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THE HURON EXPOSITOR, OCTOBER 2, 1985 — A15
Senior shutters at age 88
EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article
on a Seaforth native was taken from the St.
Catharine's Standard.
Aubrey Crich claims taking pictures is
therapeutic. Looking at him, you have to
believe what he says. With almost child -like
enthusiasm the 88=year-old retired Grimsby
dentist and oral surgeon relishes the thought
of taking his Nikon out this autumn when the
colors change.
"I like to tell people that I shutter at 88,"
he said jokingly referring to his enduring love
for taking pictures.
He has been doing it since 1951 when he
bought a cheap Bolsey camera at a corner
store and shot lily pads in a Vineland pond.
"After that I was hooked for life," he said
during an interview from his Main Street
home.
Dr. Crich was recently the first Canadian to
win the Photographic Society of America's
program achievement award for a portfolio of
winter scenes entitled "W inter As I See It."
Born in Brussels, Dr. Crich moved to
Seaforth at the age of two. He was a pilot in a
day -bombing squadron during the First
World War and in 1919 enrolled, in dentistry
school.
He bought a fruit farm near Grimsby Beach
in 1940 and raised fruit as a hobbyand
part-time job. He finally sold the property in
1951 after it became increasingly difficult to
fihd workers willing to pick fruit. He bought
his present house on Main Street and
returned to practicing dentistry full-time.
In need of another hobby to replace fruit
fanning he chose photography.
"Thad an aunt who was an artist," he said.
"But I was never good at art. Yet, I can see
pictures that other people never see."
He also has a love for the outdoors, fishing
and birdwatching.
He credits 70 per cent of his success to the
late Helen Manzer, an American photo-
graphy instructor from Vermont.
"I've taken two or three other courses, but
her course (Helen Manzer's) was the best,"
he said. "She was very strict."
Before settling into nature photography
Dr. Crich did extensive work in portraits,
pictorials, winter scenes, dogs and cats, wild
flowers, birds and butterflies.
He would often advertise locally for
residents to tell him about unusual birds'
nests on their property. Then he would haul
his equipment into the bush, set up a blind
and wait for just the right moment.
"I would be out there for two or three days
sometimes," he said.
Since his retirement, much of Dr. Crick's
photographic attention has been centred on
insects. He has often brought different
specimens back home from the field and fed
and cared for them there until just, the right
moment to take their picture. •
"I'm fascinated with how they live," he
said. "You learn so much about them."
Dr. Crich has earned countless prizes for
his work. He was awarded five stars In the
pictorial division of the Photographic Society
of America, which has 14,000 members. To
earn this honor, he had to have 640
acceptances in recognized exhibitions, with
128 different pictures.
Four of his pictures were exhibited at the
World's Fair in Brussels in 1958. A
photograph of boys playing hockey in
Grimsby was shown at the National World's
Fair in New York.
"1 can see pictures that.
other people
never see."
The National Film Board used three of Dr.
Crick's color photographs when it produced
the Centennial book, Canada, A Year of the
Land. Two of the photographs were scenes of
Grimsby, one of the railway station and the
otherof its main street. The third photograph
was a winter scene taken along the Niagara
Parkway above the Falls.
Hanging in the dining room of his house is
a haunting portrait of a bearded Dutch man
lighting • up a curved pipe. This photograph
won the Myrtle Walgreen Award for the best
color portrait in a New York salon.
He has also been a featured speaker four
times at the New England Camera Club's
annual seminar at the University of Massa-
chusetts. Dr. Crich said it is the largest
gathering of amateur photographers held in
the world.
In 1982, he donated his entire collection of
nature slides - 3,000 in all - to the Royal
Ontario Museum.
Amateur photography does not have to cost
a lot of money, said Dr. Crich. But he
suggests having three interchangeable len-
ses and an electronic flash. Dr. Crich uses a
Nikon camera with 55-, 105-, and 135 -milli-
metre lenses.
"I would suggest that someone who has an
interest in photography should take a couple
of courses And join a local camera dub so you
can bounce ideas off your peers.
"And be patient. I've sat up, all night
sometimes and still didn't get the pictures I
wanted."
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96 g KRAFT PHILADELPHIA 250 g
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KRAFT PROCESS 500 g KRAFT
VELVEETA 3.79 MOZZARELLA 199
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PEOPLE
Jim and Jean Keys, Harold and Mary
Coleman motored last Monday to Sault Ste.
Marie and took the brilliant color tour on, the
Algoma Central Railroad, 115 miles north to
the Agawa Canyon, returning via Sudbury
nickel mines and Parry Sound. They visited
Friday and Saturday with the Rev. Tom
Dukes in Port Carling and Colin MacDoug-
alds in Bracebridge and saw the Muskoka
Fa,11 colors also.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Speak of Woodstock
and Eileen Scott of North Dakota were
Sunday dinner guests with their brother
Joseph Ryan and Mrs. Ryan.
OBITUARIES
W ILLIAM DRUMMOND W ILSON
A well known Brucefield resident, William
Drummond . (W ,D. Dub) Wilson died at
Clinton Public Hospital on September 20. He
was 66.
A fanner in Tuckersmith Township, Mr.
Wilson and his wife worked as rural mail
carriers and Mr. Wilson drove a school bus
from Huron Centennial School for Murphy's
Bus Lines in Clinton.
He was an elder and trustee for Brucefield
United Church and sexton of Baird's
Cemetery. He was past president of the
Seaforth Agricultural Society, past trustee for
the Huron School Board and past director of
the Tuckersmith Telephone Company.
Born on November 2, 1918 in Tuckersmith
Township, he was the son of James Herbert
.Lorne Wilson and Jane Smith McKay.
On May 10, 1947 in Seaforth he married
Doris MacKay. The couple farmed in
Tuckersmith until 1977 when they moved to
Brucefield.
Along with his wife, Mr. Wilson is survived
by his son Brian and daughter-in-law Linda of
Seaforth and grandchildren Lisa and Curtis
Wilson.
Also surviving are four sisters, Dorothy
(Mrs. Ray Mason) of Windsor, Hazel (Mrs.
Roy McGonigle) of Seaforth, Marion (Mrs.
Douglas Andrews) of London, Madeline
(Mrs. Walter Bain) and brothers, Mac of
Brucefield and Stuart of RR I, Brucefield.
He was predeceased by two sisters, Evelyn
(Mrs. Charles Merrill) and Ethel (Mrs. James
Devereaux).
Funeral services were held on September
23 at the Ball and Falconer Funeral Home,
Clinton, The Rev. Lorne Keays from
Brucefield United Church officiated. Inter-
ment was held at Baird's Cemetery, Stanley
Township.
Pallbearers were Richard Burdge, W }lliam
Burdge, Gerrard Boon, Victor Hargreaves,
Ken Scott and Ivan W ightman, all of
Brucefield.
Flower bearers were Randy Wilson, Robert
Wilson, Neil Devereaux and W illiarn Merrill,
all nephews of the deceased.
FLORENCE MABEL COOPER
Florence Mabel (Robertson) Cooper, of RR
3, Kippen died at South Huron Hospital in
Exeter on Monday, September 23, 1985. She
was 80.
Mrs. Cooper is survived by son Jack and
his wife Karen, of Hensall; Loyd and his wif..
June, of RR 3, Kippers; grandson Jim Cooper
and his wife Beth and Scott Cooper, all of RR
3, Kippen,
Mrs. Cooper was predeceased by her
husband James Morley Cooper in 1983 and
one brother Angus Robertson.
Visitors were received in the Hensall
Chapel of Michael P. O'Connor Funeral
Homes and a funeral service was conducted
on September 26 with the Rev. Lorne Keays
officiating. Interment followed in Hensall
Union Cemetery.
As expressions of sympathy donations to
the Kipper St. Andrews United Church
would be appreciated.
CLARENCE HENRY II/ALONE
Clarence Henry Malone, 74, of Seaforth
died Sunday, September 29, 1985 at the
Seaforth Community Hospital.
He is survived by children Mike and wife
Freida, of London, Joanne and husband Bob
Muegge, of Brandon, Manitoba, Tom and
wife Eileen of Slave Lake, Alberta and Pat
and wife Deb of Seaforth.
Also surviving are nine grandchildren and
one brother Emmett and sister Mary
Malone, both of Seaforth.
He was predeceased by his wife Evelyn
Malady in 1968 and four brothers, John,
Charlie, Joe and George.
Friends will be received at the Whitney-
Ribey Funeral Home, 87 Goderich Street
West in Seaforth until 11 a.m. today when a
Mass of the Christian Burial will be held at St.
James Roman Catholic Church. Interment St.
James Cemetery. Father Caruana officiating.
ERIC BARNINGHAM
Eric "Barney" Barningham, 78, formerly
of Cromarty. died Thursday, September 26.
1985 at the Kilbarchan Nursing Home.
Born in Sheringham, Norfolk. England.
Mr. Barningham started tinkering with
motorbikes as a teenager, apprenticed as a
wheelwright then went on the become an
aircraft mechanic in the late 1930s. He
worked as' a flight test mechanic on
Mosquitoes during World War 11. Post war
he continued working as an aircraft
mechanic in Europe then in Libya, North
Africa for an American Oil Company
surveying the desert. He immigrated to
Canada in 1960 and worked for Vickers
Sperry in their Hydraulic Equipment Divi-
sion until retiring in 1972 to Cromarty.
He is survived by two sons, Bob of Toronto
and Derek of Los Angeles, California; and
two daughters Mrs. Freda Harper, of
Kingston-upon-Thames. England and Mrs.
Flo Smith of Armou, Cyprus.
Also surviving are grandchildren, Mrs
Karen Robinson, of Toronto, Dr. Nicholas
Harper of London, England, Clare Harper of
Hollywood, California, David Smith of
Aldershot. England, Linda Smith of London,
England, Sally -Ann Booth of Germany.
Michael Smith of London, England, and
Ethan Slater-Barningham; and four great
grandchildren.
He was predeceased in 1982 by his wife
Nellie Craske.
Funeral arrangements were made by
Whitney-Rihev Funeral Home in Seaforth.
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