D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNNE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-11-24 published
McCLELLAN,
Lucy
Jane
Born Yonkers, New York, November 24, 1917. Died peacefully in
her 90th year at the Royal Gardens in Peterborough, Ontario.
L.J. is predeceased by her beloved husband Bob, Gordon
ROBERTSON
and a cast of cherished Friends who were a constant source of
delight and strength to her. She is survived by her beloved son
Gordon, daughter-in-law Catherine
DUNNE, grandchildren Carli
and Jaime and their mother, Annemarie
CARERE. L.J. was educated
at The Bishop Strachan School following which she obtained her
Honours Degree in Modern Languages from the University of Toronto
in 1938. She graduated from The Ontario College of Education
in 1960 and taught for many years at Kenner Collegiate in Peterborough.
She was the Headmistress of Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp's School
for Girls in Montreal and did graduate work at New York University
and the University of Western Ontario, receiving her Master's
Degree in English from Western in 1972. She finished her teaching
career in London at Fanshawe Community College in 1976. L.J.
was a person of independent mind and spirit with an impatient
and curious intellect. She was passionate about life, ideas and
the world. On November 15, 2007, she finally let the current
carry her out into the deep, wine dark waters from whence there
is no returning, there to be reunited in love with those who
have gone before and to wait for those who will follow. The family
expresses its heartfelt gratitude to Doctor Tom
BELL and the remarkable
staff at Royal Gardens who appreciated L.J. in a very personal
way and cared for her with real affection and respect. There
will be a private memorial service with details to be announced.
D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNNE - All Categories in OGSPI
DUNNIGAN o@ca.on.simcoe_county.nottawasaga.stayner.stayner_sun 2007-11-21 published
DUNNIGAN,
Carl
Wayne
After a brave battle with cancer, on Saturday, November 17th,
2007, in his 60th year. Loving and supportive Dad to Remy. Beloved
Brother to Lee, Joan, and Robin. Uncle "C" will be sadly missed
by Rob, Tracy, Brent, and Kyle. A funeral service was held on
Tuesday, November 20 at the Ogden Funeral Home, 4164 Sheppard
Ave. East, Agincourt (east of Kennedy Rd.). Cremation has taken
place. Donations to the Canadian Cancer Society would be appreciated.
Page 17
D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNNIGAN - All Categories in OGSPI
DUNNILL o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2007-01-09 published
DUNNILL,
Barbara
Mae
At Errinrung Nursing and Retirement Home in Thornbury on Monday,
January 8, 2007. Barbara Mae
DUNNILL of Thornbury, in her 72nd
year. Daughter of the late Garnet “Sandy” and Arleen
(WICKENS)
DUNNILL. Dear sister of Gerald
DUNNILL, of Thornbury. Predeceased
by a brother, Bradley
DUNNILL.
Fondly remembered by her many
relatives and Friends. The family will receive Friends at the
Ferguson Funeral Home, The Valley Chapel, Thornbury on Wednesday
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. and on Thursday one hour prior to service.
Funeral and committal services, officiated by Pastor Jim
NEALE
of the First Baptist Church in Thornbury will be conducted at
the funeral home on Thursday, January 11, 2007 at 1: 30 p.m. Interment
at Thornbury-Clarksburg Union Cemetery. As your expression of
sympathy, donations to a charity of choice would be appreciated.
D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNNILL - All Categories in OGSPI
DUNNING o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-11-05 published
McCRAE,
Armour
Livingstone
Mayor, City of Welland, Ontario 1953-58
Passed away, on Saturday, November 3, 2007, at Toronto, in his
91st year. Armour is survived by his beloved wife Heather (nee
MONTGOMERY,) and his two loving sons and their families: Armour
and Eydie McCRAE of Guelph and granddaughter Cara (Mike;) James
McCRAE of Barrie, daughter-in-law Brooke
McCRAE and grand_son
Jamie of Brampton; and by his two loving daughters and their
families: Wendy and Bruce
DUNNING of Newmarket and grand-daughters
Abbey and Rebecca; and Donna
CREIGHTON of Toronto; and by his
daughter-in-law Margaret
McCRAE and granddaughter Jessica. Predeceased
by his cherished first wife
Jessie
King
(MAINS)
McCRAE, and by
his son Nichol.
son of the late Nichol and Emily
McCRAE of Welland,
dear brother of Margaret Mccrae
MORO and Rudy
MORO of London.
Predeceased by brothers Alex, James and Charles.
Of all positions aspired to or later achieved, being Mayor of
the City of Welland was always first and foremost in his heart,
and the one for which he wishes most to be remembered. Elected
President of the then Association of Ontario Mayors and Reeves
1956-57. In 1958, as Mayor he presided over the centennial celebrations
of the city, and in that same year was the first to be honoured
in receiving the Citizen of the Year Award for Welland-Crowland.
He was invited by the Queen to attend her Coronation at Westminster
Abbey, and was the recipient of the coronation medal. A well-known
after-dinner and convention speaker, he addressed the British
Commonwealth Parliamentary Association in Belfast, Ireland in
1953. On two occasions he was the speaker representing Canada
(France and the United States also being represented) at the
Annual Flag Day Celebration at Old Fort Niagara, Youngstown,
New York, U.S.A. Armour always promoted a better understanding
between English and French-speaking Canada, and to that end,
was instrumental in "twinning" the city of Welland with the Québec
city of Sorel. Member and Vice-Chairman of the Ontario Municipal
Board 1958-83; seconded from the Board to be Chief Hearing Officer
for the Parkway Belt West hearings in 1976, and seconded again
to be Chief Hearing Officer for the Niagara Escarpment Plan hearings
from 1980-83.
Friends may call on Tuesday, November 6, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
at the R.S. Kane Funeral Home (6150 Yonge Street, at Goulding,
south of Steeles). Funeral service will be held at Willowdale
Presbyterian Church (38 Ellerslie Avenue), on Wednesday, November 7,
2007 at 11 o'clock. Private family interment at Westminster Cemetery.
As an expression of sympathy, donations may be made to the Willowdale
Presbyterian Church, 38 Ellerslie Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M2N 1X8
or to the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, 1929 Bayview
Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M4G 3E8 Condolences www.rskane.ca
R.S. Kane 416-221-1159
D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNNING - All Categories in OGSPI
DUNPHY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2007-01-04 published
Giovanni NOLFI, 74: 'Typical' guy had winning attitude
By Catherine
DUNPHY,
Obituary▼
Writer
Giovanni NOLFI was a happy man. He never had much. He never owned
a car, never even learned to drive.
For years he worked hard at the factory, living frugally. When
he could finally afford the down payment on a house near the
Junction, he paid it off in just seven years.
He loved opera on the radio, his wife's pasta and the Azzurri,
Italy's national soccer team. He urged his sons to study, to
glory in the act of learning -- as he, a Grade 5 dropout, had
never been able to. And his boys did. Between them they have
five university degrees. Nick is a teacher and Jerry an optician
and businessman.
"Every day we told them -- do what we couldn't do," said Elena
NOLFI, his wife of 45 years.
NOLFI grilled his boys on world geography and constantly reminded
them about the great Italians who shaped the world, including
Giovanni Caboto (otherwise known as John Cabot) and Antonio Meucci,
who he always insisted was the inventor of the telephone.
He doted on his six grandchildren, slipping them chocolate bars.
He was their Nonno, a small and fiercely proud fixture at school
concerts and hockey rinks. For them, he even sat through baseball
games, a sport he never could understand.
A classic immigrant story? Yes. But something more.
NOLFI lived by a code: Chi si contenta gode. He who is contented
prospers.
He was the youngest of five children. His mother took ill when
he was young. ("He basically raised himself," said son Nick.)
NOLFI was 13 when World War 2 ended and his two older brothers
came home from fighting in Africa. The family farm couldn't support
them all; the Italian economy was in ruins.
"Canada was his beacon. It was a place of hope and opportunity,"
said his son, Jerry.
He landed in Halifax July 1, 1958. He wasn't impressed with the
train ride to Toronto -- it was definitely not up to the standard
of European trains -- but he found an Italian-speaking haven
in the Trinity-Bellwoods neighbourhood where his sister lived.
He bunked on a cot on her side porch, for which he paid $16 weekly
and washed dishes at Pinocchio's Restaurant for $1 an hour. When
he didn't have the money for bus fare, he walked to the Etobicoke
eatery.
"You hear the stories of the (wealthy developers) Del Zotto and
Bratty families," said Nick
NOLFI. "
But there were (thousands)
of Italians who came to Toronto, and they were like my father.
My dad's story is typical."
He got a job in construction, working from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.,
until one day the boss just disappeared. He never did get paid
for two weeks' work. He was saving every penny so he would have
a place for Elena when she came to Canada. They had met at her
sister's wedding and she waited for him for 3½ years. There was
no money for transatlantic calls and at times she worried. "I
think maybe I should forget him," she recalled. "Maybe he find
a Canadian."
Instead, he found a piecework job in the Alpha Shoe Factory,
working so hard he was soon earning $100 a week. Elena's protective
parents had no intention of allowing her to go to Canada unmarried,
but NOLFI wasn't earning enough to afford a trip home as well
as to set up an apartment for his bride.
Like many other couples of the day, they married by proxy. He
went with his sister to Toronto's Saint Michael's Cathedral September 10,
1961, and Elena stood at the altar in a beautiful church close
to her home in Italy with her brother-in-law at her side.
Elena arrived in Canada the next March with a suitcase full of
cheese that got lost until a man from near her village found
it. He also gave her bread and three oranges. "I've never forgotten
that," she said. But they were on their own in Toronto. "From
the second Elena got here, it was Elena and Giovanni together,
facing all their struggles," said Jill
NOLFI,
Jerry's wife.
They rented rooms in the High Park area, buying their house in
1966. They took in tenants; she babysat.
NOLFI went off every
morning to the shoe factory -- until the late 1960s, when he
lost his job. He worked in other factories until he suffered
a back injury in 1971 that rendered him unable to work for almost
a year.
Elena cooked in a delicatessen to support the family until
NOLFI
could return to work after back surgery. His last job was at
Warden and Eglinton. He would get up every morning at 4: 30 and
ride the Toronto Transit Commission for 90 minutes. He spent
some Saturdays on the couch suffering from excruciating headaches,
but he never complained. Even after he retired at 61, he continued
to get up at 4: 30 a.m. He went for daily walks in his neighbourhood,
stopping people on the street to inquire where they were from.
He was the kind of guy who would get to know everybody sitting
in the doctor's waiting room. The cashiers at No Frills adored
him.
He and his friend, the late Antonio
GRASSO, were neighbourhood
fixtures, talking politics, playing cards, joking, and meeting
and greeting people.
"He loved talking to strangers, hearing their stories," said
Nick.
On a trip to Italy this past May, he chatted with a man as his
son fetched their luggage. When he ran into him later at a restaurant
in Rome, he greeted the man as an old friend. It was his first
trip back to Italy for 30 years. He saw Bugnara, his hometown,
and enjoyed himself at a big family lunch that lasted until midnight.
No one knew he had cancer then. His health declined after he
returned home. He died October 25 at age 74. "He wanted to die
in Canada, it had become his home," said Jerry. "But you could
never take the Italian out of Dad. It was a soul thing."
His wife has placed two flags -- one from each country -- at
his grave.
D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNPHY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.toronto_star 2007-01-11 published
Full life's worth of big-hearted giving
By Catherine
DUNPHY,
Obituary▲ writer, Page R2
People usually have only nice things to say about the departed
some of which might even be true -- but with Kelly
SILVERSTEIN
people always had only nice things to say about him.
He really was just the greatest guy. Always there for kids --
any kid, not simply his own two boys. He was the fundraiser you
could count on. And a coach for eight teams spread through four
different sports.
He was the brother who rescued his fraternity when it teetered
on bankruptcy. The volunteer who always raised the most money
every year at Big Brothers and Big Sisters Bowl for Kids Sake.
The parent who donated the Raptors tickets that pushed the bidding
over the top at the school auction. The Dad who slipped the school
principal a cheque for sports camp for an underprivileged student
he thought particularly talented.
So when SILVERSTEIN died November 20 at age 42 just four days
after he was diagnosed with leukemia, there was a shocked silence
throughout his Hillcrest community.
And people wept when they heard.
There was standing room only at Holy Blossom Temple -- more than
1,200 people attended. The line snaked around the corner, and
the service was 25 minutes late starting.
"You could feel it," said Rabbi John
MOSCOWITZ. "
There was a
sense the very best one of us had just died."
SILVERSTEIN's
Friends and family -- wife
Jill, sons Oliver and
Jonah -- were there, as were his fraternity brothers, his work
colleagues, the teachers from the schools where he coached, kids
from the teams he coached, but also the guy who worked in the
underground parking lot in the building that housed his office.
He was that kind of guy.
"He was a stand-up kind of guy," said Terry
KARIS, his barber
at the Forest Hill Barber Shop. The two talked about more than
the weather when
SILVERSTEIN came in for his camouflage cut --
short on sides, long on top -- to hide the hair thinning on top.
In the fall of 2005,
SILVERSTEIN invited
KARIS to a hockey old-timers
function.
"My son Adam was on the ice with Guy Lafleur. How good is that?"
said KARIS.
It got better, though.
KARIS had forgotten his camera and just
as he and his son were about to leave,
SILVERSTEIN hauled them
over to Lafleur and took their picture together.
"He found a camera somewhere, somehow, because he knew I was
a Montreal fan. And he wasn't even one. He put it in a frame
and gave it to me. I treasure that picture," said
KARIS.
"He was goodness personified," said Michael
KALLES, a fraternity
brother. "He gave his all to everything. He wasn't a guy who
asked you to lift a heavy piano and he carried the piano bench.
He'd be carrying 15 pianos." When they were students at the University
of Western Ontario together, it was
SILVERSTEIN who started Pi
Lambda Phi fraternity.
First they met in a bedroom, then
SILVERSTEIN got the idea they
should rent a house; then he decided they should buy one -- which
they did, choice real estate at the corner of Cheapside and Richmond
Sts. -- because he raised a ton of money.
He started a chapter at the University of Windsor as well.
"Kelly did all the heavy lifting,"
KALLES said. He mobilized
them to raise the $10,000 they needed to retain their charter
when their chapter got in financial trouble. "He would say that
we have to ensure that the frat would be around when our kids
wanted to join."
He was always doing it for kids.
"He really was as fine a person as you would ever meet," said
John HUNTER, principal of Hillcrest public school, where the
SILVERSTEIN sons had attended and their father coached.
He started the basketball team there -- for five years he called
practices for 7: 30 a.m. before he went to work. There was an
offer on the table for him to come back and coach again this
winter.
"He was so kind to the kids. He had a lot of trouble cutting
them (from the team)," Hunter said.
For four years he coached two hockey teams in the North Toronto
house league. For even longer he also coached two soccer teams,
as well as baseball and basketball teams. Basketball was his
favourite sport, possibly because he was six-foot-four.
He'd take his teams out for chicken wings; he'd sweep his sons'
Friends up along on their family outings.
"Lunch became dinner and then supper. It was always one more
invitation. That was the way it was with the whole family. They
were a team," said Elaine
LESNIAK, a single mom whose son, Ari,
14, had been Oliver's best friend until they went to different
schools.
That never stopped
SILVERSTEIN. "At the bus when the kids were
going off to camp, Kelly always made sure to give Ari a big hug,"
she said.
"Every time you are with him, you want to be with him more. You
are just drawn to him," said Ari.
Maybe he was just a big kid in some ways. He'd take the family
and their Friends to a Baskin-Robbins ice cream place, seat them
at the window and pay the kids $1 for every person they could
get to wave to them. "It was our job to get people to wave, in
a freezing cold night," Jill recalled.
SILVERSTEIN attacked life, reading three newspapers daily, tearing
out articles to send off to Friends. "We all got them with the
note: FYI, K.S.," said Bonnie
BLONDER,
Jill's best friend
since childhood.
As he was often first in the office of Davis + Henderson cheque
makers, he'd put on the coffee.
"Kelly just wanted to make sure everyone was happy," said Jill
with a smile.
He was the youngest of five children of Sonny and Marlene
SILVERSTEIN,
of Silverstein's Bakery. "He was always being picked up and cuddled,"
said his only sister Robin
SILVERSTEIN-
EISEN.
The family lived in a cul-de-sac near Lawrence and Marlee in
a house with a basketball hoop out front that was the centre
of activity for all the neighbourhood kids.
SILVERSTEIN often
took his own family back there.
"He called it our 'drive-bys,'" said Jill. "He'd always tell
the kids who lived in the houses. He wanted us to know about
the good things."
In 1998, SILVERSTEIN had returned to Toronto after working in
Atlanta when his mother was diagnosed with cancer. He postponed
finding work to be with her. It was as if he pushed himself to
get in a full life's worth of giving.
"This was just his thing -- to do for others," said family friend
Barbara SILVERSTEIN (no relation.)
"He was so decent. I have never met anyone like him."
"I can't tell you how many people phoned us to volunteer because
they heard about us from Kelly," said Heather
SPROULE, executive
director of Big Brothers and Sisters.
The day after
SILVERSTEIN died, her office received a donation
from him via the United Way. "I had no idea that beyond all that
he was doing for us, that in his usual quiet fashion he made
an annual donation through the United Way."
Next month there will be an award in
SILVERSTEIN's name at the
2007 Bowl for Kids Sake.
"We thought about it for less than a second,"
SPROULE said. "It
will be a fundraising award, which at the least is very fitting."
D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNPHY - All Categories in OGSPI
DUNSEITH o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2007-01-11 published
DUNSEITH,
Peggy
A. "
Peg"
Peacefully at Stratford General Hospital on Tuesday, January 9,
2007. Peggy A. (Peg)
DUNSEITH age 81 years, formerly of Jones
St. E., Saint Marys. Beloved wife of the late J. Delbert (Del)
DUNSEITH (1995.) Loving mother of Andy and his wife
Barb
DUNSEITH
of Penticton, British Columbia and Jeff
DUNSEITH of Ingersoll
and his wife the late Mary
(DUNSEITH.1998.)
Loving grandmother
of Jenni, Mike and Corrie, Melissa, Lee Ann and Amanda and great-grandmother
of Ellie Mae, Olivia, Cale and Cole. Sadly missed by many nieces
and nephews. Resting at the L.A. Ball Funeral Chapel, 7 Water
St. N., Saint Marys on Thursday 7-9 p.m. The funeral service will
be held at Saint_James Anglican Church (65 Church St. S.) on Friday,
January 12, 2007 at 1 p.m. with the Reverend Doctor Dalice
SIM officiating.
Interment will follow in Saint Marys Cemetery. In her memory donations
to Saint Marys Memorial Hospital would be appreciated as expressions
of sympathy.
D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNSEITH - All Categories in OGSPI
DUNSKY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-09-07 published
DUNSKY,
Menachem
With sadness we announce the death of Menachem
DUNSKY, who passed
on September 4th, 2007; a wonderful father and grandfather, pugnacious
and pioneering political strategist, accomplished painter, avid
skier, Chinese chef, and contributor to the Montreal Jewish Community.
He considered his greatest accomplishment the raising of his
three sons, in partnership with his former wife Liliane. Menachem's
wit, spirit, and family devotion will be remembered by his children
Ron, Ilan and Dan; sister Zipporah; grandchildren Ben, David,
Gillian, Sarah and Rebecca' daughters-in-law Nancy, Isabelle
and Carolyn; nieces Noni, Daphna and Elana; Harry
STILMAN, and
many other family members. Menachem was born July 5, 1930 in
Montreal, son of Shimshon and Esther (née
STILMAN)
DUNSKY. He
attended the Jewish Folks' Schule, which his father helped to
found. After obtaining a B.A. at Concordia, he pursued graduate
studies in New York at New York University and the Parson's School
of Design. In 1960 he founded Dunsky Advertising, a force in
Canadian political advertising and public relations. For two
decades it was the agency of record for the New Democratic Party
of Canada. He was often quoted on political, media and Jewish
issues, and was a founding member of the Trans-Canada Advertising
Network and chairman of the Sadie Bronfman Center. In retirement,
he lived on Lac-des-Chats, St. Sauveur, where he painted pictures
inspired by the Old Testament, which were publicly exhibited
in Montreal. Funeral service at Paperman and Sons, 3888 Jean
Talon W., on Friday September 7 at 1 p.m. Burial at the Farband
Labour Zionist Association Section, Kehal Israel Cemetery, D.D.O.
Shiva immediately following at 870 Hartland, Montreal. Donations
may be made to the Shimshon and Esther Dunsky Scholarship Fund
at the Jewish People's and Peretz Schools. Tel. 514-731-3843.
D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNSKY - All Categories in OGSPI
DUNSWORTH o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-12-27 published
WHITE/WHYTE,
George
Augustine "
Skip"
Passed away peacefully at Four Teddington Park Retirement Home,
Toronto, on December 25, 2007, in his 95th year. Beloved husband
of the late Catherine ('Kaye')
WHITE/WHYTE (née
MacNEIL.)
Lovingly
remembered by his son Graham (Cathy
KINLIN,) and by grandchildren
Katie, Heather and Patrick. A favourite uncle to Donna
BRASSET-
SHEARER
the late John
BRASSET; Ron, Jim and Paul
BRASSET; Eleanor
MOORE,
Anne DUNSWORTH;
Pam
SILVERMAN, Monica
GRENIER, Ian and Patricia
MacNEIL.
George was predeceased by his two sisters, Phyllis and
Mary GENEVIEVE ('Toots'.) He was born in Sydney, Nova Scotia
and was educated at Sydney Academy, St. Francis Xavier University
and Nova Scotia Technical College. After graduating from Tech'
in 1935 with a degree in civil engineering, George worked for
the Nova Scotia Government and for National Parks of Canada,
building the Cabot Trail. During the war he was involved in naval
construction projects in several Nova Scotia ports. Following
the war, he joined the Foundation Company of Canada, where he
worked for many years on major engineering projects throughout
Canada and the United States before retiring in 1977. He was
a long-time, active parishioner of St. Anselm's Church in Leaside.
The family extends heartfelt thanks to the staff at Four Teddington
Place who care for him so well in his final years and to great
friend Jim Bouley for all his support. Friends may visit at the
Rosar-Morrison Funeral Home and Chapel, 467 Sherbourne Street (south
of Wellesley), on Friday from 7-9 p.m. Funeral Mass at Rosar-Morrison
Chapel, 9: 30 a.m. Saturday. If desired, donations may be made
to the St. Vincent de Paul Society.
D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNSWORTH - All Categories in OGSPI
DUNWOODY o@ca.on.grey_county.artemesia.flesherton.the_flesherton_advance 2007-09-19 published
ZINN,
Audrey▼
Norene▼ (née
BAKER)
Audrey Norene
ZINN (née
BAKER.)
After a short illness, peacefully
with her family by her side, at London's Victoria Hospital on
Wednesday, September 12, 2007 at 74 years of age. Best friend
and partner of Fred for 54 years. Loving mother of Pat (Ric)
DUNWOODY of Orton and Barb (Kim)
OSBORNE of Shallow Lake and
devoted grandmother of Codey, Caly and Carley. Dearest sister
to Bruce (Noreen)
BAKER of Collingwood and Shirley (Ken)
BROWN
of Oakville. Norene led a fun-filled life and will be missed
by all who knew her. The family will receive Friends at the Fawcett
Funeral Home, Flesherton on Thursday, September 20 from 2: 00-4:00 and
7: 00-9:00 p.m. A celebration of Norene's life will be held on
Friday, September 21 at 1: 00 p.m. at Eugenia United Church (Canrobert
Street in Eugenia). Interment will be at a later date. In lieu
of flowers donations to the Eugenia United Church would be gratefully
appreciated.
Page 3
D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNWOODY o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2007-09-15 published
ZINN,
Audrey▲
Norene▲
Zinn (née
BAKER)
After a short illness, peacefully with her family by her side,
at London's Victoria Hospital on Wednesday, September 12th, 2007
at 74 years of age. Best friend and partner of Fred for 54 years.
Loving mother of Pat (Ric)
DUNWOODY of Orton and Barb (Kim)
OSBORNE
of Shallow Lake and devoted grandmother of Codey, Caly and Carley.
Dearest sister to Bruce (Noreen)
BAKER of Collingwood and Shirley
(Ken) BROWN of Oakville. Norene led a fun-filled life and will
be missed by all who knew her. The family will receive Friends
at the Fawcett Funeral Home, Flesherton on Thursday, September 20
from 2: 00-4:00 and 7:00-9:00 p.m. A celebration of Norene's life
will be held on Friday, September 21 at 1: 00 p.m. at Eugenia
United Church (Canrobert Street in Eugenia). Internment will
be at a later date. In lieu of flowers donations to the Eugenia
United Church would be gratefully appreciated.
D... Names DU... Names DUN... Names Welcome Home
DUNWOODY - All Categories in OGSPI