his friend Doug
McCULLOUGH recalled. "You
cannot take the theatre out of Tom," Mr.
McCULLOUGH said. "Tom
was always on stage."
Mr. KNEEBONE was never without a story to tell, whether it was
a tale about the crazy person who gravitated to him on a Toronto
subway or a character he met while performing in a small town.
"Everything had a theatrical dimension," Mr.
McCULLOUGH said.
In recent years, Mr.
KNEEBONE turned his attention toward writing
and directing plays for the Smile Theatre Company. Once again
he and his long-time friend Ms.
CHRISTIE were collaborators.
Together they brought professional theatre to senior citizens'
homes, long-term care facilities and hospitals. Mr.
KNEEBONE
had been the company's artistic director since 1987.
Known for his extensive research, he spent hours combing through
books and old musical recordings at libraries and theatrical
museums collecting information to use in his productions. He
charmed all the librarians at Toronto's public libraries, Ms.
CHRISTIE said.
He loved the process of gathering Canada's little-known stories,
whether it was the tale of a war bride or the country's first
black doctor, and then bringing them to audiences. He also saw
it as a way to give something not only to people whose health
prevented them from getting to the theatre, but to the country
that has accepted him so warmly when he arrived.
Despite his writing and directing, he never stopped performing.
Just weeks before he died, Mr.
KNEEBONE and Ms.
CHRISTIE performed
some of Noël Coward material together for a benefit.
"He was one of the masters of Noël Coward," Mr. Krawford said.
In addition to his stage work, Mr.
KNEEBONE performed in film
and television, including the movies The Luck of Ginger Coffey
and The Housekeeper.
A proud Canadian, Mr.
KNEEBONE was honoured by his adopted country
with the Order of Ontario, and was named a Member of the Order
of Canada in October, 2002.
He leaves his cousin, Robert
GIBSON, in Australia.
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