The Glone and Mail - 01.08.2019

(Darren Dugan) #1

B16 O THEGLOBEANDMAIL| THURSDAY,AUGUST1,2019


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DEATHS

PETERBRIANEDWARDS
March 19, 1931
July 25, 2019

After a long and full life, it is
with much sadness we advise of
the sudden death of Peter Brian
Edwards on July 25, 2019. He will
be sadly missedby his wife and
best friend of 46 years Patricia
Carol Edwards(née Yeargin),and
by his manycousins and friends
in North Americaand the United
Kingdom.
Peter was born on March 19, 1931
in Great Crosby,UK, and attended
MerchantTaylors’School,Crosby.
When his draft notice arrived,he
volunteeredto go to Korea with
the FirstRoyal Tank Regiment
whichas part of the UNforce saw
activecombat. At the endof his
tour Peterreturnedto the U.K.
and was assignedto the 13th Bnof
the Parachute Regiment. He then
took a market research position
with AC Neilsen in Oxford. Peter
emigratedto Canada in 1954 and
worked at Simpson’sDepartment
Store, Cunard Steamship Lines
and The Dominion Bureau of
Statistics.In 1959, he began his
university degree at McMaster
Universitybut after one year he
was hired by Proctor and Gamble
and was sent to Cincinnatito
the computer market research
department. Peter’s next move
was to attendToronto Teachers’
College after which he taught
elementary, middle and later,
after receiving a degree from
York University, high school. He
became a guidance counsellor at
WestviewCentennial Secondary
School in NorthYork until his
retirement in 1989.
Peter did extensivevolunteer
work. He was the Presidentof
the Royal Heraldry Societyof
Canada, and a founder of the
Toronto branch of the Royal
Heraldry Society. He was in the
St John Ambulance Brigade,
Uniform Divisionfor eight years
and served for two of those years
as the ProvincialCommissioner
of Ontario. He established the
archives at theRoyal Canadian
Yacht Club and worked as the
Honourary Archivist for ten years.
Vexillology, the study of flags,
was his hobby and he established
the Burgee Data Archives. He was
a member of the North American
VexillogicalAssociation,NAVA,
and the international flag
organizationFIAV. He won the
Driver award from NAVA. He
travelled around the world to
attend their conferences. In the
last two years he has been an
enthusiasticcontributorto the
digital book Flags of the World
and has submittedover 300
articles on flags, mostly yacht club
burgees. His library is now at the
Naval Marine Archive, in Picton.
He retained his UKconnections
as a member of the Honourable
Artillery Company, The Cavalry
and Guards Club, and as a
Liveryman of the Merchant
Taylors’ Company. In Canada, he
joined the Queen’sYork Rangers
(1st American Regiment) and later
the Governor General’s Horse
Guards as a Captain (CD). He was a
life member of the Royal Canadian
Military Institute.
Peter was a member of the Whitby
Yacht Club and a Life Member of
the Royal Canadian Yacht Club. He
and Patricia enjoyed sailing Lake
Ontario, the North Channel, and
once to Martha’s Vineyard. They
sailed in Conneda, San Remo,
Nova, Unicorn III and Pamlico.
At Peter’s request there will be
no formal service or Celebration
of his life.
Donations would be gratefully
accepted in memory of Peter to
the Toronto Humane Society or
the charity of your choice.

DEATHS

VLADIMIRLOSNER

On Wednesday, July 31, 2019
at TorontoGeneral Hospital.
Beloved husband of Ina
Losner. Loving father of
Daniel Branescu. At
Benjamin’s Park Memorial
Park, 2401 SteelesAvenue
West (3 lights west of
Dufferin)forserviceonFriday,
August 2, 2019 at 11:30a.m.
IntermentCommunitySection
of PardesChaim Cemetery,
11818 Bathurst Street,
Vaughan,Ontario. Memorial
donationsmay be madeto
the Princess Margaret Cancer
Foundation,416-946-6560.

FUNERALSERVICES

WEDNESDAY
BURNS, Sylvia-12:00BathurstLawnMemorial
Park.
EIDLITZ, Paula - 1:30 BathurstLawn Memorial
Park.
THURSDAY
KOSKIE, Rochelle - Check back Wednesdayfor
servicetime.
FRIDAY
LOSNER,Vladimir-11:30Chapel.
ROTENBERG,Tina-12:00HolyBlossomCem-
BrimleyRd.
SHIVA
CAPLAN,DavidRichard-35DoonareeDrive.
NEINSTEIN,Stanley-4ChilternHillRoad.
LAREDO,Nissim-619RushtonRoad.
GREENBERG, Carole - 22 Shallmar Blvd., Unit
410.
EINI, Channa - 76RideauDrive,RichmondHill,
Ontario.
KOSKIE,Rochelle-161BeechwoodAvenue.
UNVEILING
SUNDAY
PARDESSHALOMCEMETERY
Belmont,Anna-11:30am-TempleHarZion.
2401SteelesAve.W. 416-663-9060
Allservicedetailsareavailable
onourwebsite
DONATIONSONLINE
http://www.benjamins.ca
BENJAMIN’SLANDMARKMONUMENTS
YADVASHEMATLANDMARK
3429BathurstSt. (416)780-0635

DEATHS

BRUCEERNESTBRYMER
("Derbs")

Born September 15, 1946,
diedJuly27,2019.
A true sportsman,salesman
and lovinghusband to Margo
Newman,father of Matthew
and Lee, brotherof Bill and
Peter, beloved uncle, g reat-
uncle, and friendto so many.
Bruce’s positive attitude,
engagingmanner, and ability
to talk to anyone about
anything,are attributesof his
true character we will all
rememberandholdsodear.
Aprivatefamilyservicewillbe
held at Mt. Pleasant
Cemetery. A Celebrationof
Life,tohonouronewholived
sowell,butalltoobriefly,will
be held at Weston Golf&
Curling Club, 50 St. Phillips
Road, Etobicoke on August 7
from4-7p.m.
Charitabledonations may be
made in honour of Bruce to
the Reitman Centre for
Alzheimer’sSupport at Mt.
Sinai Hospital or the Dotsa
Bitove Wellness Academy
(UHN).

AUGUSTUSJOSEPHDEFREITAS

PassedawaySunday,July28,


  1. Husband, father,
    grandfather,greatgrandfather
    and friend to all. Born August
    27, 1924 in Georgetown
    British Guiana (Guyana), one
    of six childrenof Jacinto and
    Carmelita De Freitas Phillipe.
    Predeceased by his beloved
    wife of 59 years Therese
    (Gonsalves). Gus will be
    greatly missed by his
    children: Marcelle, Trevor
    (Mary), Julie (Nick),and Peter
    (LeighAnn);hisgrandchildren
    Scott, Kevin, Jennifer, Sonia,
    Christopher, Emily, Amanda,
    Tim, Matthew, Sophie, Olivia
    and Christian; and great-
    grandchildren Marcus,
    Victoria, Mackenzie, Oliver,
    William, Evelyn, Sabrina and
    Charlotte;his sister Angela,
    brotherClaudeandnumerous
    nephewsandnieces.Guslived
    a rich and meaningful life
    filledwithfamily,friends,hard
    work and years of public
    service through Civitan
    International. Gus lived
    through thegreatdepression,
    lost an older brother to the
    second world war, and
    arrivedinCanadain1962with
    Therese to builda better life
    for their children. Gus
    exemplifiedperseveranceand
    dedication to his family, his
    faith, and his community.
    Unfailingly kind, funny, and
    quick witted, Gus was
    independentuntil the very
    end.Visitationwillbeheldat1
    p.m.onFriday,August2ndat
    the R.S. Kane Funeral Home
    6150 Yonge St, North York,
    followed by a Celebration of
    Life at 2 p.m. A reception will
    take place at R.S. Kane
    Funeral Home. In lieu of
    flowers, please make
    donations to Guyana
    Christian Charities at
    http://www.gcccanada.org.
    Condolences may be left at
    http://www.rskane.ca.


R.S.Kane
416-221-1159

3429BathurstStreet 416-780-0596

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O


livier Rodrigue is fine with
the weight of a hockey na-
tion resting on his lean
shoulders. In truth, it’s a respon-
sibility he’s always craved.
“I embrace the challenge,” the
19-year-old goalie from Chicouti-
mi, Que., said. “I want to be the
guy saving everyone.”
Rodrigue is one of four Cana-
dian netminders hoping to turn
heads at this week’s World Junior
Summer Showcase in suburban
Detroit. The event is an opportu-
nity for Hockey Canada’s man-
agement and coaching staff to
not only evaluate, but get to
know a group of 37 players that
will provide the bulk of the coun-
try’s roster at the 2020 world ju-
nior hockey championships.
And with no returning goalies
from last year’s team, the ones
taking part in the practice ses-
sions and games against the Unit-
ed States, Finland and Sweden
know jobs are there for the taking
in an open competition ahead of
December’s main selection
camp.
“I have to bring everything,”
added Rodrigue, selected 62nd
over all by Edmonton at the 2018
NHL draft. “It forces us to be at
our best.”
Canada was backstopped by
Michael DiPietro and Ian Scott at
last year’s world juniors in Van-
couver and Victoria – an event
that saw the hosts finish a stun-
ning sixth after a late collapse
against eventual-champion Fin-
land in the under-20 tourna-
ment’s quarter-finals.
“It’s very motivating just to be
here,” Colten Ellis of Port Haw-
kesbury, N.S., said. “I want to
prove to them I’m able and capa-
ble of playing on this team.”
Canadian goalie coach Jason
LaBarbera said elite skills are one
thing, but getting things right be-

tween the ears is equally impor-
tant in a short tournament.
Unlike an NHL scout trying to
project a career 10 years down the
road, he needs his No. 1 guy razor-
sharp for 11 days in the Czech Re-
public. “Your starter has to play
five or six really good games,”
said LaBarbera, a veteran of 16
pro seasons. “That’s one thing
about being a Canadian goalie –
you’re never expected to steal
one.
“It’s about making big saves at
the right time.”
Hockey Canada works on the
mental side with all its players
from a young age, but focuses
heavily on the goalies in hopes
that they can turn the page quick-
ly when the stakes are high. If
they can’t, it could spell disaster.
“You might have the most
skilled, most talented goalie,” La-
Barbera said. “If he’s not feeling
good about himself and his
game, he’s going to struggle.”
Apart from the fact that two
new goalies will don the Maple
Leaf, the battle is an interesting
one on another front, with three
of the four in camp coming from
the Quebec Major Junior Hockey
League. A province with a rich
goalie tradition, but not so much
in recent years – Canada hasn’t
had a netminder from the
QMJHL at the world juniors since
Zach Fucale in 2014 and 2015, and
before that Olivier Roy in 2011.
Rodrigue (Moncton Wildcats),
who has the most international
experience, and Ellis (Rimouski
Océanic) are joined by Alexis
Gravel (Halifax Mooseheads),
while Hunter Jones of the OHL’s
Peterborough Petes is the lone
netminder based outside Que-
bec. Zachary Émond (Rouyn-
Noranda Huskies) made the
showcase roster, but returned
home for unspecified reasons
without stepping on the ice.
Shawn Bullock, Hockey Cana-
da’s director of men’s teams, said
having that many goalies from
the QMJHL is just a coincidence.
“We want the best players, we
want the best goalies,” he said.
“We’re not worried about bound-
aries.”

THECANADIANPRESS

OlivierRodrigue,makingasaveonTuesday,hasthemostinternational
experienceoutofthefourCanadiangoaliesatthissummer’sworld
juniorshowcaseinPlymouth,Mich.DENNISPAJOT/THECANADIANPRESS

Canadiangoalies


hopetoturnheadsat


worldjuniorshowcase


Theunder-20teamis
searchingforsharp,new
talentafterlastyear’s
collapseagainstFinland

JOSHUACLIPPERTON
PLYMOUTH,MICH.

FIFA Council has unanimously
approved expanding the Wom-
en’s World Cup from 24 teams to
32 for 2023, and has reopened bid-
ding to stage the tournament, but
made no mention of changing
prize money.
FIFA said Wednesday the deci-
sion was made remotely.
Nine national associations had
expressed interest in playing host
and were due to submit their for-
mal bids by Oct. 4: Argentina,
Australia, Brazil, Bolivia, Colom-
bia, Japan, New Zealand, South
Africa and South Korea, which
could bid jointly with North Ko-
rea
Under the new timetable, any
national association has until
December to make a bid. FIFA ex-
pects a bid evaluation report next
April and a decision the next
month.
FIFA’s statement made no
mention of prize money. The
United States received US$4-mil-
lion of a US$30-million prize pool
for winning the World Cup on July
7, a small percentage of the
US$38-million from a US$400-
million pool that France got for
winning the 2018 men’s World
Cup. FIFA has increased prize
money for the 2022 men’s World
Cup to US$440-million and FIFA
president Gianni Infantino said
July 5 that he was proposing FIFA

double the women’s prize money
to US$60-million for 2023. After
the U.S. won the women’s final in
Lyon, France, fans in the stadium
chanted “Equal Pay!”
Infantino said in a statement
that “this is the time to keep the
momentum going and take con-
crete steps to foster the growth of
women’s football” and “it means
that, from now on, dozens more
member associations will orga-
nize their women’s football pro-
gram knowing they have a realis-
tic chance of qualifying.”
“We have a duty to do the
groundwork and strengthen
women’s football development
infrastructure across all confeder-
ations,” he said.
The Women’s World Cup start-
ed with 12 teams in 1991, expand-
ed to 16 in 1999 and 24 in 2015. The
men’s World Cup was played with
13-16 teams from 1930-78, 24 from
1982-94 and has been contested
with 32 since. It is due to expand
to 48 in 2026, when the tourna-
ment is co-hosted by the U.S.,
Mexico and Canada.
Infantino also has proposed a
Women’s Club World Cup, creat-
ing a women’s world league and
doubling FIFA’s investment in
women’s soccer in the next four-
year cycle to US$1-billion.

THEASSOCIATEDPRESS

FIFAtoexpandWomen’s


WorldCupto32teamsin2023

Free download pdf