I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable advice
a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday from heart
related problems without getting into too much detail at the age of 77.
I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
May he RIP.
--
Froz...
The system will be down for 10 days for preventive maintenance.
On Mar 2, 1:50=A0pm, FrozenNorth <[email protected]>
wrote:
> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable advice
> a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday from heart
> related problems without getting into too much detail at the age of 77.
>
> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>
> May he RIP.
> --
> Froz...
>
> The system will be down for 10 days for preventive maintenance.
My sincerest condolences to you and yours, Froz. Retain all the good
memories and I hope he wasn't sick very long.
FrozenNorth wrote:
> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable advice
> a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday from heart
> related problems without getting into too much detail at the age of 77.
>
> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>
> May he RIP.
Very sorry. I know what it is like to lose someone very close.
I hope you and your family is handling it well in The Lord.
--
Michael Joel
parksfamily2 ------ ---- --- gmail ----- ----- com
replace dashes with correct symbols
FrozenNorth <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
> On 3/02/12 2:26 PM, Robatoy wrote:
>> On Mar 2, 1:50 pm, FrozenNorth<[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable
>>> advice a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday
>>> from heart related problems without getting into too much detail at
>>> the age of 77.
>>>
>>> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
>>> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
>>> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
>>> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>>>
>>> May he RIP.
>>
>> My sincerest condolences to you and yours, Froz. Retain all the good
>> memories and I hope he wasn't sick very long.
>
> He wasn't well last summer, then a triple bypass in August, he seemed
> to be recovering by Thanksgiving, and even at Christmas, then...it
> started getting much worse.
My condolences as well, and I second Rob's suggestion of the memories.
I'll be thinking of you ...
--
Best regards
Han
email address is invalid
FrozenNorth wrote:
> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable
> advice a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday
> from heart related problems without getting into too much detail at
> the age of 77.
> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>
> May he RIP.
Sorry to hear that. Our condolences.
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
On 3/02/12 2:26 PM, Robatoy wrote:
> On Mar 2, 1:50 pm, FrozenNorth<[email protected]>
> wrote:
>> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable advice
>> a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday from heart
>> related problems without getting into too much detail at the age of 77.
>>
>> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
>> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
>> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
>> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>>
>> May he RIP.
>
> My sincerest condolences to you and yours, Froz. Retain all the good
> memories and I hope he wasn't sick very long.
He wasn't well last summer, then a triple bypass in August, he seemed to
be recovering by Thanksgiving, and even at Christmas, then...it started
getting much worse.
--
Froz...
The system will be down for 10 days for preventive maintenance.
On 3/2/12 12:50 PM, FrozenNorth wrote:
> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable advice
> a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday from heart
> related problems without getting into too much detail at the age of 77.
>
> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>
> May he RIP.
Very sorry for your loss. May the many good memories you surly have of
him be a comfort to you and your family during this time or mourning.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com
[email protected]
---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply
On 3/2/2012 3:10 PM, Han wrote:
> FrozenNorth<[email protected]> wrote in
> news:[email protected]:
>
>> On 3/02/12 2:26 PM, Robatoy wrote:
>>> On Mar 2, 1:50 pm, FrozenNorth<[email protected]>
>>> wrote:
>>>> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable
>>>> advice a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday
>>>> from heart related problems without getting into too much detail at
>>>> the age of 77.
>>>>
>>>> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
>>>> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
>>>> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
>>>> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>>>>
>>>> May he RIP.
>>>
>>> My sincerest condolences to you and yours, Froz. Retain all the good
>>> memories and I hope he wasn't sick very long.
>>
>> He wasn't well last summer, then a triple bypass in August, he seemed
>> to be recovering by Thanksgiving, and even at Christmas, then...it
>> started getting much worse.
>
> My condolences as well, and I second Rob's suggestion of the memories.
> I'll be thinking of you ...
>
If you have not wrote down the stories he has told about his family and
your stories of his life, you should set down and start writing, There
is no better way that to pass the traits you liked about him on to your
children.
An amateur genealogist.
On 3/02/12 10:33 PM, Keith Nuttle wrote:
> On 3/2/2012 3:10 PM, Han wrote:
>> FrozenNorth<[email protected]> wrote in
>> news:[email protected]:
>>
>>> On 3/02/12 2:26 PM, Robatoy wrote:
>>>> On Mar 2, 1:50 pm, FrozenNorth<[email protected]>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable
>>>>> advice a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday
>>>>> from heart related problems without getting into too much detail at
>>>>> the age of 77.
>>>>>
>>>>> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
>>>>> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
>>>>> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
>>>>> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>>>>>
>>>>> May he RIP.
>>>>
>>>> My sincerest condolences to you and yours, Froz. Retain all the good
>>>> memories and I hope he wasn't sick very long.
>>>
>>> He wasn't well last summer, then a triple bypass in August, he seemed
>>> to be recovering by Thanksgiving, and even at Christmas, then...it
>>> started getting much worse.
>>
>> My condolences as well, and I second Rob's suggestion of the memories.
>> I'll be thinking of you ...
>>
> If you have not wrote down the stories he has told about his family and
> your stories of his life, you should set down and start writing, There
> is no better way that to pass the traits you liked about him on to your
> children.
>
> An amateur genealogist.
Knowing his name and google provides a legacy of information, he
published a lot of journal articles, I had the pleasure of doing some
artistic tweaks to a few of some of the later PDF versions that got
published.
His family traditions and stories, were hilarious when I first joined
the family, but grew to love them. Nobody to pass them on to, my wife
and I have no children by choice.
--
Froz...
The system will be down for 10 days for preventive maintenance.
FrozenNorth wrote:
> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable
> advice a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday
> from heart related problems without getting into too much detail at
> the age of 77.
> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>
> May he RIP.
With 400 friends attending, he must have been a great guy. I'm sure he made
the world a better place.
--
dadiOH
____________________________
dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
On 3/03/12 8:01 AM, dadiOH wrote:
> FrozenNorth wrote:
>> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable
>> advice a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday
>> from heart related problems without getting into too much detail at
>> the age of 77.
>> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
>> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
>> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
>> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>>
>> May he RIP.
>
> With 400 friends attending, he must have been a great guy. I'm sure he made
> the world a better place.
>
The funeral was out of town, so my wife and I stayed with my
mother-in-law that night before driving home. The stack of condolence
letters that came in the mail that day was scary, there were several
from people she had no idea who they were, probably former students.
And yes, he was a great guy, he made my world better the day he gave me
his daughter's hand in marriage.
--
Froz...
The system will be down for 10 days for preventive maintenance.
FrozenNorth wrote:
> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable advice
> a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday from heart
> related problems without getting into too much detail at the age of 77.
>
> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>
> May he RIP.
Please accept my condolences. It sounds like he touched a lot of lives
(and I wasn't even counting those of the 400 people you mentioned).
Bill
On 3/2/2012 12:50 PM, FrozenNorth wrote:
> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable advice
> a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday from heart
> related problems without getting into too much detail at the age of 77.
>
> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>
> May he RIP.
Sounded like a great guy and had a full and rich life.
Sorry for your loss.
On 3/2/2012 1:50 PM, FrozenNorth wrote:
> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable advice
> a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday from heart
> related problems without getting into too much detail at the age of 77.
>
> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>
> May he RIP.
On 3/2/2012 12:50 PM, FrozenNorth wrote:
> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable advice
> a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday from heart
> related problems without getting into too much detail at the age of 77.
>
> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>
> May he RIP.
Our condolences to your and yours. No finer tribute, when those who knew
and loved him can gather as you indicate above.
--
www.eWoodShop.com
Last update: 4/15/2010
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)
http://gplus.to/eWoodShop
On Fri, 02 Mar 2012 13:50:35 -0500, FrozenNorth wrote:
> I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable advice
> a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday from heart
> related problems without getting into too much detail at the age of 77.
>
> I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
> Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
> professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
> moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>
> May he RIP.
Sorry for your loss, take care...
basilisk
On Fri, 02 Mar 2012 13:50:35 -0500, FrozenNorth
<[email protected]> wrote:
>I know I don't contribute here often, but have got some valuable advice
>a few times, my beloved father-in-law passed away last Friday from heart
>related problems without getting into too much detail at the age of 77.
>
>I had the honour of being a pallbearer for him at the funeral on
>Wednesday, he was a deeply religious man, and a retired university
>professor, but above all he became like a second father to me, very
>moving service with close to 400 in attendance.
>May he RIP.
My sincerest condolences. It's especially difficult when you lose
someone you're close to.