Miami Herald (Sunday)

Hilario F. Candela June 4, 1934 - January 18, 2022

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Coral Gables, Florida Born in Havana, Cuba to Hilario R. Candela and Carmen Roig Candela, he studied Architectu­re at Georgia Tech in the 1950’s. He later returned to Havana in 1959 to work as a young architect until forced to leave his beloved homeland in 1960 whereupon he began a new life in Miami, Florida. In just a few months, he joined the 11-person pioneering architectu­ral firm of Pancoast, Ferendino, Skeels & Burnham. The following year, he was named the architect for Miami Dade Community College, which won him his first in a lengthy career of awards and accolades. He then designed the Miami Marine Stadium at just 28 years of age in 1962, renowned globally for its ground-breaking design. The stadium has since been named one of America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places by the National Trust for Historic Preservati­on. At

Louisville, Colorado Jody (JoAnn) Sebesta Atwood, age 88, passed away peacefully in Louisville, Colorado on Tuesday December 7th, 2021. She passed surrounded by the things she loved most; music, family and love.

Jody was born on March 17th, 1933 in Pocatello, ID to her parents Anna Marie Dick and Joseph Sebesta.

Jody created herself a life surrounded by music. At the age of 11, she began taking cello lessons and at the age of 12 she started to play cello with the Idaho State Symphony. She also attended the Interloche­n Music Camp as a young adult.

She studied at the Oberlin Conservato­ry in Oberlin, OH and Interameri­can University Puerto Rico and received Bachelor degrees in Cello Performanc­e, Music Education and Linguistic­s. In her early forties she returned to school at the University of Miami in Miami, FL and

Coral Gables, Florida - Lydia Ou Yeh, 82, a leader of the Chinese-American community in Miami, passed away peacefully at home on Friday, January 14, surrounded by her family.

Lydia Ou Yeh was born in 1939 in Canton, China, to father Ou Jian, a 3-star army general, and mother Liang Meng Juh, an obstetrici­an/ gynecologi­st, who bore and raised 8 children. In 1949 after the Chinese civil war, her family fled to Taiwan where she and her 7 siblings were raised alone by her mother who was widowed shortly thereafter. She finished her studies in Taiwan where she received her nursing degree, before fearlessly moving alone to the US in 1961. She first met her physician husband Billy in Oklahoma, and both later re-connected in NYC, where they married in 1965. After working as an RN in NYC (where Elizabeth was born) and Atlanta (where Brian was born), in 1969 they finally settled in Miami (where William was a New Year’s Eve party at the top of the Everglades Hotel later that year, he met Eva Hernadez, who was not his date but who captivated his attention and romantic inspiratio­n. After impressing her with his skills on the dance floor, they began to date and later married in August 1963. She was the “Lucy” to his “Ricky Ricardo,” while their love and adoration endured for the next 58 years. His work over the next several decades extended well beyond Miami, reaching throughout the U.S., the Caribbean, and Latin America. Along the way, he and Peter Spillis acquired the shares of the firm’s founding partners, eventually changing the name to Spillis Candela & Partners, growing it to nearly 300 architects, engineers, interior designers, and planners by the time of its sale years later. Given his outstandin­g contributi­ons to the field of architectu­re, he was named a Fellow to the American Institute of Architects. While Cuba was always in his heart, his focus and commitment was to Miami and to the country at large, as he understood and was always respectful of the incredible and unique opportunit­y his adopted homeland afforded him. A proud citizen of the United States, it was one of his greatest sources of pride to be named the first Hispanic member to the President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities. Despite all his extraordin­ary profession­al accomplish­ments and civic engagement, his family was his greatest achievemen­t. All who met him knew that he was married for more than 50 years to the love of his life, and that together they had four children and fifteen grandchild­ren, as he would boast of this more than anything else. He is survived by his wife Eva, his children Cecilia (Eduardo), Maurice (Jacquelin), Mark (Anna) and Hilary (Ingrid), fifteen grandchild­ren, his brother Andres (Teresita), and his many, many other family and friends who loved and adored him. The family will hold a funeral service at Epiphany Catholic Church, located at 8235 SW 57th Ave, Miami, FL 33143 on Wednesday, January 26 at 10 a.m. ET. Donations in his honor may be made to Epiphany Catholic Church.

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