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                    <text>���Digitized by the Internet Archive
in

2014

https://archive.org/details/lufor1986

�This book

HARVEST

'86

is

dedicated to
the Art of

Volume

XIII

Forestry

Lakehead Universi
Forestry Association

Thunder Bay
Ontario

7B 5E1

i

photo by: Bruce Catton

liner

photo by: Scott McAllister

�2

�MR

EWF

symphony

or a coal mine,

act of creating

source

"Whether
all

work

it's

is

a

an

and comes from the same

...

Ayn Rand

�YOUR
UNIVERSITY
Serving

Northwestern
Ontario
since 1965
•

•

•

Offers comprehensive programs in Arts,
Business, Education, Engineering, Forestry, Library Technology, Nursing, Outdoor Recreation, Physical Education, Science and Social Science.

Provides instruction on-campus and off,
and full-time, fall, winter and

part-time

summer.
Has athletic and recreational facilities
including an Olympic swimming pool,
squash courts, gymnasia, tennis courts,
comprehensive varsity and intramural
sports programs.
Has an active continuing education program for professional development and
for special groups.

For more information,

call or write:

Admissions
Lakehead University
Thunder Bay, Ontario

P7B 5E1
807-345-2121

Keep

in

touch with us through

Alumni Services.
Lakehead University,
Thunder Bay, Ontario.

P7B 5E1

[Lakehead jjj University]

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�FROM THE TOP
The "big news"

been the "big move" of the School of Forestry into the Braun
in or before 1986, this news may strike you as being
"too late", but rest assured that you will always be welcome to come back and "have a look", or
discuss a management or research problem you may have, or perhaps to consider graduate studies.
Our moving into the Braun Building has enabled us to design our teaching space as well as to
specify our research space. New facilities include our micro-processor equipped (50 units) forest
management laboratories, a fire control simulator room, and renovated space for wood technology,
pathology,
dendrology, taxonomy, soils, entomology, and wildlife
silviculture,
ecology,
management. The facilities for photogrammetry have been greatly augmented with the computer
based geographic information system in the Centre for the Application of Resources Information
Systems (CARIS). Speaking of computers, our micros will soon be linked by local area networks
for 1985-86 has

Building. For those of you

mainframe

of the

who graduated

Computing Centre, and thus

to other units as well.
a phrase, hardware and electronics do not a forestry school
make! The faculty, staff, and students are of paramount importance, and we have had some
important changes this past year. Eila Green ("the boss") was obliged to resign in November;
Kadie Chadwick joined us in December and Jane Masotti in January. Dr. Navratil resigned last
year, and Dr. E. Setliff took over forest pathology; Professor J. Tanz assumed the responsibilities
for photogrammetry and management in the diploma program; Professor John Blair has been on
long-term disability leave with a serious knee problem; Dennis Joyce has joined us as a Post
Doctorate Fellow working with Dr. Farmer; Sarah Thomson and Gary Macsemchuk joined us last
summer as mensuration and forest harvesting technologist, respectively; Teresa Zago completed
her term as silvicultural technologist; and research assistants Gwen O'Reilly and Madeline Maley
continue to work with Dr. Farmer and Dr. Parker. Like the curriculum, the faculty and staff are
in a state of dynamic change!
To all graduates, I'm sure I speak on behalf of all in the School of Forestry in wishing you the
best of luck in your personal and professional endeavours, and I trust you will maintain your
strong linkages with the School.
to the

But,

if

I

may borrow and mangle

DR.

A.J.

KAYLL,

Director

School of Forestry

R.P.F.

�Management
Richard Clarke

Ken 'Mac' Brown

Crandall Benson

Frances Bennet-Sutton

is

Willard

Carmean

FUN

Harold dimming
Back from the outback

R.J.
I

Day

love 2, 4, 5,

T

If"
t

*

Tom

Eiber

Burn that Bud worm

Rob Fanner
The take home

Jack Flowers
lesson

is

MAX.
Dennis Joyce

Mary

Ellen

MacCallum

Tom

Hazenberg

CLI-

H. Gary Murchison
"You want credit for

Parker
"Genes, not jeans'
Bill

WHAT?"

�Don Richardson

Edson

Siegfried Zingel

K.C. Yang

tos!"

Jordan Tang
"In Alberta ..."

Setliff

Hans Westbroek
"You must delineate your pho-

Don Barnes

"I'll

have them back next month'

Kadie Chadwick

Doug Walker
Rick Anderson
Economics

Sandy Dunning

"Moose"
Dr. P. Fralick
Geology

Steve Elliott

,

§f

Georgina

Karen Garlick

"Okay!"

Graham

�Joe Kapron

Peggy Knowles

Frank Luckai

Gary Macsemchuk

Maddie Maley

Doug Martin

Jayne Masotti

Grant Mitchell

Brian Moore

Dr. D.E. Orr

Dave Parsons

Dr. Eric Green

Alastair

Macdonald

Dave

Peerla

Gwen

O'Reilly

Bob Pickard

�10

�1

��13

�SCHOOL

FIELD
September
and

foresters

Bay

Thunder

in

and

the

budding

future

Canada take to the woods.
has come and gone with all the

forest technicians of

Yea, .mother field school
sleeping on the bus and staring blankly at the instructors that
it

entails.

The

fir-t

years were introduced to the most primitive form

them apart and pressing the life out
more advanced training
in killing plants; cut them down and run over their offspring
with big tires. Degree three received more subtle training in
plant killing; dig all the soil out from underneath them. By
of killing plants, tearing

of them.

The second

now degree

fours are professional plant assassins so they slept

through most of
All

in

always.

years received

all

New

field school.

field

school was a good start to the year as
made, the old gangs were reunited,

friends were

and a few rather bizarre experiences were had by

*Jk

all.

What channel

Now

let

me

think. I'm sure

I

told the driver to

come back

EF

for us.

Last thing

woke up

Keep digging you

14

slacker!

EF

Oh

pooh!

I

think

I just

I

are the Flintstones

I remember
was sitting in

ran over a

I

was

RGD

on?

at this party,

this hole in the

and when

woods.

LINN AE AS BOREALIS.

I

EF

�I'm

sitting

on a log

How's it going?

pile at

9 o'clock Saturday morning and you ask;

SM

The excitement

of Thessalon

DWfl

�H
j
[

CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE

—
1986 GRADUATES

[sforS/W

OF THE

\

——
1

i

r A ID
iir
L.

SCHOOL OF FORESTRY
The Ontario Forest Products

fulfilling future,

ONTARIO PULP

&amp;

-

F OF

SAFETY ASSOCIATION

i

Hi

Ot HE N &amp;

&gt;

A/

L

/

—

t

!

...

i

PAPER MAKERS

"Promoting Safety

o Mi.

.

)M

Industry

can be your key to
a

1

,

3C

0 P EAF :l/&gt; \LG OM A

—

in the

$44 -44 11-

:

3 44- 95 32
(

-

Ontario Forest Products Industry"
r~

mm

lo

MEMBER

si

1951

BOREALIS
Forestry

Consultants
The

forestry profession is currently faced with the
challenge of developing and implementing an intensive
forest management program that will increase the
viability of the forest industry and at the same time
protect and enhance the environment. Your contribution to this difficult but exciting task can be

maximized by joining the Ontario Professional Foresters
Association. Information on the Association and its
membership requirements can be obtained from the
following address.

ONTARIO PROFESSIONAL
FORESTERS ASSOCIATION
10,255 Yonge Street
Suite 202
Richmond Hill, Ontario

L4C 3B2

16

Thunder Bay, Ontario

�I
{foe

a&amp;n {he hea/t£
&lt;xdd t&amp;wiiek

ytjuk hea/idfo

MMjfofo,

&lt;m

{he fottmtlty

&lt;bhade ^c^een^ny you, foorn {foe hwrwtriet

bwn,

and

vny,

fowifo

abe

befoebhirity

you

a%autjfofo auwtcfoing, ytauk {foi/t&amp;t €t&amp;

am
you/i hc&lt;uAe&gt;}

{he

{he {ma/vd cfl y*mb {cdde,

{he {ed twi anfoich

ycu

{hcd {tUldb youA, {wcU.

htvndle

^cm/i hoe, {he

wood

tmd {he &amp;heH efl ycmb,
{wndnete* tvnd {foe flexwe/i

^e wfoo

fvaM&gt; ty, {i&amp;fan {o

my,

&lt;^

and

he,

{vm6&lt;e/i

hc#ne&amp;{eadf {he

Shea*/

{eam {hcd hofoA
{he

&amp; am {he

doc/i,

cfl mcm/i

you/i
cfaactle,

am

coffivn.

{foe

{eiiuty.

fi/Mvyefr

ha/wn wie

&lt;n&amp;t.

&lt;jtfu{foc/i

fyfin/vncaswi

�!

D
E

G
R

I

E
E
What time does

the bus

come again?

BM

Whaddo

ya mean we were supposed to

level

it

first?

Walter Quiring, Dan Biggs, Marino
Bordin, Allison Drennan, Jeff Prochnicki, Ian
Front:

Bain, Fred Raderma, John McLaughlin, Mike
Dietsch, Patrick Matakala.
Middle: Jim Boyd, Darren Tegel, Dave Smid,
John Marlow, Angela Salzl, Troy Werstroh,
Rob Foster, Bruce Russell, Rick Smith, Steve

Osawa, Chris Adamopoulos, Dale Timmerman,
Craig Holzscherer.
Back: Yvon Lecours, Allan Rudson,
Lepa, James Mackay, Kevin Doyle,
McLaughlin, Emile Giroux.

SM

And

this

is

where the pool was going

to be.

BM

Where

is

that bus

anyway?

Chris

Mike

�19

�TECH

I

Back Row: Derek Acres, Mike Danko, Bertha Bunting, Steve Willoughby, Chris Lind, Craig Gaebel, Timo Ahonen, Mike Matheson, Bruce
Catton, Drew Bishop, Rodney MacDonald, Ron Ferland, Kevin Dunning, Les Jones, Ron Tarkka, Dave Chepil.
Front Row: Dettmar Ruppenstein, Joyce Davies, Rejeanne Baillargeon, Brenda Culligan, Rob Waddell.

20

�Back Row: Keith Walden, Richard Maass, Todd Ringash, Lars Hulstein, Vera Ballan, Barb Buckingham, Stewart Mainville, Dave Huffman,
Richard Pearce.
Front Row: Ivars Krummins, Trevor Stanley.
Missing: Steve Carleton, Holly Mathias, Todd Patterson, Tammy Sherman, Dennis Ventzke.

Come

on, one

more guys!

This

A

I

didn't

know

But

did

I

last night.

relaxing.

Who

there were Indians here.

my homework

is

hard days cruising!

We

said school

was hard?

found the kid from

last

year!

�!

INITIATION
1^85 tlu&gt; 2nd year Degree and Tech students welcomed the
year students in the traditional forestry manner. After the first
years played skidder and trees, they were then led over to the
In

first

forestry association's elegant swimming pool (AKA "the pits"). Here
each student was put through the gauntlet of second year students
along the length of the pits. The first year students that finally
emerged from the other end of the pits were slightly the worse for
wear but generally happy as they were now full-fledged forestry
students. Those that survived the pits joined 2nd year students by
the fire to wash the mud?? out of their mouths with a few
refreshments. This was a good day for all involved and will be

remembered

for

many

years to come.

Bonzai

EW

Splish-splash, I

was taking a bath.

BWB

��GREAT WEST

y

S3
LIMITED

BEATRICE FOODS
(ONTARIO) LIMITED

/^U^i
'frfr

|

/

Phone: 344-8464 Telex 073-4575

fjr\l-'Htt|P.O.

Box 3170, Thunder Bay, Ontario

Klomp-Wakefield Dairy Division
134 South Waterloo Street

Thunder Bay, Ontario
P7E 2C3
807-623-8233

DOM1AR

Everything
for the
forester...

DOMTAR FOREST
PRODUCTS

WOODLANDS DIVISION
i^HB
^jk

9

^WJKFjtw

24

Equipment Supplier

to

Professionals Throughout the World

Ben/Meadows Company
3589 Broad

Street

Post Office 8ox

80549

Atlanta (Chamblee), Georgia

30366

2601 -B West 5th Avenue
Post Office Box 2781
Eugene, Oregon 97402

P.O. Box 580
Red Rock, Ontario

(807) 886-2211

�LUFA-LUNA LUAU
LUFA/LUNA LUAU was a great
again this year, as foresters, nurses and
other assorted persons attended the bash, in all
The annual

success

forms of Hawaiian dress, from

leis and grass skirts
There was a contest
for best dressed man and woman, with Jim McBride winning the men's category. There was also a
limbo contest, with Kevin Weaver and Keith
Windier 'tending bar'.

to flowered shirts

all

photos by Dave

and

Little.

shorts.

�Boyachuk, Steve Smith, Jim Mclean, Kevin Guse, Trent Thorn, Dean Teasdale, Hubert Smith, Scott Mitchell.
Back: Ron Weibe, Perry Benoit, Ron Luopa, Ernest Richard, Kim Verbruggen, Gail Wong, Mark Goodwin, Bud
Carter, Mat Wilkie, Scott Shepley, Wendy Ward, Rainer Halonen, Peter Wiltsey, Kevin Higgins, Ken Arsenault,
Gerry Erdmann, Troy Stephenson.

s

26

�When

I

get

my hands

on you.

We

see

JBM

you Dean.

There's something alive in there

JM

....

JBM

There's nothing practical about

Our connoisseurs

of fine beverages.

this.

JM

JBM
27

�'

Randy

Anna Westwood
"Buy a Volvo ..

Mike Wiens

Dorothy Willis
"Say 'trees'"

"I like plaid'

"A

Craig Tillander

Valotaire

tree

is

a tree

is

a

Carl

I

Finn Soramaki
I

"Hey Frankie,
guy will you?"

Robert Quesnel

lose this

Mark

Well guys, we're

finally

years went by quickly but

through.

we

"Aw,

Scofich

quit joshin'

me!"

Remember

Marlene Rhyner

their individual niche requirements etc etc etc."

this ..?

10.

Initiation- pretty

2.

time through.
Hayride- What hayride?

11.
I

don't

remember

any hayride.
Lobball and Snoball Champs 1986.
Intramural woodsmen- Moper saws logs

Slide

shows with Emil-

"Skiddairs

and

forvardairs."

bad but worse the second

1.

4.

Sue Rayner

"Give a complete description of the various
habitats in the boreal forest ecosystem, and list
the animal species associated with them as per

The two

sure have lots to

remember.

3.

"You've got to be joking"

tree"

Overheads with Rich-

"visual

(sleeping)

aids."
12.
13.

for

Philosophy with K.C.- "speak out."
Lufa announcements- Q: "can I have your
attention please?" A: "NO".

real.
5.

240

N

Harold- "doesn't need an explan-

Well, that's

6.
7.

8.
9.

Early mornings in the Mac room.
Photo lab- Ralph: "These four trees on the
photo are definitely a stand".
"the point of the matter is ..."
Question No. 1, Section A, Part

Bernie Paziuk
"Hi there sexy"

1

TERMINATOR
Design by

of 2:

John Patridge
"They told me

Tom McNamee

anymore"

28

life.

See ya

C.

Hawes

"Look me in
and say that"

wit

Mike (Bomber) Lauzon

the

eye

McAllister

Ken McAllister
"Surely you jest'

Yvon Lecours

Dave Lyle
don't

have a great

Don Jobson

Scott (Scooter)

to smile,

so ..."

"I

all folks-

around.

ation".

wanna

play

"Don't
fella"

mess

dis

"Is this pose alright?"

John Lagodin

Brent Jones
"Vi .. ga .. rooo!

�"

Don Jobson

Tim Janes

James Heuvelmans

Cheryl Hodgson

Mike Henderson

"She looks better from
this side"

Moper (Roy) Granger
Caroline

I

Keener

I

Hawes

Dave Haveman
"Hi there

...

"I just can't do a thing

Andrew Grauman

I'm Dave.

Hazen Gilks

like that"

yC^P PERMANENT

PLICATION FOR EMPLOYMENT
©

1981 University and College Placement Association

•

—

rni i^ATiriMAl IMPTITI ITIOM

FOREST TECHNICIAh
The successful applicant will be responsible for the design
and implementation of a casual staffing program. A significant portion of the technician's time will be spent in a
Code

training capacity.
St

Len Gatey

"Look

into

my

eyes'

A

diploma

/

forest technology and a working knowledge
of current forest management practices at the field level
are essential.
in

Shawn Gallagher
"Wow! Look at those!

Dave (Whiner)

Dockrill

"I look great in profile"

William Devoe

John DeSousa

"I like smiling for pictures"

Richard (Keener) Cowley

"WHO?

Greg Cox
Pat Desmarais

...

let

the

Mike Cheung

riff-

!

"This has gotta be wood "

raff

in?"

Steve Cooke

"Yes, I'm

still

here'

�&gt;
Ken (Spankyl Chalmers

Randy Celko

"Hi

"That was

...

I'm

smiling,

Ben Brown

really

Clive Baudin

Pat Bonilla
No. 0112861

No. 0112860

funny

"I want Don's coffee"

Greg'
Eric Bakker

Paul (Blister)
Bastarache
"I

am SO

a

techni-

"Oh no ... there's a
bark beetle in my poc

Teckers ... enough fooling. Let's
what a technician is
everyone
REALLY made of! This is
All right

show

TECH

IN

II

ACTION
You

Up, up and away

Big Rob's new toy.

More happy

techs.

'All I

want

can't keep a

for Christmas

is

my

good tecker down!

Tim-ber-jack".

Technicians need their rest too.

�MONDAY

...

"Uh".

TUESDAY
making you

...

"Ve have vays

talk".

of

WEDNESDAY
today".

...

"Aw

c'mon, not

THURSDAY
had a zoom

...

"I wish this thing

lens".

��TECH

II

GRADS

...

PARTY!!
The Grad party this year was a great success!
Thanks go out to Richard Cowley for its organization,
and to Moper and Steve Cooke for the music. And last
but not least thanks to Anna W., Marlene R., and
John P.

for the pictures!

CIF

Presentations:

Cowley

(right).

Brian Moore
class

Leadership

Award

to

Honourary Class Member

(far right top),

members (Ben Brown,

Congratulations everyone.

Richard
1986

for

books were presented to
far right bottom).

Good

luck to

all of

you!

all

�DEGREE

III:

TIMBER BARONS

Back Row: Tim Reece, Rob Gushe, Brian Kruger, Matt Hollands, Rob Bowen, Annette Van Niejenhuis, Rob
Steve Warrington,

Stirling,

John McNutt,

Rob Whaley.

Third Row: Tara Ryan, Andrea MacDonald, Al Neeb, Rob D'eon, Pierre Patenaude, Ray Schatt, Marty Lelliott, Ward Perchuck.
Second Row: John Bonekamp, Paul Mackenzie, Frank Schaller, Bruce Summerby, Dave Jenning, Colette Tessier, Hedi Kogel, John Paterson.
Front Row: John Lawson, Heather D'arcy, Ron Fairbanks, Maria Vella, Glenn Niznowski, James Thompson.
Missing: Dare Beard, Ed Foreman, Michelle Kipien, Denise Knight, Paul Leblanc, Dave Meilleur, Tom Sladek, Dave Swinton.

34

SM

�Surviving third year was no

mean

feat. After

two years

of having the Forestry Technical Writing Manual thrust
upon us, we reverted once again to more childish fancies

and underlined everything in red. But, bleary of eye and
weary of bone, at the end of the year we were all satisfied
that with the constraints placed upon us, we could not
have improved upon the volume (net merchantable) of
output which we achieved. Truly, in the words of a
classmate, "I survived third year" is an accomplishment of
which to be proud, and worthy of printing on a t-shirt.

35

�A Message from the
The Honourable Vincent G.
Minister of Natural

Kerrio

Resources

Things are happening in forestry in Ontario these days. We're taking stock, sharing information and
changing the way we manage our forest estate.

now because our forests have reached a turning point. We need to have
make the decisions needed to create future forests.
And we want to share that information with you because we need your input into decisions

We're taking stock

right

the best information possible to

affecting those forests.

That's

why Dean Gordon

independent review

Baskerville of the University of

New

Brunswick

is

undertaking an

of our forest resources.

why we released the Provincial Auditor's Report on Forest Management, and made public
reviews on how industry carried out timber management under the Forest
Management Agreements signed in 1980.
That's why we are asking you to comment on the Class Environmental Assessment that will
determine how all forest management activities will be conducted in the north, as well as the south.
We are also trying to improve forest management by focusing our attention on the best growing
sites, sites that are also close to existing mills and good access road systems. We call these "prime
That's

the

first

five

sites."

We are also working with industry and universities to continually improve the quality of the trees
we plant. And we've made some

important advances. As a result, by the year 2000 only genetically
improved jack pine, black spruce, white pine and white spruce seedlings will be used to regenerate
our prime sites.

Ontario invests a
investment.

lot

of

money in forests. We want to make sure we all

get the best return on that

Taking stock, informing and involving people and improving the management of our forest estate.
We're managing Ontario's forests for everyone. The aim is to get the most
for everyone
out of
tomorrow's forest.

—

Ministry of

Hon. Vincent G. Kerrio
Minister

Natural
Mary Mogford

Resources
Ontario
36

Deputy Minister

—

�"With enough trees,
we'll all breathe a little

easier."

we

all

breathe, by

fumes

in

the air today,

"Trees, like other green plants, help purify the air

replacing carbon dioxide with oxygen.
"And with all the smoke, the exhaust, and the

need

the help we can get.
"The point is— we need our forests

we

all

manage them

like

never before. And
little

^

OF
AMERICAN
FORESTERS
1900

to

wisely.

"Our job is growing. Help us all breathe a
information on what you can do."
SOCIETY

we need

Society of

American

easier. Write for

^
Ralph Waite for America's
professional foresters.

Foresters
5400 Grosvenor Lane
Bethesda, MD 20814

i

i

37

�Dan

Bulger

Dave Carr

John Connor

Our legacy

Steve Curtis

38

Margaret Doughty

Wendy Duncan

Gord dimming

is

our

Mike Edwards

�Brian Farquharison

Mark Fleming

Martin Foelken

appreciation of the past

Heather Foster

Neil Fraser

...

Michele Freitag

�Our mandate

is

the

�Maure

Pat MacCasey

Kathy Marek

Joe

James Peters

Ian Pritchard

Tom

security of the future

Frank Schaller

Jim "J.D."

Steele

Jim McCullough

Ratz

Kevin Reid

Stewart

Mary Tedesco

...

Don

41

�Frank Testa

Don Tribe

Paul Tufford

Alison Turner

Steve Watson

Kevin Weaver

Keith Windeler

"Caper"

We are the Regenerates.

Walter Vos

42

Jiri

Vosyka

Teresa Zago
"I finally graduated!"

��THE 4TH ANNUAL
The

4th annual Forestry Folk Night was, as in past

years, a great success thanks to the fine organization

Dave

Ip,

Dean Hample and

friends.

by

The $300.00

in

proceeds from this event were donated to the Cystic
Fibrosis Fund which made the Folk Night that much
more worthwhile. Between the many fantastic baked
goods, the wonderful jokes?, from MC's Teresa Zago
and Rob D'eon and of course the great performers and
audience, it was once again a great night for all. Thanks
to all who helped, performed and attended.

Masters of Ceremonies:

Dave Swinton dressed

Rob D'eon and Theresa Zago.

MV

Fred, Brian and

"Dean and

regimental?

Dr. Harold

Cumming came

waltzing Matilda.

44

MD

MD

Dean

the Derivatives'

MV

Frankie Testa and Dave Ip from the Re-

JBM

generates.

Maria Vella accompanied by Dr. Hazenberg.

JBM

Ron

Storie

"Frayed Knot'

MD

�FORESTRY FOLK NIGHT

Hector Gonda
Argentinian love songs.

JBM

Kevin Reid and John.

JBM

45

�GRADUATE

i'

STUDENTS:
M.ScF.

Hector Gonda

^1

MGS

-Si

Cassian Sianga

46

MGS

Kerry Deschamps

MGS

Alan Wiensczyk

MGS

�Hugh Lougheed

Jim Thrower

Roger Butson

MGS

Wayne

MLV

Bell

&lt;$

MGS

Richard Krygier.

Lisa Buse

MLV

MGS

Margaret Schmidt

Asleep on the job?

EF
47

�0

1 u Canadian
KiSLjl Institute

R

n^^w

A f\
Bjfeg]
/y

of Forestry/

Institut Forestier
104 S. ALGOMA STREET
THUNDER BAY, ONTARIO

QU v^anaaa

P7B 3B8

TELEPHONE 344-0277

TOM SOULIAS

Congratulations Class of 86
Join CIF/IFC

FEATURING
Participate in Canada's
national association of forestry

Lunch and
Dinner Specials

Breakfast,

professionals

Discounts available to
Student Saver Discount Card Holders

and
receive

The

Forestry Chronicle

For Application Forms and
particulars, write to:

^ t&amp;

Suite 815, 151 Slater Street,
~. IJ
A..„,„. CnrynAa If
ID ono
rvir

Uttawa, Lianaaa
Telephone: 613-234-2242

&lt;Z'^

MacMillan Bloedel Limited

NIPIGON DIVISION

Q/

THUNDER BAY DIVISION

Poplar and birch veneer,

plywood and hockey

"Where

48

stick shafts

Aspenite

the safety of our employees and the quality of our product go

hand

in

hand."

��FORESTRY OF YESTERYEAR
photos courtesy of Dave Carr

�FORESTRY CONSULTANTS
Act eHthwtiaAm watai*

(faun,

e^onta,

INC.

and may cfom e^onfa

6c &lt;iucc£d4^c&lt;£

si

�LUFA LECTURE SERIES
The World

Forestry lecture series, organized and run by Dr.

Carmean

in

1984-85, continued this year in association with several L.U.F.A. members.
Lectures on forest management, acid rain, Indian claims on forested land
and other topics were included in the World Forestry series. Our sincere

thanks are extended to lecturers, many of whom came from as far away as
Wisconsin, Toronto, and New Brunswick, and to the organizers for a job
well done.
Already, preparations are underway for the 86-87 lecture series, and it is
hoped that students and faculty will continue to support this worthwhile
project.

Roy

Cline,

Taupin,

Tom

Bill

Rudolph, Paul Crabbe, Bernie

Towill.

Edson

Setliff

Christof Hugentobler

Dr. Peter

J.

19TH ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM:

52

Rennie

�!

TARIFFS

OK, who

spiked the drink with 2,

AND THE CANADIAN FOREST INDUSTRY

Why

do we always have

to talk

"Regeneration

shop?

Jump!"

The Symposium Committee once again
put together a pertinent, well-organized and
professional symposium. The topic of "Tariffs and the Canadian Forest Industry" is
as pertinent today as it was at the time of
this symposium, and is likely to continue to
be an issue for some time to come. The lectures were well attended on both days by
students, faculty, industry,
officials.

Those

fortunate

and government
enough to be

present for Dr. Farmer's (and friends) after
dinner "speech", learned the "Regeneration
Jump" as they were regaled with the folksy
and musical wisdom and humor of the Un-

derground Forestry Blues! To all appearances, the symposium and dinner-dance
were enjoyed by all!

The Benson's.

fed

Our

after-dinner speaker, Dr. Farmer.

�Gob

hitting the fan.

RE

Paul and Annette's kitchen.

WOODSMEN'S
On

a cold January morning, the largest
twenty 6- person teams and a

attracted

playground. Cheers won out against
cookies rolled and gobbers reeled.

"Woodsmen's Intramural" as yet
crowd of fans to the loggers'

chills as pulpsticks flew,

axes ricocheted,

The crosscut saw was the most spectacular tool and always the focus of a
large cheering huddle. In the log pull, choking and skidding a log as a team at
a dead run was great sport and demanded smooth cooperation. The pulp piling
required skill, while the distance pulp toss tested the brawn of contestants as
well. Getting the three axe events done before our aim deteriorated was a race
against time. Perhaps someone will score in next year's axe throw if it is
opened before the bottles are. The snowshoe races were short and intense, and
the local brew offered to runners at midpoint favoured the well-trained. Longdistance gobbing was saved for near the end to coincide with the height of good

tl

Best.

JM

feelings.

�Mike

Strategy session astride log.

Dan-yells.

INTRAMURAL
The judges Keith Windeler and J.D.

Steele,

by nimble footwork, would

sidestep the spray drift, then dash in to find the dime sized entry hole.
Unlike the more serious competition of last year, this woodsmen's meeting
was a great party. Annette van Niejenhuis and Paul Tufford fed the crowd hot
all day. Spirits flowed and soared as the all-male chamwent to the veteran Alumni team starring Jim Schwass, Greg
Dawson, Jim Parsons, Bill Hall, Dave Hayhurst, and Dave Pickston. The
mixed team 'Upsala' with Kevin Linquist, Sue Collins, Glen McGuinn, Peter
Hanmore, Rich Mackenzie, and Cathy Wayland won in their category, and
Louise Clennet, Wenda Li, Kim Verbruggen, Caroline Hawes, Marlene
Rhyner and Dorothy Willis were the best women's team this year.

chocolate and dogs

pionship

�\S3
Compliments

of

WAJAX INDUSTRIES
LIMITED
Serving the Canadian and
Industry for over 25 years.

U.S.

Forestry

1105 350 Sparks St.
Ottawa, Ont.
K1R7S8
-

(613) 238-7291

FACULTY OF UNIVERSITY SCHOOLS
Schools of
•

Business Administration

•

Engineering

•

Forestry

•

Library Technology

•

Nursing

•

Physical Education

and Outdoor Recreation

56

���WHAT'S A PROF?
Chairman of Department
tall buildings at a single bound
more powerful than a locomotive

Leaps
Is

Is faster

than a speeding bullet

Walks on water
Gives policy to

God

Professor
Leaps short buildings
Is

more powerful than

at a single

bound

a switch engine

Is just as fast as a

speeding bullet

Walks on water

the sea

Talks with

if

is

calm

God

Associate Professor
Leaps short buildings with a running start
Is almost as powerful as a switch engine
Is faster than a speeding BB
Walks on water in an indoor swimming pool
Talks with God if a special request is approved
Assistant Professor
Barely clear a quonset hut
Loses tug of war with locomotive
Can fire a speeding bullet

Swims well
Is occasionally

addressed by

God

Sessional Instructor
Makes high marks on wall when trying to leap buildings
Is run over by locomotive
Can sometimes handle gun without inflicting self-injury
Dog paddles
Talks to animals.

Research Associate
Runs into buildings
Recognizes locomotive 2 out of 3 times
Is not issued ammunition
Can stay afloat with life jacket
Talks to walls

Graduate Student
Falls over doorsteps

when

trying to enter building

Says "Look at the Choo-Choo"
Wets himself with water pistol
Plays in mud puddles

Mumbles to himself
Undergraduate Student
Lifts buildings and walks under them
Kicks locomotives off the track
Catches bullets in his teeth and eats them
Freezes water with a single glance
Is

God

...

�CONGRATULATIONS
TO ALL FORESTRY
GRADUATES

BEAVER FOODS,
LTD.
SPORTS AND LEISURE
1.

Because

wood

it

resists

of this tree

is

abrasion so well, the

1.

(Answers on page 63)

often used for flooring in

gymnasiums, ballrooms, and bowling

Which

of the cedars bears a fruit that

woody capsules

Some 80,000 of these trees are cut each
year to supply baseball-bat manufacturers
with wood that is extremely shock-resistant
and has a high strength-to-weight ratio.
The same property that makes it one of
the best woods for whittling makes it almost
a sure bet that your pencil came from this

1. Robert Frost was so fascinated with the
bending ability of these trees that he wrote a
poem about them. Name the tree, and
you'll name the poem.

2.

SCIENCE AND NATURE
What

the tree that grew in Brooklyn,

The Bible

is often plagued by a fungal
upper branches, and may even
identified by the so-called "witches'

its

4.

a

short

veterans,

1970s

the
trees

POWs,

and
and

Americans held captive.

3.

The

is

and recitals is
whose resonant wood

quality of concerts

enhanced by

this tree,

used for the sounding boards of guitars,
and other musical instruments.

pianos,
4.

What

limit

of

type of forest marks the western
is your land" in the

"This land

man named

tree

The Fellowship of the Ring,
swallowed 11/2 hobbits?

HISTORY

Unlike most conifers, this one's foliage

turns yellow in autumn. It also has cones
that point upward and look like tiny roses.

1.

What

tree

GEOGRAPHY

this tree to see Jesus.

In Tolkien's

what

brooms?"
2.

says

Zacchaeus climbed

tree

disease of

be

of

American version?
3.

1.

What was

according to Betty Smith's classic novel?

tree.

war

hit

involving

tradition

2.
In the 1955 Hitchcock comedy, The
Trouble with Harry, beneath what tree .was
Harry buried?

LITERATURE

3.

4.

a

as far as several feet from

the tree.

looks like a miniature soccer ball?

This Tony Orlando

started

returning

alleys.

wingless seed that are forcibly ejected from
2.

ENTERTAINMENT

TREEvial Pursuit

was most often scarred by

western Indians who stripped the bark to
obtain the edible sap of the tree's cambium

1. Because
grows well

tolerant of salt spray

it

is

in

sandy

soil,

this tree

planted in coastal areas. Hint:
popular Christmas decoration.
2.

it's

is

and
often

also a

This conifer, native to the West, has two
based on the elevation at which

varieties

they occur.

layer?
3. Which
when the

4.

of the maples exudes a milky sap
leaf

stem

is

broken?

Besides blooming in

the

fall,

another

distinguishing characteristic of this tree

60

is its

3.

A

state

derives

its

nickname from

2.

In Biblical times, King Solomon built the
temple of Jerusalem with these trees, which

tree.

he acquired through a trade and by hiring
150,000 men to log it in Lebanon.

By D.A. Boerner and B.C. Stone
From American Forests, Dec. 1985

this

�C.I.F.
How

RING CEREMONY

was the H.B.Sc. Forestry class of 1986? Well it was so
1 but 2 ceremonies were required to present the class with
their forestry rings. Actually the second was held to present the rings which
never quite made it to the first ceremony. It seems that the courier service
special

special that not

They were located just in time
ceremony, but unfortunately in Winnipeg.
Aside from the missing rings the night provided some definite memories.
Who could forget the "encouraging" talk from Larry Lambert of the
OMNR? He spoke with wisdom when he told the class that "50c and a
hired to deliver the rings misplaced them.
for the

forestry degree will get

you a cup

of coffee".

Some

other highlights of the

evening were the Valedictorian speech by Ken (the-railway-wasn't-so-bad)
Broughton and a slide show arranged by Ed Fong and Fraser.
Congratulations to a future

RPF

!

DWI

61

�THE
NETHERLANDS
How much can you learn from a forestry exchange
with a country that has one of the poorest forests in
Europe? A lot. From polder willows to douglas-fir,
from idealistic students to old-fashioned farmers, the
lands and people of the Netherlands make it one of
the best learning environments going. Thanks to all
who made

this

exchange possible.
All photos

by Al Neeb.

�REAL FORESTERS
Real

foresters

accountants,

dislike

cupines and wetlands

—

black

flies,

por-

in that order.

Real foresters don't perspire

—

they sweat.

Real foresters think "Environmentalist"

is

a "four letter

word."'

Real foresters cruise timber

in the rain.

Real foresters eat and drink anything that

is

free, eh,

D'eon??
Real foresters don't come out of the woods for lunch.
Real foresters don't wear beards, which catch in the
and provide habitat for unwanted parasites.

briars

Real foresters confined to a desk
go to the field.

Real foresters

will use

in the field will use

any excuse to

any excuse to head

for a desk.

All real foresters

end every promise with,

"if

it

don't

Real foresters know information on a computer printout
come from the same authority which spoke to
Moses from a burning bush.
did not

Real foresters know sawmill people believe trees are
square with no limbs.

and

rain."

Real foresters enjoy a close relation with wildlife
any other thing they can shoot at or hook.

Real foresters know accountants create more irritation
than black flies.

Real foresters have spouses who don't complain when
they find ticks in their beds.

Real foresters know there ain't no forest in the city,
there
ain't
no such thing as "Urban

Mill shut

therefore,

open orders

Forestry."

know

Real land Management foresters pray for rain, real
Procurement foresters pray it won't.

Real foresters are surprised

Real foresters don't own

much

respect for those

4- wheel drive vehicles or

who

do.

have

--

downs occur during dry weather conditions,
exist only when it floods. Real foresters

this.

if

anything ever goes as

planned.

A

real forester

can build anything for

50%

less

than

that built by an engineer.

Projects built by real foresters are simple and work.
Projects built by engineers are brilliant

and complex but

they don't work.

and slightly modified from
Cooperative Extension Newsletter — Ed.
Stolen

the

Alabama

Sports and Leisure: 1) hard maple; 2) Atlantic white-cedar; 3) ash; 4)
red cedar. Science and Nature: 1) hackberry; 2) eastern larch
(tamarack); 3) Norway maple; 4) witch-hazel. Literature: 1) the
birches; 2) tree-of-heaven (Ailanthus); 3) sycamore; 4) willow.
History: 1) ponderosa pine; 2) cedar. Entertainment: 1) "Tie a Yellow
Ribbon 'Round the Old Oak Tree"; 2) an old oak; 31 spruce; 4)
redwood. Geography: 1) American holly; 2) Douglas fir; 3) buckeye.

63

�mom SUPERIOR

mill

©
E. B.

Some of our specialties: Custom Built Units
Logging Trailers and Trains Low Boy &amp; Pole Trailers
•

•

&amp;

EDDY FOREST PRODUCTS

Portable

LTD.

25'

x

ESPANOLA

in

Cab

Shields

Camp Garages uC to

58' (or

moved

•

comp use'.

Easily

5 minutes.

ONTARIO

Log Grapplei

"V" Blode
lit

with Custom

shorr.veod

to

handle

c sa^vlogs.

adjustable &gt;ctev.

cms (or 220 h.p. and
300 Kp. crawler
tractors.

Mii.imum ou!

(rent for

good machine

balance.
tor

Good

minimum

shear

soil

disturbance.

WE SERVICE EVERYTHING WE SELL

SUPERIOR TRAILERS
.0.

Box

1

I

2R64
1185

I

ROLAND ST., THUNDER BAY,

P7B 5G3

64

807,-623-5107

���LOBBALL

SM

SM

Stee-rike

1.

1st

Rain and cold did not stop these hardy foresters from "playing ball" on Thanksgiving weekend.
to all teams for braving the weather and making the tourney a great success!

'85

SM

Thanks go

Stee-rike 2.

Base: "Go, Brian,

Go!"

SM

SM

It's

a Hit!

2nd: "Where's he go?"

DW

Look

All right!

SM

at that! Finally!

WOW!

"Hey! That's not Brian!"

3rd:

THE CHAMPIONS
TECH II BUTTROTS
r:
H. Gilkes, T. Janes, S.
A. Westwood, P. Bastarache, D.
Willis, C. Soramaki, P. Burke.
Front: S. Cooke, R. Cowley, J. Desousa, K.

Back,

1

to

McAllister,

Chalmers, C. Hawes.

�**4

SNOBALL
6 teams showed up that snowy Saturday in March for a rip-roaring time
running through Kneedeep drifts.
Congratulations to the champs, Tech
II Terminators.

All photos

by Rob

el

Tantawny.

GOT

SAFE!

Richard Lavalle, Dave Legg, Hector Gonda, Kerry
Deschamps, Etc.
Al Wiensczyk,

Lisa at bat.

Norm, Hugo Desrochers, Bruce, Brian Boy-

Steve Watson, Dave Niblett,
Heather Foster Etc.

'The Lagers' Giving

it

Ken

Elliot,

YA!

Tom

their best?

Sladek,

Perfect fly catch.

achek.

Tech

68

II

warming up.

The Technician team dugout

Mike Martel,

gathering.

�KAM-AM CANOE
RACE
October

1985

5,

Stroke! Stroke!

I'll

be

home

for Christmas,

you can plan on me. Please have snow, and

A

Going the wrong way!

Think

they'll let

All

Photos by Dave

Little.

us into Outdoor Rec?

Ahhh, dry land!

No, you can't go

yet!

Now,

repeat after

me

...

M-I-C, K-E-Y, M-O-U-S-E!

69

���LUFA REVIEW
This past winter a wayward Outdoor Rec'r asked me if there really was such a thing as L.U.F.A.? So, I sat her
a Pj stump and, stuffing my pipe with some 1981 ARCTOSTAPHYLLOS UVA-URSI, I proceeded to
regale her with the following facts:

down on

"Back

in the fall of '85 there

occurred a gathering of woodsy types on the grounds of Lakehead University. These
days of arduous field work, a Hayride/BBQ took place and fun and frivolity
was the order of the day. Weeks later at an event known as "Crest Nite" four generations of foresters gathered to
perform the ancient ceremonial Boat Races at an institution that dates back beyond the dawn of L.U. foresters. Not
long after, these same crazed people convened to exercise initiating rites on the new clan members. The Mclntyre
River ran cold that day but spirits were high and smiles abounded.
"Within the month, the elite of the student lumberjacks hied themselves off to New Brunswick to prove the
existence of L.U.F.A. Only a month later, the tree people joined forces with the Florence Nightingales and staged a
Hawaiian LUAU that left people thirsting for a visit to the real islands.
"Another month passed and, when most university types were absorbed in books and studies, those wild and
wonderful woodwhackers held a fund-raiser for the Toys For Tots Christmas drive and worked with L.U.C.F. on a
Christmas food drive as well. Both were claimed a success. And they said we didn't care!
"Soon after the Christmas/ New Year break these same stick biters presented a public symposium on the effect of
U.S. tariffs on Canadian lumber exports to make the public aware of the threat and impact on the forest industry
nationwide. A dinner /dance followed and on the whole it was deemed a class event.
"In February, our tireless Woodsmen teams organized and ran an Intramural Woodsmen Competition open to the
University. It was the hit of the Winter Carnival, truly an A-l job!
"By mid-March it was time to officially recognize the eldest of the clan and bid them farewell and bonne chance.
So the Regenerates were honoured at the C.I.F. non-Ring Ceremony and dinner/dance. Soon afterward a similar
tribute was paid to the graduating technical members of the clan, the Terminators.
"Finally, the Forestry Folk Night took place with the help and participation of numerous forestry school staff.
Thanks to those who participated and attended, a donation of $300 was made to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
"Meanwhile, throughout the year while all these main events occurred many dedicated individuals gave of
themselves and their time to assist in the orchestration of a weekly lecture series as well as produce this publication.
"Also, many foresters teamed up and participated in intramural sport leagues, further making our presence

were hopeful future

foresters. After 10

known."
The Rec'r commented

that it was really only a small handful of people that did all of this. Slowly I shook my head
and informed her that organizers are always a necessity but that the strength of any group comes from its members.
And so, even though a few set up the aforementioned events, had it not been for the clan there would have been no
need to do it and if not for the clan there would have been no success.
But there was success in the 85/86 year of L.U.F.A. because L.U.F.A. is all of the student foresters and a force to
be reckoned with.
I wish to thank all those who gave of themselves to help make the year what it was, and on behalf of the 85/86
executive, I wish

72

all

LU

foresters every success in their future endeavours.

�Paul Tufford
"The Prez."

MV

MD

Keith Windeler

MV

Dave Ip

Dan

Bulger

Sec.-Tres.

V.P. External

Vice-President

MV

+

Liaison Sec.

L.

EXECS.

U.

AND

F.

REPS.

A.

Jim McCullough

MV

Hugo Desrochers

Frankie Testa
Social

Public Relations

Annette van Niejenhuis (Deg 3), Rejeanne Baillargeon (Tech
Rob Foster Deg 1), Don Bazely (Deg 2) Class Reps.

MD

Sports Co-ordinator

Convenor

1)

I

Dave Legg

Rob D'eon

Liaison

Liaison

AM
HI

Richard Cowley
I

Tech

21

MR

Rob Vanderplug BB
(Degl)

John Lawson
(Deg 3)

MH

Pete Wiltsey
Liaison

DWI

Keith Windeler
Liaison

DWI

Chairman
73

�Bruce T. Hyer
Director

WILDERNESS SHOP:
Quality outdoor gear Tents, packs, sleeping bags, canoes, kayaks and
clothing
Outdoor
&amp; boots.
accessories.
Whitewater
&amp; Wilderness
in
"Specialists

Canoeing"

G.W.

MARTIN

Photographic equipment for the Outdoorsman
"Specialists in Outdoor, Nature and Marco
photography"; Darkroom equipment.

LUMBER
... Wild Waters is Wilderness!
Limited Edition Wildlife Prints

LIMITED
Harcourt, Ontario

Discounts to

KOL 1X0

card.
for

Special

LUFA

prices

(807) 345-0111

St.

990's raises many new challenges
the forest products industry.

look toward the
in

student

and Futures

Forests
and opportunities

time

full

on Ranger Compasses

students.

119 N. Cumberland

A

with

students
fall

1

are a professional and highly skilled team. In an
intensely competitive business such as ours, the importance
development in forest management
| of sound planning and
*
advancements are vital.
technological
of
and the utilization

We

These are

interesting times

in

our industry— times

which offer exciting career opportunities demanding
gence, imagination and ambition. We welcome your

Great Lakes
Forest Products
Limited
in

74

Thunder Bay and Dryden

intelli-

interest.

�We the willing
Led by the unknowing
Are doing the impossible
For the ungrateful.
We have done so much
for so long

We are now qualified
to

do anything

with nothing
In

no time

Jim Brown, HBScF; Neil Frazer, HBScF.

Kevin Reid, HBScF.; Sue Rayner Reid, Dip.For

GOOD LUCK TO ALL
L.U.

GRADUATES;

Technicians, Foresters,

&amp;

"Masters" of the
Universe.

Sylvia Greiienhagen,

HBScF.

at

all.

Anon.

�MEET THE HARVESTERS

Sylvia Greifenhagen; layouts

Dave

Ip; layouts,

(DWI).

Ed Foreman; Photographer

(EF).

THANKS TO ALL WHO
HELPED PUT THIS
Ed

76

Fong; layouts (EWF).

DWI

PUBLICATION
TO^jETHER

�MISSING
J.D. Steele
-layouts

Rejeanne Baillargeon
-layouts (RB)
Brian Campbell
-layouts

-artwork
Scott McAllister

-Photographer

Michel "Buck" Desrosier
Photographer (MD)

Li (WL)
-Advertising

Wenda

Jim McBride; Photographer (JBM)

CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS
AG
AN

AM
AW
BB
BC
Hedi Kogel; Darkroom
Assistant (HFK).

BM
CH
CV

DC
DL

Andrew Grauman
Alan Neeb
Andrea MacDonald
Anna Westwood
Brian Boyachek
Bruce Catton
Brian Moore
Cheryl Hodgson
Chris Vukovic
Dave Carr

Dave

Little

DW Dorothy Willis
EW Eric Winterburn
JW
JP

ME

Judy Wright
John Patridge
Martin Escholbek

KC
MGS

MV
MH
MR
PM
RC

RGD

Ken Chalmers
Margaret Schmidt
Maria Vella (also MLV)
Matt Hollands
Marlene Rhyner
Pat MacKasey
Richard Cowley
Rob D'eon

RET Rob

ElTantawny

RP

Ron

Plinte

SM

Scott McAllister

SMI
SG
SR

Scott Mitchell

YL

Yvon Lecours

JV

Jiri

Sylvia Greifenhagen
Sue Rayner (Reid)

Vosyka

James McLean; Photographer (JM)

Rob

el

Ton tawny; Photographer

(RET)
Dave

Little;

Photographer (DL|

GOTCHA!
77

�EDITOR'S

COMMENTS
We

have tried to make you laugh, cry, and spend thoughtful moments recollecting the people, the
concerns and the ideas of 1985/86. That, of course, is a very big "WE". To all the fine people who
worked on this publication-in photography, advertising and sales, and layouts- to our advertisers, and
to you the reader, Thank you.
The happy thoughts and memories of camaraderie and friendship, and the kinship we feel in our
chosen profession are marred only by the sad loss of two of our classmates. In August of 1985, Ivar
Luksep, then only 19, lost his life in a tragic automobile accident. The car in which he was a passenger
of control and struck a wall. Ivar died instantly; the driver was seriously injured. The
summer, in June of 1986, Raimo Kanala, 23 years old and a recent graduate of the degree
program, was returning home late one evening from the Landmark. A pedestrian on the highway, he
was struck by a car and killed. Sadly, alcohol was a factor in both of these accidents.
Although already dedicated to the Art of Forestry, I would like to extend that dedication here and
now to Ivar and Raimo. They are fondly remembered and sadly missed. May we never have the

went out

following

misfortune to experience such tragic circumstances again.
Best of luck to the degree and tech grads of '86! May you never learn the "U.I. Shuffle"!

Heather D'Arcy
Editor, Harvest '86

�79

�IN

MEMORIUM

Luksep
1965-August 1985
Degree 1 1984-1985

Ivar

Raimo Kanala
1963-June 1986
H.B.Sc.F. 1986

Within 1 year the School of Forestry has

two students in alcohol-related auto
accidents. They will be missed by all their

lost

friends.

Photos by Chris Vukovic

80

&lt;&amp;

Pat Mackasey.

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!Mv.

HARVE

���Digitized by the Internet Archive
in

2014

https://archive.org/details/lufor1985

�HARVEST

'85

This book
is

lume XII

dedicated to

our future
forests...

m

m

*

Published by
LakeheadPUniversity
Forestry Association

Thunder Bay
Ontario

P7B 5E1

photo by: Ray Wagner

��FORESTERS

We

are the promise

of the future.

�YOUR
UNIVERSITY
Serving

Northwestern
Ontario
since 1965
•

.

•

Offers comprehensive programs in Arts,
Business, Education, Engineering, Forestry, Library Technology, Nursing, Outdoor Recreation, Physical Education, Science and Social Science.

Provides instruction on-campus and off,
and full-time, fall, winter and

part-time

summer.

Has athletic and recreational facilities
including an Olympic swimming pool,
squash courts, gymnasia, tennis courts,
comprehensive varsity and intramural
sports programs.
Has an active continuing education program for professional development and
for special groups.

For more information,

call or write:

Admissions
Lakehead University
Thunder Bay, Ontario

P7B 5E1
807-345-2121

Keep

in

touch with us through

Alumni Services.
Lakehead University,
Thunder Bay, Ontario.

P7B 5E1

[Lakehead PS University]

��FROM THE TOP
DIRECTOR'S

...

COMMENTS

For those of you graduating this year, it seems a bit ironic to see or hear of new installations in the School, and
you are not going to be here to enjoy them. However, this is characteristic of any dynamic faculty, and in
this respect, the School of Forestry is no different than any other. The major installation this past year or so was the
computer-based geographic information system in our new Centre for Application of Resources Information Systems
(Caris) under the management of Prof. H. Westbroeck. The B.I.L.D. grant for the hardware and software was
$250,000, and having powered-up on December 1, 1983, Prof. Westbroeck and his group are striving to have the
system on-line for resources analysis projects as quickly as possible. A second major grant for $100,000 per year for
three years was received from NSERC for development of tree breeding and forest genetics research with Dr. R.
Farmer as principal scientist, working with a team with Profs. P. Knowles, A. Macdonald, W. Parker and K.C.
Yang. And late in 1984, under Prof. C. Benson's initiatives, we received notice of a $116,500 grant to equip our
undergraduate forest management teaching laboratories with an array of 40 microprocessors, complete with several
printers, two plotters and two digitizing pads.
The University has now completed a major study of space requirements and, if all goes well, the School of
Forestry will be moving completely to the Braun Building by the end of 1985. We will share the building with the
Computer Centre, and the move will not only give us additional space, but also our first opportunity to design, or
re-design, all our teaching and research laboratories.
For 1984-85, Profs. R. Clarke, H. Cumming, and T. Eiber were on sabbatical leave and the School had Profs. G.
Redmond, T. Richmond, H. Kulman and P. McAlister to take their places. We have all enjoyed their inputs, and I
hope you, the students, have found their contributions interesting and challenging. For the coming year, no one will
be on leave, and so we are going to lose the very significant contributions of Prof. J. Flowers. I'm sure I speak for
everyone in extending our heartfelt thanks to him for his contributions to academic and development objectives.
And finally, but perhaps most importantly, the School has "departmentalized", with program chairmen appointed
for the diploma program (Prof. D. Richardson), the degree program (Dr. G. Murchison), and in the postgraduate
degree program (Dr. K. Brown). This restructuring of the School, together with comprehensive curricula reviews,
will add materially to the quality of our programs and the opportunities for maintaining or improving our studentfaculty interaction. I hope that you will agree with me that the School is doing well, and that it is looking forward
to a healthy and exciting future. I also hope that you as graduates, will always feel welcome, and that you will drop
in whenever possible.
realize

6

�mm

'

i

DO

Gary Murchison
"If I'm not here

make an

appoint-

ment"

Herr Hazenberg
"I don't want to
gence, but..."

DO
insult

your

intelli-

�Tony Richmond
"Bang On"

Brian
"I'll

Gil

Moore

BM

have to ask Claude"

Vanson

Sorry Gil, no red pen.
8

EF

DO

�Dave Parsons
"Hand it in when

it's

Dr. H. Rasid

"E.T."

EF

Dr. Green
"Basically"

EF

EF

Dr. S.R. MacGillivray
"The point of the matter is..."

EF

done"

EF

Dr. J.H. Gellert

DO

Crandall Benson

"Praying to

God

won't help"
9

�Dr.

EF

Eames

"See you

all

next year!"

Dr. Orr
"A break

EF
in

the game,

Fat

stands

Mac Brown
"The mad duck hunter"

EF

Paul MacAllister
a break from the Ministry

LC

back*

Pat

Warywoda

EF

"In English, please"

EF
Hans Westbroek
"Out in the real world you must un-

On

derstand"

Don Richardson

EF

"Boreal Forest Fudge Factor"

Ken Hearnden
"For your perusal"

Dr.

10

DO

Gerry Redmond

DO

EF

Mr. N. Bonsor

"How much

is

a

mfbm

of ..."

LC

Jack Flowers

"Three more plans
pages"

Wildlife really IS important

to correct, only 1000

Emil David
Still

toying with tractors

LC

�Rob Farmer
"The take home

EF
lesson

Claude Garton
"What's this, Claude?"

DI

Melanie Perkins

EF

Mr. R. Rollins

is..."

11

�Bruce Jago

Theresa Zago
'Zig Zago'

DO

Tim Dickenson

DO

'Mr. Eigen Value'
12

EF

Jan Miller
Research Assistant

DO

Lucy Lavoie

DO

Research Assistant

Gwen

O'Reilly

&amp;

Maddie Van

Damme DO

Project Field Coordinator and Assistant

Ian Searle &amp; Theresa Zago
Research Assistant who's looking for a

monkey

DO

�Everything
for the
forester...

Compliments

of

WAJAX INDUSTRIES
LIMITED
Serving the Canadian and
Industry for over 25 years.

U.S.

Forestry

1105 - 350 Sparks St.
K1R7S8
Ottawa, Ont.
(613) 238-7291

^^
^^^J

Equipment Supplier to Professionals Throughout the World

BervMeadows Company
3589 Broad

Street

Post Office Box

80549

Atlanta (Chamblee), Georgia

Compliments

30366

2601 -B West 5th Avenue
Post Office Box 2781
Eugene, Oregon 97402

of

THE CORPORATION OF
THE
CITY OF THUNDER BAY

DOMTAR
FOREST PRODUCTS
Red Rock, Ontario

Mayor Walter M. Assef

ALDERMEN
K.

W. Lysnes

Boshcoff

B.

Climenhage
Kennedy

T.

T.

Kozyra

L.

A.

Laakkonen

J.

J. Polhill

Reid

Timko
D. Waddington

H. LeBlanc

D.

*''"'»

D.R.

Willoughby

annua*

MacLeod

Chief Administrative Officer
H.T. Kirk
City Clerk

13

���FIELD SCHOOL
This September, hoardes of budding foresters
once again descended into the unsuspecting
wilderness of Northern Ontario. Not a leaf was
unturned in the first years' quest for
left
samples. The arboretum was left bare in their
wake. The second years' scoured the countryside
with their pocket stereoscopes, searching for the
secret of photogrametry. Let's hope they found
it! The third years' peered into every crack and
crevice in the forest floors and they discovered
dirt.

The fourth

time

in

on

in

years'?. ..well, they spent their

Thessalon, and we
Thessalon!

The boring

all

know what

side of forestry

Changing of the 'bush guard'
16

goes

Getting 'hosed'

�BM

Bushbuster

in action

RM

'Root* around the collar!

RK

Where's the brakes??

GM

The chainsaw tango

JB

Cruisin' fer a bruisin'

1001,1002,1003,

EF
17

��Ugh,

it's

AS

cold!!

Engineers Beware!

It's

AS

EF

a plant, right?

ALAS! ONE DOWN, THREE TO GO!
The majority of us persevered the
somehow always managed

exams, assignremain on the true
foresters path. This course designed for the courageous, the bold, and
ments.... and

grueling
to

make it as a forester if
not as a lush! But not all our memories are related thru alcohol
consumption. Just thinking of some of our professors caused us the
same type of sensory disorder! Let's be serious. We had a great year!
Hopefully this initial year served to increase your interest in this rather
the fearless, presented us with the objective to

Can he

hit the fire?

AS

intriguing field.

19

�TECH
The

I

year has indeed been a very challenging and
year to remember. It all began with Field
School, the beginning of a new life and the start of all
first

eventful

to follow... those

good and

Mens and Dendro

exciting

courses... to say nothing about the hot stuff learned in

the

fire

stimulator!

There have also been some fun

times shared particularly in initiation, at the corn roast,
in the

shopping kart race and the many sports events
LUFA. All of which have led to some

organized by
spirit

I. Thanks to the dedication of a
has been a successful year.

amongst Tech

chosen few, Tech

I

Balsam

C'mon

Allison,

you can figure

it

out.

AB

Let sleeping Tech's

20

The

lie.

point of the matter

is ...

12!

Do you

AW

SM

hear

SM

me?

Audrey.

Party time

AW

DJ

�Back Row: Audrey Bruce, Yvons Lecours, Craig Tilander, Richard Wiz, Bill Devoe, Pete Zacharko, Ben Brown, Mike Wiens, Paul Bastarache,
Quesnel, Andrea Morison, Carl Soramaki, Mark Gallant, Mark Smallwood, Brad Hill, John Lagadin, Ray Mikolash, Mike Henderson,
Dennis Lemay, Cheryl Hodgson. Middle Row: Mark Scofich, Pat Bonnilla, Dave Haveman, Andrew Grauman, Bernie Paziuk, Kevin Cookson,
John Patridge, Scott McAllister, Tim Owens, Roy Granger, Caroline Hawes, Hazen Gilks, Dorothy Willis. Front Row: Clive Baudin, Randy
Celko, Robert Perchuk, Greg Cox, Richard Cowley, Carol Mackay, Marlene Rhyner, Peter Dytyniak, Shawn Galligher, Dennis Dufour, John
Saranchuk. Missing: Jim Nasium, Mike Raphone, LP. Daily, Hugh G. Rection.

EF

Rob

John Desousa, Mike.., Kevin Cookson, Ray Mikolash, Bernie
Paziuk, Randy Volataire.

MR

Keep an eye on those

trees.

-.2

It
Brent Jones, Andrea Morison, Clive Baudine, Gary Wilton, Ted Frisbee,
Owens, Chris ?

Tim

AM

~v

&amp;±Z
We love you too.

MR
21

�INITIATION
On

Sept. 22, a

initiated. Initiates

new crop of

forestry students were
year and transfer students
missed out last year.

were

first

and second years who
The group met at the Agora and traveled via rope
tow to George Burke where last year's Mr. Buns, Rob
Stirling, chose a new Miss DBH, Astra Senkus. Sandy
MacKinnon chose the new Mr. Buns, 'Jam'. Then it
was off to the PITS! followed by a cleansing Mac
River, a

fire,

beer balls

...

T

O

A

happy human

caliper

TWO.

TH

JM

THREE..

JM

��—
to

HARVEST

85 and

theAnew Forestry Graduates

FORESTRY CONSULTANTS
JLet e*Uku&amp;i&lt;i4*K uataitt cfou% e^fryifo &lt;z*td

INC.

may yom e^nU

Bus. 623-5366

111 |l|

&amp;e tucce&lt;

fiL--

Res. 577-9371

Tacdlime
fife*
TOP BUCKLE SKI SHOP
(The Professionals)

679 Memorial Ave.

313 Victoria Avenue
Thunder Bay, Ontario

345-4096
Best Wishes
Compliments

of

ROACH'S

"-AT™

NORO SAW &amp; MARINE
LTD.
279 Bay

&lt;

24

St.

345-7321

34-48-48-1
THUNDER BAY NORTH

EST. 1920

�SHOPPING

CART

84

Shortly before 12.30 pm on Friday November 9, two sleek
shiny vehicles approached the pottery road. The race consisted of Team Cannibis (Tech I) going against Team

Hashish (Degree

ramp up

II).

The teams were even

until

the

first

the sidewalk where D.J. gave his impression of a

looked as though Tech I had too much of
but the tables turned at the library
wheelchair ramp. The Cannibis boys hooked up to a 10
speed, D.J. and Robbie slipped by through the railing, and
Hash was on its way to victory. Thanks to both teams for a
flying forester.

a

Just don't

smoke

that thing until the race

is

over.

lead

to

It

catch,

performance and congratulations to the
Degree II team; John Paterson, Rob Gushe, Donny
Armit, Glen Niznowski and. Kirk Schmitt, who took

DO

spirited

the case in '84.

Ooh-wee, Robbie, looks

like a

tough course

DO

A3

Safeway

closes in ten minutes.

DO

A man

and

his

DO

cannabis cart

25

�Front Row: Edward Foreman, James Thompson, Denise Knight, Heather D'Arcy, Heidi Kogel, Maria Vella, Dave
Swinton, John Patterson. 2nd Row: Walter Vos, Tom Sladek, Dave Jennings, Dave (Chuck) Cassels, John Lawson, Bruce
Summerby, Brian Krueger. 3rd Row: Colette Tessier, Tara Ryan, Andrea McDonald, Rob (A.V.) D'Eon, Rob Stirling,
Pierre Patenaude, Alan Neeb. 4th Row: Steve Warrington, John Cann, Ron Fairbanks, John Bonekamp, Glenn Niznowski, John Ellison. Back Row: Matt Hollands, Rob Bowen, John McNutt, Murray Watt, Norman Pitt, Bruce Turner,
Bruce Graham, Rob Gushe, D.J. Armit, Paul Leblanc, Ron Plinte, Kirk Schmidt, Pat Davidson, Karl Kohnen, Michelle
Kipien, Raymond (Bear) Schott, Stacy Gastis, Annette Van Niejenhuis, Tim Reese, Malcom Banfield, Bertha Strickland,
Marty Lelliot, Ward Perchuck.

26

GR

�The year we

all stop to ponder our fuBetween exams and photo deadlines, we regretfully had to cancel our
annual Deg. II Christmas party. We'll

tures.

definitely

make up

for

it

next year.

It

took us a long time to choose a class
name, but alas a decision has been
made- Deg. II Timber Barons. Degree
II
wants to welcome all the tech.
transfers and wishes to send a special
congrats to John E. and his wife,

had

who

their first seedling this year.

RP

I'm not going to the Waverly with them.

Who

says field school

is

hard work.

JB

Cheap labour?

JB

Now

what do

I

do?

JB

71

�TECH

II:

BUSHBUSTERS
It
has been a long, hard haul but finally our graduating
year has arrived. This year "the Bushbusters" have shown a
great class spirit and united in many activities. Our broomball
team made a valiant attempt at standing on their feet and our
hockey team skated circles around their opposition. With

regards to the academic side of things, well, let's forget that!
I'm sure it's safe to say that we are all glad it is over. Best of
luck to all, in whatever direction you choose to head!!
Not bad for a month's work!

DD

I

Please save those trees!

Here's the nut, where's
the squirrel?

28

GP

DD

I

'frick'n' love harvesting

Close encounters of the broomball kind

DD

DD

Has anyone seen my

fuzz'n beard?

Woooh...oh...Wooh!

JW

�Front Row: Richard Audet, Gilles Bosse, Fred Brotherton, Tim Salkeld. 2nd Row: Tim Stoddart, Rick LeBlanc, Andy Koenig, Dave Flight,
Deb Desrosiers, Judy Wright. 3rd Row: Barry Anderson, Tom Veert, Eric Winterburn, Jim Heuvelmans, Rad Loke, Eric Baker, Pat Sullivan,
Miles Johnston. 4th Row: Joad Durst, Grant Jelec, Connie Skidmore, Dave Collier, Jean Maclssac, Sandy Morris (on Jean's knee), Mark
VanderHoeden, Ken Palmer, Gerd Proeschel, John Routhier. 5th Row: Ian Hagman, Larry Branston, Bernie Thiel, Dave Hails, Mark Goddard, Pierre Lang, Patrick Aulenback. Back Row: Tim Cavanagh, Gary Macsemchuk, Rick Smith, Glen Switaer.

No "Howard",

the tree limbs!

"Which way

DD

to the

Peerla's Supervision Strategy

bus?"

DD

DD

The Anderson Boys

Just another

Day

in

Forestry

DD

DD

DD
29

�INTRODUCING THE BUSHBUSTERS

r

A

w
li

Kevin Arnell

Lynne
30

Collier

Deb

Desrosiers

Darryl Defeo

§P»

mm*
Eric Baker

Ian

Hagman

t

...

i

�FOREST TECHNOLOGY GRABS

1985

31

�Tim

Salkeld

Tom

Veert

Connie Skidmore

Tim Stoddart

Bernie Thiel

Eric Winterburn

Tom

Judy Wright

Woolsey

HAPPINESS AND SUCCESS TO ALL!

�TECH

II

FORMAL

Everyone, students and profs alike, had a fantastic time
Tech II formal this year. The meal provided by the
staff of the Italian Centennial Hall was enjoyed by all and
the speeches made by Dr. Kayll and Prof. Richardson were
mercifully short. Patrick Aulenback was presented with the
'stupid question of the year award' and Deb Desrosiers
received the C.I.F. Leadership Award. Special thanks are
sent out to Rick LeBlanc and Gord Bowser for organizing
this gala event. The evening was a great success with plenty
of dancing and drinking.
at the

DD

DD

DD

DD

DD
33

�REGENERATES - DEG.

The Regenerate Blues were

by all
our way
through the 'Haze' of third year. Some of
us managed to get a few shots at the profs
during Folk Night, while others took out
their frustrations in soccer, broomball and
hockey-and had a lot of fun too!!
this

year

We

all

as

the

ping!!

34

tried

to

felt

find

learned that the take-home lesson
was to get the 'Big Pic-

day
ture'. ...PER
of

we

SE-pretty

Ill

tense

and

grip-

Top Row:

Basil English, Jean-Louis Wallace,

Gord Cummings, Paul

Fantin, Earl

Greenaway, Ian Morrison, Mark Holmes, Rob Lavoie, Mark Hebert,
Steve Curtis, Ian Pritchard, Mark Fleming, Raimo Kanala, Keith Windeler, David
Mackensie, John Connor. Second Row: Neil Fraser, Kevin Weaver, Dave Carr,
Kevin Reid, Hans Anderson, Jeff Leahy, Ed Fong, Pat Mackasey, Ken Elliot, Jim
Mackensie, Joe Maure, Scott Edwards. Third Row: James Peters, Jim Brown, Brian
Farquarson, Frank Testa, Don Stewart, Paul Tufford, Heather Foster, Ralph Horn,
Margaret Doughty. Front Row: Martin Foeken, Dan Bulger, Mike Edwards, Kevin
McKee, Tom Ratz, Glenn Johnston, Sylvia Greifenhagen, Dave Ip.
Hunt,

Bill

�35

�FORESTRY LECTURE
SERIES:

TREES IN THE CITY
A

on Urban Forestry was held on November 15-16,
was sponsored by the Lakehead University Forestry

lecture series

The

1984.

series

Association and the School of Forestry. The speakers included: Dr.

Rick

Rollins,

of

Professor

Outdoor

Recreation

at

Lakehead

University, Dr. Erik Jorgensen, Professor of Environmental Biology
at the

University of Guelph, Mr.

Ed Olsen,

Assistant Arborist for the

Minnesota, and Mr. Ian Angus, MP for the
Thunder Bay-Atikokan riding.
Dr. Jorgensen, Canada's 'Father of Urban Forestry', stated during
the lecture series how he first defined urban forestry in 1965: 'Urban
forestry does not deal entirely with city trees or with single tree
management, but rather with the management of the entire area
influenced by and utilized by the urban populations.'
The graduating foresters at Lakehead should remember the importance of trees in the city, and encourage the development of
sound urban forestry programs in their own communities.
We would like to thank all of the committee members for their
great help in putting on a fine presentation. Special thanks go to
city

Dave

of

for

St.

Paul,

making

Committee

members:

Back

Row:

Miles Johnson, Dave
Vosyka. Front Row: Valerie
Way-Nee, Norma Watson, Ken Colthurst, Rob Boychuck, &amp;
Sylvia Griefenhagen.
Schafer, Rick Harper, and

Jiri

the coffee.

Dr. Erik Jorgensen

EF
Ken Colthurst
Chairman of the Committee

Dr. R. Rollins

Panel discussion

Mr. E. Olsen
36

EF

Mr.

I.

Angus

DO

Attentive audience

�FACULTY OF UNIVERSITY S CHOOLS
Schools

of

•

Business Administration

•

Engineering

•

Forestry

•

Library Technology

•

Nursing

•

Physical Education

and Outdoor Recreation

vorioo

4

For the BIG
Custom

LOADS

Built Units

Logging Cab Shields
Multi-colour Screen Printers

Thunder Bay's Leading Supplier
of Team Uniforms
Jackets, Caps, T-Shirts, Fashion
Sportswear, Pins and Buttons

Low Boy
Pole Trailers
Trailer Trains

Bed
Pulpwood &amp; Log
Flat

Trailers

Serving the Sports and

-Wood Grapples

Business World
910 Alloy

-Portable Garages

-V-Plow

Dr.

Thunder Bay, Ont.
P7B 6A4 623-5573

Top view of the B Train
Model shows heavy
duty push type bumper

1184 Roland Street, P.O. Box 2864,

Thunder Bay, Ont. P7B 5G3
623-5107

Telex 073-4658

37

�THE B.Sc.F.
GRADUATES
OF

1985

This was the final year of school for the majority
of the class and they diligently set about the task of
having a good time. Most of field school was spent
in the Wagon Wheel drinking, or at least wishing
we were in the Wagon Wheel drinking (especially
when Prof. Day was driving). The rest of the
semester was spent doing silviculture assignments
and finding excuses for a good party. After
Christmas, management plans kept most of the
class busy right up until January 21. Fortunately,
the Spoons came to town that night to help many
of us to celebrate. After that, theses became the
well-worn topic of many conversations. Time was
still taken out for the more important things in life
such as tobogganing (right Jacquie?), the Symposium dance and of course the unforgettable (?)
ring ceremony (right Darlene?)! Thanks go to Ray
(Daddy) Wagner for taking the mug shots for the
class.

Congratulations are in order for the entire class
their graduation. Four years of hard work went
into your degree and its something to be proud of!

on

THE 1985
HARVEST
IN 1990

Bond

Olenka Bakowsky

Jeff

In Inuvik studying... lichens?!

Manufacturing

Rob Boychuk
his

"Corn Roastioes".

38

own

cereal

Used car salesman
Ford.

at

Intercity

�Shane Bray
male prostitute

A

Dean Brigham
in

Montreal.

Still

delivering

pop

for Pepsi.

Sue Collins
Snowshoeing across Canada for

Ken Colthurst
Models forestry equipment.

underprivileged seedlings.

Dan Cooligan

Kevin

President of a catering company.

Doing his master's
somewhere!

Coombs

Daniel Demers

Kerry Deschamps

Teaching French to English for-

Computer

esters.

Hazenberg.

consultant

Ian
in

Raith...

for

Dr.

Cowan

Social convener for

Greg Curniski

Ducks Unlim-

Owner of

ited.

Sask.

a starching

Dave Farrer

Scott Folk

Teaching children the dangers of

Never seen

fire.

uation.

in

company

in

Ontario since grad-

39

�Karen Foster

Teresa Holla

brave new
Papua, New Guinea.
Exploring

worlds

Playboy
March).

in

Bert Larocque
Still

living

in

Nakina.. trying to

get out.

Harley May
Head hedge clipper
sant Cemetery.

40

in

Mt. Plea-

Mike Maxfield
Writing a novel on the excitement
in Red Lake.

Joanne Leesing
Organizes snowshoe
Cascades.

Brian

budworm

farm.

fir

of the year

(Miss

Kevin Lindquist
trips

to the

Runs
turing

McDonald

Manages a balsam

pet

and spruce

own compass manufaccompany.

his

Glenn McGinn
The new Gil Vanson.

�James Mitchell
Soil

pit

digger

Robert Mitchell

by day. ...Social

The B.C. version of Rob McAl-

animal

at night.

pine.

Wayne

Ortiz

Jim Parsons
Produces Hunky Jim's Budworm

Recovering

from mutations due

to herbicide sprays.

CO.

the

Winnipeg

in

Ontario.

Dave Schafer
Trying to grow

Darlene O'Brien
Organizing the school of forestry.

Greg Pawson

Julie Pierce

Can now

Teaching

reach Dad's cookie jar!

her

kids

wood Block

I.D.

Biscuits.

Andy Pulo
Best dress

Dave Neufeld
Cheerleader for
Blue Bombers.

Karen Schweitzer
his

moustache

Living in Longlac.

Jim Stever
Obtained Ph.d.

in

Outdoor Rec.

(still!).

41

�Jim Stewart
Organized crime boss of Thunder

Bay

Bryce Stienstra
Gives home brewery tours.

District.

Don Thibodeau
Looking forward to marriage
1995.

in

Glenn Stronks
Goat farming in the rocky
Newfoundland.

Expecting

Cathy Wayland

Valerie

Wildlife technician in Upsula.

Dancing her way through

An

able bodied Tree surgeon...
most of the time.

Norma Watson
In

his sixth kid.

jail

in

Thessalon

and disorderly conduct.

face.

Way-Nee
life.

Alan Wiensczyk
His pony tail is now three
long.

42

of

Ray Wagner

Jacqueline Tracey
Perfected technique of stopping a

toboggan with her

Mary Tedesco
hills

feet

for

drunk

�LOBBALL SERIES

'84

Saturday, October 13th, was a foggy, gray day, but it
stop 8 teams of footloose Foresters from
competing in baseball. All classes were represented;
Deg. I doubly so. The championship went off when no
one was looking with Deg. I Yankettes taking the
didn't

marbles.

Once the bats were recovered (thanks Smiles) and the
second basewoman recovered (nice run Robbie) the
consolation game went to Deg. II Suunto Selects.
Congrats to the Yankettes who walked away with the
trophy and case of refreshment. Many thanks to Jim
Parsons and Jim Schwass for umpiring and keeping
things running smoothly.
The

The Allison

fastball pitch...

Regenerating

...

EF
EF

Series Schedule

EF

�FORESTRY
FOLK NIGHT
Organized on the basis of past folk nights, the third annual
Forestry Folk Night

came

to

full

fruition

on March 2

this

year.

Eleven musical acts of wide-ranging appeal covered music from
across Canada and around the world. Master of ceremonies, J.D.
Steele, commandeered the show, bringing the audience three hours
of spirited and talent-filled entertainment. Performers hailed from
nearly the entire school of forestry: both tech classes, three degree
classes, graduates and faculty. In spite of some lighting problems,
all
performers shone in the presence of about 150 audience
members. Although licenced for the first time, all earnings came
from the door and the sale of food and drinks prepared by a host
of much-appreciated volunteers. In all $180 was raised and sent to
the local Cystic Fibrosis Research Foundation.

��THE MASTER FORESTRY
STUDENTS
The

program at Lakehead
new and developing program

forestry graduate studies

University

is

a relatively

that offers graduate students an opportunity to study

methods of renewing and improving forest resources.
Students usually spend 2 years in the program before
obtaining a Master of Science Degree in Forestry.
Academically, these 2 years are spent taking a minimum
of 3 graduate-level courses and completing a thesis based
on original research. In 1984, 24 graduate students were
registered in the program. The group of students is an
interesting mix of Canadian students and those from
other countries including Argentina, Tanzania, Poland
and China. The students meet and work in their study
rooms, attend classes together and take part in such
activities as hockey, roller skating and socializing.
James Thrower

DI

Lynn Palmer

MS

Richard Krygier

MS

Margaret Schmidt

MS

John Barrett

MS

Dan

Lenthall

Lisa Buse

MS

MS

�47

�Compliments

of

M,uttay, Mro5. Jfyunbet Company,
J^imited

P.O.

BOX 70

MADAWASKA, ONTARIO
KOJ 2CO

FOR ALL YOUR LUMBER NEEDS
CALL 613-637-2840

�U.N.B.

WOODSMEN
TRIP
EW

Again

this fall, the

University of

New Brunswick was

JS

JS

overrun

13 energetic Woodsmen from Lakehead; gaining International
recognition for enduring the 36 hour drive to compete in the

by

Annual

International

Woodsmen

Competition.
These axe
North" proved to be an

wielding, saw toting "Foresters of the

equal match for their Canadian and American rivals. The men's
team placed 6th out of 28 teams; and their two man chopping
duo took first place honours and collected a trophy for their
efforts. The women's team also placed well and should be even
more threatening next year. It was an enjoyable, but crowded
trip back to Thunder Bay as both vehicles were over-filled with
trophies
and Schooner, and Alpine, and James Ready's,

and Keith's and

!

Watching for the outcome

Giving

it

the axe!

JS

Axe-wielding "Foresters from the North'

Forestry in true form

And who

said

it

wasn't heavy?

49

��MANUFACTURERS OF FINE
NEWSPRINT AND LUMBER.
EMPLOYER OF 2,000 PEOPLE
IN THE KAPUSKASING AREA.

SPRUCE FALLS POWER &amp;PAPER COMPANY LIMITED
P.O.

AT THE CREST HOTEL

M

W

•S
LOUNGE
LC

BGK KK&gt; KACVSKASINO, ONTARIO. PSM-2VS

THE CREST HOTEL

has

been a

L.U.

for

tradition

at

Keep

years.

the

tradition alive.

ENTERTAINMENT
THURSDAY, FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY

LIVE

• RED RIVER ROOM
• SATELLITE T V. - With
and Video Rock

• DANCING
• LICENCED LOUNGE &amp;
DINING ROOM

•COFFEE SHOP
• BUDGET PRICED

99
LOUNGE

ACCOMODATIONS
875 Red River Road
767-1627

Sports

�SPRUCE BUDWORM AND
OUR FUTURE FORESTS

17™ IIiiil

AFirai

mmi
TH

Congratulations arc in hand to the Symposium committee who
devoted much time and effort in putting on the very informative
and successful 17th annual symposium.
The lectures were very well attended and drew much interest from

Although the issue of Matacil versus BT was far
from resolved in some people's minds, the lectures covered a very
broad scope of the budworm issue. During the panel discussion the
audience was exposed to high doses of passionate disposition as the
questioners and panel of speakers jockeyed to support their
those present.

statements.

The dinner and dance on Saturday was also a great success. The
Polish Hall saw a clan of forestry folk, dressed to kill, enjoying a
delicious meal of roast beef, meatballs, chicken, turkey and all the
Following this feast, Professor Day (and yes Dave he is a
professor not an associate professor) announced the formation
of his new corporation - BOB'S
BUSTERS. With his
elegant poetry and his style and grace, Prof. Day demonstrated his
fixins.
full

BUDWORM

views and solutions of the infamous Budworm. He also illustrated
his engineering talents with his prototype budworm busting ar-

mament.
Throughout the remainder of

the evening Freeport provided the
entertainment (except for a short interlude by Dave Ip) and the
dance floor was seldom vacant.

52

Vosyka, Miles Johnson, Dave Neufeld, Mike Martel, Heather
Paul Tufford, Don Thibodeau, Sue Collins, Andrea McDonald, Colette Tessier, Andree Fournier

Jiri

Foster,

TH

�53

�Co-ed Champs

Deg

I

at the log twitch

WOODSMEN'S
On

Saturday January 26, 17 teams of various configuration battled to the
annual intramural woodsmen's competition. The day was cold but
spirits of more than one kind kept everyone happy. The six-member teams
challenged their limits of speed, strength and accuracy as they sawed, tossed,

end

in the

and split wood.
At the end of the day and when the results were tabulated the County Park
Cutters were victorious as the overall champions. Members of the winning
team were Dan Demers, Dave Legg, Andy Pulo, Kerry Deschamps, Ian
Cowan and Martin Eschlboeck. They accepted the coveted trophy with style
and grace but shortly after we all watched as Kirk S. dropped it and it
smashed on the floor.
pulled,

Wine on

the

wind

Women's

Div.

Champs- and adoring

fans.

DD

The baked Bean

JP

�Pulp toss

DD

County Park Cutters-the

overall

champs

TH

The dot

JP

split

INTRAMURAL
this year the team of Rob Mitchell, Joanne
Young and Ralph Horn. The women's division

The co-ed champs were again
Leesing,

Rob Boychuck,

Liz

saw the toughest competition with the only entrant taking first place.
Congratulations to Sylvia Griefenhagen, Deb Desrosiers, Maria Vella, Heather
D'Arcy and Andrea McDonald who showed great enthusiasm.
This competition has proven to be the best in recent years both in the level
of competition and the spirit and zest of those who participated. A special
mention should go to the 1975 Alumni Team whose members came from as
far away as Kenora to participate. They placed second overall, a mere 9 points
behind the winning team.
"1 have to throw

it

HOW

far?'

DD

�NIPIGON DIVISION
Poplar and birch veneer, plywood and hockey stick shafts

THUNDER BAY

DIVISION

Aspenite

"Where the safety

of our

employees and the

quality of our product

go hand

Best Wishes To

in

All

Forestry Graduates

hand."

�A FORESTER NEEDS;
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The

dignity of an archbishop,

of a diplomat,
experience of a company manager,
geniality of a nobel prize winner,
fastidiousness of a revenue officer,
speech ability of a clergyman,
shrewdness of a lawyer,
elastic conscience of a politician,
health of an Olympic sportsman,
optimism of a shipwreck survivor,
zeal of a missionary,
smile of a movie star,
And the skin of a hippopotamus.
-Forestry Chronicle.

IT'S

UP TO YOU

always see
by tree,
Producing paper, game and lumber,
Providing products without number,
I

think that

The

I

will

forests standing tree

Purifying air and water,

Saving us from being hotter
In the

summer and

in winter,

Offering heat through burning splinter.

Careful management will reap
All the best that forests keep

Producing for us year by year,
Everything that

man

holds dear.

Foresters are rightful stewards

Of this wondrous forest land,
They hold knowledge of these matters

And

THE TECHNICIAN

tact

the future's in their hand!

A.G. Racey
-Forestry Chronicle

and walks under them
Kicks locomotives off the tracks
Catches speeding bullets in his teeth and spits rust
Freezes water with a single glance
He is god.
Lifts buildings

�FORESTRY DAY
Forestry Day, March 9, 1985 saw six teams from three
schools compete in Lakeheads 5th Annual Woodsmen
Competition. Sir Sanford Fleming College and Sault

College entered a men's and women's team to compete
own 'A' and 'C teams. Our ladies emerged
victorious with the men placing second behind S.S.F.C.
Weeks of hard work by the L.U. woodsmen culminated
in a Brawl in the Study on the Saturday evening.

against our

Hundreds of "drinkin and dancin" foresters crowded
pub to participate in the Bushman's
Brawl. The entire day was a huge success and plans are
underway for the 6th Annual Forestry Day!

into the University

All photos by D.

Lakehead University Men's Team

Sir

58

Sanford Fleming College

O'Brien

Lakehead University Women's Team

Sault College

�Let's talk

teamwork.
Great Lakes
AtProducts
we have

Forest
a
team of 5200 persons.
They are engaged in timber
harvesting, reforestation
and the production of

newsprint, bleached kraft
pulp, fine paper, stud
lumber and waferply.
The careers involved
range from engineering,
operations and mechanical
trades, to accounting

employee

relations.

and

To

maintain an operation as
complex as this, a wide
variety of occupations is

Your skills may
one day become a welcome
essential.

addition to our industry.

Great Lakes
Forest Products
Limited
in

NEWSPRINT

•

Thunder Bay and Dryden

BLEACHED KRAFT PULP

• FINE

PAPERS

•

WAFERPLY

•

STUD LUMBER

59

�"With enough trees,
well all breathe a little
easier."

we

all

the smoke, the exhaust, and the fumes

in

"Trees, like other green plants, help purify the air

breathe, by

replacing carbon dioxide with oxygen.

"And with

all

the help we can get.
"The point is we need our forests

need

the

air today,

all

manage them

—

like

never before. And

we need

wisely.

"Our job is growing. Help us all breathe a little easier. Write for
information on what you can do."
i

^

60

we

to

�TH

C.I.F. Leadership Award-Darlene O'Brien

C.I.F.

RING

CEREMONY
You
This year's ring ceremony was held at the
Inn.

The C.I.F.

can dress them up but can you take them out?

DO

Ramada

representatives at the head table in-

cluded C. Benson, W. Moore, L. Suomu, and G.
Swant. The guest speaker was George Brown. James
Mitchell highlighted some of the more memorable
moments of the past four years. The program also
included a very interesting look at the future. The
voting for the C.I.F. Leadership Award almost resulted
in a tie. Congratulations are extended to Darlene
O'Brien (the winner) and Ray Wagner. Their efforts
over the past four years deserve to be recognized.
Thanks to all who helped organize the evening and to

Dave Schafer
"relief" on the

You want

for
fire

ME

to

providing

the

after-dinner

comic
He

escape.

do

WHAT?

DO

Ring No. 7

TH

TH

finally got his ring!

Are you sure

this is a

duck?

TH

61

�HOLLAND
EXCHANGE
Where can you go
windmills,
serves

find

a

to see

pub

that

two hundred kinds of

Belgian beer (and
ically drink up to

alphabetletter

"F"

two months) and see first
hand European forestry prac-

in

Special
Holland.
thanks to Susan and Herr.

tices?

Gerritson.

The girls on the beaches
Scandinavia are not bash-

P.S.
in

ful.

�FINLAND EXCHANGE
The mind is far removed from a cold, snowy Thunder Bay
and the drudgery of an 8:30 class, allured with the visions of
a steamy sauna, semi-clad blondes, the bite of a refreshing
glass of Koskenkorva, and countless other Scandinavian
delights. Finland and its people were fantastic hosts for my
summer exchange. Working in a nursery provided an excellent
opportunity to witness the initial stages of the successful
Finnish forest system. I am indebted to all those who were
instrumental in making such a sojourn possible and express

my

appreciation in a

word

-

KIITOS!

All pictures by J.D. Steele.

63

�Sanburg Forestry Consultants

Inc.

Specializing In:

Tree Nursery Operations * Silvicultural Operations
Forestry Research

R.R. No. 7

Thunder Bay, Ontario
Canada P7C 5V5
(807) 964-2173

The

forestry profession is currently faced with the
challenge of developing and implementing an intensive
forest management program that will increase the
viability of the forest industry and at the same time
protect and enhance the environment. Your contribution to this difficult but exciting task can be
maximized by joining the Ontario Professional Foresters
Association. Information on the Association and its
membership requirements can be obtained from the
following address.

ONTARIO PROFESSIONAL
FORESTERS ASSOCIATION

Dubreuilville, Ontario

POS 1B0
884-2525
Telex 067-7255

Tel. (705)

10,255 Yonge Street
Suite 202
Richmond Hill, Ontario

STUDS DIMENSION STOCK
TIMBERS P.E.T.
RAILROAD TIES CHIPS
-

L4C 3B2

-

-

KILN DRIED LUMBER (3 KILNS)
QUALITY AND SERVICE IS OUR MOTTO
FAST EFFICIENT TRUCK
DELIVERY TO ONTARIO
MICHIGAN, INDIANA, OHIO, WISCONSIN
-

BOREALIS
FORESTRY
CONSULTANTS

SPRUCE JACK PINE
POPLAR ON LONG TERM CONTRACT
-

SALES OFFICE
P.O. Box 518
530 Cathcart Street
Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario
Telephone (705) 253-2378
Telex 067 77121
Sales Mgr. Martial Beaumier

Thunder Bay, Ontario

"To plant a tree

is

an act

of faith in the future."

-

2 S. Cumberland Street

Keskus Mall

CANADIAN IMPERIAL

BANK OF COMMERCE

MORE STUDENTS BANK
WITH US THAN ANY OTHER BANK
64

832 Red River Rd.
Bay and Algoma
Victoria and Brodie
Memorial and Harbour
Arthur and Edward
Thunder Bay Mall

��AND
66

NOW...

MORE SPORTS TEAMS

��Regenerates Broomball

DD

My

Time

What's everyone looking

The Bush Busters got off

63

it

at

the end.

for a scoring rush by a superb broomballer.

DI

DI

at?

to an excellent start this year, but

The highlite of the team was
awesome threesome of Proeschel-Woolsey and Maw.
started losing

feet... they 're stuck.

the

���Photo by Steve

Elliott

OUR PATRONS
Bay Street Bazaar
285 Bay Street
Thunder Bay, Ontario
Black Clawson-Kennedy Limited
3300 Cavendish Boulevard
Montreal, Quebec
Collins Safety

Shoes Limited

906 Memorial Avenue

Thunder Bay, Ontario

&amp; Gordon Limited
269 Red River Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario

Farrant

Great West Timber Limited
P.O.

Box 3170, Lakeshore Drive
Thunder Bay, Ontario

Hill's

Greenhouses Limited

R.R. No. 1, Oliver Road
Murillo, Ontario

Hoito Restaurant
314 Bay Street
Thunder Bay, Ontario

Lingman-Laprade Travel Shop Limited
1020 Dawson Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario

Lakehead University Bookstore
"Best of luck to

Newaygo

all

foresters"

Forest Products Limited
1, Hearst, Ontario

R.R. No,

Ontario Forestry Association
150 Consumers Road
Willowdale, Ontario

Box

Pine View Nurseries
Kakabeka Falls, Ontario

40,

Powell Equipment (1978) Limited
1455 Buffalo Place
Winnipeg, Manitoba
Valhalla Inn
Valhalla Inn Road
Thunder Bay, Ontario
1

Wanson Lumber Company

Limited

277 John Street

Thunder Bay, Ontario

�LUFA REFUVA
LUFA
moment

has added another year to
to survey the

Undoubtedly

its

history

and before moving on to the promising years ahead,

let

us take a

one just past.

remember 1984-85

an active and dynamic year for the forestry community. Lakehead's
determined executive was at work throughout the academic year attempting to keep the student populus informed, entertained and spirited. All three were evidenced in our successful
bid to save the office. The toils of this year's executive were matched by the efforts of an equally diligent and
ambitious group who were responsible for such successes as a lecture series, symposium, this fine publication and
countless other endeavours. It is this group, en masse, that is wholly responsible and deserving of credit for
providing all LUFA members with a distinctive and pleasurable year.
Please note that much of what is chronicled in this review has already been brilliantly displayed in this year's
edition of Harvest.
LUFA functions can be divided into three categories: social, sports and academics. Socially, LUFA experienced a
frenetic beginning. Initiation rites were retained and all first years were escorted through the ritualistic and infamous
pits. Orientation continued with a successful night at the Crest (drowning field school thirst) and a wild hayride with
the nurses at Murillo. Even the Corn Roast was a success - complete with corn this year! As in past years the
foresters combined with LUNA to host a LUAU in the main cafeteria. Another well-attended event was the Third
Annual Forestry Folk Night where students and faculty combined forces to raise money for Cystic Fibrosis. LUFA's
generosity was also extended to two unfortunate classmates who both lost their homes and belongings to fire.
On the sports scene, the Woodsmen teams were active this year placing well at the University of New Brunswick's
competition and hosting their own Forestry Day Meet here in March. Associated with this was the Annual Bushman's Brawl held this year in the study - undoubtedly the finest event of the year! Poor weather hindered a LUFAorganized ball tournament in the fall. As for the KAM-AM canoe race, to steal a phrase from the Woodchips and
Sawdust, "the race was cancelled due to lack of enthusiasm and entries". Attracted, no doubt, by Kakabeka Cream
and Ruby Rouge, an overwhelming number of teams participated in the Intramural Woodsmen Competition. Apart
from these numerous events, many forestry teams competed in various LUSU-organized intramural sport leagues.
It was a busy year for academic endeavours within the school of forestry. Numerous guest speakers visited the
university, a weekly lecture series was initiated and a trip to the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association field
demonstration were a few of the highlights. LUFA had a hand in this busy year by presenting a lecture series on
urban forestry entitled "Trees in the City" and a symposium on "Spruce Budworm and our Future Forests". A
forestry student gained a seat on the LUSU Board of Directors and degree II student is on his way to the
Netherlands on a summer work exchange. The year drew to a close academically as the degree IV students received
their rings (and then began writing their theses) and the diploma graduated made plans for their graduation
celebration. All of LUFA extends its congratulations and sincere best wishes to all graduating students.
Already a new executive is in place and ready to meet the challenge of 1985-86. To all, from participant to
organizer, to anyone who contributed to LUFA in any way, thank you and let's get behind next year's council to
make '85-'86 even better.
all will

Forestry Association was no exception.

72

as

A

�DO

Kevin Lindquist

DO

Class representatives.

Susan

DO

Collins

TH

Andree Fournier

DO

Max

Ron

Plinte (Right)

James Turner

(Left)

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY FORESTRY ASSOCIATION EXECUTIVE
1984-1985
President: J.D. Steele

Exchange Co-ordinator: Susan Collins

Vice-President: Kevin Lindquist

Sports Co-ordinator:

Secretary -Treasurer: Andree Fournier

Social Convener:

Public Relations:

Raymond Wagner

Mascot:

Ron

Plinte

James Turner

Max

T
Raymond
Wagner

TH

LUFA

executive '84-'85

TH

J.D. Steele

DO

�Like any other agricultural crop, Ontario's
forests are subject to poor germination, weed
competition, insects, disease and natural
disasters.

At the Ministry of Natural Resources,

we help forests grow from the ground up.
Through

forest

fire control,

a healthy

management, research and

we're dedicated to ensuring

and fruitful harvest.
more than the trees you can

Forests are
see.

They are the

responsibility of thousands

of people behind the scenes. People

work

in

and with these

resources.

who

Growing

forests every day.

For more information, write:

Ministry of

Hon Alan

W

Minister

Forest Resources Branch, Ministry ofNatural
Resources, Queen's Park, Toronto.

Natural

Resources
Ontario

74

John R Sloan
Deputy Minister

Pope

�.

to

-CONVENIENT PARKINGLOCALLY OWNED/OPERATED
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

ARKET
CURRENT RIVER
HODDER AVENUE

361

WESTFORT
1413

AM TO

12

336

475-7443

683-3655
7

COUNTY CORNERS
WARDROPE AVE.

BROWN STREET

AM

7

AM TO

12

AM

7

767-4541
12

AM TO

AM

The Walrus and the
Carpenter spoke of

many things.

.

DO

But, mostly, they talked

about trees. You remember, they
and ships and sealing wax. ."

talked about: "... shoes

and

DO

DO

that

.

all

boils

down

—

to forest products.

You probably never really thought about it, but trees
provide hundreds of things you use daily: shoe leather,
bottle caps, buttons, lampshades, even

phonograph records.
The

list

gets longer every day as the forest industry finds
new ways to improve your life through trees.

Think about

it

you may

Procter

the next time you're speaking to a friend:
just find yourself "talking"

&amp; Gamble Cellulose

— about trees.

Ltd.
'

P.O. Bag 1020
Grande Prairie Alberta

75

�Olenka Bakowsky and Ray Wagner

Ron

Plinte

These folks have been the heart and soul of Harvest '85.
They have photographed and developed, layed out and rearranged, pounded the pavement for advertisers and generally
put a great deal of time and energy into the realization of this
book. Their dedication

76

is

greatly appreciated!

DO

Ed Foreman

EF

�Deb

DO

Desrosiers

Russell Erskine

Lynne

TH

Sylvia Griefenhagen

DO

Collier

PHOTOGRAPHERS
Anna Westwood

DO

AB

Andrey Bruce
Andrea McDonald

-

AM

-

AP Andy
AS

-

Pulo

-

Allison Strickland

AW

Anna Westwood
Moore
Deb Desrosiers

-

BM
DD

-

-

Brian

DE Dean
-

DJ

Elzer

Don Jobson

-

DP - Dave Peckam

DO

Darlene O'Brien

-

EF

-

Ed Foreman

JB

-

John

JM
JM
JS

Jean Maclsaac

-

James Mitchell
J.D. Steele

-

JW

Judy Wright

-

KE - Ken

PM

Marlene Rayner
Margaret Schmidt
- Maria Vella
-

MS

-

MV
-

Ron

-

Sylvia Greifenhagen

SM
ST

TH

Elliott

Pat MacKasey

-

MR
RP
SG

Blair

-

-

Plinte

Scott McAllister

Susan Turza

-

Teresa Holla

77

�EDITOR'S

COMMENTS
April, 1985

Dear Reader,

The

become a reality. I am happy to say that this year we benefited from the
year levels: technology, degree and master's. This book really is a team effort,

12th edition of Harvest has finally

inputs of forestry students
since so

from

all

many have

contributed to its success.
project of this magnitude requires dedication and patience

from all concerned. What it finally boils
be concerned. Financial backing and technical equipment are important parts of such
projects,
if the people component is lacking. HARVEST '84 was a victim of such a situation. The
forestry tradition of annually producing yearbooks was broken last year, due to student apathy. A whole year of
memories is gone forever; the people, the places and the activities. We foresters are the only faculty to produce
yearbooks at Lakehead. It is something to be proud of.
In this edition of Harvest, we have tried to emphasize the theme of "moving into the future", stepping from
today into tomorrow. For those of us graduating this year, "tomorrow" has finally arrived. It is now time to put to
the test the knowledge we have gained during our past years at Lakehead. In recent months, the need for intensifying our forestry practices has been repeatedly voiced nationally. The public is perhaps slowly realizing just
what forestry means to them. The skeptics will say: "Humbug, it's no use, you are fighting a losing battle". The
final outcome rests on our shoulders, to meet the challenge of the future.
In closing, I would like to thank all those who have contributed to HARVEST '85, your efforts have made the
book better. Special thanks to Raymond Wagner and Teresa Holla for always being there when I needed them.
Thanks are also extended to all our advertisers and patrons. Your support is greatly appreciated.
Finally, a note on enthusiasm written by the famous poet and auto maker, Henry Ford:
You can do anything if you have enthusiasm. Enthusiasm is the yeast that makes your hopes rise to the stars. It is
the sparkle in your eyes, the swing in your gait, the grip of your hand, the irresistible surge of will and energy to
execute your ideas. Enthusiasts are fighters. They have fortitude. They have staying qualities. Enthusiasm is at the
bottom of all progress. With it, there is accomplishment. Without it, there are only alibis.

Working on a

down

to,

we should
but mean nothing
is

that

all

Sincerely,

Darlene O'Brien
Editor,

78

HARVEST

'85

�THE YEAR THAT WASN'T
Even though the yearbook was cancelled last
year due to circumstances beyond our control, we
fondly remember many events and many people.
We commemorate these last two pages to "THE

YEAR THAT WASN'T".
LAST YEAR'S GRADS! SCARY

Happy

Birthday!

Are we here

SG

to drink or play ball?

GREAT TOSS

DI

DO

Dr.

PULL, PULL! Go

McCormack

TH

Sue!

RM

We'll work anywhere

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                    <text>���CITY OF Tl''"''83 OCT 11

fi^y

PM

12

CITY CLERK'S OFFICE

UKtHEAD UMJVtRSITY

APR

THUNDER

1

9 2007

BAY,

ONTARIO

�Harvest '83

Dedicated to

The U.N.
a Tree "

"f'or Every Cbiid

Program

Volume XI

Published by

Lakehead University
Forestry Association

rhunder Bay, Ont.
^7B 5E1

Photo by: Peter Hanmore

���YOUR
UNIVERSITY
Serving

Northwestern
Ontario
since 1965
.

.

.

Offers comprehensive programs

Business,
Forestry,

Education,
Library

in

Arts,

Engineering,

Tecfinology,

Nursing,

Outdoor Recreation, Physical Education,
Science and Social Science.
Provides instruction on-campus and
part-time

and

full-time,

fall,

vi/inter

off,

and

summer.
Has athletic and recreational facilities
including an Olympic swimming pool,
squash courts, gymnasia, tennis courts,
comprehensive varsity and intramural
sports programs.

Has

an

active

continuing

program for professional
and for special groups.

Keep

in

education

development

touch with us through

Alumni Services.
Lal&lt;ehead University,

Thunder Bay, Ontario.
P7B 5E1

[Lakehead PS University]

�all in

Itw

much

uj\lliin^

A.&lt;e

'&gt;'&gt;

&gt;

U

f^&gt;^

LLC

(^Jgjb£lljiJfln4.

CAUUfUA

Clho^.ii^ /lm.^!^vH,

�Meet the Director
TRANSITIONS The first graduating class of 1973 is having its tenth anniversary reunion in 1983, and by the quirk of our numbering system, the eleventh class will be graduating. Thus, 1983 is both the end of the first ten and the beginning of
the next ten years, and I feel particularly honoured to have been able to join the group.
Graduates, students, and staff have achieved much in this time, and as the School continues to develop its three
programs, curricula and administration are going to be changing to reflect current and forecasted needs. Thus it is
planned to have full faculty status in the near future, and to have program chairman responsible for the technical,
degree, and post-graduate programs. Knowing exactly what is going to be needed in the future is, needless to say,
not possible, but the faculty believes we will be able to maintain the excellence of our programs, and contribute to
the excellence of our graduate in spite of the severe financial constraints currently being experienced by all
Universities.

mentioned " ... contributing to the excellence of our graduates ..." because we only contribute. The intrinsic
you as students, and graduates, including your motivation, academic prowess, sense of identity, and yes,
esprit de corps, all constitute the major contributions to your excellence. One recent example was the awarding by
the Society of American Foresters of the Award of Merit for "Harvest 1981". Your publication ranked 4 in 16 for
North America, and I believe all students have a right to be justly proud, especially when the School of Forestry
yearbook is the only one at Lakehead.
For the future, the usual foggy crystal ball is, with current economic uncertainties, virtually opaque. I nonetheless
still feel that technically competent, ecologically and economically sensitive, and socially aware foresters will remain
in high demand. Now that some of the 1973 graduates have gained valuable experience, they are becoming actively
involved in our teaching programs. I trust that those of you graduating in 1983 won't feel obliged to wait 10 years to
make your inputs because we need them on a continuing basis in order to maintain our quality and viability. I hope
you agree, and that you will always feel welcome.
I

qualities of

lin

ike

compltmenis
of

/^^^^^
A.

JAMES KAYLL
Director

School of Forestry

�Gary Murchison
"According
to
Cochrane ..."

Bill

"I

bdg

Snedicor

and

my

back-

Parker

bdg

got a gene pool in

Siegfried Zingel

bdg

"Soil, not dirt."

Kung-chi Yang
S?-wood."

Donald Orr
"Is this the right

dwi

room?"

bdg

Crandall Benson

bdg

bdg

Brian Moore
"Here's a good sample."

dwi

yard."

Larry Backus

"Gimme

thai bush

bdg

and

I'll

cut it."

Joe Kapron
"You can correlate anything."

7

�I
ttttt

^
Nancy

Phillips

There are spores everywhere.

8

i
fry

On

lunch break.

��^

1

Hi

Ross Gillespie
"Level your benchmark."

Prof. Richardson

dob

Bob Day

"Now

fob

tge

Lorax,

this

fob

report topic:

John Conner

pch

"Silly-culture" technician.

a tree."

Frances Bennett

"Good summer

"Dangling participles."

is

pea

Ken Brown
"Duck hunting?

pch
...

sure."

shooting."

Gil
"...

Vanson
I was in my office!!"

Steve Elliott

"Typical

Doug

little

beasties.

"Good

Dr. Arf Snozzle

pch

"Woof!"

Fir."

Frank Luckai

Lynn Sevean
"I love those

pch

to the last

dwi

drop."

Peggy Knowles
"I'll

play

piano."
10

a

few

dwi
'ditties'

on the

�Ralph Birston
"Unhuh, unhuh, unhuh."

Willard

Carmean

smg

fry

Dr. Al MacDonald
smg
"I can't answer that question."

Snoozy Hideabed

"ZZZZZ

"Dust to Dust."

Jack Flowers
"That's esoteric."

dob

Dr. Eric Green
"
"Basically ...

smg

...

ZZ

fry

smg

smg

"Delineate your photos."

Eila

Green

"May

...

Don Richardson

Hans Westbroeck

I

help

dob

you?"

Richard Clarke

dob

Eames
"Bug on Train."

dob

"1 forgot to order the buses."

David Parsons

smg

Dr. William

11

�"Best Wishes

from

12

in

Future Endeavours"

ALL YOUR FRIENDS AT LABATT'S

��Degree

I
I

LEFT TO RIGHT: Don
Kris Schlamp,

Tim

Richardson, Chas Croal,

Don

Stewart, Karl Flood,

Tom

Ratz,

dwi

New

life

Emerges.

Rob Gerlings, Gord
Forbes, Doug Fizzel, Bill

Allan, Brian Farguharson, Scott Edwards,

Gumming, George Wilson, Neil Frazer, Frank Testa, Keith
Greenway, Andy Hueton, Dave Carr, Ian Morrison, Mike Martel, Kevin

Reid.

I

What do you do

with a drunken

forester?

LEFT TO RIGHT: Don

Richardson, Glenn Johnston, Mike Edwards, Sylvia
Griefenhagen, John Niessen, Don Mathieson, Jim Brown, Steve Brushey, James
Peters, Kevin McKee, Ken Elliott, Brian Aaltonen, Cathy Rhind, Mark Holmes, Dan
Bulger, Kevin Whindler, Ben Kelley, Mark Fleming, Pat MacKasey, Jean-Louis
Wallace.

dwi

Lakehead Transit

14

^"^^

�Following in the tradition of For. Deg. I classes, we have retained the true spirit of full-fledged apathy. For
example, we ha\e not as yet acquired a class name, although certain ideas, such as "The Psycads" have been
proposed. Perhaps in the near future (at least before 1986!) we'll find some word to describe us!
All in all, we had a great time getting to know each other, in class and after class (especially through recreational
cruising!). Next year we might even shock ourselves and get involved in some activities! No matter what, I'm sure
we'll have as good a time as we did this year.

I

try not to let school inter-

fere with

my social

dwi

life!

15

�Field School
Field School proved to be a great time for
all.

We

one and

even found lime to learn something. Tech

ways

found

101

ferent

profs.

to learn the

Deg

went

I

same thing

'leafing'

told

by

I

dif-

through the bush

with garbage bag in hand, and came close to leaving
the country in their quest for Dendro. Some Tech II's
decided to get their feet and everything else wet by
spending a rainy night in Raith. Degree II learned a
valuable lesson in handling a chainsaw (Right Juha?!!)
and how not to pinch a fire hose (Right Rob?) Life was

Professional Treeplanters in the making.

smg

pits for Degree III, soil, soil, and more soil!!
Degree IV had a great party going (What No Booze?)
at Rinker Lake. What are we foresters turning into?
Well, back to classes.

the

Good

Luck!!!

Tied up

in his

work.

amt

Betty

made

Crocker never rw
cookies

like

this.

Once you

get to the freeway

Break Time!
tge

-^^it^ii^fe^ ''^.Cw'i.^SiSf "t-i^-iii^kS^

Ready, Aim, Fire!

pch

rw

��Tech
The
Tech

first
1

I
year has been a good one for the
We started out with the

class.

camaraderie of field school when everyone was
wondering what the h-1 was going on thru
closed eyelids and yawns. Then on to the Crest
and later the dreaded 'Baptism' and MUCH
later to classes. The favourite class, no doubt
was soils mit Prof. Zingel and Geology with uh
Prof, uh Kissin running second.
Tech I did well in sports thanks to the
organization and encurring spirit of a dedicated
few. All in all a very good year for Tech I.

TOP ROW: Dana

Biernacki, Rick Lablanc,

Roy Lawrence, Mark Hovey,

Dave Vidotto.

Campbell, Murray Erickson, Daryl Defeo, Randy Myers, Jim (Jim Bob) Heuvelmans.
Geoff Beatty, Doug Mickelson, Greg (Billy) Fallows, Dean Elzer, Russ Wallace, Eric
Waterburn, Paul Pulver, Mike Cheung, Bruce Holmes.
Gilles Bosse, Brian

TOP ROW:

�BOTTOM ROW, Left to Right:
SECOND ROW:

Bob Anderson, Rick Lablanc, Tim Keenan, Dave Ludwig, Bob Johnston, Lee Carroll, Diane Turton,
Paddy Desmarais, Donna Ivimey, Cheryl Simpson, Joan Van Mel, Dave Williams, Ralph Klietsch,
Ken Sielmack, Richard Belanko, Chris Allgoewer, Mark "Tex" Reiter, Ross Hart, Blair Gaudet, Lindsay Killen. BACK ROW: Brooke
Fumerton, Steve Devos, Scott(y) Thomas, Richard Wentzell, James Thompson, Fred Brotherton, Mike Richardson, Norm Stolle, Kirk
Schmidt, Shawn Maclean.
Sharon Oattes.

Your

Jeff

attention please.
19

�pch

The calendar never mentioned
prerequisite to

becoming a

that the shit pits

forester, but at

LU,

it

is

is

a

the

unwritten law. This year it was actually sunny, so the
newcomers had it easy. September 25 was the chosen
day. Rowdy, enthusiastic first year techers and degreeers flocked to the pits, which were hosted by the
Coureurs de Bois and Tekers dontus karus classes. The

annual Miss DBH (sorry guys, only females are allowed
to compete) and Mr. Butt contests were held. Cheryl
(Leather) was crowned Miss DBH and only Mr. Butt
knows for sure who he is. Then one and all passed
through the "water hazard" to reach the warm fire
across the mighty Mac and down a beer. Welcome to
the club!

Take

I

Take the
20

pch

quit!

Pitsi

Challenge!

A

hair-raising experience.

pch

^'^^

it all

smg

off!

Miss

DBH

Getting psyched up.

Runners-Up.

smg

�21

�KIMBERLY-CLARK
OF CANADA LIMITED
PULP AND FOREST

PRODUCTS
Terrace

Bay

-

Longlac
Ontario

Congratulations

and

Best Wishes to the
Class of

83

SUP€lflO/t
For the BIG
Custom

Built Units

Logging Trailers
Logging Cab Shields

\TtfAll€IK\

LOADS

of the B Tram
Model shows heavy
duty push type bunkers

"lop

view

Low Boy
Pole Trailers
Trailer Trains

American Can Canada

Bed
Pulpwood &amp; Log
Flat

Inc.
1

Woodlands

Division

Marathon, Ontario

22

Trailers

184 Roland Street, P
623-510;'

O

Box 2864, Thunder Bay, Ont

P7B 5G3

Telex 073-4658

�Shinerama

'82

This year, 67: L.U. students, 99% foresters, raised
S1659 by shining shoes for Cystic Fibrosis. Ugo and
Quinn Feunekes teamed up to raise the highest partnership total, while Ear Falls House won the Residence
competition. Thanks to all participants.
Results
1. Ugo and Quinn
Feunekes
2. Andv and Keith
:

Martin
3. Paul Phillips
and Rob McAlpine

$398.58
$191.37
$142.69

I

What

great legs!

have a pointed hat to hide

my

head

leh

23

�The 1983
Harvest

Graduates

�Diploma in

Forest

Technology

�Tech

II

Finally, our graduating year has arrived (and

for a select few,

our
Tourney,

it's

Techers

a bit overdue). This year

win

we

Forestry Baseball
play their hearts out in broomball,
skate circles around the opposition in hockey, a
spirited effort by our curling team (way to go
Joan, Jeff, Arlene, Andy and Dave) and a
valiant attempt by those that participated in the
Engineer's bus pull. How about our memorable
Harvesting field trip, and is Gonzo still in the
photo lab? I think it's safe to say we are all glad
to get that out of the way. To bring the year to
sa\\

the

LEFT TO RIGHT: Dave
Rob

Balwin,

Schafer,

Lome

Molinski,

Maureen La Fleche, Matt Myers,

Randy Simpson,

Barry

Cynthia Mann, Steve Pauluzzo.

a close, I'm certain our grad will be a success.

BACK ROW,
Garlick,

FRONT

Left to Right: Wayne Cuba, Ward Perchul&lt;, Steve
Rob Vassov, Dave Nix, Pete MacGillivray, Tim Rock.
ROW: Jeff Mundy, Bill Hudson.

LUNCHTIME
26

...

CHARGE!!

looking at?

Patemaude, Roland

Pratt.

FRONT ROW:

John Wylie.

Dougherty,

amt

�LEFT TO RIGHT:
Lelliott,

Wayne

Sean DeTracy, Jas Sidhu, Joan Schuppli, Marty
John Haveman, Joe Maure.

amt

\\'ehrstedt, Terry Tallett,

All

Techers keeping

snowed up!

fit

LEFT TO RIGHT: John Cunningham, Al Tomberg, Barry
Brown, Chris Hamelin, Wayne Busch, Brent McLean, Jim
Tiller, Lorenzo Mele, Andy Turega, Dan Desramaux.

BACK ROW,

Left to Right:

Mike Leyland, Mim Bowman.

amt

Mike Walker,

amt

Bert Jenkins, John Bayes,

FRONT ROW:

Paul Hoffman.

Smile for the camera.

amt

27

�LUFA

Love Boat Cruise

Such an intriguing sandwich!

I

Scientific

Scars from

fire

Skin tone weathered

used

to find

proper companion from the
females of the species
Topographical

maps

cruise control.

Forestry Student

Name: Partius

break con-

struction exercise

calipers,

is

Enjoying the scenery.

have the munchies.

Common Name:

DBH

Mary-Ellen

Let's rock this ship!!

\^

quite-a-bitus

Squinting eyes (resulting
from various causes)
Pinkish to bright red nose
of week)

/^depending on day

Facial hair (usually less prominent on females of species)

of Play

boy bunnies, a sign that the
specimen is not totally realistic

Silva

Ranger compass (with
stuck to back so he

^magnet

can put anywhere!)
Wineskin, capable of inducing

Swedish steel hunting knife,
used mostly for peanut butter
&amp; Ritz cracker munchies
Pocket stereoscope, lovingly
placed in pocket

proper state of mind within
Vi hour

Leaky technical pen
^(never used)

Worn &amp; faded blue jeans with
patches in critical areas
35

mm

Wool socks (unmatched,
"holed)

SLA camera,

cracked lens

with

\^

Workboots, broken in during
28

shit-pit

week

and

Cruiser's axe - used to keep
uppity Engineers in line

�THE CHALLENGE
OF FOREST

MANAGEMENT
The great

forests of
ut one aspect of
management. We are proud
|)art!cipate in many ways in teaching

Ontario are renewabfebut forest regeneration
still requires carefu
research and planning.
On one front, the
Ministry of Natural

er forestry practices to tomorrow's
esters and technicians.

Resources has been experimenting
with growing poplar from tissue culture in
test tubes. If successful, the program will
allow the Ministry to produce thousands of
genetically superior plantlets for

regeneration program.

Ministry of

Hon..Alan W. Pope
Minister

Natural

its

Resources

W.

T Foster

Deputy Minister

Ontario

29

�Coureurs de Bois
Degree II tried their hardest to live down their image
of 'Keeners' placed on them by Les Bucherons. Many
could be found at the 'Study' on Friday afts to
basically get Stats out of their systems. Somewhere
between Moose and Goose, Photo, English, and
Computer, time was found to welcome the new tech
transfers

from

Newfoundland

to

British

Columbia.

Some

of the transfers did not know where they
belonged. Time was also found to participact in many
intramural sports. Thanks to all who came out, and
watch out for next year coz we're up and coming.

I

know

this

species

...

Just

let

me

check

handy-dandy pocket guide.

LEFT TO RIGHT:

Margaret Doughty, Robert
Joanne Leesing, Sandy Stubbert, Kevin Coombs.

30

Mitchell,

^'"^

Party Forestry Style at 18 below

0.

my

�FRONT ROW,

Left to Right: Dave Farrer, Ray Wagner, Mary Tedesco, Sue Collins, Norma Watson, Kathie Marek, James Miichell, Val
Mark (Peewee) Love, Martin Eschlboeck, Glen Stronks, Paul Beamish, Daniel Demers, Harley May, Jim Stever, Ralph Horn,
Gerry Sliworsky, Dave Legg, Dave Schafer, Greg Curnisk, Rob Boychuk, Martin Kaiser, Jeff Bond, Shane Bray, Jim Stewart, Dave
\\'aynee,

BACK ROW: Mike (Rabbit) Robinchaud, Rose Ryder-Burbidge, Ken Colthurst, Juha Anttila,
Dennis Jeshor, Mike (Buck) Desrochers, Teresa Holla, Susanna Grimes, Al Wiensczyk, Andy Pulo, Cathy Wayland, Paul Quinn, Ian

(Cowpuncher) Neufeld, Kevin Weaver.

Cowan, Mark Bancroft.

FRONT ROW, Left to Right: Wendy Duncan, Glen McGinn, Paul (Harley) Ruebsam.
BACK ROW: Richard Mackenzie, Dean Brigham, Kevin Lindquist, Karen Schweitzer,
i

jlie

Pierce, Kerry

^'"^

Ministry Supervising.

Deschamps, Heather Foater, John Cram, Jacqui Sands.
31

�Who's on

First???

It
was the nippy October morning after the Corn
Roast when the Forestry teams slugged onto the field.
The day was overcast, and although hung over, a spark
of indominable forester spirit was on the fields. The
games were an array of baseball expertise outfielding
incompetence, and beer. In the end, it was the Tech II
all-stars up against the best of the Coureurs de Bois.
The result was the Degree II team going down to a
rather crushing defeat, after a day of Calsbergs.

Congratulations Tech

II

for a fine performance

Tech

32

dde

The Grand Slam.

1983 Champions!!

Official

Spectating

The wind-up.

II:

dde

It's

Ump.

a fly!!!

dde

dde

�Kam-Am Canoe Race
The sky was cloudy and so were a few minds that
morning but somehow we all got pointed in the right
direction and the race was off. As always there were
those few confused souls

and they were soon out of
to talk them out of it.

One team,

who

actually decided to race

sight despite

our best efforts

sensing their inevitable defeat, hailed the

passing cabin cruiser and spent the rest of the trip
eating granola bars and drinking. The one casualty of
first

the race

(D&amp;R

racing team) learned the difficulty of

'watering the grass' from mid-stream but luckily were
pulled from the chilly waters of the McKellar.

When

the waters finally stilled and the paddles laid

we found

the Outdoor Rec's had finished first
and second again. Ken and Dick Morden lead with a
time of 1 hr. 49 min., followed by Bernie Brault and
Angle Walton at 2 hr. 11 min. Coming in a close third
to uphold the foresters honour were Peter Harpe and
Peter Green (better take the portage next year guys!).
Congratulations to all the other teams for making the
day a great success.
to rest

Whadda YA mean "You

For years now

...

lost the

paddle".

Speed

it

up guys!

I'm supervising.

33

�FRONT ROW:
Mark (Boone)

Peter (Monty)

Hanmore, Frances (The Editor) Youck,

Speers, Neil Edwards, Anita Riekko.

Editor;

MIDDLE ROW: Andy

Nancy (HB No.

1)

Toniiinson, Greg Pawson,

Petrowski, Bruce (Spruce) Carroll, Roger Burson,

Denis Durocher, Anne Kangus, Paul (Pudd) Betts, Mike Maxfield, Dave Wark, Tracy Tieman, Corrinne Nelson, Gary
Vermeer, Bill Hall, Dave (Peabody) Tarjan, Margaret Penner, Dave (Munchkin) Hayhurst. BACK ROW; Christopher
Wilson, Bill De Groot, Bill Van Schip, Keith Fletcher, Mario Lapierre, Keith Ley, Anna Szabo, Rick (Ski) Ksiezopolski, Reg
(Class Rep) Hiebert, Caspar Horvath, Ralph Jacob, Erin (The Green) Leffers, Richard (Zee) Zotz, Mike (Rabbit) Robichaud,
Don Vaillancourt, Jim (Ripper) Neill, Greg Rawling.

Les Bucheron!

A

somewhat resembles
not in body, at least in spirit. This
means that they are all as ferocious as the Hulk and
they all spread terror throughout LU not with a
double-bladed axe, but with a hockey stick, or soccer
shoes, or just with brilliant mental skills.
special breed of forester that

their

symbol

if

"Oh

ya, and just where have these brilliant
mental skills gotten you?"
Les Bucheron: "Well, for starters, our soccer team
has been invited to participate in the
next world cup."

Engineer:

Artsie:

"Wow!"

Les Bucheron: "Herald Balard wants to purchase our
hockey teams."
Outdoor Recker: "Ohhh!"
Les Bucheron: "And to be able to play on our water
polo team you, like a frog, must have

webbed
Lorax:

And

"Now

our

feet

pch

and ribbit."

that's brilliant."

skills

don't

stop

there.

We

also

excel

heard through the grapevine
that Great Lakes will be opening up 40 vice-presidential
positions just so some of next year's graduates can have
a deserving job. But first we'll all have to make it out of
Hazenburg's business or is it economics - I'm still
academically. In fact,

I

Phil

Graham

Gary (Hound dog)
Vermeer

�Holly Slusar

P''"

Marilyn White

Tony

Peiffer

h

LEFT TO RIGHT: Ron

Storie,

Graham, Richard Pecman

(Pec),

Paul Kutz, Nancy Laroque,

Doug

Pitt,

Arne Aiking.

Tim

Grant, Phil

Dean Allen
(Dino)

Dave Wark, Teresa Zago, Class Rep; Paul Knowles (Twinkle Toes). STANDING:
(LUFA), Brian Goldsworthy (Tonto), Peter Row, Arne Aiking, Darlene O'Brien, Jim Parsons (Allan), Paul Charrette, Dave
Luika (Party), Scott Folk, William Trowell, Greg Rawling, Peter Green, Jim Thrower.

SEATED:

Ian Searle, Christine Nenicka, Diane Lee,

Peter Harper

35

�Pine and Tulips

Scot's

W'c ani\od on Dutch
a crash course in

Dutch

soil early in

May, ready

to take

forestry. After a crash course

Dutch train system, we arrived in Arnhem where
we were immediately made welcome by 14 Dutch
students. After taking a short chainsaw course, we left
our mark on the Dutch landscape. It was quite an
experience. At the end of the summer, we were really
sorry to say goodbye to all the wooden shoes, windmills, and blond, blue-eyed males. Thanks to all who
helped make the exchange possible. All photos by
in the

Leslie

Hawkins.
Sampling the substrate.

How

Sawmill
36

-

to get

around

in

Openluchtmuseum.

Holland.

Zimmerman

Pratijkschool voor

forest in the

Bosbow en

morning.

Culturtechniek.

�FORESTRY CONSULTANTS

INC.

Trees are only renewable
if

99

we renew them

i

2C

.

!

*

Dubreuilville, Ontario

POS 1B0
884-2525
Telex 067-7255

Tel. (705)

STUDS DIMENSION STOCK
TIMBERS P.E.T.
RAILROAD TIES CHIPS
-

-

-

KILN DRIED

LUMBER

-

(3

KILNS)

QUALITY AND SERVICE IS OUR MOTTO
FAST EFFICIENT TRUCK
DELIVERY TO ONTARIO
MICHIGAN, INDIANA, OHIO, WISCONSIN

SPRUCE JACK PINE
POPLAR ON LONG TERM CONTRACT
SALES OFFICE
-

P.O. Box 518
530 Cathcart Street
Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario
Telephone (705) 253-2378
Telex 067 77121
Sales Mgr. Martial Beaunnier
-

�New

dife».Huns.

luretroni ol

il

all

Nevv options

Good

New

lucit iis

CONFECTION

ttvillivini's

vou Niop

inlo

And

you'if right

in

the

Tomorrow!

POST OFFICE

TOBACCO

Thai's

why we've

taken

ai

promoting and

interesi in

sponsoring people-oriented
proiecis.

And

ihai's

why we

safeguard the environmeni by

and furnishing
areas and by meeting

setting aside
nation

exceeding

YOUR ON

CAMPUS

strict air

and water

STORE

FACULTY OF UNIVERSITY SCHOOLS
Schools

of

•

Business Administration

•

Engineering

•

Forestry

•

Library Technology

•

Nursing

•

Physical Education

and Outdoor Recreation

38

�Shopping Kart Race
Eight teams entered this year's race, held on October
and a total of 7 teams finished. The race began
and ended on the pottery road and was a relay-style
race. Highlights of the race: at the first bump, almost all
carts were involved in a pileup (luckily most riders wore
helmets); the ramp in front of the library proved to be
too narrow for one extremely long cart.
The winner of the best decorated cart was the Hell's
Angel team with their souped up cart. For an unprecedented 3rd year in a row, first place was snatched
20, 1982,

by the fleet-footed Colt 45'ers. Maybe the consumption
of pre-race fuel helped them win. Anal Pores picked up
second place and Team Rossi came in third.
Next year's race should be a thriller with the OLD
Colt 45 team attempting to hold off the YOUNG Anal
Pores.

Pre-race preparation.

�The 1983 Har

��B.Sc.F. Directed Studies
OPERATIONS RESEARCH. BACK ROW: Doug

LEFT,

Mount. Cord Greasley,

Blair Andres, Ed East, Dave Berry,
Prof Walker, Vic Miller, Henry Freiter. FRONT ROW: Viv
Ball,
Jeff
McKnighl, Dwayne Schullz, Rick Lambert.

BELOW, ECOLOGY. BACK ROW: Tom
Richard

ROW:

FRONT ROW:

Dave Bogensberger, Holly

42

Maddie Maley.

Chris

Hollstedt,

Cunningham,
Simon Tanner. FRONT

Dave Morris, Dr. Farmer.

Slusar.

SILVICULTURE. BACK ROW: John Andres,
Richard Krygier, Roy Sidders, Wayne Bell, Herb

ROW:

Krygier,

Kelly Sitter,

Bax.

FRONT

FISH &amp; WILDLIFE.

BACK ROW:

Dr.

Gumming, Rick

Pecman, Charlie Todesco. FRONT ROW: Chris Halenda,
Dave Morris, Gord Johnson. MISSING: John Bagacki.

'^""^

�FIRE

BACK ROW:
Rob McAlpine
Rob Howe
Scott

Ronson

FRONT ROW:
Dave Archibald
Dr. Fiber

Ugo Feunekes
tge

"I am the Lorax. I speak for the
Truffala trees, which you seem to
be chopping as fast as you please.
I speak for the trees, for the trees
have no tongues." Well, once we

I'm sure we'll live up
to our name. This past year has
with
been
pretty
hectic
all

get jobs,

management

REMOTE
SENSING
Ralph Birston

Doug

Pitt

Chris Cohlmeyer

Paul Kutz

plans, parties, history

readings, the opening of the pub,

and of course, hockey.
Congratulations to all who made it
through. Thanks for coming out.
It was a great four years!
theses,

PROBLEM
SOLVING
BACK ROW:
Paul Phillips
Ugo Feunekes

Henry

Freiter

FRONT ROW:
Dr.

Brown

SOILS
Ted

Slavin

Chris Kilzman

Hawkins
John Connor
Leslie

MISSING:
Dr. Zingel

�MENSURATION. BACK ROW: Charlie Todesco, Fred
Dewsberry, Prof. Richardson. FRONT ROW: Doug Mount,

GENETICS. BACK ROW: Linda

Gail Retailack, Rick Lambert.

ROW:

Geerincic, Rich
Frani&lt; Schnekenburger, Michael Stoehr, Dr. Parker.

Lynn Palmer, Janet

Sliz.

FRONT ROW:

Lipman,

MIDDLE

John Andres,

Mark Hopfgartner.

SOIL-SITE.

BACK ROW:

Dillabough,

Dave Thurston,

FRONT ROW:

ECOLOGY.

Dr. Carmean, Jeff Goelz,

Vanson, Randy
John Connor, Chris Cohlmeyer.
Gil

Betty

Collier.

Richard Krygier, Chris Hollstedt, Simon Tanner,

Rob Howe, Ugo Feunekes, Dr. Kayll, Dave Archibald, Scott
Ronson, Rob McAlpine, Tom Cunningham, Dave Morris.

MANAGEMENT.
Benson,

MISSING:

Roy

Dave

Sidders,

Bogensberger,

Gord

Ed Swayze,

Greasley,

John

Prof.

Bagacki.

Liz Eckert.

SILVICULTURE.

BACK

ROW:

Lomnicki, Gerard Van der Burg, Paul

Prof.

Clarke,

Phillips, Sherry

Barb

Lynn

Boycott. MIDDLE ROW: Ron Reinholt, Chris Hollstedt,
Mary Ellen Anderson, Rich Lipman. FRONT ROW: Joan
Keene, Betty Dillabough.

^'^^

�Best Wishes
Compliments

of

NORO SAW &amp; MARINE
LTD.
279 Bay

345-7321

St.

Thunder Bay, Ont.

landmark inn
(I

Jl

TaccSFime

1010 dawson road
thunder bay, Ontario

phone

679 Memorial Ave.

P7B 5J4

(807) 767-1681

telex 07-34354

watts line 1-800-667-8191

345-4096
GLEN W. DAHL
general manager

flnytime

is

T^aco Tiime
Compliments

of

THE CORPORATION OF
THE
CITY OF THUNDER BAY

svorfo
y
Jp

Mayor Walter M. Asset

MARKETING

ALDERMEN
MULTI-COLOUR SCREEN PRINTERS
K.

CAPS
TEAM UNIFORMS and JACKETS
T-SHIRTS

W. Lysnes

Boshcoff

B.

Climenhage
Kennedy

T.

Kozyra

A.

Laakkonen

J.

5b S.dJ'"

J. Polhill

T.

Reid

Timko
D. Waddington
L.

H. LeBlanc

D.

Willoughby

91 0 ALLOY DR.,
THUNDER BAY. ONTARIO,
INC..

CANADA P7B 6A4
JilimiH.IIIIIIHIHlK

D.R.

MacLeod

Chief Adnninistrative Officer
H.T. Kirk
City Clerk

45

�GRADUATE STUDIES
The graduate program in Forestry at Lakehead is
growing. The first enrollment was in '77 and since then
about 10 students have graduated. In '82, there were 13
enrolled in the fields of: Silviculture, Fish and Wildlife,

Genetics, Biometrics and Harvesting, with almost half

beginning their

first

Most have

year.

their B.Sc.F., but

and
Forest
Engineering are also applicable.
The program emphasizes research in methods of
renewing and improving forest resources and maintaining the forest environment.
The head of Lakehead's Senate Graduate Studies
Committee is Stan Walker, and Chairman of the
allied

such

disciplines

Biology

as

Graduate Studies Committee

is

Ken Brown.
F. Bennett,

M. Harvey, C.

Sutherland.

GENETICS
Frances Bennett, 3rd

Frances

is

yr. (Dr.

Parker)

among

studying genetic variation
species whose ranges

N.A. west coast
the
procera,

intermediate

three

overlap.

MAGNIFICAVAR,

SHASTENSIS,

MAGNIFICA.) Gene

exchange patterns

(A.

A.

variety:

and

A.

between

or

within these species are explored using flavonoids, a
species-specific chemical characteristic of needles.

Tom
Tom

Krickl, 3rd yr. (Dr. P. Knowles)

comparing the genetic variability of PICEA
from improved source (of the Ontario Tree
Improvement Program) and natural stock. Since
is

MARIANA

disease resistance

is

closely related to genetic variation,

improved stock most similar to natural
will

in this respect

be more desirable.

Gwen

O'Reilly, 2nd yr. (Dr. Parker)

Geographic variability of PICEA MARIANA across
Northern Ontario, and lowland/upland ecotype difMorphological
ference
is
Gwen's
topic.
thesis
characteristics of the cones and needles are the criteria
for her study; also, proteins in the foliage and seeds,
called isozymes are useful.

Laird

Van Damme,

1st yr.

(Dr. Parker)

In a continuation of his undergraduate thesis. Laird
is

assessing

selection

the

methods

efficiency
for

of

alternate

PICEA MARIANA.

plus

-

tree

R. Collier, L.

VanDamme.

�Craig Sutherland,

Day)

(Dr.

1st yr.

Craig is attempting to determine the optimum size and
shape of container necessary for the production of high
seedlings.
Twelve
spruce
container
quality
black
container sizes (4 volumes x 3 shapes) have been
manufactured and will be used to test seedling growth
in the greenhouse phase and after outplanting.

Mark

Rosiek,

1st yr.

(Clarke

&amp;

Brown)

Mark's thesis is in conjunction with a project of Clarke
Brown, which has been on-going since June, '80.

&amp;

Factors that influence 'free-to-grow' status in

MARIANA

and PINUS

BANKSIANA

will

PICEA

be studied.

'Free-to-grow' refers to a certain height and growth

when

rate of a stand

reestablished.

BIOMETRICS
Johanna Kavanagh, 3rd

(Murchison)

yr.

Johanna's research is comprised of a two-part study: 1)
the development of two computer programs to process
stem analysis data from Lakehead's digimicrometer. 2)
the accuracy of volume estimates obtained using different sampling intensities for PICEA GLAUCA.

Randy
Randy
fit

(last

year's Harvest editor),

past

project

K. Kavanagh

L.U.

of

yield

tables

This
for

yr. (Dr.

studying the growth and

is

yield

patterns

of

GLAUCA, P. GLAUCA plantations,
POPULUS TREMULOIDES, and mixed woods to
PICEA

determine the timing and aspen density at which
competition between aspen and spruce begins. This
data will be used to time herbicide application and

hand

Mark

1st yr. (Dr.

Day)

experimenting with various preconditioning
and storage procedures for PICEA GLAUCA seedlings
to quantify the effects on outplanting performance.
Three methods of storage and the effects of wrenching
(preconditioning) on the degree and timimg of dormancy were evaluated. Spring planting is his final
phase to determine wrenching effectiveness and the best
is

(G.L.F.P.)

Lakes F.P., Dave is
method as an inventory
technique for estimating the amount of forest residue
remaining in a cutover. This efficient method is important for better wood utilization and for measuring
cooperation

evaluating

fuel,

the

with

line

Great

transect

but has never been tested in Ontario before.

FISH

release (cleaning) to release spruce.

Mark Harvey,

yr.

Day)
In

Bill

will

N.W.

HARVESTING
Dave Thompson, 3rd

Towell, 3rd

attempting to

down.

SILVICULTURE
Bill

is

the Weibull distribution to yield data collected from

MARIANA
^'"^

(Murchison)

provide PICEA
Ontario. Take
comfort Randy, Weibulls wobble but they don't fall
a

D. Thompson

Collier, 1st yr

Bill

AND WILDLIFE

Dalton, 3rd

yr.

(Gumming)

Bill is studying the foraging patterns of beaver in
poplar stands to determine their efficiency according to
the optimal foraging theory, (energy minimization,
food maximization, predator avoidance, etc. ...)

storage method.

47

�Let's talk

teamwQik.
4t Great Lakes

Forest
have a

Products we
team of 5700 persons.
They are engaged in timber
harvesting, reforestation

and the production of
newsprint, kraft pulp,
fine paper, lumber and
waferply.

The

careers involved

range from engineering

and mechanical trades, to
accounting and personnel.
To maintain an operation
as complex as this, a wide
variety of occupations

Your skills
may one day become a
welcome addition to our
is

essential.

industry.

Great Lakes
Forest Products
Limited

��pch

David Loney

Kevin Weaver, Fran Youck, Dave

Ip.

smg

THE FIRST ANNUAL FORESTRY FOLK NIGHT
The combination of talented foresters, professors and special guests
proved to make our first Folk Night a great success. Richard Zotz kept'
the evening rolling with his witty comments and charm. Entertainment
ranged from the foot stomping sounds of Dean Hemple's quartet to thei
mellow tunes of Jeff Glanbitz. Peggy Knowles demonstrated her pianist
abilities, while Harold Gumming captivated the audience with forestry
songs.

Through

the

sale

of

baked

goods,

$160.00

was

raised

for

the

Woodsmen Team. Special thanks to our guests Annie Merlin, Slipt
Disque, to the many performers and to' everyone who contributed to the
evening.

Brian Campbell, Dean Hemple.

Darlene O'Brien

50

dob

Enjoying the show.

Slipt Disque.

dwi

�51

�Tlie Intramural

Woodsmen

Competition
On Saturday morning January 15, II teams
descended on the Woodsmen field ready for a good
time. Thanks to Mark Bancroft and his crew, the day
was a great success. Bogie's raider's walked away with
the Men's first place, Dar's Darlings captured the
Women's title and Rob MacAlpine's team won the coed division. Thanks to Ray and Maureen for providing
pop and hot dogs.

A

Human

On
52

amt

favorite event.

dmk

skidders.

your mark, get

set,

Heave ho.

GO.

dwm

Don't move.

Hold me up

amt

amt
please.

The Boys.

amt

�Congratulations to
"Harvest 1983"
and to Forestry Students
at

ONTARIO PAPER COMPANY
A Division of

Q.N.S.

PAPER

COMPANY LIMITED

Lakehead University

ONTARIO PULP AND
PAPER MAKERS
SAFETY ASSOCIATION
Mr. P. G. Day, PresidentMr. A. J. Marchand, Vice-President
Mr. W. C. Lockhart, General Manager,

"CONCERN MEANS INVOLVEMENT"
Manitouwadge Ontario
,

BUCHANAN FOREST PRODUCTS
COURT STREET
THUNDER BAY. ONT.
233

LTD.

S.

PHONE (807) 345-0571

Cumberland Street
Keskus Mall
832 Red River Rd.
Bay and Algoma
Victoria and Brodie
Memorial and Harbour
Arthur and Edward
Thunder Bay Mall
2 S.

CANADIAN IMPERIAL

BANK OF COMMERCE

MORE STUDENTS BANK
WITH US THAN ANY OTHER BANK
53

�What did Voa do
# SruP£NTS
recH

PS OF NOV.
recH

1

summer r

last
I

VE&lt;^. 3

2

/ACTUAL f '^o \
NunQEy^ [.5RMPLED)
J\/unO£^? /
OF nALES [of

55(73)

\

^3(7?.^) 3^7(^2.7)

65(90.3)

CLASS)

^ (n.i)

CfFEhA UESipFCLASS)

1/^/^(6^)

lz(z/.3)

77

(l7.3)

BRBRKOOU/N OF EMPLO^ME/S/T IN FORBSTRy

TOTA U

_

7.

Ig.o

=^

TotAL- 3

y.i

H.H

3M

13.5

in

22.2

333

15.3

15.3

q.l

/?./

(/.O

^^

10.1 lO.l

3,V IH-S

!o6

11.1
Cfo)X&gt;EG.

n.2.

/&lt;9.6

20.:{

10.1

3.1.-1

13.3

^.

/

^.^

TcCH

G-l /3.5 3.^

^H.l
5.5

H.Z

((-(

G-O

/,S

3.G
;?,7

2-0

H.I [03 ?.o 3.1
^.6

1

-z

^3.5-

93.^
50.O

Top coMP/^KJi£S
7,^

FORCQN

&lt;o3

GfRFnr LmE5

v.?

KSM

ToTAL Total
^1.7

33,^

h^AlAL£

0£C-.

OEGr
3

CPECr

6H.3 H5.0 2J.7

?^.?

-TOP 5

n.ts/.R

b^.7

TOP H R£^IOMS
5 '2

F.P.

23 VkJOOOW^NDS
2,0 LflHEHERP a,

54

?.3

^.^

TOTAL

1

CLRRKE

6,7

STUPENTS EMPLOYED IN FORESTRY
TEcH

A7

1

.0

10.

22.1 25.7

11.

(=r^T£ CH

'

r

11.

^dRoiAjN

/\JonTHERM

5,7 MflNiroOA

5-^ R.\aIE5T

/.7

MP\NFOH
SPRUCE FRLLS

H-O GEf^f\Lro[\J

2.^ fV.RRSr

I.I

EN\JlRON.C/)N,

2.0

2.0

l.l

BOXaJRTER

1.1 SlOO)C

/.7

FETR\A/n\AjR\

1.7

fV)iRf6iO/\j

LOOKOUT

N.

CBMrt^nL

�WAVERLY HOTEL
ROCK

'N

ROLL

'N

GOOD TIMES

Corner of Cumberland
and Cannelot

The For Every Child
Lakehead University this

A

Program came to
The program which was
initiated as a United Nations Environment Programme
endeavor, is being promoted in Canada by The
Canadian Foundation For World Development. The
CFWD has launched a nation wide campaign to plant
trees in Canada. The UN has asked Canadians to raise
Tree

falL

money for the growing of nursery stock in Haiti, a
country that is 91% deforested. LUFA members have
raised over $200.00 for this purpose through the sales
of buttons, mugs and T-shirts. We have also been in
contact with several schools who have expressed an
interest in participating in tree planting projects.

T-shirts.

55

�Forest

Management

in Ontario

Symposium

Ready Or Not!!

The CIF held their 75th anniversary this
year and the Northwestern Ontario section
alHed themselves with LUFA to produce
15th Annual Symposium. The theme
was "The Managed Forest in Ontario, Are
We Ready?". The seminars were aimed at
the public, a group which seems determined to ignore things that are in their

the

THE COMMITTEE:

Rick Lambert, Simon Tanner, Leslie Hawkins, Chris

own

Cohlmeyer.

of

interest.

the

interest

However

sessions,

the

the different format

and the
combined to

speakers,

of the audience

all

make

the
symposium a
where
speakers
told
us

success.

we

are

Our
in

management right now and why, and that
if we start using the plans and techniques
now becoming available we may have a
well managed forest someday.
The Dinner and Dance was held this year
Holiday Inn and approximately 130
people stuffed themselves on roast beef.
at the

Tom

Krickl,
a transplant, remembered
school for us, although perhaps not
precisely as we remember it, and Fat
Chance had everyone rocking and polkaing
for the third year in a row. Many thanks
field

to

PANEL:

P. Corbett, R.

Monzon, A.

Currie, G. Patterson, J. McNicol, S.

dwi

the

LUFA

committee members from
and the CIF for their efforts.

Courtney.

M.

Squires

P. Corbett and
56

J.

McNicol.

dwi

J.

Jackson

both

��^1

ML

-ni

The Woodsmen

\

�John Andres

Ron

Ray Wagner

Solecki

1982-83
year
the
During
Lakehead Woodsmen participated
in three

competitions:

November

-

Sandford Fleming College;
McDonald College;
January
March - Lakehead U.
At the SSFC competition LU
'A' placed 7th out of 16 teams
while taking a 1st in swede saw
and pulp toss for distance. LU 'C
13th
overall.
In
team placed
Sir

Montreal, LU 'A' again placed 7th
out of 19 teams while winning a
1st in swede saw, 2nd in overall
sawing, and two 3rd place finishes
in log decking, and dot splitting.
At our own Lakehead competition,
LU 'A' placed 2nd out of the 10
participating teams while winning
again swede saw and placing 3rd in
six
other
events
waterboil,
decking, crosscut, speed chopping,

Paul
Kutz

Mark
Bancroft
Captain

Jay
Steele

^

chainthrow,
and
pulp
toss.
However, in the women's division,
LU 'C walked off with ten first
place

finishes

in

1/4

split,

pulp

throw for distance, axe throw, log

power saw, crosscut,
chopping,
chain
throw,
swede saw, and pulp toss for
distance. LU 'C placed first in the
decking,

speed

Al Armstrong

women's
beating

division

all

the

men's

one

also

Congratulations
for the

the

and 6th

overall

women's teams and
to

all

team.
woodsmen

most successful season

history

of

woodsmen

in

at

Lakehead U.

A special thanks goes to Mark
Bancroft for all his countless hours
of
sharpening
equipment
and
organizing the team.

Christine Livesey,

Mary Tedesco, Cathy Wayland, Miriam Bowman, Linda Dunford, Sue

Collins.

59

�����Tlie
On March
recei\ed their

Ring Ceremony
11,

1983,

forestry

the

rings

fourth

year

class

from the C.I.F. Ac-

cording to the June 1974 issue of the Forestry
Chronicle, the ring signifies: accomplishment in
studies,
dedication to a profession with high
standards
and
aspirations
to
positions
of
responsibility. Paul Phillips was the valedictorian
and gave his own special meaning to the ring. Herb
Bax, a past graduate of L.U. was the presenter.
Everyone enjoyed themselves during the evening at
the Airlane Hotel.

�65

�������OUR
COLLINS SAFETY SHOES
LIMITED
906 Memorial Avenue
Thunder Bay, Ont.

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
"Best of Luck to

All

NEWAYGO FOREST PRODUCTS

Foresters."

LIMITED
R.R. No. 1
Hearst, Ont. POL

HOITO RESTAURANT

LINGMAN-LAPRADE TRAVEL

314 Bay Street

SHOP LIMITED
County Fair Plaza
Thunder Bay, Ont.

Thunder Bay, Cnt.

1N0

�PATRONS
POWELL EQUIPMENT

ONTARIO FORESTRY
ASSOCIATION
150 Consumers Road
Willowdale. Ont.

M2J 1P9

M

(1978)

WANSON LUMBER COMPANY

LIMITED

LIMITED

1455 Buffalo Place
Winnipeg, Man.
R3T 1 L8

277 John Street

PERCIANTE &amp; LAPRADE
SPORTING GOODS LTD.
777 Red River Road

Thunder Bay, Ont.

P7B 1J9

Thunder Bay. Ont.

P7B 1W8

THE RED OAK INN
555 West Arthur Street

Thunder Bay, Ont.
P7E 1W8

�The 1982/1983 Executive

Paul Phillips
Social

Convenor

Peter Green
Exchange Co-ordinator

Dave Neufeld
Sports Co-ordinator

�3-handed defense.

•

.

Tech

II

Hackers Broomball.

75

�Meet the
Harvesters

Photographers
JRA

John Andres

VMB

AMC

Vivienne Ball
Fred Brotherton
Allen Collins

HGC

Harold Cumming

FOB

BDE Bill DeGroot
TOE Thomas Fiber

DDF
SMG
PCH
LEH

Peter

Hanmore

Leslie

Hawkins

RJH

Rob Howe

DWI
EL

Dave Ip
Erin Leffers

GSM

George Macdonald

DMK
KM

Dan McKenny
Ken Morden

CN
DOB

Christine Nenicka

LS

Darlene O'Brien
Ron Reinholt
Gail Retallack
Lynn Sevean

KMS

Kelly Sitter

AMT
RW

Allan

FRY

Frances Youck

RWR
BGR

76

Denise Ewacha

Susanna Grimes

Tomberg

Raymond Wagner

�A Few Words from
Another yearbook

is

now

history.

Harvest '83

University Forestry students. This edition

is

is

the Editor

a record that documents one year in the

the eleventh one printed.

As you look through

life

the pages,

of Lakehead
I

hope that

it

few smiles and chuckles to your lips.
believe that the most important component of

will bring a

this school of forestry is the people. In a production like this, it is
I
impossible to get pictures of everyone. Somebody always manages to elude the class photographer. Tech transfer
students are especially hard to track down. Perhaps if your picture isn't with the class, it is among one of the
candids. My apologies to those people who didn't make it into the yearbook.
lot of hard work went into the production of "Harvest '83". We have big steps to follow. The 1981 edition of
"Harvest", which was edited by Mark Stevens (who was voted Forester-of-the-Year in 1982), won an award from

A

American Society of Foresters. We hope to keep up the tradition.
is too much work for one person alone, but as you can see from the facing page, I had lots of help. Ray
Wagner spent many hours in the darkroom developing high quality photos; Teresa Holla faithfully typed everything
gave her (she will be the editor for Harvest '84); Peter Hanmore took most of the pictures; friendly Darlene
I
O'Brien chased after new advertisers; Susanna Grimes took the initiative to do a survey of summer jobs; Margaret
Penner kept track of all the money; Leslie Hawkins did a bit of everything; Peter Harper helped out whenever he
could find the time. Many other people also contributed their time and talents, just look at the list of
photographers. Then there are the artists, the class reps who sold books, and people who just came up with some
neat ideas. Me, I just puttered around and told everyone else what to do so I wouldn't have to do anything.
Enjoy your yearbook.
the

There

^ AOjvJtaa

Q..

Frances Youck
Editor, Harvest '83

�71

78

�79

�a tree

is

an

art of faith in the earth

an

art of

hope

for the future

an act of humanity towards coining
generations

who

will

after

we

enjoy
shall

its

fruit_^

be gone

�����</text>
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                    <text>���Digitized by the Internet Archive
in

2014

https://archive.org/details/lufor1982

�Harvest 1982
Volume

X

Published by

Lakehead University
Forestry Association

Thunder Bay, Onta^

P7B 5E1

�BM

��"From

the Top'

Well, the "new kid in town", as I have been called has now been with you 14 months, and finds himself in a
hazardous situation of thinking that he knows what's going on! While that may not be the case exactly, I do have a
much better idea of the vitality and strengths of the students of Lakehead University School of Forestry and of the
institution itself.

This past year, we have had more forestry students enrolled than at any of the other five Canadian schools.
Although we don't have the largest faculty, we do have a hard working one. In addition to their teaching responsibilities, they have initiated a review of our curricula, engendered about $350,000 worth of research grants and
contracts, prepared major equipment and research development proposals and participated in a university-wide
review and planning exercise. The prospects for the School are very promising, but our successes haven't been
without losses. Prof. D. Mead resigned last year, and while Professors David, Hazenberg, and Yang are on sabbatical leave, we have had to scramble. Professors D. Walker and N. Phillips have been welcomed additions to our
faculty, and we hope to acquire more like them. Larry Bockus and Joe Kapron joined the technical side of the team,
and our latest member is Alvina Faykes, who is helping in the front office.
We are planning to upgrade the equipment in the remote sensing and photo-interpretation laboratories, and to
equip the forest management laboratories with data analysis equipment, and the biological laboratories with plant
storage and analysis facilities. These improvements are the first steps we are taking to develop and improve all of
our programs.
To some of you, this may appear to have come too late. But despite current market problems, the demand for all
types of foresters is going to increase. The era of the managed forest is dawning and the educational training obtained through us must be first class. Please remember that your education begins rather than ends here. The
demands made on you by society, the profession, and the forest for its "conservation" (i.e. wise use) are going to be
very great. Consider the doors always open for more Lakehead experience.
In the past year some progress has been made towards our mutual goal of making Lakehead's forestry program
second to none. You, as students, and graduates, make a significant contribution to the achievement of that goal. I
no longer feel like the "new kid in town" - thank you for your welcome.
A.J. Kayll
Director

MJS

4

�In the Forest

Autumn Means
Rest

MJS

MJS

For
it

LU

Foresters

Signals

Fall Activities

5

�a bowl

If life is

of cherries
What am

I

forester, that's

On

a chilly

...

doing in the pits? Being initiated into a
what!
September afternoon, les Bucherons and

welcomed in the first year foresters with
The ceremonies commenced with the annual Miss
and Mr. Butt contests. The guys had a hard time

the Teachers
style.

DBH

choosing between

all

the

buxom

beauties,

but finally

Rosemary Ryder-Burbidge as the winner. The
men put on a fine performance, but, Mike Desrochers
stole the show and was named Mr. Butt.
The first year foresters then went through shit pit
after shit pit, and learned not to trust the "helping
hand". The promise of a cold beer and a warm fire
selected

the end of the course kept the
and rowdy.
Special thanks to the guys who dug the pits and got
things rolling. Everyone had one helluva good time.

across

the

river

at

foresters enthusiastic

The "helping hand".

You'll love

it

RES

baby!

gas

fT&gt;
RES

RES

��What's on
Second?
Les Bucherons baseball team, that's, what! They
played through galeforce winds, snow, rain and beat
out Lorax and alumni to take the championship.
Despite sub-zero temperatures, everyone who participated had a good time.

Ha Ha,

Try

this

one on for

size.

Ready and waiting.

try

and

hit this

sucker

ball.

Shivering in the dugout.

�Kam-Am
Canoe Race
How

The annual Kam-Am Canoe Race was a huge sucThe foresters had a lazy, enjoyable day while the

RES

about a tow?

cess.

competitive wreckers dominated the winner's circle.
The water was just too enticing for a certain couple,
who decided to take a plunge, and lost some cargo in
the process. The electric paddles didn't work, and the
officer took away Vic's shotgun (honest officer, I was
only trying to wing 'em). One astounding victory was
achieved by the foresters - the backwards race

championship.
Congratulations go to the winners: Hugh Dobson
and Dave Howe (Men's Doubles); Carol Gibb and
Mary Slater (Women's Doubles); and Sally Thomson
and Dave Kaegi (Mixed Doubles).
The participants had the perfect wind-up to a perfect
day at the annual corn roast. The woodlot was ablaze
with several gigantic bonfires, and people were a-havin'
a great time. Did anyone out there find the corn?
The easy

RES
life!

When

you're happy and you

know

it,

cross your blades!!

RES

IT"—-"

An

easy portage.

RES

RES

RES

�Shine On!
This soar
akehead University Shinerama raised
approximately $2450 for Cystic Fibrosis research. The
top 3 teams were simply "out-shining" this year. They
raised almost half of the total. Ugo Feunekes, Guy
rhauvette, lan McCormick, Mark Steven and Bill
W iltshire have shown what a little determination and
effort can do for Cystic Fibrosis.
1

Participation was up, but

This

amount raised was down.
due to the short number of hours most

likely

is

people spent shining.

Thanks to John Wynn, Mike Rose, and
Hawkins. Also, best of luck to Shinerama '82.

Leslie

Participate next year!

Ramune

Wiltshire

RESULTS:
1st

place (per person basis)

Ugo Feunekes Deg

III

$260

2nd place

Guy Thauvette Deg IV
Ian McCormick Deg IV

$433
Service with a clown.

3rd place

Mark
Bill

Stevens

Wiltshire

Deg IV
Deg IV

$355

Residence Interhouse Competition
Winner: J-House

We're waiting guys!

Presenting Shinerama '81.

10

Keep a

MJS

ROW
straight face guys.

�1

Grocery

Shopping?
No, those crazy foresters are at it again, running
over people and causing havoc.
It's not the local Spaceway, it's the LU campus, seen
from all directions by the passenger in the shopping
cart. The Colt 45'ers won the race for the second year
in a row!! Congratulations Vic Miller, Rob Howe, Rick
Leary, Scott Ronson, and Mike Rose.
Team

On

Rossi: better luck next year.

your mark, get

set,

GO!!

Fierce competition.

MJS

Colt 45'ers

in the

winner's

MJS
circle.

Hold on

to

your hat!
1

�Weyerhaeuser
Lectures '81
Speakers receive tokens of our appreciation.

SBS

This year's Weyerhaeuser Lecture Series topic was
the
"Nutritional Status and
Fertilization
in
the
Forest". The event began on the eve of November 19
with Dr. E.H. White of the University of New York.
Dr. White's informative lecture explained the amazing
effects of fertilization observed in his at the U. of N.Y.

The

10 ft. per year growth of Carolina Poplar was the
most impressive point.
Dr. I. Morrison from the Great Lakes Forest
Research Centre spoke on the second evening. This talk
was of the current research on fertilization in the
Boreal Forest. The final point was that fertilization is
still

in the

experimental stage.

and the speakers met at a social
and hot discussion over cold beer.
to the Committee for an excellent event!

Finally, the audience

for snacks

A

toast

Wake up

Professor Day!

SBS

SBS

�YOUR
UNIVERSITY
Serving

Northwestern
Ontario
since 1965
.

.

.

Offers comprehensive programs in Arts,
Business, Education, Engineering, Forestry,
Library Technology, Nursing, Outdoor
Recreation, Physical Education, Science.

Provides instruction on-campus and off,
fall, winter and

part-time and full-time,

summer.

Has

athletic

and recreational

including an Olympic

facilities

swimming

pool, squash

courts, gymnasia, tennis courts,

comprehensive varsity and intramural sports
programs.

Has an

program
development and for special

active continuing education

for professional

groups.

Keep

in

touch with us through the

Department of Alumni
Lakehead University,
Thunder Bay, Ontario.

1

Lakehead

Affairs,

E University]
13

���GROWING POPLAR
IN

TEST TUBES

From tissue culture in
test tubes to a new tree.

tubes
a controlled

Researchers at the Ontario

vironment. Callous develops
the tissue and is transferred to

Ministry of Natural

Resources are presently

a second growing medium where shoots are
produced. The shoots are then removed to
a third growing medium for root development.

experimenting with this
technique of growing
poplar from tissue culture.
If it

is

The

successful, the

Ministry

result?

A new tree!

can then mass produce thousands

of genetically superior plantlets for
its

regeneration program,
The method involves placing

or branch tissue into

Ministry of

Minister

leaf,

Natural

stem

a growing medium

Resources

in

Ontario

16

Hon ..Alan W. Pope
W.

T.

Foster

Deputy Minister

��Dr. Jim Kayll
Director

Crandall Benson
Associate Professor

MJS

Robert Day

Dr. Stan Navratil
Professor

Professor

MJS

H.D. Walker
Seasonal Lecturer

MJS

Lynn Sevean
Technical Assistant

mm

Brian Moore
Technical Assistant

MJS

Dr. Willard Carmean
Associate Professor

4

William Mackinnon
18

Associate Professor

TAM

David Parsons
Assistant Professor

MJS

�Dr. Robert Farmer
Associate Professor

MJ

Gee Professor Richardson, You make good cookies!

Craig Sutherland
Technical Assistant

MJS

Dr. Ken Brown
Associate Professor

Dr. Thomas Eiber
Associate Professor

Bob Pickard
Technical Assistant

�Steve Elliot
Technical Assistant

20

���23

��25

�People

and Places
These are the days of laughter and Fellowship. The
is the things that you do and the
people you meet doing them.

best part of university

MJS
26

TCG

�Sports

���Best Wishes

in

Future Endeavours

from

ALL YOUR FRIENDS AT LABATT'S

GREAT WEST

L

I

M TED
I

For Con
company
CONTRACTORS AND CONSULTANTS

/

(frfr

fjQ,%

,

Pnon.?

% W&gt;iK^J P0

-

344-84S4 Teie^ 073-4575
Box 317 °- Thunder Bay, Ontario

IN

FOREST MANAGEMENT

P7B 5G6

"Good Luck

in

the Future"

from
Mike, Joe, Mike

30

����A CAREER WITH

GREAT LAKES FOREST PRODUCTS
OFFERS YOU
CHALLENGING OPPORTUNITIES.

Great Lakes
Forest Products
Limited
Mill

Operations

in

Box 430

^

nder Bay
Ontario

pjc 4W3

Thunder Bay and Dryden, Ontario

MANUFACTURERS OF QUALITY PRODUCTS
• Newsprint Paper
• Bleached and Unbleached
Kraft Pulp

and
Lumber

• Fine
•
•

Kraft

Papers

Waterboard

O.
There's no holding

New

directions.

forefront of

For the BIG
Custom

Built Units

Logging Trailers
Logging Cab Shields

LOADS

Top view ot the B Train
Model shows heavy
duty push type bunkers

Low Boy
Pole Trailers
Trailer Trains
Flat

Bed

Pulpwood &amp; Log
1

34

Trailers

184 Roland Street, P.O. Box 2864, Thunder Bay, Ont P7B 5G3
623-5107
Telex 073-4658

it

all.

you back! Because Tomorrow holds

New

options.

Good

New

challenges.

luck as -you step into

And

a lot of promise.
you're right in the

Tomorrow!

���37

�KIMBERLY-CLARK
OF CANADA LIMITED
PULP AND FOREST

PRODUCTS
Terrace

Bay

-

Longlac
Ontario

Compliments

of

WAJAX
INDUSTRIES
LIMITED
FIRE

CONTROL

DIVISION

WAJAX PUMPS
NIEDNER HOSE

BEAVER FOODS

WAJAX INDUSTRIES

LIMITED

BRANCHES ACROSS CANADA

38

��The

MAG

H.B.Sc.F
Graduates
40

�Harvest

Forest Technology

Graduates

�Degree IV
As

this

was (hopefully) our

we made

school,

sure that

last

it

did

field

not

The Sinton Hotel
week of the year. They

pass without incident.

had

best

its

ran out of jugs! There were
beach bonfires, a daring dog rescue, a
presentation of the Cabin 6 award, and
a late night sea voyage (See dog rescue).
We did do something during the day,
actually

can

anyone

Congratulations

remember
to

all

what?

those

on

OP. PLANNING,

BACK ROW:

Dirk Kloss, Darrel MacKay,

Dan Pyke, Kim

Assmussen, Prof. Clarke. MIDDLE ROW: Ingrid Russel, Riet Verhaggen, Susan
MacBrien, Guylaine Thauvette, Tim Moulton. FRONT ROW: Mark Stevens, Rob
Beggs, Eric Boysen, Mark Finstad, Mike Nesbitt, Jeff Stone.

the

waterpolo,
and the three Ginko curling teams.
The Christmas party at Trevor's was
the biggest class bash of the year. The
Ginkos participated in various roles in
LUFA, woodsmens team, Shinerama,
football,

soccer,

volleyball,

Weyerhauser, and Symposium this year.
To all those Ginkos getting hitched
this year, all the best. The rest of us will
make do with our CIF rings.
Look out world; the Ginkoes are

HERE

!

SILVICULTURE, BACK ROW:

FRONT ROW:

Trevor Atkins, Karl Dyer, Prof. Day, Gord King.
Ralph Spanns, Bev Shaw, Shannon Stone.

FOREST PATHOLOGY, BACK ROW:
Dave Pickston, Aubrey Spring, Mike Lipa.

FRONT
Navratil,

ROW:

Caroline

Evans,

Prof.

Barb MacPherson.

tam

tam

�43

�SBS

PROBLEM SOLVING:

Phil

Graham, Ramune

Wiltshire, Ralph Spaans,

MJS

Luc Lefebvre, Prof. Brown.

TAM
44

�FACULTY OF UNIVERSITY SCHOOLS
Schools

of

•

Business Administration

•

Engineering

•

Forestry

•

Library Technology

•

Nursing

•

Physical Education

and Outdoor Recreation

Timberjack MACHINES

The forestry profession is currently faced with the
challenge of developing and implementing an intensive
forest management program that will increase the
viability of the forest industry and at the same time
protect and enhance the environment. Your conto this difficult but exciting task can be
maximized by joining the Ontario Professional Foresters
Association. Information on the Association and its
membership requirements can be obtained from the
tribution

SALES
SERVICE

following address.

PARTS
Timberjack Skidders
Grapple Skidders
8 and 16 foot

Hydraulic Loaders

Log Loaders

Forwarders Harvesters

ONTARIO PROFESSIONAL
FORESTERS ASSOCIATION

EATON YALE LIMITED

10,255 Yonge Street
Suite 202
Richmond Hill, Ontario

FORESTRY EQUIPMENT DIVISION

L4C 3B2

45

�Tech
Our graduating
into

year!, following Terry

Trout Lake, the

Camp

517,

(How

II

bumpy

ride

from

are the kidneys, Jack,

Rob, Boo and Dave?), Tree climbing,
Grant and Terry's parties, (every other
week?) our WINNING broomball team,

wood tech. prof., the SHORT
but informative labs, whiling away the
hours in the great hall, our 8 girls, well
what else, sex appeal!, and all the work
until the wee hours of the morning for
the big March Due Date. I'm Sure that
our graduation dinner and dance will be
the fly-in

something to remember by

BACK ROW:
Mann,

Iris

Pete Siemers. MIDDLE ROW, Left to Right: Joanne Shannon, Craig
Dave Havelsrud, Robert Whaley. FRONT ROW: Lee McClure,

Seefield,

Kelley Roberts,

all!

4T

BACK ROW:

Craig Mann. MIDDLE ROW, Left to Right: Mike Tinney, Grant Wray, Pat
Baulking, Jack Harrison, Robert Marshall, Neil Sager. FRONT ROW: Joanne Perrault.

RES

46

�47

���Way-Nee, Yvonne Woloszczuk, Jacquie Sands, Margaret Doughty. MIDDLE
Tedesco, Steve Curtis. BACK ROW: Raymond Wagner, Casey Colthurst, Norma
Watson, Harley May, Dave Schafer, Martin Eschlboeck, Bryce Stienstra, Mark (Pee Wee) Love, Dave Neufield.

FRONT ROW: Glen McGinn, Stu Morton, Sue Collins,
ROW: Jiri Vosyka, Kevin Flood, Dan McCann, Mary

50

Valerie

�RW

BACK ROW, Left to Right: James Mitchell, Dave Legg, Greg Curniski, Paul Quinn,
Fogan Anagnostopoulos, Daniel Demers, Rob Boychuck, Hal McCrea, Mark Bancroft.
MIDDLE ROW: Kerry Deschamps, Ian Cowan, Susanna Grimes, Karen Schweitzer, Julie
Pierce, Cathey Wayland, John Cram. FRONT ROW: Andrew Pulo, Teresa Holla, Dave
Farrer, Stuart

Flemming.

Year 1 has just flown by for
addition
Lakehead's
latest
to
forestry,

the

graduating

of

'85

(Who knows what their name is, it
may just remain "for. Deg. 1").
Initiation. What can I say except it
was the absolute
resist

it).

Classes.

pits,

(Couldn't

They would have

been great if we could have stayed
awake. As far as class Participation, apathy is great and I
hope it improves next year. The
year ended in a typical forestry
fashion at the Waves, but no one
is able to remember exactly what
happened. Seriously, it was a good
year and the class shows potential,
esp. in indoor soccer.

�Tech

I

TECHUS DONTUS KAREUS
For most first year techs, field school was nothing
new, we take holidays all the time! We learned about a
couple of new plants and how to use some outdated
tools.

Wearing what

the Techs

managed

is

referred to as the

to put

Degree

I

"Tech Look"

BACK ROW: Todd Hughs, Joe Maure, Wayne Bush,
Bayes. MIDDLE ROW: Chris XX, Peter Couse, Roland
FRONT ROW: Brent McLean, Terry Tallet.

in their place.

Hey, "Coiirs de Bois", How many of you got lost
compassing a straight line in the woodlot, eh?
At least Teachers can separate the BULL from the

SHIT.

BACK ROW:

Keith Robb, Jim Tiller,

John Smith, Al Tomberg, Tim Rock.

52

Owen

Wolfe,

FRONT ROW:

Tom

Mike

Nelson, Steve Garlic,

Lallier.

BW

John
Pratt.

BV

�53

�Les

4?\

Bucherons

\

r

Degree II was invaded by many
Tech Transfers from both ends of
the country. They added culture to
the class.

The

athletic

prowess

of

les

was demonstrated in the
many teams the class entered into
Buchs

intramurals.

The

guys

won

PCH

the

outdoor soccer championship and
most teams made the semi-finals.
In
between computer, photo,
and English, the class found some
time to relax and get to know each
better.
Who will forget
other
hallowe'en chez Bush and co., and
we all know the Waves never

rocked

like

it

did April 2/82.

Can you

identify this fruiting

body?

MJS

October's Playboy centrefold.

BACK ROW:

Gary Vermeer, Chris Wilson,

Phil

Graham, Paul (Twinkle Toes) Knowles, Jim

MIDDLE ROW: LUFA

Pete Harper, Keith Fletcher, Jim (Alan) Parsons, Reg
Hiebert, Bernie Last, Peter Green, Paul Kutz, Greg Rawling, Jim Thrower, Peter Kuntz, Will
Trowel. BACK ROW: Peter (Monti) Hanmore, Stirling (Silver) James, Keith Ley, Mario
(Ripper) Neil.

LaPierre.

Eric the Green.

54

AMK

�{

f

iionMri

M

JK
w

Now

FRONT ROW: Nancy Tomlinson, Teresa Zago, Laurie Hutchcroft, Joanne Lecours, Corrine
Nelson, Margret Penner, Marilyn (Marylou) White, Anne Kangas, Frances Youck. BACK
ROW: Mike (Rabbit) Robichaud, Tony Peiffer, Rick Ksiezopolski (Ski), Gaspar Horvath,
Darlene O'Brien, Erin (Bush) Leffers, Ralph Jacob, Christine Nenicka, Dave (Party) Lutka.

was

that 65 or 56 rings?

FRY

PCH

Is

it

deep enough Mario?

RES

FRONT ROW:

Richard (Zee) Zotz, Neil Edwards, Mark (Boon) Speers, Bill Hall, Greg
Pawson, Dave (Munchkin) Hayhurst, Bruce (Spruce) Carroll. MIDDLE ROW: Bill Van Ship,
Paul (Pudd) Betts, Denis Durocher, Dean (the Weiner) Allen. BACK ROW: Roger Butsam,
Andy Petrowski, Fred McLaren.

TCG

55

�BACK ROW,

Left to Right: Frank Schnekenburger, Dave
Dave Bogensberger, Ted Slavin, Scott Ronson, Brian
McDonald, Ron Reinholt, FRONT ROW: Roy Sidders, John
Berry,

LEH

FRONT ROW, Left to Right: John V.
BACK ROW: John (Skid) Andres, John

Connor, Mike Rose, Gail Retallack, Gord Greasley.
Hill, Ed Swayze, Doug Mount, Henry Freiter, Mark
Hopgartmer, Gerard VanderBurg, Simon Tanner, Paul Kutz, Tom Cunningham, Dave Morris,
Paul Phillips, Fred Dewsberry, Dave Thurston, Rick Lambert, Charles Todesco.

RES

�rax
THANKS FOR COMING OUT!!

...

for everybody really

hockey, broomball,
waterpolo and soccer). Just as this was the Year of the Intramural, it was also the Year of the Essay. Profs found it
did

this

year

(intramural

volleyball,

was tres fashionable to assign essays (8) all due around the
same time. Our vocabulary also improved with favourites as
"fruiting bodies", "But Tom ... you're a reasonable man",
and the old favourite, "But sir ... whine, whine." Some high
points of the year include: Soils Social, the S&amp;B (stitch and
Bitch: sorry your timing was off guys!), the 2nd annual
cookie party, the rumoured meeting of the .125 club,
fatherdom, and of course the LAST time most of us ever have
to stare

down

a pie-faced Dr. Diptera.

Ed, Blair and Frank!! Will a Lorax

girl

Good

luck to Gerard,

ever marry?

RES
Bagacki, Viv Ball, Richard Leary, Doug Thoroski, Betty
Dillabough, Dennis Rossit, Blair Andres, Richard Lipman.

BACK TO FRONT:
Forbes,

Wayne

Bell,

Chris

Halenda,

Mary-Ellen

Anderson,

McKnight, Lynn Palmer, Chris Cohlmeyer, Ugo Feunekes,
Hawkins, Gord Johnson, Richard Krygier, Dwayne Schultz,
Howe, Barb Lomnicki, Janet Sliz, Holly Slusar, Chris Kitzman.

RES

Gary

Vic Miller, Michael Stoehr, Linda Geerinck, Jeff
Leslie

Rob

RES

57

�kbm
360

Mooney

St

Thunder Bay. Ontario
Telephone

f

Forestry Consultants Inc

807

)

P7B 5R4

344-0811

Telex

"Trees are renewable only

if

073-4603

we renew them!"

Best Wishes 1982 Graduates

CP Hotels

14

Red Oak Inn
Where summer never ends and
thegoodtimesbegm!
The Management and

Staff

of the

Red Oak Inn
The Ontario Paper Company Limited

58

Extend Best Wishes to
Lakehead University
Forestry Students
and the
Class of '82

All

�Forestry at Lakehead

Education

�Censor's Page

Pictures that

we decided

to use

anyway.

�Public

What?

The 14th annual LUFA Symposium dealt with "Public
Awareness of Forestry and it's Implications." The two
days of lectures were interesting, "eye-opening", and
somewhat disconcerting. The general consensus of
speakers was that foresters must shake the image of
hidden profession and impress, upon the public,

the
the
the

importance of forestry to this country. Bill Fullerton,
Ross Howard, Neils Carl, and Ted McHale indicated that
Government as well as industry must publicize what they
are doing to improve the present situation of the forest
sector. At this time foresters do not have a good public
image, particularly during times of conflict with special
interest groups over such issues as the "Whitewater
Wilderness
Area
vs
G.L.F.P.
Ltd.
harvesting
operations" conflict. It is something that all foresters as
professionals, are going to have to deal with more and

The Speakers.

1

more in the future.
The Symposium Dinner and Dance at the Red Oak Inn
was once again a success. The meal was good, Herb Bax
delivered an entertaining and thought provoking after

mm
mm

dinner speech, and then Fat Chance provided the dance
music.
Thanks should be extended to all of the symposium
committee members who put forth the time and effort to

make

the whole

"show"

possible.

Ian

McCormack

1
After Dinner Thoughts.

And we all had

a really

good

time.

61

�The facts s figures on daily interest sayings.
Chances

are.

our

savings accounts will

Your savings balance lends to
fluctuate during the month. Open

Commerce Duly Interest Savings
Account, a non-chequing passbook
account. You receive a passbook
to help you keep a record of your
savings and the interest that has

been paid

to date.

•

Based on (/ your

final dairy

balance, this account returns an
attractive rate of interest per

annum, paid

twice a year!"
balance required.
Unlike some other daily interest
savings accounts, with a Commerce
•

No minimum

•

Commerce

add up

to just

the nghi kind of savings vehicle

you So drop into a Commerce
branch today and ask us for the
facts, and figures on all of our
accounts We'll welcome the opportunity to take your banking needs
for

into account.

account, you are not charged for
withdrawals or transfers, no matter

how many you make. However, you
cannot write cheques on this

&lt;1&gt;

account.
•

You can

arrange, free of charge,

to have a specified

money

amount

of

transferred automatically, at

between your
savings and chequing accounts
regular intervals,

14 S. Cumberland Street

Thunder Bay, Ontario
P7B 2T2
Phone

(807)

344-7240 or 344-7249

A stake
Congratulations to
"Harvest 1982"

in the

and to Forestry
Students at Lakehead

ure.
"lift

University

ONTARIO PULP AND
PAPER MAKERS
SAFETY ASSOCIATION
~

Mr. W.A. Matson, President
Mr. P.G. Day, Vice-President
Mr. W.C. Lockhart, Manager

Procter &amp; Gamble Cellulose
believes that an investment in -

community
the future

affairs is a stake in

— the future of the

community's

citizens, its

resources,

businesses and

its

industries.

7--^^y_

—
(

—
'

and furnishing recreation areas
and by meeting or exceeding
strict air and water quality
i

standards.

With support and investment
today, your community will
grow, assuring you a stake

"Participation

Makes the Difference"

That's

why we've

active interest in

taken an

62

&amp; Gamble

and sponsoring

Procter

people-oriented projects. And
that's why we safeguard the

Cellulose, Ltd.

environment by setting aside

in

the future

promoting

Grande
Alberta

Prairie

�The Rings
On

Friday the 5th of

March

1982, the tenth graduating

from Lakehead University gathered at
the Airlane Hotel for the annual ring ceremony of the
CIF. The evening was highlighted by dinner, speeches, a
slide tape show, and of course the presentation of the
class of foresters

rings.

The most memorable

part of the evening comes in two
Krabbe's
speech
"Grecian Formula
Anyone?" (Sorry Crandall) and of course the memories
of stem analysis on white birch (Being certain to pile the
bolts neatly on the side of the road). The other
memorable part of the evening was the slide tape show
which managed to embarrass almost every member of the
graduating class. Fortunately only one person had to do
parts,

Paul

some explaining to his parents. (I'd ditch that hat Ian!)
The final question that the ring ceremony brings to
mind is, did anybody count the bottles of wine that
certain people placed under a table?

63

�64

�On February 27, 1982, LUFA held its second annual
Forestry Day. Several professors, students, and local
businesses set up forestry displays in the Agora. Out in
woodsmen teams from

the field,

competed
petition.

in

The

the

LU

the

USA

and Ontario

woodsmen comcome out and view

invitational

public was invited to

The highlight of the day
was the superlogger event. One competitor from each
team did 5 different logging events - all in a row! Big
Al from Unity, Maine was proclaimed male
superlogger, and Ingrid Russell from LU was crowned
female superlogger. Unity, Maine walked away with
first place in the men's division, and the LU gals won
the competition and displays.

women's overall trophy.
Thanks to Ralph Spaans and

the

his

committee for

organizing the event.

I

A-M

—

LU Woodsmen

TEAM A

TEAM

Mark

Paul Kutz

Stevens

B

Nolan Shortt

John Andres

Mike Umpherson
Raymond Wagner
Al Tomberg

Mark Bancroft

Vic Miller

Jeff Stone

Rohn Solecki
Tim Moulton

TEAM C
Helen Sallans
Ingrid Russell

Anne Kangas
Darlene O'Brien
Cathy Wayland

Shannon Stone

65

�m BlilP
DOMTAR
FOREST PRODUCTS
Red Rock, Ontario

Well see you on the job.
At Vulcan, we've been servicing and selling forestry
equipment long enough to see the need for well-trained
forestry people. Congratulations graduates, and good luck in
your new career.

VULCAN
MACHINERY S EQUIPMENT

LTD.

915 Memorial Avenue,
Thunder Bay, Ontario
Ph. (807) 623-4422
Tlx.

MMKIEUflL

Compliments

1

of

THE CORPORATION OF
THE
CITY OF THUNDER BAY

Dubreuilville, Ontario

POS

073-4509

BO

884-2525
Telex 067-7255

Tel. (705)

Mayor Walter M. Asset

STUDS DIMENSION STOCK
TIMBERS P.E.T.
RAILROAD TIES CHIPS
-

ALDERMEN

-

-

KILN DRIED LUMBER (3 KILNS)
QUALITY AND SERVICE IS OUR MOTTO
FAST EFFICIENT TRUCK
DELIVERY TO ONTARIO
MICHIGAN, INDIANA, OHIO, WISCONSIN
-

SPRUCE JACK PINE
POPLAR ON LONG TERM CONTRACT

C.

Boshcoff
Johnston

R.

Larson

K.

L.

R.

W. Lysnes
J.

-

D.

J.

Packota
Smith

-

D.
D.

Wadding ton
Willoughby

66

Chief Administrative Officer
J.R. Picherack
City Clerk
H.T. Kirk

Ubriaco

Vander Wees

SALES OFFICE
P.O. Box 518
530 Cathcart Street
Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario
Telephone (705) 253-2378
Telex 067 77121
Sales Mgr. Martial Beaumier

Timko

S. Trotter

�Winter Carnival

Time
Once

again,

the

Forestry

all

star

team won the

carnival hockey competition. That's 2 years in a row!

Way
Jan.

to

go guys

23,

1982,

temperatures, 13

go for a hat trick! On Saturday
blowing snow and freezing
fool-hardy woodsmen teams competed

-

let's

despite

the carnival woodsmen competition. More axe
handles were broken than logs were chopped through
during the log chopping event. There were some fine
performances; Rob Howe got 85/100 in the axe throw
Dave Bogensberger piled pulp logs in 30
event;
seconds; and Chris Nanni gobbed an amazing 9.2
meters! Severe frostbite was avoided through the
consumption of large doses of anti-freeze. Afterwards,
everyone warmed-up at the Bushman's Brawl, where
the winners were announced. These were: Men's team
No. 16, Dennis Rossit; Women's team No. 12, Francis
Youck; co-ed team, Rob Howe. Congrats to ALL!!
in

Forestry All-Star Championship

Team

�TOBACCO
CONFECTION
POST OFFICE

YOUR ON
CAMPUS
STORE

THE SOUND PROFESSIONALS
[McDonald's
tm

Compliments

of

Memorial Avenue
Red River Road Thunder Bay

Arthur Street

-

-

'MOBILE STEREO SYSTEMS FEATURING
CLARION, PANASONIC AND KRICKET

*HOME AUDIO COMPONENTS FEATURING
AKAI,

ALTEC LANSING, TECHNICS,

A.D.C.,

AND CERWIN VEGA
PORTABLE VIDEO AND
EQUIPMENT FEATURING
MAGNAVOX, AND PANASONIC

*HOME

AND

TELEVISION
AKAI,

MOVIE LIBRARY. COMPLETE
'VIDEO
SELECTION OF RECORDS AND TAPES

'PROFESSIONAL SERVICE TECHNICIANS

AND INSTALLERS. WE ARE THE FACTORY
AUTHORIZED SERVICE DEPOT FOR OUR
180 South Court Street
Thunder Bay, Ontario

Phone: 344-9638

68

LINES.

32 St. Paul
344-0828

St.

135 N. Syndicate Ave.
622-6457

�More People and More

Places

�Meanwhile, Back

Bush

in the

...

MJS

You
learned

could
all

see

there

foresters

was

to

from

all

years.

Tech

know about geology from

I

the

back of the bus. Frank demonstrated to them
tremendous cutting skill. Degree I collected all kinds of
plants and learned to trust their compasses.
Degree II learned to drive a skidder and identify 50
different species of birds, with the help of the handydandy field guide. A word of experience: initial attack
can be a muddy experience.
At Thessalon, Lorax dug a few soil pits, picked up a
few diseases, dug a few soil pits, identified a few herbs
and dug a few more soil pits. They also discovered

Cream Pie is Prof. Eiber's
Some Ginkgoes decided

There

ain't

no buried treasure down

favourite food.
to

swim across Lake Huron,

but got tired of walking. Important discoveries were
made, but no one remembers what they were. Due to
heavy herbicide exposure, Ginkgoes rushed to local
pubs to dilute the effects. Between all these activities, a
few trees got thinned and pruned. Tech II can answer
any questions you want to know about Raith but were
afraid to ask.

Mega Wood
70

there.

���OUR PATRONS
American Can of Canada Limited
Marathon, Ontario
Black Clawson-Kennedy Limited
Paper Mill Machinery and
Industrial

Equipment

Montreal,

Canadian

Quebec

Institute of Forestry

Institut Forestier

du Canada

Suite 815, 151 Slater Street

Ottawa, Canada K1P 5H3
Collins Safety

Shoes Limited

906 Memorial Avenue

Thunder Bay, Ontario

Lome's Cameras &amp; Fishing Tackle
20 South Court Street
Thunder Bay, Ontario

Lakehead University Bookstore
"Best of luck to all foresters
in future endeavours"

Newaygo Forest Products Limited
R.R. No.

1,

Hearst, Ontario

Ontario Forestry Association
150 Consumers Road
Willowdale, Ontario

Powell Equipment (1978) Limited
1455 Buffalo Place
Winnipeg, Manitoba R3T 1L8
Prince Arthur Hotel
17 N. Cumberland Street
Thunder Bay, Ontario P7A 4K8

The Spectacle Shoppe
615 Victoria Avenue
Thunder Bay, Ontario

�L.U. Exports
When

"Why

go to Holland? Are there any
and Mark Finstad, Lakehead
exchange students to Holland replied, "You bet there
are!" Thanks to Gerard Vanderberg, Peter and Mark,
spent the summer in Holland viewing tulips, windmills,
canals, wooden shoes and blonde, blue-eyed beauties.
They also met foresters, researchers and professors and
worked in Dutch forests. It is hoped that the exchange
program can be continued, when some problems in
planning and organization have been overcome.
"Dank u el" to everyone involved. All photos by Mark
forests?"

Finstad.

asked

Peter Green

�To Our
Future Businessmen
233

S.

Court Street

Thunder Bay, Ontario
Phone: (807) 345-0571

�New
On

the third

Brunswick!
weekend of October

in the fall

of '82,

Woodsmen Team headed east to the
New Brunswick for the 2nd consecutive

the spirited L.U.

University of
year.

Nineteen guys and girls van-danced for 36 hours in
an attempt to pass the time on the way to UNB's 18th
Inter-Collegiate Woodsmen Competition. Needless to
say, a good time was had by all as the green and red
'boxes' passed the miles away.
Weeks of practice fortunately paid off as Lakehead
'A' placed 10th out of 30 teams.

LAKEHEAD

'A'

Mark

Stevens (C)
Dirk Kloss

Tim Moulton
Al Tomberg
Ray Wagner
Juha Anttila
Bernie Stockermans

LAKEHEAD

'B'

Paul Kutz (C)
Jeff Stone
Mark Bancroft

John Andre

Tim Rock
Mike Tinney

LAKEHEAD 'C
Shannon Stone (C)
Helen Sallans
Ingrid Russell

Darlene O'Brien
Marguerite Kuiack

Anne Kangas

BJS

�Montreal
The end of January saw the woodsmen bound for
Montreal. Thirteen took the train while six braved the
winter cold in Al's halfton. The valiant efforts of teams
were rewarded only with mediocre placings. The
Women's Team salvaged some of Lakeheads honor by
bringing

home

the

fell

and twitch trophy.

Way

to

go

Ladies!

A TEAM

Ray Wagner

Mark

Al Tomberg

Stevens

Nolan Shortt
Mike Umpherson

Tom Rock
Vic Miller

B

TEAM

Paul Kutz
Mark Bancroft

Tim Moulton
Rohn Soleck
John Andres
Jeff Stone

C TEAM
Hellen Sallans
Ingrid Russel

Anne Kangas
Darlene O'Brien
Cathy Wayland

Shannon Stone

�Gerard Van Der Berg, Sports Coordinator

LEH

Simon Tanner, Vice-President

�Harvest Staff

Pete

Guylaine Thauvette

Hanmore

SBS

Raymond Wagner

MJS

These people are responsible for
production of this issue of
Harvest. One of the key people of
the staff managed to stay behind the
cameras this year. Rohn Solecki,
you haven't been forgotten. Also
helping out was Teresa Holla and
Tim Moulton. To everyone else who
the

helped out with the book

MJS

Susan MacBrien

THANK

YOU!

Francis

MJS

Youck

Mark

Stevens

SBS

Contributing Photographers
RW

Ray Wagner

BM

Brian

PSS

Peter Smith

TGE

Tom Eiber

EB

Eric Boysen

RS

MJU

TAM

CT

Mike Umpherson
Dan Pyke
Francis Youck
Charlie Todesco

Ron Storie
Tim Moulton
Mark Finstad
Ramune Wiltshire
Randy Collier

MAG

Mary Gardiner

BJS

LD
CC
SAE
BGR
FD
UTR

Linda Dunford
Casey Colthurst

SMG
TCG

Steve Elliot

SBS

Shannon Stone

Gail Retallack

MJS
RES

DWP
FY

CN
LEH
MJL

BW
JWW

JMF

ROW
RLC

Moore

PEG

MSN

Mike Nesbit
Peter

Mike Lipa

PCH
MJK

Rob Whalley

JHB

Leslie

Jon

Hawkins

SMG

Bernie Stockerman
Susanna Grimes
Tim Grant

Mark Stevens
Rohn Solecki
Phil Graham

Fred Dewsberry
Ulf Runnesson
Christine Nenicea

Susanna Grimes

Hanmore
Shannon Stone

Joan Keene
John Blair

Wynn
Randy

Collier

SBS

�Editorial

Words

Final
Harvest '82

number of

is

the result of

Mark

people.

Tim Moulton have

many hours

of work by a

Stevens, Leslie Hawkins,

put in hours of work in getting

A

advertising for the book.

special thanks to

hours on typing,

Raymond Wagner
Rohn

Solecki,

layouts,

did most of our

Mark

must

be

given

their best to

keep him

Solecki

for

his

Grimes also helped out with

ideas, pictures,

As

people have put out a

obvious by now,

many

and work.
lot

of time and effort to bring out this book.
I

hope

yearbook.

If

you think

better than this

Shinerama, or the Symposium or Weyerhausei

with

Committees.

If

you enjoy sports have a go

Woodsman's Teams. Or

publish

this

People

yearbook.

who

care

to

Harvest and she

will

will

The number of

things that have to be

have noticed that eight of the staff of

this

If

book have

tc

layoul

a

yearbook seem to be endless.

A

final

word on

for having a lot of

events

is

Spirit,

it,

a funny thing,

Forestry students are noted

so keep
if

it

up. Participation

you put a

lot into

it,

back a good deal more than you expected.

this

you

you

done to make

be editing next

need some help.

if

pages, or take pictures or draw artwork are needed.

you can make a book

Fran Youck

Loggei

at

one please make youself known to the

staff of Harvest '83.

year's

that

concerned about doing things for people, get involvec

get

you have enjoyed reading through

that

you an

If

care to try something really different lend a hand

suggestions and support. Margret Penner and Susanna

is

out a book.

people

darkroom work and

Rohn

to

required to bring

are

number of

appreciate the

sports try-out for the

Susan MacBrien took care of our accounts.

Thanks

that

will

and proof reading.

Shannon Stone, Peter

Stevens,

Hanmore, and Rob Whalley did
busy.

Guylaine

who have

Thauvette, Francis Youck, and Teresa Holla
spent

and

graduated you

Randy

Collier

Editor Harvest '82

you

in

will

���NOT FOR
GENERAL BORROWING
Permission to take this book from
from a
the Library must be obtained

member of
Enquire

the Senior Library Staff.

at

the

circulation

desk.

��</text>
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UNIV
LE
3

HARVEST

8

���"3

LMEHEAD

UNIVERSITY

LIBRARY

APR

stv
if

i

ic^-.:

!*§

ewe

uLlXR a

...

:

ant,

THUNDER

1

9 2007

BAY, ONTARIO

����From

the

Top

This has been a year of change and transition for the Lakehead University School of
and also for forestry in Canada. Early in the year Ken Hearnden, after many years
of dedicated service as director of the School of Forestry, assumed the responsibilities of Dean
of Students, and our Director Dr. Jim Kayll took over the helm of the School at the end of the
year. During 1981 we will closely examine the past and present programs of the School of
Forestry, and then we will take steps leading to the development of new programs that will
address the current and future needs of forestry education in Ontario and Canada.
The future programs of the School of Forestry must be developed with an awareness that
forestry in Canada also is in a stage of change and transition. We are moving from a time of
exploitation and extensive management into an era of intensive management and more complete utilization. These changes are spurred by increased Canadian and world populations, by
increased needs for forest products, and by the need for alternative sources of energy. The
themes for the 1980 and 1981 LUFA Symposium reflect these forestry changes - in 1980 the
theme was Biomass, and in 1981 the theme was Forest Management Agreements between forest
industry and the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources.
More intensive forest management of the future will require new forestry practices that
presently may be considered theoretical and impractical. And no doubt the future will see new
and radically different forestry practices emerge from research yet to be accomplished.
These forestry changes are bound to produce radical changes in forestry employment as well
as changes in forestry education in Canada. More intensive forest management and more
advanced forestry practices will require greater number of foresters. These forestry graduates
will need advanced scientific knowledge, and they also will need superior administrative skills.
And producing greater numbers of forestry graduates having superior training will require an
expansion and an improvement of forestry education at Lakehead University as well as at
other Canadian Schools of Forestry. We will need more faculty having advanced and
specialized knowledge, and also we will need more sophistocated laboratory and field equipment. Our forestry degree program must be expanded and improved. Our graduate program
must likewise be expanded and improved so that highly trained graduate students will be
available for the needs of forest industry, government agencies, Canadian forest research
stations, and Canadian Schools of Forestry.
Forestry,

Dr. Willard H. Carmean,
Acting Director.

�Dr. A.J. Kayall
Director

R.T. Walker
Technical Assistant

MJS

MJS

Dr. W. Carmean
Associate Professor

G. Vanson
Technical Assistant

RES

MJS

K.W. Hearnden
Dean of Students

RSA

R. Pickard
Technical Assistant
5

�Dr. A.D. MacDonald
Associate Professor

MJS

MJS

K. Kovacs

Lab Demonstrator

Dr. W. Parker
Professor

G. Hamilton
Lab Demonstrator

RES

MJS

Dr. P. Knowles
Assistant Professor

A. Grey
Lab Demonstrator

PCH

MJS

m

D. Mothersill
Lab Demonstrator

A. Spring
Lab Demonstrator
6

MJS

F. Bennett

T. Krickl

Lab Demonstrator

Lab Demonstrator

T. Spanton

Lab Demonstrator

MJS

Log Boom, Longlac

MJS

MJL

�Dr.W. Eames

MJS

Crown

Fire, Boreal Forest

E.A. Green
Associate Professor

Professor

D.B. Parsons
Assistant Professor

W.D. MacKinnon
Associate Professor

J.M. Richardson
Sessional Lecturer

MJS

Anderson

Dr. J.H. Gellert

F.J.

Assistant Professor

Associate Professor

���Dr. S. Walker
Professor

PCH

D. Corbett

D. Martin

Lab Technician

Lab Technician

Professor

B. Jago

Lab Demonstrator
10

c
J.

Jackson

Lab Demonstrator

A. El Tawashi
Lab Demonstrator

��Mary Provenzano
Secretary

�.

New

Kid

in

Town

New
On

. .

Director at Lakehead
1981, the School of Forestry had a new
1,
Dr. A.J. Kayll took over the reins from Acting
Prof. Carmean and former director Prof. K.W.

January

Director,

Director

Hearnden.

FORESTRY SCHOOL DIRECTOR JAMES KAYLl,

s

...took

:

\

over

Lakehead University Jan.

at

1

New LU forestry head

Dr. Kayll had previously been Chairman of the Department
of Forest Resources at the University of New Brunswick,
where he spent the past 12 years as a faculty member. Prior to
that, Dr. Kayll held the position of research scientist at the
National Forestry Institute in Petawawa, Ontario.
Dr. Kayll's research interests lie in the field of forest fire
ecology and its application as a forest management tool.
Lakehead U. forestry students first met Dr. Kayll at the
UNB Woodsmen competition in October, 1980. The Chief
Judge of that competition was "a great guy" we were told by
UNB students - their loss, our gain.
Dr. Kayll, on behalf of the forestry students at Lakehead
University, we welcome you to our School of Forestry.

specialist in forest fires
By

DAN BAUGHMAN

Chronicle-Journal staff
I

|

;

I

•

i

:

|
•

:

:

:

;

:

:

Lakehead University's new forestry school
director has good reason to be Jired up about
his new Job- he is a fire expert
Dr. James Kayll, who succeeded Prof Kenneth Hearnden as director Jan. 1, has
specialized in using (Ire as a tool (or forest
managers since graduating from the University of British Columbia in 1959 with a
forestry degree

He went on to Duke University In North
where he received a master's
degree in forest fire ecology He researched
the matter as a scientist with the National
Forestry Institute at Petawawa, then went to
the University of Aberdeen, Scoiland. to
receive a Phi) on e how fire affects vegetaCarolina

tion

For the past
:

!

!

•

;

member

12 years, Kayll

at the University of

where he was

was a

faculty

New Brunswick

a director of the Fire Science

Centre, among other portions
Kayll says It is too soon to say what changes
he might make to the curriculum at
Lakehead University, but they will likely include more emphasis on using fire in forest
management The school currently offers
Just one course on fire control
"Used properly and under the right ratesot
both fuel and weather conditions, it can be used as a controlled fire management tool."
said Kayll during an interview

QUICK RECYCLING
Fire helps re-establish a forest after it has
been logged, he said. It prepares the site for
planting or for seeding and quickly recyies
nutrients which normally take years to

decompose

in

Northern

Ontario's

cold

climate
Controlled

hazard

by

burning reduces the wildfire
eliminating the slash on the

ground, Kayll said It can also be used to
create desirable wildlife habitat, he added.
Some trees are able to withstand fires better than others. Kayll said. For example,
pines can survive a ground fire which will kiU
fir trees The (irs are more susceptible, he
said, because their branches reach all the
way to the ground and because (hey have thin

bark
Noting Northwestern Ontario is one of the
worst hit areas by forest fires in Canada,
Kayll said not all wildfires are harmful For
Instance, he said, if the fire is a low, groundcreeping type, it can eliminate undergrowth
and allow larger trees to grow (aster
uncontrolled, high-intensity
a useful tool to the forest
often fires aren't high intensity," said Kayll A forest fire fighting
policy that extinguishes all fires doesn't take
advantage of those blazes which do more
good than harm, he added

"Obviously,

wildfire

isn't

manager But very

CHEAPER THAN MECHANICAL
Besides Its other advantages, controlled
burning of cutover sites to prepare them for
regeneration is far cheaper than doing the
thing by mechanical means, said the
forestry school director
Kayll said studies by the New Brunswick
department of natural resources showed it
cost only $13 per hectare $5 27 an acre) to
prepare cutovers by burning in 1979 That is
about one-tenth the cost of doing the same

same

&lt;

thing mechanically, he said.
The forest industry can help keep costs
so they will

down by arranging logging roads

serve as fire breaks, he said
Controlled fires are not suitable lor every
area, Kayll cautioned Research needs to be
conducted to identity areas where it would be
valuable technique, but currently, fire is a
vastlv underused management tool, he add-

ed

MJS

...

well, there goes the

neighbourhood!
13

�YOUR
UNIVERSITY
Serving

Northwestern
Ontario
since 1965
.

.

.

Offers comprehensive programs in Arts,
Business, Education, Engineering, Forestry,

Library Technology, Nursing, Outdoor
Recreation, Physical Education, Science.

Provides instruction on-campus and off,
part-time and full-time, fall, winter and

summer.

Has

athletic

and recreational

including an Olympic

facilities

swimming

pool, squash

courts, gymnasia, tennis courts,

comprehensive varsity and intramural sports
programs.

Has an

active continuing education

for professional

program

development and for special

groups.

Keep

in

touch with us through the

Department of Alumni
Lakehead University,
Thunder Bay, Ontario.

\

14

Lakehead

Affairs,

M University]

�...

hopefully, these ideas

will take root

��Art Groot

Graduate Studies

at

Lakehead

"Much

study is a weariness of the flesh" Ecclesiates xii, 12.
anything has been discovered by the graduate students, it
is certainly the reality of these words! At present there are 15
graduate students engaged in further education, with their
thesis topics representative of every facet of forestry. Kevin
Antoniak and Bill Dalton are the budding wildlife biologists
of the group, while the rest of us are worrying about the
trees. Other graduate students include Nancy Phillips, Steve
Columbo, Emmanuel Mireku, Erhard Dolesberger, Connor
O'Reilly, Bill Towill, Art Groot, Eileen Harvey, Phil Behman,
Sherri Dubinsky, Johanna Kavanagh, David Thompson, Tom
Krickl, and Frances Bennett.
Although we don't have much time for socializing (except
for the Sleeping Giant and Landmark-eh Erhard!), a unique
camaraderie has developed amongst all. In part, this is due to
the quest for survival and the desire to escape the hallowed
halls of Lakehead University as soon as possible! Most came
to the programme not only ignorant of the truths concerning
Boreal forest silviculture, but also as complete strangers! We
are hopefully the better for our stay here (although not
financially so as many undergraduates would be led to
believe!!) For many, these friendships have made the two or
If

mvw&lt;

••

Eileen Harvey

TAA

ft

!

Phil

Behman

MJS

more

years possible.

To

say anything else would increase the risk of forgetting
something important! We as graduate students realize the
importance of our years here, but more importantly, we
recognize the need for us to get out in the field where we can
compromise the theoretical with the practical. To this end we
leave you with this thought:

"When you think you are a great man, and above your
tribesmen, go into the forest, stand before a mighty pine,
then tell the pine how great you are."
Shamon Chief Kitpou

Bill

Dalton

TAA

Frances Bennett

TAA
17

�Degree Four

SOILS: R.T. Walker, Ken Van Rees, Ann Armstrong, Don
Richmond, Dr. Zingel.

JSK

MGMT:

FIRE
Caruth,

Kevin

Sherlock,

Ed Morrice? Sue

Corcoran, Dave
Christophe Voisin, Bill

George

Neufeld,

Scott, Prof. Elber.

AND WILDLIFE: Dr. Cumming, Ingo Menzel, Scott Nisbet, Olesia Van
Dyke, Bruce, Dave Jones, George Mason, Joan Wild.

MOOSE:

FISH

MGMT:

Scott

Wadsworth,

Christilaw,

Leslie

LECTURER: Herb
RJ: teaches

18

field

school craps.

"The

things

I

do

people!"

Philips,

Bax.

Gord

Ed

King,
Morrice,

Steve
Prof.

Dominy,
Clarke.

Dave

GUEST

for

�MANAGEMENT:
Tom

Tim Laidler, Paul Kennedy, Andy Gray, Bob Sutton, Pete deGroot, Al
Obright, Steve Duffus, Valdis Grasis, Steve Johnston, Prof. Benson.

Thompson, Judy Czempinski, Keith Winn,

I

like things

long and hard!

I
MENSURATION:

Mitch

Kennedy,

Lino

Morandin,

Prof.

Richardson, Martin Watts, Joe Kapron.

GENETICS: Fiona Simmonds, Fred Patry,
Donald, Ann Armstrong, Dianne Williams.
SRD
Mike's got

it

on

his

hand, Mitch-his finger and Martin smokes

it!

Fiona

��Tech

Two

Mary

Rick Alguire

Ellen Anderson

Cory Chouinard

Paul Charrette

Rob Argue

Kevin Barry

Diana Boerger

Greg Clark

John Connor

Marilyn Kromberg

£3
Bob Demers

Jill

Dowgray

Guy Deschenes

John Fleming

Martin Focken

Andree Fournier

Chris Greenslade

Keith Gregory

Daniel Haines

Tech

Two

photos by Rob Argue and Knut Herzog.

Paul

Dunn

Guilio Frasson

Jon Faurschou

Claude Garand

���The

Forest Techno

�Harvest

7b

�Best Wishes from

Timberjack Skidders
Grapple Skidders

Hydraulic Loaders

Log Loaders

8 and 16 foot Forwarders Harvesters

EATON YALE LIMITED
FORESTRY EQUIPMENT DIVISION

�In the Field!
While

other

students

in

slept

during the first two weeks of
September, we foresters were up at
crack of dawn ready for
the
another day in the bush.

Well,

I

was

just sittin' here

ROB

Degree I and Tech I started their
beloved plant collections. Sec year
Tech and Degree students were
introduced to skidders and chain
saws. Degree III passed the time
away at Rinker Lake by digging

"You

Peach (oops! I mean 'Soil') pits
while Degree IV students nearly
food
away
due
to
passed
poisoning. However, they managed
to return to town alive and well
their
completion
of
upon
silvicultural field camp.

And

then

we

all hit

mean

this

isn't

'street

LEH

legal'?"

the books!
Hell of a

way

to catch a fruit.

Off

to

see

the

wizard,

right

Tommy?

How

about a used bus?

RES

So

this

school!

UTR

is

what they

call

beer

BW

���The

Pits!!!

September 13, 1980 is a day that will be remembered
by many 1st year forestry students. That was the day
when they were initiated and became full-fledged
Foresters. For those of you who don't remember, you
were thrown, dragged, dunked and pulled through 3
shit pits. The pits were preceded by a Miss DBH
contest won by Ann Kangus, and a Mr. Butt contest
won by Pat Bocking. The judges were very enthusiastic
about the whole thing. It was cold, and it was raining,
but that didn't dampen the spirits of those hardy
freshmen. They just thought of that keg of beer at the
end of the pits, across the river.

You

call that

an ass?

RES

Now

More!

RES
that's

We

an

ass!

want more!

��Degree One

BACK ROW: Jim Neill, Keith Ley, Chris Armstrong, Simon Tanner, Paul Betts, Dean Allen, Chris Hamelin, Richard Zotz, Allan
Marusyk, Mario Lapierre, Andy Petrowski, Fred McLaren. MIDDLE ROW: Doug Pitt, Laurie Hutchcroft, Cheryl Clemens, Corrie
Nelson, Teresa Zago, Cheryl Curtin, Larry Leduc, Denis Jeschor, Mike Peterson. FRONT ROW: Dave Hayhurst, Rose O'Connell,
Frances Youck, Peter Hanmore, Sandy Stubbert.

Les Bucherons!
That's French for lumberjack,
and the Degree 1 foresters have the
spirit

of those hardy pioneers. After

being

initiated,

becoming
they've

made

Lakehead

officially

foresters,

their presence felt at

U.

intramurals,

make

and

fullfledged

-

participating

LUFA

events

in

(Let's

a chain of tubes. Where's the

corn?")

Les

tradition

and

Bucherons

followed
duty in

fullfilled their

keeping the cannon green. Those
Bucherons have a promising future
ahead of them. Watch out Plumbers! "Gradscall bullshit!"

BACK ROW:

Rick Ksiezopolski, Mike Robichand, David Lutka, Susan Turza,
Ralph Jacob, Bruce Carroll, Gaspar Horvath. MIDDLE ROW: Anna Szaeo, Bill
Hall, Marilyn White, Gord Lamb, Anne Kangas, Tony Peiffer. FRONT ROW: Paul
Kuebsam, Mark Speers, Kim Uhren, Paul Knowles, Greg Pawson. LYING DOWN:
Gary Vermeer.

RJG

32

PCH

�;ACK ROW: Helmut
Wilson,

Peter Harper.

letcher, Phil

Pfeiffer, Neil

Edwards, Stephen Nenadov, Mike Eves, Chris
Margret Penner, Dave Hayhurst, Keith

MIDDLE ROW:

Graham, Rick Gadd, Christina Nenicka, Reg Hiebert.
Bob Picken.

LEFT TO RIGHT:

Erin Leffers,

Brett Johnston, Anita Riekko.

FRONT ROW:

lancy Tomlinson, Joanne Lecours, Rick Pecman,

FRY
33

�FRONT ROW:

Darlene Cousineau, Diane lee, Geoff Hall, Karrie Jason, Jo-Anne Shannon, Iris Seefield, Lee McClure, Carl Dings,
SECOND ROW: Allan Harris, Dave Haavaldsrud, Greg Gardiner, Greg Pratt, Ted Chick, Dave Archibald, Pat
Rumball. THIRD ROW: Terry Mimcoe, Tom Peters, Madeline Lacoste. BACK ROW: Steven Boudreau, Peter Seimers, Robert
Whaley, Peter Stege, Peter Smith.

Vernon Nawagesic.

Catch any Epilobium angustifoliums

34

lately?

�FRONT ROW: Rob David, Kelly Roberts, Keith Windeler, Robert Marshall, Mike
BACK ROW: Ted Chick, Jack Harrison, Craig Mann, Walter Vos, Bernard Longpre,

Danles, Greg Salton, Tanis House, Peter Green.
Brian Cambell.

35

�Degree

Lorax
Degree

II

first

Throughout the
lot

the 1980-81 academic year
year foresters to THE PITS!

initiated

introducing the

Two

by

Lorax personnel experienced a
Thus, by mid-March, came
desire to basically expunge a few courses-and
year,

of grey-toned days,

their

profs.

Intramural teams did well again in soccer, hockey,
possibly waterpolo. The Ginkgos, Rancheros,
Brewmasters, and Les Bucherons created no problems

and

(sic).

All in all, it was real - the work, the cruising, the
cookie bash, the Halloween party, and one (?) prof
babbling on and on ...
Lorax! on the 5 year plan!

BACK TO FRONT:

Gary Forbes, Dave Thurston, Blair
Andres, Fred Dewsberry, Bernie Last, Arne Aiking, Jan
Sliz, John Andres, Richard Krygier, Holly Slusar, Bob
Coleman, Rick Lambert, Carla Ingleton, Maddie Maley,

Bob Howe.
MJS

BACK ROW:

John Connor, Robert Edmounds, Rob McAlpine, Tim Grant. MIDDLE ROW: Rich Lipman, Doug Theroski, Joan
Keene, Viv Ball, Jeff McKnight, Henry Freiter, John Hill, Lissa Mamonke. FRONT ROW: Linda Geerinck, Leslie Hawkins, Pauline
Grigjanis, Andrew Cox, Simon Tanner.

36

MJS

�BACK ROW:

Dave (Peabody) Tarjan, Charlie Todesco, Dave Bogensberger,
Jim Duchene. MIDDLE ROW: Frank Schnekberger, Rick Leary, John Bagacki, Paul Kutz,
Jean Meloche, Ron Reinholt. FRONT ROW: Wayne Bell, Gail Retallack, Lynn Palmer, Chris
Kitzman, Chris Halenda, Mike Rose.
Scott Ronson,

BACK ROW: Doug
Peter Wernsink,

Mount,

Gord

MJS

Tom Cunningham. MIDDLE ROW: Mark

Greasley, Dennis Rossit,

McDonald, Brian Goldsworthy, Vic

Miller,

Dwayne

Schultz,

Hopfgartner,

Dave Morris.

Ugo

Feunekes,
Brian

FRONT ROW:

Glenn Terry, Ed Swayze.

LEFT TO RIGHT: Barb
Slavin, Michael Stoehr, Chris

Lomnicki, Dave
Cohlmeyer.

Berry,

Ted

MJS

SAE

37

�Degree Three

BACK ROW:
Dillabough,

Karl Dyer, Randy Collier, Pete deHaan, Pulie Essau, Dave Donevan, Mark Finstad. FRONT ROW:
Kim Asmussen, Ramune Beresnevicius, Caroline Evans, Liz Eckert, Ingrid Russel, Gaby Feulgen.

Eric Boysen, Betty

GINKGO

came back to LU
than ever. Although it had
lost a few leaves, new buds sprouted and joined the
rest of the crown. The GINKGO'S started off the year
in isolation at Rinker Lake Camp. After some soil pits,
the Foresters of '82 returned to class for another year
of wonderment (Uhh, what's going on!) in the world of
education. "Stick your nose in the jar of budworms. If
you smell 'em long enough you might be able to use
Last

September,

more vigorous and

the

prolific

smell to I.D. them!" And we all know that the best
way to recognize the wood sample is to memorize the
number corresponding to each species in the wood

block kits. And then there's the time this guy lifted the
top off his petri dish and contaminated LU with the
dose!

Next year, with the wizards, or Cripes Canada, or
(I guess they're just a gang of 'Howdy
Cowboys' who didn't know what to do for four years)
gone, the GINKGO'S won't have anyone to compete
against. Lorax and Les Bucherons won't change that
drastically and offer some competition!!
the Rancheroes

P.S. If you're not a

GINKGO,

you're a

STINKO!!

BACK ROW:

P.J.

Lamarche,

Schueller, Chris Saegar,

McCreath.

38

Spaans,

Rob Booth, Mike Nesbitt,
Pyke, Tim Moulton,

FRONT ROW: Dan

Schaefer, Ulf Runesson.

Ralph

John
Janet
Chris

RES

�LEFT TO RIGHT: Cathie Churchill, Guy Thauvette, Jon Wynn, Doug Witt, Laird Van Damme, Inga Stadus, Bev Shaw, Riet
Verhaggen, Jeff Stone, Nolan Shortt, Kevin Williams, Mike Umpherson, Paul Straiton, Bill Wiltshire, Aubrey Spring.

Gord King

LEFT TO RIGHT: Rohn

Sherry Lvnn Boycott

Luc Lefebvre, Faye
Verhaggen, Mark Stevens, Chris Flaherty, Mike O'Neil,
Solecki,

Pulie Essau.

FRONT ROW:
LEFT TO RIGHT:

Kelly

Sitter,

Trevor

Atkins,

Helen

Graham, Darrel MacKay, Lucie itke,
Barb MacPherson, Paul
ipa, Susan
Krabbe, Wayne Issac, C arol Graham, Mike

Norma

Grit tin.

Phil

I

BACK ROW:

I

Sallans,

and Vinnie.

MacBrien, Dirk klosv
39

�The

40

�Harvest

JSK

Graduates

i

���WHERE THE NORTH BEGINS
They

tell

me

you're a stranger,

From lands that lie afar;
You ask me where the North

And what

its

begins,

boundaries are.

The North

is not an area,
not a piece of land;
The North's a spirit and a life,
Which you must understand.

It's

Up

where the hand clasp's stronger,

Far from city dins;

Up where the smile lasts longer,
That's where the North begins.

Up

where the sun shines brighter,

Where

worries easily end;

Up

where the snow lies whiter,
You're in the North my friend.

Where
Where

And
Submitted by Luc Lefebvre

every man's a fighter,
the bond of friendship's tighter;
honour's more than fame.

Where you feel the fresh winds blowing
From pine woods clean and pure;
Where you find the trout streams flowing,
You're

in the

Where fewer

And

fewer

Where

THE CROSSCUT

And

North for

hearts are aching,

men walk

the world's

all

sure.

broke;

still

in the

making,

hearts carry hope.

Where
I

I

fellows don't mind giving,
ask not creed or name;
Where the fun of life is living,

We

used to sing,
used to swing,

I was in my prime,
Through those mighty pines.
King of the camp,
Yes, I was the champ,
But dethrowned was I
By a better guy.

When

Now
It is

I

For

life is

worth the game.

Have you left your camp at daylight,
As dawn was breaking forth;
Carried back your deer at twilight,
Then you've really been up North.

lay to rest,

for the best;

But before I go
You must be toldHere I sit brave and tall,
I am the mighty cross cut saw.
Nolan Shortt

Have you smelled
By streams where

the bacon frying,
big trout swims;

Made friends without half trying,
That's where the North begins.
For the North is not a country,
Measured by terms of land;

The real North's a spirit,
Which you must understand.

Anonymous
Submitted by Gail Retallack

��!

Keep on Shining
This year 74 shiners from L. U. invaded the City of
to raise money for the research of cystic
fibrosis. Forestry dominated once again, led by Ian

Thunder Bay

McCormack and Guylaine Thauvette who raised
$360.89. Ugo Feunekes and Dave Lyle shined $293.61
worth of shoes, while Micheal Eves and Ron Gellatly
came back with $222.62 from their day's effort.
C-House led the way in the Residence and won

the

inter-house competition.
In total, $3,155.64 was raised for this worthy cause.
Special

go
and Jon

thanks

Beresnevicius,

to

Wynn

DeGroot,

Liz
for

Mona

co-ordinating this

year's Shinerama.
"Rooty-toot -toot! We're the boys from the

"My

socks are funnier than your

Doing the 'chair'-man

suit!"

J

You've seen one
46

foot, you've seen

them

RES
all!

RES

institute

...

!'

ROB

��A Day
Races

at the

I

think

I

...

see land ahead!

Go

for

it -

only 12 '/2miles to go!

Smile Ted; we're on

October 4, 1980 ... on that frosty Saturday morning, 42 mad canoeists broke
on the Kaministiquia River and made a mad dash to the south ... and the
warmer waters of the G.L.F.P. mill. The winners of the Women's, Co-ed, and
Men's division (pictured above) were respectively: Lynn Arnold, Marguerite
Kuiack, Martha Hunt, Kornel Straslinzowski, Hugh Dobson, Ted St. Croix.
As a result, they were forced to down a magnum of Rubi! The race was
followed that night by the annual Corn Roast - a great time as usual!
ice

A
48

competitor?

�A Night

. . .

at the

By gosh

this

is

fun!

Seven

little

drunks

sitting

on a

Opera?

wall,

one

fell

off

...

49

�At
Ball

the

Park

Saturday, September 27, 1980,
featured the annual LUFA Softball
Tournament. The bright and sunny
weather attracted a large turnout

with

representatives

from

all

6

forestry classes taking part in the

event.

showed their
good time, and
thus did not win the Tournament.
was the Lorax team that
It
displayed their sporting talents and
walked away with the 1st place

The

ability

Rancheros

to have a

prize.

Congratulations
see

you

at the ball

We'll
Lorax!
park next year.

Double trouble

I'll

Casualties

50

be back

real

Can

soon

I

open

my

eyes

now?

RES

RES

RES
1

caught a

BEER!

�On

Grocery
Shopping
of the 80's
your mark, get

set

...

push!
...

what d'you mean

In the second F.A.S.T. (Forester's

Annual Shopping-

Gentlemen,

start

your engines

no engine!!
car Trek), racers use foot power.

The

race

This year's

was held on the afternoon of October

15th.

of entries.

The

race

featured

Newfy team raced

a

variety

Lukey's Boat; the gods from
degree 1 travelled in their 'Chariot of the Gods; and
the Colt 45 'ers raced in their 'box of beer'.
The seven racing teams travelled the half mile course
around the university. Despite a few casualties, that is,
the Chariot of the Gods lost a god along the way, and
Jeff ran over his passenger Pulie, everyone finished the
in

race.

The Colt 45 team composed of Richard Leary, Rob
Howe, Scott Ronson, Dave Tarjan and Mike Rose
crossed the finish line first. They finished the race in 2
minutes 23 seconds (a world record
racing

I

in

shopping-cart

believe!).

The Newfy Lukey's Boat won the prize for the best
decorated cart.
See you at the races next year! (special thanks to
Guylaine Thauvette for organizing F.A.S.T. for the
second consecutive year!)
Get the

I

know we can

hell

outa the way!

beat them to the checkout!

1980 winners

-

Colt 45

'ers.

�Any Which Way

but Lost!

On

Saturday, October 18, 1980, LUFA, with the
of Don Hopkins and the Thunder Bay
Orienteering Club, organized the 1st annual Forestry
Orienteering Race.
assistance

Although the field of competitors consisted mainly of
Outdoor Rec.'ers, Gord King, (our friendly neighbourhood forester), got lost the least and won the event.
The number of participants was small this year due
to the 18 foresters vacationing in
at

next

year's

race

we

hope

New
to

Brunswick, but

outnumber

the

Wreckers!

RES

The competitors

Crazy Wreckers! Follow the Foresters!

Which way now?!

Help! I'm

52

RES
lost.

��4

Weyerhaeuser 80
The 1980 Lecture Series was once again a roaring
The topic this year was The Compatability of
Forestry with Recreation and Wildlife in the Boreal
Forest.
On Thursday night, Mr. Warren Moore,
manager of Forestry Operations with the Woodlands
success.

Division of Great Lakes Forest Products Limited,
presented the talk "Logging of the Forest from an
Industrial Viewpoint". With the addition of many
slides, his talk gave a very good perspective on typical
forestry operations, and their associated problems.

Mr. Mark Cressman, on Friday
"Logging of the Forest
from
Viewpoint".
discussion

His

presented

many
a

very

slides

night,

a

and

different

spoke on

Recreationist

informative
view towards

logging than was heard the previous night.

To conclude the series, Mr. Tim Timmerman spoke
on "Logging on the Forest for a Wildlife Manager's
Viewpoint".
The slides and accompanying text
demonstrated
Forest

a

third,

very

necessary,

objective

Mr. Warren Moore

RES

Great Lakes Forest Products

for

Management.

The ensuing question period centered on G.L.F.P.'s
somewhat questionable practices and philosophy. The
Outdoor Recreation students in attendance had surprisingly few comments.

Mr. Mark Cressman
Ministry of Natural Resources

Gordon King

RES

Chairman, Weyerhaeuser Committee

Mr. Tim Timmerman
Ministry of Natural Resources

54

RES

�'Well,

what do you know!"

RES

"Hmm." "Hmm." "Wow!"

WEYERHAEUSER COMMITTEE
BACK ROW: Gord King, Mike Millard, Pete DeGroot,
Steve Dominy. FRONT ROW: Ann Armstrong, Leslie
Hawkins.

Social was a rip-roaring time. The
were flowing smoothly over the gullet
we could do to keep the tables on their

The Weyerhaeuser
and
and it was
shots

ales
all

legs.

The speakers showed up
the

cold

refreshments,

in

to wet their whistles with

the

company of

a

few

professors.

Many thanks to the Weyerhaeuser committee for the
supper, fantastic, A-l job that they did!

Forestry,

bination!

wildlife,

and recreation

...

What

a great

com-

�Woodsmen
Team Lakehead

to

UNB

How long do you figure it takes two vans to ride
from Thunder Bay to Fredericton? Answer: 32 hours,

McDonald

College Competition

including pit stops, scenic tours, etc.

On October 16, twenty one happy-go-lucky foresters
headed to the University of New Brunswick to take
part in the UNB Woodsmen Competition. These
foresters were the first to venture East, and compete in
the UNB competition. The competition, held on October 18, was attended by 28 teams, from the States
and Canada. Our Lakehead teams were the farthest
from their home range. The time and effort put into
the trip were well worth it - a stepping stone to
becoming champions!

A Championship to our credit ... Finally!! The '82
Lakehead Ladies' Woodsmen Team brought back the
pulp toss trophee to Thunder Bay after defeating all
men and women's teams in the competition. And there
were 37 teams attending the event.
As usual, the snow cover was thin in Montreal.
Although, we foresters of the North are not accustomed
to such "Banana belt" climate, we competed with as
much vigor and enthusiasm as the other Southern teams
did. The Lakehead teams faired well in all events (i.e. no
bad screw-ups). Other LU celebrities included Nolan
Shortt who took fourth place overall in the snowshoe
race, and Guylaine Thauvette who placed second in the

women's snow shoerace.

Forestry
The Woodsmen

activities for the 1980-81 year finally

culminated with our
Inter-Collegiate

Day

first

annual Lakehead University

Woodsmen Competition on February

RES

28.

Winter Carnival
annual Winter Carnival Woodsmen Comsponsored by LUFA, was held on January 24,
1981. A good turn-out of 23 teams competed in the
various events and against the elements as well as the

The

petition,

of the refreshments. When the smoke had
from the waterboil event, the Alumni team
walked away with the championship once again. The
girls from Tech II captured the Women's Division and
thus enjoyed a magnum of Rubi Rouge!
As usual, the festivities were wrapped up with a
typical Bushmen's Brawl and everyone went home
effects
settled

(eventually) happy.

Thanks go to Guylaine Thauvette, Bob Coleman,
and all other members of the L.U. Woodsmen's team
for organizing this event.

56

Unity College from Unity, Maine came the furthest
and went home the happiest with the Men's Overall
Championship. Our own Lakehead "C" team won the
Women's Championship, as well as the overall pulp
toss event.

Other Lakehead successes were
event in which Lakehead

in

the log decking

"B"

placed behind Lakehead
"A" by only 1/100 of a minute. In the snowshoe race,
Nolan Shortt, Bill Hall, and Guylaine Thauvette, (all

from L.U.) placed 1st, 2nd, and 3rd, respectively to
sweep the event. Thanks to Ralph Spaans and Bob
Coleman for their organizational efforts. It was great!!

�UNB

Lakehead

Odyssey

"A"

Bob Coleman
Tim Moulton
Steve Dominy

(C)

Nolan Shortt
Mike Umpherson
Ralph Spaans

Lakehead "B"

Lakehead

Mark Stevens
Ed Morrice
Mark Finstad

Guylaine Thauvette (C)
Gaby Feulgen
Diane Renaud
Caroline Evans

(C)

Bernie Stockermans

Dan Pyke
Trevor Atkins

"C"

Kathy Tschumi
Faye Verheggen

��To

Lakehead

Montreal!

"A"

Bob Coleman (C)
Mike Umpherson
Nolan Shortt

Rob Howe
Jeff Stone

Dave Bogensberger

Rohn

Solecki

.up**-'

Lakehead "B"
Dirk Kloss (C)
Bill

Wiltshire

Paul Kutz
Bill

Hall

Kim Uhren
Tim Moulton
Rick Leary

™ Lakehead "C"
Gaby Feulgen

(C)

Guylaine Thauvette
Diane Renaud
Gail Retallack

Vivienne Ball

Joan Keene
Ramtine Beresnevicius

-

-

Jfe
il^&amp;r

^
RES

If

��i

-ST?

The ox never

sleeps.

MJS

Winter Carnival
The

1980-81

January blues

L.U. Winter Carnival broke the midin

Snow

much more

exciting fashion than in

broomball and ball hockey
tournaments were well responded to by L.U. students.
past

years.

rugby,

Forestry contributed its share of participation,
primarily in the Ice Sculpting Contest. Foresters from
all years got together to construct a 100-foot Blue Ox
sled. "Babe never did get painted blue, but she
captured first place.
Forestry also won the winter Carnival Hockey
Tournament thanks to the spirited team consisting
mainly of Lorax, with a few individuals from other
classes. Peter Wensink, goalie for the Forestry team,
won the Most Valuable Player award for the tour-

and
still

nament.

mm

The Bushman's Brawl,

as usual, brought the

week

to

a great finish.

Ralph Spaans receives sculpting trophy.

FORESTRY:

MJS

Winter Carnival Champions.

MJS

King and Queen
White and Wendy Macdonald.

Carnival

Dave

MJS

61

�Management Agreements

Forest

Mr. K. Armson
Ministry of Natural Resources

MY
Mr.

Bob Sutton

J.

NDP

Symposium

Foulds

Nat. Res. Critic

'81

The original band backed out
and the Royal Edward went
bankrupt one week before the 13th
annual Symposium, but that did
not prevent a great success!
Mr. Nick Saltarelli of AbitibiPrice (Iroquois Falls) joined Mr.

Ken Armson, Mr. Jim Foulds and
Mr.

George

Bell

answer

to

''Why

question

the

Forest

Management Agreements?"
The evening at the Red Oak Inn
featured a superb dinner, a formal
introduction
of
Dr.
Kayll
by

LUFA

Tim Grant,

Vice-President

a delightfully hilarious talk by
Prof. Brown, and a great dance.

The

was

success

organizational
Schueller,

due

of
Sutton,

efforts

Bob

to

the

John
Steve

Dominy, Pete and Liz DeGroot,
and many others. Thanks!

(All

62

photos by Mark Stevens)

Sue Neufeld

Mr. G.

Bell

Spruce Falls

P&amp;P

Co.

��Forestry

Day

�,

Day '81

Forestry
On

February 28,

LUFA

1981,

hosted its first (annual ?) Forestry
Day. Displays were set up in the

Agora by local forestry companies
and heavy equipment was exhibited
out in the parking lot.
Nine teams, from as far away as
Maine, U.S.A., participated int he

LFS

Inter-Collegiate

Woodsmen

Competition, which was
Unity College.

won by

The Lakehead "C" team captured

1st

Women's
All

in

place

honours

in

the

Division.
all,

our

efforts

were

successful mainly due to the efforts

of Bob Coleman, Ralph Spaans,
Dan Pyke, and Tim Grant.
The 2nd annual Forestry Day
will hopefully be even bigger and
better in 1982!
EJP

THE LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY

FORESTRY ASSOCIATION
wishes to thank the sponsors
of its recent
PJK

FORESTRY DAY
Abitibi-Price Inc

Buchanan Forest products Ltd.
Capital Equipment Limited
Canadian

Institute of Forestry

Equipment Limited
Collins Safety Shoes Limited

labatts Breweries (Ont.)
L.U. Student Union

Noro Saw &amp; Marine

Ltd.

Ontario Logger Sports Association

Confederation College

Powell Equipment (1978) Ltd.
Thunder Bay Hydro
Thunder Bay Trophies &amp; Engraving

Limited

name

Mg ZZtAuMK

Universal Logging Supplies

Eaton Yale Limited

Greot Lokes Forest Products

Ltd.

K 5,M. Forestry Consultants

Inc.

Lakehead University

1003

Mininstry of Natural Resources

C. C. Poulin

DeGagne Equipment

N?

Ltd.

Vulcan Machinery &amp; Equipment

ADDRESS

ltd.

Wolfgang Schoor

L.U. School of Forestry

TELEPHONE

f&gt;SZ."

I

S90

Lakehead University Forestry Association

Winner of the "162" Husqvorna Chain Saw
(drawn under licence "319632)

N. F. RET ALL ACK
BURLINGTON, ONT.

65

�HOW DO YOU PUT A
GUARANTEE ON THE
LIFE OF YOUR FOREST?

YOU PUT YOUR
NAME ON THE LINE.

When we put our signature on
the Forest

Management Agree-

ment with the Ontario Ministry
of Natural Resources,

we

assumed the responsibility of
tending the woodlands to
provide for a continuous supply
of forest products.

an equivalent amount of wood
is being added by new growth.
This reflects our understanding of how a forest must

continue to live. And how
our industry must continue to
live. And how our employees

practices will ensure that forests

and the communities that depend
on them must continue to live.
The forests you see today

are properly harvested and

are changing, thriving growing.

Our

forest

management

regenerated. For every tree
take out, we'll

make

we

sure that

And we want
just the

to see

them

same, years from now.

Thats why we put our name on the line,
a commitment. and we stand behind it.

it's

-Price
ABITIBI-PRICE INC
Toronto Ontario

66

������i nem letsfaceh. realms
ON A ROLL. HE'SAGREAJ
KNOWS HIS
stvff, anp he's ear the
^ah

KXJ MI6HI AS1UELL
ADMIT IT, MIKE its

SPEAKER,

GOIN6T0BeA vem
I

UNO

FALL

JIMMY
CAHTtR

fOf.

m

absolutely for inknow
stance. Dtp
801. OF ALL POLLUTION

m

COMES ffVM PLANTS

B&amp;T ONEUHEFS

nokimno
WHAT KINP
Of PWJJ-

AND WEES'

7/ON 7

LWttl. HO
WONDER THE

LBAVBS,

WOT,

,

^SHi

FOKSISAttttT

WALK
AH/MORE

FIT ID

MOLD..
'

IN

V"f&lt;vS*

Former

director

New fore

"t

Lakehe

a

at

honoured

at co

Top of the mornin' to you,
and a happy St. Patrick's
Day.

THE SA

Cir/ Page

Secwd Section

Rater

%J

Canada

Service

SAULT STE. MARIE, CANADA

critically

short

VLJC.J

will celebrate
W11A
yeachyeartocelebratetms
neda
wdl ^ setting Achievement?in the
celebration
history an

t
it
L.U-

L .U
University's
g
Ai
.

£n
n

m

t

s^rB°oard
g

Monda y

£^ "L^eS

o,

aW Labour Day,

Day"

60,000
It's

Mo

LAKFHFAD UNIVERSITY
FORESTRY ASSOCIA
TIQN

WOODSMEN'S TEAM

-^.,^if^!*

-.1-

'162

DRAW 10-00 PM
T.c»e, ss ,
-'C-FNCE«S1%5j

LAKPHCAf,,.

«'9«1

00esc „

1

Cfume
WINKER NEED

72

N

-°

""""H" ATTENDANCE

1003

.

evep
Umversit,

m"^'*^

�Os

t,

icc«i!
ry

head

dU

©Or
&lt;t&gt;

"nr.

'o,

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n- «».,

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'

»,

Of"'"*

CD

JLT

STAR

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER

if

City Editor:
Homer Foster

13, 1S80

Q

foresters, Roberts soys

(/&gt;

o"

a.
CD
features displays, ga

Irndaitar
r-tJi

Imdl

t

'

"I

Lakehead Lmverwty H'tunisnien an- \hown
""nprtine in the Swede Sawing event earlier

ed

ai

the fint annual

petition

OH fehruurx

I

I

28,

�Unlike most of Canada's natural wealth, the great forests
of Ontario are a renewable - one that can be grown and

nurtured and harvested or left untouched
enjoyment and future legacy.

for our present

By providing opportunities

for young people to learn
practices,
the
Ministry
of
Natural
Resources is proudly participating in the education of
tomorrow's foresters and technicians.

proper

forestry

young people, who have
accepted the challenge of preserving the beauty and
abundance of our natural woodlands, that we most sincerely extend our thanks and the future thanks of
generations yet to come.
It

is

Ministry Of

to this group of dedicated

Hon. JamesA.C. Auld
Minister

Natural
W.T. Foster

Resources
Ontario

Deputy Minister

���LUFA
The 1980-81

LUFA

fiscal

the introduction of a few

Review

year has a lot to review. The increased student participation in LUFA activities, along with
events, helped the morale of the Forestry student rise to a level that indicates that once

new

again Forestry is a proud and active faculty.
Forestry was very well represented in the intramural sports as usual, along with the various sporting events put on by
LUFA. The Kam-Am canoe race, after much controversy got underway and was dominated by outdoor racers, but
foresters were not far behind. The corn roast at the LU woodlot was a "smash", and it was disappointing to see that the
Engineers were not up to their usual antics.
The second annual shopping cart race was a big success; the colourful carts careening around campus shows that we
are indeed crazy. Our first annual orienteering competition, put on in cooperation with the Thunder Bay "O" club,
proved that those Wreckers just can't handle a compass and the bush. Weyerhaeuser went over well and I'm sure that a
lot of people were enlightened as to the compatibility of logging and recreation. As always the LU Woodsmen competition during winter carnival was very active and special thanks should go out to Guylaine Thauvette for coordinating
it and to the woodsmen's teams for vMging and helping set up. Symposium was a big success due to the hard work of the
symposium committee and a very c^Mfcversial topic - FMA's. "Thanks" for a job well done go to John Schueller, Bob
Sutton and all the other committee^^Kibers. The Montreal Woodsmen's Competition January^aw our new improved
1
lnan tne team did at UNB. However, things are loo Mie up and ''11 have a
teams in the middle of the pack, a
team to reckon with next year.

l^m^ ^

jr first aBu^LUBnvitational Woodsmen's Competition held in conjunction with our first annual Forestry Day was
a^pfcuccesflmd justices to show what a lot of time, perseverance, and dedication can do. Bob Coleman and Ralph

Spaans deserve special thanks for

extended efforts.
can be an organization that can make University life for the Forester a little
better at LU. Participation and dedication by enthusiastic students will ensure that LU Forestry will be a school to be
recognized in Ontario as well as across Canada. LUFA has a lot to offer the Forestry student and I think that this past
year shows that. We would only be too lucky to have more students like Bob Coleman, Mark Stevens and Ralph Spaans
I'd like to

who did

so

add a personal

much

their

note.

LUFA

for us.

There is a host of other people who have consistantly added to LUFA over their stay at LU. Pete and Liz de Groot,
and Steve Dominy, to name a few. These are special people who care and many thanks go to them for the many things
they have done.
But let's not overlook the up and coming classes. It's their attitudes and enthusiasm that we. build on, and I think LU
School of Forestry can look forward to a school of involved, informed and concerned Foresters in the future.

Dan Pyke

LUFA

President, 1980-81

�"Thank You"
On November 8, 1980 the School of Forestry held a
dinner at the Royal Edward Hotel in recognition of
Prof. K.W. Hearnden's contribution to Forestry at
Lakehead University.
Professor Hearnden came to Lakehead University as
an Associate Professor of Forestry in 1969. He was
appointed Acting Chairman of the School of Forestry in
1971, became Chairman in 1972, and was re-elected to
Ihe position for three consecutive terms. He was
promoted to the rank of Professor in 1976, and served as
Director from 1978 to 1980.
During his years at Lakehead, Prof. Hearnden saw
the School of Forestry expand from granting diplomas
in

Forest Technology, to granting B.Sc.F. degrees in

1972,

and M.Sc.F.

in 1977.

Hearnden is Dean of Students at
Lakehead University.
On behalf of all Lakehead University Forestry
students-past, present, and future-we say "Thank you
Dean Hearnden".
Presently,

Prof.

Dean Hearnden, Chief Judge of L.U.I.W.C.

Prof. Vidlak presents aerial photo.

Dean Hearnden and Prof. Westbroek
78

Dean Hearnden and Dan Pyke,

LUFA

President

MJS

�'

Ring Ceremony
In mid March 1981, the annual Canadian Institute of
Forestry ring presentation ceremony was held at the
Prince Arthur Hotel. The ceremony is jointly sponsored

by the North Western and the Lake of the Woods sections of the CIF. This year, the ceremony was attended
by the Vice-President of the CIF, the Chairmen of the
sponsoring sections, a Faculty representative, and of
course the graduating class.
The presentation of the ring is to recognize the fact
that the potential graduate is about to enter a career in
forestry after training in a Canadian university.
Congratulations are extended to the graduates and
thanks to the Canadian Institute of Forestry.

The handshake

But there's got to be more rings!

is

Finally,

fine, but

my own

where's

mv

ring?

ring!

79

�����Around Campus

84

�8

You Remember?

Will
Mount

Helen erupted

St.

Washington State

in

in

May,

The summer of 1980 proved to be Ontario's worst
over 300,000 acres.

The 1980 Summer Olympics

in

Moscow were

1980.

year on record. Thunder Bay Fire No. 46 alone destroyed

fire

boycotted by Canada, the United States, and approximately 40 other

countries because of the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan.

The United States remained on the international news scene
months before being released in January, 1981.

as 52

American hostages were held by Iran

for 14

Terry Fox, a one-legged amputee from British Columbia, attempted a Marathon of Hope from the Atlantic to the
He was forced to cancel his run near Thunder Bay after cancer had spread to his lungs. His efforts raised
more than $20 million for cancer research in Canada.
Pacific.

The price of beer was $1.40 at the Crest in the fall, while a case of 24 was $10.20. Doran's introduced beer
on the market. Meanwhile, the price of gas soared to $ 0.29 per litre.

It

UNB Woodsmen

Lakehead University Foresters toured East in October, 1980 to the
took 32 hours to get 18 people there in two vans, and 44 hours to

"Jimmy"

President

November 4,

Carter went

down

get

10,

1980,

John Lennon, a former

Mayor Dusty
Beetle,

1

/

2

Miller

was shot and

was defeated by Walter Assef
killed

on November

8,

February 28,

1981

witnessed the First

The Day featured

Everybody's friend, Painter

The

first

first

time.

Ronald Reagan on

March, 1981.
in

Thunder Bay's

civic election.

1980.

Colonel Saunders, founder of Kentucky Fried Chicken, died on December
U.S.S.R. died on December 18, 1980.

Association.

Competition for the

people back.

to defeat in the U.S. presidential elections at the hands of

1980. Reagan, 70, later survived an assassination attempt in

On November

1

balls

16,

while Premier Kosygin of the

(Annual) Forestry Day hosted by the Lakehead University Forestry
equipment and an Inter-Collegiate Woodsmen's Competition.

forestry displays,

Bill, retired in

January, 1981.

space shuttle 'Columbia' was sent into space on Sunday April 12 by the Americans, and

made

a perfect

landing on April 14, completing a successful mission.

Thunder Bay
another bad
...

fire

will

be hosting the Canada

Summer Games

in 1981,

while the Ministry of Natural Resources predicts

summer.

and on April

25,

1981,

we

are

madly rushing

in

an attempt to

get

Harvest

'81

ready for the presses. We're

nearly done!

How

Could You Forget?!

B5

�HARVESTers

Hi

^1
Nolan Shortt

Rohn

Solecki

Peter

Hanmore

J
Guylaine Thauvette

MJS

Randy

Collier

MJS

MJS

These are the people who formany hours of studying and
socializing in order to bring you this
ninth annual edition of HARVEST.
It has been great to be able to work
feited

with such a nice bunch of hard-

working

Leslie

staffers!

MJS

Hawkins

Russ Erskine, ICP Rep.

MJS

contributing
the
Also
to
production of HARVEST '81 were:
Nancy Phillips, Darlene Cousineau,
Linda Minello, Rob Argue, Trevor
Atkins, and the class reps. Thanks
to

one and

all!

Contributing Photographers
AMK

Anne Kangas

BGR

Gail Retallack

BJS Bernie Stockermans
BW Bob Whaley

CES
CJT

Chris Schaefer
Charlie Todesco

DHC Darlene Cousineau
DWP Dan Pyke

DWR Don Richmond
EAM Ed Morrice
EJP Ed Paleczny
FJV Faye Verheggen

FRY
GIM

Frances Youck
Ian

McCormack

MJK
MJL

Joan Keene

Mike Lipa

MJS Mark

MRL
MSN

Stevens
Rick Lambert

Mike

Nesbitt

NBS Nolan

Shortt

Peter Hanmore
PJK Paul Kutz
RES Rohn Solecki
RJB Real Bouchard
RJG Rick Gadd
RJL Rick Leary
RJV Riet Verheggen
ROB Ramune Beresnevicius

RSA
SAE

JWM

John Miller
Knut Herzog

SJT Simon Tanner

KH
KR

Kelly Roberts

SPM
SRD

Steve Duffus

Robert Argue
Stephen Elliott
SBS Shannon Stone

SRN

Scott Nisbett

Trevor Atkins

LFS Lyn Sevean

TAM

Tim Moulton

LMR

TGE Tom Eiber
UTR Ulf Runesson

Winn

Leslie

Hawkins

Louise Reilly

MAA Anne Armstrong
MEA Mary-Ellen Anderson

VCM

Joe Kapron

Susan MacBrien

TAA

Keith

LEH

Susan MacBrien

PCH

IHS Inga Status
JMF Mark Finstad
JSK Joe Kapron

KW

Frances Youck

Vic Miller

Mark Stevens
RES

MJS

�I

.

That's

It,

No More

That's All, There Ain't
. .

The end is in sight! For most people it is the end of
another school year. For others, it is the end of their
formal education at Lakehead University. At times like
to reflect back upon the past - to
good times and the friends we've made.
Every year the Forestry Yearbook staff does its best to
produce a book that will recap the highlights of the past 8
months, and we do it for a reason. Harvest '81 is
dedicated to The student; the one who desires to learn
and who is willing to endure hardship in order to achieve,
and the one who provides the highlights that can be
captured on film and recorded in Harvest. Thus, we are
dedicating
this
book to ourselves - professors,
technicians, secretaries, lab assistants, graduates and
undergraduate students. We have desired, endured, and
achieved, and we will continue to. Living is a learning
this,

it

fitting

is

remember

the

experience.

The production of Harvest '81 required lots of
ingenious ideas, and long hours of diligent
work by numerous HARVESTers. The requirements
photos,

were met by a super staff.
Fortunately, we had Rohn Solecki as Photo Editor.
With a photo bank of nearly 1900 pictures, Rohn spent
many late nights /early mornings busy in the dark
room. With his knowledge and experience as a previous
yearbook editor, it was also great to have Rohn around
as a General Advisor.
Leslie Hawkins is the girl to thank for keeping the
yearbook price at $6.00. Leslie did a lot of footwork as
Business Manager to increase our advertising revenue so
that we could add some badly needed pages to the book.
But she didn't stop there - layout and typing have also

become her

.

And then there are Susan MacBrien, Randy Collier,
Guylaine Thauvette, and Frances Youck who spent
many hours together (usually late into the night, or late
into April after exams) working on layout, copy sheets
and creativeness, eh Sue? Peter Hanmore and Joe
Kapron provided photography, while Peter and Nolan
Shortt helped with the darkroom work. THANKS
FOLKS!
This year, more than ever in the past, we've had
contributions of art, poetry, photos, photos, and more
photos by people, people, and more people. To all
these contributors we say "Thank you for helping

make your book

our book - yearbook better".
message wouldn't be complete
without a word of appreciation to our advertisers. Their
support has made this book possible, so plwase support
our sponsors.
In case you haven't keyed-in by n ow, this book was
produced for you, and you probably helped out in some

And

way

to

finally,

-

this

make it better. So let's all
we remember 1980-81

give ourselves a pat

on

the back as

And don't forget to buy a Harvest '82, if you're still
here next year. If you're not, Good Luck wherever you
go!

Mark

Stevens, Editor.

specialties.

87

�OUR
American Can

of

Canada Limited

Marathon, Ontario
Black Clawson-Kennedy Limited

PAPER MILL MACHINERY AND INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT
Montreal,

Quebec

COLLINS SAFETY SHOES LIMITED
906 Memorial Avenue
Thunder Bay, Ontario

EDWARD

S. FELLOWS
FORESTRY CONSULTANT

P.O.

Box

354, Fredericton, N.B.

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
"Best of Luck to

All

Foresters

in

Future Endeavours"

�PATRONS
LORNE'S CAMERAS AND FISHING TACKLE LIMITED
20

S.

Court Street

Thunder Bay, Ontario

ONTARIO FORESTRY ASSOCIATION
150 Consumers Road
Willowdale, Ontario

THE SPECTACLE SHOPPE
615 Victoria Avenue
Thunder Bay, Ontario

THUNDER BAY TRAVEL
10 Cumberland St. N., 118 Centennial Square
Thunder Bay, Ontario

�"Best Wishes

in

Future Endeavours"

Lcrbaffs
from

ALL YOUR FRIENDS AT LABATT'S
SPONSORS OF THE
INTER-COLLEGIATE

1ST

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY

WOODSMEN COMPETITION

FACULTY OF UNIVERSITY SCHOOLS
Schools

of

•

Business Administration

•

Engineering

•

Forestry

•

Library Technology

•

Nursing

•

Physical Education

and Outdoor Recreation

�To Our
Future Businessmen

233

\

S.

Court

Thunder Bay, Ont.

k b IYI
360

Mooney

St

Thunder Bay. Ontario
Telephone

Forestry Consultants Inc.
P

7

B

5R4

(807) 344-0811

"Trees are renewable only

Telex

if

073-4603

we renew them!"

Best Wishes 1981 Graduates

91

�A CAREER WITH
GREAT LAKES FOREST PRODUCTS
OFFERS YOU
CHALLENGING OPPORTUNITIES.

Great Lakes
Forest Products
Limited

Box 430
hu nder Bay
t
Ontario

I

1

P7C 4W3

Operations in Thunder Bay and Dryden, Ontario
MANUFACTURERS OF QUALITY PRODUCTS

Mill

• Newsprint Paper
• Bleached and Unbleached
Kratt Pulp

• Fine and Kraft Papers
• Lumber
• Waferboard

A mm

MJS

JMF

�9.5

�LMR

Lakehead University Forestry Association

HELPING FORESTERS TO A BETTER EDUCATIONAL LIFE AT LU.

94

�THE
GRIFFITH MINE
Red Lake, Ontario

Owner
The Steel Company

of

Canada

Managing Agent
Picklands Mather and

Company

The Ontario Paper Company Limited

Phone 613-756-2010

MURRAY BROS. LUMBER CO.
Limit

MENS

condONi

d

WEAR

VJ&gt;

WARREN K COOK
SAMUELSOHN
MICKEY ALLEN

269 Red River Road

LIMITED

PLANING MILL FACILITIES
Owners and Manufacturers of Hardwoods and Softwoods
Lumber, Pulpwood and other Forest Products
HEAD OFFICE: BARRY'S BAY, ONT., CAN. KOJ 1B0
SAW MILLS AT MADAWASKA AND BARRY'S BAY

ONTARIO CANADA

t) Farrantu4

(1969)

�Compliments

of

THE CORPORATION OF
THE
CITY OF THUNDER BAY
ALDERMEN
Boshcoff
C. Johnston
R. Larson
W. Lysnes
J. Packota
D. Smith

%h

iM^^glf
JlU'in

,1

li

1

MICROCOMPUTING
Intercity Plaza

(807) 345-2042

L. Timko
s Trotter

jILiJJK*

JZwSSmwiL
If 4 St3Ea\jL

IN

Phone:

9r

tfflSSBlB

CREATING NEW FRONTIERS

Thunder Bay, Ontario
P7B 3A5

Mayor Walter M. Asset

K.

Radio /hack

-

J

-

Vander Wees
Waddington
D. Willoughby

D.

lit

Chief Administrative Officer
D.

Picherack

City Clerk
H.T. Kirk

The forestry profession

is currently faced with the
challenge of developing and implementing an intensive
forest management program that will increase the
viability of the forest industry and at the same time
protect and enhance the environment. Your contribution to this difficult but exciting task can be
maximized by joining the Ontario Professional Foresters
Association. Information on the Association and its
membership requirements can be obtained from the
following address.

Ontario Professional
Foresters Association
10, 271 Yonge Street
Suite 303
Richmond Hill, Ontario

L4C 3B5
Telephone

(416) 884-7845

14 S. Cumberland Street

Thunder Bay, Ontario
P7B 2T2
Phone

(807)

344-7240 or 344-7249

�For the BIG
Custom

.

Built Units

Logging Trailers
Logging Cab Shields

LOADS

of the B Train
Model shows heavy
duty push type bunkers

"Top

view

Low Boy
Pole Trailers
Trailer Trains

.

Bed
Pulpwood &amp; Log
Flat

.

Trailers
Procter

184 Roland Street, P.O. Box 2864, Thunder Bay, Ont. P7B 5G3
623-5 1 0 7
Telex 073-4658

1

&amp; Gamble Cellulose

-

and furnishing recreation areas
and by meeting or exceeding
strict air and water quality

believes that an investment in

community
the future

affairs i* a stake in

— the future of the

community's

citizens, its

resources,

businesses and

its

standards.

With support and investment
today, your community will

industries

grow, assuring you
That's

why we've

active interest in

taken an
Procter

and sponsoring
people-oriented projects.
that's

why we

a stake in

the future.

promoting

&amp; Gamble 0*

Cellulose, Lid

And

[fflfcf

iSr

safeguard the

environment by setting aside

VALUE/FIRST
Compliments

of
MODERN

El
R.R. No.

1,

neujcrrGO
FOREST
PRODUCTS
LIMITED

HEARST, ONTARIO

AIR

CONDITIONED

DEPARTMENT STORE
FOR THE LATEST FASHIONS
AND GIFT SELECTIONS
Located

in

"Keskus"

Shopping Centre Downtown
POL 1 NO

Phone 345-5441

LOGGING DIVISION

EATON'S

Buy-Line 344-5821

�T

JACKETS AND CRESTS
MADE TO YOUR SPECIAL ORDER BY

SCHACHTER'S
A DIVISION OF

BESSBOROUGH MERCHANDISERS
LTD.

633 Main Street
Winnipeg, Manitoba

R3B 1E3
Phone (204)943-1064

WRITE FOR FREE CATALOGUE

Compliments

of

WAJAX

GREAT WES

INDUSTRIES
LIMITED
FIRE

LIMITED

\

DIVISION

WAJAX PUMPS
NIEDNER HOSE

Phone: 344-8464 Telex 073-4575

l^/jfXl ^JP.O. Box

^kSr%ty}

CONTROL

3170, Thunder Bay, Ontario

P7B 5G6

Br'

WAJAX INDUSTRIES LIMITED
BRANCHES ACROSS CANADA

�MlIffiMMIJIlIL

MMninEiD)

Nobodycandoit
like McDonalds can

Dubreuilville, Ontario

POS 1B0
884-2525
Telex 067-7255

Tel. (705)

STUDS DIMENSION STOCK
TIMBERS P.E.T.
RAILROAD TIES CHIPS
-

-

McDonald's

-

KILN DRIED

LUMBER

-

(3

KILNS)

QUALITY AND SERVICE IS OUR MOTTO
FAST EFFICIENT TRUCK
DELIVERY TO ONTARIO
MICHIGAN, INDIANA, OHIO, WISCONSIN

SPRUCE JACK PINE
POPLAR ON LONG TERM CONTRACT

THREE CONVENIENT
LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

-

201

W. Arthur

Street

1200 Memorial Avenue

SALES OFFICE
P.O.

Box 518

530 Cat heart Street
Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario

Telephone

(705) 253-2378
Telex 067 77121
Sales Mgr. - Martial Beaumier

TOBACCO
CONFECTION
POST OFFICE

YOUR ON
CAMPUS
STORE

853 Red River Road

�Earn some high credits
this

semester

with...

COMMERCE
STUDENT
SERVICES

DALMYS

"Available

at the

Canadian Imperial

Bank of Commerce on or near most
college and university campuses
throughout Canada."

CANADIAN IMPERIAL

BANK OF COMMERCE

FOR YOUNG FASHION
Keskus Downtown
Thunder Bay, Ontario

CROWD AT THE CREST
EXCELLENT FOOD AND VARIETY IN OUR DINING ROOM
JOIN THE REST OF THE

CREST HOTEL
Red River

"Best Wishes to

All

at

Junot

Graduating Foresters!"

100
i

�KIMBERLY - CLARK

OF

CANADA

PULP

AND

LIMITED

FOREST

Longlac - Terrace

PRODUCTS
Bay

Ontario

CAREER
FORESTERS

Congratulations to
"Harvest 1981"

and to Forestry
Students at Lakehead

JOIN

CANADIAN INSTITUTE OF FORESTRY
INSTITUT FORESTIER DU CANADA

University

Box 5000

Mac donald College,
PUBLISHERS OF

ONTARIO PULP AND
PAPER MAKERS
SAFETY ASSOCIATION
T.N.

McLenaghen, President

W.A. Matson, Vice-President
W.C. Lockhart, Manager

"Participation

Makes

the Difference"

THE FORESTRY CHRONICLE

P.Q.

H9X CO
1

OFFICE 457-9131

HOME

457-6711

�KOEHRING
:&lt; CANADA
LIMITED
WATEROUS WOODLANDS DIVISION
BRANTFORD, ONTARIO N3T 5P6

strong on performance
ROB

FIRESTONE

CANADA

LIMITED

80 South Court Street
Thunder Bay, Ontario

ALSO
CLOTHING
FOR THE

YMERS
MEN'S WEAR

BIG

Cumberland
Thunder Bay

17 S.

St.

Ontario

AND TALL MAN

Tel. 344-1321

LIMITED

THE SOUND PROFESSIONALS
MOBILE STEREO SYSTEMS FEATURING
CLARION

HOME

AUDIO

FEATURING AKAI,
LANSING

HOME
We'll see

you on the

At Vulcan we've been
equipment long enough
forest

r\

people.

(

servicing
to

see

the

and

selling

need

lor

job.
forestry

well-trained

ongratulations grailuates and good luck

in

AND

AND ALTEC

PORTABLE

VIDEO

EQUIPMENT
MOBILE COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
FEATURING ROYCE AND LONG

RANGER
NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO'S LARGEST
TAPE SELECTION

PROFESSIONAL

\oni new eaieei

COMPONENTS

S.A.E.

INSTALLERS

AND

SERVICE TECHNICIANS

VULCAN
MACHINERY a EQUIPMENT

LTD.

915 Memorial Avenue
Thunder Bay, Ontario
Ph: (807) 345-5495
Tlx 073-4509

102

32 St. Paul
344-0828

St.

135 N. Syndicate Ave.
622-8457

�idustrial
FOREST MANAGEMENT
REFORESTATION

ENGINEERING

COMPUTING CENTER
TOPOGRAPHIC MAPPING

1595 Fifth
Prince George,
(604) 564-4115

BEAVER FOODS

FEATURES
A FINE SELECTION
OF RECORDS, TAPES

JSFOffl
700

VICTORIA AVENUE

THUNDER BAY ONTARIO P7C

5P7

PHONE

623-7585

from
Your Friends

ROACH'S

NOFIDA IFt

at

VICTORIAVILLE

Arthur Square
215 Red River Road
Thunder Bay
Tel. (807) 245-3601

RED &amp; WHITE
CABS

34-48-48-1
THUNDER BAY NORTH
Best of Luck to

AND STEREO COMPONENTS
IN

division ot imagp &amp; sound m(

Best Wishes

Since 1952

EST.

All

Graduates!

1920

���!

Twas
a

IHS

The end is near ... in fact, this it it! We've tried to recapture all of
those memorable moments that made 1980-81 what it really was. The
School of Forestry will never be the same! Best of luck to all graduating
you who will be moving on to bigger and better
of us can look forward to another exciting year (or more)
at Lakehead. Life is what you make it ... make it a good one!
The following few pages are blank just so you can fill them
up with autographs. Take advantage of the opportunity and
harvest a few more memories from 1980-81
foresters,

things.

and

The

to those of

rest

�����������</text>
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                    <text>���281097

�'

Harvest '79-'80
Lakehead University
^

Forestry Association

^

Thunder Bay, Ontario.

This

/mmw

Book

is

Dedicated to the

J^^^ Spurgeon

Memory

of

�EXPERIENCES
University is a
living as well
as learning
experience. In

I

time you will
realize that

...

RhS

�it

wasn't just

sitting in a lecture

theatre. It was
a place where

you expanded
your horizons

...

�'i

and experienced
the meaning of
friendship.

You

have learned
the importance

will

of experiences.

��Field School

Field school is where they expect you to do things
you haven't been taught yet, using tools they don't
give you. But it still beats sitting in a lecture theatre,
and getting homework assignments.

PI

.

HEY!

!

That's my finger you're standing on.
10 degrees and 35 degrees or ...
are we going???
Are THEY going?!?

P2.

Now

P3.

Where
Where
Hard at wori&lt; sawing wood.
Hey you, get out of that jeilo tree!
Which way to the little boy's room?

P4.
P5.

P6.
P7.

is it

RES

��A DAY

IN

THE

LIFE

.

.

.

FORESTERS &amp; ENGIN

ood

Chii&gt;$

and SdwclM$t

WEYERHAUSER

�\ERS LOSE CLUB STATUS
sjsdBdsMSu 9qj puB pjBq &gt;fJOM sjajsajoj aqj dnoj3 b
SB iBqi SMOU&gt;i ni 'dnoiS Azbjd puB pjiM b sjb 3M JBqj
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3M SB jnq ssijiAipB jno jo spsdsB iBuouBsuas ajoui
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•SM3U aqj ui auip jo iBsp poo§ b spuads jsjsajoj nq

^4,

.STUDENT CHARGED

CLIP
THERE

WANTED

OUT THIS PICTURE
MAY NEVER BE ANOTHER

Forestry Degree students require an ir
structor for a Remedial Spelling course,
be offered in January, 1 980. All intereste
applicants please contact ext. 999. Graci
i

Four grads only need apply.

9^\&lt;i'^'^'

WITH MURDER

WOOD CHIP!

Forestry students trained on the job

�PI

10

JE

P3

�EVERYBODY

IN

THE

POOL!!! was

the

cry of the day.

A

great time

almost
did a
in

was had by

all

involved, well

Especially those 3 teachers who
late night shit disturbing and filled

all.

little

the

pits.

Great show guys and girls.
to the crew who tried to

Brownie points go
rush the

pits earlier in the

numbered

evening. They out

the guardians of the pit 2 to

1

but

chainsaw
sound effects. After digging out the pits 2nd
year was ready to give the 1st year students
hell, which they did. Next year is your
chance for revenge guys.
didn't

PI.

P2.

stand

a

chance

against

"You're in good hands with ..."
where
is
that
buried

So

treasure???
icnow, but I'm not telling.

P3.

I

P4.

OH

P5.
P6.

SHIT!!!, they call this
Treasure?!?
Now boys, don't try anything
funny!

Say BIG BOY, wha'ch ya doin'
tonight???

11

�Put a Shine on!
^Ht' .KAMA

nAYll

^^^RIOAjrSEPT^^^R^

SAM,

Shinerama, the annual shoe-shining blitz in aid of
was once again dominated at
Fibrosis,
Lakehead University by the Foresters.
Elizabeth DeGroot, a forestry Degree 111 student
and Shinerama Co-ordinator for 1979, reported that
Tech I (way to go Teachers!) had the largest turn-out
of shoe-shiners on September 28.
Once Dorothy Bush put on her clown act (doesn't
she always?) along with Gwen O'Reilly.
Prizes were awarded on a money-coUected-perperson basis. First place was captured with a day-long
effort by Tim Grant and Ugo Feunekes of Degree I.
Together, they collected $292.13. Last year's winner,
Hugh Hughson, Alumni Tech Graduate of 1979 now
in Natural Sciences II 1/2. picked up second place
with a total of $130.18. Third place was awarded to
Shannon Stone and Dave Wadsworth of Degree III.
They shined $204.29 worth of shoes.
Once again, thanks to all participants and
Cystic

organizers for putting a shine on
child's face.

12

some

less

fortunate

�Tug of War
"HEAVE!!!" "Naw, it's only the engineers so
we don't have to." We all know engineers suck
and not only
either!
13,

We

worth a damn
on Friday, October
was true so we had to

that they don't float

tested that saying

1979 and found that

it

cancel our spring cut and river drive of engineers

on

the Mclntyre.
After it was over

we knew that we would have to
them by other means. A hasty attack on
smaller phallic symbol (cannon) failed, but we

eliminate
their

were not discouraged.

On that day, as on most, the foresters had great
enthusiasm. We out-numbered the engineers (who
believe that if equipped with a hand-held calculator
they can be a match for a forester with a chainsaw)
by a mile, and even offered a rematch. Instead, the
black-bottomed box boys stole the rope (along with
everything else in our office). Despite that, we are
still here and wiUing to test the floatability of an
engineer, this year or next. The engineers will never
stand a chance because although the models are
always being redesigned, the foresters adapt at an
incredible rate, without losing strength, vitality, or
spirit.

L.U.

FORESTERS, GO FOR

IT!

RES

RES

13

�Who's on
Septemberr 29,

1979

...

a

First?

date that

will

surely

be

remembered forever. Yes, that cool, damp, dreary
Saturday was highlighted by the annual LUFA Softball
Tournament.
When the smoke cleared and the beer bottles emptied.
The Whoppers emerged as champions despite being pretournament 'unfavourites'. Walter's team from Degree
IV was victorious in the consolation round.
Tech II showed up with a 12-member contingent but
bowed out of the tournament after two early defeats.
The Ginkgos (Degree II) disappointed the crowds with
their lack of victory while the Reefers

(Degree

around - win or lose.
Construction crews have already begun
P. A. Stadium for next year's tourney.
See you at the ball park!

III)

were

the 'happiest' players

to

upgrade
•

iliiiliilllil^glil;^

PI

RA

�15

�The
On
and
1

5

Kam-Am

'79

the frosty Sat. morning of Oct. 14, 46 participants
organizers prepared for the umpteenth annual race.

he 13 mile race started at the junction of Hwy. 130 and
Kam River and finished just down-river of the Great

the

Lakes Paper

mill.

won by Outdoor Rec. 'ers but
had more fun.
mean, why not stop to pick
up 3 soccer balls, one volleyball, a hard hat and a baseball
bat? Those who enjoyed the race obviously didn't come
All three categories were

the foresters

1

first.

Many thanks to Dan Pyke, Mark Finstad,
Beresnevicius and Geoff NichoUs for their help.

Ramune

KAM-AM RESULTS
2:16:00

2.

Alexander, Hamilton
Boycott, Bremner

3.

Hunt, Strzalilowski

2:17:20

4.

2:19:15
2:27:05

6.

Dawe, Mulrooney
McCreath, Solecki
Baker, Dewsberry

7.

Grant, Feunekes

8.

Boivin, McFarlane

9.

Sidders, Slavin

10.

Pawson, Neely

2:31:20

11.

Straiton, Scott

2:31:40

12.

2:32:15

13.

Kuiack, Arnold
Morrice, Russell

14.

Ellis,

1.

5.

15.

Burton
Wiltshire, Thauvette

P2

16

2:17:00

2:29:15

,

2:29:15

2:30:00
2:30:40

,

2:37:45
'

2:38:10

2:39:20

KK

P}

M}

�17

�The Great Race
The race of the century, and it was held right here at
Lakehead! On the bright and sunny Oct. 16 afternoon, 7
racing teams were lined up at the start, ready and waiting.
Count down, and then off!! Across the road and down
the sidewalk. Oooppsss!!! Yes, you were supposed to go
down the ramp, not over the railing; a slight casualty but
the race goes on. Up the stairs, change runners and hurry
to the finish line. It was a close encounter with the transit
bus (acts of God even happen in shopping cart races) so
Degree IV takes the lead and keeps it to the finish.
Racing in The Great Shopping Cart Race were none
other than Big Jim Slade with his harum. Snoopy and
(Yes) the Red Baron, one other Degree II team and one
entry each from Degree I, Tech II, Degree III and Degree
IV. Many thanks to SAFEWAY STORES for supplying
the racing vehicles and to Bill Wiltshire for delivering
them to L.U. and back.
Construction is already underway on a multi-million
dollar track for the 1981
to tune

up your

Summer Games

cart.

RESULTS:
Neely, Pawson,

Ward

McCormack, Essau,

Stevens
Kutz, Feunekes, Grant
Nesbitt, Dillabough, Graham

Day, Anderson, Doyle
Wiltshire, Beresnevicius,

MacPherson

Bush, O'Reilly, Czempinski

so don't forget

��LUFAgate
On October 25, 1979, The LUFAgate affair was blown
wide open as forestry students joined forces to voice
their dissension at the fumble-fingered handling of the
affair by LUSU.
To refresh your memory ... the engineer's cannon was
misplaced
(cheers!
the
Group of Nine) on
to
Thanksgiving weekend. Following that, a forestry
pathology display was removed from the 3rd floor of the
Centennial Building (later recovered, but damaged). A
firecracker bomb was used in a poorly attempted
assassination try. Our path of escape from the CORN
ROAST was blocked by felled trees. Last but not least,
the LUFA office was entered by the Plumber's break
and enter squad. Furniture, trophies, yearbook supplies,
signs etc. were removed and a colourful stain was added

ATTENTION

to the floor.

On Oct. 24, LUFA was informed 2 hours before a
General Meeting that the club was temporarily "unclubbed" due to irreconcilable differences with our
friends next door. To put it mildly, we were pissed right
off, so on October 25 at 11:30 a.m., 70 rowdy foresters
voiced their discontent in a 2 hour sit-down shout-out
protest in front of the LUSU office. To further voice
our displeasure, the local paper and TV stations were
called in to cover our peaceful but noisy demonstration.
Well, the cannon is now back upon the Centennial
Building lawn and our furniture has been recovered, but
the memory lives on (and engineers still suck!).

you

NOTICE

d

mt

your

Be

too
We

b'^D;
'

DiS4pP^^ in

ed

At

With

Bucks

^

Fopf

CANOOHN

•

:

F![

&lt;

FCl

-•iO

e shin^ramr

20

i

�Lom

3ur

i:&gt;as&gt;-

h

d^stupk-dL
,
'

CuHtrs

won

V.V.C

and

Dn our arses one*

saj.

NjOTH

|

K,'

(:

Vihaf happens^

We

la^e

aiwi

Ni£

Du,"

dob pml^es

,

club bud&lt;j,^

cUb opf^g

ARE LuFA And

U-r

^flMT l«JHAr 15
l^fC^ffTi-V

r

OURS/

1

"
4»

RES

P6

THAT PAGE:
PI.
P2.
P3.

and furthermore, Hi

THIS PAGE:

Mom.

P4.

...says

A sign of the times

P5.

"We want

Part of the ransom note

P6.

...

PI.
P8.

it

all

our money
What Cannon?

back.

Come on Dan, kiss her
"Wewant LUFA."

21

�Forestry in
Brazil
Weyerhauser '80

The

Weyerhauser Lecture was
IN BRAZIL".
Dr. Knudson of Perdue University talked about the
sivacultural aspects of FORESTRY IN BRAZIL. While
he lived in Brazil he helped to start two schools of
topic for this year's

"FORESTRY

forestry.

Mr. Spanger talked about and gave an extremely
slide presentation
on harvesting in the

interesting

Amazon

Basin. After hearing his presentation

watch for news of

Many
Ellis,

this

thanks to the organizers of

THIS PAGE:
Walt
Dr.

Ellis

Knudson

THAT PAGE:
PI. A cut over is a cut over
P2.

22

this lecture:

Gord King, Pete DeGroot, Rob

Kosyk, and Leslie Hawkins.

PI.
P2.

Mr. Spanger

we

shall

grand forestry experiment.

is

a

....

Janser,

Walt

Mike

�RES

23

�FUN
Triangle Park

-

the

IN

THE SUN

name awakes

cold shivers in the

hardy foresters who survived. In the middle
ot" downtown Port Arthur, teams of foresters fought
bra\ elv to keep the fire burning to let Thunder Bay know
bodies ot

that

ilic

"WE EXIST!".

After using a box of matches and a litre of 'Boy Scout
Miracle Fire Starter' (27.4C/1) Ian finally got the fire
going on Sunday, January 20, 1980 at 4:00 pm sharp!
(approx.).

All

down
all

week

long, cries of

LUFA

in the

week

"More

....

wood!" were heard

office, but the fire burnt

on (almost

long, eh Degree 111?).

Fortunately, there were only minor (no one fell into the
someone did at initiation and at the corn roast)

fire like

accidents,

i.e.

burnt pants (both sides yet), frost

bite,

a

small fender-bender and burning gas cans.
Let's see
that

we

if

exist.

next year,

we can

really let T.

Bay know

�RES

P8

THAT PAGE:
PI.

Bet

ya can't

start

it

with

only one

matcli!

P2.

"Oh Yah? No sweat"...

P3.

... I'll

show him.

Oh Hell!
THIS PAGE:
P4.
P5.

P6.

Your pants are on fire.
Boy do I feel dumb standing out here
freezing

P7.
P8.

Next time for sure!

my buns

This is the life.
Ignore him and
our picture.

off.

maybe he won't

take

25

�Forest Biomass
That was the topic of the 12th annual LUFA Symposium.
Dr. Harold Young opened the Symposium with a history
of the development of Forestry and the study of Biomass.
The talk was highlighted with a slide show.
On Saturday morning. Bill Raitanen talked about the
work he is doing with hybrid poplar in Southern Ont. and
on the silvacultural aspects of Forest Biomass. He showed
some really amazing slides, for example, a 9 year-old poplar
the

same

size as a

27 year-old Red Pine.

Dennis Bradley talked about his studies on Complete Tree
Harvesting, the use of the whole tree including the branches
and roots. He also discussed some inventory problems he
has run across, for example, the inadequacy of current
inventory methods and the lack of data concerning the
crowns and roots of trees.
Bob Haig talked about the possibility of using wood for
energy in the near future.
After Supper, Professor Hearnden gave a "sermon" on
Forestry in Biblical times. (What is the second oldest
profession

...?)

Then came

the drinking, socializing, drinking, dancing,

more dancing, and just a little
drinking just for the hell of it.
Many thanks to those who attended and to the speakers.
Now lets see a few more of you out next year, you might
even see some of your friends dressed in something other
than jeans and t-shirts.
drinking, talking, drinking

RES

�27

�Chez Montreal!
This year's Woodsman's team had a great time in
Montreal, as usual. From Thunder Bay to Montreal (27
hours as guests of VIA Rail); from the crazy humour
of James and company, to the annoying game of
basketball at 3:00 a.m. (eh Joan?); from Montreal back
to T. Bay - it will be remembered by those involved for
a long time.
Tom Obright took on the job of Manager (thanks
Tom) and had to look after:

Men's Team
Mark .Anderson
Hugh Hughson

Women's Team
Gaby Feulgen
Shannon Stone

Mike Millard

Joan Keene
Dianne Renaud

Ed Morrice
Mark Stevens
James K. Sweet
Bill

Guylaine Thauvette
Vivienne Ball
Ingrid Russell

Wiltshire

Despite the very cold weather, enthusiasm was high.
1st place honours were elusive for both teams,
Guylaine placed 2nd in the snowshoe race for the second
consecutive year, Vivienne Ball claimed 3rd place in the

Although

chainsaw event. Ed Morrice came 4th in the dot split.
Both Lakehead teams slipped in the overall standings
from the previous year, but already there have been
murmurings of "Watch out next Year!"

PHOTOS BY:

Mike "Disco"

Millard.

��LUFA
P

1

.

P2.

Exec

Lyn Pawson - President
Mark Stevens Sports Co-ordinator
Dan Pyke Vice-President
-

P3.
P4. 'Gaby' Feulgen

P5. Ian

-

McCormack

Secretary-Treasurer
-

Public Relations

�LUFA
LUFA

Well,

was anything but dead

sit-in after losing

club

spirit, if

our budget

nothing

In between pranks,

canoe race went

well,

when someone, (Group of

who

It

was good for

we had

a softball tourney, fairly well attended in spite of the poor weather.

The Kam-am

even with an extra loop in the
trees.

community, we held a Salvation
to Safeway!

Nine,

are you?!?), stole the cannon.

river,

and the Corn Roast that followed was a

Shinerama was again dominated by

Army

Christmas Drive. Something

foresters,

else

it

was back

and

new was our

Weyerhouser went smoothly, with a good turnout and

After the Christmas hoUdays,
with a Ski Night,

After raising shit in the pits at initiation, we raised the same at a

else.

way home was paved with

many thanks

this year!

Review

to the old grind, helped along

to further our

first

though our

riot,

good

will in the

annual shopping cart race,

interesting speakers.

by a tubing party, the Winter Carnival

Woodsmen's Competition, and Bushman's Brawl, then Symposium,

the Montreal

Woodmen's

Competition, a hockey tourney and Triangle Park Campout.

Course evaluations were handed out, leather jackets were sold (whether they
for

new

ideas

LUFA

is

those people

We

-

some of which were a

continuing to grow.

who donated

It

their time

car rally

fit

or not), and

we looked

continually

and a dance-a-thon.

looks like there's a

lot

of potential. In conclusion, we would like to thank

and helped make the club a

can only encourage everyone in forestry to

success, even with

GET INVOLVED. Come down

all

some executive turnover.

to the

LUFA

office

and

help your club.

Lynn Pawson,

LUFA

President

visit,

and

�Competition Unlimited

32

����B. Sc. F.

GRADUATES

1980

MGM

Management D.S: Rick Szyda, Walt Ellis, Peter Newton, Bruce Bucchannan, Terry
Quennel, Pat Bourroughs, Roger Barber, Lynne Germaine, Peter Higgelke, Bruce Pagan. F: Prof. Blair.
Industrial Production

Management D.S:

Ray Boivin,

David

Beckwermert,

MGM
Martin

Czarski, Peter Rooney, Richard Greet, Anthony Ritchie, Prof.
Benson, FR: Paul Scott, Shirley Scott.

36

MGM

Kim

Roberts, Glenn Peterson.

�Paul Chapman, Sheilee Lister, John
Enright, Geoff Cushon, Hal MacLean, Prof. Barker,
MacDonell.
Robert
Janser,
Hartley
Malcolm
FR:
Multamaki. Absent: Prof. Day.
Silviculture

D.S:

Mensuration D.S: Donna Burton, Walt

Ellis,

Cindy

Fairlie,

Brian Meredith, Prof. Richardson, Peter Newton.

Geoff Cushon.

Photogrammetry

D.S:

BR:

Prof.

Birston,

Prof. Westbroek. FR: Derek Tirschman,

Ken

Day, George Bruemmer, Russ Hendry, Mike
Schlereth.

Soils

Tom

MGM
D.R: Chris Kelland, Steve Lindsay, David Wheatley,
MacLean, Al Johnson. Absent: Doc Zingel.

MOM

Management D.S: BR: Dan Marinigh, David
McFarlane,

Jim Sutherland,

Roger

Clarke. FR: Lynn Pawson,
Denise. Absent: Steve Bull.
Prof.

Barber,

Elizabeth

37

�Forest Technology

Graduates
BR: Dave Miyers, Vince Keenan, Paul McWilliams, Andy Hodgins, Dale Mychalysnyn, Bruce
Nann, Rhonda Anderson. NR: Sandy MacKay, Doug Schindler, Randy Oleksiw, Sharon Cahill,
Jack Gulka, Tom Vlasic, Chris Gibson, Bob Gardam. NR: Liz Bolha, Shelley Hescia, Denise
Rasmussen, Patrice Baxter, Karen Waters, Yolanda Nycz. FR: Mr. X, Stephen Moss, James Sweet,
Mark Anderson, Phillip Dogle, Steve Nauss, Al Foley. Absent: Carolyn Day.

38

�BR: Scott Gallape, Doug Orr, Paul Chisholm, Jonathan Klinck, Ted Slavin, Doug Edmund. NR:
Chris Harmer, Juhe Nightingale, Dave New, Roy Sidders, Dave Berry, Paul Dennis. NR: Shelley
Kalik, Vivian Heinsalu, Leroy Thomas, Fred Hampton, Bogdam Staruch, Nat Goudreau, David
Carlson. NR: Robert Wallis, James Eccles, Ed. Abels. FR: Steven Lem, Cliff Bluechardt, Brenda
Ashley, Leslie Holm, Earle Brown, Robert Beggs.

39

�Time Out
I

HIS PAGE:

PI.

Isn'i that disgusting.

p;

1

only wanted a drink, not a bath!

P3

1

didn't

P4
P5
P6

know he's in there.
Look Ma! NO HANDS!!
Boy was that some party.

do

that, did I??

1

I

couldn't

even see straight.

THAT PAGE:
PI.

Sure beats living

P2.

Take THAT!!

in Res.

P3.

Kiss my...

P4.
P5.
P6.

A true basket case.
Now

where are we!?!

Aww, you

didn't really take that picture

P2

40

��Degree

Three
PI. BR: Rick Lavoy, Christophe Voisin,

Andy

Grey,

Christilaw.

Tim

FR:

Laidler,

Scott

Dave Wadsworth,

Kevin Sherloclc.
P2. BR:

Olesia
Iwanusiw, Alf Van
Dyke, Ed Mortice, Joan Wild, Dave
Pickston.
FR: Darey Ortiz, Al
Thompson, Judy Czempinski.

P3. BR:

Diane Renaud, King Wright,
Bruce Middleton,
Cathy Carpenter. FR: Elizabeth

Don Richmond,

Eckert,

Gwen

Nanni,
Keith
Manders.
P4. BR:

O'Reilly,

Winn,

Chris

Margaret

Valdis Grasis, Martin Watts,
Mitch Kennedy. FR: Steve Duffus,
Darey Ortiz.

�PI.

BR:

George

Christophe

Corcoran,

Lino
Paul Kennedy,
Rick Norkooli. FR: Ingo
Menzel, Fred Paty, Bernice
Stockermans, Bob Sutton.
Voisin,

Morandin,

P2. BR: Elizabeth DeGroot, Pete

DeGroot, Shannon Stone,
Mike Kosyk, Gorden King.
FR: Mike Millard, Holly
Schofield, Diane Williams,
Fiona Simmonds.
P3. BR:

Steve
Dominy, Joe
Kapron, Ron Letham, Dave
Caruth. FR: Pete de Haan,

Ken Van

Rees,

Bill Scott.

43

�Degree

Two

Mike Umpherson, Chris Schaefer, Dave Donevan, Paul Straitton. MR: P.J. Lamarche, John
Graham. Sherry Lynn Boycott, Jeff Stone, Wayne Isaac, Bev Shaw, Ulf Runesson, Kevin Williams. FR: Luc
I efcbore. Chris Flaherty, Caroline Evens, Ian McCormack, Mike Dempsey.

PI. BR: Ralph Spaans,

Mark Stevens, Eric Boysen, Mike Lipa, Kim Asmussin, John Schueller. MR: Mike O'Neil,
Ron MacDonald, Guylaine Thauvette, Mike Nesbitt, Barb MacPherson, Ramune Beresnevicius, Jim MouUon,
Norma Griffin, Claude Arial, Ingrid Russell, Riet Verheggin, Mark Finstad, Inga Stadus. FR: Dan Duguay, Phil
Graham, Faye Verheggen, Gabriel Feulgen, Bill Wiltshire, Doug Witt, Karl Dyer, Carol Graham.

P2. BR: Paul Krabbe,

44

�PI. BR: Geoff Nichols, Nolan Shortt, Gord Johnson. MR: Janet McCreath, Pulie Essau, Susan McBrien, Cathie Sugg,
Jon Wynn, Peter Roy, Dan Pyke. FR: Dirk Kloss, Randy Collier, Gord Johnson. Hiding: Dave Nicholas, Ed

Paleczny,

P2.

Rohn Solecki.

Close your eyes and pucker up!

45

�BAC K ROW

:

I'aul Kidiiinao, Jcaii

Meloche, Jim Duchene, Dennis Rossit, Paul

Phillips, Bernie Last, Chris

Kitzman,

Mark Hoptgannor, Doug Thoioski, Frank Schnekenburger, Richard Lipman, David Thurston. MIDDLE ROW: John
Connor, Rick Lambert, Gail Retallack, Holly Slusar, Lynn Palmer, Doug Mount, Hubert Stami, Barb D'Silva. FRONT
ROW; Raimo Alahaivala, Jeft McKnight.

RES

RES

BACK ROW: Tom Cunningham, Ugo Feunekes, Fred Dewsberry, Charlie Todesco, Dave Morris, Andrew Cox, Richard
McDonald. MIDDLE ROW: Dave Tarjan, Tim Grant, Karen Stewart, Gord Greasley, Douglas Tennant,
Joan Keene, Steve Hyett, Micheal Stoehr. FRONT ROW: Frank Lauzon, John Hill.
Krygier, Brian

46

�Degree

I

BACK ROW: Steve Skinner, Robert Edmonds, John Bagacki, Rick Leary, Reg Ozburn, Ron Reinholt, Dave Wark,
Barb Lomnicki, Gary Forbes. MIDDLE ROW: Linda Geerinck, Leslie Hawkins. FRONT ROW: Mark Wiercinski, Ed
Swayze, Glen Terry, Dwayne Shultz, Doug Baker, Leslie Eck, Pauline Grigjanis, Christine Halenda.

RES

BACK ROW: Janet Sliz, Carla Ingleton, Arnie Aiking, Henry Freigter, Paul Kutz, John Andres, Wayne Bell. FRONT
ROW: Guy Pritchard, Vivienne Ball, Mike Rose, Lisa Mamonko, Ted Cruttenden, Scott Ronson. MISSING: Gerrard
Van Der

Berg.

47

�Tech
TOP ROW: Rob
Lars Madden.
Val Newman.

I

Lavoie, Frank Roberts, Rick Alguire, Frank Muschalla, Cory Clouiwand, Roy Belluz, Bob Demers,
Rory Hart, Mike Yakomovich, Tom Weltin, Ralph Kermer, Pete Wood, Paul Dunn,

BOTTOM ROW:

RES

TOP ROW:

Pat Hanlow, Pat Lagerlof, Greg Holms, Al Wilson, John Flemming, Howard Haslam, Bill Kosticle, Craig
(Moonshine) Nagazina, Dave Hails, Kevin Marsten. BOTTOM ROW: John Faurschow, Diana Boeger, Andree
Fournier, Karen Ross, Rosanna Rossette, Paul Kuster, Wayne Wilson, Dave (Pokie) Polakoff.

48

�TOP ROW: John Leask, Brion Wylie, Ron Vanderstar, Knut Kerzog, Kevin Barry, Graham Sayer, Steve Peterson.
MIDDLE ROW: Tasia Zaritshy, Heather Kaufman, Nancy Houlden, Don Vaillancourt, Leshe Bancroft. FRONT
ROW: Tim Rooney, Pete Kuntz, Willie Trowell, Paul Charrette, Louise Reilly, Dan (Blueberry) Haines.

RES

BACK ROW: Kevin Barry, Richard (?), Martin Focken, Frank Schaller, Chris Greenslade, Guy Descnens, Mike Daniels,
Greg Churchill, Pat Roche, Mary-Ellen Anderson, Robert Argue, Mike Tinney, Guilio Frasson, Jim Youngblut.
FRONT ROW: Tim (?), Dave Rouleau, Greg Clarke, Jill Dowgray, Kathy Tschumi, Sue Snyder, Glenda Livingston, Ian
Searle. MISSING, (in action): Marilyn Kromberg, Ingrid Hoffstatter, Bill Goodwin, Barb Hendenhaf, Bev Oltsher, Ed
Patchell, Dale Wallace, John Connor.

49

���52

��Director's Message
Although the uncertain national economic scene and employment trends may not be seen to be cause for optimism
amongst forestry students, currently, a longer view suggests that there is reason to anticipate truly challenging opportunities and careers in Canadian forestry in the near future. Within the past several years, a widening public and
political recognition of the need for the implementation of the principles and practices of sustained yield forest
management has become apparent. In mid 1979, for example, a report "Forestry Imperatives for Canada", was
prepared for the Canadian Council of Resource and Environment Ministers. The following statement appears in that
report:

"Canada has allowed much of its most productive forest land to revert to a non-productive state. Firm action must
be taken to correct this in order to stop the current decline of the forestry industry in many regions of Canada. And
also to provide the opportunity for industrial expansion in the future. The opportunities of future job creation and
industrial development occur in all regions of Canada and are limited only by the degree of emphasis we place on
forest renewal and improvement today."
A recognition of the need for the kind of "firm action" referred to above, by one large, forest products company
is indicated in a recent article in the Globe and Mail. The article reports the concern of the President of the MacMillan Bloedel Company that, " ... British Columbia itself is running out of harvestable trees and even MacMillan
Bloedel with the largest timber allocation on the Coast, is "bumping against the ceiling of being able to supply our
B.C. operations". The Directors of the Company will be considering this month a "multimillion dollar increase in
spending on planting, fertilizing, thinning and improved data keeping." Similar measures are being planned or
implemented by other major forest products companies, especially in Western Canada, and there are indications that
the major companies in Eastern Canada, especially in Ontario, will be accepting increasing responsibility for the
more efficient harvesting and renewal of the forest.
Finally, we have reason to hope that, after more than a century and a half of forest exploitation and destruction,
we shall see the advancement of sustained yield forest management in Canada. Finally, we have reason to anticipate
that the principles and techniques of forestry, as taught in forestry schools across the country, will be carried into
practice.

In behalf of the faculty members and staff of the School of Forestry I extend our sincere good wishes to
students for satisfying and challenging careers in forest resources management in Canada.

all

of our

K.W. Hearnden, R.P.F.,
Director.

�M6M

PI. Prof. K. Hearnden
Forest Resources

Management, Forest

History.

P2. Prof.

J.

Blair

Harvesting, Transportation, Industrial

Production.

P3. Prof. R.
Ecology,

Day

Silvics.

P4. Prof. S. Navratil
Pathology

P5. Prof.

W. Eames

Calculus

P6. Prof. S. Walker
Chemistry

P7. Assoc. Prof.

J.

Barker

Ecology, Silvics

\

KH

55

�56

��58

�PI. Assist. Prof. H. Rassid, Climatology
P2. Assist. Prof. D. Richardson
Mensuration, Tree Growth and Yield
Assist. Prof. R. Shegelski, Geology
P3. Assist. Prof. K.C. Yang

Wood

Technology

P4. Lecturer B. Phillion
Mensuration, Management
Lecturer J. Richardson
Technical Writing

Sessional Lecturer T. Hill
Sessional Lecturer G. Holt

Sessional Lecturer

J.

McNicol

Environmental Impacts

Sessional Lecturer R.

York

Principles of Business

P5. Sessional Lecturer N. Phillips

��61

��WAJAX
Extends Sincere
Congratulations
to

all

1980 Graduating Students
of

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY
FORESTRY DEPARTMENT

WAJAX INDUSTRIES

Over 75 years

in

LIMITED

the field of Fire Control

�PATRONS
American Can of Canada Limited
Marathon, Ontario
Black Clawson-Kennedy Limited

Paper

Mill

Machinery and Industrial Equipment
Montreal,

Quebec

Castagne's Rocks and Minerals
122 N. May Street

Thunder Bay, Ontario
Collins

Shoes Limited

906 Memorial Avenue

Thunder Bay, Ontario P7B 3Z9
Industrial Forestry Service Limited

No. 101-1595 Fifth Avenue
Prince George, British Columbia V2L 3L9

Lakehead University Bookstore
all foresters in future endeavours"

"Best of luck to

Lome's Cameras and Fishing Tackle Limited
20 S. Court Street

Thunder Bay, Ontario P7B 2W3
Ontario Forestry Association
150 Consumer's Road
Willowdale, Ontario M2J 1P9

Reed Limited
Dryden, Ontario
Tony's TV and Stereo
32 S. Cumberland Street
Thunder Bay, Ontario P7B 2T5

"All

Woodlot Service Limited
Matters Pertaining to Forestry"

320 Maple Street, Fredericton,

New Brunswick

�FACULTY OF UNIVERSITY SCHOOLS
Schools

of

•

Business Administration

•

Engineering

•

Forestry

•

Library Technology

•

Nursing

•

Physical Education

and Outdoor Recreation

FIRESTONE

CANADA LTD.

THE
GRIFFITH MINE

80 S. Court Street
Tliunder Bay, Ontario

Red Lake, Ontario

Owner
The Steel Company of Canada

Managing Agent
Picklands Matlier and

Company

THE CREST? TURN LEFT AND THEN

65

�Best Wishes from

Timberjack MACHINES

SALES
SERVICE

PARTS
Timberjack Skidders

Hydraulic Loaders

Log Loaders

Grapple Skidders

8 and 16 foot Forwarders Harvesters

EATON
YALE LIMITED
FORESTRY AND CONSTRUCTION DIVISION
675 Beaverhall Place, P.O. Box 1 060, Thunder Bay, Ontario
Telex 073-4531
Phone (807) 577-1 111

LEN BELAND -

TERRY SMITH

JOHN KOHLER

Regional Manager

Service Manager

Branch Manager

LORNE MacDONALD
Sales Representative

VERN JOHNSON
Kenofa
(807)

LARRY
Parts

WOOD

Manager

Swan River
547-2900

-

EATON YALE LIMITED
FORESTRY EQUIPMENT DIVISION

66

I

�T

Compliments

of

KIMBERLY-CLARK

BURGER

OF

CANADA

LIMITED

o

HOME OF THE
WHOPPER

PULP AND FOREST PRODUCTS
Arthur and Edward Sts.

Long lac -Terrace Bay
Ontario

GREAT WES

Radio /haek
INTER-CITY PLAZA
Phone: 345-2042

L

/

\

/&lt;&gt;£^^^

M TED

1

1

Phone: 344-8464 Telex 073-4575

(fFfr^fjf\l .'M||jp.O.

Box 3170, Thunder Bay, Ontario

�Best Wishes

in

Your Future Endeavours

FARRANTANd CORdONlTd

WEAR

MENS

CLOTHIERS

N

offers suits of

first

quality by

WARREN K COOK
SAMUELSOHN

E

W

SNIFFER HILLMAN
MICKEY ALLEN

A
Y

tfie
IS

G

to

secret of a

made

be measured &amp;

to

fitted

thie tailor of

measure

O
14 S. Cumberland St.
Thunder Bay, Ontario
Canada P7B 2T2
Phone 344-7240

TIMBER COMPANY LIMITED
Hearst, Ontario

14

suit

by Gabriel Arrione

distinction

COURT STREET
345-5641

S,

�Please keep the changes
Tn TfT^^
"

have to change your "style" a
once you've graduated. That's par for the course.
But keep the changes on the surface.
The world you're entering needs your idealism, your
enthusiasm, your concern and commitment as much as
it needs your education, mm
_ __
_
Sure, you're going to

* *•

little

Goodiud.

_ _
^»
/Ibitibi-Price
^ THUNDER BAY
69

�Earn some high credits
this

semester

with...

COMMERCE
STUDENT
Great Lakes
Forest Products

SERVICES

"Available at the Canadian Imperial

Bank of Commerce on or near most
and university campuses

college

throughout Canada."

CANADIAN IMPERIAL

BANK OF COMMERCE

MANUFACTURERS OF
GREAT LAKES FOREST PRODUCTS
OFFERS YOU CHALLENGING

NEWSPRINT PAPER
BLEACHED KRAFT PULP
STUD LUMBER
WAFERPLY

OPPORTUNITIES

PARTICLEPLY

A CAREER WITH

BEAVER FOODS

�DOMTAR
FOREST PRODUCTS
Red Rock, Ontario

The

forestry profession is currently faced with the
challenge of developing and implementing an intensive
forest management program that will increase the
viability of the forest industry and at the same time
protect and enhance the environment. Your contribution to this difficult but exciting task can be
maximized by joining the Ontario Professional Foresters
Association. Information on the Association and its
membership requirements can be obtained from the
following address.

Ontario Professional
Foresters Association
10, 271 Yonge Street
Suite 303
Richmond Hill, Ontario

L4C 3B5
Telephone

(416)

884-7845

�YOUR
UNIVERSITY
Serving

Northwestern
Ontario
since 1965
.

.

.

Offers comprehensive programs in Arts,
Business, Education, Engineering, Forestry,

Library Technology, Nursing, Outdoor
Recreation, Physical Education, Science.

Provides instruction on-campus and off,
part-time and full-time, fall, winter and

summer.

Has

athletic

and recreational

including an Olympic

facilities

swimming

pool, squash

courts, gymnasia, tennis courts,

comprehensive varsity and intramural sports
programs.

Has an

program
development and for special

active continuing education

for professional

groups.

Keep

in

touch with us through the

Department of Alumni
Lakehead University,
Thunder Bay, Ontario.

Lakehead OS University!
72

Affairs,

�"

quality and

servne

wego BerMleadows
GBv£RALCATAl£)G/13th EDfTON

bytlfe

book!

1

Over 5,000 tools

(or the professional to help
make your job easier, faster, and more efficient
A reliable source for over 20 years, we stand

behind everything we sell For selection, quality
at a (air price, and fast service anywhere on the
continent, you can count on Ben Meadows for
courteous, professional service It you don
have our 13th edition catalog, order one on your
letterhead today for the best buys in forestry,
engineering and educational supplies
t

The Ontario Paper Company Limited

Call toll (ree
In

800/241-6401

Georgia, Hawaii, and Alaska

call collect

404/455-0907
eouiPMENi 'MPPuen AND CONSUL tanj ropROfESSiONALS Throughout the world

^^^^^^

BenAleadows Company
3589 Broad Street Atlanta IChamblee] Georgio 30366
Teleptxjne 404, 455-0907 Cable Address Benco

We'll see
At

Vulcan

eqiiipnicnl
loresliA
\oLii

wc\i.-

been

enough

loni'

people,

new

you on the

C

servicing'

and

job.

selling

lorestiy

need lor well-li'anicci
ongialulalions graduates and good luek ui
lo

see

the

eaieei.

VULCAN
MACMfrJEHY &amp; ECaUIPMErdT LTD
915 Memorial Avenue
Thunder Bay. Ontario

Ph (807) 345-5495

Tlx.

073-4509

73

�BUCHAIMAIM BROTHERS ONTARIO LTO.

To Our
Future Businessmen

233

S.

Court

Thunder Bay, Ont.

JEWELLERS

We Extend Our
Congratulations
to the
Class of 1980

LTD

GREEN ACRES PLAZA
PHONE S77-662S;
THUNDER

YIUIERS
MiN'S WEAR

BAY, ONT.

ALSO
CLOTHING
FOR THE
BIG

17 S. Cumberland

Thunder Bay
Ontario

AND TALL MAN

Tel. 344-1321

LIMITED

Phone 613-756-2010

MURRAY BROS. LUMBER
Limit

CO.

LIMITED

PLANING MILL FACILITIES
Owners and Manufacturers of Hardwoods and Softwoods
Lumber, Pulpwood and other Forest Products
HEAD OFFICE: BARRY'S BAY, ONT., CAN. KOJ 1B0
SAW MILLS AT MADAWASKA AND BARRY'S BAY

ONTARIO CANADA

74

(1969)

�CROWD AT THE CREST
EXCELLENT FOOD AND VARIETY

JOIN THE REST OF THE
IN

OUR DINING ROOM

CREST HOTEL
Red River
"Best Wishes to

All

at

Junot

Graduating Foresters"

�Compliments

of

THE CORPORATION
OF THE CITY OF
THUNDER BAY
Mayor J.E. Miller
Aldermen

Boshcoff
Larson
W.S. Lysnes
R. Murray
J. Packota
K.

K. Tilson

R.

J.D. Polhlll

L.

J.

Vander Wees
Wllloughby

D.

Chief Administrative Officer
D. Picherack
City Clerk
D.B. Morris

SAFETY SHOES AND BOOTS
PROTECTIVE RAINWEAR

RUBBER BOOTS
LEGGINGS AND SPATS
SAFETY PANTS

266 Bay Street
Thunder Bay, Ont.
P7B 1R5
Phone (807) 345-2441

TImko

S.L. Trotter
R. Ubriaco

�kbm
360

Mooney

St

Thunder Bay, Ontario
Telephone

Forestry Consultants Inc.
P7B 5R4

(807) 344-0811

"Trees are renewable only

Telex

if

073-4603

we renew them!"

Best Wishes 1980 Graduates

CABLING
Best Wishes from

We Would
INCORPORATED

2""

MAY

1670

Like to Take This
Opportunity to Wish
Lufa Students
Best of Luck
Now and in the Future

YOUR CANADIANA SHOP
Raw

Fur Division

413 Victoria Avenue East
Tliunder Bay, Ontario

77

�The Challenge of Forest Management
Unlike most of Canada's natural wealth,
the great forests of Ontario are a renewable resource
one that can be grown
and nurtured and harvested or left
untouched for our present enjoyment
and future legacy.

—

and preserving the beauty
and abundance of our natural woodlands, that we most sincerely extend our
thanks and the future thanks of generations yet to come.
of renewing

By providing seminars and field demonstrations on proper forest practices, the
Ministry of Natural Resources is proudly
participating in the education of tomorrow's foresters and technicians.

Ministry of

Hon.

James

Natural
Dr. J. K.

It

is

to this group of dedicated

people,

Resources

young

who have accepted the challenge,

Reynolds

Deputy Minister

Ontario

"THE JACK PINE" Tom Thomson (Oil on canvas —1917) The

78

A. C. Auld

Minister

National Gallery of

Canada

— Ottawa.

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79

�Parting
Well,

it's

that time again.

Another deadline to be

met, the FINAL one. That means that
writing this message any longer.

I

can't put off

looked at some old yearbooks
that covered 18 years and spanned the country from
Nova Scotia to B.C., to see what other editors have
said. Funny, but four of those books didn't have an
editor or a staff, they just sort of happened. Fortunately we didn't have that problem this year. I had
more people offering to help than I knew what to do
with. Especially in the photography department. That
was fantastic because photos are what the book is
made of. In this way we got a better cross-section of
the faculty represented in the book. To those of you
whose pictures weren't used THANK YOU for submitting them anyway. Please keep on submitting them
because without your extra help the book would lack
depth, which would be the beginning of the end of the
book.
When it came to doing the layouts there also never
was any shortages of help. Usually I had more people
offering to do work than I had the room or equipment
to keep them busy, so they took turns. Chris and Wiet
did most of the layout for the first deadline in the first
lounge of E-House while I was busy in the darkroom
trying to keep them supplied with photos. On the way
to meeting our third deadline Mark and Guy worked
on layouts in the LUFA office until almost 3 AM, on a

Out of

curiosity,

I

school day. Randy was in constantly pestering me for
pages to lay out. And then there was the time 5 of us
worked on one layout for one and one-half hours
trying to get it done and in the mail on time. These are
just a few of the events that went into the creation of
this

A

book.

to go to Mark Stevens.
one who saw to it that everyone got his
copy of last years book, he masterminded the advertising sales campaign and managed to bring in
enough money to keep the book in the black. He also
organized the sales of this years books and says that he
will do the distribution of the books when they arrive
special

He was

the

word of thanks has

this spring. All

work and

his

of

Words

was on top of his regular class
Exec, position. It was because of

this

LUFA

I was able to concentrate
on the photography and layout of the book.
This year we tried a few new ideas in the book.
Hopefully they will add to your enjoyment of the
book, now and in years to come. If there is something
about the way the book was laid out that you didn't
like, or that you Did like, please tell us. The yearbook

his extra-ordinary efforts that

staff, especially the editor

come

in

and

tell

US

cannot read your minds, so

instead of bitching to your friends

about how stupid the yearbook is. Until YOU tell US
what you want, the book will consist of what the editor
wants to see, which is not necessarily what you want.
Remember, the HARVEST is YOURbook, and what
you want is important.

Buy a

HARVEST

'81

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•

���UNIV
LE
3

AtSS

��EDITORIAL
What is 'forestry ? I know, it's something about "... an art and science ... using available technology ... to
produce ... benefit of man.", and I won t argue the definition, but perhaps there's more. Forestry is more
than an industry, a science, or even a profession. Forestry is a lot of things to a lot of people, and in that
train of thought may I introduce the theme this year of "Forestry is
and to usher us through the book is
our friend from the cover (or was it the Wayland) Lu Forester.
Lu Forester however, like the rest of this book, is a creation, and I would like to take a moment to
acknowledge the people who helped create "Harvest 79".
Sheri Walsh was this years ad manager, coordinating all advertising activities, writing numerous letters,
making phone calls, sending out invoices, as well as taking pictures and selling books. Helping Sheri with
advertising around town were Bev Shaw and Mark Stevens who went door to door through Thunder Bay's
business sections.

On the production end of the book, Rohn Solecki put in countless hours taking and developing pictures,
coordinating and doing lay-out, and 'kicking my ass' to get things done. Rohn knows all aspects of yearbook
production and will undoubtedly make next years book the best yet. Also helping with the production of the
book were Ed Paleczny doing a lot of photography, Randy Collier working on lay-out and again Mark
Stevens working his butt off on lay-out, ideas, and sales. I would also like to thank Ramune Beresnevicius for
"Lu Forester". There were many other people who helped on the book
and I thank them although space does not permit their mention on this page.
I would also like to thank our sponsors for their advertising, since a yearbook is too expensive to be made
solely on sales. I hope you enjoy our book.
To the people who bought 'this years model', I hope you find it satisfactory. To those who didn't buy a
yearbook, I hope you will indulge in one next year. Remember, we put the book out for you!
To this years graduates I extend the best wishes for the future from the whole yearbook staff, and to those
still working towards a degree or diploma, I offer my condolences.
Once again I would like to thank everyone involved with this book, it really looks good.
the creation of our surreal cariature,
to varying degrees,

Remember, "Forestry

is ...

our business!"

Paul Adkin,
Editor.

2

�YEARBOOK STAFF

...

and then

the editor

there's the

who

staff's pictures,

one about

forgot to get his

only

it's

not funny!

Missed but not forgotten are:
Rohn Solecki, photography.
Ed Paleczny, photography.
Sheri Walsh,

Ad Manager

Randy

Collier, layout.

Bev Shaw, advertising.
Helen Sallans, photography.

Mike

Millard, dancing (disco?).

and
Paul Adkin, editor.

Thanks

also to Al Banner, Al Brailsford, Scott Forrest, Steve
Knowles, Shannon Stone, Jordy Tanz, Karen Wilkens, and
everyone else who contributed photos.

Mark

Stevens, ads and layout

LEFT: Ramune
"Lu

Forester's

Beresnevicius, graphics.

mum".

�L.U.F.A.
LUFA

activities started with 'shit hitting the fan' the

initiated, but a

week

later there

REVIEW

second day of

was sweet revenge on the

first

field school.

You guessed

it,

degree II was

years!

The academic year was

highlighted by our various activities beginning with a forestry dominated Shinerama,
canoe race, the corn roast (with real corn), the Softball tournament, the Weyerhaeuser
Lecture Series, the tubing party (with non-alcoholic cider), Ski Nite, Symposium (a tremendous turnout (sic) ), the
Woodsmans Competition (LU 1 calling passionate lady), the Hockey Tournament, and finally awards night.
Due to the changing nature and expectations of students, we conducted a LUFA evaluation. The result was the
initiation of a careers night and the tubing party.
The course evaluations have been completed, and are in the LUFA office for all to see.
In conclusion, I wish to thank all the people who have worked hard to make this year a success, and encourage
everyone else to come out and see what goes on. Try it, you may just like it!
I hope to see everyone next year.

followed by the

Kam-am

James McPherson,
President.

�LUFA EXEC
ABOVE:
LEFT:

Fiona Donald, Secretary.
Terry 'Scuzzy' Quennell, sports coordinator.

LOWER

LEFT: Mike

BELOW: Graham

'Disco' Millard, public relations.

Boundy, Vice-President

'giving

head to?'

James McPherson, President.

5

�DIRECTOR
Although forestry students and those

who

S

MESSAGE

are graduating with forest technology diplomas or degrees in forestry

may view

the forest scene as

employment aspect, the prospects for challenging careers in forestry should improve significantly and
progressive!) in the years ahead. There is now, in Canada and beyond, a much wider public and political recognition of the need for greatly intensified efforts in the rehabilitation and planned management of our forest resources than was apparent a few years ago.
In October,
&gt;78, the 8th W orld Forestry World Congress was held in Jakarta, Indonesia. Participants from 104 countries and 14 international
organizations received and discussed papers and reports on a wide range of forestry subjects and issues, and at the conclusion of the Congress
rather unimpressive, especially from an

(

l

recorded the following declarations:

"The Congress, with a grave sense of urgency, stressed
immediately

forests will

The Congress noted

be unable to

that the world

make

to all

Governments

the future contribution to

human

population

is

that time

is

running out and that unless effective measures are taken

mankind of which they could be

capable.

"

increased by 70 million people, annually, and recorded that:

"If present trends continue and potential demands materialize, there is a prospect of a serious gap between the worlds needs for industrial and
other wood products and the capacity of the world's forests to supply these and other essential goods and services. This gap can only be avoided if
the shrinkage of the forest areas is halted, if natural forests are properly managed, if harvesting is more complete and more efficient, if there is
subsequent full and prudent use of all products harvested, and if large areas of successful plantations are created and intensively managed.

The Congress
Early

called on all foresters to reaffirm their total

in 1979, the

"Canada

is

commitment

Honourable Len Marchand, Federal Minister

to resource conservation, resource reneival

of the

Environment, stated

and resource expansion."

that:

facing a shortage of wood. Roughly 12% of Canada's productive forest land is inadequately stocked ivith trees and about half a million
added to this backlog annually. Moreover, the second growth stands, following logging or fire, are often poorer in quality than the

acres are being

stands they replace. Annual losses to

The

fire, to insects

and

disease equal half the commercial harvest in volume.

"

gap" was formally recognized and discussed during conferences convened by the Ontario Ministry of
1978 and again in 1979. The problem of insuring the establishment and management of high quality second forests on
cut-over and burned areas in Ontario has been a concern of the forestry profession for a number of years. That this problem has finally engaged
the attention of our provincial politicians, and that it has been accorded an improved priority rating in public spending plans are encouraging.
Within the past few months, the federal government has committed itself to the expenditure of about a half billion dollars for the modernization
of pulp and paper mills and for the rehabilitation, development, and management of public forests in a number of provinces. Ontario, Quebec,
New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia will participate, and contribute provincial funds, for the advancement of these programs. Beyond these encouraging, immediate stimuli for forestry in Canada, we can anticipate that as energy costs continue to rise there will be beneficial results for
forestry. The substitution of wood for metals in construction of all kinds, the increased use of wood itself for energy generation, and the prospects
of increased utilization of all species and of all parts of trees can be anticipated.
In sum, I believe that we shall see abundant opportunities for challenging careers in forest management in Canada within the next few years. I
believe, too, that the practice of forestry, in contrast to that of simple timber liquidation, will provide full opportunity for the effective exercise of
the knowledge and skills which our gradutates have acquired at Lakehead University.
On behalf of all members of the faculty and staff of the School of Forestry, I am pleased to have this opportunity to record here our wish and
hope, and, indeed, expectation that each graduate of the classes of 1979 will find satisfying and challenging work in forestry, and that each one will
existence of a serious, "regeneration

Natural Resources early

in

contribute directly or indirectly to the advancement of forestry practice in Canada.

K.W. Hearnden, R.P.F.,
Director

m

��FACULTY

K..C.

Vang. Assistant Professor.

Wood

Technology.

H.G. Murchison, Associate

Professor,

Management.

*

L. Vidlak.

G.J. Borradaile. Lecturer

in

Geology.

Honorary Professor.

Silviculture.

^

.H. Parker. Assistant Professor. Biology

.

�9

�H. Rasid, Lecturer

in

Climatology.

�C.A. Benson

G. Murray

D. Barker

Assistant Professor

Assistant Professor

Assistatn Professor

Management

Ecology, Genetics

Silviculture

MISSING: H. Cumming,
Timmer.

Soils;

Fish and Wildlife; E. David, Harvesting; T. Eiber, Entomology,
H. Westbroek, Photogrammetry.

Fire;

G. Hazenberg, Biometrics, Economics; V.

TECHNICIANS

M.E.

Gross, Greenhouse.

J.R. Ward,

Wood

Technology, Harvesting.

1

1

����Graduates

�B.Sc.F.

There's a hole

in

my

hucket

GRADUATES

...

Brian

Hillier, Steve

Knowles, Don Aikman, Gerald Kroes, Wayne Young, Cindy Dunsford,
Karen Wilkins, Dr. Murray.

Sheri Walsh, Francis Bennett,

16

1979

�Forestry

Dave Harman, John Bastone, Jim Krag, Charlie Western, Kim Leonard, Dave
Blair, Gord Mackenzie, Marke Henteleff, Don Murphy.

Stringer, Prof.

What!

is ...

NO BEER!?!

17

�Just cruisin'

18

...

Dave MacDuff, Joe Johnson, Duncan Waugh, Dave Lindenas, Alan
Bob Piekard, Mike Walsh, Prof. Murchison.

Brailsford.

�.

Rob Bowden. Sue

Millson,

Dave Brown, Pat Thompson.

Don Aikman, John

Bill

Chapman,

Al Banner,

Bastone, Brian Scherby, Vic Bender, Gary Schlact,

Dan

Bob

Little, Eric

Elliot,

Evenson, Roy Roblin.

Kim

Leonard

GRADUATE STUDENTS
Bernie Phillion, Philip Behman, Nancy Phillips,
Emanuel Mireku, Steve Columbo.

Conor O'Reilly, Erhard Dobesberger.

Lome Morrow,

�FOREST TECHNOLOGY GRADUATES

Lud

Krysl,

Rob

Schrader, Kevin Marr, Darrell

Vladimir Lamoureux,

Dave

20

Buller.

MacKay, Mike Dempsey, Maurice

Tim Swanson, Andrew Treadway, Ted Dunn, Dale Read, Ann

Blais.

Trayes,

�1979

Kevin Maloney, Gary Dudinsky,

Bill

Degroot, Eric Armstrong, Forrest

Mann, Bruce McGregor.

21

�John Simzer, John Buffery, Trevor Atkinson, Dave Thompson, Petra Bauer.

Hurry up,

my

feet are cold!

Chris Faint, Peter Maclsaac, Kelly Killins, Peter Summers.
MISSING: Tom Obright. (He took the pictures)

22

�flc J!

vmEs

�INITIATION

���27

�KAM-AM CANOE RACE

�Where

the hell are

we?

S. Elder

P. Veillette

...

T. Friyia
R. Heney

who

cares!

Green
R. Strobel

J.

29

�WEYERHAEUSER

THE COMMITTEE
FRONT ROW:

Sherrylynn Boycott,
Savinskv, Dave West.

BACK ROW:

Steve Knowles,

Norma

Griffin,

Dave Lindenas, Tony Prinsen, Hark

Gord King, Pete Degroot, Rob Janser, Walt

Ellis.

"Feasibility of Forest Production
North of the 50th in Ontario"

The Weyerhaeuser Lecture

November 1978, featured a few surwe learned that the forest is more than
At least thats the opinion of Mr. J.E.J.
Series,

prises for everyone. If nothing else,

an array of trees, it's people!
Fahlgren, commissioner of the Royal Commission on the Northern Environment, our first speaker. Our second speaker was Mr. G. Brown,
Regional forester stationed at Kenora, who highlighted unique aspects of
timber management north of the 50th.
Behind the scenes preparations were greatly enhanced by the assistance of
K.W. Hearnden and his secretaries. Hats off to these people!
Many thanks to all those who helped on the committee, your support was
greatly needed and appreciated. Special thanks to Frank B. for putting me
in the drivers seat.

David Lindenas
Chairman
P.S.

Good

luck in '79

'WALL-EYE'!

I feel

ill.

��SYMPOSIUM

SPEAKERS,

This year
Proposals."

LUFA

presented

it's

Left to Right: R. Forester, J. Dubreuil, J. Flowers.

11th annual

symposium under the theme

of "Forest Utilization:

Problems and

The first night's speaker was Mr. A.J. Fleming, who introduced this year's theme. The next day Mr. J. Flowers,
Mr. J. P. Dubreuil, and Dr. R. Forester all gave informative talks, and these were followed by a series of workshops
and discussions. The wind-up dinner -dance was highlighted by our after dinner speaker, the Honourable Jack Stokes.

Many thanks to all those who attended and to our excellent speakers.
organize this year's Symposium, a job well done!

A

very special thanks to

all

who helped

��L.U.F.A.

34

WOODSMAN'S COMPETITION

�And

they call

me

a cut-up.

Take

that

35

�MONTREAL WOODSMAN'S COMPET

f

�ITION

�!

PHOTO
CONTEST
"FORESTRY

IS

"a log cabin by

..."

Waco Lake,

Ontario."

Submitted (and won) by:
Gordon MacKenzie and Karin Hotvedt.

POETRY
THANK GOD
God I'm

(Sung to "Thank
Well

life in

the bush

much young

Ain't

is

I'M

A FORESTER!

Country Boy", John Denver)

a

kinda laid back,

foresters like us can't hack;

Late to leave, and early to get back,

Thank God I'm

a forester!

Workin' in the bush never did me no wrongRaise me a jack pine workin' in a bogMy days are all filled with a drizzle and a fog-

Thank God I'm
Well,
I

I

me steel toes and a really hard hat,
a red pine or something like that;

got

me

got

a forester!

Could be a spruce or it could be a
Who cares— I'm a forester!

When

the works

my

all

fir,

done and the sun

plants and

sets low,

kinda low;
Left them three weeks but the prof 'll never know,
Thank God I'm a forester!
I

press

I feel

I wouldn't trade my trees for diamonds or jewels,
never was one of them money-hungry fools;

Well,
I

I'd rather

my compass

have

Thank God I'm
Well,
I

got

I

got

me

me

and

my

measuring tools-

a forester!

steel toes

and a

really

hard hat,

a red pine or something like that;

Could be a spruce or could be a

fir,

Who cares-I'M A FORESTER!

GINKGO!

!

!

submitted by

Mark

Stevens

��DEGREE ONE

FRONT ROW: Barb Henkenhaf, Bob Coleman, Paul Straiton, Geoff Fullerton, Pulie Essau, Tim Algar.
CENTRE ROW: Gord Johnson, Karen Fried, Chris Schaefer, Janet Cory, Caroline Evans, Guylaine Thauvette,

Ulf Runesson, Chris Flaherty,

D. Pyke.

BACK ROW:

Dirk Kloss, Garth Sweetnam, D. Nicholas, Randy

Collier, Jeff Stone,

Mark

Stevens, John

Graham, Claude

Arial, Geoff Nicholls,

Peter Roy.

FRONT ROW: Dave Donevan,
CENTRE ROW: Nolan Shortt,

Karl Dyer, Mark Finstad, Carol Graham, Kim Asmussen, Timo Sihvo.
Susan MacBrien, Bill Wiltshire, Phil Graham, Mike Nesbitt, Inga Stadus, Ingrid Russell, Wayne Isaac, Ian

McCormack.

BACK ROW:
Norma

Mike

Mike Umpherson, Kevin Williams, Claude Robinson, Bob Hoffman, John
Lynn Boycott.

O'Neill,

Griffin, Sherry

Scheuller, Bernie Augsten, Pat Helferty,

�FRONT ROW: Cathie Sugg, Terry Denike, Jon Wynn, Ramona Beresnevicius, Mark Van Schie, Ron MacDonald,
CENTRE ROW: P.J. Lamarche, Gaby Feulgen, Faye Verheggen, Mark Hueston, Betty Dillabough, Mike Stubley,
BACK ROW: Mike Lipa, Ed Paleczny, Luc Lefebvre, Riet Verheggen, Eric Boysen, Boris Michelussi.

FRONT ROW: Bea Termaat, Barb McPherson,
BACK ROW: Ralph Spaans, Jay Stewart, Rohn

Dan Duguay.
Paul Jurjans.

Bev Shaw, Janet McCreath, Doward Haslam, Claude Garand.
Solecki,

Ray Givens.

41

�TECHNOLOGY ONE

FRONT ROW: G. Wazny, L. Salminen, S. Warner, C. North, D. Rasmussen.
MIDDLE ROW: D. Fanjoy, C. Day, L. Holm, J. Gulka, V. Heinsalu, S. Moss, J. Picton.
BACK ROW: S. Gallupe, M. Anderson, S. MacKay, E. Abels, J. Sweet, D. Edmond, L. Thomas,

FRONT ROW: D. Raby,
BACK ROW: S. Lem, B.

42

B.

Gardam, B. Nunn, D.

A. Denholm, S. Cahill, J. Nightingale, D. Carlson, B. Ashley, R. Sidders.
Beggs, L. Bancroft, T. Vlasic.

Orr.

��DEGREE TWO

FRONT ROW:
Dave

Scott Christilaw,

Dan

Cote,

Ken Van Rees, Linda Minello.
ROW: Jo Kapron, Mike Armstrong,

Jones,

BACK

Scott Nesbitt, Ingo Menzel, Fred Patry,

Steve Dominy, Fiona Simmonds, Dianne
Williams.

44

�MISSING:

(lost in

action?!

Dorothy Bush
George Corcoran
Liz

Deacon

Fiona Donald
Valdis Grasis
Olesia Iwanusiw

Mitch Kennedy
Paul Kennedy
Chris Knoll

Tim

Laidler

Lucie Lavoie
Lino Morandin
Sue Neufeld
Rick Norkooli

Niki Pederson
Shirley Scott
Bill Scott

Van Dyke
Dave Wadsworth
Alf

Martin Watts
Keith Winn

FRONT ROW: Andy Grey, Mike Millard, Shannon Stone, Paul Adkin, Diane
BACK ROW: Ed Morrice, Jacques LaBelle, Neil Markham, Graham Boundy,

Renaud.
Pete deHassn, Pete

DeGroot. Kevin Sherlock, Holly Schofield, Mike Kosyk.

Ready

...

aim

...

FIRE!

!

I

love Photo! Yeah,

me

too!

45

�DEGREE THREE

FRONT ROW: Russ Hendry, Cindy Fairlie, Mike Schlereth.
BACK ROW: Dave Beckwermert, Hartley Multamaki, Paul Scott,

FRONT ROW: Richard Greet, Steve Bull.
BACK ROW: A] Johnson, Paul Chapman,
FRONT ROW: Robert Jansen, Brian Meredith.
BACK ROW: Donna Burton, Liz Denise, Lynn Pawson,

Peter Higgelke.

Shellee Lister, Geoff Cushon,

Derrick Tirschmann, Peter Newton.

Dave Wheatley.

�FRONT ROW: John Enright, Dave McFarlane, Steve Nauss, James McPherson, Martin
BACK ROW: Steve Lindsey, Peter Rooney, Dan Marinish, Ken Day, Bruce Fagan.

Terry Quennell,

Kim

Roberts, Rick Szyda, Pat Borrough, Donald

Czarski, Steve Bull,

Pittis,

Ray

Guy Rochon, Glenn

Boivin,

Tony

Ritchie.

Peterson.

MISSING:
Roger Barber
George Bruemmer
Bruce Buchanon
Walter

Ellis

Chris Kellana

Malcolm MacDonnell
Hal MacLean

Tom MacLean
Margaret Manders
Bob Mohlstrom
Lesley Phillips
Shirley Scott

Jim Sutherland

47

��82

oo

o9
o

3

Spozts

���52

�1,894,

They

call

him

KIM!

1,

895, 1,897, 1,898, 1,899

...

Walk much?

53

����DONORS
Reed

Ltd.

Dryden, Ontario

American Can

of

Canada

Ltd.

Marathon, Ontario

Edward

S. Fellows, Forestry

P.O.

Box

Collins Safety

194A

32

S.

S.

Consultant

354, Fredericton, N.B.

Algoma

Shoes Ltd.
Thunder Bay

St.,

Tony's TV and Stereo
Cumberland St., Thunder Bay

all foresters in future endeavors"
Lakehead University Bookstore

"Best of luck to

Cumberland Book Store
St., Thunder Bay

12 S. Cumberland

Gallenkamp Shoes
Keskus Mall, Thunder Bay

�FACULTY

OF
UNIVERSITY

SCHOOLS

Lakehead IS University
58

�BUCHANAN BROTHERS ONTARIO

LTD.

TO OUR
FUTURE BUSINESSMEN
Box 891 P
Thunder Bay,Ont.

�BEAVER FOODS
CONGRATULATIONS
Compliments

of

CLASS

THE CORPORATION OF THE
CITY OF THUNDER BAY
Mayor

m

to the

of

'79

co

ipa
KiJ LIMITED

J.E. Miller

ALDERMAN

Boshcoff
Larson
W.S. Lysnes
R. Murray
J. Packota

K. Tilson

K.

L.

R.

J.D. Polhill

R.
J.

Ubriaco

Vander Wees
D. Willoughby

Chief Administrative Officer
D. Picherack
City Clerk
D.B. Morris

60

Timko

S.L. Trotter

HERMAN VAN HEUSDEN
Branch Manager

THUNDER BAY OFFICE
(PORT ARTHUR)
266 BAY ST. PHONE (807) 345-2441

�61

�GREAT WEST

NEWAYGO
TIMBER

COMPANY
LTD.
L

1

M TED
1

Hearst, Ontario

*&gt;f?

A

PHONE 344-8464 TELEX 073-4575

^^r^^^^^'^^^

62

P.O.

BOX 1170

THUNDER

BAY. ONTARIO.

P7B5G6

�THE GRIFFITH MINE
STELCO
OWNER
THE STEEL COMPANY
OF CANADA

MANAGING AGENT
PACKLANDS MATHER
AND COMPANY

DOMTAR FOREST
PRODUCTS
Red Rock, Ontario

�GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO
GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO
GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO
BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH
BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH
BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH BOLTECH

GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO
GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO

This half-page

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GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO GINKGO

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BEST-KNOWN RECORD STORES

COME TO WHERE
THE MUSIC

IS!

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Special orders filled upon
request at no extra charge
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242 Red River Road
across from Keskus Mall
Store Hours: 9:30-5:30 Mon., Tues., Wed.
9:30-9:00 Thurs. and Fri.
9:00-5:30 Saturday

�There's nothing quite like it
Canada's most respected 8 year old whisky.

�4

EVE
unisex hairstyling

A .ward

544-3121

�SERVING THUNDER BAY

AND NORTHWESTERN
ONTARIO...

Lakehead

B University!

FIT

COUNTS

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IT

LTD.

GWG

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Montreal

WHERE

LIMITED

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&amp; SPORTS SHOP
PETRIE'S

RACING
TOURING

AND FAMILY
BICYCLES

COMPLETE BICYCLE REPAIRS
623-7221
125 Archibald St. N.

14 S.CUMBERLAND ST.
THUNDER BAY, ONTARIO
CANADA

P7B 2T2

Telephone (807) 344-7240 or 344-7249

Best Wishes from

T^ubsonsTSaiJ Company,
INCORPORATED

RAW FUR

2»»

MAY 1670

DIVISION

413 Victoria Avenue East

Thunder Bay, Ontario

68

The Ontario Paper Company Limited

�Timberjack MACHINES

SALES
SERVICE

PARTS
Timberjack Skidders

EH7 Hydraulic Loaders

Grapple Skidders

Log Loaders

8 and 16 foot Forwarders Harvesters

EATON
YALE LIMITED
FORESTRY AND CONSTRUCTION DIVISION
675 Beaverhall Place, P.O. Box 1060, Thunder Bay, Ontario
Phone (807) 577-1 1 1 1
Telex 073-4531

TERRY SMITH

LEN BELAND -

JOHN KOHLER

Regional Manager

Branch Manager

LORNE MacDONALD
Sales Representative

Service Manager

VERN JOHNSON
Kenora
(807)

Swan River
547-2900

-

LARRY
Parts

WOOD

Manager

�Of

/
o^CROOKS
PHARMACY

VHHERS
MEN'S WEAR
LIMITED

Also
2 Court St. S.
151 Frederica St. W.
Thunder Bay, Ontario

CLOTHING FOR THE
BIG

AND TALL MAN

17 S. Cumberland St.
Thunder Bay, Ontario
Tel. 344-1321

kbm
Forestry

Consultants

Trees are renewable only

Inc
if

we renew them"

Best Wishes 1979 Graduates

�YOU ARE Always Welcome AT
• CUSTOM BUILT UNITS
• LOGGING TRAILERS • FLAT BED
• TRAILER TRAINS
•LOWBOY
• POLE TRAILERS

oo

K

SUPERIOR CUSTOM TRAILERS LTD.
1185

ROLAND

ST.,

THUNDER BAY P. ONT.
TELEX 073-4658

P.O.

BOX 2864

807-623-5107

CUMMINS ONTARIO LIMITED
1400 West Walsh Street, Thunder Bay

CUMMINS DIESEL ENGINES
AEROQUIP HOSE AND FITTINGS
RACOR FUEL SEPARATORS
ROCKFORD VARIABLE SPEED FAN DRIVE
JACOBS ENGINE BRAKES • FLEETGUARD FILTERS
SOUTHWIND HOTBOX AND CAB HEATERS
LISTER AND KIRLOSKAR ENGINES
SALES • SERVICE • PARTS
577-7561

344-3789

�-

SUPERTREE

It's

A black
A product that sub

Ontario.

a genetically-superior seedling.

spruce, a tree of the future.

stantially increases a forest's yield

of land

area.

demand

And

meet's Man's

per unit

7

growing

il%

•

:S

(

Today Ontario's Ministry of
/
/'
Natural Resources is testing and developing healthier, hardier seedlings. And
the seedlings we are producing are part of

fl,

\
=

We'll soon be signing Forest

Agreements with

all

|

4
s.

^

Management

;

We hope

and increase regeneration.
These new agreements also include
incentives to improve forest utilization -plus site
preparation, planting, tending, and forest planthis will streamline

and

wildlife, recreation

local needs.

Our

recent Ontario Conference

Regeneration

in

on

;/

Forest

the year 2020,

we hope

to

provide Ontario's forest industry with
nearly one-billion cubic feet of wood

f
"%

our pulp and paper combe partici-

ning that takes into account

By

;

^

panies. Industry-the harvesters -will

pating in replanting cutover areas.

program

jj

I

our new provincial Tree Improvement
Program. But there's more to increasing a
forest's yield than developing seedlings.

incentive

modernize and control pollution. And
\ Ontario is matching federal funds to help
^ companies construct access roads.
Where will all this work, development and legislation lead us?

,

for forest-related products.

A $100-million

has been established to help pulp and paper mills

/"

annually.

Our goal

is

to regenerate 400,000

acres each year, in addition to the acres

naturally regenerated. Right

now, we're work-

ing toward that goal. In 1977
159,000 acres.

And

last

year

we

we

reforested

reforested

al-

most 180,000 acres, a 13 percent increase over '77.
But we still have a long way to go.
Government, industry and conservationists must

work hand-in-hand to ensure more productive
yields. We must build a forest industry capable of
handling future needs. We must help nature
grow a stronger, superior product.
Like our

little

black spruce, the supertree.

Kapuskasing provided answers

to the problems of regenerating black spruce
the backbone of our pulp and paper industry - and

produced a new provincial program for
using carefully-controlled fire to prepare thousands
of acres for replanting.
Then there's the government's commitment to a healthy woods-industry and Northern

Ministry of

Hon James A c Auld
Minister

also

Natural

o

„ n
Reynolds

Dr. J. K.

Resources
Ontario

Deputy Minister

�7'

R.P.F.

MANAGER
CANADIAN INSTITUTE OF FORESTRY
INSTITUT FORESTIER DU CANADA

BOX 5000

MacDONALD COLLEGE.

P.Q.

Office 457-9131

PUBLISHERS OF

THE FORESTRY CHRONICLE

HOME

457-6711

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Forest Products
Limited

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and Good Luck
in

your Studies

and your Future

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Telephone (604)

Cables

683-6994

FORESTAL

�Woodlot Service (1978)

1

Ltd.

"All Matters Pertaining to Forestry"

GORDON

B.

YOUNG

B.Sc.F.. M.F.

Registered Professional Forester
Res: 506 472-7721

320 Maple

916 Prince

Street,

Fredericton, N.B.

E3A 3R4

Truro, N.S.

Street,

B2N 1H5

902 895-4393

506 472-3396

;jfi

:.:•!!

Yil

COUNTY

FAIR

PLAZA. DAWSON ROAD. THUNDER BAY. ONTARIO P7B 1K6

Telephone

(807) 767-7812

Phone 613-756-2010

MURRAY BROS. LUMBER
Limit

CO.

LIMITED

PLANING MILL FACILITIES
Owners and Manufacturers of Hardwoods and Softwoods
Lumber, Pulpwood and other Forest Products
HEAD OFFICE: BARRY'S BAY, ONT., CAN. K0J 1B0
SAW MILLS AT MADAWASKA AND BARRY'S BAY

ONTARIO CANADA

74

(1969)

�Please keep the changes
to

a minimum.

have to change your "style" a
once you've graduated. That's par for the course.
But keep the changes on the surface.
The world you're entering needs your idealism, your
enthusiasm, your concern and commitment as much as
it needs your education
Sure, you're going to
little

Good

luck.

/IBITIBI
M
PAPFR COMPANY
PAPER
ARITIRI
ABITIBI

C\

LTD.

�When it comes to
money management,
we wrote the books.
Pick up your
free booklets

today.

(HEARST) LTD.

HIGHEST QUALITY

ROUGH OR DRESSED
SPRUCE LUMBER
CANADIAN IMPERIAL

BANK OF COMMERCE

P.O. Box 460,
Hearst, Ont. Canada
Tel.: (705)

LAKEHEAD

362-4217

Telex: 067-78519

UNIVERSITY

BRANCH

GET
THIS

CATALOG
FOR YOUR
BEST SOURCE OF EDUCATIONAL, FORESTRY AND ENGINEERING SUPPLIES IN THE
U.S.A.
The Ben Meadows Company has been a
recognized
over
in

20

this

source of quality supplies

for

years. You'll find over 5,000 items

one catalog... every item backed by

our satisfaction

guaranteed sales

policy...

and most items can be shipped promptly
from our warehouse.
tive pricing.

If

edition request

All

this

plus competi-

you don't have our new 13th

one today.

EDUCATIONAL, FORESTRY AND ENGINEERING SUPPLIES.

t

Ben Meadows Company

3589 BROAD STREET, ATLANTA

(Chamblee),

GEORGIA 30366

PHONE 404/455-0907. CABLE ADDRESS "BENC0"

�CROWD AT THE CREST
EXCELLENT FOOD AND VARIETY

JOIN THE REST OF THE
IN

DINING

ROOM

CREST MOTOR HOTEL
RED RIVER ROAD AND JUNOT

�CASE POWER
&amp; EQUIPMENT LTD.

KI2

655 Mountdale Avenue
Thunder Bay "F", Ontario
Phone: 807-577-4281

The management and

staff

extend their best wishes

for future

success to

all

graduating forestry

students.
Forestry and its associated industries play a major role in the economy of Northwestern Ontario.
The challenges and opportunities available to you in your chosen profession should prove most
gratifying throughout the coming years.

Alan Taylor
General Manager

"VTLSH

TO

Our

end

GKATULATIONS
0 THE CLASS OF

77

IPACQ
rrc.
"your

JM77SM

/Wf
IU

"

We'll see

you on the

job.

j&gt;. e «&lt;7wi

3iS-ZiH/

BMST.(eoH**THUK) THUNDER BAY, ONTARIO.

At Vulcan we've been servicing and selling forestry
equipment long enough to see the need for well-trained
forestry people. Congratulations graduates and good luck in

your new career.

VULCAN
MACHINERY &amp; EQUIPMENT

LTD.

915 Memorial Avenue

Thunder Bay, Ontario
Ph (807) 345-5495 Tlx. 073-4509

78

�Compliments of

*

KIMBERLY-CLARK
of

CANADA
Pulp and

LIMITED

Forest

Products

Longlac - Terrace Bay

Ontario

The

forestry profession is currently faced with the
challenge of developing and implementing an intensive
forest management program that will increase the
viability of the forest industry and at the same time
protect and enhance the environment. Your contribution to this difficult but exciting task can be
maximized by joining the Ontario Professional Foresters
Association. Information on the Association and its
membership requirements can be obtained from the
following address.

JHhIhh

150 Consumers Road, V/ilhwdale,

Canada

Ontario Professional
Foresters Association
10, 271 Yonge Street
Suite 303
Richmond Hill, Ontario

L4C 3B5
Telephone

(416)

884-7845

79

�THE
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