In memory of Robert...
"Sory Andy....I've lost him for you...." - Mrs. Barrington Leigh
http://grad.econ.ubc.ca/cpbl/robert/
http://www.fftimes.com/index.php/3/2006-08-28/26834
Memorial held for math wiz
August 28, 2006
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(CP)
EDMONTON — Friends and family remembered Robert Barrington Leigh yesterday not only as a brilliant mathematician with a promising future, but as a smiling, friendly well-rounded man with a love of theatre and adventure.
“Personally, I feel honoured to have been acquainted with such a talented person,” said Telford Yeung, 21, who had known Barrington Leigh since the sixth grade.
“I have quite a great amount of respect for him.”
He recalled Barrington Leigh as not only a great student, but also a theatre-lover. They worked together on plays in high school, with Barrington Leigh taking care of stage hand duties while Yeung acted.
“If you were well-acquainted with him, you’d see he’s not just an intellectual in mathematics,” said Yeung, who is now entering medical school at the University of Alberta.
Barrington Leigh, 20, was a cross-country skier and avid outdoorsman.
The University of Toronto math student, home on a summer visit, vanished Aug. 13 when he left his parents’ home to meet friends at the Edmonton Folk Music Festival.
His family launched an intense search for the young man.
Hundreds of volunteers, including friends and total strangers, showed up to comb Edmonton’s river valley in search of Barrington Leigh.
Finally, nine days after he went missing, Barrington Leigh’s body was found in the North Saskatchewan River.
His mother, Iris Barrington Leigh, confirmed yesterday he died from a suicide.
“I’m just very, very sad that he didn’t feel he wanted to open up and seek the help that he needed,” she said outside the memorial.
http://www.canada.com/edmontonjournal/news/story.html?id=1a3356c9-a82e-4794-a60f-dcc0dc4585fa&k=47653
200 mourners remember Robert Barrington Leigh
20-year-old's body pulled from river early Tuesday
Published: Wednesday, August 23, 2006
EDMONTON - More than 200 people -- friends, neighbours and strangers -- held hands and stood in silence at a candlelight vigil Tuesday evening, hours after the search for Robert Barrington Leigh ended when his body was found in the North Saskatchewan River.
Family of the 20-year-old held the vigil in Queen Elizabeth Park to thank people who banded together to help with the nine-day search.
"Robert's family wish to say a heartfelt thank you to all of you standing here tonight," Robert Wong, the young man's former junior high math teacher, said on behalf of the family.
Barrington Leigh's mother stood beside him holding a candle, resting a picture of her son against her legs.
"We're forever grateful to you, all of you," Wong said.
Family and friends organized a massive search for the University of Toronto student, who went missing Aug. 13. He told his family he planned to meet up with friends at the closing night of the Edmonton Folk Music Festival, but wasn't seen again.
Teams of searchers working from a base set up above a grocery store combed ravines and the river valley, and volunteers taped up or handed out hundreds of posters. The family offered a $5,000 reward for information.
Around 11 a.m. Tuesday, a body was spotted a short distance from the north bank of the river near 92nd Street and Cameron Avenue.
River Tours West owner Alan Flynn, who subcontracts to the city, was on the river with a city drainage worker when they spotted the body.
"I knew this person had been missing for quite some time and I thought, 'Well, I better go and take a look,' " Flynn said. "There was this body snagged on some deadfall under the water."
Flynn said he dialed 911 and told the operator he had found a body and needed the fire boat and police at the scene.
"We stayed with the body to make sure it didn't float away, and waited for them to come and take care of the area," said Flynn, who has helped with many body retrievals from the river over the years.
There were no marks on the body to indicate the person had been a victim of foul play, Flynn said.
"His wallet was still in his pocket. He wasn't beat up at all."
Identification found on the body confirmed it was Barrington Leigh. No foul play is suspected.
"We don't have a lot to say except that we really want to thank everybody who has given us such incredible support over the last nine days," the young man's brother, Christopher, said outside the family home earlier Tuesday.
the brightest kid I could ever met...now who's next?
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