JUDD o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2008-03-29 published
BIGGS, "
Jack"
John
Alfred
Peacefully, at University Hospital, L.H.S.C., on Thursday, March 27,
2008, "Jack" John Alfred
BIGGS, at the age of 82 years. Loving
husband of Betty, for over 54 years. Dear father of Wendy
JUDD
and Dennis
BIGGS
(Lin
FINDLAY.) Beloved grandfather of Colleen
and Michelle
BIGGS.
Jack was very active in the Memorial Boys and
Girls Club and worked for many years at Canadian National Railway
(car shop) and
GM Diesel. Friends will be received at the Evans
Funeral Home, 648 Hamilton Rd. (1 block east of Egerton), on
Monday, March 31, 2008 from 10-11 a.m. Funeral service will follow
in the Evans Chapel at 11: 00 a.m. Interment in Grove Cemetery.
Donations to the Memorial Boys and Girls Club would be appreciated
by the family. Online condolences can be expressed at www.evansfh.ca
A tree will be planted as a living memorial to logo Mr.
BIGGS.
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JUDD o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2008-06-17 published
GLOVER,
Audrey
Pearl
Ethel (née
BELL)
At Elgin Manor on Monday, June 16, 2008, Audrey Pearl Ethel
GLOVER
formerly of Aylmer passed away peacefully in her 86th year. Predeceased
by her husband Sydney
GLOVER (2007.) Beloved mother of Linda
CAMERON and husband John of Port Elgin, Frances
CLARKSON and
husband Robert of San Antonio, Texas and Barbara
WATTERWORTH
and husband Duncan of Saint Thomas. Loved by her grandchildren Darek
KINSEY and wife Denise, Ryan
KINSEY and partner Suzanne
TOTH,
Tami KINSEY,
Lisa
PALAZZOLO and husband Nino, Stephen
MARCZENKO
and wife Laurie, Andrea
MARCZENKO and partner Norm
JUDD, Brooke
WATTERWORTH and several great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren.
Sister of Rhea
MOODY of Saint_John and Edna
ROBERTSON and husband
Len of Calgary and the late Lillian
BELL,
Hugh
BELL and Wesley
BELL.
Born in Empress, Alberta on July 8, 1922 to the late Roy
Wesley and Ethel
(SMITH)
BELL while her New Brunswick born parents
were out west for a few years farming. They returned to New Brunswick
and settled in the Bains Corner area outside of Saint_John. Audrey
graduated from the Saint_John General School of Nursing in 1944 and
married Syd in 1945. She was a member of Trinity Anglican Church
and became an accomplished sewer, bridge player and golfer. She
was a devoted wife, mother and grandmother. Friends may call
at the H.A. Kebbel Funeral Home, Aylmer, on Wednesday, 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. where the funeral service will be held on Thursday June 19,
2008 at 1 p.m. Cremation will follow with burial in Orwell Cemetery
at a later date. Donations to the Trinity Anglican Church would
be appreciated. Condolences at kebbelfuneralhome.com.
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JUDGE o@ca.on.middlesex_county.london.london_free_press 2008-03-22 published
JUDGE,
Catherine
Camilla (née
MENZIES)
Of London on Thursday, March 20, 2008 in her 92nd year. Beloved
wife of the late Charles W.
JUDGE and dear daughter of the late
Alexander and Camilla
MENZIES.
Loved mother of Charles and his
wife Carolyn
JUDGE of Saint Thomas. Predeceased by her sister Violet
MENZIES.
Loved grandmother of Daniel and his wife
Tricia
JUDGE
of Saint Thomas and Camilla and her husband Jeffrey
AVISS of Manotick.
Loved great-granny of Connor, Keelyn, Daera, Paige and Quinn.
In keeping with Catherine's wishes, there will be no visitation.
Cremation has already taken place and a private graveside service
will be held at a later date. Donations to the charity of choice
gratefully acknowledged. A tree will be planted in Pinafore Park
in memory of Catherine. McFarlane and Roberts Funeral Home, Lambeth
519-652-2020 in care of arrangements. On-line condolences and
donations are available at www.mcfarlane-roberts.ca
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JUDGE o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2008-07-03 published
JUDGE,
Shirley
Ann (née
HIBBERD)
Social worker, feminist, professor, partner, lover of books,
gardens and road trips. Born September 22, 1938, in Surrey, England.
Died February 4 in Ottawa of colon cancer, aged 69.
By Helen LEVINE and Donna
JOHNSON,
Page L6
In many ways, Shirley
JUDGE came at the world in an old-fashioned
British way. She was independent, courageous and outspoken, but
had a certain personal reserve.
Born
Shirley
Ann
HIBBERD, she was the responsible eldest of four
girls raised in wartime England. Her earliest memories were of
food rations, victory gardens, billeted Canadian soldiers and
hiding in the "bomb shelter" under the stairs when air-raid sirens
sounded.
A top-flight high-school student who dreamed of studying history
at Oxford, Shirley was streamed into social work at the University
of Bristol, a course of study "befitting a woman." Her first
job was in a mining community. By age 23 she was co-ordinating
adoptions for an entire county.
Shirley married in 1963, immigrating with her husband to Ottawa,
where she worked in child welfare at the Children's Aid Society.
The marriage ended after seven years. Shirley formed an enduring
bond with Henry
HOMONICK.
She became a highly respected psychiatric social worker at Ottawa's
Queensway Carleton Hospital. When the head of her department
died suddenly and a less-qualified male colleague was appointed
as interim director, Shirley resigned in protest.
She joined the faculty of Carleton University's school of social
work, teaching and organizing the graduate field placement program.
The school's structural feminist approach fit with her convictions
about social justice and women's equality. On the side she ran
a small counselling practice and acted on the boards of various
women's organizations.
Shirley had a lifelong love of learning. She earned a pilot's
licence, was an expert gardener, took courses in retirement,
belonged to a book club, and travelled. She was a member of a
feminist "envisioning" group - nine women who met regularly for
potluck suppers and discussions both personal and political.
She met her terminal diagnosis with true British grit and humour.
She wanted full information and choices, including the option
to die with dignity. In the end she fought to stay alive, for
in spite of chemo, pain and loss of energy, Shirley found riches
and meaning in the last year of her life. Dying was a kind of
intense road trip in a foreign land, and she lived it fully,
opening up about her fears, joys and hopes in a way she had never
done before.
Her final project was audiotaping her experience of dying for
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Radio. At meetings, at parties,
at chemo sessions or alone in the middle of a sleepless night,
the tape recorder came out. Shirley loved having a project that
challenged her and gave a sense of purpose to her dying.
Helen LEVINE and Donna
JOHNSON are Shirley's Friends.
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