Jersey Number 22Da'Marion AlbericPosition: Running BackHeight: 5-10Weight: 180Class: FreshmanHometown: West Palm Beach
Fla.High School: AtlanticBioStatsMediaBioBioStatsMedia
• An On3 and 247Sports three-star recruit out of Atlantic High School
• A two-year varsity letterwinner as a running back
• Tallied 1,452 rushing yards on 198 carries
• Had 37 receptions for 279 yards in his career with three touchdowns
• Rushed for 598 yards on 108 carries with eight touchdowns as a senior
• Three-time MaxPreps Player of the Game as a senior
going 2-0 in the district for the second straight year
• Totaled 111 yards on 20 receptions with two touchdowns as well as a junior
• Recipient of the 2022 Courage Award in Palm Beach County
• Helped his team to the second round of Florida’s 3M District 9 playoffs after going 8-4 in 2022
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unfortunate circumstance and his own bloody-mindedness condemned Magnard’s music to obscurity
If your immediate reaction on seeing this title was ‘Albéric Magnard who?’
can be attributed to no one more reasonably than to the composer himself
On the lines of the rebuke aimed by the Soviet authorities at Prokofiev
that ‘he trod on the throat of his own song’
one may say that Magnard trod on the toes of his own career
and did so with a truly remarkable persistence and ingenuity
Most composers demonstrate some affinity at least between their own characters and those of their music
but in Magnard’s case the link is unusually clear: the message runs ‘music is a vocation: there is no room for compromise.’ So it was in his life
One doesn’t need to be a trained psychologist to trace such determination to his early years
His world was turned upside down in April 1869 when his mother
jumped out of an upper window and died a few days later
was on his way up the ladder to being eventually editor of the prestigious journal Le Figaro
but was himself given to taking a gloomy view of the human race and
was becoming feared for his ability to prick bubbles and nose out scandals
His watchword was ‘truth’ – ‘la vérité’ – the personification of which was to figure years later in Albéric’s opera Guercœur
in nature and in his piano lessons with Charles de Savignac
But like so many fathers in musical history
Francis insisted his son had a conventional education and should then train as a lawyer
The only sign of anything unusual in Albéric was his enjoyment of his mandatory military service
in which he rose to the rank of sub-lieutenant
But, as for many French musicians of his time, Wagner was waiting round the corner: the impact of performances of Parsifal and Tristan and Isolde at Bayreuth in 1886 could not be gainsaid
Magnard joined Théodore Dubois’s Conservatoire class as an ‘auditeur’
From here he moved on to classes with Massenet, Wagner’s Die Meistersinger
and finally the tutelage of Vincent d’Indy
who from 1888 was to remain his guiding star
Varèse was to stigmatise d’Indy’s teaching as ‘bigoted’
but Magnard found in him the assurance he needed
and also an emphasis on fugal writing that was to bear vigorous fruit
Albéric also had warm words for the Chanteurs de Saint Gervais and their promotion of Renaissance polyphony
pointing out the shameful fact that there was no reliable edition of the composer’s music
found an immediate response from the publishers Durand
after which the courting couple are left haplessly (and syncopatedly) searching for an exit
and in the finale a plethora of dotted rhythms
duly soothed by a more flowing second idea
This was his last score before the defining event on 18 November 1894 of his father’s death
It had certainly been a difficult relationship
An answer was also supplied to the question of whether Papa’s influence had eased Albéric’s way in the musical world – the very possibility of which the son had always resented
The answer of the musical world was a decisive ‘yes’ and took the form not of antagonism but
Between 1895 and 1902 Magnard’s music was played just twice in public concerts
and for the 1900 International Exhibition was totally ignored
One can perhaps forgive the sidelining of the Chant funèbre
both of which are perhaps overlong for their material
benefits from his declared intention ‘to clean up my style and technique’
Here he rations the counterpoint which had tended to clutter up textures
and now ideas flow far more easily from one to another
At the same time we are aware of his creed that ‘to create works that last
even if there must always be one dominating key round which the others are disposed
By 1899 he realised that musical oblivion called for a radical response. Taking a leaf out of Berlioz’s book
on 14 May he conducted an orchestral concert entirely of his own music
with the symphony being especially praised
even if the cost equalled the annual budget of a modest bourgeois family
But then the clouds descended once more… At least he was consoled by a happy marriage (Julia felt his rejections far more keenly than he did) and by a warm relationship with the musical powers in Brussels
most notably with the violinist Eugène Ysaÿe
While Albert Carré, the director of the Opéra-Comique, was rejecting his opera Guercœur as being too static (true, but it contains some magnificent music), Ysaÿe gave the first performance of Magnard’s Violin Sonata, one of his best works. But the date, at the Salle Pleyel in Paris, was 2 May 1902 – just two days after the premiere of Debussy’s Pelléas et Mélisande
In 1898 Magnard had been one of the first to congratulate Emile Zola on publishing his incendiary letter to the president
proclaiming the innocence of Alfred Dreyfus
the Jewish army captain wrongly imprisoned for espionage
whose structure follows that of André Chénier’s poem of the same title: the violent
dramatic first section depicts the struggles of the oppressed
glorifies Justice (it was the first orchestral work played in public in Paris at the Liberation in 1944)
The work ends with a Franck-style chorale and with just a hint of Tristan and Isolde in the final plagal cadence. But in general Wagnerian influence is surprisingly scarce. Magnard has a highly individual way of moving from one musical key to another
but without the slithering chromatics which bedevilled so many of his French contemporaries
If tradition weighed too heavily on him in his String Quartet
there’s more light and air in the Piano Trio he finished in 1905
with a few delicate Fauréan touches to the harmony
where he repelled all friendly advances from the locals
producing his own scores from 1902 onwards
but omitting basic actions such as making sure scores were available for performances
Increasingly, too, he refers in his letters to his works as ‘mes ordures’ (‘my filth’). Well might Chausson’s wife say that ‘Magnard could be a good friend if only he weren’t so disagreeable.’ On which front
his behaviour over the rehearsals for his opera Bérénice at the Opéra-Comique in December 1911 takes the proverbial biscuit: not liking the soprano lead offered him
he engaged another soprano without consulting anybody
all the time accusing the director’s wife of trying to sabotage the whole enterprise
though there may be a tape somewhere in the vaults of French Radio
When the Germans arrived in the first days of September 1914
he sent his wife and two daughters away to safety and
remained in his manoir to await the invaders
René was returning there just as the Germans arrived
crouching behind the bathroom shutters with his gun
may have thought they were about to shoot René
They responded by setting fire to the manoir
D’Indy’s response to the news was laconic: ‘C’était bien lui’
what does survive from his last years is the magnificent Fourth Symphony
it marks the high point of his skill both as structuralist and orchestrator
it really ought to supply the primary material for a re-evaluation of this remarkable composer – saving him
He championed the idea that severe obesity – far from being a “moral failing” – is a physiological and psychological disease requiring medical intervention
From 1990 to 2007 he was a consultant surgeon and lecturer at St George’s hospital and medical school in Tooting
patient-centric care and surgical innovation
An early convert to minimally invasive procedures that could reduce recovery time and pain
he was the first person in the UK to offer totally extraperitoneal (TEP) hernia repair as a day surgery
Alberic ultimately specialised in weight-loss surgery and in 2000 founded the current bariatric service at St George’s hospital
In this field he worked alongside his wife
He regularly appeared on radio and television to argue that severe obesity is a devastating disease compounded by stigma
and that sufferers cannot be cured by simple “willpower”
His innovative approach to treatment combined surgical intervention and continued psychological and dietetic assistance
In 2007 Alberic set up the bariatric unit at University College hospital, London, remaining its director until 2009. He was also president of the British Obesity and Metabolic Surgery Society (2010-13) and later undertook medico-legal work as an expert witness
He was born Alberic Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes in Bakewell
the youngest of five children of Sir Maurice Fiennes
managing director of Davy and United Engineering Company
Alberic was educated at the Lyceum Alpinum Zuoz
He also became an expert skier and enjoyed this sport for life
He started a degree in zoology at the University of Zurich before enrolling at St Bartholomew’s hospital medical college in London
During this time he also flew light aircraft with the RAF volunteer reserve
He passed the examinations for the Royal College of Surgeons in 1978
winning the Hallett prize as the highest-scoring candidate in the country
As a lead surgeon during the 1988 Clapham Junction rail crash
he recognised the need for improved training in trauma care among surgeons in the UK and helped establish advanced trauma life support (ATLS) training for them
Alberic was committed to lifelong care of his patients, who valued his clarity, focus and empathy
His colleagues described him as extremely trustworthy; sensitive to the needs of others; quick to provide help where needed; and an outstanding teacher to many surgeons in the UK
a talented craftsman and a devoted Guardian reader
He supported the charity Freedom from Torture from 1996 until his death
and was passionate about community welfare and politics
Albéric Joseph Rodolphe Marie Robert Ghislain O'Kelly de Galway (17 May 1911
Brussels) was a Belgian chess Grandmaster (1956)
an International Correspondence Chess Grandmaster (1962)
and the third ICCF World Champion in correspondence chess (1959–1962)
He is one of five Grandmasters who were born on this day in Chess History
O'Kelly won the Belgian championships thirteen times between 1937 and 1959
having finished first at the 1947 European Zonal tournament at Hilversum
tied for first place with Pirc at Teplice Sanov
O'Kelly finished first at São Paulo ahead of Eliskases and Rossetto
O'Kelly finished first at the round-robin Utrecht 1961 with 6½/9
he was awarded the Belgian decoration of the Golden Palm of the Order of the Crown
for his chess successes and the distinction he had brought to the nation
O'Kelly was made an International Arbiter in 1962 and was the chief arbiter of the world championship matches between Tigran Petrosian and Boris Spassky in 1966 and 1969
he was the arbiter for the Moscow Karpov–Korchnoi match
he took lessons from the legendary Akiba Rubinstein
an Irish-born British army officer who was granted a nobility title in 1720 in what was then the Austrian Low Countries
he was often addressed as 'Count O'Kelly de Galway'
for example on the front cover of his 1965 book about Petrosian
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0.04);}@media (hover: none){.css-w5p45x:hover{background-color:transparent;}}.css-w5p45x.Mui-disabled{color:rgba(0
0.26);}PrintShareSaveThe death has occurred of
Aer Lingus and Irish Army Aircorps '55 class of Apprentices
suddenly but peacefully at Beaumont Hospital
Most dearly loved and treasured by his children Eric David and Heather
Derinn's husband Luke and Joseph's partner Catherine and great grandchildren Lily
Deeply missed by his nephews and nieces and close friends
Recently in the care of TLC Carton Nursing Home
Donations if desired to the Alzheimer’s Society of Ireland (Donation box in the Church)
Funeral Service.css-h76uj{display:inherit;margin-right:-4px;margin-left:8px;}Cremation / BurialDate Published:
If you would like to make a donation to the chosen charity please click on the button below.
memorial mass or anniversary for a Loved One?You can now create a family notice on RIP.ie to remember your loved one
Abigail Brooks Sprauve and Alma Brooks; and his brother
and Jaynelle Hendrickson; and other family members and friends too numerous to mention
The first viewing will be from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m.
at Dan Hurley Home for Funerals and Cremation Center of St
A second viewing will be from 9:45 to 10:30 a.m.
Interment will follow at Brookman Cemetery
Arrangements are under the care of Dan Hurley Home for Funerals and Cremation Center of St
Family and friends may offer their support by sharing a special memory or message by going to www.hurleydavisfuneralhome.com
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Esquire Middle East – The Region’s Best Men’s Magazine
Home | News | Alberic Leman
What’s your favourite wardrobe item?Definitely shoes
Especially a pair of moccasins; they combine comfort and style all in one
How would you describe your style?Casual yet chic with a hint of classic
What does your style say about you?Generally
yet I have a passion for the finer things and this is reflected in my personal style
I believe that everyone should stay true to themselves
This is not to say that I don’t follow the latest trends
I choose pieces that accurately reflect my age and style
What style advice can you give our readers?Be comfortable in what you wear
so it is important to be comfortable in what you are wearing
From working for one of the most renowned men’s luxury brands
I have also found that investing in timeless classical items is essential as they will last year after year in your closet
What is the best style advice you’ve ever been given?When I was a teenager in France
I walked into a luxury shoe boutique and I was astonished by the price of a certain shoe
How has your style changed as you’ve got older?Even though I am getting older
I am just not as experimental with loud colours and eccentric styles and cuts
Does your style change when you travel?My style definitely changes when I travel
choosing colours and materials that are suitable for the warm weather
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(Gelineau) Chauvin; 4 children: Georgiana L
Przybylek and her husband Francis of Hiram
NH; 7 grandchildren; 5 great grandchildren; and nephews and nieces
the youngest of the 8 children of Alberic and Anna (Gauthier) Chauvin
He was raised in Webster and lived in Dudley from 1970 to 2000
Chauvin was first a self-employed garage owner and then a mechanic at Jolly’s Esso on East Main Street
He was a machinist at Command Aircraft in Moosup
he was a school bus driver for Bay Path Regional Vocational Technical High School in Charlton for 12 years
He was a former member of Sacred Heart of Jesus Church for 50 years
and then a member of Saint Anthony of Padua Church in Dudley since 1970
he was an eagle scout and later scoutmaster of Troop #171 at Sacred Heart of Jesus Church
at 10:00 AM in Sacred Heart of Jesus Church
16 East Main Street (please meet at the church)
The Webster-Dudley Veterans Council will perform military honors after the Mass
donations in his name may be made to either Overlook Hospice
Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Scanlon Funeral Service
Benedictine monk of Ampleforth Abbey who was a veteran of the Korean War and awarded the MC
died peacefully at Ampleforth Abbey in Yorkshire on Sunday 30 September 2012 at the age of 81
John Stacpoole (Alberic was the name given to him when he became a monk at Ampleforth Abbey in 1960) was born in Belfast in 1931 and educated at Gilling and Ampleforth College
In1950 he went to the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst and in 1952 joined the Duke of Wellington's Regiment (West Riding) 1st Battalion
Second Lieutenant Stacpoole commanded the Assault Pioneer Platoon
He was wounded in Korea and awarded the Military Cross
He then joined the Parachute Regiment 2nd Battalion and served in the Canal Zone
Stacpoole served as Aide-de-camp to the GOC in Nigeria
and subsequently in Ghana and Sierra Leone
John Stacpoole joined the Benedictine monastery at Ampleforth
From 1963-1966 he studied at St Benet's Hall at the University of Oxford
and on his return to Ampleforth worked extensively in the school
as well as spending some time as Acting Housemaster of St Wilfrid's House
In 1979 Fr Alberic returned to Oxford as Acting Master of St Benet's and then Senior Tutor
In this period he became actively involved and well-known in ecumenical circles and from 1980-1982 was General Secretary of the Ecumenical Society of the Blessed Virgin Mary
In 1985 he completed a DPhil at the University of Oxford on the Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission (ARCIC)
Fr Alberic was once again appointed Acting Master of St Benet's Hall
Fr Alberic was a prolific author and correspondent
He was editor of The Ampleforth Journal from 1967- 1980 and co-editor of The Noble City of York
a major work which ran to more than 1,000 pages
His other works included The Vatican Council by those who were there (1986)
an authoritative account of the Second Vatican Council of the Roman Catholic Church
Fr Alberic began parish pastoral work with his appointment at parish priest of Our Lady and St Chad
roles he fulfilled for nearly twenty years
Fr Alberic's health deteriorated and he died peacefully in the monastery infirmary at Ampleforth Abbey in the early hours of Sunday 30 September 2012
The Funeral Mass for Fr Alberic Stacpoole will take will take place in Ampleforth Abbey on Thursday 11 October 2012
followed by burial in the vault in the Monks' Wood
Tags: Fr Alberic Stacpoole OSB, Benedictine, Ampleforth Abbey, Stacpoole OSB
Filipino Bishop in UK calling banks to stop financing fossil fuels
Missionary sister pays tribute to her cousin
Jesuit parishes to host open conversations this spring
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Fr Alberic Jacovone OSB was studying Latin and Ancient Greek in 1950s Rome
when his Abbot in the Benedictine Order asked
“I wanted to stay in Rome and finish studies there!” Fr Alberic said
you will understand in years and years and years…how important it is to go now,” the Abbot said
Fr Alberic understands why he had to come to Australia
Fr Alberic was one of the pioneers of the Italian community in Australia
He was awarded a special Centenary Medal from Queen Elizabeth II in recognition of his contribution to the Catholic and Italian communities
which included building schools in the Archdiocese of Sydney
“We came here without a penny and not a word of English,” Fr Alberic said
He has many memories of the Italian community in Western Sydney
The Associazione San Giorgio Martire di Sydney has had the Community Centre Centro San Giorgio in Kenthurst for 40 years
“How smart the pioneering generation has been,” Fr Alberic said
built a cultural centre and on the Feast of St George
they invite everyone to honour St Georgios.”
Georgios means ‘one who cultivates the land’
St George cultivated the seed of Christ in his soul,” he said
“Anthony – Antonios in Greek – is the flower
and St Anthony is someone who radiates the perfume of Christ,” he said
Fr Alberic studied for two years in St Patrick’s Seminary
Fr Alberic had a trick up his sleeve when studying for a Doctorate of Divinity at Manly: mastery of Latin and Greek
“And they said to me to teach at the Catholic Teacher’s College in North Sydney,” he said
Fr Albertic taught hundreds of students about theology at Catholic Teacher’s College
One of his former students became Principal of Marian College
what was really interesting is that we have an innate craving for what is beyond,” he said
His passion for ancient languages was evident in his teaching
He recommended that all students buy an etymological dictionary and use it in essays to impress markers
“We should have pride in our Ancient Christian heritage,” he said
Fr Alberic was born in the town of Matera in Southern Italy
which is one of the oldest inhabited cities in the world
with evidence of inhabitants dating back to 7 000 BC
The city of Matera is famous for its caves
where Mel Gibson filmed much of The Passion of the Christ (2004)
when I was a student in Rome,” Fr Alberic said
Matera was part of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies before the Kingdom of Italy
to which many Italians still have a strong attachment
“When they created Italy they destroyed the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies,” Fr Alberic said
At 81 years of age Fr Alberic still pursues his historical and cultural interests
celebrating the Bicentenary of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies with a group of fellow scholars last November
see Sharing God’s Word: Sunday Homilies by Fr
Montreal’s Metafilms has teamed up with writer/director Albéric Aurtenèche for his feature film debut
Produced by the prodco behind Cannes Film Festival coup de coeur winner La femme de mon frère (“A Brother’s Love”) and Canadian Screen Award-winner The Great Darkened Days (“La grande noirceur”)
a man who who returns to the land he inherited a year after his father’s horrific hunting accident
the film follows his past short film work like: Non-lieu (2006)
Sigismond sans images (2016) and Que votre empire s’étende (2019)
Germain Petitclerc (Matthias et Maxime) is an executive producer
while Sylvain Corbeil (Jeune Juliette) serves as a producer
Production officially started on the feature this October before moving to Quebec’s Estrie
FunFilm Distribution will release La contemplation du mystère in Canada in fall 2020
The feature stars Emmanuel Schwartz (The Twentieth Century)
Reda Guerinik (Fatale-Station) and Martin Dubreuil (The Great Darkened Days)
This year's early signing day was an exciting one
but it didn't offer too many surprises from Palm Beach County
Local players were ride-or-die for the programs they committed to months ago
those players finally got to sit down and put pen to paper on the national letters of intent
Take a look below to meet Wednesday's signees
After 1,200 all-purpose yards and 10 touchdowns to lead Atlantic's rushing attack for a 9-2 path to 3M region quarterfinals
Alberic will be taking his talents to the University of Massachusetts
There he'll find local faces in linebacker and Boynton Beach native Derrieon Craig
who just completed his freshman season with the Minutemen
Georgia was on Bowens' mind after a helicopter visit from Kirby Smart in January
and the Bulldogs were able to woo him once and for all with a weekend in Athens in the summer
The four-star was previously committed to the University of Florida
The Dawgs are sure to be barking over the next few years with the addition of Bowens' speedy legs and near-unstoppable strength
If Georgia manages to swipe former Gators running back Trevor Etienne
UF fans may want a few more words than your typical SEC trash talk
and 18 sacks — plus a forced fumble — to charge Newman's defensive line to yet another 1M region championship appearance speak pretty loudly for the three-star
200-pound frame in action to know he's the real deal
he had more numbers as a junior at Atlantic
17 pass breakups and three interceptions to see the Eagles to region semifinals that year
It'll be hard to find someone to fill Cosby-Mosley's cleats
At least one who can do as much as he did in all three phases of the game in the past four years at Benjamin
punter or his natural positions of receiver and safety
Per a signing day shoutout via X (formerly Twitter)
Wake Forest coach Dave Clawson says the three-star will "have an impact" in "several" positions for the Demon Deacons' backfield
Cosby-Mosley will be reunited with former Benjamin teammate and receiver Micah Mays
Although Gilmore was due for another year of varsity before reclassifying to the 2024 recruiting class
the four-star was a force on both sides of the ball in his last season with the Blue Devils
Kentucky recruited him for the receiving skills he showed off with and without the arm of former Pahokee quarterback Austin Simmons
who also reclassified to the class of 2023 just months before Gilmore to early enroll at Ole Miss
Huff came home for his senior year and ended up finding his home for the next four years
The Dillard High transfer returned to Delray as one of South Florida's most under-recruited players
Tennessee State was one of the programs keen enough to buy in
an inside linebacker who stands at 6-foot-2
he took unofficial visits to Auburn and Florida State in March
but the Tigers stayed invested in the three-star
Tennessee State picked up another Palm Beach County name last season with former Pahokee former linebacker Jacorris Foreman
Pahokee − Utah TechPalm Beach County didn't get to see the hype that followed Jenkins due to a season-ending ACL injury
The Orlando Christian Prep transfer came with a 4.39 time in the 40-yard dash and arrived to high expectations from the Muck
A healthy Jenkins could see starting time sooner than later once he touches down in St
George after Utah Tech's 2-9 finish in the FCS
the Seminoles were first to Knight after a viral performance at the national combine in January
head coach Mike Norvell said the Benjamin star has "huge upside" and is "one of the best playmakers in the country." Knight is ranked No
22 among ATHs across the nation for the 2024 recruiting class
but he'll likely be used most on defense at FSU
After picking up former Pahokee running back Jashon Benjamin in the last recruiting cycle
Rutgers came back to Palm Beach County for more and found a gem in Levy
The speed was there with Benjamin on offense
the Scarlet Knights' defense just installed the turbos
he's already part of major milestones for UCF as coach Gus Malzahn navigates a new era in the Big 12
to the Knights' best recruiting class in program history
the third-best in the Big 12 after Texas Tech and TCU
the Knights' 2024 recruiting class ranks No
4 ranked recruiting class got stronger on Wednesday with a commitment it had since April
was imperative on both sides of the ball to see Atlantic go 9-2
racking up eight touchdowns on 35 carries on the ground on offense
210-pound linebacker accounted for 68 tackles
Philostin's recent visit to Indiana over the weekend solidified that he was bound to be a Hoosier
The three-star held over 30 offers from Power Five programs around the country
Many from programs that didn't go 1-8 this season
But the way new head coach Curt Cignetti and his additions to Indiana's coaching staff spoke ensured Philostin that winning was in the foreseeable future
In his last winning season at Cardinal Newman
Philostin contributed 29 tackles and two interceptions
American Heritage-Delray − ArmyVanscoy was limited to just six games in 2023
but Army stayed the course with the commit it locked in back in April
certain to blossom with consistent development from coaches at the next level after years of turnover during his varsity career with the Stallions
"Jake is the best kicker in the country coming out of high school," Weinberg is projected to have a big future in Tallahassee
a back-to-back Lou Groza High School Kicker of The Year winner
can compete with Lou Groza finalist and redshirt junior Ryan Fitzgerald right away
Emilee Smarr is a sports reporter for The Palm Beach Post
She can be reached via email at esmarr@gannett.com
[AMIS Memorial Chapel & Crematory]
The funeral service honouring the life of Carolman Alberic Lothaine “Joe” Astwood Williams in his 80th year of Paget Parish
son of the late Alice Beatrice Astwood and the late Peter and Norma Williams
will be held on Friday 17th December 2021 at 2:00pm at AMIS Memorial Chapel
Interment to follow at Pembroke Parish Cemetery
A walk thru viewing will be held prior to the service from 1:00pm to 1:50pm at AMIS Memorial Chapel
Joe leaves to be dearly remembered by brothers: Tyrone Williams and Joseph [Judy] Smith [N.Z.]; sisters: Pearl Agard and Dianne [Roy] Trott; nephews: D’andru Smith
Marlon and Angelo; nieces: Kaylene Williams
Ruby Goater and Diedre Shakir; special friend Glen Goater
numerous other relatives and friend too many to mention
He was predeceased by siblings: Janet Broadley
Category: All, Obituary
Bernews Obituaries
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As published in Winnipeg Free Press on Jun 11, 2011
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Dustin Peltier had been using the monk’s cheese for almost a decade as a chef in various restaurants around Winnipeg
plopping great lumps of it on gastro-pub burgers — because it had a great melting point — and believing that the earthy-tasting Trappist-monk delight
made with fresh-from-the-cow unpasteurized milk
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the more he thought about the cheese maker behind the cheese
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serene 82-year-old French-Canadian monk at the Notre Dame des Prairies monastery near Holland
had been making cheese for over 60 years and was edging closer to
“heaven,” and wanted to find a protégé to pass along his knowledge — and the 300-plus-year-old secret cheese recipe — before it was lost forever
“The monastery life isn’t for everybody,” Peltier says
but I had been using Brother Alberic’s cheese and talking it over with my wife
The monks don’t have a listed phone number
But they do operate a small storefront selling monastery wares
three-kilogram rounds of Brother’s Alberic’s celebrated cheese
went to the nearby town to grab a bite and returned at 2p.m
to present themselves to the cheese master
I am going to carry the cheese recipe with me to the grave,” Brother Alberic said on a recent afternoon
“So it was better to get someone from the outside and teach them
and so it was too late for him to be a monk
But Trappists are an entrepreneurial bunch
And while Brother Alberic never sold his wheels to customers
who came from all corners of Manitoba to buy it
for more than $70 — when an equivalent wheel from Europe would retail for about three times as much — a good business is a good business
none of Alberic’s five brother monks at Notre Dame
Nor did any of the aging Trappists in Quebec
giving the Manitoba monk a free hand (with a Vatican blessing) to teach Peltier
“I started to make cheese in Quebec in 1955
The recipe for Fromage de La Trappe dates back centuries to France
although in more modern times a monk named Brother Juin brought it to the monastery in Oka
— in 1893 — before it migrated west in 1918
instructing the monks to burn the recipe should it go unused
rather than share it with the outside world
Brother Alberic’s blend begins with unpasteurized milk from a nearby farm
which he slowly heats in a vat with rennet
before placing it into stainless steel moulds
Weights are set on the cheese to further press out moisture
the fledgling wheels are set out to age on old wooden planks in a humid cellar
The cheese is handwashed daily with a sponge and brine
a micro-bacterial culture that gives it its colour (pale orange)
and jousts with other bacteria to give it its flavour (delicious)
Overseeing the entire operation is a statue of the Virgin Mary
“What Brother Alberic does is an art,” says Peltier
who underwent the monk’s crash course in February
spending a week at the monastery making cheese
but sometimes Brother Alberic would point to one and say
“He has 60 plus years of learning his craft and studying this cheese.”
One lesson the monk imparted to his pupil was that
and thus encouraged Peltier to pass along everything he learned
(Brother Alberic did break monastery rules by sneaking Isaak into the cellar to give her the grand tour one cold day
cheekily observing that none of the other monks were around to catch sight of her)
Peltier and Isaak are now in the process of converting an old trailer into a cheese factory
They recently bought the last five wheels of Brother Alberic’s cheese and
“I want to give a push to Dustin,” Brother Alberic said
he has turned down many interview requests from supplicants
but agreed to speak to the National Post for about 15 minutes
and not because he had experienced a change of heart
but because he wanted to generate some buzz for his protégé
“It won’t be long now before he builds his market.”
the last and now officially retired cheese-making Trappist monk of Manitoba said goodbye
joconnor@nationalpost.com Twitter.com/oconnorwrites
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A cricket chirped in the monastery’s library
Thomas Merton’s “New Seeds of Contemplation,” was about it for sound
Merton did not write on the absence of sound on that page but the abyss of solitude in the soul: “You do not find it by traveling but by standing still.”
as if it was a new line she had overlooked while reading the book three years ago when the direction of her life changed
when she took off around the country to seek silence in her soul
travel great distances to learn how to be still
quit her job as a therapist in Ames not long after reading the book
She called the New Melleray Abbey near Dubuque
where monks have lived in the Trappist monastery since 1849 in long periods of silence and contemplative prayer
She met Father Alberic Farbolin there and spent long periods talking with him about the infinite possibilities in stillness
It eventually led her to an unlikely place of noise and chaos – Los Angeles – where she joined documentary filmmaker Patrick Shen to work on his new film, “In Pursuit of Silence,” which he expects to join a major fall film festival lineup later this month
where people have to yell at each other across a restaurant table and where the amplification of sound from technology is creating a generation whose mental and physical health could be at harm
But it also seeks to explore the mysteries of silence
a place where Hall often revisits now in a growing relationship with the monks
Hall was sitting across from clients all day in 2012
She went to Iowa State University and had earned a master’s degree
in listening to the noise in people's lives
She urged her therapy clients toward their passions while ignoring her own
his words pushed her to find them in place of quiet
Hall scheduled a visit with Father Alberic
in the traditions of the Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance
followed by manual labor on the farm and casket-making enterprise that helps sustain them
and Mass and other prayer sessions throughout the day
More than two-thirds of the day is spent is silence
Some might look at such life as a kind of prison
prayer and contemplation is a “wild ride,” he said
not a rush of adrenaline but a slow and steady “tink
tink” of an apprentice’s tool toward a place of infinite possibility
The freedom is love … and to get over yourself.”
The monastic life is not flight from society
adjusting his robe while awaiting the bell to join communal prayer
It’s a conversion to a life of prayer and living encounters with the Lord
He compares it to meaningful silence between spouses that happens after they have talked a lot
learned to trust and realize they don’t always need words
The silence and prayer leads to a closer relationship with the world and its people
“We believe our prayers have impact on others,” he said
“We wouldn’t stay if we didn’t think it had impact.”
Hall gave her employer 30 days’ notice and used her savings to visit 17 monasteries in the U.S
“It was something I needed to do and I didn’t know why,” she said
But as the youngest of four creative children
whose sister includes well-known Iowa entertainer Leslie Hall
“While we’re all going through the motions of living our life
she searches for the reasons why we live our lives the way we do,” said her mother
she seriously takes the road less traveled and looks for answers
Hall spent days writing and thinking and driving
sometimes showing up on the doorstep of a monastery in the middle of the night in a snowstorm
which implies there will be an answer upon reaching the final destination
She had viewed monasteries as ancient museums
a “sort of monument to religion.” But as she talked with monks and sisters
in them she learned it was no quiet escape from life
She once asked a sister if those dark thoughts that came to her in the quiet spaces would ever end
The sister asked her why she would want them to end
She was learning to sit with them and try to let them go
Hall has suffered from anxiety and depression but the silence allowed her to sort through her often “wandering and anxious mind and heart.”
She created 17spaces.org to post her photography and writing about the monasteries
where she began to hear what she calls a “wave of ancient rhythms” in the silence
But creativity’s original intention is best removed of such ego
That’s tough when you want people to read your blog or see your film
“What will make people turn around to see?” Instead she needed to ask
“What is gnawing and nagging at my heart to be spoken?”
she considered it a trip of self-discovery with “no resounding truths or clear-cut facts.” There were no metrics to gauge success
more curiosities of mysteries and more reverence for this life than I am able to live,” Hall wrote
He had made his directorial debut in 2005 with the critically-acclaimed “Flight from Death: The Quest for Immortality” and was busy on his new documentary that was taking on the noisy chaos of our time
It sought to explore the auditory barrage that people face in today’s world but also the metaphysical aspects of silence in short supply
“The inner life has become foreign and the relationship with our authentic selves estranged,” he said in an email interview with The Register
We have the nagging feeling we have to be someplace
who had no filmmaking experience but shared his passion for the subject
“Cassidy has a reverence for silence that is inspiring,” he said
“She’s kept the team and the film accountable to silence throughout the whole process
After filming in a dozen states and eight countries
they were editing down the film when Shen faced a challenging sequence on meditation
“I turned around to find Cassidy respectfully and quietly standing at the doorway where she gently suggested with just a handful of words that maybe silence would even find meditation too prescriptive or restrictive,” he said
“I decided on the spot to eliminate that scene and it’s never come up again.”
Hall had learned that the subject is slippery
and Hall entered the narrow and tall church built of limestone and topped with a vaulted cathedral of wood beams
Here she finds a spirit she cannot describe
She listens to the chants of the monks and repairs to her simple retreat room of bed and desk
where she has come more than a half dozen times over the last couple years
There are still more questions than answers
She had joined the film crew in Alaska and New York City
and in conversations with Buddhists and a recent Yale graduate walking across the country in a vow of silence
But always she remembered New Melleray and the monks there who led her to humbling encounters with silence
“In this space they are loving people more
In taking silence back it allows us to love the world more and love ourselves.”
is a leading pollutant and a dangerous one to our health
But in her conversations with Alberic she learned of an inner quiet
and though they disagree on some subjects of faith
they keep coming back to one thought: God is love
She is most proud of the shots of scenery and the life of the monks in the film
Shen said it was important to include the religious traditions of silence
“Ultimately we felt that it was much stronger to simply sit with the monks in silence
to give the viewer that visceral experience of monastic silence rather than cheapen it with a bunch of words,” Shen said
Hall may have seemed like an odd pilgrim to silence
coming from Iowa with its vast open fields and quiet towns
She hears the buzz of quiet while resting in her parent’s home
There can be inner noise in a quiet room and silence in the wind blowing through swishing prairie grass
by thinking of the monks of New Melleray and Father Alberic
She utters to herself a manta of sorts: “Keep the silence and stillness within.”
Then she breathes out and lets the anxiety go
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Home Bury St Edmunds News Article
SuffolkNews is proud to present its first ever audio play
a chilling adaptation of 'Canon Alberic's Scrap-Book' by M
'Canon Alberic's Scrap-Book' tells the story of an English scholar tormented by supernatural forces beyond his comprehension
The tale was included in James' celebrated collection of 1904
In Britain, ghost stories were traditionally told at Christmas, and the works of James – who grew up near Bury St Edmunds – were written with the festive period in mind
and his studies of Bury Abbey are well-regarded to this day
he is by far best-known for his short fiction
including such classic stories as 'Casting the Runes' and 'Oh
SuffolkNews has adapted 'Canon Alberic's Scrap-Book' in collaboration with the Irving Stage Company
Actors from the company have lent their voices for the production
while criminal barrister Simon Spence KC voices the sacristan
The story is narrated by journalist Christian Jenner
All are West Suffolk residents
Mrs Jenner said many SuffolkNews readers would be puzzled by the concept of listening to a ghost story at Christmas – but this is actually in keeping with a very old tradition
She said: "It's wonderful for people to be have something a little bit different for Christmas
A Christmas Carol – which is a ghost story
I actually think it's a really lovely thing for Christmas."
The music accompanying the play is composed and performed by Myuu
The Irving Stage Company's next production is Murder on the Nile
which will be performed at the Theatre Royal Bury St Edmunds
Tickets are on sale now