Yannick scherrer biography
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Remembering the six Canadian soldiers killed since Nov. 11, 2010
Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 11/11/2011 (4851 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
In the 12 months since the last Remembrance Day, Canada lost six Canadian soldiers who were serving as part of the nearly decade-long uppdrag to Afghanistan, which wrapped up in July.
Last year, not long after soldiers had gathered in the dust of Kandahar Airfield for one last last Nov. 11 in Afghanistan, Cpl. Steve Martin was killed by an improvised explosive device while on foot patrol in Kandahar.
Martin, a member of 3rd Battalion, Royal 22e Regiment, was on his second tour in Afghanistan and had only recently buried his grandfather in his hometown of Saint-Cyrille-de-Wendover, about 115 kilometres northeast of Montreal.
He died two days before his 25th birthday.
“He always had a smile on his face when he walked by,” said Gaston Laterre
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Canadian dead in Afghan explosion
Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 28/03/2011 (5079 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan — For the first time in 2011, a Canadian soldier has died in Afghanistan.
Cpl. Yannick Scherrer, from Montreal, was killed around noon Sunday by a roadside bomb during a foot patrol in the Panjwaii district southwest of Kandahar City.
He is the first Canadian to to die in the Afghanistan campaign in more than three months and just the second since August 2010.
“Our thoughts and deepest condolences go out to Cpl. Sherrer’s family and to the soldiers and friends who served alongside him,” Canada’s top soldier in Kandahar, Brig.-Dean Milner, said in a statement read beside the Canadian memorial at Kandahar Airfield.
Scherrer’s death brings the total number of Canadian soldiers killed in Afghanistan to 155.
One diploma
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René Schérer
French philosopher (1922–2023)
René Schérer (25 November 1922 – 1 February 2023) was a French philosopher and professor emeritus of the universite de Paris VIII.[1]
Biography
[edit]Schérer was born in Tulle on 25 November 1922. He is the younger brother of filmmaker Éric Rohmer (1920–2010). He was Guy Hocquenghem's teacher and lover, with whom he co-wrote two books. In 2007, then aged 85, he commented on the history of his life and his work in an interview with Geoffroy de Lagasnerie: After all: interviews on an intellectual life, published by Cartouche.[2]
Schérer died in Châtillon, Hauts-de-Seine on 1 February 2023, at the age of 100.[3][4]
Books
[edit]- Husserl, sa vie, son œuvre (avec Arion Lothar Kelkel), Paris, PUF, 1964, coll. « Philosophes »
- Structure et fondement de la communication humaine, Paris, SEDES, 1966
- La Phénoménologie des « Recherches logiques » de Husserl, Paris, PUF,