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REINELT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-09-17 published
REINELT,
Ursula
Elizabeth (née
RUEHL) (1934-2005)
Peacefully, on Friday, September 16, 2005 at Victoria Hospital,
Ursula Elizabeth
REINELT (née
RUEHL) in her 71st year. Beloved
wife of Franz
REINELT for 48 years. Loving mother of Richard
(Leanne) REINELT and Thomas (Natalie)
REINELT.
Loving
Oma of
Christian, James and Tyler. Dear sister of Herta
ROLLETSCHEK
and Erika ROSS and the late Gunther
RUEHL and Herbert
RUEHL.
A Memorial Service will be held at Forest Lawn Memorial Chapel,
1997 Dundas Street East (at Wavell), on Sunday, September 18,
2005 at 2 p.m. Visitation one hour prior to the service. Interment
of cremated remains Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens. In lieu of
flowers, donations to the Canadian Cancer Society would be appreciated.
Arrangements entrusted to Memorial Funeral Home, 452-3770.
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REINGEWERTZ o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-01-26 published
REINGEWERTZ,
Freda
Passed away on Tuesday, January 25, 2005. Freda, beloved wife
of the late Isadore. Dear mother and mother-in-law of Esther
and Joseph
SHIEWITZ, and Shirley
REINGEWERTZ.
Proud
Bubbie of
David and his wife Danielle, Aron and his wife Nuphar, and Cheryl.
Great-grandmother of Jordan. Funeral service will be held on
Wednesday, January 26, 2005 at 1: 00 p.m. at Steeles Memorial
Chapel, 350 Steeles Ave. West, Thornhill. Interment to follow
at Bathurst Lawn Cemetery, Torah Emeth section. Shiva to be observed
at 59 Alexandra Wood, Toronto. Memorial donations may be made
to the Emunah Women of Toronto. Memorial donations may be made
to the Emunah Women of Toronto (416) 636-0036, Baycrest Foundation
(416) 785-2875, or charity of your choice.
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REINGOLD o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-05-30 published
LANGER,
Harvey▼
On Saturday, May 28th, 2005 at Baycrest Centre. Harvey
LANGER,
beloved husband of the late Anna
LANGER. Dear brother and brother-in-law
of Bernie and Ryna, Michael and the late Pearl, and the late
Morris and Rose, Gordon and Shirley
LANGER, and Jeanne and Frank
REINGOLD.
The▼
LANGER family acknowledges the excellent care Harvey
received at Baycrest Terrace and Hospital, and our special thanks
to Dorothy
FRANCIS and Caroline
KEARNEY who cared for him during
his last year. At Benjamin's Park Memorial Chapel, 2401 Steeles
Ave. W. (3 lights west of Dufferin), for service on Monday, May
30th at 2: 00 p.m. Interment Beth Tzedec Memorial Park. Shiva
Monday only at 180 Gordon Rd., evening service at 8: 00 p.m. If
desired, memorial donations may be made to The Harvey Langer
Fund c/o Baycrest Foundation at 416-785-2500 ext. 8
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REINGOLD o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-02-16 published
INGOLDSBY,
Michael
Francis
Peacefully, after a courageous battle with cancer, on Monday,
February 14, 2005, at the Peel Memorial Hospital in Brampton,
at the age of 49. Beloved husband of Denise. Loving brother of
Tom ('Ing') and his wife Beverley, and their children Jessica
and Peter. Dear nephew of Walter and Peggy
ROSS.
Predeceased
by his parents Maurine and Frank. Mike will be dearly missed
and remembered by all of his relatives and dear Friends. Mike
was a longtime fan of the Montreal Canadiens and the Notre Dame
'Fighting Irish'. Friends will be received at the Scott Funeral
Home 'Brampton Chapel', 289 Main St. N. (Hwy. 10), Brampton (905)
451-1100, on Thursday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. A Funeral Mass will
be celebrated on Friday, February 18, 2005 at Saint Mary's Catholic
Church, 66A Main St. S., Brampton. For service time, please call
the funeral home. Interment to follow at Saint Mary's Catholic
Cemetery, Brampton. If desired, donations may be made to the
Oncology Department of Peel Memorial Hospital, or to the Canadian
Cancer Society. The family would like to extend a special thank
you to Dr. Stephen
REINGOLD and the nurses of the Oncology Clinic
at Peel Memorial Hospital for all of their care and support,
as well as the nurses in the Palliative Care Department for their
care and compassion. Sign a book of condolences at www.obituariestoday.com
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REINGOLD o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-03-02 published
BOGAERT,
Mary "
Catherine"
Surrounded by her loving family, Catherine passed away on Friday,
February 25, 2005, at William Osler Hospital at age 41. With
courage, dignity and unparelleled grace, Catherine lost her battle
with colon cancer. Predeceased by her mother Pauline
BOGAERT.
Beloved Mother and best friend to Amelia "the Dude"
FITZGERALD,
the one true love of her life. Dear sister to Cherie
BOGAERT,
Cindy (Tim)
BREWER and dear brother Chris (Sheila)
BOGAERT.
Catherine
was a special "Aunt CaKu" to nieces and nephews Josh and Nicky
BOGAERT and Will and Carla
BREWER. A loving partner to Gary
SWITZER,
Catherine will be remembered for her capacity to love, quick
wit, roaring laugh, and her steady supply of perfume and lipstick.
Her love touched him in ways he never experienced before, making
her impossible to forget. Catherine was an accomplished ballerina,
dancing professionally in Vienna and Toronto. She especially
loved her role as the Sugar Plum Fairy. She later became a Human
Resources specialist, improving employee relations every day.
The medical community especially Doctors
VARDY,
HEADLY,
REINGOLD
and SEHDEV and all the support from paramedics, homecare and
palliative care surrounded Catherine and her family with love
and compassion and provided exceptional care. We are fortunate
to have experienced their level of commitment. A candlelight
service will be held at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, St.
George Street, Dresden, Ontario at 7 p.m. on Saturday, March 5,
2005. In lieu of flowers, donations to the Canadian Cancer Society
will be welcomed.
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REINGOLD o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-05-30 published
LANGER,
Harvey▲
On Saturday, May 28th, 2005 at Baycrest Centre. Harvey
LANGER,
beloved husband of the late Anna
LANGER. Dear brother and brother-in-law
of Bernie and Ryna, Michael and the late Pearl, and the late
Morris and Rose, Gordon and Shirley
LANGER, and Jeanne and Frank
REINGOLD.
The▲
LANGER family acknowledges the excellent care Harvey
received at Baycrest Terrace and Hospital, and our special thanks
to Dorothy
FRANCIS and Caroline
KEARNEY who cared for him during
his last year. At Benjamin's Park Memorial Chapel, 2401 Steeles
Ave. W. (3 lights west of Dufferin), for service on Monday, May
30th at 2: 00 p.m. Interment Beth Tzedec Memorial Park. Shiva
Monday only at 180 Gordon Rd., evening service at 8: 00 p.m. If
desired, memorial donations may be made to The Harvey Langer
Fund c/o Baycrest Foundation at 416-785-2500 ext. 8.
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REINGOLD o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-08-14 published
ROGOW,
Alex
Passed away peacefully at the Sunnybrook Hospital on Saturday,
August 13, 2005. Beloved husband of Ida. Loving father of Sheila
and her husband Alan
MAGDER. He will be greatly missed by his
grandchildren Richard and Valerie. Brother of Dora
SENELNICK
and Esther
REINGOLD and the late Mike
ROGOW.
Funeral services
on Sunday, August 14 at Steeles Memorial Chapel. Burial at Bathurst
Lawn Cemetery (Adath Shalom section). For time of service please
call 905-881-6003. Shiva will be held until Wednesday evening
at 151 Rosedale Heights Dr., Thornhill. Donations in his memory
may be made to the charity of choice.
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REINHAM o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-12-26 published
CHABURSKY,
Reverend
Ihor
S.
Passed away peacefully on December 22, 2005 at Grand River Hospital
- Freeport Site, Kitchener. He received the last rites from Rev.
V. YANISHEWSKY.
Beloved husband of Romana. Loving father to Renata
Roman and Orest
CHABURSKY and father-in-law to Eugene
ROMAN.
Cherished grandfather to Krystina and William
ROMAN and Luba
and Gregory
CHABURSKY. He will be missed by his sister Ulana
and brothers Myron and Nestor with their families from Toronto,
brother-in-law Lubomyr
ZOBNIW and family from New York, family
in Canada, U.S.A. and Ukraine. He will be fondly remembered as
a dedicated pastor by many parishioners and priests at the following
Ukrainian Catholic Churches: Kitchener, Church of the Transfiguration
Guelph, Holy Protection; Cambridge, Nativity of Mother of God
London, Christ the King; Saint Thomas, Exultation of the Holy Cross.
A special thanks to the nurses and staff, Dr.
MacEACHERN and
Dr. CAMPBELL at Grand River Regional Cancer Centre and Dr.
WILLIAMSON,
nurses and staff at Freeport Site in Kitchener. A heartfelt thanks
to Dr. REINHAM, Dr.
BELL, Dr.
ANELLO and Dr.
HORN for their care
and guidance. Resting at the Cardinal Furneral Home, 92 Annette
Street (near Keele) Monday from 6-9 p.m. then to the Ukrainian
Catholic Church of the Holy Protection (Leeds St.) Tuesday from
7-9 p.m. Funeral Mass Wednesday at 10 a.m. Interment St. Volodymyr
Cemetery, Oakville. In lieu of flowers, donations to Lviv Ukrainian
Catholic Seminary would be appreciated. On-Iine condolences at
www.cardinalfuneralhomes.com
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REINHARDT o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-01-07 published
REINHARDT
Henry "Heinz-Ludwig"
Mr. Henry "Heinz-Ludwig"
REINHARDT passed away in his 85th year,
at home on January 5th, 2005. Loving father of Karin and John
LAWRENCE,
Peter and Pamela
REINHARDT, Sylvia and Terry
DONOVAN
and Cindy and Rob
KENGIS.
Proud grandpa of ten grandchildren
and one great-grandchild. Husband of Helga
REINHARDT. A funeral
service will be conducted at the Westview Funeral Chapel, 709
Wonderland Road North, on Saturday, January 8th, 2005 at 10: 30
a.m. with visiting being held one hour prior to the service.
Interment to follow at Mount Pleasant Cemetery.
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REINHART o@ca.on.kent_county.wallaceburg.wallaceburg_courier_press 2005-06-29 published
CARROLL,
Lawrence
A.
Mr.
Lawrence "
Larry" A.
CARROLL a resident of Kitchener passed
away on Wednesday, June 22, 2005 at Grand River Hospital in Kitchener
at the age of 62. He was born in Chatham and was a
son of the
late Alfred and Helen
(TYHURST)
CARROLL.
Larry enjoyed bowling,
movies and hockey games but, most of all, he cherished his grandchildren.
Loving father and father-in-law of Kim and John
McCABE of Brigden,
Ken and Melissa
CARROLL,
Shawn and Maxine
CARROLL and Jodi and Greg
REINHART all of Kitchener. Dear grandfather of Melissa, Amanda,
Mathew, Cassandra and Brian. Great grandfather of Olivia. Kind
brother and brother-in-law of Gord and Yvonne
CARROLL of Port Lambton
and Jim and Shirley
CARROLL of Florida. Sadly missed by many nieces
and nephews. The late Larry
CARROLL rested at the Eric F. Nicholls
Funeral Home, 639 Elgin Street, in Wallaceburg until Saturday,
June 25, 2005 when private family services were held in the chapel
of the funeral home at 3 p.m. with Reverend Jim
MILLER,
Officiant.
Cremation has taken place and the interment of ashes will take
place at a later date in Riverview Cemetery, Wallaceburg. As
an expression of sympathy donations to the Heart and Stroke Foundation
may be left at the funeral home. As a living memorial a tree
will be planted in Nicholls Memorial Forest in memory of Lawrence
A. CARROLL.
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REINHART o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-07-11 published
ROBINSON,
Donald
At Parkwood Hospital, on Friday, July 8th, 2005, Donald
ROBINSON
of London in his 84th year. Beloved husband of Marigold. Loving
father of Allan
ROBINSON of Ottawa, Wendy
CUFF
(Dan) of Wiarton,
Ruth WILSON of Toronto, Ted
ROBINSON
(Janice
LAVERGNE) of Grand
Forks, British Columbia, John
ROBINSON (Dawn-Marie) and Pat
HENRY
all of London. Cherished grandfather of many grandchildren and
greatgrandchildren. He will be missed by his brothers and sisters,
Joy HOWARD, "Jim" James
ROBINSON, Doreen
WEAKE and Tom
ROBINSON.
Predeceased by his sisters Dorothy
REINHART,
Marjorie
CALZAVARA,
Audrey ALLISON, and by his brother Lawrence
ROBINSON. A memorial
service will be held at the Westview Funeral Chapel, 709 Wonderland
Road North, on Tuesday, July 12th, 2005 at 3: 00 p.m. Intement
of ashes will take place at Chesley Cemetery at a later date.
Those wishing to make a donation in memory of Donald are asked
to consider the Alzheimer's Society.
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REINHART o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-05-05 published
Burly doctor remembered for the size of his heart
Last Letters: A series of stories about correspondence from soldiers
killed in the final days of the war
By Anthony
REINHART,
Thursday,
May▼ 5, 2005, Page A18
Victory in Europe was already in sight by the time Easter Sunday
rolled around in 1945. But in the Pacific, a new horror made
its debut that day, aboard a British carrier called Indefatigable.
It was April 1, 1945, and Alan
VAUGHAN was right where he belonged
in the sick bay, tending to the men he called "my boys" --
when a Japanese plane, carrying a 250-kilogram bomb and a suicidal
pilot, came out of the clouds.
In a letter home to Toronto 14 months earlier, when he was still
in Europe and kamikaze had yet to enter the layman's lexicon,
the young doctor had reassured his mother that "we are amply
equipped to finish off any fools who might try to attack us from
the air."
But once the smoke cleared from the carrier's deck, 14 men lay
dead, including the big, burly 29-year-old physician known as
Doc VAUGHAN to the crew, and Beefy to his Friends.
"Apparently, there wasn't a mark on him," said his nephew and
namesake, Alan
MANCHEE of Toronto. "It was the concussion" of
the blast that killed his uncle.
Similarly, Indefatigable, the first British ship to come under
kamikaze attack, was relatively unscathed, with only a slight
dip in its armoured flight deck.
Soon enough, the dent was smoothed over with concrete, but Doc
VAUGHAN's death left a hole that took far longer to fill.
"I guess anyone who dies in combat has a certain amount of heroic
quality," said Mr.
MANCHEE, born nine years after his uncle's
death, and raised amid his lingering legend. "But with him, he
really seemed a larger-than-life character."
Before he enlisted in the Royal Canadian Navy Volunteer Reserve
in 1941, Alan
VAUGHAN had distinguished himself not only as a
medical student at the University of Toronto, but also as a gregarious
and impulsive young man, with an iconoclast streak.
"He was a bit of a maverick," Mr.
MANCHEE said, recalling tales
of Uncle Alan driving to Muskoka, where the family had an island
cottage, and swimming to it if there was no boat waiting for
him.
The aspiring doctor raised his university tuition by creating
and operating a summer camp for boys, on that same island.
Just before the war, while interning at Toronto's Hospital for
Sick
Children,
Dr.
VAUGHAN proposed to a woman as they rode in
a car along University Avenue. When she turned him down, "he
took the ring back and threw it out the window," his nephew said.
Overseas, similar antics and a deft bedside manner made an impression
on the sailors and airmen around him. That much is clear from
the vast collection of letters Mr.
MANCHEE, 50, has been leafing
through since his mother, the doctor's only sister, died last
autumn.
Many were written by shipmates after the Indefatigable's captain
put out a call for condolence letters from his 2,200-member crew,
and was flooded with about 300 replies.
In one, an air gunner recounted a jungle-training trip ashore
in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka,) for which Dr.
VAUGHAN volunteered
after an airman dropped out due to illness.
The letter-writer, surnamed Sage, was skeptical of an officer
who would stoop to such gruelling duty. "The Doc, as I studied
him, appeared comical and definitely out of place there," he
wrote, describing "a large, perspiring, but very cheerful character
with a soft Canadian drawl."
But when the Doc volunteered to cook and clean at the campsite,
and managed to match the airmen's pace as well as their constant
jibes, "this really gripped me," he wrote. "Doc's body may have
been big, but his heart was surely bigger."
Another shipmate of lower rank wrote of going through a mental
breakdown at sea, and that "after a few minutes with Doc
VAUGHAN,
I felt as though I were talking to my own brother."
These letters were forwarded to Dr.
VAUGHAN's family in Toronto,
who were deep in grief and exchanging their own poignant correspondence
as the wider world celebrated victory in the war in Europe.
The eldest sibling, Bryan
VAUGHAN, was in Toronto and unable
to serve overseas, but sister Charmian (Mr.
MANCHEE's mother)
and brother Denny, the youngest, were in different parts of Europe.
Denny, a musician who went on to renown as a bandleader, heard
the bad news first, then telegraphed home on April 14, 1945:
"Dearest Mom and Dad. Don't know what to say or do. All my sympathies
with you."
Charmian, in Italy working for the Red Cross, had heard only
that her brother had died, and for several agonizing days, didn't
know which one. On April 21, she sent this message home: "How
is Mum. If necessary will try to get home immediately. All my
love."
A week later, Bryan sent his sister the first of several dispatches
that spring and summer, with updates on how their parents were
coping.
"Sitting on that wide windowsill in the sun, Easter Sunday, you
were thinking of us, as we were thinking of all of you, who are
away from home," he wrote. "But much as each of us was in the
others' thoughts, little did we dream what good old Al was up
against."
Bryan went on to reveal his own burden, hinting at survivor's
guilt weighed down by his dead brother's unrealized potential:
"I'm almost ashamed to say it's been an inspiration," he wrote
of Alan's death. "Now I feel I have to do the job of two, and
what's more, have the power to do it. And I've pledged myself
to try."
As a young man, weaned on epic tales of his uncle's exploits,
Alan MANCHEE felt a similar obligation, and even tried to steer
himself toward medical school.
"It was not the right thing to do," said Mr.
MANCHEE, now a senior
communications adviser for Hydro One, "but he was such an important
person in my mother's life."
Such efforts have since given way to subtler forms of remembrance,
most notably in Muskoka, at the family retreat. There, decades
ago, Bryan
VAUGHAN climbed the tallest tree and hung one of Doc
VAUGHAN's jackets in it, and the ashes of several deceased family
members have since been placed around it.
"Even today up there," Mr.
MANCHEE said, "the children still
call it 'Uncle Alan's tree.' "
In conjunction with the Dominion Institute and its Memory Project,
we asked readers to submit the last letters of Canadians who
died in the final months of the Second World War. This week,
we have presented three of the soldiers' stories.
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REINHART o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-05-27 published
Family, Friends mourn popular student
'Loving and kind' Etobicoke boy dies in collision with garbage
truck
By Anthony
REINHART,
Friday,
May▲ 27, 2005, Page A13
Of all the students at St. Ambrose Catholic School in Etobicoke,
Ben PASKUS probably had a better grasp than most of the role
of a grief counsellor.
For the past few months, the 11-year-old had been one himself,
helping a Grade 6 classmate cope with the death of his father.
When they arrived at school yesterday morning, those same classmates
learned they would no longer have Ben to lean on. He had been
killed the evening before, under the wheels of a garbage truck,
as he pedalled his bike toward home.
"And it's such a beautiful day," Lynn
TOMASEK said through tears,
standing outside the school in the sun on what was surely the
darkest day of her four years as principal.
Police said the boy was cycling eastbound on the north sidewalk
of Horner Avenue at about 6: 40 p.m. on Wednesday. As he crossed
Sheldon Avenue, he rode into the path of a City of Toronto garbage
truck that had been westbound on Horner and was turning right
onto Sheldon.
Ben, who would have turned 12 on Monday, was pronounced dead
a short time later at St. Joseph's hospital. The traumatized
driver of the garbage truck was also taken to hospital. No charges
had been laid as of yesterday.
Louise LEMIEUX, the boy's mother, issued a brief statement through
the Ridley Funeral Home late yesterday, thanking her neighbours,
her son's school and the emergency workers who tried to help
him.
"It comforts me to know that the police, the firemen, the Emergency
Medical Services and the staff at St. Joseph's Health Centre
did everything they possibly could," said Ms.
LEMIEUX, a single
mother with two younger boys at home.
"When praying for my family, I ask that you include the other
victim of the accident, the driver of the truck, who will also
be in my prayers."
Ms. TOMASEK, the school principal, had been scheduled to attend
a conference yesterday, and was at home getting ready that morning
when her telephone rang. It was the school's secretary, saying
she had heard a news report of a boy who had been struck and
killed in the same general area as the school -- the Alderwood
neighbourhood, south of Evans Avenue and east of Browns Line.
Afraid the boy might be a St. Ambrose student, the principal
called police, who confirmed her fears.
"He was a gorgeous kid, so handsome," said Ms.
TOMASEK, who cancelled
her trip to the conference and had her husband drive her straight
to the school.
"His face just kept coming up in front of me when we were driving,"
she said. When she arrived at the school, Ms.
TOMASEK and her
vice-principal, Jo
CORSI, faced the delicate task of maintaining
daily routines for the 400 junior kindergarten-to-Grade 8 students,
while acknowledging the loss of a student his teacher called
"a treasure."
"There is no formula," Ms.
TOMASEK said. "We've never done this
before."
Professional grief counsellors were available to help any students
or parents struggling with the news. The school's guidance counsellors
were also on hand.
Ms. TOMASEK read a brief dedication over the P.A. system after
O Canada was played. Then, students who knew Ben were given time
in class to share their memories of him and describe him, she
said.
They used terms like "athletic," "loving and kind" and "energetic"
to describe a boy who was known to offer help when needed, and
to stand up for his Friends when he thought they needed defending.
"He was a little bit of a mischief maker when he was young,"
Ms. TOMASEK said, adding that Ben was once a regular visitor
to her office for minor infractions, but had since become a leader
among students.
"There are some kids in the school who you know better than others,"
she said, as some of the school's youngest students were finishing
the remainder of their lunch break running around a nearby spruce
tree. "He was definitely one of them."
As the noise died down and the kids filed back to class, Ms.
TOMASEK struggled aloud with her own shock over the boy's sudden
death.
"It just takes a split second, doesn't it?" she said, before
she and Ms.
CORSI headed back inside to the rest of their day.
A short distance away, at the scene of Wednesday's accident,
fresh flowers and a teddy bear had been taped to a tree trunk.
Three blocks east of that, a similar memorial still stands more
than three years after another neighbourhood boy was killed.
Justin BOUDREAU-
WEISS, 12, died while trying to cross Horner
Avenue on November 30, 2001, prompting calls for the city to
install a traffic signal along the busy stretch, which abuts
an industrial area.
A bouquet of artificial flowers and a laminated poster commemorating
his death are tied to the new traffic signal.
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REINHART o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-09-07 published
Defeated by his demons, man met violent end on a Moss Park bench
By Anthony
REINHART,
Wednesday,
September 7, 2005, Page A1
Last
Tuesday night, Paul
CROUTCH laid down his life, or what
little was left of it, safe in the belief that he could handle
any threats.
He bedded down on his usual bench in Toronto's Moss Park, which,
to his mind, was a damn sight safer than the shelters, with their
drunken bullies and bedbugs, their tuberculosis, their thieves.
When the former British Columbia resident wound up dead the next
day, beaten almost beyond recognition on a rough and desperate
patch of the city's downtown, few would have expected police
to find $300 in his pocket, right there where he'd put it.
Fewer still would have guessed he had been a newspaper publisher,
minor hockey coach, homeowner and the father of a scientist before
his demons defeated him.
And no one who was thinking straight would have anticipated where
the finger would point: at three part-time reserve soldiers from
the armoury next door, three young men trained to lay down their
own lives to save others.
As often as death walks the tired streets around the park, "you
wouldn't expect people that are charged with our protection to
take this kind of action," said Don
HARRIS, who runs the Good
Neighbours' Club, a men's drop-in centre where Mr.
CROUTCH, 59,
visited daily.
For all its optimism, the centre's name suggested only irony
yesterday, given what police allege to have happened after three
members of the Queen's Own Rifles left the Moss Park Armoury
and visited the park next door.
There, police say, a woman saw three men beating a homeless man,
and they turned on her when she tried to intervene.
There, at 4: 40 a.m., officers found an unconscious Mr.
CROUTCH,
suffering what the coroner would call "blunt impact head trauma...
consistent with being punched, kicked or stomped."
And there, they pursued leads, along with the National Investigation
Services of the Canadian Forces, that resulted in Jeffery
HALL,
21, Mountaz
IBRAHIM, 23, and Brian
DEGANIS, 21, being charged
with second-degree murder and assault causing bodily harm.
In due course, a court will answer the questions. Yesterday,
those closest to Mr.
CROUTCH could only wait, wonder and remember.
"Paul wasn't always a crazy homeless person," said Marilyn
HOWARD,
his former wife of 25 years, from Dawson Creek. "He was incredibly
brilliant, and that was probably a lot of his difficulty."
Difficulty quickly followed Mr.
CROUTCH's birth, in Toronto,
on November 6, 1945. He was placed in a foster home with a family
called CROUTCH, but they never adopted him.
At 12, he renamed himself Paul Richard Franklin
CROUTCH, taking
his first three names from his favourite hockey players.
When the young couple met in 1966, Mr.
CROUTCH worked for aircraft
maker McDonnell Douglas, and after they married, he started his
own fabricating business.
"His mental illness was starting even then," Ms.
HOWARD said.
"His big problem was, he was always right," and too often saw
the rest of the world as wrong.
The couple moved to Vancouver in 1973, then north to Dawson Creek
two years later, where Mr.
CROUTCH worked as a travelling auto-parts
salesman for Ford. Twice a month, even in winter, his work took
him deep into the Yukon via the Alaska Highway, a desolate but
essential lifeline for northerners.
"He did lots of favours for people on the highway," Ms.
HOWARD
said, recalling how her husband would pick up a half-dozen lobsters
on sale at Safeway, or a side of beef from a farmer, and deliver
them to far-flung Friends along his route.
Mr. CROUTCH left the road after their daughter, Shannon, was
born in 1977. He joined the Peace River Block News as advertising
manager, but when its owners cut salaries, he left. With his
wife and some Friends, he started a weekly, The Mirror, in 1980,
and focused his coverage exclusively on good news.
The paper prospered, but Mr.
CROUTCH's mental illness became
ever more evident, both at home and in the paranoid tone of his
editorials.
"The worse it got, the less he realized how much help he needed,"
said Ms. HOWARD.
And he would go on refusing help until the day before his death.
The couple divorced in 1993, and soon after, Mr.
CROUTCH sold
The Mirror and moved to Grande Prairie, Alberta.
"I got reports of him just sitting in the mall [in Grande Prairie],
looking like a zombie," Ms.
HOWARD said.
She lost track of him from there, but in the late 1990s, as his
daughter was earning her master's degree in plant science, Mr.
CROUTCH made his way back to Toronto.
When he walked through the stainless steel doors of the Good
Neighbours' Club in 1999, he filled out a form to become a member.
In the box marked "next of kin," he wrote "none wished."
From then on, he was a fixture, albeit a quiet one, at the drop-in
centre, where he showered, did his laundry and sent faxes to
the social agencies that helped him.
"He was really smart, and he really felt he'd been wronged,"
said Gary McCRIMMON, a worker at the centre, referring to Mr.
CROUTCH's phantom fears of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police,
the government, whoever. "I think it consumed him and it was
a large part of his downfall."
As evening fell last Tuesday, Mr.
CROUTCH turned aside a doctor's
concerns with his usual phrase: "I'll be dead in a couple days."
He also refused, as usual, to sleep in a homeless shelter.
"I gave him two bottles of water and he set off for the park,"
Mr. McCRIMMON said.
When a detective called the centre on Wednesday morning, Mr.
McCRIMMON answered. When told of Mr.
CROUTCH's death, and of
the bruising on his face, his first thought was that he had fallen.
"She said, 'Oh, no, no, this is a homicide,' " he said. "When
I went and identified the body, I could see what she meant."
Ms. HOWARD, who spent yesterday taking condolences on the sidewalks
of Dawson Creek and arranging a Toronto cremation by phone, said
she hopes to be in court to see her ex-husband's alleged killers
face justice.
"Paul's life was over, in many ways, years ago," she said. "These
people who did this have got to atone for what they've done."
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REINHARTZ o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-02-12 published
DISHART,
Dennis
Robert
After a courageous battle with cancer, peacefully passed away
on Friday, February 11, 2005 at his home, with his family by
his side. Cherished husband of Brenda. Loving father of Courtney
and Brock and step-father to Marie (Dave)
SCHNIEDER/SNIDER/SNYDER,
Heather (fiance
George), and Emily. Survived by his mother Anne and step-father
George. Predeceased by father David (1977). Dear brother of Wayne
(Mary), Barry (Marian), Connie (Gene)
FLEMING/FLEMMING. Predeceased by
brother Douglas (1979). Dennis will be sadly missed and fondly
remembered by many nieces, nephews, family and Friends. A special
thank-you to Dr. Abe
REINHARTZ, Dr. J.
WILSON, Dr.
FISHBEIN and
Dr. BOSZKO and the nursing staff of the Humber River Regional
Hospital - Church Site, and the Palliative At Home Care Nurses
for their excellent care and compassion. Memorial visitation
will be held at The Simple Alternative Funeral Centre, Mississauga
(1535 South Gateway Road, at Dixie Road, 2 lights south of Eglinton,
905-602-1580) on Tuesday, February 15, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
A Memorial Service will be held on Wednesday, February 16, in
the Chapel at 11 a.m. Interment of ashes to follow at Sanctuary
Park. Donations to the Humber River Regional Hospital - Church
Site, Oncology Unit or the Canadian Cancer Society would be appreciated
by the family.
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REINHARTZ o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-03-16 published
MARTIN,
Edward
On Monday, March 14, 2005 at Humber River Regional Hospital -
Church Street Site. Beloved husband of Ray
MARTIN. Loving father
of Linda D.
MARTIN and Edward Randy
MARTIN.
son of the late Edward
and Martha
MARTIN. Dear brother of Jessie, Dorothy, Thomas, George
and the late Gladys, Lill and Betty. Ed served overseas for 5
years in World War 2 with the R.C.A.M.C. as a stretcher bearer.
Ed was a longtime member of the Rexdale Lawn Bowling Club and
West Acres Seniors' Centre. Spunky, Stripe, Sundee, Suzi, Tigger,
Mask and Sam will miss him. We would like to sincerely thank
Dr. A. REINHARTZ and Dr.
WILSON and staff at the Oncology Department
of H.R.R.H. - Church Street Site. Also special thanks to Dr.
M. ROTSTEIN for all his previous care before his retirement.
At Ed's request there will be no visitation or service. Ed will
be cremated. If desired, donations can be made to the H.R.R.H.
Oncology Expansion Program, 200 Church Street, Toronto, M9N 1N8.
Funeral arrangements entrusted to the Newediuk Funeral Home,
Kipling Chapel, 416-745-7555."Until we meet again"
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REINHARTZ o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-07-20 published
CARAVAGGIO,
Violetta
It is with great sadness we announce Violetta's peaceful passing
at Humber River Regional Hospital - Church Site on July 19, 2005,
at the age of 72. Beloved wife of Nicola. Loving mother of Tony,
Maria (and her husband Ambrose), Mario (and his wife Christine).
Cherished grandmother of Roby, Cheyenne, Cassandra, Ariana, Alexander
and Nicola Ann. Thanks to all the nurses on the 4th Floor B Wing
and Dr. REINHARTZ for taking care of Mom. Special thanks to Leslie
for her Tender Loving Care. Friends and family will be received
at Bernardo Funeral Home, 2960 Dufferin St. (two streets south
of Lawrence Ave.) on Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m. and Friday from
2 to 4 and 6 to 9 p.m. The Funeral Mass will be celebrated on
Saturday, July 23, 2005 at 9: 00 a.m. in St. Charles Borromeo
Church (southwest corner of Dufferin St. and Lawrence Ave.).
Entombment at Beechwood Cemetery (Jane Street, north of Steeles
Ave.). As expressions of sympathy, donations may be made to the
Canadian Cancer Society.
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REINHARTZ - All Categories in OGSPI
REINHOLDT o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-01-03 published
STAFFORD,
Muriel
Gidley, (F.R.C.C.O.Hon,) L.T.C.M.
Died at the age of 98 years on December 30, 2004. Beloved wife
of the late Merrill C.
STAFFORD, loving stepmother of Frank and
his wife, Carolyn, Ross and his wife, Doris, and Merilyn
REINHOLDT,
together with many grandchildren and great grandchildren.
Muriel STAFFORD was a distinguished musician; first woman to
be President of the Royal Canadian College of Organists, later
it's Honorary President, awarded the first Distinguished Service
Award; Organist and choir leader of Park Road Baptist Church
for over 31 years; Deputy organist and Director of Music at Yorkminster
Park Baptist Church.
Muriel STAFFORD was Past President of the Women's Musical Club
of Toronto, and
an Honorary Life Member of the Toronto Heliconian
Club.
Muriel's busy life included also a garden, toured by a great
number of people over many years. She was a member of the North
Toronto Horticultural Society, two Rose societies and the Toronto
Botanical Garden.
The will be no visitation. A reception will follow the funeral
to be held at St. Clement's Anglican Church, 59 Briar Hill Ave.
(at Duplex Ave.) Wednesday, January 5 at 2 p.m. Donations may
be made to St. Clement's Anglican Church or the charity of your
choice. Morley Bedford Funeral Directors (416) 489-8733.
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REININGER o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-02-17 published
YATES,
Margaret
Ruth (née
MESSENGER)
June 23, 1932-February 14, 2005
Peacefully, at Kensington Gardens, Toronto, on Monday, February
14, 2005. Much loved wife of Mac. Loving mother of Judy
REININGER
(Markham), Geoff (Toronto) and Don and his wife Vera (Krefeld,
Germany.)
Loving grandma to Adam and Alyson
REININGER.
Marg was
the daughter of the late Dr. and Mrs. Donald
MESSENGER of Kirkland
Lake.
She is survived by her sister Anne
DARLING of Lake Watabeag,
Ontario and predeceased by her sister Marilyn
ODELL of Needham,
Massachusetts. Marg was a proud graduate of Kirkland Lake Collegiate
and the University of Toronto and was employed by Gellman Hayward
Ltd. and The Hudson's Bay Company. She will be treasured always
by family and Friends. A Remembrance Service will be held at
the Humphrey Funeral Home - A.W. Miles Chapel, 1403 Bayview Avenue
(south of Eglinton Avenue East), on Saturday, February 19th at
2 o'clock. Donations in Margaret's memory to the Alzheimer Society
of Canada, 20 Eglinton Avenue West, Suite #1200, Toronto M4R
1K8, would be appreciated.
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REININGER - All Categories in OGSPI
REINISCH o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-01-28 published
PAYNE,
James
At London Health Sciences Centre, Victoria Campus on Tuesday,
January 25, 2005 James
PAYNE of London in his 89th year. Beloved
son of the late James and Patty
PAYNE. Survived by many cousins
Donna BELL, Beryl
ALLEN, Bill
PENSTON, Frances
PENSTON, James
PENSTON, Del
PENSTON, Shelagh
REINISCH, Joan
McCRAE, Barbara
WHITE/WHYTE,
Kenneth
McLEAN and Bruce
McLEAN. Predeceased by a sister
Louise and a brother Bill. Friends will be received at the Logan
Funeral Home, 371 Dundas St. (between Waterloo and Colborne St.)
on Saturday from 1-2 p.m. Funeral Service will be held in the
chapel on Saturday, January 29, 2005 at 2 p.m. Interment Woodland
Cemetery. On line condolences www.loganfh.ca A tree will be planted
as a living memorial to Mr.
PAYNE.
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REINISCH - All Categories in OGSPI
REINKELUERS o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-12-05 published
REINKELUERS
Horst "
Lex"
After a courageous battle, as a result of a stroke, Mr. Horst
(Lex) REINKELUERS of London, passed away peacefully on Friday,
December 2, 2005 at University Hospital in his 82nd year. Beloved
husband of Margarete. Dear father of Marcus
REINKELUERS and his
wife Jill of Etobicoke and Christopher
REINKELUERS and his wife
Brenda of Kemptville. Loving Opa and Baboo of Nicholas, Louisa,
Pauline, and Erich, Marc and Carly. Predeceased by his dear sister
Margrit RUF. A Memorial Service will be held at Memorial Funeral
Home, 1559 Fanshawe Park Road (east of Highbury) on Wednesday,
December 7, 2005 at 1 p.m. Interment at Siloam Cemetery. Donations
to the Heart and Stroke Foundation would be appreciated. Memorial
Funeral Home 452-3770.
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REINKELUERS - All Categories in OGSPI
REINPRECHT o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-02-05 published
GOODALL,
Douglas▼
Stanley▼ (1921-2005)
Born in Brooklyn, New York, Stan passed away peacefully at Sunnybrook
Health sciences Centre - L Wing, on Wednesday, February 2nd,
2005, at age 83. Loving husband of 58 years to Anne
(REINPRECHT,)
father of Douglas (Susan,) Karen
BAILEY
(Scott,▼)
Steve▼
(Flay▼)
and grandfather to Rob (Nicky), Jeff, Trevor, Shannon, Thomas
and Mark. Stanley served in the Second World War with the 23rd
Canadian Field Company (landed D-Day). After the war, he founded
ABSO
Blueprints▼
Co.▼
Ltd. in 1952, which he operated for 44 years.
Stanley's family will receive family and Friends on Monday, February
7th from 7-9 p.m. at the R.S. Kane Funeral Home, 6150 Yonge Street
(at Goulding, south of Steeles). A service will be held in the
chapel on Tuesday, February 8th at 1: 00 p.m. The family would
like to give special thanks to the staff of George Hees Wing
Sunnybrook and Women's College Health Sciences Centre. In lieu
of flowers, the family would appreciate donations to the Alzheimer
Society of Canada or charity of your choice.
R.S. Kane (416) 221-1159
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REINPRECHT o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-02-05 published
GOODALL,
Douglas▲
Stanley▲ (1921-2005)
Born in Brooklyn, New York, Stan passed away peacefully at Sunnybrook
Health Sciences Centre - L Wing on Wednesday, February 2, 2005
at age 83. Loving husband of 58 years to Anne
(REINPRECHT,) father
of Douglas (Susan,) Karen
BAILEY
(Scott,▲)
Steve▲
(Flay▲) and grandfather
to Rob (Nicky), Jeff, Trevor, Shannon, Thomas and Mark. Stanley
served in the Second World War with the 23rd Canadian Field Company
(landed D-Day.) After the war, he founded
ABSO
Blueprints▲
Co.▲
Ltd. in 1952, which he operated for 44 years. Stanley's family
will receive family and Friends on Monday, February 7 from 7
to 9 p.m. at the R.S. Kane Funeral Home, 6150 Yonge Street (at
Goulding, south of Steeles). A service will be held in the chapel
on Tuesday, February 8th at 1: 00 p.m. The family would like to
give special thanks to the staff of George Hees Wing Sunnybrook
and Women's College Health Sciences Centre. In lieu of flowers,
the family would appreciate donations to the Alzheimer Society
of Canada or a charity of your choice.
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REINPRECHT - All Categories in OGSPI
REINSALU o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-03-05 published
PFAFF,
Isaac - Dispatch:
By Jordan PRESS,
Saturday,
March 5, 2005 - Page M6
Isaac Moses
PFAFF didn't wave placards to further the causes
he was passionate about -- he used his pen. "He was a humanitarian,"
says his daughter, Desiree
REINSALU. "
But he did it in a really
non-militant manner."
Born
June 13, 1920, in Ladysmith, South Africa, Mr.
PFAFF began
writing anti-apartheid-themed plays at the age of 18 in English,
Dutch and German, often using the pen name Paul Roubaix.
"There was not the freedom of speech there is now" in South Africa,
Mrs. REINSALU says. "Most writers who had a political conscience
wrote under a pseudonym."
When Mr. PFAFF toured South Africa with his theatre company,
he refused to perform in front of segregated crowds. As president
of the South African arts union, he worked to end apartheid with
a group that included Nelson Mandela and Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
He has written more than a dozen plays for the theatre, three
novels and several short stories and radio plays, most of them
about human rights and compassion.
In May of 1964, Mr.
PFAFF's politically charged writing forced
him to flee South Africa with his wife Juanita and their children
Desiree and Howard. They left their home with all their furniture
inside.
In Canada, he produced many plays as a high-school teacher at
Oakwood Collegiate Institute and Thornhill Secondary School.
One student sent flowers and a letter to the funeral, saying
Mr. PFAFF helped her to her current career as a lawyer for the
underprivileged, Mrs.
REINSALU says.
Mr. PFAFF died February 4 due to complications from severe asthma.
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REINTALS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-06-07 published
GLEBOVS,
Boris
(July 6, 1907-June 5, 2005)
Peacefully at Kristus Darzs Latvian Home in Woodbridge, Ontario,
on Sunday, June 5, 2005 just one month short of his 98th birthday.
Loving husband of the late Alida Lucija (née
REINTALS) who died
on January 26, 1962. Boris will be missed by his daughters Baiba
KUPCIS (Ojars Allan
KUPCIS) and Mara
GLEBOVS (Michel
SHANKS)
granddaughters Laura and Jennifer
KUPCIS; niece Silvija
KARLSONE
and family in Liepaja, Latvia; and the many people whose lives
he touched. Funeral Service at the York Visitation, Chapel and
Reception Centre, 160 Beecroft Road, North York, on Wednesday,
June 8 at 2 p.m. with visitation one hour prior. In lieu of flowers,
donations in memory of Mr.
GLEBOVS may be made to Kristus Darzs
Latvian Home or a charity of your choice.
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REINTALS - All Categories in OGSPI
REINTJES o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-01-05 published
REINTJES,
Gertrude
(VAN
RYSWYCK)
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REINTJES - All Categories in OGSPI
REIS o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-04-11 published
RAMEY,
Clifford
Peacefully at Parkwood Hospital on April 9, 2005 Mr. Clifford
RAMEY of London in his 87th year. Beloved husband of Mrs. Kathleen
RAMEY.
Loving father of Janet Mancini
BILLSON (Norman
London)
and Robert B.
RAMEY
(Donna.)
Well loved grandfather of Mark F.
MANCINI, Kyra Mancini
REIS, Alex J.
RAMEY, and also his great-grandchildren
Anne and Giorgio
MANCINI and Eamon and Stefan
REIS. Dear brother
of Blanche
SHEPHERD, Doris
BRAIN, Walter
RAMEY and Donald
RAMEY.
Dear brother-in-law of Gordon and Dorothy
JOHNSTON. He will be
sadly missed by many nieces and nephews. Predeceased by his sons
James (1999).
Clifford first retired after 27 years as Warrant Officer in the
Canadian Army. As a member of the 4th Canadian Armored Division
in World War 2, he saw service in the European Theatre for over
4 years and was present at the Battle of the Bulge in the winter
of 1944-45. Later he worked for 23 years as a Real Estate agent
in London. Funeral Service will be conducted in the Lloyd R.
Needham Funeral Chapel, 520 Dundas Street, on Tuesday, April
12th at 11 a.m. Visitation will be held one hour prior. Interment
to follow to Mount Pleasant Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations
would be appreciated to the Veterans Section, Parkwood Hospital,
London.
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REIS o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-07-11 published
BLACKPORT,
Dorothy
(GALLAGHER)
At L.H.S.C. University Campus on Saturday, July 9, 2005, Mrs.
Dorothy (GALLAGHER)
BLACKPORT, resident of the McCormick Home,
passed away in her 81st year. Beloved wife of the late Doug
BLACKPORT
(2001.) Dear mother of Trudy
SPEARING and her husband Bill, Doug
BLACKPORT, Bob
BLACKPORT, Michael
BLACKPORT and Pat
BLACKPORT
and his wife Wendy. Also loved by her grandchildren Michelle
SCOTT and her husband John, John
SPEARING,
Patrick
BLACKPORT
Jr., Amanda
BLACKPORT and Angie
BLACKPORT as well as her 2 greatgrandchildren
Jordann and Emily
SCOTT. Dear sister of Julia
REIS,
Helen
BLACKPORT
and Ann GALLAGHER.
Predeceased by her 2 brothers and 2 sisters.
Visitors will be received at
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REIS o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2005-11-11 published
CARREIRO,
Manuel
Caetano
At Victoria Hospital, on Thursday, November 10, 2005, Manuel
Caetano CARREIRO in his 72nd year. Beloved husband of Maria
(DOS
REIS)
CARREIRO. Dear father of Frank
CARREIRO (Sue), George
CARREIRO
(Lina,) Joe
CARREIRO
(Filomena) and Lucy
NEEVES (Paul,) all of
London. Loving grandfather of Joshua, Justyne, Amanda, Amber,
Michael, Robert, Christopher, Chelsea, Karissa and Brandon. Brother
of Francisco
CARREIRO and Cecilia
CALOURA of London, and Maria
DO ROSARIO, Maria
CARREIRO, Maria Jose
CARREIRO and Antonio
CARRIERO,
all of Sao Miguel, Acores, Portugal. Visitors will be received
on Friday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the O'Neil Funeral Home, 350
William Street. The Funeral Mass will be celebrated on Saturday
at 10 a.m. in Holy Cross Church (Elm Street at Hamilton Road).
Entombment Holy Family Mausoleum, St. Peter's Cemetery.
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REIS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2005-09-20 published
SHAW,
Doris▼
May▼
Peacefully at Toronto in her 96th year. Wife of the late Francis
E. SHAW. Beloved Mother of Marguerite
DARVILL (Jim), June
DUGGAN
(Gerry,) and Dawn
McPHERSON
(Jim.▼)
Most▼ loved Grandmother to
Libby CAMPBELL (Wayne), Steven
DARVILL, Andrea and Suzanne
DARVILL
(Mark), Michael
DUGGAN (Heidi), John
DUGGAN (Sue), and Lisa
DUGGAN,
Duncan McPHERSON (Jana), Christa
McPHERSON, and Daniel
McPHERSON.
Great Doris to Kelty and Neil
CAMPBELL, Mary
DARVILL, Eka and
Hopi REIS and Aaron
ANDERSON.
With▼ special memories of the
SHAW
family. Doris fought the good fight for many years with the help
of her devoted friend Eileen. Doris was a wonderful feisty lady
who loved ballroom dancing and throwing great parties. She will
be missed for her beauty and courage. An enormous thank you to
the palliative care team at St. Michael's Hospital for their
superb care. There will be a private funeral service followed
by interment at Mount Pleasant Cemetery. If desired the family
would greatly appreciated memorial donations in Doris' name to
the Lions Foundation of Canada Dog guides, Canine vision, P.O.
Box 907, Oakville, Ontario L6J 5E8. or St. Michael's Hospital
Foundation (designated to Palliative Care), 30 Bond Street, Toronto,
Ontario M5B 1W8.
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REIS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-01-17 published
JACOME,
Maria
Evelina
(March 30, 1920 - January 16, 2005)
Of Halton St. Visitation 5-9 p.m. Monday and 2-4 and 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ryan and Odette Funeral Home, 1498 Dundas St. W.,
at Dufferin, Toronto. Mass 2 p.m. Wednesday at St. Helen's Church
to Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Antonio
JACOME predeceased his wife.
Mrs. JACOME is survived by: children Maria
REIS
(Luis,)
Antonio
Paulo JACOME (Judite), Paulo Jorge
JACOME (Fatima). Parking is
no problem - simply enter from Dufferin, just north of Dundas.
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REIS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-08-03 published
REIS,
Albertino▼
(February▼ 9, 1909-August 2, 2005)
Of Lindsey Avenue. Visitation 6-9 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday
at the Ryan and Odette Funeral Home, 1498 Dundas St. W., at Dufferin,
Toronto. Mass 9: 30 a.m. Friday at St. Anthony's Church. Burial
in Fatima, Portugal. Mr.
REIS, who died at the Toronto General
Hospital, is survived by: wife
Maria; daughters Maria
CLAUDIO,
Lidia FIGUEIRA (Joao), Deolinda
REIS, Maria Conceicao
GOMES
sons Manuel
REIS
(Teresa,)
Abilio
REIS, Antonio
REIS (Maria,)
Alfredo REIS (Alda F.), Jose Maria
REIS (Alda M.); grandchildren
great-grandchildren. Parking is no problem - simply enter from
Dufferin, just north of Dundas.
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REIS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-08-05 published
REIS,
Albertino▲
(February▲ 9, 1909-August 2, 2005)
Of Lindsey Ave. Mass 9: 30 a.m. today at St. Anthony's Church.
Burial in Fatima, Portugal.
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REIS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-09-20 published
SHAW,
Doris▲
May▲
Peacefully at Toronto, in her 96th year. Wife of the late Francis
E. SHAW. Beloved mother of Marguerite
DARVILL (Jim), June
DUGGAN
(Gerry,) and Dawn
McPHERSON
(Jim.▲)
Most▲ loved grandmother to
Libby CAMPBELL (Wayne), Steven
DARVILL, Andrea and Suzanne
DARVILL
(Mark), Michael
DUGGAN (Heidi), John
DUGGAN (Sue), and Lisa
DUGGAN,
Duncan McPHERSON (Jana), Christa
McPHERSON, and Daniel
McPHERSON.
Great Doris to Kelty and Neil
CAMPBELL, Mary
DARVILL, Eka and
Hopi REIS and Aaron
ANDERSON.
With▲ special memories of the
SHAW
family. Doris fought the good fight for many years with the help
of her devoted friend Eileen. Doris was a wonderful feisty lady
who loved ballroom dancing and throwing great parties. She will
be missed for her beauty and courage. An enormous thank you to
the palliative care team at St. Michael's Hospital for their
superb care. There will be a private funeral service followed
by interment at Mount Pleasant Cemetery. If desired, the family
would greatly appreciate memorial donations in Doris' name to
the Lions Foundation of Canada Dog Guides, Canine Vision, P.O.
Box 907, Oakville, Ontario L6J 5E8 or St. Michael's Hospital
Foundation (designated to Palliative Care), 30 Bond Street, Toronto,
Ontario M5B 1W8.
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REIS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-09-23 published
DE JESUS,
Mariana
Peacefully at Fairview Nursing Home on September 21, 2005 in
her 85th year. Beloved sister of Lucinda and the late Joao
DOS
REIS. Cherished aunt of John and Nicole, George, and Gabrielia,
Joe and Bernadette, Luci and Louie. Mariana will be missed by
her many great nieces and nephews. Friends will be received at
the Cardinal Funeral Home "Earle Elliott Chapel" 715 Dovercourt
Rd. (Ossington Subway Delaware exit) on Friday from 3-5 and 7-9
p.m. Mass of Christian Burial on Saturday September 24th, 2005
at 9: 30 a.m. at St. Anthony's Church, 1041 Bloor Street West.
Interment Prospect Cemetery. In memory of Mariana, donations
may be made to the Canadian National Institute for the Blind.
Online condolences at www.cardinalfuneralhomes.com
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REIS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-11-07 published
REIS,
Kuldar "
Karl"
Peacefully at North York General Hospital on Thursday, November
3, 2005 in his 68th year. Beloved husband of Joan. Loving father
of Nanci and husband John. Proud grandfather of two grand_sons
Lance and Corey. There will be no service or visitation as requested.
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REIS o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2005-12-13 published
REIS,
Maria (née
REGO) (March 2, 1919-December 11, 2005)
Of Maynard Nursing Home, Halton Street. Visitation 1-4 and 6-9
p.m. Wednesday at the Ryan and Odette Funeral Home, 1498 Dundas
St. W., at Dufferin, Toronto. Mass 9 a.m. Thursday at St. Agnes
Church to Prospect Cemetery. Mrs.
REIS, who died at her residence,
was predeceased by husband Henrique, and sons Joseph and Robert.
Surviving are: daughters, Regina
MIRANDA (John), Vivelina
BENCZE,
Marcy LABILE
(Nick,)
Elda
PECE (Leo,) Armanda
PECE (Mike;) son
Samuel REIS
(Carol;) daughters-in-law, Orminda
REIS and Susan
REIS; 19 grandchildren; 7 great-grandchildren. Parking is no
problem - simply enter from Dufferin, just north of Dundas.
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REIS - All Categories in OGSPI
REI surnames continued to 05rei005.htm