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

2014

https://archive.org/details/lu1958

��GIANT

Yearbook

of the

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE
of

and Technology

Arts, Science

EDITOR

PAT BOIVIN

VOLUME:

SESSION: 1957-58

9

PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO

31426
Published by the Students of the Lakehead College
1958
Page

1

\

*****

p0 fc-T

0

�ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The Giant would

like to

thank

its

many

contributors, in-

cluding those whose contributions could not be published

due

to limitations of space. Special thanks

go

to our staff:

Bob Nash, Annis Quackenbush, Margaret Strachan, Brian
Robinson, Nancy Egan, Doreen Inouye, and to the Yearbook House, and

also to

our

staff advisor,

Photography by Frank Brown and

Page 2

Dr.

T

B. Miller.

assistants.

�EDITORIAL

As an inexperienced hand in the role of editor and organizer, it has been
to have worked with everyone associated with the Yearbook

greatest privilege

my
this

year.
I ventured quite blindly
into this undertaking, and with experience gained the
hard way, have tried to produce a book that would be a credit to the inaugural year

of the Lakehead College.

Does everyone realize that we are the initial group of an institution that has just
on the long path towards a bright future? The opening of a Junior College in
the Lakehead may well be the first step in establishing a University at the "Head of
started

the Lakes."

The enrollment

this year,

that the need for a college such as the

double that of last year is unquestionable proof
Lakehead College was acute.

Northwestern Ontario High School Graduates had to travel at least
from home to continue their studies should have been appreciated
by those concerned a long time ago. It was this factor, plus many others, that finally
brought this matter to the attention of the right people. It can also be said that many
of those that have been interested in the introduction of a college at the Lakehead
really had a battle on their hands to convince those that held the bag that the need
was there.

The

fact that

a thousand miles

Now that the seed has been sown, perhaps the next step
Junior College into a University.

is

the growth of our

As a second year Technical Mining student, I am leaving the Lakehead with fond
memories of the old Lakehead Technical Institute and the new Lakehead College.
I feel fortunate that circumstances have brought me here from the East to continue my
studies. I will always remember these last two years as a student of the old and the new.
They have been two great years.
editing of this book has been made relatively simple due to the cooperation
have received from many students. The book was late in getting started, and as a
the deadlines were upon us almost as soon as we began.

The
that

I

result,

To state a few of the initial problems that we met, there was first, the banking,
then an advertising campaign, and the general finding out of how the production of a
yearbook is handled. I appreciate the experience this has given me. Then followed the
work of gathering material, photography, etc. and etc. I was fortunate to have a few
other people interested enough in helping me iron out these problems.
Even though

my comments
feel it is my

should deal only with the organizing and publishing
privilege to say, on behalf of all the student body, a
hearty wish of good luck to Mr. Page. For those who did not know, he is going on to
the University of Minnesota to get his Doctor of Philosophy degree in Geology. I hope
that the Lakehead College will regain the use of his advanced studies on completion
of this yearbook,

I

of his course.
I

would

like to finish

to say farewell to the

many

by wishing everyone the best of luck
friends I have made.

in their ventures

Pat Boivin
Editor

Page

3

and

�1

To

HE PRINCIPAL'S MESSAGE

the Graduates:

is my privilege to extend sincere congratulations
graduating class from the Lakehead College of Arts,
occasion is a milestone
not only in your own personal
aspirations and earnest endeavours of the many people
worked hard to establish the College here.

and every good wish to the

It

first

Science and Technology.

—

lives

—but

in this

The

also in the hopes,

community who have

full of challenge for all who are engaged in the various fields of
many, many years has the spotlight of public interest been focused
on our school's and universities with such glaring intensity. The interest is almost
universal. It extends from parents to politicians to business corporations. All of them

These days are

education.

Not

for

You have taken full advantage of the facilities that are available
Lakehead and I have every confidence that you will prove yourselves worthy of
the sacrifices that have been made in your behalf. In the final analysis, the future of
the College will depend on the calibre of the graduates.
are prepared to help.

at the

You are graduating at a time when the world is filled with opportunity but
plagued by anxiety. You are members of a select group the six or seven students out
of one .hundred who are participating in education beyond the secondary school level.
It will be your rivilege and duty to accept more than the average share of responsibilities.
I hope that you will accept them with confidence and courage, and always remember
that the solution to your problems must lie in human understanding and in wisdom

—

applied to

human

affairs.

Harold

S.

Principal

Page 4

Braun

�THE NEW COLLEGE

The Lakehead College of Arts, Science and Technology officially opened on October
2nd, 1957. Previous to this date, many students throughout the province and beyond
had received letters of acceptance from the principal of the College, stating that registration would take place on Monday, September 18th, at the new building located off the
Oliver Road across from the cemetery.

On registration day, many new faces were seen on the campus. Students were directed to the various teachers situated around the new common room. Approximately
one hundred and thirty-five students enrolled on Monday and Tuesday, as well as about
fifty part-time students. In the library, students could be seen buying armfuls of text
books and school laboratory supplies throughout these days.
Lecrures opened for the full time students at 9:55 Wednesday morning, following
an assembly in Room 2, conducted by Mr. Braun to help the students become acquainted
wirh the rules and regulations of the College. Since our college had only been built, the
laboratories on the second floor were not completed when the lectures began. Until a
month or so after lectures commenced, only four lecture rooms, plus a few chairs in
the common room, were available to the students.

October 2nd was declared a holiday for the college students to attend the
opening of the new Lakehead College of Arts, Science and Technology.

To
have

date, half of the school year

left here,

although the College

is

official

completed. A few students from various faculties
has an enrollment of over a hundred and ten

still

students.

As the

college will grow in size, the student body will grow, even in the
percentage
This year, the College only has five girls, one in Technical Division and four
in the Arts faculty. School sports will also increase,
and will get even better response
from the student body, although over sixty-five percent of the students
now participate
in them. The social life at the school is still in full
swing. However, this

of

girls.

will slowly

slacken as the examinations

So

far,

draw

nearer.

the College has had a very successful year in everything. I am sure this
end of this term, but also in the years to come.

will continue not only until the

Doreen Inouye

Page

5

�PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE

The position of President of the Students' Administrative Council is an honourable
and pleasurable one, honourable in the fact that it is the highest position to which a
student can be elected by his fellows. The students elect the person they feel will aptly
represent them with character, deportment and ability. He must be willing to assume
the responsibilities that they do not wish to assume themselves. The pleasant part is in
knowing that, of those who elected you, there are many on whom you can rely to render
every assistance to

make

the job enjoyable.

was with great pride that I assumed this position for 1957-58. When my fellow
felt that I would fill this most important position to their satisfaction was
indeed a proud moment for me. To be the first President in the new College is something upon which I will reflect for many years.
It

students

This year has marked a milestone in the progress of our institute. From having
two or three parties per year at a local club, we have
been able to expand to many dances at the school plus our traditional club parties. The
club parties were a success and all concerned had a good time. The school dances, although not supported to the full extent, proved to be a starting point for more parties in
the future years. The students this year did not realize that these paries were for all the
student body, and whether or not they attended these functions, the non-participants
helped pay for the others.
to restrict our social activities to

We

numbers but in thought. Already we seem to
There seems to be a two way criss-cross, three
way split, the facilities versus each other and also Fort Bill against Port Art versus
out of town. These groups would be fine if it were just to outdo each other, but
detrimental if they tried to depreciate other group functions. There are some detrimental
rivalries already between these clans. The proof of this is, that if one sponsors a dance,
the majority clans, namely Fort William and the Engineers, do not always support,
with the result that only a select group shows up every time.
have

must be growing not only

fraternities, or

should

I

in

say, clans.

Some mention of appreciation should go out to Richard Heale and Bob Nash.
Although the council supported them financially and enthusiastically, if it were not for
these boys, we would not have VE3ECT, our new club radio station. The council also
financially helped the lapidary club, frequented by the miners.

my opinion, was a good one. The executive and reprewere very cooperative and willing to tackle anything themselves, but usually
only the Technical group gave support to their reps. At this time, I would like to
thank our five wonderful girls who pitched in and helped us every time there was some
decorating or organizing that needed doing.
The

council this year, in

sentatives

In closing,

I

would

knowing

that there

although things were hectic at times, I was
appreciated the Students' Council functions, and

like to say that,

who
were some who

glad to be able to serve those

of planning that went into them,

I

enjoyed these affairs and recognized the amount
happy.

am

A

wise woman, my mother often quoted to me from Abe Lincoln:
"You can please all of the people some of the time and some of the people

the time, but you can't please

With

this in

all

of the people

all

of the time."

mind, good luck to next year's council and president.

Glen Coley
President

Page 6

all

of

�THE GIANT

Regardless of where one looks from in either of our twin cities, one can always
a massive rock lying in the middle of Thunder Bay. The
contour of this noteworthy landmark points it out as a favourite sight for all tourists.
see the "Sleeping Giant"

We,
name

the

the staff of the 1958 edition of the yearbook, felt that it was only fitting to
first edition of this yearbook for the new Lakehead College after this natural

formation, and so

Much
of

all

—

we

chose "The Giant" for our

Indian folklore

legends

is

is

this one, told

new name.

attached to the Giant, but one of the most entertaining

back in 1889:

"Nana, the sleeping giant which reposes in Thunder Bay, lived at the time the
mastadon roamed our forests. He stood thousands of feet high, a giant and monarch,
chief of earth and sea. He wooed "and won a dusky maiden. She was young and beautiful,
tall like himself, and her foot was as fleet as the frightened deer. Her tresses were like
the raven's wings and her eyes as bright as dew drops. Her voice was as soft as the
music of the mountain brook and she was as joyous as a bird and as lovely as a summer
day.

By the

lake side in a rocky cave they dwelt for

Ojibways and all the other powerful Indian
Nan's descendants.

The

old warrior

was fond of

fishing,

two thousand years, and the
Lake Superior district were

tribes of the

and

it

was

his

wont

to

lake swinging a large hemlock tree for a club to drive the fish before

walk through the

him out

lake to Sault Ste. Marie, where his faithful wife stood and caught them. This

into the

was fine

angling.

Years rolled on until one fine day the old squaw lost her cunning and all the fish
Nana drove before him passed her and swam into Lake Huran, and the old giant,
hungry and relentless in his rage, killed his good wife with his club, and her poor lifeless body floated down upon the shore of Lake Huron, where it can be seen unto this
day, a cape known as the Old Squaw, or Nana's Wife.
that

When Nana

saw what he
by name and talked of
agonizing despair he raved and
tent in fear of the Great Spirit's
his wife

had done he was afraid and could not rest. He called
love. In vain he sought the Great Spirit for rest and in
tore his hair. Nana was penitent and sorrowful; penianger and sorrowful in the loss of his wife's companion-

ship.

He wandered from his home out upon the prairies and far over the mountains,
seeking forgetfulness and rest when, lo, he heard the loud cannonading of bursting
boulders, and saw huge rocks high in the air. He heard fearful hissing of escaping gas
and steam, and felt the suffocation of many obnoxious odors. The crimson heavens
rained rocks, lava and ashes, whilst amid the clashing perils of thunder and the red
lightning's fitful glare, the earth shook

the volcanic

and trembled from the awful groaning roar of

fires.

The Great Spirit was angry with Nana and he fled away, swifter than the eagles
back to his Lake Superior home, where he heard his wife's voice calling to him and
beheld her streaming eyes so wild in fear, so sad in their imploring look, beseeching
him to stay the cruel blow. He heard her death cry in the passionate sounds of the winds.
Retribution was overtaking him. He walked once more in Thunder Bay and then, in
agony of remorse and despairing anquish, Nana laid himself down and died of a
broken heart.
fly,

Page 7

�—

FACULTY MEMBERS

V*.

H.

S.

P

BRAUN,

B.A.

Principal

W.

S.

ARMSTRONG,

M.A.

J.

W. HAGGERTY,

Page 8

B.Sc.F.

D.

LINDSAY,

B.A., M.Sc.

�W.

MILLER

T. B.

B.A, Ph.D.

T.

D.

McKINNON

B.Sc. Eng.

W. PAGE

ETOILE

\

R.

STEVENSON

l.

LEHTOVAARA
B.

R.

B.A.

B.Sc.

C.

WHITAKER
B.A., B. Paed.

Com.

r
Miss

Mrs. VIEGANDT
Librarian

HELVI HELLE

Secretary

4

Page 9

�Page 10

�Faculty of Applied Science

Page 11

�HANS DORNBUSCH

BOB EVERETT

Fort William

Fort William

&gt;

HUGH GAMBLE

GERRY FORSLUND

Dryden

Geraldton
Ontario

Ontario

r

ANDREW

LARRY GIBSON

GILLILAND

Winnipeg

Fort William

Manitoba

V

i

STEVE

HART

I

RICHARD HEALE

Picton
Ontario

Atikokan
Ontario

Page 12

�MEL JACOBSON

AL JOHNSON

Fort William

Port Arthur

DAVE JOHNSON

HOWARD KAUPPINEN

Port Arthur

Orillia

Ontario

i\

k

l

OSMO KAUSTINEN

GAVIN KEMPTON

Nipigon

Fort William

Ontario

PETER KOSHULAP

EUGENE KOTYK

Fort William

Fort William

Page 13

�Page 14

�Page 15

�ACTS

Page 16

�RUDDY GROULX
Port Arthur

Pharmacy

RAY HODOWANSKY
Fort William

BRIAN KEEN AN
Port Arthur

ED KNUTSON
Port Arthur

Page 17

�Page 18

�Page 19

�Chemistry

Page 20

�ENGINEERING

BERNIE ALLARD

I

KEN BOLOTY

Port Arthur

Port Arthur

Page 21

�JOE WOJCIECHOWSKI

PAUL ZUBEC

Port Arthur

Port Arthur

Page 22

�TECHNICAL FORESTRY
First

Year

FRANK BROWN
Creighton
Ontario

JOHN DUNCAN
Peterborough
Ontario

RUSSEL HALL
High River
Alberta

Page 23

�HUGH SCHOOLEY

MIKE SYRYDUK

Ottawa

FORT WILLIAM

Ontario

BOB ZARN

NESTOR TRACH
Poit

Leamington

Arthur

Ontario

BERNARD DOUGHTON

EARL CONNORS
Port Arthur

Fort William

Page 24

�RAY DREW

MARVIN DYRKACZ

Port Arthur

Winnipegosis
Manitoba

HUGH FERGUSON

DANNY

Fort William

LANGILLE

Port Arthur

BERT LEMON

JACK MEYERS

Chapleau
Ontario

Toronto
Ontario

GILLIS PRUD'HOMME
Ste. Angele de
Mont Noir
Quebec

HENRY ROMPPAI
Port Arthur

Page 25

�TECHNICAL FORESTRY
Second Year

FRANK BUCHIK

AL KORKOLA

Fort William

Timmins
Ontario

RAY VILLENEUVE

BRIAN ROBINSON
Sarnia

Timmins

Ontario

Ontario

Page 26

�Tech Mining II

Page 27

�APPLIED SCIENCE

We
in

the

in

Applied Science

new Lakehead

Lakehead Tech was formed.
the

many

have had the honour of being the first Engineers
it has been the largest enrollment since the old
can all look back with pride at how we surmounted

this year

College.

I

believe

We

difficulties that faced us.

one of the most difficult of those given in any university. Night
have struggled to keep up to the tremendous pace. Many of
our number have dropped out, but I believe that each and every one feels that he has
gained something that can never be taken away.

Our course

is

after night, our tired bodies

Now

that everything is over in our first year, we look back to our weekly periods
Chemistry laboratory, the drafting room, and all the other. Frustration in failure
and joy in success have all been ours at one time or another this year. However, we can
all say, "The work was hard but we had a lot of fun too."
in the

We

have enUnfortunately, we have heard that Mr. Page is leaving the College.
joyed your interesting classes, Mr. Page, and hope for the benefit of future students that
you will return once more to our College. To you, Mr. Page, we say "Clear sailing ahead."

We

can thank our fellow classmates for the help we often received but most of
can thank our wonderful teachers. Throughout all, they have shown patience
and understanding, forever willing to give us extra help. To our teachers we all owe a
vote of thanks.
all,

we

What faces us now? Only time will tell. But with faith and determination our
goal shall be achieved.
wish the best of luck to all those in the school, and also to
we have every confidence in
the teachers.
also say "Goodbye Lakehead College

We

—

We

you."
Jerry Smith

ARTS
The enrollment of full-time students in the Lakehead College Arts faculty reached
an all-time high of thirty-two this year. This number was swelled by approximately
sixty-six part-time students who attended the extension classes after four throughout the
week and on Saturday morning.
The

courses available have also been expanded to cope with the increase in enfaculty of Pharmacy was added this year, but actually, they are a part of

The

rollment.

our Arts society. Instruction is now offered in twelve subjects, including English,
French, History, Philosophy, Economics, Psychology, Calculus and the Sciences. The
French department at the College has now been expanded to include two sessions one
for the day students and one for the part-time students.

—

Although only the first year of the University Division courses are available
we hope to be a degree-granting college in the very foreseeable future.

at

the present,

Amidst the taunts of the other faculties, we Artsmen take our stand for our few
and far-between lectures. Little do the others realize that an Artsman does the majority
of his

work

after school

is

recessed.

The Artsmen, which happen
sented at

all

to include three

Artswomen, have been well repre-

the school functions. For private entertainment,

we

held a very successful

under the watchful guidance of Dr. Miller and Mr. Page, at the home of one of
the fellows. Although the invitation was extended to the whole faculty, the female

stag,

members

We
and the

aptly declined the offer.

are

proud to have formed the

first class

for the

new

largest class in the history of the Arts faculty,

College. Certainly,

standards set before us by previous classes.
of the Lakehead College.

May

Page 28

we have

tried to

the Class of '58 go

maintain the high

down

in the laurels

�COMMERCE
This year, the faculty of

Commerce

two

consisted of

students, both hailing

from

the Fort William Collegiate Institute. Although most of the subjects were taken with

Monday evenings were spent taking Accounting for a
few odd hours. Generally speaking, the Commerce faculty is an integral part of the

the Arts faculty at the College,

Arts faculty, although

it

boasts a

name

to itself.

Besides Accounting, the Commerce curriculum consists of English, Economics,
Psychology, Calculus and History. This provides a well-rounded knowledge, yet gives
the subjects tending toward the commercial and financial end of life.

Both of us Commerce students, males to be exact, plan on continuing our education
University of British Columbia in sunny Vancouver. Here, we hope to obtain our
degrees, and later to take up our position in the future of Canada.
at the

During the year, it has proved rather hectic trying to fit two lectures into the space
provided for one. They would have to put Psychology and Economics both from 4:30 to
6:00 on Mondays and Thursdays! Nevertheless, the only available solution was to alternate classes, exchanging notes at the end of each lecture. This has proved rather
frustrating, especially when it ends up that both of us attend the same lecture at the
same time. Not only do we do this, but we also fit three Accounting lectures into one
solid, two and a half hour evening stretch. Oh, the joys of being a Commerce man!
All in

all,

this year has

proved

itself

very enjoyable, and

we

leave the College for

the coast carrying fond memories of a year well spent.

PHARMACY
The origin of pharmacy is lost in the mists of time. Scientists have collected evidence to show that pharmacy of a kind was practiced at least 4500 years ago. It was
then intermingled with the practice of medicine, both being abounded by magic,
quackery and superstition. With fading of centuries, chemistry gradually replaced
witchcraft until finally medicine and pharmacy were established into separate professions.

Today, pharmacy embraces

a

variety

of occupations,

including

the

retail

macist, hospital pharmacist, analytical pharmaceutical chemist, pharmacist in the

and research worker,

services, teacher,

as well as a

number

phar-

armed

of positions in pharmaceu-

tical industry.

The modern pharmacist

has one of the broadest scientific backgrounds of the health
have a knowledge of all of the many processes of manufacturing
pharmacy, since many of his modern-day prescription requests are filled from stocks
manufactured in factories. However, even in this modern age, the pharmacist himself is
still required to prepare medicines of all types. Before he dispenses any material, he
must be sure that it is correctly labelled and that it is of the required standard and
quality. He must be trained, therefore, to examine, if necessary, his raw material by
chemical or microscopic means. Thus, he is more than merely a dispenser, he is also a
chemist, and upon occasion, an analyst.
services.

He must

Courses

in

Pharmacy, leading to the Bachelor and Master of Science degrees are

offered in eight Canadian universities. Although only two students are presently enrolled in this course at the

Lakehead College,

interest in this field will

be keener with

the expansion of the College in the near future.

Pharmacy

way

for

is

a

dynamic and expanding
in medicine

field

in

which new drugs are paving the

an entirely new era

Tamara Anderson

Page 29

�TECHNICAL CHEMISTRY

I

year of the Technical Chemistry course is offered at the College. On
student chooses the branch of chemistry he desires.
For
those entering chemical research or instrument technology, there are two years of school

Only the

first

completion of

this year, the

remaining. Those interested in health laboratory work may spend one more year at the
Provincial Laboratories in Toronto. The Ryerson course of one additional year enables
the graduate to work on atomic, government or industrial research projects.

At the College this year, there are five students enrolled in this course. One of our
number plans to go on to the Provincial Laboratory, while the remaining four hope to
go to the Ryerson Institute of Technology.

Ouc

year involves twenty-nine periods a week, of which eight are given to
is given in such technical subjects as physics, chemistry and mathematics, in addition to English, biology, botany and economics.
first

lab work.

Instruction

This year, the class paid a visit to the Husky Oil Refineries of Fort William. At
we observed the process by which organic compounds are cracked. This
process is a part of our course.
hope that our initial visit may set a precedent for
the refinery,

We

visits in future

We

years.

new labs at the College, a far cry from
they were so new, and things opened and closed
so easily that the drawers had a habit of coming completely out, shattering the glass
have really enjoyed working in the

those old ones at the Institute.

In

fact,

contents!

Although there is little to offer at the Lakehead in the way of summer employment
which we may directly apply our knowledge, there are some openings in applied
fields, such as at the paper companies, the refinery, and the hospitals.
to

ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

—A New
At

Course Offered

the start of the

new two-year

I

at the

Lakehead College.

1957-58 term, the Lakehead College added to its calendar a
This course has shown all signs of gain-

course, Engineering Technology.

ing in popularity and surpassing

some other courses

offered.

come from the Lakehead area.
journeyed across the ocean, leaving Estonia, his homeland,
behind. The students in the class combine many varied interests and hobbies, some of
which are hunting, flying, broomball, curling, hockey and music.
Most
However, there

of the fifteen students enrolled in the course

Our

is

one

who

time-table consists of a well-balanced thirty hours per

Most of our subjects are taken with the rest of the
drawing and drafting is done with the Applied Scientists.
labs.

week of

lectures

and

technical students, but our

Engineering Technology trains the student for work in industry, and provides many
upon graduation. Before receiving his diploma,
a student must work sixteen weeks on a job pertaining to the course. On completion
of this, he becomes a qualified engineering technician.
Those wishing to receive a
degree in any of a number of branches may continue their studies at a university. Technical engineers form a class below graduate engineers, and perform duties which the
graduate had to previously do, leaving the latter with more time to devote to the
opportunities for an interesting future

larger jobs.

Recent surveys, which indicated a great demand for technicians and engineering
branches of industry, prompted the government to start the course of
Engineering Technology at the College.
are proud to have formed the first class.
assistants in all

We

Page 30

�TECHNICAL FORESTRY

I

The doors of our new Lakehead College have attracted ten stalwart young men to
the Technical Forestry course this year.
have representatives from Alberta to the
eastern part of Ontario. All of us have a love for the rigorous outdoor life and a great
appreciation of nature, and we are looking forward to a promising career in practical

We

forestry.

Most of
activities,

many

the fellows are active participants in one or

hockey and curling being the

of us. In fact,

many

of the pictures in this

College by two of our ardent darkroom

more

of the College's sports

Photography is a popular hobby with
book were printed and developed at the

favorites.

artists.

course, we have many other interesting subelementary forestry, timber estimating, surveying, drafting, and public

Along with the academic part of our
such
speaking.
jects,

as:

Two weeks of our fall term were spent in the College forest around Island Lake
and Trout Lake. There we were under the supervision of our instructor and also the second year students. The purpose of these trips was to gain a basic knowledge of forest
cruising.

The cold winter months have been spent in the classroom. However, pleasant
breaks in the routine were provided by guest lecturers. Representatives of the local forest industries and associations have given some very enlightening talks on many different aspects of forestry. Interesting films, slides, and periodic afternoon excursions, have
all served to make this an enjoyable and profitable year.

Russel Hall

TECHNICAL MINING
The term

I

got underway on September 18, with the next thirty days being rather

quiet, while the ten miners, representing places in

Ontario, as well as the Lakehead, got to

know one

Manitoba, Northern and Southern
another and the routine of the college.

After the thirty day period of induction, we set out on our field trip with Mr. Page.
two cold rainy weeks, during which time we travelled west as far as Pigeon River where a newly found deposit of pyrrhotite was being worked; and as far east
as the Willroy Mine at Manitouwadge where we were shown the complete workings

The

trip lasted

of the

mine and

As well

townsite.

memories that will never be forgotten, the field trip served
with minerals, various geological formations and a few other situations
that miners are bound to face some time or other in their career.
as leaving us

to familiarize us

The remainder of the fall term passed very quickly with everyone enjoying equal
work and fun. The fun was terminated by a successful dinner dance at the

portions of

Club Seaway; and the work by the Christmas examinations which
will never be forgotten.

also left

memories

that

This group has spent many an hour in the library looking up material needed to
in assignments given to them by the teachers and also to do work. It is one of
the quietest spots in the school, thanks to our helpful friend, Mrs. Viegandt.

hand

We would also like to take this opportunity to say "Au Revoir" to Mr. Page. It
would have been nice to have him finish up our course with us but we extend our best
wishes and wish him good luck in his ventures.
Danny

Page 31

Langille

�TECHNICAL FORESTRY

II

This year, there are four students in the second year forestry class. This small class
gives a greater opportunity for the students to receive more personal attention.

During the course of the year, the boys were fortunate to attend two one-week trips
camps and to watch the logging operations of the different pulp and paper
companies in the district. They were also able to take in numerous guided tours of local
paper mills and company woodlands' offices. Shortly after the opening of the first term,
each of the boys attended a two-week scaler's course at Long Lac, Ontario. The course
was sponsored by the Department of Lands and Forests and each of the students was
to tour the

successful in obtaining his scaler's license.

second year students took the first year boys
The majority of the
forestry lectures have been used to compile this cruise and to prepare tables, maps and
a management plan for the area.

Immediately following

on

a

two-week

this course, the

cruise in the Institute Forest, north of Trout Lake.

On completion of the course, each boy, formed his own idea on what his future
would be. Two of the fellows hope to go into jobs with the forestry department of pulp
and paper companies. One student hopes to work with the Department of Lands and
Forests, and our fourth faculty member will attend the University of New Brunswick
forestry course.

Brian Robinson

Technical Mining 11

This, our graduating year, has been another interesting and educational one for us.

The

field trips are the highlight of the technical courses.

On our first field trip to Manitouwadge, we were accompanied by the first year
Miners. As host, Wilroy mines provided us with good food and accommodation.
The
main object of our trip was a tour of the mine and mill, which turned out to be very
interesting.

In keeping with tradition, our two evenings were very eventful, especially for two
second year boys. Poker was the chief pastime and, strangely enough, the first year boys
proved to have what it takes, that is, except for one who couldn't eat for two days.

Geraldton

is

a

town with very few

recreational facilities, so after arriving in the

evening, our weary group congregated over a

little

and exchanged delightful stories until flickering
the beginning of our second field trip.

round table marked with water rings
ushered our departure. This was

lights

Soon some Bell Telephone workers befriended us and joined our stag parties which
became more exciting as the week progressed. Several beds were found difficult to sleep
One of us saw to this in a fit of revenge
in while others could not be found at all.
brought on when, due to faulty construction, his trusty bed let him down with a crash.

The McLeod Cockshutt mine took excellent care of us and
vey and tour in four days.

we completed our

sur-

These last two years have been a bright spot in our lives, and we have Mr. Page to
thank for most of the highlights. As he is leaving the school to join some of us in an
effort to gain more knowledge, we extend the best of success to him.

Bob Walterson

Page 32

�ONTARIO

OPPORTUNITY UNLIMITED
Mineral production in Ontario continues to spiral upward to new heights.
Ontario's Mines increased their yield in 1957 to an outstanding high of

$739,219,218

—

previous year!

representing an expansion of about $90,000,000 over the

Many new

areas have come into prominence in the last few

years as the result of rich discoveries, and names such as Manitouwadge,
Blind River, Bancroft and

many

others,

which were

little

known a short

time ago, are taking their rightful place beside the old established mining fields.

With

al lthis

in engineering,

To

all

continuing expansion more

men

— men trained

are needed

geology and the related sciences.

young men with the

will to succeed,

mining

in Ontario offers a

challenge and opportunity unlimited.

Forging Ahead in 1957"

— a new booklet reporting the

activities of

Ontario Department of Mines and progress of the Mining Industry.

your free copy write

THE ONTARIO DEPARTMENT
OF MINES
Hon.

J.

W. Spooner

Minister of Mines

/Jo

H. C. Rickaby
Deputy Minister

mm
Page 33

The
For

�Botany
Pat Armstrong,
Paul Schmidt.

Ron Thomas,

Stan Pasko, George Bevilacqua,

Hans

Dieter, Bernie Skula,

Economics
Nester Cheowy, M. Barnuk, Mr. Lehtovaara, Helen Dewar, Leo Bruzas,
Barry Wa»;
George Rhine.

Page 34

�FRENCH

D. Pozihun, N. Chehowy, T. Crocker,
R. Morton, F. Goodfellow.

M. Hansen, M. Rayner,

E.

L.

Bruzas,G. Rhine,

Aidy, Mrs. Stevenson, M. Lindholm, E. Lahto.

History

R. Stark,

M.

Hassell, B. Skula, B.

Wagar,

Page 35

W.

Gregoruk, D. LeDrew

�PSYCHOLOGY
Jerry Carlson, Ernie Petch,

Bob

Orr,

Ron

Bisset,

Ruby Went, Joan Smith, Mina

Lome

Gibson, Roy Willanen, Mr. Whitaker,
Smith, Jerry Sykes.

PART TIME STUDENTS
As the four o'clock bell rings in many elementary schools at the Lakehead, we
would find pupils leaving the confines of the school, glad that another day has come
to an end. However, many of their teachers are getting ready to go to school themselves.
If we were to look in on them, we would see them hurriedly gathering their books and
accessories and dashing out to catch that ride to the new Lakehead College. The teachers
not only interested in educating their pupils, but are striving to
education by participating in the various extension courses offered
at the College. A great many of the "part-time students" have some courses to their
credit already and are working ahead in quest of a Bachelor of Arts degree. A maximum
of two courses can be studied during the winter and a great many Lakehead teachers
head down East in the summer to attend summer sessions at various universities and to
study additional subjects.

concerned in

this are

further their

own

A variety of courses is always offered at the Lakehead and this year included Elementary Psychology, French, Economics, History and Botany. Lectures commence at
4:30 and sometimes last well on to 6:00. The sessions for the "part-time students"
began in early October and terminated in mid- April with a final exam.
The enrollment this year is very good and all indications point to a better one
next year. It is nice to get away in the summer time and take a holiday but we think a
great majority of the teachers participating in these courses would favour a summer
school at the Lakehead held in the beautiful new college.
Gerald Carlson

Page 36

�THE CORPORATION
of the

PORT ARTHUR

CITY OF

heartily congratulate the

Lakehead College of Arts, Science

and Technology
in the

opening of their new and modern college

and wish them every success

MAYOR—Eunice

M. Wishart

ALDERMEN:
Edward V. Anten, M.D

Jean T. Robinson
Daniel H. Coghlan

Michael R. Zale
Albert

J.

Samuel Ashton

Hinton

William Desimone

Jack M. Stitt

Angelo G. Mauro

Grace

CITY CLERK: Arthur

H. Evans, O.B.E., F.C.I.S.

Page 37

Adams

�Compliments of

Compliments of

ST.

SPORTING GOODS LIMITED

Two

Stores to Serve

112

JAMES

CENTRE

HI-FI

You

Syndicate Avenue

S.

Fort William

Cumberland

9 S.

St.

Port Arthur

Guy

Perciante

202 Arthur

Edgar Laprade

Compliments of

Compliments of
F.

.

.

.

LOVELADY AND SONS

CAMERA SHOP LIMITED

TOURTELLOT

HARDWARE
COMPANY

Port Arthur

St.

'Home

of World's Finest

Cameras"

LIMITED

10

S.

Cumberland

St.

Port Arthur, Ont.

Arthur

St.

Port

Arthur

Cor. Victoria

&amp;

Syndicate Ave.

Fort William, Ont.

Page 38

I

�Convocation
1957

The ninth annual convocation

May

7,

of the Lakehead Technical Institute

was held on

1957, at the Fort William Collegiate Institute.

Following "O Canada," the Reverend S. R. McLeod, D.D., delivered the invocation.
The welcome to graduates and guests was given by the Principal, Mr. H. S. Braun, after
which the diplomas and certificates were presented. Mr. F. L. Stevens conferred
diplomas

in the

Technical Division, while Dr. P.

McK. Spence

presented certificates

to the University Division graduates.

Introduction of the guest speaker, Dr.

Hugh H.

Chancellor, University of Manitoba, was by R.

J.

Saunderson, President and ViceChairman of the Advisory

Flatt,

Committee.
After the presentation of scholarships, trophies and awards, the final convocation
Lakehead Technical Institute closed with "God Save the Queen." The tenth
convocation will be the inaugural for the Lakehead College of Arts, Science and Techfor the

nology.

SCHOLARSHIPS

and PRIZES:

Abitibi Power &amp; Paper Co. Ltd. Scholarship
Canadian Car and Foundry Prize
Northwestern Ontario Timber Operators' Ass'n Scholarship
Xi Upsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Scholarship

BRUCE ANTONEN
V.

BALCYTIS

FRANK BUCHIK
JOHN CERVEN
DONALD COULSON
MANFRED FICKER
WAVENLEY GILBERT
ALLAN KORKOLA
JOHN LAGADIN

Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario Scholarship
City of Port Arthur Scholarship
Jessie Mackey Memorial Scholarship
Marathon Paper Mills of Canada Limited Scholarship
J.

STUART McNEILL

P. Bickell

Foundation Scholarship in Mining

City of Fort William Scholarship
Donald Clark Cup

KEITH PERRY
ROBERT SLISKOVITCH

Robert Poulin Memorial Trophy
National Council Jewish Women Scholarship
L. T. I. Students' Administrative Council Scholarship
Year Book Prize
Port Arthur Lodge No. 224, 1. O. O. F. Scholarship
University of Toronto Alumni Scholarship

BERNARD WAATAINEN

Principal's Prize in Forestry

MICHAEL ZABLOCKI
ATHLETIC AWARDS:

Lady Grey Chapter,

ARTHUR MENHART
KIMIO OMAE

PRIZES

to

I.

O. D. E. Scholarship

PERRY
Table Tennis—GERALD SMITH
PART-TIME STUDENTS: Economics—GERTRUDE ZAVIDOWSKI
Curling— KEITH

Geology— BARRY

WAGER

History— PATRICIA ARMSTRONG
Psychology—JANE WADE

Page 39

�Compliments of

PROVINCIAL PAPER, LIMITED
PORT ARTHUR DIVISION

Utctorta College
in the

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
Founded by Royal Charter

in

1836 "for the general education of

in the various branches of Literature

As one

and Science on Christian

youth

Principles."

Federated Colleges in the Faculty of Arts of the University
College enrols students in all courses leading to the
degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Commerce and preparatory
to admission to the schools of Graduate Studies, Divinity, Education,
of the

of Toronto, Victoria

Law and
In the
for

Social Work.

Annesley Hall Women's Residences accommodation

women

students

of

is available
College.
In the Victoria College
available for men students of the College.

Victoria

Residences accommodation

is

in Residence may be assisted
Bursaries.
Residence
through

Men and Women
For

full

apply

information, including calendars and bulletins,
to the Registrar, Victoria College, Toronto.

Page 40

�Page 41

�THE SOCIAL SECTION

The social life of the year got underway on October 9-10 at Gibson"s Bowling
Alley in Port Arthur. The student nurses from the General Hospital were invited, in
order to get the boys from out of town acquainted with some of the Lakehead girls.
The afternoons turned out to be quite successful, although I don't think the bowling
was up

to par.

On October 25, the first
common room was decorated
orchestra.

The

A

dance was held in our new school. For the occasion the
and we danced to the music of a well known Lakehead
good time was had by all.

Foresters had the first stag of the season at Frank Brown's girl friend's

Amethyst Beach. From the

camp

at

passed along, everyone enjoyed himself with the exception of a pilot who couldn't find his CO. before taking off! There were the usual
activities of stags
namely poker and dice games and chug-a-lug contests, with the odd
serenade thrown in by the mad Frenchman.
tales

—

The S.A.C. delved into its funds and purchased a number of long playing records
which enabled us to have record dances on November 8 and January 10. These dances
were not too well attended, but those who did turn out, enjoyed themselves.

On November 28, a Dinner-Dance was held at the Club Seaway in Fort William.
After a hot dinner, Dr. Miller, alias Captain Blythe, presented our champion mousecatcher, Bob Walterson with the supreme award
the golden mouse trap. Tommy

—

Laprade and his orchestra was on hand with the music. It seems as if everyone was
prepared to spend the night dancing, but around 2 A.M. the management politely asked
us to leave. Although reluctant to end such a wonderful evening, we gave in and departed.

To get the new year off to a good start, a dance was held in the common room on
January 17 with the Swing Kings supplying their talents. There was a good turnout
and everyone enjoyed himself.

On

January 31,

"La

Premiere Dance" was held. For

this

occasion

all

the senior

grades of the local high school were invited. Although there weren't too many of the
high school students present we had an excellent turnout of our own student body.
Dancing was to the music of the Jesters. Prior to the dance, the Forestry and Mining
students gave short talks on their respective vocations.

The Artsmen, not to be outdone by the Foresters, held a stag of their own at
Dave Crane's house in Fort William. The evening was highlighted by a very interesting
discussion headed by Dr. Miller and Mr. Page. The rest of the evening was taken up
with general chit-chat, singing and card games.

The annual Mid-Winter Formal was

held on February 21 at the Club Seaway in

Fort William. Dancing was to the music of the Swing Kings. A buffet supper was
served at midnight.
were glad to see so many of the students out for this special
occasion. I must say, all those in attendance looked pretty nice in their gowns and suits.

We

This was the big social event of the year and was well received by

There are

still

a

few functions to be held before the
wind up dance.

will be the Athletic Society's

Page 42

all.

year's end,

and among them

���CURLING

Every Wednesday afternoon at 4:30, the Port Arthur Curling Rink is buzzing with
one were to look in, he would see the forty-odd Lakehead College curlers
participating in this "roarin' old man's game." These students comprise eleven rinks
which are presently playing a single round-robin competition for the school championship. This competition finishes around February 26, leaving time for a school Bonspiel.
There are strong hopes that the teachers may join in and attempt to beat the invincible
students. This remains to be seen.
activity. If

This year, as in the past, there was a small fee of four dollars for each student for
the privilege of partaking in this sport. However, the Athletic Council again agreed to

pay one

dollar out of each curler's fee.

Playing in the men's Lakehead International Bonspiel to be held around the midteam consisting of College students Carl Konefal, Brian Whitfield, Ed Tutkaluk and Don Siira.
wish them the best of luck!

dle of March, will be a

We

The Lakehead College curlers extend their thanks to Nan Egan for the work she
has done during the season in preparing the draws and collecting dues from certain
evasive curlers.

HOCKEY

The

Athletic Society, in an effort to provide
and the male students

students, rented the Arena,

Some
on

skaters

showed the dash and

that part of the foot

citing

games

result

known

some disorganized recreation
swarmed on the ice.

for the

some skated more
than on the skate blade, but rousing and ex-

dexterity of big leaguers, and

as the ankle

from pick-up teams.

An

executive was chosen to administer the League and arrange any outside games.
we have played two, with King's Business College providing the opposition.
Plans are in progress for a Hockey Night with the Port Arthur high schools for Fri-

Of

these,

day,

March

On

7.

each

Wednesday

afternoon, a familiar sight

is

down the ice without the puck, then crashing into
The reason for the crash? He hasn't learned how to

M.

B. treading his

way

dexter-

ously

the boards, or the nearest play-

er.

stop yet, but he will!

The

doctors will not

lows have been

wounded

in a

make much

of a living from us as only a couple of the

battle-scarred; notably

game with

the fine

goalie import

fel-

from Sarnia who was

King's.

Altogether the hockey provides a large number of students with healthy, though
tiring, sport.

Page 45

��CURLING

Jim Shmidt

Marg

Strachan
Colin Trivers
Dave Crozier

George Neely
Pat Boivin

Glen Eckland
Brian Robinson

ft
t

•

*

&amp;r
score

|

2

34

5 6 7 8 9

2

Mel Jacobson
Gavin Kempton

"

•

•is

•

II

!

^

Lloyd Fucile
Bruce Knicely

Bob Nash

Tom

Roberts
-

_

Brian Whitfield

Don

Sir a

Ed Tulkaluk
Carl Konefal

Page 47

1213 14

In

^ A

Walter Papich
Eugene Kotyk

10

6

�Norm

Zawalsky
Annis Quackenbush
Edgar Quinn
Gerald Smith

Russ Hall
Doreen Inouye
Ed Tulkaluk
John Lagadin

Rod Cook
Mike Beverley
Clary

Hardy

Carl Konefal

Dave Crane
Jim Webster
Tamara Anderson
Brian Whitfield

Page 48

�THE

ATKINSON'S

J.

Jewellers J^imited

H.

McLennan Lumber
COMPANY

TROPHY CUPS,

PINS,

MEDALS,

LIMITED

RINGS

Building Supplies
Fuel

-

-

CIL Paints

Hardware

Lakehead's Leading Quality Jewellers

80 N. Cumberland

8

S.

Cumberland

Port Arthur

St.

Port Arthur

St.

Compliments of
.

•

I

I

j

SPECIALIZE

QUALITY BUILT

CLEMENS

CUSTOM PRODUCTS
from

ALLOYS

-

MILDSTEEL

THE

Grocery and

ALUMINUM
-

Meat Market

STAINLESS

DAY COMPANY
of

Canada Limited

Head Office and
Branch:

Plant:

Fort

William

1301

Toronto

Page 49

Victoria Ave.

Fort William

�.

.

.

LIMITED

OUNG /FaASH IONS
fine

sportswear
chosen
for style,
quality

and
value

When you

shop our well-stocked
Men's Shop for all your class and date
clothes, it's a cinch, whatever your taste,
whether it be for the latest fashion trend or
the most cherished conservative classic,
you'll find it right here!
Come, look
them over and decide which were

—

meant

especially for you.

Page 50

your store for

�Page 51

�S.A.C.

REPRESENTATIVES

Page 52

�THE PRECAMBRIAN CLUB
This year, the club

membership includes

is

headed by Pat Boivan, who is in his second year Mining. The
and eight first-year students. The members were

five second-year

launched into the art of lapidary science, commonly known as rock polishing, by guest
lecturer, Dr. Quackenbush.
In his lecture, Dr. Quackenbush dwelled on the structural
geology (and the development) of subterranean formations in this area and their development through the chronological eras of geology.
1

Several of the members have been busily cutting and polishing the various rocks
encountered in their travels around the Lakehead. The results have been surprisingly
good for many of the specimens. One problem has arisen for Mr. Page, that is, beating
enthusiasts away from the College mineral collection. This is making life pretty tough

on

local high-graders.

Dr. Bartley, the former principal of Lakehead Tech, will be giving a lecture on
geology and mineralogy to the club members in the near future. So if you encounter
students with bandaged hands and splinters of rocks protruding from various parts of
the anatomy, a fair conclusion is that the Precambrian Club's rock polishers are at it in
full force.

The

club

is

a junior

member

in the

Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy.

This entitles the club members to the monthly issue of the Institute's Journal. All developments in the mining and metallurgical professions are reviewed upon release to
the public.
In this way, the students keep abreast of modern techniques along with
standard methods taken in lectures during the school year.

Page 53

�IMPORTERS
LADIE S

MEN'S

FOR—

WEAR

WEAR

FOOT WEAR

• Ladies and Mens Wear
• Infants and Childrens Wear
• Shoes for all the family
• Dress Goods and Notions
• Linens, Blankets and Yarn
• Quality Luggage

'

\&gt;

•

It's—

^^^V

'

•

(J\
•

BOY

GIRL'S

LINENS

S

WEAR

WEAR

&amp; LUGGAGE

DISTRIBUTORS
OF FORT WILLIAM
(Formerly Bryans)

Personality Beauty Clinic

^^eterson (Electric
COMPANY,

LIMITED

"Head'quarters for "Shear" Artistry

Dealers

Dial

and

Contractors

5-8152 or 5-6076

Dial 5-8123

226 Van Norman

263 Lincoln Street

Port Arthur

Page 54

St.

Port Arthur

�THE UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA
announces
the

Opening

Courses will be offered leading

to

of the

degrees

AGRICULTURE
ARCHITECTURE
ARTS

ENGINEERING

COMMERCE

LAW

DENTISTRY
EDUCATION

MEDICINE

And

in:

HOME ECONOMICS
INTERIOR DESIGN

PHARMACY

FINE and APPLIED
(Painting,

1958-1959 oession

ART

to

diplomas or

certificates

in:

AGRICULTURE
APPLIED ART
MUSIC
NURSING EDUCATION

SCIENCE
SOCIAL WORK

Sculpture,

Ceramics)

Valuable scholarships
and bursaries.
Excellent athletic and

For free particulars write to:
re-

THE REGISTRAR

creational facilities in the
new University Gymna-

sium.
fc Residences.

The University of Manitoba,

With

the

Compliments of

The Corporation
of the

City of Fort William

Page 55

Fort

Garry,

Man.

�—

Figure

it

out for yourself,

Two

that the greatest have had;
arms, two hands, two legs, two eyes,

And

a

You've

With
So

all

if you would be wise,
equipment they all began
from the top and say, "I can."

brain to use
this

start

Look them over, the wise and the great,
They take their food from a common plate.

And

similar knives and forks they use,

With similar laces they tie their shoes;
The world considers them brave and smart,
But you've all they had when they made their
start.

You are the handicap you must face,
You are the one who must choose your
You must say where you want to go,

How much
God

you

will study the truth to

has equipped you for

Lets you decide

life,

but

what you want to

place.

know;

He

be.

Courage must come from the soul within
You must furnish the will to win.
So figure it out for yourself,
You- were born with all that the great have
had;

With your equipment

they

Get hold of yourself and

all

began,

say, "I can."

—Author unknown

The POWELL

Limited

Page 56

�What Are

Ontario's Forests

The economical and recreational

Worth To You?

value, the fertile

soil,

the fish and wildlife

cannot be computed in terms of dollars and cents, but without them we

would be poor, indeed.

They make Ontario a land of excellent fishing and hunting, of delightful
woodland camping and vacationing areas, of fertile farms and scenic vistas.
Such things are priceless. We must conserve them wisely for they contribute substantially to the welfare of the people in Ontario.

EXERCISE CAUTION

KEEP ONTARIO GREEN
PREVENT FOREST FIRES
Carelessness with fire in forested areas, disregard of fishing and hunting
regulations and

mismanagement

of soil are abuses which could change a

country from a "have" to a "have not" nation.
Let us measure up to our responsibility and co-operate with conservation
authorities and fire prevention regulations.

Ontario Department of Lands and Forests

Hon. Clare

E.

Mapledoram

F.

Minister

ONTARIO
Page 57

A. MacDougall
Deputy Minister

�Compliments of

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LIMITED

TORONTO, ONT.

PORT ARTHUR, ONT.

Conserve

tlie

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OTTAWA

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Ottawa have educational and cultural opportuCanada: departmental libraries of the Dominion

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Page 58

�Page 59

�—

THE BEACH COMBliRS

Work

is all we'll ever know,
matter where we roam or go.
From dawn to dark the same refrain,
toil beneath the sun and rain.

No

We

The Aunor Mine

To

fix the light

has had good toilers

and

fill

the boilers.

But the brightest of all within their reach,
Are the boys that labour on the beach.

While office staff are still in slumber
We're splitting kindling from the lumber.
We saw the firewood, cur the grass,

And

polish the Lodge's shiny brass.

We

sweep the spotless dressing rooms,
We're very handy with the brooms.
We pick the papers from the sand,
That's

why

the beach appears so grand.

Whatever we attempt or
Is

Bur when we
Is

try,

rated by the experts, high.

when we

glisten like the sun

get the painting done.

Canary yellow stands the swing,
Considered a delightful thing.
Beneath it stands a yellow table;
Picture the beauty if you're able.

The "Lodge,"

To

paint

it

it is

a gorgeous spot,

costs an

But we have made

By painting

it

awful lot.
trim and nice,

it

for half the price.

The benches

please each shapely queen
They're Chinese red and island green.
The sea-blue tables never fail
To hold a dozen Black Horse Ale.

Come

out some day and feast your eyes;
You'll really get a swell surprise.
The sun portrays the painted beauty

Of

the

Aunor

lads

who

have done their duty.

Al Johnson

Page 60

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Compliments of

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C

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jj-lorist

Sold

Only

By

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William

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Compliments of

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Page 61

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FORT WILLIAM

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for over 60 years
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Page 63

�SLAVE

Ken

Boloty

Everyone, at one time or another, has read about the poor lowly slave. However,
slave is unknown to most people. The slave of old generally had only one
master, but his modern counterpart has many.
feel the best way to inform you about
him is to give you a typical day from the diary of our typical slave, whom we call Alvin.
the

modern

We

just

We meet Alvin at approximately 11:45 P.M. Yes! you guessed it, our Alvin is
going to bed. He sets his clock for 7:45 A.M. and sinks into a peaceful slumber.

—

due course the old timepiece sounds out with a loud RING!!
However, our
manner, soon puts a stop to this warbling ticker. Oh! Oh! It
sounds as if it broke into a million pieces.
In

friend, with a cat-like

Hmmmm?
Suddenly there

Looks
is

—

though our friend

as

a loud screech

is

going to sneak in
up or do

"Alvin! are you getting

a
I

few extra winks.
have to drag you

out of bed?'"
In due time our friend Alvin finishes breakfast. If you should ask him what he
he would not be able to tell you. Poor boy he looks beat from the night before.
seems he spent a long evening pondering over a little item his masters term homework.

—

ate,
It

Finally Alvin sets out for a

red building called the "Hall of Learning."

little

He

would much rather go to a hall of different nature but his conscience puts too much
pressure on him. It seems Alvin had spent the previous afternoon at this other hall.

Now
and
boy

is a place that seems to be jammed with other slaves
Today, these slave-drivers sem to be overworking Alvin. The poor
having difficulty explaining his absence of the previous afternoon.

this hall of learning

slave-drivers.
is

The boy's day (five complete hours ) finally comes to an end. However, our friend
not quite as happy as would be expected. It appears that the learned scholars in this
hall of learning have not been able to teach all the things they were supposed to or/
this day, so they suggest that a teeny weeny (?) bit of research be done at home. Our
friend foresees an unbearable seven hours in the evening, but you can rest assured that
is

change things.

he'll try to

One

and two thrilling cowboy spectaculars later, Alvin casually puts on
and is just opening the door when "Just a minnit! young man."
master's voice. "Where might you be going?"

—

fine dinner

his black leather jacket

Oh! Oh!

his

"Well

—ah—SIR.

I

was

just

going to take part in some extracurricular

activities."

"'Oh Yeh!" stammers the big boss. "It seems to me that you have extracurricular
do with a pen and some paper. Now March!"

activities to

Our poor Alvin drags himself

to a

huge

pile of paper,

which he

feels

would make

the best fire known.

After fifteen cigarettes and a change in hairdo, which he self-consciously gave
himself, the boy notes the time on his wrist watch to be 11:45 P.M.

This looks like the place where we first met our boy. However, there is a small
the poor boy seems to have a bit of trouble finding the whole million
difference
pieces to his morning "song bird."

—

Page 64

�—
FROM A FEMININE VIEWPOINT

we

we had an idea of what we were
months inside plaster walls, with the only females being four others
like ourselves. We were resigned to our fate. One good thing was that we had spent
five glorious years together at Fort William's renowned Collegiate. Those years of
peaceful bliss were now closing behind us, leaving only the memories, as we take one
more step up the ladder of higher learning.
Before

headed for

—

entered the famed Lakehead College,

eight

new faces. How on earth were we to
remember them! The first week passed. Things were not

Registration day faced us with an ocean of
learn

all

names

their

so bad after

—and

Mind

all.

you,

to

we

still

cowered

in the nearest corner, biting our nails

we would

and

breathe at the wrong moment. However, after
a few days we had met a wonderful group of the students
all males. Our noses began
to slip off the grind, and slowly the old text books began to collect cob-webs
and mice
hesitating to breathe, for fear

—

—

—

in the lockers.

Not long

after

culture, currently

down our

we

arrived,

we became

on the curriculum.

progress in this exciting

mastered the

Now

new

initiates into

and then

study, but

the popular course on card

a lecture

would

we were good

conflict,

slowing

students and rapidly

art.

A new world was opening for us. It is written that this is a co-educational college,
but the odds are certainly against the co-eds or maybe they are for us! The round of
social events in the first term introduced us completely to the routine of college life

—

far

from

On
things

dull, isn't it?

looking back, we do not forget a thing, except possibly scores. But perhaps the
learned KO«-academically were worth the payment in marks.

we

And in a few months we shall leave this College, possibly never to return. In the
meantime, the five of us will remain as close friends, facing the perils of college life
together.

We wish all good fortune on the female population of the future, and hope that
numbers will be greater than ours. May their year at this College be as enjoyable as
ours, and the memories they carry with them, as pleasant.
its

THE QUICK TEMPER

Anger, what
Pulses at

my

is it

that races through

throat,

my

brain

makes me impetuous

again.

Brings tremors to my voice, urges violence and action,
Blinds clarity of mind, brings fits of passion.

Makes me

curse aloud, and scowl at friends,

Thunders through

my

Makes me clench my
It

frame, seeking vainly an end.
fist

cannot be quenched,

and

grit

my

teeth.

this pressure beneath.

Slowly the storm makes way for the calm,
Serenity and warmth, no quivering of arm,
The pressure subsides, no rage any more,
Breathing less violent, and peace is in store.

Anonymous

Page 65

�For dependable service on

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all

American

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products, including No. 1 and No. 2 Domestic

Fuel Oils:

CALL YOUR FRIENDLY

DIAL

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For young people intent on
to

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—

utilizing their abilities

and capacities

on making the most of their

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—

lives,

nothing can

take the place of university training.

You may

obtain information concerning the facilities of this

university and the scope of

its

services

by writing

to the Registrar.

THE

UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO
London, Ontario

Page 66

�MADSEN RED LAKE
GOLD MINES LIMITED
-[NO

PERSONAL

LIABILITY]-

^^^icefs and ^J^irecto rs

MARIUS MADSEN
FRED R. MARSHALL,

Q.C.

-

-

Toronto, Ont.

-

Rothesay, N.B.
M.E.

-

-

Montreal, Que.

-

SEGUIN

Toronto, Ont.

BIRD, C.E.

Toronto, Ont.

A. H.
J.

Toronto, Ont.
Toronto, Ont.

HUGH MACKAY
HORACE G. YOUNG,
S.

....

McDONOUGH

JOSEPH

JOSEPH

McDONOUGH

FRED

MARSHALL,

R.

-

Q.C.

MISS M. MASTERSON

(Executive ^Dffi ccrs

-

-

President

-

-

Vice-President

Secretary-Treasurer

-

+

E

.G.

DR.

CRAYSTON,

E.

G.

BISHOP

P.
-

General Manager

ENG.
-

-

-

Consultant

-

GUARANTY TRUST COMPANY OF CANADA
70

Richmond Street West
St. James Street West

610

THE BANK OF

Office-.

Mine

SUITE 1109
55 Yonge

Street

-

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Page 67

Toronto, Ont.

Montreal, Que.

-

-

New

York

Toronto, Ontario

Madsen, Ontario

Office:

-

-

NEW YORK

48 Wall Street

Head

-

-

15,

N.Y.

�HARRY AGONISTES
(An

(An

Harry Pantoulias

Essay in Autobiography)

Essay in Autobiography)

It is said that people learn by living. I consider myself to have lived, but seem to
have learned nothing. Such a confession probably signifies stupidity, and since I do not
like being called stupid, I will try to reproduce part of my life and see if I have not
learned anything. To avoid disappointment, I shall not set my sights too high. I will be
satisfied with anything which shows that my life has not been in vain.

In Greece, I lived on a farm near a small town. Every day I would walk the odd
two miles to school, catch up on some badly needed sleep in class, and at night, I would
drag my weary self back home. The only thing I learned in school was that two and
two makes four, but everyone knows that. I think I also might have learned that it is
right for the big to hit the small. The teacher, with his knotted stick, was daily proving
that lesson. If there is anything that those who went to the Greek public schools remember,

it is

the teacher's strap.

thought that facing that strap six days a week was not healthy, and for the sake
I would usually forget to go to school on sunny and warm days. Most days
in Greece are sunny and warm. It was always more fun searching for birds' nests or
feeding worms from the end of the hook to the fish in the river. School should be for
girls; boys can learn from nature.
I

of

my

health,

The Germans seemed to have an even better idea about schools. They burned ours
down. My father was still old-fashioned; he sent me to a school in a neighbouring
town where my aunt was living.
In the summer I looked after the shep. There, I was not stupid any more. I could
"baa" as good as any sheep. I cannot understand why shepherds are looked down upon.

They sleep under the shade of a tree all day and look at the stars at night.
look after themselves most of the time.

The sheep

Since Greece is a small and overpopulated country, the Second World War may
be considered as a blessing, since it killed quite a few people and left more room for
the survivors. Some people, however, still felt crowded after the Germans left and a
civil was war started. Until 1947, I had a ringside view to the slaughter. The Communists had control of our town by night, and the army by day. Between battles, we were
usually entertained by each side's public personnel. The Communists had the better
loudspeakers and their slogans of equality, liberty and freedom from the English
sounded nice. They did not sound so good to my father, so he joined the anti-Communist
side, with the result that the Communists killed my grandfather and burned our house.

We moved to Piraeus, where I went to a bigger school. Unfortunately, neither
Germans nor the Communists could stop my father's stubborn efforts to educate
me. The only thing I learned was how to fool the teachers into thinking I was smart so
they would pass me. I wouldn't fool my fellow students, however. They found me an
uncivilized, ignorant, country boy who could not even talk proper Greek. With such a
the

I could not be blamed for detesting Piraeus, and being eagerly awaiting for
our papers to be finished so I could come to Canada. Even the famous classical ruins
of Athens looked like ruins, and nothing else.

reception,

I liked the trip across the Atlantic, though. There is nothing in life more enjoyable
than ploughing through the waves on an ocean liner. I was the only one in the family
who was not happy when we landed in Halifax. Canada, from Halifax to Fort William,
was one long train ride through the largest forest and tallest grass I had ever seen. One
could grow some mighty fat sheep on this grass! Occasionally, but not very often, we
would pass through a city. In Greece, a person can not walk in any direction for more
than four hours without passing through a town, while here one could ride for half a
day through nothing but bush.

Page 68

��——

month

William, I started school again. Once again, I was a first
had finished public school in Greece. Most people only have to
struggle through it once. I had to do it twice. School life here, though, was a little different. There were no straps, hardly any strict discipline, the girls left the room before
the boys, and a new language, which was "Greek to me," was spoken. I did not like
this strange language. Anything I do not understand, I do not like. The other pupils,
probably trying to be friendly, would occasionally corner me and start blabbering in
English. I would wave my hands and make like the deaf and dumb, but to no avail.
After

a

grader, even though

They

in Fort
I

usually succeeded in

With the learning
knew what I was being

making me

came new difficulties. Then I had to prove that I
The days of accepted ignorance were over. What I was

of English
taught.

being taught, however, contradicted

Now

feel stupid.

at

times to what

I

had been taught in Greece.

learned that Canada was the foremost, the greatest, the best country in the world.
When I was in Greece, I felt sorry for the people in other countries who could
I

not be Greeks, and the only superlatives used in school were those describing Greece.
seems that nationalism makes liars of peaple. Both Grece and Canada could not be
the best. With lying as a common point, people of different nations are basically the

It

same. Even though in Greece the main topic of conversation is politics, while here it is
the weather, and although in Greece they start a war when they want something, while
here they go on strike, they are the same since their goal is the same: to improve their
position at the expense of

someone

else.

After all these years of school, however, I still seem to have learned nothing. For a
person to learn anything, he must discover why he is living. Acquiring knowledge so
as to cheat our fellow men in order to live a fuller life has no value if we do not know
the reason for our struggle for existence. The ready made formula that this life is
merely a journey to the Great Beyond and we live for our soul, and God can only be
believed through blind faith.

.

.

.

I feel that I was born so as to
accomplishing nothing."

die. In

between

I

am

L'HIVER
La neige silenteLa terre gelee;
Gelee comme couer

D'homme.
Tout

est

mort

—

Les arbres nus
Leurs membres gris,
Leurs troncs tranquils.

Un

vide profond

Des sons

silents

Le noir tombant,
La lune levant.
Le vent du nord

Rampe

Un
De

sur la neige,

avant-coureur
l'hiver grand.

Allan Jack

Page 70

"eddying about here and there

�NATURE
abundance
of the

responsible for the

is

mined

of ore

at the site

once primitive and beautiful
Steep Rock Lake

TWO

FACETS OF NATURE
NATURE

is

responsible for the beauty

that abounds in the
forests
in

It is

the Atikokan vicinity

with a true love of nature and a keen understanding for the rights of fellow

development

at Steep

Rock Lake

surrounding countryside

While the demands
in

and wilderness areas

some

tained

respects,

in

it

of
is

is

is

men

that

mining

kept under rigid control so that the beauty and abundance of

unsullied and unspoiled.

modern

society

and industrial development are such that nature must

suffer

with complete assurance that sportsmen agree nature's benefits are main-

Northwestern

Ontario

by Steep Rock's diligent application of the rules of nature

preservation.

Do you want mora

in-

formation about Atiko-

C

kan and Quotico Park?
Writ*

Km

Eoll,

Sott*-

.

L7

Er^

C^CS)(§CS

Atikokan Chambar
of Com merit

IR0N

MINES LIMITED

iary,

STEEP

Page 71

ROCK

LAKE,

ONTARIO

�PROSPECTING IN THE ASTEROID BELT

Marvin Dyrkacz

Mark was
metals.

a prospector, going to the Asteroid belt looking for radioactives and rare
searched for years, never finding much, hopping from fragment to fragment.

He

He

After a time, he settled on a slab of rock a mile thick.
Martha, after no girl he had ever known.

He made
a

few tons of

called

this

slab of rock

enough to equip Martha with an air pump and a shack,
and some water tanks, and a robot. Then he settled back and watched

a little strike,
dirt

the stars.

The robot he bought was
word vocabulary. Mark added to
At

first,

As

—"Therobot

that, bit

by

air

pump

years passed, the air

is

pump

working,

and "No sir." He could
and "The corn is budding,

sir"

sir,"

began to work harder

in the planitoids rocks into a breathable atmosphere.

pump worked

a little harder,

a thirty

bit.

could say was "Yes

the

all

simple problems

memory and

a standard model, with built-in

The

also state
sir."

it converted the oxygen
seeped into space, and the

as

air

supplying more.

Looking up, Mark could

see the sheer blackness of the rivers of space,

floating stars. Occasionally, he caught a glimpse of

Mars or

Jupiter.

and the

Once he thought

he saw Earth.

Mark began
key words.
I

When

responses into Charles. He added simple responses to
does it look?" Charles would answer, "Oh, pretty good,

to tape

new

he

"How

said,

guess."

Mark had always been suspicious and scornful of women. But for some reason, he
did not tape the same suspicion into Charles. Charles' outlook was quite different.

"What do you

think of girls?"

Mark would

ask, sitting

on

a packing case outside

the shack.

"Oh, I don't know, you have to find the right one" the robot would reply dutifully,
repeating what had been put on the tape.
"I

never saw a good one yet,"

And

then

it

do you think of

Mark would

would be bedtime,
he would ask

girls?"

or

say.

Mark would want more

again,

conversation.

"What

and the discussion would follow the same

course.

rust.

Charles grew old. His limbs lost their flexibility, and some of the wiring started to
Mark spent hours keeping the robot in repair.

It was always night on Martha, but Mark broke up his time into morning,
noons and evenings.

Time passed unnoticed by the stars, and the air pump hissed, clanked and
Mark fixed it constantly, but the air of Martha became increasingly rare.
Mark was
gravity.

He

tired

leaked.

now, and barely able to crawl around even without the pull of
him as best he could,

stayed in his bed most of the time. Charles fed

moving about on

rusty, creaky limbs.

Charles would ask Mark,
Mark would reply, "Here,

have to share

after-

it

with

"Why would
I

a person like you want to live up here?"
have a whole world to myself, where on Earth I would

billions."

Mark was too tired to see the end coming, and Charles was not interested. But the
end was on its way. The air pump threatened to give up momentarily. There had not
been any food for days.
Charles stood beside the body of his friend. He walked to the corner of the shack
tired air pump. His rusted limbs would not bend. He stood frozen,

and turned off the
staring back at the

stars.

Page 72

�THE WILD CLAIM

I

V.

Weemees

There are different ways of working one's way through college, and so last summer
hired out as a cutter in one of the North-Western Ontario lumber camps. For about

month

Swede by the name of Sven. He knew I
and often treated me with the light contempt a
professional has for an amateur. But the bush was poor, and often we found common
language in expressing exactly how poor it was. And one rainy afternoon he told me
how he had cut one hundred cords of wood in twenty-two days. I did .not quite believe
a

wanted

it.

He

worked on

I

to

a strip next to a big

make money

smiled: "Listen

.

for

.

my

studies

.

—

"Last year in camp 113, everybody was prospecting
the contractor, the foreman,
the strip boss, the barn boss and even the bull cook
for lithium, beryllium, and everything.

—

—

was cutting very poor bush, worse than here, even maybe a cord and a
then one day the idea hit me. I had in my bag a chunk of copper ore
from the days when I had worked as a miner around Sudbury. So when the next Sunday
came, I was up early. I, too, was going prospecting. I even borrowed a compass from
Kerry, the strip boss. Kerry knew all about prospecting. He had staked a few claims for
lilithium and was going to make a million dollars. So he said.
"Well,

half a day.

I

And

"So I set out, and came back quite late in the evening. I returned the compass to
Kerry, but I did not say anything. So he got curious and asked me if I had found anything. I pretended I did not want to talk, but when he insisted, I said yes, I had brought

back a sample but I did not know if it would be any good. Let's see, said Kerry and so I
took the bit of ore out of my pocket. Kerry looked at it and got very excited. 'Boy!'
he shouted. 'You lucky dog! This is copper! Where did you find it?' I did not answer.
He grew silent too. 'You staked your claim already?' he asked then. I shook my head.
'I did not know,' I said. 'If this is copper like you say, it
is a serious thing. I have to
think about it.' 'Is the place far from here? Did you mark the place?' But I did not
talk any more. I said I had to think about it.
"Well, from then on I had it made. Next day, Kerry came to my
no good, Svenska. I'll give you something better.' We went up the
those jackpines! So I cut five cords a day
steady.
is

—

"And every Saturday

'This bush

strip.
hill

a

little.

Oh,

I did not have to buy any beer because the other
could drink. But on Sundays everybody went prospecting
and everybody was trying to find my mine. Everbody, that is, but me. There was hardly
anybody f6r dinner, although on Sundays they served chicken in the camp. So even the

men bought me more

than

in town,
I

cookees had nothing to do, and I asked one pretty Finnish
with me. She said yes. Oh, I was famous then.

I
I

"But I knew it could not last. So one Saturday when
was going to town to register my claim. And of course
never saw any of those men again."

Page 73

I
I

girl, Sara,

to

go

for a

walk

my scale, I told everybody
never went back. That was it.

had

�C.

R.

Addison

BEST

BET

WITH THE COLLEGE SET

INSURANCE

Compliments of

AGNEW

REAL ESTATE

SURPASS

SHOE STORE
Dial

5-9251

Port Arthur

Arthur

Port Arthur

St.

Rutledge Stationery

Compliments of

LIMITED

TAYLOR'S

GREETING CARDS

S.

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TAILORED TO
TAILORED TO

STATIONERY

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Port Arthur, Oat.
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St.

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Phone 2-1653

WEAR

512

Victoria

Ave.

TAILORED BY
TAYLOR'S MEN'S

WEAR
Fort William

Page 74

Ontario

�A

0&amp;csinor-&amp;env*r

check

list

of fast, safe mining equipment

"MOBILJUMBO'*®

DH143

Super 5Vi"

Drill

Deluxe "Air Trac"®
"Air Trac"

Wagon

Drills

Deep Hole

[~|

Drills

|

|

Ring Seal Shanks, Sectional

I

|

Sinkers

|

|

Breakers

I

|

Tampers

Drill

Rod

Air Tools

I

|

Hydraulic

Drill

Jumbos

Hydraulic

Drill

Support

Pneumatic Columns
Forges

Drill Steel

Bit

I

Grinders

Line Oilers

|

Automatic Stopers

Above ground or down below

I

|

Chain Feed

Drifters

I

|

Screw Feed

Drifters

GARDNER-DENVER

Air Leg Drills

Air Feed Legs

helps speed production

Air Motors
Air Hoists
|

" Airslushers"

|

Shaft Muckers

Mine Car Loaders
|

|

Sump Pumps

|

|

Dewatering Pumps

|

|

Grout

Pumps

rj]

High-Pressure

|

Centrifugal

|

Pumps

Pumps

Rotary Portables
|

Stationary Compressors

|

See your Gardner-Denver mining equipment
specialist or write for bulletins

ENGINEERING FORESIGHT
IN

— PROVED

ON

THE JOB

GENERAL INDUSTRY, CONSTRUCTION, PETROLEUM AND MINING

Gardner-Denver Company, Quincy,

In

Illinois

Gardner-Denver Export Division, 233 Broadway, New York 7, New York
Canada: Gardner-Denver Company (Canada), Ltd., 14 Curity Avenue, Toronto 16, Ontario
Page 75

�—

—

— ————

THE RUSH TO DEATH
Lost in a

We

gamma

fog

tread,

The

frightened age.

"Big"

is

theme

the standing

Of man
Alone

in fear.

Last spins the cycle's course,

For

now

We

must

live.

— no to-morrow
From slumber—

Screaming dreams
Pull us

limp.

No

sleep

For death
It comes.
But when?

Giant pois'nous mushrooms

The sky
With

light

death's bright glow.

New-shattered pillars of
Men's minds

Crumble

to dust.

All base runs wild in

Carnel joy,
For sweet

life's short.

Drink deep the potent brew

Of now
Fear each

new dawn.

Drink deep
For death
comes.
But when?

It

Sleek missiles reach toward

The

sky

And where
The

is

circle

God?
quickens pace,

Life's pulse

Now

breaks the beat.

Man's human body, head

Of

ass

Blind, senseless fear.

Sing your frantic

little

In haste

Tempus

fugit.

Sing songs
For death
It comes.
But when?

Page 76

songs

�Neutrons,
Electrons,

Destroy a land.
Protons,

Megatrons,
Isn't life

grand?

Press a button,
Press again,

Down

comes the deadly

rain.

Pull a lever,
Pull again,

Watch man go down

the drain.

Sing and drink, but never sleep,
For death lies within our keep.
Allan Jack

—

—Lome

ICE FISHING

Campbell

exposed and unexposed parts of the
by a smokey, uncomfortable bonfire. At first, you can't get too close and later, you can't get far enough away. Inside,
you are warmed by liquid anti-freeze which clouds the chilled brain, making the person
more prone to the after-effects of cold and other sicknesses, related and unrleated.
Ice fishing

human anatomy

is

the noble art of freezing

in

an attempt to

warm

all

a small area

A shelter of some sort is generally suggested, but you find no shelter can provide
room needed. The shelters are so small that there is no room to flail arms, especially
when there is more than one person and the parties get excited if a fish is accidentally
hooked. The confusion results in refreshments being spilled, persons getting wet, and,
the

least in

ment

importance, the fish getting away.

Excepting that fishing tackle which any self-respecting male owns, all other equipchisels, sieves, ice boxes
proves unnecessary. It may be borrowed from nearby

—

—

ardent ice fishermen.

The

real

reason for the popularity of ice fishing

is

that

it

gives the fellows a

chance to tear loose without raising the eyebrows of neighbours, or the long arm of the
law.

Sometimes the excursion gets no further than the
the thought of leaving civilization, usually

all

first

in the party

tavern out of town.

want

With

to fortify for the rigors

with a refresher. After a few drinks in front of a roaring fire, thoughts turn to what
happened on the previous trip. This results in everybody staying in the warm building.
The only 'fishing' done is fishing objects out of glasses, and hardships from former
fishing trips.

Page 77

�Compliments of

COCHRANE HARDWARE

Ruttan-BolduC'Adderky

(WESTERN LIMITED)

LIMITED

WHOLESALE HARDWARE, IRON,

STEEL

MINING and FORESTRY SUPPLIES
Insurance

CONGRATULATIONS TO ONTARIO'S

and Mortgage Loans

NEWEST JUNIOR COLLEGE, THE
LAKEHEAD TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
PORT ARTHUR

QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY
at KINGSTON

FORT WILLIAM

Compliments of

Incorporated by Royal Charter 1841

• Faculty of Arts
• Faculty of Applied Science
Chartered Accountant

• Faculty of Medicine

• Faculty of

Law

• School of Nursing
• School of Commerce

Combined Courses in Arts and Physical
and Health Education
Graduate Courses

230 Van Norman

in Arts, Science

and Medicine

Write to the Registrar

Page 78

St.

Port Arthur

�Canada's Most Complete

DRILLING SERVICE
\

BOYLE5
BROS
DRILLING COMPANY

We

manufacture a full range of underground and surface diamond drills
developed to meet extensive contract commitments throughout the world.
We are sole proprietors of the PERMASET diamond drill bit, now available

We

in all standard patterns.

complete sales and service
branches.

undertake

facilities at

full scale

contract work and offer

each of our conveniently located

BOYLES BROS. DRILLING LTD.
Port Arthur, Ontario
Vancouver, B. C.
Noranda, P. Q.

Edmonton, Alta.

Kirkland Lake, Ont.
Moncton, N. B.

Congratulations
to

1958 Graduates

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE OF ARTS,
SCIENCE and TECHNOLOGY

We

emphasize industry's need for graduates of higher education,
and our interest in young Canadians with degree standing in
the sciences.

GOOD LUCK

Abitibi

to all of

you

in

your further

studies.

Power and Paper Company Limited

Lakehead Woodlands

Port Arthur, Ontario
Page 79

LTD.,

�—Ray Drew

MANITOUWADGE— THERE WE WENT!
This

fall,

We

left

our course in Mining Technology, we, the students in mining,
being able to visit the prosperous new mining development at

as part of

were fortunate
Manitouwadge.

in

the college on a

Wednesday morning and

travelled

in cars

that,

were

bulging with food, clothing, and a motley assortment of guns and other offensive
weapons. By the number of firearms in evidence, one would think that we were going
on a military skirmish. Actually, most of the boys thought that they would alleviate
the over-crowded situation for the moose population in that district.
After travelling over innumerable miles of rocky, bush-covered hills, we arrived
in time for a late but hearty meal at the hotel. When we had finished
eating, we immediately sized up the town to find out the places of entertainment and
at

Manitouwadge

relaxation. Some of the boys went to the
search of liquid refreshment.

movies, while the thirstier ones went in

The next morning, we groggily went up to the mine where we were to be shown
the complete lay-out of the mining operations. First, we saw the original strike that the
prospectors had found; then we went to the assaying geologist's and superintendent's
where we were shown the various plans of the mine. Now came the most inWe went down to the bottom of the mine in little elevator cages called
"skips." Here, we saw the acutal mining processes being carried on. Many questions
and new experiences later, we arrived back on the surface. We then went to the processing
plant where the ore is treated and concentrated for shipment. All too soon, the day had
come to a close and we returned to our dormitories for supper.
offices

teresting part.

The next morning, with our mineral and ore samples to remind us of a wonderful
and educational tour, we reluctantly left for home.

WHAT CAN YOU

DO?

—John

Jaklitch

After a long one-hour session in the English class, I walked into the common room
I noticed four card players being pestered by an unmentionable. But he soon left when I reached the table and I overheard Ken say, "Let's make

exhausted. In the far corner

up

game no one

a

ever heard of, then he might shut up."

The pest soon returned and Joe, who
and gave them to Bill on his left. He tore
in front of Al. Then Joe tore five cards in
himself. "I have a rough," he said. "I'll bet
"I

have a giggle," said

Al, the third
"I've got a mike.

Bill. "I'll raise

was now the

dealer, tore

two cards

in half

the corners of three cards and spread
quarters, gave fifteen to

Ken and

them

kept five

a coke."

you a coke."

man, folded without betting and Ken, with
raise you two cokes."

a little thought, said,

I'll

The pest looked with his eyes wide, and shaking his head, said, "You're crazy,
you're never going to beat a rough and a giggle with a lousy mike."

Page 80

�The

rain;

Dark, oppressive master of

The

streets,

Whose

barren furrows cut

The towns;
Scabs of wanton man.

The

streams;

Black, spindly legs

Of

seas

Fully pocked

By rain,
Our Lord.

—Allan Jack
MODERN
Up

LIVING

town,

Down-town
Have to run
One life,

fast.

Only one,

Must make

it last.

Buy one,
Buy two,

Make

a quick deal.

Rush home,
Sit

down,

Wolf down your meal
Homework,
Bookwork,
Can't take a break.
Work hard,

Work

fast,

Deadline to make.

Good

night,

Sleep tight,

Take

a

deep breath.

All gain,
All loss,

Cancelled by death.

—Allan Jack

The
choked

man stood over her menacingly. He had choked her. Deliberately he had
And now, with clenched fists, he stood looking at her. Suddenly, in a fit
raised his foot and kicked her. He could not understand why he always had to

large

her.

of rage, he

do this. Giving a vicious growl, he kicked her again, but this time with all his might.
There was a shudder and a tremor of life, then the engine broke into life. The man,
with a smile of delight, climbed into the truck and, gearing her down, drove off.

Page 81

�t

c

i

.

It

The Catholic College

a

e I s

C3 allege

of the University of

Toronto

Co-educational

Under

the direction of the Basilian Fathers

All

Courses

in

Arts and Sciences

Leading to the Degrees of
Bachelor of

Residence

for

Facilities

For

full

Commerce

Men and Women

Students

information write

The Registrar
Michael's College
Toronto 5, Canada

St.

With

the Best Wishes of

THE ONTARIO PAPER
COMPANY LIMITED

MILL

AT THOROLD

WOODS OPERATIONS

AT

HERON BAY AND MANITOULIN ISLAND

Page 82

�Eat

Compliments of

Newaygo

SL aw

Timber Co.

s

ENRICHED

LIMITED

WHOLESOME
subsidiary of

BREAD

CONSOLIDATED WATER POWER and PAPER

COMPANY
240
Port Arthur

S.

Algoma

Port Arthur

DIAL 5-7327

Ontario

Compliments of

&lt;£.

St.

X
LIMITED

II, ontpson

Everything for the Office

OPTOMETRIST

Cumberland

St.

Port Arthur

Dial

Page 83

4-152'

Port Arthur

�ON YOUR
When down
On the tide

SHIP OF MEMORIES

the stream of life you're drifting
of passing years,

And

the storms of heartbreak rock you
In their waves of burning tears,

May

sometimes be a blessing
stormy seas.
May this be a ray of sunshine
On your Ship of Memories.
this

As you

And
And

sail life's

you keep drifting

as ever

slowly wends

its way,
Like a clear cool crystal river
Ever flowing day by day,
May this be your rock of shelter
From the tempest of the seas,
As ever you keep drifting
On your Ship of Memories.

life

And when
As

the Captain's voice

is

calling

you're drifting round the bend,

And

you're setting sail to heaven

From

May

the port of journey's end,

have proved refreshing
Like the mild and gentle breeze,
As you sail life's angry waters
On your Ship of Memories.
this

—

F.

Dyer.

THE SPECTACULAR GOAL

Paul Zubec

The time was three o'clock, Wednesday afternoon, and the hockey
King's Business College and the Lakehead College got underway.
In goal for the College was the
foresters

With

the score tied at one

Brown took
It

seemed

line.

A

The

rear guards

were

a player for the K.B.C.'s carried the puck over the
forward took him out of the play, but the puck slid

all,

a swing at the puck and missed; then
as if the

There was about

puck had barely enough speed

a four-inch

Zubec took

a kick at

it

and

to reach the goal.

gap between the

the goal-tender, took a swing at

puck

chemist, Pete Kedge.

Frank Brown and "Boom Boom" Zubec.

Lakehead College blue
slowly toward the goal.

missed.

mad

game between

it

goalie's skate and the goal post. Kedge,
with his stick but missed, and the slow-moving

slid in.

The puck, which seemed untouchable, lay there with three bewildered, red faces
standing around it.

Page 84

�SOLILOQUY

I

A

ON A MIDNIGHT WALK

step with fear into the wide unknown,
nestling from my cozy prison flown

Into the infinite space;
But there is only darkness in my way;
The branches of the pines above me sway

From winds

that leave

no

trace.

The crisp snow crunches under heavy feet
As weighted by a heart which scarce can beat
They tread unhappily.
The eyes must slowly accustom

to the dark
For light can only penetrate an open mark

As

little

as there be.

As cold so frequently can speed the blood,
Then in this sombre silence let thoughts

flood

And

break the seal.
How can it clear the mind as

oft' before?
quietness salt unto an open sore,
Or can it heal?

Is

Nature

in her boundless glory can clean
bind up scars that may reach deep and keen.
Just contemplate and rest,
For man's accomplishments seem small compared
With the tiniest flower who, her petals bared,
Endures the toughest test.

And

My

petty problem, solved, will

Not only love of man but
Deep down inside.

And

I

now reveal
God I feel

love of

have sudden need to

bow my head

awesome reverence and dread
"May peace abide."

In

—Annis Quackenbush.

A NOTE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC ADVERTISING FORESTRY— Hugh

Schooley

People should pity the poor forestry student who so adversely concentrates on his
he is nightly awakened from his dreamland by the bellowing belching
of a black phantom beetle burping up the bark of a balsam bole.
insect studies, that

Seriously though, in spite of a few minor headaches, the forestry course here at the
Lakehead College has much to offer. It is giving this year's students the practical basis
on which to build their future and it will offer this same basis, or more, to the faculties
of future years. Forestry work is so varied that, no matter what you may have in mind
for eventual employment, there is a phase of the industry that will satisfy your interests.
Join next year's technical foresters and let the college staff secure you a future in forestry.

Page 85

�AN ADEQUATE HARVEST FOR INDUSTRY
DEPENDS ON MAXIMUM
FOREST

GROWTH

KIMBERLY-CLARK PULP jl PAPER
COMPANY
LONGLAC

LIMITED

ONTARIO

Page 86

�.

We See

Double
EATON'S

The Store

for

.

.

and one

.

.

Young Canada

has two sound points of view

Canada

.

for

.

.

YOU,

one for You, light-hearted
the prudent parent.
.

We've learned two ways of looking
you know

service can teach a lot

gang-is-wearing.

upon

We

we

.

.

.

years of

!

We're proud of our young aspect
in the bright clothes

at things

Young

...

.

.

you'll see

.

it

reflected

knowledge of what-theask the "teens" advice
and then we act
sell

in the

.

.

.

it.

And we can
youngsters

grow and

so

we

We know

see the parents' side.

on pocketbooks

put

!

the strain that

We've seen four generations

steadfastly maintain sound value at sane price.

It's true
We do see double
thats why we've earned
and won the confidence of old and young. We didn't become the
STORE FOR YOUNG CANADA simply by saying so. To us it's
more than a catch phrase; it's a trust and a tradition
and we work to keep it so.
!

.

.

.

.

«*T.

EATON
Canada
PORT ARTHUR BRANCH

Page 87

.

.

�I

DIRECTORY
ALLARD,

Bernard, 455 Oliver Road, Port Arthur, 4-4310
Tamara, 809 Myles Street, Fort William, 3-3996
BEVERLEY, Michael St. J., Box 580, Geraldton, Ontario, 56
BIANCO, David B., 104 Stadler Avenue, Red Rock, Ontario,
6-2218
BOIVIN, Pat, 365 Aubrey St.
North Bay, Ontario, CL 4-1144
BOLOTY, Kenneth, 602 Winnipeg Avenue, Porth Arthur, 4-4568
Frank D., 13 Wavell St, Creighton Mine, Ontario,
2-3132

ANDERSON,

TU

W,

OX

BROWN,

BRULEY,
BUCHIK,

Joseph A, 383 Bay Street, Port Arthur, 4-4756
Frank, 1521 W. Francis Street, Fort William, 2-0491
BUCHKOWSKI, William, 615 Northern Avenue, Fort William, 3-6594
BUTUK, William, 514 N. John Street, Fort William, 3-9185
CAMPBELL, Lome A, 632 Oliver Road, Port Arthur, 5-5146
CARLSON, Gerald A, 424 W. Amelia Street, Fort William, 2-4989
CODY, Terrence F, 233 N. Harold Street, Fort William, 2-2516
COLEY, Glen A, 564 Buchanan Street, Sudbury, Ontario, OS 4-4507
CONNORS, J. Earl, 86 College Street, Port Arthur, 5-5376
COOKE, J. Roderick, Courtright, Ontario, 54
COTE, P. Raymond, Longlac, Ontario
CRANE, David, 1025 Sprague Street, Fort William, 3-3686
CROZIER, David L, 223 Worthington Street W, North Bay, Ontario
DORNBUSCH, Hanns R, 2808 Moodie Street, Fort William, 2-5184
DOUGHTON, Bernard E, 13 S. Syndicate Avenue, Fort William, 2-6278
DREW, Raymond E, 85 Martha Street, Port Arthur, 5-8815
DUNCAN, John M, General Delivery, Peterborough, Ontario
DYRKACZ, Marvin, Winnepogsis, Manitoba
EG AN, Carol Anne, 243 N. Franklin Street, Fort William, 3-6571
EKLUND, Glenn R, Nestor Falls, Ontario, 1065
ELCHUK, David G, R. R. No. 2, Fort William, Murillo 16
EVERETT, Robert W, 122 N. Selkirk Avenue, Fort William, 3-8546
FERGUSON, Hugh A, 305 S. Marks Street, Fort William, 3-3103
FORSLUND, Gerald, MacLeod Mine, Geraldton, Ontario, 555-W
FUCILE, Lloyd A, 212 S. Vickers Street, Fort William, 3-8617
GAMBLE, Hugh G, 194 Van Home Avenue, Dryden, Ontario, 355
GIBSON, J .Larry, R. R. No. 3, Fort William, 2-3967
GILLILAND, Andrew, 156 Roslyn Road, Winnipeg, Manitoba, 428-633
GREGOR, Ronald D., 339 Roberta Street, Port Arthur, 4-2344
GROULX, Rudolph
30 Summit Avenue, Port Arthur, 5-9058
HALL, Russel B, 17 Lyle Street, Port Arthur, 5-9865
HARDY, Clarence L, 4-432 Catherine Street, Fort William, 2-2658
HART, Stephen Z, 14 Elizabeth Street, Picton, Ontario, 1120
HEALE, Richard, 146 Pine Crescent, Atikokan, Ontario, 2179
HODOWANSKY, Raymond, 126 Simpson Street, Fort William, 3-6312
INOUYE, Doreen S, 403 Prince Arthur Blvd., Fort William, 2-2741
JACK, Allan D, 1832 Moodie Street, Fort William, 3-6749
JACOBSON, Melvin, 204 Cameron Street, Fort William, 3-9249
JAKLITCH, John, 339 Cuyler Street, Port Arthur, 4-2785
JOHNSON, Alan E, 116 College Srreet, Port Arthur, 5-7610
JOHNSON, J. David, 217 Rupert Street, Port Arthur, 4-2838
KAUPPINEN, Howard, 33 Albany Avenue, Orillia, Ontario, FA 4-7511
KAUSTINEN, Osmo M, P. O. Box 64, Nipigon, Ontario
KEDGE, Peter, 493 N. Marks Street, Fort William, 2-2930
KEEN AN, Brian, 534 River Street, Port Arthur, 5-8079
KEMPTON, Gavin V, 372 N. John Street, Fort William, 3-6893
KLEMACKI, Ronald, 244 Egan Street, Port Arthur, 4-1866
KNICELY, Bruce N, 518 N. Brodie Street, Fort William 2-1726
KNUTSON, Edward G, 46 Dixon Street, Port Arthur, 5-9234

W,

Page 88

�KONEFAL, Carl J, Apt. 1—90 Jean Street, Port Arthur, 5-5331
KORKOLA, Allan J., 101 Algonquin St. W., Timmins, Ontario, 3020-J
KOSHULAP, Peter, 625 McBain Street, Fort William, 3-9732
KOTYK, Eugene, 539 Prince Arthur Blvd., Fort William, 3-6766

KWASNY,

Walter J, 624 Prince Arthur Blvd., Fort William, 2-3763
John, 140 N. Hill Street, Port Arthur, 5-9347
LANGILLE, Daniel A., Bare Point, Port Arthur, 5-7698
LAW, Thomas D, Dawson Road, Port Arthur, 4-0792
LEMON, G. Albert, South River, Ontario
MAIER, George, 228 N. Norah Street, Fort William, 2-5569
MAKI, John, 115 S. Empire Avenue, Port Arthur, 4-4213
MALO, Raymond, 324 N. Harold Street, Fort William, 3-6590
MARTIN, Donald R, 200 E. Christina Street, Fort William 2-5022
MEYERS, John J., 2229 Avenue Rd., Armour Hts., Toronto, Ontario,
MOKOMELA, William, 621 Winnipeg Avenue, Port Arthur, 5-8250
MOROZ, W. Mervyn, 416 N. May Street, Fort William, 3-3778
MacDONALD, Ian, 216 Cummings Street, Fort William, 2-8120
McCALL, Robert J., 2042 Hamilton Avenue, Fort William, 2-1153
McKAY, Kenneth, 419 Dease Street, Fort William, 2-7551
NASH, Robert, 100 Matthews Street, Port Arthur, 5-7473
NEELY, George D., 321 N. Harold Street, Fort William, 2-2074
NESBITT, Robert D., 192 Powell Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario, CE 4-8793
PANTOULIAS, Harry T, 332 N. Syndicate Avenue, Fort William, 3-9150
PAPICH, Walter, 223 Ambrose Street, Port Arthur, 4-6456
PRUD'HOMME, Gilles, Ste. Angele de Montnoir Co., Rouville, P.Q.
QUACKENBUSH, Annis, R. R. No. 2, Arthur Street, Fort William, 2-3835

LAGADIN,

MA

QUINN,

1784

Edgar, Nolalu, Ontario

RICHTER, Dennis, R. R. No. 3, Fort William, 2-5080
ROBERTS, Thomas B., 123 Edith Drive, Toronto, Ontario, MO 6048
ROBINSON, Brian, 117 Conrad Street, Sarnia, Ontario, ED 7-9847
ROMPPAI, Henry K., 522 Dewe Avenue, Port Arthur, 5-8058

SAKAMOTO,

Kenneth, 519 McBain

Street, Fort

William, 2-7541

SAXBERG, Allan, 316 River Street, Port Arthur, 4-1100
SCHMIDT, James W, 23 Elm Street, Port Arthur, 5-5724
SCHOOLEY, Hugh, 751 Eastbourne Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario, SH
SHEEHAN, Edward, P. O. Box 271, Schreiber, Ontario
SIIRA, Donald T, 268

SMITH,

S.

9-4513

Empire Avenue, Port Arthur, 4-4723

Box 449, Nipigon, Ontario, 46
Margaret E., 1415 Ridgeway Street, Fort William, 2-1016

Gerald, P. O.

STRACHAN,
SYRYDUK, Michael, 1311 Georgina Avenue, Fort William,
TONKIN, A. Robert, 16 Ruttan Street, Port Arthur, 5-6263
TRACH, Nestor, 354 Cuyler Street, Port Arthur, 4-2594
TRIVERS,

2-6777

No. 2, Thessalon, Ontario, 297-5-1
Edward, 318 O'Brien Street, Atikokan, Ontario, 2652
VILLENEUVE, G. Raymond, 511 Hemlock Street, Timmins, Ontario, 5119R
WALDUCK, Kenneth, 225 McKibbin Street, Port Arthur, 4-2727
WALKER, Stephen D., P. O. Box 76, Pine River, Manitoba
WALTERSON, Robert, 137 McKibbon Street, Port Arthur, 4-2796
WEBSTER, T. James, 1701 '/2 Sills Street, Fort William, 2-1754
WEEMEES, Valdeko, 282 Ray Court, Port Arthur, 4-7414
WHITFIELD, C. Brian, 217 W. Francis Street, Fort William, 3-9386
WOJCIECHOWSKI, Joseph A, 318 First Avenue, Port Arthur, 5-6839
ZAJAC, Z. Joseph, 265 Golden Ave. E, Timmins, Ontario, 3903-W
ZARN, Robert, 21 Georgina Avenue, Leamington, Ontario, 18544
ZAWALSKY, Norman, 108 Burriss Street, Port Arthur, 4-4283
ZAWALY, Sidney, 811'/2 Fourth St. N, Kenora, Ontario
ZUBEC, Paul, Jr., 217 Mclntyre Street, Port Arthur, 4-3834
Colin, R. R.

TUTKALUK,

Page 89

���DATE DUE

GAYLORD

PRINTED

IN U.S. A.

�qi
Lakehead College year book.

'

426

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

2014

https://archive.org/details/lu1959

���THE N 0

R'W

ESTER

Yearbook of the

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE
of
Arts, Science

and Technology

Editor

STEWART SMITH

Session: 195 8-59

Volume': 10

Published by the students of the Lakehead College 1959

PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO

Page

1

�ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The Nor'Wester would

extend thanks and apprecihelped in the production of the
Yearbook. Special thanks go to our staff: Pauline Grieve,
Charles Mountford, Susan Greer, Frank Murphy and Fred
Bodnar. Thanks also to Dr. Miller for cheering us when
we were in trouble and for giving his expert advice whenever it was needed. Without the helpful co-operation of
Yearbook House, we could never have published this book
a sincere thank you!
ation to

all

students

like to

who

—

Photography by Eric Kutok.

Page 2

�EDITORIAL

But it also breeds apathy. Today in the Western
should take a long, hard look at our political system and decide if it is the
system or the operators of the system which have caused the apathy evident in nearly all
democratic countries.
Familiarity breeds contempt.

world,

we

The

philosophy of the Western
well-being and safety to
share in the responsibilities of running the government. This does not mean that all
the individual should do is to vote and pay taxes, rather he should also become a living
expression of the democratic ideal
a man with liberty, but who wishes to promote
theories

of Democracy, the ascendant

world, presuppose that

man

is

interested

enough

political

in his

own

—

the interests of his society, even to the extent of sacrificing his own interests at times.
Yet is not this supposition much too unrealistic? History has proven to us the bitter
lesson that

man, even

at the

height of his political sophistication, has not even
by the faith of democracy.

come

close to the bright ideals, presupposed

The

advocates of democracy often advance the argument that it is democracy
and that this alone is justification for its initiation in a country. This

that people want,

argument seems wholly illogical and ridiculous, especially when one considers the unusual and often immoral things which people want, and yet this desire for these things
has certainly never been used as justification for their adoption. Do people really want
democracy? NO. It expects too much from the common citizen. People are basically
disgustingly materialistic. So long as people have satisfactory homes, good jobs and some
leisure time, they care little for the high-flown phrases and glowing idealism of our
well meaning democrats.
And since most people find it almost impossible to fulfill
their material designs by a strict adherence to the theories of democracy they abandon
their God-given obligations, and resort to barbaric, and often cave-man like techniques
to achieve their ambitions. A moral degeneration occurs, in the form of political apathy
and a withdrawal from the responsibilities of citizenship. This conclusion is derived
not from the idle imaginings of a non-voter and non-participant in the processes of
democratic living, but from the dillusioning evidence of actual life.
The inhuman
coldness of statistics tell us that in Canada and the United States, the average vote in
any election, hardly ever rises above 65%. And, if one could by some magical process
subtract from this percentage those voters who are totally unqualified to vote or who
care little for this obligation, the final percentage would undoubtedly be depressingly

And not only is apathy apparent in the inconclusive matter of voting statistics,
but also in almost every other field of responsibility and citizenship. It might then be
argued that the people would care just as well for a despot so long as he satisfied their
material aims. Unfortunately, this seems to be the only logical conclusion to be drawn
from the present situation. Although it seems almost inconceivable that people would
willingly allow themselves to be deprived of their liberty and benefits of a free country,
it seems that one can arrive only at this unhappy conclusion.

low.

However,

this criticism

render to the facts and

let

must not be mis-interpreted.

ourselves be defeated by our

Page 3

own

I

do not suggest we

faults.

sur-

�My

and

faith

strong.

still

I

my

loyalty to the democratic

although

philosophy,

shaken,

remains

believe in democracy, in

FOR—

been strengthened,
weakened, by this inquiry.
Democracy remains to me the highest
form of government, and the best system

fact,

belief has

than

rather

Ladies and Mens Wear
• Infants and Childrens Wear
• Shoes for all the family
• Dress Goods and Notions
• Linens, Blankets and Yarn
• Quality Luggage

»

good for human
But today, democracy needs
more than merely a person's faith in it.
for the attainment of the
society.

It

requires

men who

are not afraid of

criticism, ridicule or abuse,

stand

up and affirm

mocracy,

men who

men who

will

their defense of de-

It's—

will act as the repre-

and precursors of a great new
spirit of zeal and persistence on the part
of the world's citizens. Democracy must
never be passive, but must stride forward
vigorously, ever advancing toward greater
improvement. It is a great and stirring
challenge, yet one which must be faced
by men of conscience. We, this year's
graduates of the Lakehead College are on
the threshold of citizenship and we are
just about to enter upon a world which
can be moulded to a large extent by our
labours.
Shall we meet the challenge?
sentatives

(JJolL/ii
OF FORT WILLIAM
(Formerly Bryans)

STEWART SMITH

Compliments of

CLEMENS
Grocery and

1301

Page 4

Victoria

Ave.

Meat Market

Fort William

�PRINCIPAL'S MESSAGE
It is

my

privilege to extend congratulations and every

of the graduating

it

good wish

to the

members

class.

In spite of the fact that this will be the largest graduating class that we have had,
me much pleasure to see that you have not lost the close companionship and

gives

sense of pioneering that was so evident in our smaller student body.

The Technology Division
Technology.
just as

includes, for the first time, graduates

Engineering

in

you will find interesting and responsible positions
the Forestry and Mining Technologists have before you.
I

trust that

in industry

Some of you will be going directly into employment in industry while others will
continue your studies at various universities. We, of the staff, will follow your progress with interest and anticipation and we wish you Godspeed.

need not remind you that there are critical and challenging years ahead. Many
have expressed the view that in our struggle to make life better materially,
we have concentrated on material things so long, that we have become obsessed by them.
Now that we have achieved them, we want to enjoy them. There has been a tendency
to carry this same attitude into our educational system. There is a feeling in high schools
that students should, above all, enjoy themselves and after graduation fit into this comI

sociologists

fortable, static society.
I
believe, however, that this attitude is changing.
Parents and students are beginning to realize that there is a hard struggle ahead and we must prepare for it. The
feeling of urgency is heightened by the lively public interest in our educational system.

As you go out

to take your place in society

and our problems.

You

you

will inherit both our material

are graduating at a time

when

the world

com-

with
opportunity but plagued by anxiety. It is my earnest hope that you will not only take
full advantage of the opportunities but also make more dynamic efforts toward solving
our problems.
forts

—H.
Page

5

S.

BRAUN,

is

filled

Principal.

�Student

(Council!

MHili'.

.

IIP

.

Left to Right: Stewart Smith,

Dan

Langille, Pauline Grieve,

John Jacklitch, Jay Sinclair, Neil McLeod, Diana Jarvis,
Alex Bartholomew, Hugh Ferguson, Bob Tonkin, Sue

Greer.

At

this

moment

I

realize

how

difficult a task

it is

to write the President's message.

So many things have happened during my 1958-59 term in office that it is difficult to
capture and tabulate them in a form that would produce interesting, informative reading.
Therefore, rather than recap the achievements of the Students' Administrative
thanks to all students who elected me to office as
always be proud of. I sincerely hope that I have
accomplished the task in a manner expected of me. Also I should like to congratulate
the representatives of the SA.C for the excellent administration that they carried out
during the year.

Council

I

all

my

should like to extend

their President, a position that

I

shall

To all graduates and undergraduates
your future ventures.

I

extend

my

best wishes for your success in

Dan

Page 6

Langille.

�Compliments of

THE CORPORATION
of the

PORT ARTHUR

CITY OF

MAYOR — N.

R.

WILSON

ALDERMEN
Saul

Laskin

J.

Edgar Laprade
Edward V. Anten, M.D.
Waino W. Laakso
R. B.

Stitt

McNeill

Sam Ashton
Angelo G. Mauro
William Desimone

Wilmot

CITY CLERK:

M.

Cliff S.

Arthur H. Evans, O.B.E,

Page 7

F.C.I.S.

�FACULTY

�Page 9

�Port Arthur

Fort William
3-7441

4-2428

Rutledge Stationery
LIMITED

oca

GREETING CARDS

- STATIONERY

BOOKS - OFFICE

THE

OFFICE

Members

SUPPLIES

FLORIST
FURNITURE

Florist Telegraph Delivery
Phone 2-1653

SERVING THE LAKEHEAD
SINCE

Fort

512

Victoria

William

1911

Congratulations
to

1959 Graduates

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE OF
SCIENCE

and

ARTS,

TECHNOLOGY.

We

emphasize industry's need for graduates of higher education,
and our interest in young Canadians with degree standing in
the sciences.

GOOD LUCK

Abitibi

to all of

you

Power

&amp;

in

your further

studies.

Paper Company, Limited
Page 10

Ave.

Ontario

�W.

S.

ARMSTRONG,

Page 11

M A.

�cience

KEITH BLACK

DAVE BROWNE

Kingston

HUGH

BLAINE

Fort William

DOUGLAS CALVERLEY
Nanaimo,

Fort William

B. C.

KEN BOEGH

HANS DORNBUSCH

Port Arthur

Fort William

JOHN BOBAK

TERRY CODY

Fort William

Fort William

Page 12

�1 /Ml

ERSKINE FLOOK
Port Arthur

JOHN GERRIE
Fort William

Page

1

�DON SURA
Port Arthur

BOB TONKIN
Port Arthur

14

�Page 15

�ANDREWS—

DAVE
Port Arthur
our hockey fan and commentator 'par excellence.' His
marks in the past have proven his academic ability, and we are
sure he will do well in the Honours Math course that he will
take next year at the University of Toronto.
In the summer,
Dave is the star pitcher for the Red Sox; in the winter, his
interests lie in chess and hockey.
His pet peeve?
Chicken
hockey players.
Dave

is

KEN BLAZINO— Port
No

one

in the

goodness).
different.

world can match

Elvis' talent for

Arthur
crooning (thank

—

Some of those notes he sings are really
well,
Ken plans to take an Honours Math course at

Queen's next year. French and English just seem to get under
his skin.
He can liven up any French class with his dazzling
pronunciation (?). An excellent bowler, Ken should take all
honours in our league this year.

FRED BODNAR— Fort

William

William's contribution to the photographic life of the
College, Fred took many of the pictures seen in the candid
snapshot section of the Nor'wester. A boy with sunny disposition, Fred always seems to be playing a practical joke on someone.
His bomb takes up much of his time, but we understand
Fort

1

*

GAYLE CARLSON

he

also

takes a

—

lively

interest

in

the fair sex.

Port Arthur
This happy-go-lucky gal can often be heard asking, "Anyone for cards?''
Her pastime seems
If she has a pet peeve she certainly hides it well.
to be arguing with the red-headed Englishman. Wherever Gayle goes
next year, she assures me that she won't include geology in her course.

Page 16

�JIM
One

FERGUSON

— Fort William

of the three potential accountants in the Arts faculty, Jim nevertheless dislikes those late Commerce classes.
Jim travels in his own

"bomb," and hasn't missed a class yet (well, hardly any!). Easy-going
and even-tempered, Jim makes a good "dummy" in bridge games in
the

BEVERLY

GAMMOND

—

Common Room.

Slate River

Another of the triumvirate hailing from the halls of F.W.C.I., Bev
drives in to school each day from her home in Slate River.
Her
hard-working nature should help her to continue her chosen career
either at Queen's or at Teachers' College.
Among her interests, Bev
enjoys skating parties and hockey games. We wish her the best of luck
in the future.

SUSAN GREER

—

Fort William
Hailing from the busy metropolis of Fort William, Sue is a top swimmer, curls, plays badminton, and comes in handy as a fourth in bridge.
Her main ambition is to own a white sports car with red seat covers,
and her pet peeve is Economics classes. Next year, Sue will be going
A member
to Queen's to take Honours History and Political Science.
of the S.A.C., Sue was our very able Social Convener this year.

PAULINE GRIEVE

—

Port Arthur
Pauline was kept busy this year as secretary to the S.A.C. She did a
terrific job as business manager of the Yearbook and solved all finan-

A

yearbook staff.
real live-wire around
the school, Pauline will head for the University of Toronto next year
to continue her studies in Arts. Pauline's big pet peeve is Economics.
cial difficulties of the harried

MAURICE JACKSON— Fort

Aft

William
Another Artsman from the 'swamp,' Maurice comes to and
from school in his own 'bomb.' Like many other people his
pet peeve seems to be Economics. Maurice is a chess enthusiast,
and when in the common room, likes nothing better than to
With his steady
sit down and have a roaring game of chess.
school-work. Maurice seems likely to do well in the future.

Page 17

�CLARENCE JACOBSEN— Port Artnur
Jake has acquired a bad habit of walking out of Economics
classes.
His interests are somewhat of a mystery but it has been
rumoured that he has been seen in the local taverns.
(What
other interests do you need?). Jake says that his future is still
undecided, but we hope he will enter the writing profession.
Some

of his essays are works of genius.

DIANA JARVIS— Port

Arthur
you hear an odd squeal from the vicinity of the lockers, it's
The owner of the squeal will be attending Queen's
just Diana.
next year. She is one of our curlers and Bob has finally convinced her to take .up skiing. Di was our vice-president of the
S.A.C. and the only gripe she has against the school is the Saturday morning class. Song she reminds us of: Woodchopper's Ball.
If

TIM
Known

his

to

trademark

in

friends

many

as

places

a great

is

BRIAN KEENAN— Port
Permanent thorn

is

Kong

leaves his

Tim

able to bounce back with

smile after copious amounts of kidding.
At dances, his
ability is second only to Arthur Murray's.
His future

up as the disreputable
some den in Hong Kong.

not definite, but will probably end

owner

it

Tim

including Keenan's backseat.

has a very happy disposition, and

dancing

KAN— Hong

the China Clipper,

of a

Fan Tan game

in

Arthur

in the side of a certain Finnish skip

weekly hikes to the curling

rink.

He

on our

holds the cue cards for

Keenan was one of the stalwarts at
however he still finds time to dream
about his European tour. His red hair is often seen bobbing
above the wheel of his blue bolt and as he attempts to plow the
a

certain

the

new

English Prof.

Munro

Street parties

access roads to the College,

much

to Frank's chagrin.

STEVE

KOVANCHUCK — Fort William

One

of the College's best curlers, Steve also plays basketball for the
Fort William Canucks in the Inter-City League. Steve is a very studious worker, and we are sure that he will do well in the Business

Administration course that he plans to take next year at Western
University. Steve is also an expert in the art of playing bridge.

Page 18

�WALTER KWASNY

— Fort William

Once again, Walt is playing a stellar game at guard for the high-flying
Court Kings. As his girl is in Hamilton, Walt is studying with great
diligence, and should have no difficulty in graduating from the College
this year.
On weekends Walt can be seen touring the city in his
Plymouth with his smiling compatriot, Chuck. Best of luck at U. of T.,
and in your career of dentistry.

— Port Arthur

LORRAINE LEGROS
Here

is

the only girl at Lakehead College who owns and operates a
Usually she can be found in the common room, pondering

slide rule.

over physics problems. She is Dr. Fonda's favourite French pupil as
she enjoys recording into the little "mashin'." She plans to return to
Winnipeg next year to attend the University of Manitoba.

GERALDINE MAKI

— Port Arthur

Last fall Gerry entered the Lakehead College with a scholarship for
general proficiency, thus giving good proof of her outstanding academic ability. Her pet peeves include economics and brothers. Al-

though she has not chosen a university for next year

yet,

Gerry plans

to be a librarian.

— Port Arthur

GORDON MAYCOCK
An

old married classmate, Gordie is the Charles
Gordie managed the Athletic Council

room.

fingers this year, but eventually

wound up

Goren

of the

treasury

in the black.

common

with

sticky

Gordon

is

very active in the Y. M. C. A. and puts our athletes through their
paces weekly at the Tech gym. He is planning on a career in the Y.,

and we wish him the

best.

NEIL McLEOD

— Fort

William

one of our all-round sportsmen at the College. He skis, curls,
Neil was also one of the College debaters
that went to Duluth.
(Need more be said?). Neil is often kidded by
a certain red-head about buying a teddy bear in Duluth for Sally.
Even-tempered, he is an Arts representative to the S. A. C. At the
moment, Neil plans to attend Manitoba to pursue a scientific field.
Neil

is

plays football and hockey.

Page 19

�WILBERT MIKKOLA

— Port Arthur

noted philosopher, and listens attentively in all the philosare not too sure of his interests but we are sure that
he finds a place for the "jeune filles." After one English class, it has
been rumoured that there is Irish blood in Wilbert's veins.

Wilbert

ophy

is

a

classes.

We

— Port

JOHN MOFFATT

Arthur

noted member of the Hearts, Spades and No Trump Society.
He can be seen haranging the populace on Wednesday afternoons, and
then on Wednesday evenings trying to figure out what happened to
his team.
It has been rumoured that John intends to go into nursing.

John

is

a

If this "field" doesn't

the

appeal to him, he will probably be seen gracing

campus of the University of Manitoba next

year.

MERVIN MOROZ — Fort William
A second year man here, Merv still

feels that one of life's greatest
overcoming Gr. 13 French. Likable Merv's Saturday nights
are spent in contentment with some of his cronies at the "Annex."
One of the Common Room kids, Merv has no equals at Bridge, Chess,
and sundry other games (?). Seriously though, Merv has what it takes
to get through university, and we wish him the best of luck.

obstacles

is

CHARLES MOUNFORD
Charlie was the
year,

and

is

man behind

— Fort William

the literary section of the

also a first-class debater, having

made

Nor 'wester

this

the infamous trip

Charlie exhibits a keen mind and a vivid imagination
which should stand him in good stead when he pursues an Arts degree
at Western next year.
Noted for his sarcastic witticisms, he someto Duluth.

times gets himself in hot water with a girl in Arts because of his wit

and very broad mind.

LIZ

PAGE

—

Fort William

and was a regular fixture at all the Colall the dance posters around the
school, Liz' pet peeve are boys who won't help on the social committee.
Liz is a great hockey enthusiast, and is particularly attracted to
hockey players from Winnipeg. Liz plans to attend Teachers' College next year.
She went to Duluth. Need we say more??

"Stubby"

is

lege social

a real party girl,

functions.

Page 20

Creator of

�JOAN PEDEN

—

Port Arthur
"Twila" abounds with energy. Her activities include highland dancing,
skiing, basketball, and hiking with second year foresters.
Joan is also
vice-president of the Athletic Council, and gives her co-operation to
Her ambition is to play the
all sporting projects around the school.
bagpipes in Queen's Kiltie Band next year. She will probably end
up as the proprietress of Port Arthur's first date bureau.

WALTER POSHTAR

—

Fort William
Walter, a renegade from the fair city of F. W., has an affinity for '58
Chevies.
Wally has an amusing disposition and a bathtub full of
interesting (?) anecdotes.
Walt's oratory has gained him a place on
the common-room soap-box, from where he acquaints us with his cosmopolitan ideas. His clerical work in the past should stand him in
good stead in the future.

HAROLD PRIMMER

— Kenora

Harold is a very conscientious student who hails from Kenora where
he enjoys an outdoor life. He is taking his first year Pharmacy here
and then plans to complete his course at the University of Toronto.
Women? Yes. Harold is engaged to a beautiful nurse by the name
of Joan Penner. People?
"True friendship is greater than wealth."

DENNIS RAHKOLA

— Nipigon

"Rock" is the out-of-doors man in the Arts faculty. Whenever he
(Last
can, he returns to his native hunting grounds around Nipigon.
year he shot two sparrows and a cat). Dennis plans to take dentistry
at the U. of Toronto.
Lab. classes just seem to get -under his skin,
"I've had it, I've dissected my last frog."
Dennis an avid fan of the
Bearcats.

BILL

SALEM

— Porr Arthur

A

noted Shakespearean critic, Bill can often be heard expounding his
views of the famous bard.
"Just because some idiot says he's the

Why??" Bill would
Toronto or Queen's. Hockey
(he roots for the Beavers). No one can match

greatest, hes' the greatest.
in

journalism

at

like to take a course
is

his favourite sport

his "faultless"

French

reading.

tAKEMLAD COLLEGE
PORT ARTHUR,

Page 21

I

�BILL

SARANCHUCK — Kenora

It has been rumoured that Bill has been very busy this term chasing
ghosts out of his habitat. This taks is so difficult that only an energetic Kenorarite could accomplish it and still retain the drive to man-

age the Court Kings and have time for the books.
Bill's
goodnaturedness and intelligence (?) should bring him success at B. C.
next year.

JIM

SARGENT

Simbo

— Port Arthur

arrived here in the

fall

determined to become an intellectual

He

has succeeded, and manages to get consistent marks. His
curling mastery was apparent during the College curling season, and
Next year, Jim plans on
his team finished near the top of the pack.

artsman.

going to the University of Toronto, to complete his studies for his
B.A.
Good-natured Jim has only one pet peeve Economics classes.

—

MELVIN SAUNDERS

— Fort William

A
MH

MS-

m

graduate of F. W. C. I., Buddy is well-known for his keyboard artisHis ambition is to take an Arts degree and to attempt to make
his mark on the world of music.
Buddy is noted for his good humour
and his amusing (?) jokes. Well-liked by all, and with all his ability,
Mel should do well in the future.

try.

v.

CLAY SAVELA

— Fort William

an accomplished sportsman, having been a football and basketall through high school.
This year, his activities include
curling, basketball (he plays for the champion Court Kings) and Jan.

Clay

is

ball

star

Next

year, Clay has decided to join his pal Jerry at the University of
Toronto, where he will study dentistry. He is also a member of the
common room philosophers club.

SID SEELEY

— Fort William

main ambition is to be a geographer, and he intends to pursue
at Western next year.
A champion bridge player, Sid is
interested in sports of all kinds.
Sid's pet peeves seem to be English

Sid's
this

end

and English classes.
with Sid and has to endure

essays

Page 22

We

pity the poor fellow

Sid's

withering sarcasm.

who

plays bridge

�BARRY SHARP

— Fort William

Cohort of Fred Bodnar, this shady character is often seen bombing
around town in his own racer. Although Barry is an unknown quantity as far as marks are concerned, he always presents an intellectual
interest in class.
He is also interested in photography, (or is it the
darkroom that he is more interested in?). Chem problems and practical jokers are this man's peeves, (please take note, Fred!).

JERRY SKEA

— Fort

William

activities include sailing, skiing and Marlene.
He gets very
good marks which should stand him in good stead when he takes up
dentistry at the University of Toronto next year. In his roaring Buick,

Jerrys'

Jerry is the friend of all hitch-hikers at this fair institution. He may
often be seen discussing some weighty subject with his cronies, Buddy

and Clay.

FRANK

SLISKOVIC

— Port Arthur

will probably succeed Anastas Mikoyan as Russia's next
deputy premier. He plans to take a course in political science and
economics at Assumption University. Like most regulars at J. B.'s he
His out of school activities include basketis a fanatic about Paladin.
ball and broomball.
Although he seldom shows it, he is quite in-

"Gunner"

telligent.

DOUG SMITH
Doug,

—

Fort William

and well-mannered (?) young man, is the right hand
Wally Poshtar, or is it vice versa? Doug is a budding psycologist and philosopher and sometimes is dragged into a discussion
with the common room philosophers. Intending to become the original
ten-year college man, Doug plans to pursue his higher education at
the University of Manitoba next year.

man

a quiet

of

STEWART SMITH

— Port Arthur

In addition to being editor of the
of the S.A.C. and is also the
stalwart of our debating club. (Stew is reported to have got stewed
He plans to take an Honours History course at Queen's
in Duluth).
He is a good Bearcat hockey fan, and his pet
University next year.

The mighty atom
Nor'Wester

this

peeves are his

is

at

it

year, Stu

little sister

Page 23

again!
is

a

member

and "Meester Jeem Sargent."

�SAM STASIUK

—

Strong and silent

Fort William

Sam

left

the confines of the

woodyard

to further

his learning in the field of higher education.

Sam's activities include
hockey and broomball and is a valuable asset to both functions. Tomorrow's business tycoon, Sam has decided to take a Commerce course
at the University of Western Ontario.

WALTER STELMACHUCK

— Geraldton

Called the "Giant-Killer" in the College's curling circles, Walter has
often been the stumbling block over which
year, but

to

go

some

potential

Walter swears that he hasn't missed any French

fallen.

to

somehow we
Western

just don't believe

Next

him.

year,

champ

has

1%

classes this

Wally plans

to continue his course in business administration.

ANNE STEVENS

— Port Arthur

from P.A.C.I. and after her sojourn here
heads for U. of T. next year to take an Arts course. She was our Athletic Council Secretary and her main interests lie in curling, skiing,
reading and Roger. Anne is a top student yet her pet peeve is the
wish her shuccess in her future career. Song
class before noon.
she reminds us of: Me and My Shadow.

Anne came

to the College

We

RUTH STONES

—

Port Arthur
Don't let Ruthie's quiet nature fool you. She has recently acquired
a green hot rod which is always full of passengers.
A "pro" curler,

Ruth has also taken up the task of training
Ruth plans ta attend U. of Manitoba next

a

Weimariner show dog.

year,

and with her

warm

personality she will certainly succeed, in her ambition to be a social

worker.

ELEANOR TOPLACK
New

— Port Arthur

Her big complaint is the 8:30 bus
Bowling, playing the piano and sales-clerking
occupy her spare time. She can often be heard denouncing Latin
declensions in the Common Room. Eleanor plans to attend Western
next year. Her nickname "The Schemer," is the only question mark of

that

clothes are this gal's passion.

comes so

early.

her character.

Page 24

�WORKMAN

ROBERT
One

of

the

College's

—

Fort William

prospective

dentists,

Robert should have no

An

ardent ski enthusiast, he can often
be seen flying down the slopes at Loch Lomond Ski Club. One source
of great interest to Rob is his little black Austin which often needs
difficulty in reaching his goal.

Rob's mechanical genius on

EGIDIO

BABUDRO— Port

Big Ed,

who

College,

is

Arthur

has worked for some time before coming to the
a regular fixture in the back seat in Room 4.
His

pet peeve seems to be his
t

it.

'little'(?)

brother, Frank.

J1

Page 25

�ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

I

MAURI AHOKAS—Oshawa
This blond, blue-eyed boy came to us from Oshawa. He is a
goaltender for one of the hockey and broomball teams. Mauri
can often be seen driving his hot little Ford around town, accompanied by that shady character Johnston. Although a quiet
boy, Mauri spends much of his time manipulating the ivories
at

PETE

BODNAR—Fort

At one time planning
learning

how

to

a

all

William

to use a stethoscope, Pete has

to use a slide rule.

Pete's after hours are

who walk

Corey's.

ended up

Quiet and refined in

no doubt much more

livelier.

A

class,

friend

the highway, he never hesitates to give a forester

lift.

KEN BOLOTY—

Port Arthur
our cool and crazy trumpet player who once played
with a high school band and is now engaged with Port Arthur's
City Band and the Bluenotes. A racing enthusiast, he likes to
see who is the first one down at the New "O." Although somewhat unpredictable, Ken is very well liked at the school.
'Louis'

is

LORNE CAMPBELL— Port

Arthur
team and also in the city league.
just about to be named "most faithful patron of the
New O." He was also directly concerned with the broomball
broom scandal. All kidding aside, Lome is really a well-liked
person and a friend to all.

He plays
Lome is

for our broomball

Page 26

if-

�DAN CHRUSZ— Fort
Dan

is

well

known

to

all

the girls for his

William
good looks and great

He spends most of his' time with the 'jeune filles' of Fort
William. Dan is well liked, and is one of the most promising
boys (?) in Engineering, and the only thing that we've got
against him is that he is from the swamp of Fort William.

size.

BILL
Bill

of

is

COCKELL— Port

work with

player with a

the air cadets.

booming

his eyes at the slightest
is

Arthur

a graduate of Hillcrest

shot.

High School where he did

He

bowls and

Our

is

a lot

a fine broomball

has a far-away look in

Bill

mention of Toronto, where

his wife-to-be

waiting.

Here

is

just to

the

chap that came
attend our College.
a

warm

sunshine of

St.

RAPHAEL DANZIE— West

Indies

way from the West

Indies

all

He

could be sipping lemonade in
Lucia, instead of freezing in the subMr. Danzie has tried all our winter

zero climate of Canada.
sports and is anxiously awaiting

AL EKROOS— Fort

the

summer

to teach us a little soccer.

William

This flying Finn cowboy from F.W. can't seem to find out
what he is being trained to be! Al takes part in all the sports
activity the college has to offer
girls, card-playing, and drinking (cokes that is) ). High grades and Al seem to go hand in
hand and being a Finn, naturally Al is a swell guy with lots

—

of friends.

FRANKOW—

BOB
Port Arthur
Bob's interests are motorcycles and girls. An energetic man, Bob
never stays in one place long except when playing checkers,
a game in which he has a fair amount of skill.
Bob is a member of the Lakehead Motorcycle Club and takes part in all of
their activities (?????).

Page 27

�JIM

HARNETT—

Port Arthur
"Mr. Sportsman" here at the College, Jim is a hockey, baseball,
broomball and basketball fiend.
His extra-curricular activities
consist of ivory banging, dancing and poker.
Jim is on the
Athletic Council and was one of the broomball organizers. Despite what people may think, Jim also excels in the classroom.

GORDON JACKSON— Port
Little

Gord worked

for

the

Arthur
Lawrence Corporation before

St.

deciding to continue his education.
Gordon is a diligent student and is working hard to make the most of his time. Before
the year is over, maybe Gord will take Harnett up on the bet
they've been talking about; we think Gord will win.

GARY JESSIMAN— Fort

William
Without Gary's great physical effort, Ross' car(?) would never
go.
His marks prove he has a F.W.CI.-educated brain. The
boys of Eng. Tech. are grateful to him for his sense of humour
If marriage doesn't draw Gary away
aren't we, Mr. Higgs?
from the books, he should graduate as a first-class bridge builder.

—

KEN JOHNSTON— Toronto
"Twinkle Toes" is an active lad, playing hockey and broomball;
he is also a member of the Athletic Society. Ken is a pipeliner
from way back as he has had four years experience working
on the pipeline. Ken's ambition is to complete his two years
at the College and then go into pipeline engineering.

RON KLEMACKI— Port
now
Band. Ron
and
ful

is

Arthur

Ron played for Tech's band
playing for the Bluenotes and the Port Arthur City
is a member of the students' council and is a faith-

The master musician

patron of

all

of the bunch,

the College dances.

Page 28

�RON

LIMBRICK— Fort William
has a car which he drives until it is red in the face!
As
far as his love life is concerned, ask anybody, they know all
about it.
His activities include broomball and hockey.
His

Ron

ambition

is

to

become an Al engineer and build

cocktail bars

for his dad.

BARRY LYONS— Port

Arthur

'The Gumper' is a local boy and the philosopher
of the engineering class. He can be heard expounding his views
in the common room, and his constant advice is: "Don't cry
over spilt milk." With all these theories, we often wonder why
Barry,

alias

he ever chose to be an engineer.

MURPHY—

Port Arthur
FRANK
"Flashbug" is responsible for many of the pictures in this book.
Frank curls and enjoys the mixed curling especially since the
Another of Frank's favourite pastimes is
nurses are involved.
sneaking up behind a car and while passing, giving a 'beep,
beep' with his Nash Rambler horn.

ALLAN SAXBERG— Port

Arthur
round athlete who enjoys just about every sport. He
is an ardent and staunch member of the Y.M.C.A. and he puts in
In fact, with all his outside
a lot of work for this organization.
activities, including broomball, we wonder how he manages to
do so well in his exams.
Al

is

an

all

SIEGFRIED

SCHRAML— Port

High School, has
when he still manages

Siggy, a graduate of Hillcrest

Arthur

carried his fine

reputation to the College,
to achieve high
marks. He indulges in basketball, broomball, and whist in the

common-room, where he

is

a very, very frequent visitor.

after hours are probably spent

Page 29

in

chasing the

girls.

His

�CLEM STRICKLAND— Fort

William

The

studious type, Clem gives the impression of being a hard
worker. However, girls and the chessboard seem to take up a
good deal or his spare time. Whenever a roar of laughter rises
from a group, you can be sure Clem is up to something. Taking
walks and hitching rides are his special activities.

JAY SINCLAIR— Fort

William

A

pusher from the big city, Jay rates high in the higher brackets
of the Eng. Tech. group not only in academic standing, but also
in sports activities.
Jay is a football star from way back and
this year was an outstanding broomball and hockey player for
the College. Jay should do very well in all ways in the future.

SITARIK— Port

BILL
Bill

of

is

Arthur

a graduate of Hillcrest

becoming

and

a track

where he had great potentialities
But being lazy and a little

field star.

A

friendly
shy he decided to devote his time to the fair sex.
guy, Bill takes a lot of razzing on account of his Julius Caesar
haircut, but it doesn't seem to worry him a bit (Wonder why?).

TURESKI—Rainy

BILL
Bill's

usual studious attitude has been altered

River

somewhat by the

cozy atmosphere of the common room.
But we think he will
live to disprove Mr. Braun's theory that "people who sit and
play cards in the common room, will fail." Bill was our all-star
goalie

on the College hockey team

this year.

DAVE UUSITALO— Port

Arthur

Dave has earned

of procrastinator, because of his pe-

the

title

culiar delay in putting the shocks in his car.

come

the

days, but

make

owner of
if

his

own

construction

he doesn't keep away from

it.

Page 30

He

hopes to be-

company one
Susie's,

of these

he might not

�JOHN VENNES— Rainy

River

of the class, for he has been guiding
and fishermen since he was knee high. No doubt
John is fully qualified and experienced in this type of work,
Perhaps this
yet his fish stories do seem rather tall at times.
story-telling helps him in getting his good marks.

John

is

the big

game hunter

tourist hunters

LARRY WARWICK—Port
Eng. Tech.'s

man

"Wick" can

of opinions,

Arthur

usually be found dis-

some controversial subject with someone. Larry leads
busy life around the school, participating in hockey, broomball, bowling and is also responsible for some of these write-ups.
In the years to come he will probably end up in Fidel Castro's
cussing
a

civil service.

ARMAS WEST— Port
Armas

He

is

the one

plays a

who

mean game

Arthur
gets

some of

the best

of broomball and

is

marks

in the class.

quite adept at scoring

goals for the other teams.

his

bomb

fa-

His friends are always expecting
blow up, yet it still keeps going. His
vourite hang-outs are the Finn and Kakabeka halls.
little

red

to

�TECHNICAL FORESTRY
First

Year

BARTHOLOMEW —

ALLEXANDER
Brantford, Ont.
our rep. to the SAC, and is a drummer in the LSSR
Pipe band. His sports are skiing and archery, and his weakness
is
eight dollar phone calls.
He has an uncanny ability for
managing two dates on the same night. His hero is Bob Cummings and his philosophy is "Take it easy but above all, take it."
expect Bart to win a scholarship to continue his education
Bart

is

We

at the

WILLIAM

U.N.B.

BROWN— London,

Ont.
peanut bars before every game chess game.
His hero is Fidel Castro and his pet peeve is Jerome. He is our
His sports are basketrep. to the A.A. (Athletic Association).
He hopes to enter
ball and hockey, and he wears a red toque.
the teaching profession in a few years and may finish his degree

Champ

after

J.

eats

his

working

a

couple of years.

—

�CHARLES JEROME— Hamilton,
Bill

came here on

doesn't drink).

Ray

Ont.

a three thousand draught bursary

(he really

He

too wears a red toque and his hero is Aldo
Bill's pet peeve is flooded poolrooms
people! )

kills
( he
Stoney Creek and his special ability is underwater billiards.
His favorite saying is "You're out of your mind," and incidentally he is the real owner of the notorious Saltfleet Jacket.

at

BRYN JONES— Sarnia,
Mogambo,

Ont.

another avid fan of the popular
His hero is Zorro and fags are his weakness. He
red toque.
His
is heard saying, "Do you think she'll go out with me?"
philosophy is: to be ambitious is to desire; to desire is to covet;
He greatly admires
to covet is to sin, and Bryn is a holy man.
Bryn, nicknamed

the sleeping giant

—

is

from

usually

Hillcrest Park.

PETER MATROSOVS— Brantford,

Ont.

Pete came from Latvia nine years ago and had to

come

to the

Lakehead to keep an eye on Bart. His special ability is arguing
which seems to boost his marks. His hero is Pete. His activities
include archery and skiing and his weakness is antique guns. Pete
is also a member of LSSR.
His future? "Grim" he says, but
judging from his marks so far we think his future is very bright.

WAYNE ROBINSON— Fort

William

our math genius; slide rules are kid stuff. He figures
out problems in his head before you can unlimber a slide rule.

Shuster

is

His hero? Scout. Famous

as the first

philisophy? Don't fight

it

—

him how many minutes

it

is

one under the

until

us.

Ask

2:23 P.M. April 30.

JOHN SENYK— Port
Here

His

table.

bigger than both of

it's

is

a

word

Arthur, Ont.

to the wise

— The bigger

may be

they are, the harder

Land SurHis nickname is Cynic and
his favorite sport is deer hunting. His hero is Trev and his
Don't hit me, John!
Trach
weakness is Miss Watermelon.

they

hit.

John's future

either as an Ontaria

veyor, or as a Labatt's Salesman.

said

it.

Page 33

�DONALD SKELTON— London,
Pierre

is

Ont.

usually seen with Bryn.

They were

the ones to start

the red toque fad; and also caused the cover charge to be placed
on all the rest of us. He hopes to finish his degree someday. His
sports are hunting, fishing, archery and collecting old guns. His

hero

Two

—

is

Captain Marvel.

He

has no vices

—

HE

says.

LEONARD SUOMO—Copper Cliff, Ont.

words for Leo Crazy Finn!" Leo also wears a red toque.
His hero is Morty Meekle; and his weakness is the "sauna!" His
special ability is enduring 180 degree temperatures in the steam
bath. It looks as if Leo and Bart have the two scholarships sewed
up between them. He says one more year will be plenty of
school for him.

NESTER TRACH— Port
Nes

Arthur, Ont.

the old-timer of Tor.
arranging dates for the boys.
is

Tech

He

I,

and

his special ability

is

does fine at organizing stags,
too. He's always last under the table. His word to the wise is:
"Much chance!" He made that expression famous. His hero is
the Rifleman and his future will probably be as a professional
teller of tall, tall, tales.

Page 34

�Page 35

�Tech Mining

DANIEL LANGILLE
Ambition

—

—

Port Arthur

Geologist
Probable Fate
Janitor at General Hospital
Favourite Saying
If she only knew
Weakness
His back
Pastime
Watching submarines at Boulevard Lake
Nickname
Sawed-off

—

—
—
—
—
— President

Activities

of Students' Council.

Page 36

�HUGH O. SCHOOLEY—Ottaw

—

Ambition An entomologist
Probable Fate Cleaner-upper al
Favourite Saying
Oh tiff, suffer
Pet Peeve
People who leave Cc

—
—

—
—Hubie
—

Nickname
Activities

—Any job
—Bush
Probable
Favourite Saying — Heinz
Pet Peeve — Irishmen
Nickname— Hey you
Ambition

BOB ZARN— Leamington

soft

Fate

Student's Council

pilot
is

best

Page 39

Men

�ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

C-f-'

/

r r

II

(I

C

GERALD CARLSON

(Curly)

— Fort William

This year Gerald represents our faculty on the Athletic Council. He
is an avid organizer of hockey, broomball and bowling at the College.
Curly 's outstanding activities are uncertain but it is known that he has
been dating a cute brunette from Fort William. Being the youngest
in the class is no burden for Curly as he often gets some of the highest
marks.

JOHN JAKLITCH

(Sam)

— Port Arthur

John represents our faculty on the S. A. C. this year. When he is not
found in the confines of Hansen's Poolroom he may be easily located
at Barb's.
His minor activities include bowling, broomball, homework and card playing. He is recognized as the whist champion at
the College. John hopes to continue his studies at Houghton College
next year.

TOM LAW

(Dooley)

— Port Arthur

Tom

works very ardently

time

at the residence of E.

He spends most of his spare
can often be seen arguing the
merits of marriage with two confirmed bachelors from Mining II.
His main activity at the College is card playing, but he often indulges
in

BILL
Bill

is

always battling for

His school

first

gym

in school.

K.

Tom

class.

MOKOMELA

(Mok)

— Port Arthur

place honours in the class with

J.

S.

bowling, broomball and gym class.
Most of his outside social life is spent with Judy. Mok also plays
football and for the last two years he has been a member of the Port
Arthur Mustangs.
activities

consist

of

Page 40

�Page 41

�ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

GERALD CARLSON

(Curly)

II

I

— Fort William

This year Gerald represents our faculty on the Athletic Council. He
is an avid organizer of hockey, broomball and bowling at the College.
Curly's outstanding activities are uncertain but it is known that he has
been dating a cute brunette from Fort William. Being the youngest
in the class is no burden for Curly as he often gets some of the highest
marks.

TOHM

T

AT^t

iTru

/c

—

\

PORT ARTHUR DIVISION

Page 42

�Convocation

19
The
held on

first

May

5

8

convocation of the Lakehead College of Arts, Science, and Technology was
1958, at St. Paul's United Church in Port Arthur.

8,

Following "O Canada," the Reverend W. C. Mercer declared the invocation. Mr.
Braun welcomed the graduates and guests, after which the diplomas and certificates were presented.
Mr. D. I. Nattress conferred diplomas in the Technical Division,
while Mr. W. G. Tamblyn presented certificates to the University Division graduates.

H.

S.

The guest speaker, Mr. C. J. Warwick Fox, President and General Manager, the
Great Lakes Paper Company Limited, was introduced by Mr. R. J. Flatt, Chairman of
the Board of Governors.
Following the presentation of scholarships and awards, the
'God Save the Queen."

first

Convocation of

the Lakehead College ended with

SCHOLARSHIPS
Hydro

AND

PRIZES:

—

Power Commission of Ontario Scholarship Howard Kauppinen.
Power and Paper Co. Ltd. Scholarship William Butuk.
Fort William Scholarship
Ronald Gregor.

Electric

Abitibi

—

—
—Eugine Kotyk.
Marathon Corporation
Canada Limited — Robert Zarn.
University Women's Club
Thunder Bay Scholarship — Margaret
Foundation Scholarship
Mining — Bernard Doughton.
Port Arthur Chamber of Commerce Scholarship— Carl Konefal.
N. W. O. Timber Operator's Association Scholarship— Hugh Schooley.
Port Arthur Lodge No. 224,
O. O.
Scholarship— Allan Korkola.
Lady Grey Chapter
O. D.
Scholarship— Annis Quackenbush.
Engineers' Wives Association — Hugh Gamble.
Lakehead
Association Scholarship — Robert McCall.
XI Upsilon Chapter Beta Sigma Phi Scholarship — Sidney Zawaly.
National Council
Jewish Women — Annis Quackenbush.
Mackey Memorial Trophy —Carol Anne Egan.
Lakehead College Alumni Scholarship—John Smith.
Canadian Car Company Limited
—Mr. A. Enstrom, Mr. A. W. Abercrombie.
—Allan Korkola, and John Lagadin.
Robert Poulin Memorial Trophy — Pat
Donald Clark Cup and Athletic Award —Carl Konefal.
Part-Time
Economics —Nestor Shehowy.
Botany—Stanley Pasko.
French — Eileen Lehto.
History — Allan Hauta.
Psychology —Robert
City of

City of Port Arthur Scholarship
of

of

Strachan.

P. Bickell
J.

in

I.

I.

F.

E.

Professional

Electrical

-

of

Jessie

Prizes

E.

Principal's Prizes in Forestry

Boivin.

Prizes to

Students:

Orr.

Page 43

�To The

and Students

Staff

of

THE LAKEHEAD COLLEGE OF ARTS,
SCIENCE

AND TECHNOLOGY

Industry and Education are the forward line and back line of the same
team, just as teachers and students are themselves a team. Therefore,
officers and employees of this Company are keenly aware of the vital
role played by your College in training students to meet the needs of
industry.

The continued success

of the forest industries is guided by professional
foresters, scientists and technicians in the mills and laboratories, professional engineers of various categories, and specialists in management
and marketing. Many aspects of technology are involved.

Therefore, in these days when so much is said of technological progress
in other countries, we are glad to have this opportunity of paying tribute
to the splendid record of your College.

Published as a public service by

The Ontario Paper Company Limited
Thorold, Heron Bay, Manitoulin Island, Montreal,
Baie Comeau, Shelter Bay, Franquelin

For You
Your future

many

factors,

—

advancement,

The Future

both

cultural

and

material,

depend on

will

none more important than your use of the years immediately following

your graduation from high school.

Never

young people who

If

before

has

university

sincerely wish

to

make

training

been

deemed

so

its

needs.

By writing to the Registrar

wide-ranging educational

for

ready to

tell

the most of their capabilities.

you are interested, the University of Western Ontario

&gt;ou of

imperative

facilities,

to

now you may

is

show you how Western
obtain an

interesting

can meet your

illustrated folder

which outlines Admission Requirements, Courses, Scholarships and Fees.

'

J

It

e

Ijt

niversitvj

of

LONDON

-

*~IAJ e s t c r

CANADA

Page 44

n

C3

n

t

a

r

i

o

�Page 45

�The

College

Girl

as

Seen by.

Page 46

��HER TtACUERS

Page 48

�Page 49

�Page 50

��November 7-58 Record Dance:

January 16-59 Sleigh Ride:

The social activities of the Lakehead College
began a little late this year but the first dance was
an immense success. There was a capacity crowd
with most of the students themselves attending, nurses from both cities plus students from other schools.
The dance was put on by the Student's Council and
music was supplied by various L.P.'s purchased by

The

New

Year

started off right with all tickets

being sold for the Sleigh Ride.

Twenty below weather was in store for the
students but running behind the sleighs soon disspelled the cold. At the school donuts were served

was decorated with orange, brown and yellow stream-

with dancing to the records in the Common Room.
Pictures were taken by Frank Murphy, and everyone
had an enjoyable time.

an autumn motif with sprays of autumn flowboard and canteen.
Everyone got acquainted with each other and the
first dance of the social season was a success.

January 30-59 Record Dance:
Another Record Dance was held with a very
poor show of students attending. Due to a bit of

the Council for the

Common Room. The room

itself

ers in

ers outlining the doors, bulletin

on the social convenors part, the decoratfrom the Christmas Dance were still present
but gave the dance a bit of pep, something which
laziness

November 19-58 Dinner Dance:

ions

The second dance of the winter term was the
Students Council semi-formal supper dance at the
Flamingo Club. Approximately fifty couples attend-

members

Guest speaker was
Mr. H. Badani, M.P. for Fort William.
Dancing
followed with the music supplied by the Continen-

ed plus

of the

staff.

tals.

the students entirely lacked.

February 20-59 Mid-Winter Formal:
The Students Council held their annual midwinter formal at the Prince Arthur Hotel. Approximately ninety people attended including members
of the staff. The guest speaker, Mr. Ken
delivered a most interesting address on the

November 28-58 Christmas Dance:

defence system

Although great preparation and planning was
for this dance, the attendance was poor. Two
large Christmas trees placed in the far two corners
of the room, were brightly lit and sparkling with
tinsel. Red, white and green streamers added to the
gay atmosphere which produced enjoyment in all
done

MacGray

NATO,

Europe. Then dancing followed
to the music of the Continentals and this was by far
the most successful of the Councils social endeavours
for everyone enjoyed themselves immensely and the
party didnt break up until 1:45. At press time, one
or two social functions still remain.
in

those attending.

Sue Greer

Page 52

— Arts

�Page 53

�Compliments of

Compliments of

International

Transit

LIMITED

J.

H.

McLennan Lumber
COMPANY

LIMITED

FOR GROUP TRAVEL

CHARTER A BUS

269 Arthur

Building Supplies

-

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Dial

St.,

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WITH THE COLLEGE SET

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Compliments of

AGNEW

SURPASS

SHOE STORE
Arthur

"DL Walck

(or

tL

Wan

of

%omorrow
Page 54

St.

Port Arthur

�ATHLETIC COUNCIL

9

President's Message:

This year saw the initiation

bowling league with the
The most favourevidenced by the large number of heavy sweaters
of, a joint

nurses of Port Arthur's General Hospital, and three broomball teams.
ite

sport has again been curling, as

tarns seen about the College on Wednesday afternoons. Through the generosity of
Board of Governors, we were able to obtain a group membership in the Port Arthur Y.M.C.A. Many students have been availing themselves of the facilities of the
gyms of Hillcrest and Lakeview High Schools. The second annual hockey night and
dance was held again at the Arena, with the Port Arthur Collegiate retaining the trophy
that they won last year. More than 400 students attended this event which is proving
to be a very popular event of the College. The lack of continuity in the College makes

and
the

the organization of a bar-credit system for athletic letters very difficult, but individual

trophies will continue to be awarded.

The

fall

held up the elections for at least one month, so it
ident from the council members, to start things
fall

field
is

technology division
plan to appoint an acting pres-

trips in the

my

moving as soon as possible after the
been a great pleasure and honour to serve as President and I
the future more athletic fields will be opened to the students.

registration. It has

hope

that in

JACK MEYERS

Page 55

�CURLING

This year curling had the largest number of participants of any sport at the College.
in all were formed. They were composed of Lakehead College students
with several nurses from the Port Arthur General Hospital included.
had some
well-known curlers this year but most, however, were people who had never used a
broom before except to sweep floors. These soon learned, much to the amusement and
dismay of the veterans, that 'sweeping a rock' is a much different proposition. One
player was particularly adept at sprawling over the ice and rocks. His name shall not
be mentioned, but he is an Artsman with red hair. At the present time, Pete Hindle's
rink remains unbeaten with Jim Sargent's rink running a close second. But, to all of
us I think it does not matter which team finally is victorious. What really matters is that
we got out together and had wonderful times on Wednesday afternoons.

Twelve teams

We

Gerald Smith.

with a league composed of sixteen teams bowling on Tuesday and
The teams were made up of our students and some fifteen
of season
nurses from the Port Arthur General Hospital. To cover the cost of an end
enthubanquet, the bowlers each paid an extra fifteen cents per line. There was high
and
siasm at the beginning of the year, but this seemed to wane as the year went by,
bowling.
teams
eight
only
were
there
February,
by the middle of

We

started the year

Wednesday

afternoons.

However, we hope

that the future of

rollment increases, bowling

bowling

may prove one

at the

of the

College will be bright, and as en-

most popular sports
Robert Zarn.

Page 56

at the College.

�HOCKEY AND BROOMBALL
Hockey

this year at the

College was started before Christmas at the Port Arthur

Arena. Only three games were played before the exams and so play was discontinued
until January. In January, a sad surprise awaited us
all our hockey equipment had
been stolen, and it seemed we were finished with hockey for the year.

—

Then broomball was mentioned. Thirty-six boys signed up, and Gerald Carlson,
Jim Harnett and Ken Johnston drew up a broomball league and schedule. Three teams
were formed with all of the games being played on Wednesdays and Fridays at the Oliver Road Rink.
The league ended with Carlson's team on top, but in the play-offs,
Johnson's team came through with the championship.

Two

hockey exhibition games were played against King's Business College with
up a pair of wins to the tune of 10-3, and 22-4. The stars in these
games for the College were Faulkner and Sinclair, who between them, picked up over
20 goals. Later in the year two broomball exhibition games were played against an allstar team from Port Arthur's high school, and as in the hockey the College picked up
two victories, 6-1, and 4-0.
the College picking

The annual Hockey night was again sponsored by L.C.A.S.T., and the Perciante
and Laprade trophy was retained by P.A.C.I., although the College team gave a good
account of themselves.

Judging from the

become

interest

shown during

the year for the broomball,

it

will prob-

might be mentioned that
since our league is the only organized College league in Canada, John Jacklitch, our
leading scorer is also the top broomball scorer across Canada!
ably

a regular feature at the College in the future.

It

Gerald Carlson

Page 5

�Chappies

.

LIMITED

Page 58

.

your store for

���PART TIME ARTS
Hi

there,

Well here we
Let's look in

are in '59; right in the thick of our courses in the "part-time section."

and see what

we

First we see many old
many more attending this

can find

this year.

few new ones

Seems to be
and enthusiasm
has grown. In my opinion it does each year. Many of these students have been attending the lecture sessions for quite a few years now and no doubt have a goodly number
of subjects to their credit.
Each credit is a step closer to that B.A.
familiar faces and quite a

year.

I'm sure this

is

too.

a sign that interest

not quite time for the bell yet. What do you say we grab a cup of hot chocoup and gives you "courage" to sit through a lecture 'til nearly
six.
Gee, it's only 4:30 now. Oh well, we might as well sit here and chat for a spell.
Everyone else seems to be exchanging views or comparing notes here too.
It's

late?

Sort of perks you

All this reading and studying sure keeps a fellow hoppin'!

come here

nearly every day for lectures.

By

I

hear that some guys

the way, the courses this year for us include

Economics, French, Zoology, History and Psychology. Exams? Twice during the year
Xmas and the finals at Easter. Summer Course??? Here? I should hope so! I'm
sure there would be strong support for it if the opportunity were granted.
However
we can talk it up and see what happens. Here's hoping!
.

.

.

/

Bye now

.

.

.

—GERALD CARLSON.

DEBATING
This year, for the first time in the history of the Lakehead College, interest was
There were about ten interested members of the group, and in
aroused in debating.
started
the course of the year, we participated in five debates with outside schools.
off the year with two debates against the Port Arthur Collegiate. The competitors from
the College were Stewart Smith, Charles Mountford, Anne Stevens and Diana Jarvis.

We

Both debates were won by the College.
February 27th, 18 students travelled to Duluth at an invitation from the UniStewart Smith,
Minnesota (Duluth Branch). Although all our debaters
conducted themselves well in
Charles Mountford, Diana Jarvis, and Neil McLeod
their debates, differences in debating styles resulted in a double win for the Duluth
teams. All the students on the Duluth trip had a terrific time, and we hope it will be
a precedent that will be continued in the future.

On

versity of

—

—

The year ended with another win over the Collegiate. The S.A.C. has donated a
hope
trophy for annual debating competition among the schools at the Lakehead.
this generous gesture will ensure the continuance of debating at the College.

We

Page 61

��1

1;
CHARLES MOUNTFORD

STEWART SMITH

PAULINE GRIEVE
Advertising

Editor

Literary

FRED BODNAR

SUE GREER

FRANK MURPHY

Photography

Photography

Social

YEARBOOK STAFF

we have tried to revive for you on lifeless paper the moveof the school year; the sporting triumphs and defeats, the intellectual

In our book this year,

ment and

life

and the personalities with whom you have become acquainted throughout
1958-59 so that those of you who attended this college will have something to refer to
when memory stirs some half-forgotten echo in later years. Only those who have been
personally cognizant of an affair can draw from the printed page the human qualities
that lie behind each article, each photograph and each story, and it it is to you that
victories

this

book

We

is

sincerely addressed.

hope that we have captured successfully the
which is now passed, a difficult task of course but one in
which we have had the full and complete help of the entire student body. To those
helpful souls who extended so much of their time, thanks again. Thanks too, to those

on the yearbook

staff sincerely

true atmosphere of the year

few, alas too few!

who

contributed so

many

stories of such

high literary merit to the

literary section.

This book is a memory book and we hope that it provides for you many hours of
happy reminiscence when the day is done and the sun sinks, like Lochinvar, into the
western sky.

CHARLES MOUNTFORD
Page 63

�Compliments of

Compliments of

J^erciante

&lt;SiL

tJZapracfe

SPORTING GOODS LIMITED

Crooks Rexall Pharmacy

Two
112

You

Stores to Serve

Syndicate Avenue

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Fort William
9 S.

Port Arthur

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Perciante

Edgar Laprade

ATKINSON'S
Jewellers J^imited

TROPHY CUPS,

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MEDALS,

Compliments of

TAYLOR'S

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40

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Lakehead's Leading Quality Jewellers

TAILORED TO

St.

FIT

WEAR

TAILORED BY
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8

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Port Arthur

Page 64

WEAR

�NATURE
abundance
of the

responsible for the

is

mined

of ore

at the site

once primitive and beautiful
Steep Rock Lake

TWO

FACETS OF NATURE
NATURE

is

responsible for the beauty

that abounds in the
forests
in

It is

the Atikokan vicinity

men

with a true love of nature and a keen understanding for the rights of fellow

development

at Steep

Rock Lake

surrounding countryside

While the demands
in

and wilderness areas

some

tained

respects,

in

it

of
is

is

is

that

mining

kept under rigid control so that the beauty and abundance of

unsullied and unspoiled.

modern

society

and

industrial

development are such that nature must

suffer

with complete assurance that sportsmen agree nature's benefits are main-

Northwestern Ontario by Steep Rock's diligent application

of

the

rules

of

nature

preservation.

Do yew want mora

in.

formation about Atlkokan and Quottco Park?
Writa Kan Eoll, Soetatary,

[=D

[j3©(§CS

IR0N

MINES LIMITED

Atikokan Charabar

STEEP

of Commorca.

Page 65

ROCK

LAKE,

ONTARIO

�MADSEN RED LAKE
GOLD MINES LIMITED
[NO PERSONAL LIABILITY]
Kyj'J'icerA

oard of
JOSEPH

McDONOUGH

MARIUS MADSEN
FRED R. MARSHALL,

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HjirectorS

Toronto, Ont.

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Rothesay, N.B.
Montreal, Que.

M.E.

SEGUIN

Toronto, Ont.

BIRD, C.E.

Toronto, Ont.

A. H.
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HUGH MACKAY
HORACE G. YOUNG,
S.

and

^fairectord

Drunker

and

Jlr nt*

GUARANTY TRUST COMPANY OF CANADA
70 Richmond Street West

O

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txecutive Officer*

JOSEPH

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G. CRAYSTON,

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P.

THE BANK OF

West

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President

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Kimberlq

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Pulp and Paper
WOODLANDS DEPARTMENT

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Page. 66

Company

Ltd.

�WAAL
Page 67

�THE UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA
announces

THE OPENING OF THE 1959-1960 SESSION
Courses Will Be Offered Leading To Degrees

AGRICULTURE
ARCHITECTURE
ARTS

In:

HOME ECONOMICS
INTERIOR DESIGN
LAW
MEDICINE
PHARMACY

COMMERCE
DENTISTRY
EDUCATION
ENGINEERING
FINE AND APPLIED ART

SCIENCE
SOCIAL WORK

(Painting, Sculpture, Ceramics)

• Valuable
•

scholarships and bursaries.

Excellent athletic and recreational facilities in the

new University

Gymnasium.

•

Residences.

And To Diplomas

or Certificates: In: agriculture

APPLIED ART
For

full particulars

write to

:

The Registrar,
The University of Minitoba,
Fort Garry, Manitoba

MUSIC
NURSING EDUCATION

KING'S BUSINESS COLLEGE

Port Arthur

A

— Fort

William

private business school specializing in complete business courses, with

emphasis on the business

skills.

Commercial, Stenographic and Secretarial Departments offer a variety
of courses at reasonable tuition fees.
Training for Business is one of the most successful means of capitalizing
on academic education the combination is good insurance of a success-

—

ful career.

Established 1902
Page 68

�LITERARY SECTION

Editor

— CHARLES MOUNTFORD

Brown

Contributors: Frank

Bernard Doughton
Susan Greer
Clarence Jacobson

Diana

Jarvis

Lorraine Legros
Charles Mountford
Sid Seeley
Stewart Smith
Anne Stevens
Eleanor Toplack

OF STUDIES

Studies

and for

are

useful

for

Read not to understand, nor to make notes, but to
confuse and annoy the professor. For if a man's
wit be wandering, let him go to the Ontario Mental
If his wit is not apt to distinguish or
Hospital.

amusement, showing-off,

Their chief use for amusement is
in laughing and joking; for showing-off is in telling tall tales; and for ability, is in the successful
passing of a school year. To spend too much time
in studies is unwise, to spend little time in them
is the true mark of a genius.
Sharp men use studies,
wise men abuse them, and stupid men forget them.
Some books are to be read for a few pages, others
to be read from the frontispiece, and some few to
be returned to the library shelves. Reading giveth
sore eyes, talking a sore throat, and writing a sore

him take a Geology Lab. If he
be not apt to beat over matter, and to call up one
thing, to prove and to illustrate another, let him
study Logic, for he will then be even more confused.
So every defect of the mind may have a
Card-playing is
suitable, agonizing college course.
classes
skipping
voice,
the
and
temper
good for the
good
is good for card-playing, and going to college is

hand.

for a laugh.

And

ability.

man

find differences, let

he has no
need for pencils, if he talks little, he has no need for
Vick's, and if he reads little, he hath no need for
Library

therefore

Science.

characteristic that

by

fit

if

a

Nay
may

write

little,

there is no virtue or good
not be destroyed or stunted

studies.

Sir

Page 69

Francis Smith.

�ONTARIO

Opportunity Unlimited

.

.

.

Mineral production in Ontario continues to spiral upward to new heights.
Ontario's Mines increased their yield in 1958 to an outstanding high of
$800,000,000— representing an expansion of about $50,000,000 over the
previous year! Many new areas have come into prominence in the last
few years as the result of rich discoveries, and names such as Manitouwadge, Elliot Lake, Bancroft and many others, which were little known
a short time ago, are taking their rightful place beside the old established

mining

fields.

all this continuing expansion more men are
in engineering, geology and the related sciences.

With

needed

—men

trained

To all young men with the will to succeed, mining in Ontario offers a
challenge and opportunity unlimited.

"New Horizons

—

in 1958"
a new booklet reporting the activities of The
Ontario Department of Mines and progress of the Mining Industry. For
your free copy write

Honourable James A. Maloney, Q.C.
Minister of Mines

H. C. Rickaby
Deputy Minister

THE ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF MINES

Page 70

�LOST IN THE SOUP

By Frank Brown
was

It

dered

down

a clear,

warm, evening when we wanand took off from Deso-

to the aircraft

lation Lake. Here, in the land of the

midnight sun,
worry about darkness clos-

a person doesnt have to

ing in so we prepared to continue flying until three
or four in the morning.

Our job, flying electro-magnetic survey from a
height of five hundred feet, is quite hazardous anywhere in Canada, particularly in the Arctic.
It

was a routine
ground fog

a slight

flight for three hours,

and then

started to creep over the hills.

Being near the Arctic Ocean, fog is not unusual, so
we were not too worried. However, we liked to be
cautious and headed for home. The nearest landing
field other than ours was at Yellowknife, three hundred miles to the south.

As we proceeded north to our home base the
fog got as thick as soup, and for the time being we
circled the imwere lost in a land of nothing.

We

mediate area and could see nothing to give us a
bearing.

But wait!
spotted

it

first

Was

the radio tower?

that

and Jim and

know

I

verified

it.

Archie

We

were

camp was

near because
the runway ran north and south, with the camp as
its northern boundary. If we flew on past the camp
and made our approach directly over it, we could
relieved to

make our

that the

landing.

Jim and I had every confidence in Archies
we were not too worried about his bringing
us in for a safe landing. But was a landing necessary?
We still had three hours of gas on board. We could
wait until the fog cleared, and furthermore, all the
gas was a hazard if we should crash on landing. All
this was going through the earphones as Archie
ability so

prepared to land.

Jim
strained

yelled that

we were

to see through

off the runway,

and

I

the thick, gray mass. Yes,

was the runway, niety degrees to our left.
Archie had completely miscalculated his approach.
Upon seeing his gross error, he pulled up the landing gear and applied full power to both engines. The
power was there, but the plane just seemed to hang
in the air as if shrouded in the fog.
knew a hill
was directly in our path of flight, and we simply
had to get sufficient speed to climb over it. Then
we all heard a crunch as the plane touched the earth.
there

We

Page 71

�The

propellers dug into the snow, gouging out
There was a terrible grinding and ripping noise
as the airplane bounced and lurched along the ground.
A hot, sticky substance was trickling down my face.
I wiped my forehead with my hand and discovered
it was blood. I had not felt the blow, with all the
jarring about. Then the plane gave a last dying lurch
as it tried in vain to become airborne for a last grand
finale. There seemed to be a soft sigh as it finally
came to rest. We quickly climbed out, fearing a
fire, and studied our surroundings. One engine was
completely missing and the other one was torn loose
of its mounts. It had made its last flight.
a pit.

We

R. C.

Addison

INSURANCE

thanked God for bringing us through the
and started the trek to camp by fol-

terrible ordeal,

lowing the squawking of seagulls from the
behind the camp.
I

I

REAL ESTATE

dump

have flown since then and will fly again, but
remember being "lost in the soup."

will always

Dial

5-9251

Arthur

Port Arthur

St.

— Port

Arthur

IMPORTERS

AND

DISTRIBUTORS

"QUALITY" APPAREL
for the
Entire

FAMILY
IRISH LINENS

BRITISH WOOLLENS

HUDSON'S BAY

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1

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Dress-Wear
Sportswear
.

Page 72

I

.

.

Shop—McNULTY'S

�FROM A PAINTING

The sea gull and his mate wend
Their way across the desolate fjord;
Only the monotonous slap of rippling
Water on bare rock
Interrupts their soundless

flight

across the

inlet.

Behind them, a jigsaw pattern coastline,
Dotted with the scattered grain of
Boulders and rocks;
Bold streaks of white, rust and grey
In the patchy rocks

Become muted

A

in the distance.

premonition

—

the gulls hasten on.

The sun

is suffocated; an unfeeling grey
Coldness is now
Suppressing the once-soft green-blue

Of the water;
The shore draws them
Compelling

fortress of

near, a strait of Messina,

immovable

granite.

The

jagged peaks thrust angrily into the
Threatening sky,
Challenging these audacious creatures

Who disturb
The

their solitude.

gulls fly on.

ANNE STEVENS

Page 73

�They're good, butFOREST FIRE SAFETY RULES:
camp

1.

Build

2.

Locate fire where rising wind cannot strike

3.

Remove flammable

4.

Keep

5.

Use vacuum containers avoid unnecessary fires
Before breaking camp, drown fire with water
and stir ashes with bare hand as final check

6.

on rock, sand or mineral

fire

fire small

;

soil
it

debris from fire area

never leave

it

unattended

;

7.

Do

8.

Extinguish all smoking materials in water or on
rock make final check with fingers

not smoke on trail

:

stop and

sit

down

The

fire-limiting

record

of

our Forest Protection service,
the finest in the world, is at
the mercy of every sportsman
and vacationist who goes into
the woods. Last year, 86 per
cent of forest fires were
caused by human negligence.
Thoughtless smokers and careless campers were responsible
destroyed
for fires which
thousands of acres of publicowned timber, devastated delightful camping and vacation
grounds, poisoned fishing waters, and eliminated game animals for many years to come.

Only by adhering always to
sensible fire precautions can
you be sure you did not cause
the senseless waste of forest
fire.

;

9.

Use hand-rolled cigarettes and safety

lighters

ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF LANDS AND FORESTS
HON.

J.

W.

SPOONER

F. A.

Minister

MacDOUGALL
Deputy Minister

Page 74

�LA CHAMBRE DES COMMUNES

S'il est suivit jusqu'a sa source ce sourd bourdonnement guide sans detour a la
chambre des communese je puis dire chambres des communes car c'est veritablement
ce que c'est.
La aumileu du tapage est la creme du pays qui cause ce tapage. Oui, la
creme du pays. Combien y en a-t-il qui oseraient ni pas l'avouer a la vue de ces jeunes
Apres tout, ou trouverons-nous de meilleurs joueurs
gens si virils et si intellectuels?
de cartes, de dames et des echecs, (cependant les etudiants ne sout pasles seuls qui soient
des as a ce jeu echecs, le vent rapporte que deux de non docteurs sont des plus brillants
guerriers).
Mentionnons aussi, que dans cette chambre commune, il y a toujours une
veritable peste de personnes appartenantes au beau sexe et que chacun du sexe fort
pourait, sans trop de peine, commencer son hamer, (vive les non-conformistes! ).

pas.
Aux quatre laboratoires: physique, chimie, zoologie
machines, les composes, les specimens enfin tout est utilise avec le plus
grand interet pour le bien-etredde la race humaine. L'un est occupe a tourner vivement
gigantesque roue qui l'amuse et l'intrigue, I'autre se gratte les menages afin de trouver
la reaction qui changera l'eau en or: le premier (s'il continue) accomplira de grandes

Mais,

ici

et botanie;

on ne badine

les

choses, le dernier s'il'naccomplit rien, sera

du moins

riche.

Aux

lectures, l'atmosphere de "nous comprenons tout cela" regne et demeure invulLe professor saute de tableau atableau et miracle! Les plus complexes et incomprehensibles theoremes et lois sont raisonees, comprises et enfiles dans la memoire.
Le professor demande si chacun a bien compris et chacun (avec les sourcils en accent
circonflex) repond 'oui.'

nerable.

Dans une telle ambiance intellectuelle ou les hommes et les femmes sont
ment des individus, il est difficile d donnr un caracteristique generate: mais,
donner une, on pourrait dire que I'emsemble
et revetu

d'un inviolable genie qui

essentielles'il

command

le

ecartes.

—LORRAINE LEGROS.

Page 75

faut en

emotif ni marmoreen; il est enjoue
respect, meme dans ses chutes et ses

est ni

�NANABIJOU

Stalwart, silent,

still, he lies
Across the horizon far,
Bathed in rays of golden-red
Sparkling waters form his bed,
Mantled in a cloak of green,
Majestic, yet serene, he seems
Nanabijou, the Sleeping Giant.

Monstrous, mighty, mute, he lies,
Surveying his domain,
Once a valiant warrior bold
His feats of strength and power told,
Till jealousy led to his

And

Was
A

doom,

turned to stone by Manitou
Nanabijou, the Sleeping Giant.

laurelled, lauded legend he,

Who sleeps
Amid

the

in silence there

pounding

For Lake Superior

And

yet

we

foam!
home.
him and sigh

is

look at

sea of
his

This sleeping form will come alive
Nanabijou, the Sleeping Giant.
Beloved, bereaved, bewailed was he
By dark-eyed Indian maid;

So she herself was turned to stone
By Manitou, and now alone
She waits in patience there, above
The Bay of Thunder, for her love
Nanabijou, the Sleeping Giant.

SUSAN GREER

Page 76

�HAVE YOU BOUGHT
YOUR WHITE BUCKS YET?
Stewart Smith

The group

is

sidious theory in

always

right.

American

life,

This new and
striking at our

Since the machinery of conformity and mass eduis aimed in the main at the school children

in-

so-

by means of the freedoms present in a demois crippling our long-held doctrine of democratic individuality, and is converting our society
into a sheeplike population of faceless conformists.

cation

examination should be made of

ciety

of today, a

cracy,

on them. The result is a mediocre education and a country of life-adjusted, ( just what
does this ambiguous phrase mean?), nameless persons. These man-produced, and assembly-line young-

One of the proud claims that Americans have
made for years has been that in America exist equality

of opportunity and an unspoken assumption of

the right of individuality.
ly

empty and

false

Today

this claim

is

mere-

idealism.

Today, the shy or the highly intelligent child is
People who do not act just as everyone
else does are 'maladjusted' and every effort is made
to make these people fit the mold, which, of course,
Phony
is set by that nebulous body 'The Group.'
politeness, synthetic good intentions, and the massproduced smile have replaced the traditional sentiments and emotions of the individual.

a deviate.

And, although Americans are
to provide their families
tection, their

lives

fairly

secure, able

with food, shelter and pro-

are passed, not

in

the glow

of

convention and decision, but under the
vague, grey shadow of uneasiness and doubt. Why?
Because individuality has been lost.
In a free and
democratic society, people today are being robbed
of a tradition that the communist countries deny
by force.

personal

This

loss of individuality

formism

and the upsurge of con-

are not only applicable in terms of same-

gadgets and food.
In
is
only a
fact, this particular growing sameness
symptom of a more serious disease. For individualism really has little to do with the eccentricities
It
and idiosyncrasies usually associated with it.

ness

in

taste

for

clothing,

rather deals with the ability to

make

its

brief

effect

now educated in terms of deviation, maladjustment and group work on the basis of co-operaThis co-operation is
tion instead of competition.
leading to stagnation and a relaxation of the mind's
capabilities. Shy children, and especially very intelligent children and plain different children are
classified arbitrarily as 'deviates' and are forced by
the Group in the form of well-meaning teachers and
classmates to conform under the guise of life-adjustment and necessity.
By such conformism, not
only is individuality crushed but creativeness and
potential intellectual ability are ruined and stunted
Often,
in the interests of the average, mediocrity.
this repression of a child's unique characteristics
sters are

make him

that

different from

all

other

human

beings,

leads to the creation of an automaton, faceless
ideal

fodder for a juvenile gang,

totalitarian

or,

later,

a

and
mass

movement.

Despite the increasing need for daring and perindividualism so necessary and precious to

sistent

prepare

for

the

future,

the

driving

force

of con-

formity strides forward, brushing aside or crushing
all unique traits, all personal free desires. The Group
is always right and because of the realization of this
assumption, service, hospitality and goodwill are all
geared for groups and not for mere individuals. On
the basis of group tests people's endurance and patience are driven just short of the breaking point

in

decisions, to

love, to work as an individual and not as a mere
puppet of The Group. Also teamwork and group
action are not bad or undesirable until they become
ends in themselves and until adjustment to The
Group becomes a way of life.

Page 77

the service of society or

The Group.

�Victoria College
in the

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
Founded by Royal Charter

in

1836 "for

in the various branches of Literature

the general education of

youth

and Science on Christian Principles

"

.

As one

of the Federated Colleges in the Faculty of Arts of the University
of Toronto, Victoria College enrols students in all courses leading to the
degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Commerce and preparatory to
admission to the schools of Graduate Studies, Divinity, Education, Law and
Social Work.

Annesley Hall Women's Residences accommodation

In the

is

available for

women

In the Victoria College Residences
students of Victoria College
accommodation is available for men students of the College.

Men and Women

in Residence may be assisted
through Residence Bursaries.

For

full information, including calendars and bulletins,
apply to the Registrar, Victoria College, Toronto.

The Corporation
of the

of Fort William

Page 78

�The Church was once a place to escape from the
advance of the philosophy of sameness. But today,
the growth of national church membership reflects
more the desire of people to conform than the desire to worship. Church Sunday worship is becoming a fashion parade, an arena where prospective
social climbers can vie with each other under the

Compliments of

Newaygo

pretence of spiritual zeal.

Timber Co.

This problem we face is puzzling and frightenbut to understand it properly, a basic truth

ing,

should be observed

—

the

group was created for

the individual, not the individual for the group.

LIMITED

The

purpose for the individual's existence is not to be
function of society, but to be a factor and a
power in creating society in the way any individual
a

subsidiary of

CONSOLIDATED WATER POWER and PAPER

so wishes.

Perhaps,

if

the

danger

is

realized

COMPANY

soon enough,

may be detoured
way, have you forgotten how to say T?
the path of conformity

—

By the

THE END.

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Page 79

�WHEN THERE ARE SWALLOWS

When
And

there are swallows,

hand
Changes white to verdant green,
the Earth, by sleight o'

When

Life, by the spring of childhood
Like Earth renewed, the hoary
Frost of age all melted clean away,
Then faithful youth, like fateful sap

Shall flow again;

When

there are swallows.

When

there are swallows,
drink again the

And we
Hoary,

fast forgetfulness of age,

What force shall then suffice
To yield to us our gilded youth,
Our
Our

tender years of painless joy,
years of burning, unburnt life;

When

there are swallows.

C.

Page 80

Mountford

�IT

SEEMS LIKE ONLY YESTERDAY

Bernard Doughton

On

November

a

night

much

any other No-

like

borough of Islington, London
N.7, a small six year old boy lay half asleep in his
cot. It was 1944, there was a war on, and London
lay still and dark under the prevailing blackout as
But even the
it had done for the past four years.
throaty voice on the wireless saying "This is Ger-

vember night

many

calling,

in the

Germany

calling,

Germany

calling,"

could not deter the chain of thoughts that romped
through his preoccupied mind, the extremes of joy

and sadness so

A

typical of any six year old boy.

sound came out of the night, a singularly

ferent sound, yet a sound that

dif-

London was now

all

of all who
pitching tone
sent forth its ominous message and, as it faded
away, warned of the ensuing destruction and chaos
that must follow it.
So accustomed was the little
boy to this sound that he dozed on, apparently

used
heard

Commanding

to.

it,

the

its

surroundings but wide awake enough
to hear what was going on in the next room. In that
room, the parlour, his mother and father were
having a card game with the neighbours. Faintly
present, was the voice of the radio with the sinister
throaty speaker declaring what Germany's mighty
Luftwaffe was going to do to London that night.
all

"Turn that bloody
"Let's

him

hear

off!" someone said.
do any harm," said an-

traitor

out, can't

other.

They had placed

the boy's bed in the passage
were of the opinion that this was the

since they

most

structurally strong position in the Flats.
In
confined chamber, he was protected from the
outside dangers but well aware of the conversation
in the next room.
this

"Think
voice

he'll

time.

this

wake up?"
"No,

he's

It

was

used

said his father in a reassuring tone.

ment was

didn't blast

sound became audible, a droning

were on.
The drone was louder, became a subdued roar and new sounds entered the picture as
ack ack batteries began their individual war with
the heavens in an attempt to pluck the invader from
the skies.
A high pitched scream, long and harmonious, was introduced followed by another and
another, each ending with a heavy "crumping" sound,
followed by a vibration that rattled the crockery
and threatened to shake loose and send tumbling
any all placed item on the pantry shelves.

his

to

The

mother's

Jerry

now,"

latter state-

By this time the boy was at the window gazing
upon the scene that befell his eyes, and what a
scene it was! The sky was criss-crossed with fingers of light from the searchlights, that probed
and intruded the clouds in an effort to find the
enemy that had dared to disturb a nation's sleep.
Off to the right of his field of vision a ball of fire
was falling towards the earth.
"Jerry

must have

hit

one of the balloons,"

said

now

dark neighbouring room.
The
flame fell below the horizon, lit up the sky momentarily as if making a final bid for attention, and
then faded away.

a voice in the

The racket went on for an eternity that could
not have been longer than twenty minutes, and then
the noise began to subside as one by one the sounds
died away 'til only the occasional whine and crump
was heard.

Now that the show was drawing to a close the
boy moved away from the window. He knew only
too well that to be found at the window during an
air raid would invoke severe disciplinary action. He
crawled into his cot and when the customary check
came he feigned sleep.

in fact true, for in the short span of his

lifetime, he

faint

attention

the air raid siren with

oblivious to

Another

sound, augmented with every second that ticked by.
Planes!
This aroused the boy from his slumber,
for he loved planes irrespective of what side they

had never known a night that the siren
forth its bombastic warning.

Page 81

�He began
afar

to drift off to sleep as somewhere
"All Clear" sounded singing as it seemed
"It's alright now, it's all over ... for
to-

the

to say

Compliments of

As his mind revelled on the shrapnel collection tomorrow en route to school, he heard
the
radio in the next room only instead of the gutteral
voice, the strains of "The White Cliffs of
Dover"
driften into the passage. He passed on into a long,
night."

peaceful sleep, and never once did
the situation occur to him.

the gravity

of

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Page 82

Port Arthur

�A READER'S GUIDE TO OTHELLO

Eleanor Toplack

one of Shakespeare's greatest domestic
gives a vivid account of married life
in Venice during the sixteenth century where a
woman may start out being smothered with kisses
and end up simply being smothered.
Othello

is

tragedies.

It

—

He

with Othello, a
"Call
friend,

also a more mature work of Shakesevidence of this is his feminine ending
(both Desdemona and Emilia are killed). Another
factor is his naughty language and skillfully woven
"juicy" plots.
1. In some places he completely forgets himself, and, due to censorship the lines are
omitted.
It is therefore left to the reader's imagina-

Othello

tion

is

An

peare.

to

fill

in the necessary

fascinating character, Iago,

compass and

The

plot

is

set

Rodrigo is seen
3. This is not
also a Venetian spy with

in Venice.
is

his only occupation; he

is

2.

a villain.

4. At this
the rank of an Ancient.
is conspiring a plot against Cassio.

revenge

getting

5.

unusual amount of

"Who

is

is

ruler.

talking with Iago. Iago

this

it

at

someone

on

his hands.

Cassio?"

father,

that

gentleman

a

sunburnt

Brabantio,"

there

off

tan.

Iago

must be

a

tells

his

telephone

booth somewhere on the Grand Canal.
Brabantio,
hearing the news, gets terribly excited and cries out,
"Get weapons, and raise some special officers of
the night!"
He can hardly wait to see his new
son-in-law.
The rest of the night Brabantio runs
frantically around the streets searching for Desdemona in his nightgown and bare feet. 7.

The Act

a

Moor with

up her
thinking

a gulled 6.

Desdemona has run

detail.

so complex that he must be studied in different degrees
and levels. The reader is strongly advised to bring

The most

—

Rodrigo

reveals to

a choice bit of gossip.

sneers

moment

He

for

Iago.

is

he

Iago
always
has an

Cassie,

abuse
lies.

closes

Othello's

with Ioga mumbling how he will
by pouring it brimfull with

ear

8.

The scene shifts to Cyprus where Iago, Desdemona, and Cassio join the victorious Othello 9- who
has just won a sea battle although he is a general,
not an admiral.
Iago
plot.

is

now scheming around

the clock on

his

10.

he

makes clear, is a book-worm with leather patches
on his elbows while he himself has stripes from
his wrist to his shoulder.

1.

It

was

juice
2.

like child's play for Will to
over his loom.

spill

lemon

Probably so that the costumes and stage properties of the Merchant of Venice could be used

6.

The

7.

A

8.

He

9.

This

4.

A

is

title

his specialty,

and he works hard

at

5.

He

it.

finds

0.
it

a

mess of him apparently.

strange place for her to be.

had watched Hamlet and thought

it

could
also.

Othello was in Cyprus and everyone else was
Venice it would be difficult for even Shakespeare to manage.
If

in

of the officers advanced in age but not

in rank.

made

look Like a "perfect crime" in his case

again.
3.

birds have

keeps him in trim on his job.

Page 83

A

steady 24 rock and roll shift around the clock.

�He invites Cassio for a drink. Cassio accepts.
Iago gives a toast 12. to the marriage of Othello
and Desdemona saying, "Well, happiness to their
sheets."
This is undoubtedly a slip of the tongue.
Cassio becomes completely inebriated and as he
proudly boasts "I can stand well enough," he falls
on his face. Before the evening
comes involved in a drunken brawl.
flat

muttering, "Reputation, reputation,

This is not
blasted hangover to cope with.
reputation."

13.

I

all,

is

up he be-

He is heard
have lost my
he has also a

These

quite annoyed to find Cassio's suit in his closet be-

tween

his uniform.

Othello becomes worried about Desdemona and
unburdens himself to Iago.
Iago has also some
weighty thoughts on his mind. 15. "It were not for
your quiet, nor for your good to know my thoughts,"
he whispered to Othello.
16. Furthermore, people
are beginning to talk. 17. Nor is this all.
Iago,
just warming up, tells Othello a whopper about
sleeping with Cassio one night, one of them having
gotten into the

wrong

19.
I'll

He

He

from

Iago

"O Mon-

cries out

tear her all to pieces.
is

O,

obviously upset.

here the plot becomes quit confused.
21.
Bianca gets involved. She is a very loose
and when Cassio talks about her he makes

A woman
woman

gestures as

to hold her together.

if

ing that he

and her
Cassio gets Desdemona to forward his suit to
Othello in order that he may get on friendly terms
with him. Desdemona, being slow-witted and dense
says "My lord shall never rest. I'll intermingle everything he does with Cassio's suits."
Othello gets

20.

blood, blood, blood."

From

coming

insinuations

monstrous!

strous!

is

He

annoyed.

14.

of

sort

get under Othello's skin.

talking

Othello, think-

about Desdemona, becomes

therefore must get rid of

Desdemona

lover.

Rodrigo makes a pass as Cassio; Cassio who does
not like these sort of things tries to defend himself.

Meanwhile Othello creeps into Desdemona's cham"She must die," he mutters, "yet I'll not shed
her blood nor scar that skin of hers, smooth as
monumental alabaster." 22.
ber.

bed.

"I heard him say, 'Sweet Desdemona let us hide
our loves!' And then he would cry out 'O sweet
creature' and grip and wring my hand and kiss
me as if he pluk'd up kisses by the roots." Then
"
18. Cassio would have
sir he would
certainly something to gripe about if he discovered
with whom he was in bed.

11.

Who

wouldn't

if

the drinks were

on the houser

12.

Imagine receiving

wedding
13.

burnt piece of toast for a

Free liquor benefits.

14. Othello has just
15.

a

gift.

He

finds

it

blown

his top.

hard to keep to himself

all

his dirty

jokes.

one about Desdemona.

16.

This

17.

No

one more than Iago.

18.

The

scars of censorship.

19.

They cause an odd form of

20.

He

is

a spicy

dermatitis.

looks at himself in a mirror and thinks he
has horns growing out of his head.

21. 'Will'

got the warp and woof tangled on his

loom.
22.

Translated as the old Moorish oath "Allah blast
her."

Page 84

�LITTLE THINGS
Desdemona overcome by his kisses awakes and
begs her lord to wait till morning.
23- She is very
eloquent but should have saved her breath for a
dash down the hall.
Othello, who is not used to
waiting, smothers her.
Although dead she comes
back to life to wish all a farewell.
Emilia, her maid, lets the truth out to the Vene-

much

It

Iago has to run her
Othello who does not
through with his sword.
like the limelight to be taken away from him, cries
out, "Here is my journey's end, here is my butt."
All turn to him with a puzzling look as he runs
his dagger through himself and exits.
24.
tian

F.B.I,

so

so

that

takes a

A

little

24.

He

defies

all

the

it

takes a

little

true ambition with a

of wit;

little bit

—

the little things that people do that
the old world go.

him good-night.

conventions of

muscle and

not the biggest things that count and
make the biggest show

It's

It's
23- Obviously too tired to kiss

little

grit,

makes

Elizabethan

drama and makes no further speeches.

A

little bit

of smiling

A

little bit

of courage for comrades slipping

and a

little

sunny

chat.

back;
not the biggest things that count and
the biggest show

It's

—

make

It's the little

things that people do that
the old world go.

it

takes a

word

with sunshine and

to drive

away

a kindly action and
of cheer

It takes

To

fill

a

life

makes

a tear;
Great things are not the biggest things that

make
It's

the

the biggest

show

things that we
the old world go.

little

makes

—

may

do that

Powell Equipment Co.
Ltd.

Page 85
I

�STORM
Shivering, huddled helplessly in a protecting pine,
alone in the terrifying world
tiny bird remains

—

The

of blue and green.

White

clouds send across a patch of blue, driven by
shroud of ugly gray
a blanket

—

And, as the ominous sky lowers,
A raw breeze ripples the calm waters.

Suddenly,

all

nature

Even the breeze
Tall

hills,

is

stilled,

hesitates to

silenced

mar

— awed.

the mirror lake.

dark clouds and towering pines enclose
the small world;

Time

stands

still

in hushed, expectant silence

Awaiting Nature's wrath.

Releases

its

—

the storm breaks,
pent-up fury on the tiny, unprotesting

Violently, unmercifully

occupant.
Fierce winds create havoc with the waves

And

lash majestic evergreens,

of

its

might.

bowing

in recognition

—

Rain pelts everywhere
unabated and aided by the winds.
Then, miraculously
the storm ceases, and filtering

—

sunlight illuminates a refreshed scene.

—DIANE

Page 86

JARVIS.

�ASSASSINATION

A
Under

was burning

single bulb

in the

garage that housed the Soviet Commissar's

the glare of this single light

quently called upon to

worked Peter Menshilov,
exact repairs on the commissar's car.

a

mechanic

who was

car.

fre-

This night, however, he had already finished repairing the car, and was now in the
process of afixing a crude, deadly time bomb alongside the engine block. The explosive in the bomb was a single pound of amatol, which would be quite sufficient to blast
the car to bits.
Peter worked swiftly and deftly and soon had the bomb well fastened on. Then
he carefully set the time mechanism for 9:10 the following morning. Once that was
done, he slammed the hood down, gathered his tools up and departed after turning the
light out.
later, he was up at his flat which he shared with two other Rusentered quietly so as not to disturb any of his neighbors, and just as
quietly slid his meager belongings packed in his travelling bags from beneath the bed.

Thirty minutes

sian families.

He

Then he quickly
As he

departed.

down

was on, he stopped beneath a
hundredth time in the last two
days, he checked to see that his travel permit and train ticket to East Germany were
still there. Having satisfied himself, he once again starred off down the street. It was
not long before he arrived at the railway station where he was to catch the 1 1 30 train
for the west. Once he was on the train, he was safe for about nine hours before circumstances forced him to depart from the train.

street

strode

lamp and took

the deserted street that his flat

from

his wallet

his pocket. For the

:

As

the train was about ready to depart, Peter was passed quickly through the in-

spection point as his papers were

He

soon found his seat and relaxed as
Minsk behind them. It was
not long before his tense nerves loosened up, and soon the gentle swaying of the train
had lulled him asleep.
the train pulled out

from the

all

in order.

station leaving the lights of

As he slept, the events of the past several months passed through his mind in the
form of a dream. He dreamed about his being introduced into the Russian Anti-Communist League by one of his friends who also had recently been made a member. Peter's
becoming a member of the society gave them their chance to try an experiment. As
Peter was single and had no living relatives in Russia and had access to the commissar
of Minsk's private auto, it was decided that he would place a bomb in the car. At first
Peter was hesitant to undertake this chore because if he failed and was caught, he
would be speedily executed. He liked living as well as did the next man and it took
some fast persuading by the members of the League before he would give in.

bomb

in the car, he was constantly in fear of being discovLeague was busy obtaining for him a travel permit,
money and a train ticket by which he could skip the country. They also made the necessary connections in East Berlin so that he could be safely transported to the Western
zone. With due caution they covered their own trail behind them so that they could
continue after Peter had gone.

Until Peter placed the

ered.

While Peter

fretted, the

Page 87

�Then one day they learned that on the morning of the fourteenth the commissar
was leaving for Moscow on official business. As the car would have to be prepared for
its trip by Peter, it was decided that the time had come for the bomb to be put into
place. So that is why Peter was now on his way to Berlin.
In the morning about the time Peter was leaving the train on the Polish-German
border to continue on foot, the commissar's driver was taking the car from the garage
and was parking it before the house. He never heard the ticking of the bomb that
would spell out death for him and the commissar in about a half an hour.
Precisely at nine o'clock the commissar came out of the house followed by his
servant carrying the bags which were placed quickly and efficiently in the trunk.
few moments later the car shot away towards the outskirts of town.

A

At nine-ten the car was passing through the last of the houses of Minsk when it
erupted with a sheet of flame and a deafening roar. Several peasants who had been
observing the passing of the car stared dumbfoundedly at the smoldering heap which
a few seconds before had been a car. The first part of the mission had just been accomplished.

Meanwhile, Peter was walking through the German forest west of the Polish border trying to put as much distance between him and Minsk as possible. He knew that
by now the bomb had fired and in less than an hour an intensive search would have
been started for him.
checking his map he found that he was less than a mile from the autobahn
to be met and driven the last sixty miles to Berlin. He had twenty minutes to make the rendezvous which was at 9:40. It had been calculated that by 10:30
Berlin would have been notified and it would be almost impossible for him to get past
the city's check points.

Upon

where he was

At 9:40
up to

pulled

and clambered

hair,

from the cover of the forest just as a Volkswagen
where he emerged. Peter dashed up to the car
The car shot off the moment the door closed behind him.

precisely he broke

a halt opposite the point
in.

Peter turned and viewed the driver, a young man of about twenty-five, with blond
blue eyes and a fair complexion. He was quite a contrast to Peter who had coal

black hair, brown, almost black eyes, and a dark scarred face which was a result of a

bomb

burst on his bunker back in the

During the
though Peter
Russian.

The

days.

a word even
he spoke German as well as he did
concentrated on the road as they were driving at speeds some-

entire sixty mile trip,

tried to strike

driver just

war

up

Peter's

companion never spoke

a conversation as

times in excess of ninety on some of the straight stretches of road. It was imperative
that Peter be in Berlin before 10:30 and so the League's connections had provided him

with

a

souped-up

car.

Page 88

�was before 10:30 when the little car pulled to a halt at a check point on the
and now Peter started to sweat. Peter's companion looked as though
he had done this a thousand times before and soon they were passed through without
It

outskirts of Berlin,

the least bit of trouble.

The small car shot on into the city and soon passed through the new section of
the city that had been rebuilt since the war. The car was forced to slow down when it
came to the portion of the city that had not been rebuilt and was still in the same state
that it had been when the last of the allied bombing raids had gone. It was several
minutes later when the car pulled to a halt before a partially wrecked building, blew
allowing them entry.
its horn once, and a portion of the building's wall swung away

When

the car was in, the wall closed and Peter and the driver got out. Peter was
room where a small, swarthy man was seated behind a large oaken

led into a small back
desk. This

man

immediately jumped up, welcomed Peter in flawless Russian and wrung

his hand.

He

"Glad to see that you made it all right Peter; hope you had an uneventful
to see that you make it over to the other side all right and we have a
daring plan that might just work because it is so daring. There will be some awful red
Russian faces if it does work. We are going to dress you up in the uniform of a colonel in the Red army. You are going to pull a surprise inspection of one of the guard
posts on the East-West Berlin border.
In your pocket will be a hand grenade with
which you will dispose of the surprised guards. Then all you have to do is take a stroll
into the western zone where you will be met by some of our men who will conduct
you to the British Embassy where you will apply for political refuge. There will be
no need to fear the Western guards at the second gate twenty yards past the Russians,
for they have been alerted to let you through. All they will do is duck the grenade
blast which is something that you had better not forget to do. Now, until tonight you
had better rest up. There is a bed and food in the next room. We shall see you again
trip.

said,

We're here

at eight o'clock."

Peter retired to the other room, ate, and then lay down and slept fitfully for
He awoke about four and spent the rest of his time going over the

several hours.

plans in his mind.

was eight o'clock and the small man had returned. Under
Out of
bundle which he opened on the bed.
the package came the uniform of a Red army colonel.
Before he knew

his

arm he

it,

it

carried a paper-wrapped

Page 89

�him almost perfectly.
The pocket bulged
guards would notice it.

Peter was soon dressed in the grayish uniform which

The hand-grenade was handed
something

terrific

but

now

it

to

him and he put

it

was doubtful whether the

fit

in his pocket.

room of the house where a large black limouhe entered it it shot out into the rubble strewn street and
roared away.
It was just dusk when the car pulled up to the guard post and Peter
smiled to himself when he saw the surprise on the guard's faces when they spotted
the red stars painted on the sides of the car.
Peter was

sine awaited him.

led out to the front

When

Peter got slowly out of the car which was a safe twenty yards from the guards

so as to be out of the blast of the grenade.
He walked slowly towards the guards
who were now standing nervously at attention. He was nervously fingering the

hand grenade with the pin now out. When he was about five yards away, he whipped
it out of his pocket and threw it at them.
With the same motion he threw himself
on the ground and rolled behind the nearby building. All the guards did was stare
They were so
at the grenade for the second before it went off and cut them down.
astonished that their nerves never had a chance to galvanize them into action.
Peter got up from his safety and sprinted through to the western side.
As he
had been told, the western guards never bothered him.
He looked back into the
Russian zone and saw his car speeding away in the opposite direction and he knew
that as long as those men were on that side people like him would always be able
to rid themselves of the most hated oppression that the world has ever known.

Sid Seeley, Arts.

with the

compliments of

YOUR
NEIGHBORHOOD
TEXACO
DEALER
TEXACO CANADA LIMITED
Texaco Petroleum Products

Pogo 90

�3 A.

M.

within the tomb
of unperturbed glass
cluster ancient pillars

of barren ash

once the jewelled ends of fragrant cigarettes

now
pompeiian coprolites
vulgar incarnations
of countless ashy thoughts
thoughts already dissipated
like the

that just

smoke

now

streamed, exhausted,

from blackened

craters of tired nostrils

closed in silent recognition
that the dark
is

and early morning

not the bird of day

but the death of night

DIS

I

stood on the shore
dim land of Dis

of the

careful

my

I

was

path not to miss

I missed it
and darkness did kiss

ah! erring

I

stood only once

on the dim shore of Dis
but being once there
cost all happiness

—CLARENCE JACOBSON.

fog, 91

�Personality Beauty Clinic

X
LIMITED

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Everything for the Office

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Compliments of
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COMPANY

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MOST COMPLETE OFFICE OUTFITTERS

OPTOMETRIST

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St.

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18

Court

St.

Port Arthur

fag, 92

117 S. Syndicate

St.

Fort William

�From
Best

Wishes

the Conservation Centre of
to

1959

Lakehead College

Canada

Graduates and Students
of Arts,

of the

Science and Technolgy

Dryden Paper Company Limited
Dryden, Ontario

Compliments of

d^eu.

Ruttan-Bolduc-Adderley

.

.

.

porter J

SPORTSWEAR SHOPS
LIMITED

Famous
Insurance

for

.

.

.

and Mortgage Loans

SPORTSWEAR
and
Clothing
for Students

Court

St. at

Park

PORT ARTHUR

Pag b 93

LTD.

�With the Compliments of

THE GREAT LAKES PAPER COMPANY, LIMITED

FORT WILLIAM, ONTARIO

Canada's Most Complete

DRILLING SERVICE

We manufacture a full range of underground and surface diamond drills
developed to meet extensive contract commitments throughout the
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Vancouver, B. C.
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Page 94

�The Store for
Young Canada

PAYS TO
SHOP AT EATON'S
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• Largest Assortments
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backed by the Famous Guarantee,

"Goods Satisfactory or Money Refunded"

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Canada
PORT ARTHUR BRANCH

Page 95

��KANSAS CITY
TORONTO
Lithographed

in

MISSOURI
ONTARIO

6.
1.

U. S. A.

by Yearbook House

LAKEl--.-T.At)

PORT ARTHUR,

Gl

�DATE DUE

CAYLORD

PRINTED

IN U.S.A.

�Institute^
Lakehead Technical
year

^£«j7

JNJVERSTTY

OBRARY

��</text>
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1

�1961

VOLUME:

SESSION: 1960-61

12

CO-EDITORS
ELIZABETH SENYK and JEFF

MAC KAY

3.1429
Published by the Students of the Lakehead College

PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO.

LAKEHEAD COkktSI
€WT
PORT ARTHUR,
t

��CONTENTS

DEDICATION
PRINCIPAL'S

4

MESSAGE

FACULTY

5

6

EDITORIAL

12

STUDENT COUNCIL

14

STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS

16

ARTS FACULTY

28

APPLIED SCIENCE

41

FOREST TECHNOLOGY

46

ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

50

RYERSON ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

55

MINING TECHNOLOGY

60

STUDENT NURSES

62

ATHLETIC COUNCIL

66

SPORTS

68

STUDENT DIRECTORY

82

ADVERTISING DIRECTORY

85

3

�DEDICATION

For his capable administration of Lakehead College, the

Yearbook
tional

MR.

staff,

pleasure

H. S.

on behalf of
in

BRAUN,

dedicating
Principal.

all

the students, takes excep-

the

1961

NOR'WESTER

to

During the several years that

Mr. Braun has been Principal, the College has grown steadily
in

student body, classrooms, library

and

courses.

facilities,

tecching

staff,

�THE PRINCIPAL'S MESSAGE

To The Graduates:
a privilege to extend sincere congratulations and every

is

It

good wish

to the

because, for the

work

years'

graduates of

first

some

time,

in

They alone have

and plans

the

During the past year

tain the
past.

to

I

same

—

hope our

have taken two

The success of

thing to our

—

this

expan-

students

first

graduating

A

class.

no better and no worse.

based on the premise that
well.

we have experienced

over forty percent.

efforts

year

foundation on which the College has been

close relationship

watch you with

Good

same

measure up equally

enrolment to date

this

at the University of their choice.

for further expansion are

this year's class will

in

of the Arts students

as our graduates

laid the

unique

is

depend on the records these

work next year

their

few years ago we said
Our College is as good
built

The group

at the College instead of one.

sion will, in a large measure,

make

'61.

between

have been

interest

and

We

staff

the largest increase

have

tried to

main-

and students as

in -the

successful.

We

shall

continue

anticipation.

luck.

H. S.

BRAUN

5

���OFFICE STAFF

MRS. NORI SCOTT

MR. ALEX.

MRS. ELIZABETH BOGEL

HORBOW

'FRANK'

SESSIONAL LECTURERS
D.

MORGAN,

B.A.

(McGill),

M.A. (Harvard)

8

S.

LUKER,

B.A.,

M.A. (Western)

E.

M. W.

CHARBONNEAU,

B.A.

(Ottawa)

�LIBRARY STAFF
Back Row: Jack Shannon, Roman R. Grodzicky (head librarian), George Dawosyr.
Centre Row: Patricia Shannon, Jane Braun, Catherine McDevitt, Elizabeth Bogel, Marjorie

Vester.

Dubois.

Front Row: Jo-Ann

Zubec, Marianne Harvey,

Anne

Stevens,

Jeannette

�10

��NOR'WESTER
STAFF

JEFF

MAC KAY
Editor

ELIZABETH SENYK
Editor

To

initiate

new ideas

from a tradition that
tence.

The tradition

appear

in

is

—

is,

that the

exis-

its

yearbook

same form, with new faces
adhered

therefore,

There

of the Nor'wester.

—

stray

to

is

of the purposes of

question

in

basically the

old settings

one

yearbook

a

in

is

to in the '61

no place

in

it

in

edition

for the out-

spoken reactionary of contemporary society; and, progress

is

restricted

varying content.

to
In

improving

production

a collection of surprises and

than

rather

other words, the Nor'wester

is

innovations,

inspired

not

but

merely a record of events and a marker of progress and

development

at the

Lakehead College

61.

And

tion

by supplying warm memories

it

will further

show the value

for the

of

in

year 1960-

yearbook

the

attics

tradi-

of

the

next thirty years.

The production of the

Nor'wester was accom-

'61

plished despite copious difficulty.
to

We,

the editors, wish

thank our small but loyal Band (whose pictures appear

on the next page)

for assistance

and courageous support

even during the long, hot summer.

12

��STUDENT
PRESIDENT'S

MESSAGE
We

facilities,

our case, the additional lack of athletic

in

are

as obvious as they are frustrating.

all

college

The individual student finds

ours worthwhile.

like

and encouragement

the stimulus
potential.

to

develop to

the great aim of education,

This,

Education

not

is

confined

to

extracurricular

program contributes

of character in

ways

us realize
offer

tions

that the

ample opportunity

and

book

academic cannot.

learn

to

and grow.

A

as other larger schools.

activities

Merely keeping up with the

head

at the

itself

activities

whose

of the

past councils

Nor

extracurricular program.

is

a job

Most of

Lakehead
far greater
in activities;

number

larger

potentials are being tapped.

any executive capacity

in

of

we have a correspondingly

other words,

of students

the

many organiza-

small enrolment, has as

its

learning;

the development

to

percentage of our students, then, are involved

Those of you who have served

full

numerous organizations on campus

the

that

College, with

The Student Council finds

his

fulfilled

is

Lakehead College.

at

task.

There

one outstanding advantage, however, that makes a

is

in

of a small

The lack of adequate social and cultural ac-

and,

tivities,

many disadvantages

realize the

all

university.

in

realize

great

the

to introduce

itself;

is

this

effort

an easy
involved.

something new

is

a definite accomplishment.
This year has

been one

of great accomplishment.

We

have not only carried on the functions

ed from previous councils, but have added a few of our own.

ly

broomball team the college has had; the

ladies

successful;

finished

in

addition the

the year with

off

gram has experienced one
Our

institution

first

the

Trophy Night Banquet.

of the biggest

has pushed

itself into

booms

in

its

inter-faculty

first

college radio program, 'College

first

year

made

League; our college paper, 'The Manifesto',

Senior Basketball
first

This

we placed a team

debut; our

girls

inheritin

the

formed the

dance competition proved high-

Line',

made

its

appearance and we

Without a doubt, the extracurricular pro-

the history of Lakehead College.

the public light as never before.

Locally our basketball

broomball teams, as well as our news column and radio program, have given us tremendous

and

publicity.

we momentarily flashed upon the national scene. In fact, every major uninow
aware
of the diminute but dynamic Lakehead College.
versity in Canada
We on the Council
But why have we made so much progress this year?
The reason is simple.
have made it our policy to delegate the work load to the many competent people we knew were in
the college.
There is always the group of steadfast dependables who voluntarily step forward to

Through

the

Manifesto,
is

assume

—

on

their

whom

These are the people

share of the work.
the

burden of leadership has always

aid of the equally competent people,
the Evans', the Senyk's, the

year.

We

ing

itself,

—

the Shannon's, the Helper's, the Caddo's
But

we searched

further.

shyness or humility, held back.

Bahrynowski's and the MacKay's,

were the reason

We

And
for

enlisted the

these students,

our progress

is

the Lakehead

in

its

College?

history.
It

is

not the walls, nor the chairs

but the people within the building.

college as well.

In

The students, then, are responsible

helping
for the

to

and

desks, nor even the build-

develop the students,

growth

we develop

of the college this year.

BOB MC ALPINE
14

this

harnessed the potential of the student body and the development of that potential gave

our college the greatest push

What

who through

fallen.

the

�COUNCIL

STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES - Back Row. Laurence
Ronald Paakanen, Melvin

Perrier,

Christianson, Janet Thorn, Sin

Maurice

Murray Summers,

Coulson, John Bishop,

Earl Johnson.

Front Row: Ronald

Soo Kung, Karen Hegge, Roderick Ward, Frank Sargent,

Price.

15

�RADIO
CLUB

Back Row.

Lome
Kmet.

Bill

Jeffers,

Evans, John Draho, Ed

Golomb.

Middle Row:

John Bishop, Greg Yurick, Jeff McKay, Jerry

At the Key. Mike Skillen.

After one year's absence from the ether, the Lakehead Col-

lege Amateur Radio Station

VE3ECT returned

to the air this year

with a powerful signal on three "ham" bands.

With a hard core of approximately ten avid members and
an executive consisting of Bill Evans, President, Mike Skillen VE3EDX, Vice-President, and Lome Jeffers, Treasurer, the club soon

overcame the

host of difficulties

faced

it

in

Starting from scratch, the club erected

borrowed a receiver and radiotelegraph
for a

September.
a vertical antenna,

and applied

transmitter,

license renewal.

Unfortunately due to lack of an advanced license, the 180
watt radiotelephone transmitter was rendered useless barring the
necessary conversions. Thus, most activities of the club appeared
as clear as
the
in

many

mud

layman students

to

contacts

made

of the College.

"hams" and other

with distant

North America provided

many

The club provided a library
proved very educational to

all

Nevertheless,

thrills

of

for the

universities

"educated few".

magazines and data which
and many have

those interested

amateur
provided incentive for several people to obtain their own
licenses.

Our thanks

their
to the Students' Administrative Council for

generous grants and encouragement,
with the squeals, howls

who

16

put a

bonded

and

static,

to the students

and

who

put up

to the College's builders

roof under our antenna.

73's.

�MANIFESTO

The

EDITED BY THE STUDENTS OF LAKEHEAD COLLEGE

VOLUME

1,

NO.

OF ART, SCIENCE
PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO

1

AND TECHNOLOGY
NOT OVER

10c

RADIO STATION FOR LAKEHEAD COLLEGE
By

STUDENT COUNCIL UNDER

FIRE

On Thursday

afternoon, NoIt appears that the Council did
vember 17, the Student's Coun- not wake up to the fact that at
ll_
\_
V V» V» In V
meeting.
The
least
wU J half
U
VI
II WO'w
that
U
attended
1^1 IVJ^&lt;wl
of those
Ul
cil held its weekly
agenda consisted primarily with the last supper dance were not
the issuing of grants to the vari- college students, and probably
and
clubs
organizations, do not even knr.»
ous
There was some discussion who
the iss
grants
ed the
the Ye
contribu
oppositk
I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

.

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

editor's message
a

greetings

Pnviledge to extend
and good wishes to

!^S~jlS^L
me * um
l

l,

I

I

.

of

he,r ..° v

f

1

?

?.

^

h

,he

JOHN BISHOP

JZzrrtf *gjrSS

5 ~^J
dX^" ~S
much

PJ^fl

i
&gt;

&gt;

When
to

)mplaining of the
of our existing rae at the Lakehead.
'low quality" supfrom the current

un
The nr
meeting c

cision

programming
late stress

hold
Dance. Th

to

yvoke up and facVe, the students

managed t
red. Howe

College feel

to

tertainment,

dances

the opporour worth and

uest

hav

the hole."
ing

made

was announced A,
vember 21, by the Co
of Governors, that tw
It

to the

College will be

have
tween

Pat McGrath.

«««
NEWSPAPER STAFF RqW

.

NM
Ann Tod, Bob
.

—

and completed for the next year.
The additions to the original
building will form a U-shaped
structure with one arm to contain
three lecture rooms, a large sloping floor lecture theatre, and extra office space. The other arm
will contain a biology laboratory,
a greenhouse, two squash courts,
and equipment storage roome.
The contract has been let to
Leighton
Construction
Limited
and the architects are Mickelson,
Fraser, Haywood, and Associates,
To those who frequent the library, it is evident by the sounds of
excavation, etc. that work has
already begun. The cost of the

two structures will be $193,511,
which will raise the total value
of

some

of the
recently
"adults"
gers." Let us break
irass-Knuckle Curtainl
i

t

per dance
order that n
thus alleviati

Exp

we

to offer to the
ainly resent belird class human

Col

suppose

to-

on mu-

and emotional

ar

terred in
fact that

of the

yet

few weeks, there
numerous
letters
editors of two lo-

purchase
cided

may

Jay District

finally a

re'

hi

providing a!
sought after,
and yet absent serthe general public
College itself. Our
propagate a Voice
College throughout

Dpe of

1

were

S

College may realize the
aream ot every Institution of

head

the buildings to cover $1,000,000. Along with this, it has
been announced that an addition-

Bahry now
'

Front

he College

probably

and Roll as much as
whether they are
5,
moron type, as has been
ex- claimed by people writing anony

_ .. lllt iesi High for their
cellent response to our plea for
subscribers.
hope that the remaining institutions will be as

mous

letters to the T.J. or not
derive almost as much pleas
ure from our Rock and Roll as
the
older
generation
derived
as fast as need be, this is welco- generous.
med news and bodes fair of what
Some of the universities with from their high-class singers like
should be forthcoming in the not which we are negotiating with Rudy Vallee, and their singers of
too distant future.
Manitoba (Winnipeg), such wonderful classical numbers
are: are:
Minnesota (Duluth),
New Bruns- 'ike "Tiger Rag" and "I Wanna
wick (Fredricton), Western (Lond Be Loved by You." BUT— we can
on )' Q ueens (Kingston) and Tor- also appreciate the true classical
numbers, which have survived
onto (Toronto).
The Literary Club held its first
The staff of the Manifesto feels the relentless slipping away of
meeting on November 10, with a that this broad coverage will the sands of time since their inturnout of 30 students. The Prog- give our readers an insignt into ception as the popular music of
ramme for the evening included many other educational instit- the days gone by. Why can we
not arrive at some happy methe reading of Paddy Chayefs- utes.
dium, whereby the personal feelky's play: "Middle of The Night',
P. J. McGrat, Director of
ngs °* ever y° ne towards music
wich has
been
made into a Circulation &amp; Publicity
and culture can be satisfied? We
motion picture starring Kim Nofirmly believe that we can. The
vak and Fredric March.
Everyone present had a chance
The library of the College con- Students of LCAST have given
to read a part and display their tains a mocrofilm reader and a birth to an idea which, if allowed
and mature could
acting abilities.
collection of books, and pictures to develop
We look forward to an enjoy- on the early history of the Lake- provide the descriminating inable and informative year.
head.

,o rnose of us

who

the
LCAST had not been progressing
felt that

We

We

LITERARY NE^^S

'

17

�8

INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP

Back Row: Dan Wolframe, Murray Summers, Allan Carlson.

Proof Row: Jeanne No-

walkoski, Karen Hegge, Maurice Price.

The story of

Inter- Varsity

1875, where students

Howard

first

felt

Christian

Fellowship begins

in

Cambridge

University

a desire to meet together for Christian fellowship.

Ginnis, a student from

Cambridge, was sent

an Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship

Canada.

in

I.

to Toronto

V. C.

F.

in

1928

in

Mr.

to establish

has spread tremendously

throughout Canada, the United States, Latin America, the Philippines, Formosa, and
other Far Eastern countries.
I.

F.

is

not to be thought of as

God

body.

initiative of

C.

v

V. C.

instrument used by

F.

It

on the

is

to

just

an organization, however, but as an

develop Christian character and

to witness to the student

the students alone that these interdenominational

The main emphasis

in

the

I.

V. C.

F.

program

placed on Bible study.

is

speakers and round table discussions add variety to the weekly meetings.

a Fireside Evening was held before Christmas.

Allan Carlson

I.

V.

groups are formed.

This event

In

Guest
addition

enabled the Christian groups

from the General and McKellar Hospitals, the Lakehead Teachers College and Lake-

President

head College

to

enjoy an evening together.

Guest speaker

Manitoba,

Kenneth Louden, regional director of Inter-Varsity for

for the occasion

Saskatchewan

and

North

was Mr.
Western

Ontario.

The
such

I.

V.

a group

C.

F.

group

at

has had the

Lakehead College

privilege

of

is

lege expands into a full-fledged university that the
lished

1

on

this

campus.

still

in

its

infancy,

meeting on the campus.
I.

V. C.

F.

may

It

this

also

being the

hoped

is

that as

first

year that

Lakehead Col-

grow and become

firmly estab-

�CAMERA CLUB

Standing: Sin Soo Kung, Gilles Leblanc, Veikko Johannes, Keith Sitch, Robert McAlpine,

John Bishop.

Seated: Earl Johnson.

The Camera Club has seven members and a
wonderful wealth of equipment

The members
operative

seem

all

efforts

their

in

to

the dark

in

room.

be enthusiastic and cotowards

the

success

of

the club.

We
five

to

have received a grant of one hundred and

dollars from the Students' Council,

with

which

purchase chemicals and equipment.
It

was decided by the Camera Club and the
Staff that the Camera Club members be

Yearbook

responsible

and club

as successful
very well and
cessful

the

for

activities,

as
all

coverage of
in

order to

possible.

all

make

Things

sports,

the

are

social

Yearbook

progressing

indications are pointing to a suc-

year.

19

�DEBATING CLUB

Fronf Ro W:

Back Row: Melanie Bahrynowski, Bob McAlpine, Pat McGrath, Ed Golomb.
Fran

Bilinski,

Siobhan Rickard, Brenda Coopman, Ann Tod.

The Lakehead College debating club was
faced with an unparalleled record to uphold.

year

this

No

time

elapsed after the election of officers took place, and, Pat

McGrath

—

— who

Vice-President

many

was elected

President,

and Pat Shannon

rhetoric enthusiasts,

—

Siobhan Rickard

Secretary, along with

began informal debates

within

On November 22 the subject "Resolved,
Canada Should Have Its Own Flag" was presented in
the College.

that

such

a manner that even the judges were at a loss to proclaim

a winner.
tention

in

Teachers
of

Siobhan
vice

.President

Similar debates

were staged along with

'con-

words' with several of the high schools and the
College.

Plans

for

a

Manitoba were also discussed.

trip

to

the

University

�TOURNAMENT

BRIDGE

Every college and university usually has some outstanding
itself.

and recognition

athletic

of

spite

in

peculiar

trait
its

size

determination,

game which

its

desire

to

its

win

extreme mental

win,

The game

has entrenched

and

pupil

is

to

acin

a

alert-

bridge; a

very deepest roots into

souls of the great majority of the college's

prey

fall

The grand champions among the east-west groups

were Armas West and Allan Carlson with 73
Runnersup

70

were

Lloyd

and

Fucile

Brian

points.

Keenan

with

points.

the

In

north-south

McAlpine took top
Petro
with

Janiuk

72

and

division

honours

Patricia

Mike Helper and

with

an

83

Shannon were

point
close

Bob

effort.

behind

points.

Bridge Night did not belong solely to the winners;

students.

To exhibit the high standard

of

play and to en-

courage the game within the school, a Bridge Night
held each year.

is

Bridge Night '61 was under the expert

direction of 'a real pro', Mr. Philip Rickard.

room was

the master points that

the winners.

and sheer physical
contract

and

the undying glory,
to

and com-

to

achievement

for outstanding

requires of

and mental prowess.
the hearts

or

meagre resources has managed

game which
ness,

scholastic

Lakehead College,

paratively

claim

social,

The common

the

and

competitors
this

rather

enjoyed the
unusual

was a great source

but

keen,

advanced play

affirmed

of pride to

intellectual

all
(?)

event

each student of the

col-

lege.

well filled with students seeking the rich prizes,

21

�Back

Row-. Ian Hall, Bruce Flatt,

Warren Wanson.

Froni Row-. Bob

Keith Srigley,

Sills,

Bob Bennett, Ron Venor.

PRECAMBRIAN CLUB
The Precambrian Club

and made up

and

more

an organization formed by

of the mining technology students of Lake-

The chief aims of the members are

head College.
gain

is

practical

knowledge

of

the

in

hope

of

strengthening their position.

The club hopes to accomplish some of
showing

films

field trips to

or

program
T.

W. Page

objectives by

mining properties which are either

under
is

its

on mining and geology and by arranging

development.

This

part

of

in

opera-

the

club's

under the direction of the executive, with Mr.

an informal

to time

throughout the year experts

talk

on

who

some phase

of

come

College and give

their

to the

the

particular field

of

mining

in-

work and

afterwards answer a few questions from the members.

At present new ideas are being considered but they
are only

the planning stage

in

and

will

require further

discussion.

Since the

Canadian

Precambrian Club

Institute

of

Mining

is

affiliated

with

the

and Metallurgy, mineral

samples, maps, literature, and film can be obtained from

anywhere

in

the world, thus enabling the club to sponsor

an interesting and varied

acting as advisor.

From time

22

mining industry

the

in

dustry will be invited to

to better acquaint industry with the value of mining

technicians

tion

to

are actually working

year.

list

of activities for the

coming

�Back Row.- Barry Smith, Don Mcintosh, Maurice
non
fried

Price,

Mr. Gale (faculty), Mr. MacKin-

Front Row. Frank Murphy, Mr. McKenzie (faculty), Ron Paakanen, Sieg-

(faculty).

Schraml,

Shannon, Leonard Reid, Ron Klemacki.

Bill

ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGISTS' ASS.
Late last spring at a social gathering of technolo-

the

gists,

idea

technologists
association

an

of

was a

association

the

for

topic of great interest.

was formed

with

an

engineering
This

year an

membership of

initial

The purpose of the formation of
create

a

better

understanding

this

between

body

industry

is

to

and

Another important function of E.T.A.
part-time

One

of

the

largest

projects

of

the publication of a brochure, which
to industries across

Canada.

in

the
is

to

association

is

be distributed

The brochure

will

This

will

Employment

An
the

industry.

and summer placement

Robinson, the

engineering technologists, and to educate employers to
recognize the value of technologists

employ, engineering technologists.

their

ment.

forty-six.

who have

course outlines and comments from employers
in

be done

local

of

conjunction

in

university

officer

commending
of

their

1

for

employ-

in

with

the

Guy

Mr.

National

the Engineering students on

organization

Heavy Construction News Magazine,
6,

the full-time,

Service.

article

formation

January

is

members

appeared
Vol.

5,

No.

the

in
1

on

961

contain

23

�����FACULTY OF ARTS

I

�PROPERTY OF

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE
ONT.
PORT ARTHUR,
:

29

�������FACULTY OF ARTS
DAVID

D.

ANDREWS

ALLEN

GAYLE

S.

II

A.

CARLSON

CARLSON

WALTER

J.

KWASNY

��FRANCES POLESCHUK

WILLIAM M. SARANCHUK

PATRICIA V.

SHANNON

KENNETH M. TRIMARK

JANET

33

E.

THOM

���RONALD

E.

DAY

LAURENCE

L.

COULSON

�����FOREST TECHNOLOGY

46

I

��FOREST TECHNOLOGY

II

��ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

I

����ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

II

�RYERSON ENGINEERING

TECHNOLOGY
JOHN ALAKSA

JAMES

JOHN

G.

D.

CAMERON

DRAHO

WILFRED W. HANKKIO

JAMES

L.

HUTCHISON

ROBERT

C.

KLAAS

55

����59

�MINING TECHNOLOGY

ALFRED

60

K.

SRIGLEY

RONEY

E.

VENOR

WARREN W. WANSON

�61

�62

����A.

B.

S.

PRESIDENT'S

MESSAGE
Many

lege Athletic

Society

The groundwork

been

society has

and

now

I

year have been wiped

last

smooth running,

for a

in

momentous year

student need
athletics.

is

up whereby a

set

be a champion to receive a trophy

not
It

set,

for Lake-

sports.

year a point system was

Last

out.

efficient athletic

a pattern of seasons has been

laid,

look forward to a

head College

in

problems faced by the Lakehead Col-

of the

a very good athlete

true,

may

receive

a trophy more easily than a novice or a poorer athlete,
but the latter can receive a trophy
athletic

Basketball

was

finally

mas

it

was our major

entered

seemed

recognition of

in

simply by participating

ability

more

in

team was headed

that the

team

sport last year, as a

the inter-city league.

in

his

sports.

Until Christ-

cham-

for the

pionship; but after a Christmas lay-off, filled with turkey,

SHANNON

BILL

too

President

much sleep and too few

and never found

itself

team had only one member
were playing

more than

and bowling were our most

Curling
In

in

a

practices, the

senior

of senior

league,

I

team

let

down

Considering the

too late.

until

age and

that they

team did

the

feel

well.

hundred students participating.

active sports, with over a

bawling our averages ranged from 216 to 112, not championship calibre

yet,

we

but

were

sure

noisy.

was

Curling

up

set

way

a

such

in

on one team, and no more than one
second

week

last

Our hockey

the second division, there

in

—

had

beaten

14 to

3.

Terrace

no more than two experienced persons were allowed

was a seven way

rock

sport.

week

Bay the

Forestry

against Applied Science

won

was

tie for first

Our

success.

place.

we

as

instructions,

the

left

kids.
As it turned out, we lost
was a success was that our game with Schrieber, who
before, was washed out because of wet ice.

easy on these younger high school

it

The reason the

trip

The broomball league was also a great success.
hard

balanced the teams so well that on the

This system

Bay was a tremendous

to Terrace

trip

dressing room, were to take

a squeaker

that
girl.

championship but

the

forced.

In

Almost every faculty put up a team for
not

the two complete

after

games

the

a

until

complete

ended one

score

to

this

game

overtime

nil

for

Forestry.

The only major problem
year

Last

conscious

all
in

the

sports

left

competing with them.

any of the sports offered and the
I

them.

would also
It

like

for

the

athletic

executive next year

were dominated by the men and

to thank

was mainly because

my
of

There were not enough
girls

activities

executive,

them that

finally

in

girls

in

—

what

do

with the girls?

felt

shy or

self-

any teams

for

petered out.
long at any problem that

I

year was a success.
Bill

66

to

girls

the school to form

who worked hard and
last

is

most cases the

Shannon,

Pres.

gave

�ATHLETIC SOCIETY REPS.
Lawrence Mironsky, Dale Lindsey, Myron Watsyk, Keith

Sitch,

Gilles

Leblanc.

EXECUTIVE

BRENDA COOPMAN
KEN TRIMARK
Vice-President

Secretary

DON CADDO
Treasurer

���Back Row: Dave Trochimchuk, Eugene Yemchuk, Don Mcintosh, Myron Watsyk, Bob
Arnold Ruoho.
Front Row. Ken Trimark, Harry Rusling, Don Caddo, Mike

Climie,

Helper, Bob McAlpine.

The basketball potential

was

finally put to use

official

debut

this

association the

although

when

season.

in

was composed mainly

it

Lakehead College

Sponsored by a

team was entered

Classified as the

the

the "Mustangs"

made

their

local athletic

into the senior

league

of junior-aged players.

underdogs the Mustangs surprised

everyone at the beginning of the season by defeating
Laskins,

one

tinuing

in

70

of the top-rated

this

teams

rather surprising

in

the league.

Con-

form the College team

vaulted

into

first

The Mustangs

place

with

team that confronted them

And

it

was only with

three

successive

much concern,

stimulated

to exert

maximum

this

its

But

for

its

in

the standings

first

year

Mustangs did extremely

as

well.

and out
an

each

maximum

effort.

effort that the older

and more experienced teams were able
Mustangs down

victories.

forcing

to

force

the

of the playoffs.

organized

team the

�The bowling league

this

year was a great success.

pated and a good many high averages

HIGH AVERAGES

-

-

Up to
good

fifty

Trimark

216

Lindsey

206

B.

McAlpine

-

197

Trimark

315

M. Matich

283

W. Shannon

270

K.

Trimark

511

Kmet

485

470

D. Lindsey

GIRLS HIGH

students partici-

league.

K.

K.
I.

for a very

D.

HIGH SINGLE GAMES

HIGH DOUBLES

made

BOWLER -

High Average

High

Single

High

Double

-

F.

Bilinski

F.

Bilinski

F.

Bilinski

-

171

302

487
71

�FORESTRY

—

Crompton.

Standing: Tony

Kneeling: Ed

Silc,

Murray Summers, Ray Inaba, Pat McGrath, Ken

Andy Yerex, Harry

Kari,

Rusling.

The broomball season got underway shortly after Christmas with
part

—

Arts

I,

Arts

six

teams taking

Applied Science, Forestry, Mining, Engineering Technology.

II,

games were played during the lunch hour to allow fans, all three of them,
the action.
It
was a great year for broomball with injury ratio at an all
Professors Markovich, Higgs and McKenzie all took an active interest in the
year participating in many of the games.
Although they seemed to lack
vigour of youth, their experience

made them

to

All

watch

time low.
sport this

the fiery

standouts.

With the termination of the regular schedule a sudden death semi-final pitted
the

high

flying

nowhere

to

went on

to

Arts

upset

II

the

team against the underdog
favoured

Artsmen.

forestry

Undeterred

by

team,

even greater heights by whipping the Science men

the championship for the season.

Congratulations, Twig Benders!

who came from

glory

their
in

the

foresters

the final to claim

�McLaren,

Back Row: Isobel

Hutchinson,

Elizabeth Senyk.

Front Row-. Marien

Ruth

Foster,

Patricia

Newfield,

Jeanne Nowalkoski,

Doreen Inouye, Karen Hegge.

3ALL
This
girls.

year for the

first

time the

Lakehead College sponsored a team

for

The Lakehead College Queens entered the ladies broomball league of

Fort William

and were scheduled

the Superior Bottling Aces.
scoreless

games

to

play the veteran Empire Hotel Cubs and

After defeating the Cubs, they fought through three

The

with the Aces.

Queens following three periods

final

game ended

of overtime.

with a 0

Next year, we hope

-

1

loss for

to see

the

another

team entered from the College.

73

�CURLING

Along
the

with

most

bowling,

curling

one

is

of

popular sports available to the
Practically every athleti-

college students.

person

cally-inclined

enthusiastic

(including

members)

faculty

some very
participates,

and the hardy foursomes spend a great
deal

of

curling
This
into

rinks

first

time

at

the

in

the

many

excellent

Lakehead area.

year the competitors were divided

two

division
final

their

The winners

divisions.

played

off

in

a

for the college championship.
division, the

Dale Lindsey

in

sudden

each
death
In

the

rink, consisting

Ray Inaba, Lawrence Couland Andy Yerex, was the top team.

of Dale Lindsey,
son,

The second

division

the rink skipped by
rink

championship went

Bob Michels.

to

Michels'

champions were Al McKay, Ann Todd

and Richard

Staples.

Both teams finished

the season with impressive eight wins and

one

loss

The sudden death play-

saw a strong and determined Lindsay

rink

soundly defeat the Michels entry, eleven

to one.

74

records.

off

��Back Row. Armas West, Mike Hockenhull,

Keith

Sitch,

Jim

Scarnati,

Pat

McGrath,

Fronf Row: Sin Soo
Walter Johnson, Myron Watsyk, Eugene Yemchuk, Ken Trimark.
Kung, Gilles LeBlanc, Lawrence Coulson, Ray Inaba, Lorraine Shannon, Bill Shannon,
Francis

Bilinski,

Don Caddo, Mike Helper, Dale

Lindsey.

����NEW LECTURERS
Steve

Mr.

taking

economics,
Turning

his

degree

B.A.

it

also

was the

in

studied

first

from engineering to

but

tics,

was born

Markovich

At University, he

sisters.

of

who

Why? —
his

the

leaders

v
^W;^^L

tion

This

A man

shrewd

Canada,

in

Krutschev;

dramatist

and among

travel;

of

numbers

his

with a possible specializa-

Law, after he obtains the M.A. and Ph.D.

who came

the instructor

is

of the Uni-

Mr. Markovich

admired pastimes hockey and

International

in

to

of

girl

August of 1960, after

in

among
among

admired

science.

political

Graduate School

the

interests,

his

even those

working toward the M.A. degree.

future intentions teaching

^jil^k
SB

in

boundless energy and broad

his

mathema-

for

—

govern men better; and

to

and married her

college romance

study

and
1959.

in

year at Western, he met the

last

his

In

versity of Virginia,

^r^'r^^

Ontario

dislike

his

should

world peace;

to establish

spending an academic year

^

of

result

why one

him

ask

save humanity.

^^jj*''"

Western

of

by older

science

political

growing desire to know more about people

people

m^^^\
ML-^ J

the

study

to

University

the

may have been

science
his

grew up happily surrounded

he

gave that up

but

honours from

with

political

result

where

Ontario,

engineering,

to the College

the

in

of 1960,

fall

taught well, coached the basketball team, taught sociology and
"the facts of

the nurses, advised the student council, sang

life" to

worked hard, and distinguished himself

with the faculty,

colleagues as well

as to

to

his

students.

his

i

Mr. Charles

Gale, the

R.

the Victorians, has enjoyed

last of

He grew up in the state of California, spent his high school and undergraduate days in the midwestern state of Kansas, and found his spiritual home in the
a tripartite history

east manifested

in

the U.S.

New

in

Gale came

Mr.

and

business

to

York City at Columbia University.
the

teaching.

Lakehead with experience

from summer positions with Boeing Aircraft Corporation
ita,

where he did mathematical work

and

with

Vitro

Washington

in

experience was acquired

homa.
tion

Following

the

opportunity

of

lieu

teaching

University

of

other

His

of

interest

in

the

arts

in

a

different

his

portant

engagements

The
in

educational

latier

cultural

organization and direction

of the Literary Club, Music Appreciation Club

College Staff Choir.

posi-

opportunity.

has further stimulated the

Lakehead College through

Okla

of

appointments be-

system presented an interesting and challenging

life

instructional

His teaching

Gale accepted a

success, Mr.
in

wrote

he

of the Polaris.

year at the

last

initial

Lakehead College

with

cause

this

Wich-

in

the stress department,

in

where

manuals on the functional operation

both

was gained

experience

business

His

in

and

the

Lakehead

group turned down many im-

order to devote

its

talents

to

several

spontaneous performances at Club Seaway, The Flamingo, and
Higgs Hideaway.
At the completion of the 1961-62 session, Mr. Gale plans to earn
university
his

before

resuming

his

academic career.

Upon

retirement he

remaining days enjoying roast beef dinners with claret wine and

ions

Bach,

Proust,

Eliot,

Collingwood,

Tillich,

and Oppenheim.

It

will

his

his

doctorate

move

to

at

New

an eastern

York to spend

evenings with cultural compan-

would be a great

life!

��STUDENT DIRECTORY
NAME

LAKEHEAD ADDRESS

PHONE NO.

HOME ADDRESS

403 Oakdale Cresc, F.W.

MA

Same
Same

APPLIED SCIENCE
BISHOP, John W.
BRAY, John R.
CARLSON, Stephen

10 Wishart Cresc, P.A.

W.

91

CHRUSZ, Daniel

COULSON,

Laurence

DAY, Ronald

L.

573 Egan St., P.A.
30 Prospect Ave., P.A.
24 Shuniah St., P.A.
323 River St., P.A.
78 Crown St., P.A.
310 Heron St., F.W.

E.

EVANS, William

E.

GUSTAFSON, Donald

J.

HALL, Ian G.

HEINO, Eric A.
JANIUK, Petro

Lome W.
JOHANNES, Veikko
JOHNSON, Walter D.
KASOWSKI, Walter J.
KORONIAK, John M.
JEFFERS,

LINDSEY, Dale

MC

F.

L.

KEE, Bruce A.

OZBOLT,

Louis

PETERS, Donald A.
oi_nKA/v\L, oiegtried

SKILLEN

Michael

K.

131 E. Frederica St., F.W.
153 S. Windemere Ave., P.A.
24 Leys St., P.A.
1411 West Gore St., F.W.
717 S. Norah St., F.W.
416 E. Christina St., F.W.
381 N. Algoma St., P.A.
218 Tupper St., P.A.
305 Balsam St., P.A.
K.K.

J

1

WEST Armas O
YFMCHUK
Euapnp /V».
M
U'VIV_|
LUUCMC
ARTS

Winnipeg Ave., P.A.

145 Cummings St., F.W.
1416 Cuthbertson PL, F.W.

2,

nilldale

S07 Dnnnlrl

Rd.,
F

W

P.A.

2-1820
4-8896
Dl 5-8000
MA 2-3096
MA 3-9274
Dl 5-8387
Dl 4-2805
Dl 5-6004
Dl 5-9096
Dl 5-8490
MA 2-9578
MA 2-2665
Dl 4-0489
Dl 5-5343
MA 2-5459
MA 2-5693
MA 2-2187
Dl 5-6767
Dl 4-2513
Dl 4-5523
Dl 4-yoo4
Dl

MA

*5Q?9
J-J/Oi
MA aZ-**H
9 441 O
ft
/VIM
Dl
L/l

i

ou

i

nt?QTn

ot.,

r.vv.

85*54
^ _ 0»J*J*f
0

/Y\/-\
*5

1

O

R.R.

1,

South

Gillies,

Ont.

Same
Same
Same
Same
Box 162, Red Rock, Ont.

Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Sa me
Sa me
Sa me

7

ARGES, David

192 Rupert

BUETOW, Bemhard G. M.
BURAK, Walter W.
CADDO, Donald R. C.

64 Prospect Ave., P.A.
149 Marlborough Rd., P.A.
309 Grenville Ave., P.A.
383 Bay Street, P.A.
222 Pine Street, P.A.
373 N. Court St., P.A.
300 E. Mary St., F.W.

CARELIUS, Norman

Strand Ave., Mclntyre

5-8156
5-6853
Dl 5-5627
Dl 4-1080
Dl 4-4756
Dl 4-5932
Dl 5-8567
MA 2-4466
Dl 4-5851

145 S. Empire Ave., P.A.
10 Jean St., P.A.
122 Crescent Ave., P.A.
414 Shuniah St., P.A.
132 Pine St., P.A.
223 Van Norman St., P.A.
2020 Walsh St., F.W.
615 Leland St., F.W.
244 College St., P.A.
78 Crown St., P.A.
1710 Isabella St., F.W.
136 Bentwood Drive, P.A.
74A Regent St., P.A.
19 Primrose St., P.A.

4-6018
4-2590
Dl 5-6488
Dl 4-8685
Dl 5-9200
Dl 5-8163
MA 2-1596
MA 2-8947
Dl 4-1855
Dl 5-8490
MA 3-6137
Dl 5-6803
Dl 5-7529
Dl 4-0996

ARNOT, James

E.

C.

BILINSKI, Frances

BOYKO, Alexander M.
BRULEY, Kenneth

K.

CHRISTIANSEN, Ronald

H.

CLIMIE, Robert C. D.

COOPMAN,

Brenda

COUTANCHE, Guy
GIBSON, Gerald

J.

C.

B.

GOLOMB, Edward W.
GOYDA, Ronald M.
HALL, Wayne F.
HEGGE, Karen

A.

L.

HEINO, Richard A.
HELPER, Michael M.
HESS, Milton L.
HOARE, Richard

JOHNSON,

Frederick

W.

St.,

P.A.

JOKELA, Tim A.
KEMPTON, Gavin V.
KNUDSEN, Edward G.
KOSKITALO, Leslie N.
KROKER, Ernest A.

62 Machar Ave., P.A.
372 N. John St., F.W.
109 Winnipeg Ave., P.A.
268 S. Empire Ave., P.A.
48 Jean St., P.A.

KRUPPA, Jean F. C.
LANCASTER, Wallis

609 Prince Arthur Blvd., F.W.
486 Oliver Rd., P.A.

MAC
MAC

Long Lac,

Same

KAY,
KAY,

J.

Alistair

Jeff

M.

MARCHAND, Raymond

A.

1023 Sprague St., F.W.
1853 Rankin St., F.W.
80 S. Hill St., P.A.

Dl
Dl

Dl

Dl

Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same

Same

1, Strand Ave.
Mclntyre

R.R.

Red Rock, Ont.

Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Sundridge, Ontario

Same
Box 162, Red Rock, Ont.

Same
Same
Same
116 Elm Park Rd.
Winnipeg, Man.

4-6756
3-6893
Dl 5-5543
Dl 4-4723
Dl 5-7408

Same
Same
Same

MA

Same

Dl

MA

Dl

MA
MA
Dl

3-3695
4-1756
3-6997
2-2955
2-2452

South Gillies, Ont.
112 Stadler Ave.,
Red Rock, Ont.

29 Lakeview

Rd.,

Baie

P.O.

D'Urfe,

Same
Same
15 Fox

St.,

Penetang, Ont.

�MEDWID,

Bert

439
336

J.

MELNIK, George J.
MICHELS, Robert E.
MC ALPINE, Robert D.
NAWALKOSKI, Jeanne

-K.

R.

Arnold

E.

SANTALA, Arthur E.
SARGENT, Frank A.
SCARNATI, James J.
SENYK, Elizabeth

400 Leslie Ave., P.A.
44 Carrie St., P.A.
368 Surrey St., P.A.
327 Catherine St., F.W.
327 Catherine St., F.W.
52 S. Algonquin Ave., P.A.
1417 Hamilton Ave., F.W.
726 N. Brodie St., F.W.

St.

STROMBOM, John
SYMINGTON, James

R.

TOD, K. Ann
TOD, Thomas G.
VAILLANT, Armond J.
WATSYK, Myron A.
YACIUK, Joseph M.
YURICK, Gregory P.

Baird, Ontario

130

ZALE, Robert M.

ARTS

High

S.

P.A.

St.,

4-6096
3-8114
2-1993
Dl 4-4086
MA 2-1818
Dl 4-3697
Dl 4-7449
Dl

F.W.

155 Pine St. P.A.
578 Harold St., P.A.
38 Centre St., P.A.
21 N. Court St., P.A.
179 S. Kenogami Ave., P.A.

POTESTIO, John A.

RUOHO,

P.A.

Rd.,

1415 McGregor Ave., F.W.
536 Leslie Ave., P.A.
219 W. Frederica St., F.W.
165 Martha St., P.A.
470 Tupper St., P.A.
718 S. Franklin St., P.A.

NEWFIELD, Patricia A.
PARVIAINEN, Kaarina
PILGRIM, William

Wm.

Ft.

Pacific Ave.,

MA
MA

MA

2-4201
5-5733
Dl 4-6198
Dl 4-6725
Dl 5-7092
Dl 4-3973
Dl 4-3925
Dl 4-3177
Dl 4-6029
MA 2-4845
MA 2-4845
Dl 4-8957
MA 2-4524
MA 2-6547
Murillo 90
U\ 0-yoU4
Dl

Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Box 176, Nipigon, Ont.
Box 95, Nipigon, Ont.

Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same

II

-

ANDREWS,

93 Ontario St., P.A.
R.R. No. 2, Hilldale Rd., P.A.
250 Ambrose St., P.A.
222 Empire Ave., F.W.
212 S. Vickers St., F.W.
204 Cameron St., F.W.
121 Summit Ave., P.A.

David D.

CARLSON, Allan A.
CARLSON, Gayle S.
FUCHEK,

Patrick V.

FUCILE, Lloyd A.
JACOBSON, Melvin D.

JUDGE,

Ross

KEENAN,

B.

321 -A Ambrose

Brian

St.,

P.A.

4-2093
Dl 4-9805
Dl 4-3863
MA 2-1930
MA 3-8617
MA 3-9249
Dl 4-1814
Dl 5-5143
Dl

Same
R.R.

No.

2,

416

Enfield

Burlington,

KWASNY, Walter

MC

624 Prince Arthur
403 Ambrose St.,

J.

MARTINDALE, James
MATICH, Michael L.

R.

22 Lake

CABE, Florence M.

430

St.

St.,

F.W.

Blvd.,

MA

2-3763

Dl 4-3211

P.A.

P.A.

Dl

5-8466

Dl 4-1581

Patrick's Sq., P.A.

MA

POLESCHUK, Frances

Vickers Heights,

SARANCHUK,

800 Oliver Road, P.A.
386 Leslie Ave., P.A.
168 Summit Ave., P.A.
118 Ruttan St., P.A.

Dl

486 Oliver Road, P.A.
609 N. Harold St., F.W.

4-1756
2-2844
Dl 4-6150
MA 3-7538
Dl 4-0393
Line 23

SHANNON,
THOM,

William M.

Patricia V.

Janet

E.

TRIMARK, Kenneth M.

ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

ANDREWS,

Christopher M.

BECOTTE, Garry

P.

BUCKELL, Kenneth J.
HOCKENHULL, Michael
HUIE, Allen Munn
JAMIESON, James

J.

Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
213 Matheson

Evert E.

KWIATKOWSKI, George
LE

BLANC,

MARBES,

Gilles C.

Peter

MINAKI, Shig
MC INTOSH, Donald J.
MIRONSKY, Lawrence G.

O'HAGAN, Dennis L.
PAAKANEN, Ronald W.

SHANNON,

William

SMITH, David

J.

S.

TROCHIMCHUCK, David
WARD, Roderick J. A.
WILSON, Wilfred R.

St.,

Kenora

Same
Box 176, Longlac, Ont.

Same

109 Banning St., P.A.
421 N. Vickers St., F.W.
10 Water St., P.A.
A.T. Oliver,

RR

EW.

3,

Dl

Portage La

MA

Same
Same
Same
Same
1

\*l

Same
Same

621 Oliver Road, P.A.

4-0438
5-9482
Dl 4-9284

14 Manion St., P.A.
160 Banning St., P.A.

Dl

246 Hodder Ave.,

Dl

4-5349
4-5036
5-9949

Same
Same
Same
Same

207 S. Rockwood Ave.,
314 N. Cumberland St.,

R.R.

P.A.
P.A.

Dl

Dl

Dl

P.A.

2 F.W.

50 S. Algonquin Ave., P.A.
270 W. Christina St., F.W.
1205 Donald St., F.W
370 River St., P.A.
1617 Woodward Ave., F.W.
41 Ray Boulevard, P. A.
345 Ray Boulevard, P. A.
.

Prairie,

i

163 Birch Cresc, Terrace
Bay, Ont.

Dl

Feversham, Ontario

MA
MA

Same
Same
Same
Same
Same

4-1764
2-5517
2-3513
Dl 4-1890
MA 2-8536
Dl 5-7055
Dl 4-9298

Man.

1427 Laperniere Ave.,
Ottowa
III.
\^
W vJ Ont
1

KLINGBERG,

Rd.,

Ont.

1

C/O

A.

2-2847
5-8647
Dl 4-3165
Dl 5-6968
Dl 5-5276

F.W.

Warren, Ont.

Same
Same
Same
Same
Same

50 Tuddenham

St.,

Sudbury, Ont.

WRIGHT, David
ZOLDY, Allen M.

62 N. Clarkson Ave., P.A.
129 W. Myles St., F.W.

Dl

MA

5-6307
2-1969

Same
Same

83

�ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY
KLEMACKI, Ronald
KUNG, Sin Soo

II

MURPHY, Frank W.

244 Egan St., P.A.
229 Grenville Ave., P.A.
205 Ferrand St., P.A.

SITCH, Keith

621

P.

R.

SMITH, Barry S. M.
STAPLES, Richard D.

Dl

Oliver Road, P.A.

368 Mclntyre
249 W. Miles

FOREST TECHNOLOGY
ARNOTT, Robert W.
BUSCH, Mervin G.

4-1866
4-1332
Dl 5-6222
Dl 4-9284
Dl

St.,

P.A.

Dl

St.,

F.W.

MA

Same
Same
Same
480 Superior Ave.
Terrace Bay

5-6737
3-7275

Same
Same

5-8408
5-9755

Some

I

S

^trnthmnri Avp

637 Rupert

A

P

Dl

P.A.

St.,

Dl

517 Second

St.,

Ont
\mS III*

Fort
Frnncps
Ul
Ul

1

CROMPTON,

INABA, Raymond
IRWIN, James R.

311

T.

JOHNSON, Norman
KARI, Karl

Wolsley St., P.A.
415 Heather Cresc. F.W.
137 Banning St., P.A.

Kenneth G.

215 S. Kenogami Ave.,
119 Duke St., P.A.
224 S. High St., P.A.

E.

E.

MCGRATH,

Patrick

J.

RUSLING, Harry

THOMAS, John

91

P.

Winnepeg Avenue,

404 N. High

Street,

5-5329
MA 2-4400
Dl 4-8104
Dl 4-3332
Dl 5-8967
Dl 5-7143
Dl

P.A.

P.A.

P.A.

Dl

5-8000

Dl

4-3348

539 Oliver Road,

5-9118

Dl

P.A.

1

1

Same
Same
Ontario

Orillia,

R.R.

1,

306

First

Fort Frances

St.,

Same
27 Queenston Cresc,
London, Ont.
39 Norway Avenue,
Welland, Ont.
73 Coulson Ave.,
S.

YEREX, Hugh A.

1

Ste Marie, Ont.

205

First

Ave.,

Port Dover, Ont.

FOREST TECHNOLOGY

BURROWS,

Frederick

EKLUND, Glenn

POULTON,

II

R.

R.

Robert

ROBINSON, Wayne

C.

Tony

SILC,

671

John

215

S.

Kenogami Ave.,

P.A.

Dl

4-2320
4-3189

Chapleau, Ont.
Box 23,

215

S.

Kenogami Ave.,

P.A.

Dl

4-3332

Nestor Falls, Ont.
19 Poplar St.
Copper Cliff, Ont.

733 S. Norah St., F.W.
80 S. Hill St., P.A.

MA

2-4896
4-2542

Same

Dl

17 College

Dl

4-4290

78 Avondale Ave.,

Street,

P.A.

Dl

496 Howard Ave.,
Timmins, Ont.

SUMMERS, Murray G.

St.,

P.A.

Willowdale, Ont.

MINING TECHNOLOGY
BENNETT, Robert
DAFOE, Ray J.

B.

I

21

Balsam

319 Talbot

DOUGLAS, Arthur
FLATT, Bruce J.

J.

St.,

P.A.

Dl

St.,

P.A.

Dl

Oliver Road,

P.A.

Dl

457 Black Bay Road,

P.A.

Dl

R.R.

1,

146 Cummings St., F.W.
89 Winnipeg Ave., P.A.

37 Centre St., P.A.
310 North Algoma St., P.A.
103 S. Empire Ave., P.A.
37 Farrand St., P.A.
48 N. Windermere Ave., P.A.
589 Van Norman St., P.A.
78 Empire Ave., F.W.
69 Madeline St., P.A.
602 Hargrove St., F.W.

Dl

5-6704
5-8297
Dl 5-6408
Dl 5-7518
Dl 4-6914
Dl 4-3829
MA 3-9852
Dl 5-6439
MA 2-8566

Hymers, Ont.

Dl

Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
49 Bowman

R.R.

837 McMillan
250 McVicar

Robert
SRIGLEY, Alfred

VENOR, Ron

WANSON,

1,

Kaministiquia,

Ont.

St.,

F.W.

MA

St.,

P.A.

Dl

18 Melvin Ave., P.A.

K.

E.

Warren

Heron Bay South, Ont.

3-9370
5-8996
Dl 5-5156
MA 2-5674
Dl 5-8262

HERNESHUSTA, Kenneth
SILLS,

Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same

LATTA, Brian

K.

5-5727
5-8717
4-5825
5-8808

RYERSON ENGINEERING

TECHNOLOGY

I

ALASKA, John

CAMERON, James

D.

DRAHO, John G.
DYNES, Donald E.
ESPIN, Newton W.

HANKKIO, William W.
HUTCHISON, James L.
KLAAS, Robert
KMET, Gerald

Kapuskasing,

MEYER, G. Hugh
NIEMI, Donald
PEARSON, Gordon
PERRIER, Melvin
PRICE, Maurice
REID, Leonard A.
RIX,

James

1412 Ridgeway St., F.W.
399 Conmee St., P.A.
106 Birch St., P.A.
86 College St., P.A.
325 South Norah St., F.W.
154 N. Windermere Ave., P.A.
238 Wolseley St., P.A.

MA

2-4994
Dl 4-4278
Dl 4-6534
Dl 5-6344
MA 3-8324
Dl 4-2941
Dl 4-1326

Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same
Same

Ave.,

Ont.

�ADVERTISING DIRECTORY
ABITIBI

POWER AND PAPER

115

ANACONDA

IRON ORE
(ONTARIO) LTD.

92

ANDREW MC CORMACK
INSURANCE LTD
ASSUMPTION UNIVERSITY OF

113

WINDSOR

90
89
97

ATKINSON'S JEWELLERS LTD.
JAMES D. BARCLAY

BARNETT-MC QUEEN COMPANY LTD.
BEV PORTER'S SPORTSWEAR SHOP
BIRD'S RESTAURANT

__

BIRKS STITT
H. BLACK &amp; COMPANY
BLACKWOOD HODGE
F.

BONIN-DOBIE-JACKSON, LTD. __
BOURKE'S DRUG STORE AND

91

109
109
100
108
110
100

RIDGEWAY PHARMACY
CALLON, PUSTINA

AND

96
96
90

ZELINSKI

CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE
CANADIAN TIRE CORPORATION
ASSOCIATION STORE
CARPENTERS AND JOINERS
LOCAL UNION 1668
CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF
PORT ARTHUR
CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF
FORT WILLIAM

113
104

88
103

CORY'S BILLIARDS

CROOKS REXALL PHARMACY
H. T.

CUNNINGHAM

DELUXE SIGNS
DORAN'S BREWERY LTD.
DRYDEN PAPER COMPANY LTD.
G. R. DUNCAN &amp; COMPANY LTD.

EATON COMPANY LTD.
FARRANT &amp; GORDON LTD
FERO'S RESTAURANT
FILIPOVIC &amp; DUBINSKY
FITZSIMMONS FRUIT COMPANY LTD. _
GAROFALO'S BARBER SHOP
GERRY BROS. LTD.
GREAT LAKES PAPER COMPANY LTD. ___
INTERNATIONAL CO-OPERATIVE

T.

STORES LTD
INTERNATIONAL TRANSIT LTD.
KIMBERLY-CLARKE PULP &amp; PAPER
KING'S BUSINESS COLLEGE
LE COCQ THE FLORIST

CUPBOARD
LOVELADY AND SONS CAMERA
SHOP LTD.
LOU'S

99
102
89
93
115
94
92
111

99
106
101

87
89
98
87
1

14

110
86
96
1

1

116

LOWERYS LTD.
LUMBER AND SAWMILL
WORKERS UNION
MADSEN RED LAKE GOLD MINES

MAPLEDORAM AGENCIES
MCCARTNEY'S
MC DOWELL MOTORS

LTD.

___ 106
91

LTD. __ 103
__ 97
102
___ 94

MCLENNAN LUMBER
MC NULTY'S LTD.

101
101

MICKELSON-FRASER-HAYWOOD
NESCO-NORTHERN ENGINEERING &amp;

102

SUPPLY COMPANY
NEWAGO TIMBER COMPANY

94
97
106
110
95
__ 107
99

NEWS-CHRONICLE
NIFTY CLIP

NORTHERN WOOD PRESERVERS LTD.
ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF MINES
ONTARIO PAPER COMPANY LTD. _
PERCIANTE &amp; LAPRADE SPORTING
GOODS LTD.

_

PETRONE &amp; WALNECK
PHOENIX DANCE STUDIO
PORT ARTHUR MOTORS
POWELL EQUIPMENT COMPANY LTD.
PRINCE ARTHUR MOTOR HOTEL _
PROVINCIAL PAPER LTD.

_

__

ROYAL EDWARD HOTEI
RUTLEDGE STATIONERY
RUTTAN-BOLDUC-ADDERLEY
SARGENT &amp; SON
SAVE- WAY CLEANERS
SCOTT MOTOR SALES _

1

COMPANY
COMPANY
SHAW'S BAKING
SEVEN-UP BOTTLING

.

SHOP-EASY STORES
__
ST. JAMES STEREO CENTRE _
__
STEEP ROCK IRON MINES
SUE PARK HAIR FASHIONS ___
SUPERIOR BOTTLING COMPANY
W. S. TOMLINSON
UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA
UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO
VAN PETEGHEM FURS __
VICTORIA COLLEGE
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
WARDROPE AGENCIES
WAVERLEY HOTEL AND THE SHORELINE

—

.

MOTOR

HOTEI

104
105
109
108
112
105
93
90
104
105
108
109
02
97
104
116
113
116
106
87
113
98
100
93

95
101

.__

114

__

105
98

WILLSON STATIONERY

COMPANY LTD.
YOUNG &amp; MARTIN

114

85

�AN ADEQUATE HARVEST FOR INDUSTRY
DEPENDS ON MAXIMUM
FOREST

GROWTH

KIM BE RL Y-CL AR K

© PULP &amp; PAPER

COMPANY
LONGLAC

86

LIMITED
ONTARIO

�With the Compliments

of

THE GREAT LAKES PAPER

COMPANY,

LTD.

FORT WILLIAM, ONTARIO

Established

1907

SUPERIOR

FITZSIMMONS
BOTTLING CO.
FRUIT CO. LTD.

Drink

SUN CREST
IT'S
21

1

BEST

Southern Ave.
Fort William

181

Ambrose

Street

Port Arthur, Ont.

Wholesale Dealers
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables

CONFECTIONS and TOBACCO

87

�Compliments

of

The Corporation
of the

OF
PORT ARTHUR
CITY
Mayor N.

R.

Wilson

ALDERMEN

Saul

Laskin

Waino W. Laakso
Edgar Laprade
H. Coghlan
Ronald V. Wilmot

Daniel

City Clerk:

McNeill
Samuel Ashton
Angelo G. Mauro
Jean T. Robinson
Eunice M. Wishart
Cliff

S.

Arthur H. Evans, O.B.E.,

F.C.I.S.

�Compliments

of

ATKINSON'S JEWELLERS
LIMITED
Home

of

BLUEBIRD DIAMONDS

AND ALL FAMOUS NAME WATCHES

"The Lakehead's Leading Quality Jewellers"

Compliments

Compliments

of

of

PAUL GAROFALO'S
BARBER SHOP

H.

CUNNINGHAM

T.

B.A.
92

S.

Cumberland

St.

Barrister,

"The Newest

at the

Solicitor

Lakehead"
5-6 Lowery Building

Modernly equipped
latest

in

to

do the very

hair cutting

205 Park

Dl

St.

5-7242

Port Arthur

89

�PORT OF SPAIN, TRINIDAD?
SASKATOON, SASK. ?

ROYAL EDWARD

At the Lakehead or far afield, wherever
your vocation leads, you will find
branches of this bank ready to serve
your banking needs.

HOTEL
Free parking
Fort William's

THE

Owned

New Modern

CANADIAN BANK
OF COMMERCE
PORT ARTHUR

Community
Hotel

Coffee Shop

Catering to Weddings
Luncheons, Banquets
R.

—

Gordon Wilson, Mgr.

FORT WILLIAM
INTER CITY PLAZA

Fort

William

ASSUMPTION UNIVERSITY
OF WINDSOR
congratulates the 1961

graduating classes of

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE
and welcomes your

inquiries about continuing your education in

any of the following

fields

ARTS
PURE SCIENCE
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
ENGINEERING

HOUSEHOLD SCIENCE
NURSING
For information about scholarships, bursaries, student loans,

contact the Registrar, Assumption University of Windsor,

400 Huron Line

90

CLearwater 4-9246

�Compliments of

BARNETT-MC QUEEN

COMPANY

LIMITED

FORT WILLIAM

Greetings and Best Wishes from the

EXECUTIVE STAFF

AND MEMBERS

of the

LUMBER AND SAWMILL
WORKERS UNION
Local 2693, of the United Brotherhood
of Carpenters &amp; Joiners of America

Representing the Bushworkers, Shops and Millyards
and Construction Workers
T. Mior,
President

91

�G.

DUNCAN &amp;

R.

CO.

LIMITED
Realtors - Insurance
121

S.

May

Fort William

Street

Compliments and Best Wishes
From

ANACONDA

IRON ORE

(ONTARIO) LIMITED

92

�For Fine Furs

VAN PETEGHEM

FURS

Manufacturing Furriers
Repairs

—

Re-styling

—

Storage

Dial Dl 5-6341

8

S.

Court

St.

Port Arthur, Ont.

DELUXE SIGNS
The Lakehead's Complete Manufacturers

NEON

—

PLASTIC

—

of

COMMERCIAL SIGNS

Compliments of

PROVINCIAL PAPER, LIMITED
Port Arthur Division

93

�R.

MC DOWELL MOTORS
LIMITED
Van Norman &amp;

St.

RAMBLER

Paul

HILLMAN
LANDROVER

SUNBEAM

Compliments of

NESCO

NORTHERN ENGINEERING &amp; SUPPLY CO.

From
Best

Wishes

"the Conservation Centre of Canada"

to the 1961

Lakehead College

Graduates and to the Students of the
of Arts,

Science and Technology

DRYDEN PAPER COMPANY,
LIMITED
DRYDEN, ONTARIO

94

LTD.

�BEST WISHES
from

WOOD

NORTHERN

PRESERVERS, LIMITED
Dried

Kiln

Treated

Lumber

Wood

Products

Port Arthur, Ontario

Victoria College
in

the

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
Founded by Royal Charter

in

1836 "for the general education of youth

in

the various branches of Literature and Science on Christian Principles."

As one

of the Federated Colleges in the Faculty of Arts of the University of

Toronto, Victoria College enrols students

in all

courses leading to the degrees

of Bachelor of Arts

to

to

and Bachelor of Commerce and preparatory
the schools of Graduate Studies, Divinity, education, Law and

Social

In

Margaret Addison Hall and Annesley Hall accommodation

available for

women

students of Victoria College.

commodation

is

In

is

admission

Work.

the Victoria College Residences ac-

available for men.

Men and Women

in

Residence

may

be assisted through Residence Bursaries.

For Full information, including calendars and bulletins, apply to the Registrar, Victoria College,

Toronto.

95

�KING'S BUSINESS COLLEGE
Port Arthur

A

private business

school

—

Fort William

specializing in complete business

courses, with emphasis on the business

skills.

Commercial, Stenographic and Secretarial Departments offer a
variety of courses at reasonable tuition fees.

Training for Business
italizing

is

one of the most successful means of cap-

on academic education

— the combination

is

good

in-

surance of a successful career.
Established 1902

Barristers,

Solicitors

and

Notaries Public

Callon Block
17A Cumberland

Thomas

St.

S.

Port Arthur, Ont.

Callon
Nicholas J. Pustina

Res.

Robert

Res.

E.

P.

Zelinski

Res.

4-2502
4-7618
4-6892

RIDGEWAY PHARMACY
Ridgeway &amp; Vickers
Fort William, Ont.

St.

�SEVEN-UP BOTTLING

COMPANY
FORT WILLIAM

Home

LIMITED
131

CLARE MAPLEDORAM
AGENCIES LIMITED
of

Insurance

and Real Estate
125

N. Archibald Street

S.

May

Street

Fort William

FORT WILLIAM

Ontario

Ontario

Compliments

NEWAYGO

of

Compliments

TIMBER

JAMES

CO. LIMITED

D.

James
Subsidiary of

Port Arthur

BARCLAY
Barclay

Barrister, Solicitor,

Consolidated Water Power and

Paper

D.

Company

7-242 Arthur

of

Notary Public

St.

Port Arthur

Telephone Dl 4-9581
Ontario

97

�GERRY BROS.
Compliments

LIMITED

of

YOUNG &amp; MARTIN
Hardware
Barristers, Solicitors,

— Furniture — Appliances

Notaries
Transistor Radios
$13.95 to $79.95

Phone Dl 4-8431

Port Arthur, Ont.

1906

Since

Phone

509 Victoria Ave.

MA

MANITOBA

THE UNIVERSITY OF
Announces

THE OPENING OF THE

1961

-

62 SESSION

Courses Will Be Offered Leading To Degrees

In:

AGRICULTURE
ARCHITECTURE
ARTS

DENTISTRY

INTERIOR DESIGN

PHARMACY

EDUCATION

LAW

ENGINEERING

MEDICINE

SCIENCE
SOCIAL WORK

COMMERCE

HOME ECONOMICS
FINE AND APPLIED ART
(Painting,

Sculpture, Ceramics)

Valuable scholarships and bursaries.
Excellent athletic and recreational facilities in the
University Gymnasium

new

Residence

And To Diplomas

For

full

or Certificates

particulars write

to:

The Registrar
The University of Manitoba
Fort Gary, Manitoba

98

In:

AGRICULTURE
APPLIED ART
MUSIC
NURSING
EDUCATION
OCCUPATIONAL
&amp;

PHYSIOTHERAPY

3-6478

�TRAINING OF THE WHOLE
Education
is

is

MAN

the training of the whole man, or

the combined activities of schooling and living.
The school side of education is learning the

and Y

of specific problems in science

and the

woman.

It

unknown X

arts.

The living aspect teaches us to assess the unknown X and
Y in the personalities and other situations we shall have to deal
with in our work and social life. The students who can understand, even while disputing the views of others, are surely benefiting

by their college training.

Those who go further and learn to harmonize the conflicting
views of others and persuade people to work for the common
good in business and civic life bring their education into life.

A Message

from

THE ONTARIO PAPER

COMPANY

LIMITED
THOROLD

Compliments
of

FARRANT &amp; GORDON

LTD.

Clothiers
"Successful

Men Always LOOK
14

S.

Court

Successful"

St.

Port Arthur

Compliments
of

CORY'S BILLIARDS
1

8

South Cumberland
Port Arthur,

Ontario

St.

�FOR

—

THE FUTURE

Your future advancement, both cultural and material, will
depend on many factors, none more important than your use
of the years immediately following your graduation from high
school.

Never before has university training been deemed so imperative for young people who sincerely wish to make the most
of their capabilities.

you are interested, the University of Western Ontario is
ready to tell you of its wide-ranging educational facilities, to
show you how Western can meet your needs. By writing to the
Registrar now you may obtain an interesting illustrated folder
which outlines Admission Requirements, Courses, Scholarships
If

and

Fees.

THE UNIVERSITY OF

WESTERN ONTARIO
LONDON

CANADA

BONIN-DOBIE
BIRKS STITT LIMITED
Cor.

Court and Arthur
Port Arthur

Home of the famous
"AQUATEL"

100

JACKSON, LIMITED

Sts.

604 Public

Utilities

Bldg.

Port Arthur, Ont.

General

Insurance

Phone Dl 5-7309

�McNulty's Limited
Arthur

Port Arthur

St.

THE LAKEHEAD'S

QUALITY COLLEGE
Compliments

SHOP
IMPORTERS

DISTRIBUTORS

•

World-Famous Merchandise
Casual
Dress

Wear
Wear

Styles as

shown

Scott

McHale and

Continental Suits
Irish

19- 214 Arthur

—

—

&amp;

DUBINSKY
&amp;

Notaries Public
Dl 4-8461-2

St.

Fashion Magazines
Slims
Skirts
Blouses
Dresses

in

—
—

Sweaters
Casual Jackets

FILIPOVIC
Barristers, Solicitors

Sportswear

of

Port Arthur

—
Shoes
— Coats

Ritchie

Linens

Shirts

British

Woolens

Hudson's Bay and Kenwood Blankets

Compliments

of

THE

Compliments

of

MCLENNAN
LUMBER COMPANY

GEORGE WARDROPE

LIMITED

AGENCIES

J.

H.

Building Supplies

Hardware
Coal

—
—

OIL Paints

21

St.

Paul

St.

Port Arthur, Ontario

Fuel Oil

Rental Tools

101

�Compliments

SCOTT

MOTOR

SALES

of

CROOKS REXALL
PHARMACY

Quality Used Cars
318 South Syndicate Ave.
Fort William, Ont.

Port Arthur
Fort William

The Most Wanted

DIAMONDS
in

the world
are at

MCCARTNEY'S
T he

finest Jewellry Store in

Compliments

the Northwest

of

MICKELSON-FRASER-HAYWOOD
Engineers

102

—

Architects

�With the Compliments

The Corporation

of

of the

\

/

i

1

1

1

I

A

i

1

C TY OF FORT WILLIAM
MAYOR

—

ALDERMEN

Ernest

—

H.

Reed

A. Anderson

H.

W. M. Assef

E.

J.

Boothe

0.

T H
II.

\_4

1

1

\_/

M.

Chicorli

A.

N.

ADMINISTRATOR

—

CLERK

—

D.

1

S.
i

W.

Day

H.

Spicer

Williams

F.

Blake

H.

S.

Littleford

J.

W. Lukinuk
C McKenzie

W

Carrol!
—

1

M. Limbrick

M. Martin

MADSEN RED LAKE
GOLD MINES LIMITED
(No Personal

OFFICERS

AND DIRECTORS

Board of Directors

Executive Officers

Joseph McDonough
Marius Madsen
Fred R. Marshall, Q.C.

Horace

G.

Young,

A. H. Seguin
S. J.

Hugh

Bird, C.

H.

E.

Mackay

Liability)

M

E

Toronto,
Toronto,
Toronto,
Montreal,
Toronto,
Toronto,
Toronto,
Registrars

Ont.
Ont.
Ont.

Joseph

Que.

E.

Ont.
Ont.
Ont.

Dr.

McDonough

Fred

R.

Miss

M

Marshall, Q.C.

Masterson
P. Eng
.

G. Crayston,
E.

G

Bishop

President
Vice-President
Secretary-Treasurer

General Manager
_ Consultant

and Transfer Agents

GUARANTY TRUST COMPANY OF
CANADA
366 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario
610 St. James Street West, Montreal,
Quebec

THE BANK OF NEW YORK
48 Wall Street, New York 15, New York
103

�Compliments

LAPRADE SPORTING

SHAW'S

GOODS

Enriched

Wholesome

Two

Bread
S.

Algoma

Dl

9

5-7327

LIMITED

Stores to Serve

You

508 Victoria Ave.
Fort William

Port Arthur

St.

Dial

&amp;

PERCIANTE

Eat

240

of

S.

Cumberland

St.

Port Arthur

Guy Perciante

RUTLEDGE
STATIONERY LIMITED
Greeting cards

Books

—

— Stationery

Office Supplies

Office Furniture
Phone MA 2-9675
Fort William

104

Edgar Laprade

CARPENTERS AND
JOINERS LOCAL

UNION 1668
212 Wilson

512 Victoria Ave.
Ontario

Port Arthur,

St.

Ontario

�Compliments

THE WILLSON

of

STATIONERY

PETRONE &amp; WALNECK
&amp;

Barristers

22

S.

COMPANY

Court

Most Complete Office

St.

Port Arthur
Dl

LIMITED

Solicitors

18 Court

4-9191

117

St.

S.

Port Arthur

Outfitters
Syndicate Ave.
Fort William

Phone Dl 4-9618

Phone

MA

3-8521

RUTTAN-BOLDUC-ADDERLEY
LIMITED
16 South Court Street, Port Arthur, Ontario

Insurance and Mortgage Loans

Compliments

PRINCE ARTHUR

of

MOTOR HOTEL

Port Arthur, Ont.

"The Lakehead's Finest"
Dl

5-5411

Telephone

S.

L.

Weare
Manager

105

�SUE PARK
HAIR FASHIONS
213 Park
Port Arthur,

"Where

Compliments

of

FERO'S RESTAURANT

St.

Ontario

258 Arthur

coiffures are created"

Port Arthur,

Street

Ontario

Phone Dl 5-9365

LOWERYS

LTD.

Everything for the Office
Dl

Port Arthur

4-6666

First

in

News and

Pictures

THE NEWS-CHRONICLE

106

�A

Career with a Future

The successful development of its many resources has
given Ontario a pre-eminent position in the economy of
Canada .... has made it a better place in which to live.
In the field of mining few areas can offer more to the

man

of imagination than Ontario's vast mineral empire ....

an unlimited potential of nearly 300,000 square miles of
rock formations favourable to the deposition of minerals useful to

man.

In

only half a century mining has

tario's greatest industries.

velops so do jobs

—

It

is

still

become one

The mining

industry

is

looking for young

pecially those with degrees in geology, engineering

allurgy to

fill

it

—
men —

interesting jobs with a purpose

with a future.

On-

of

growing, and as

de-

jobs

es-

and met-

positions of major responsibility.

THE

ONTARIO DEPARTMENT
OF MINES
Hon. James A. Moloney, Q.C.

H. C. Rickaby

Minister

Deputy Minister

�With compliments

r

H.

r.

of

bLALK

Port Arthur

Fort

oc

LU.
Winnipeg

William

Envoy

The
Compliments

of

British

Built Especially for

Only $495 down

SARGENT AND SON
21

Car Designed and

Canadians

.... and

less

than $55 a

month.

N. Court Street

PORT ARTHUR

Port Arthur

MOTORS
Court

108

St.

at Pearl

Dl

5-5437

�Learn to dance the Phoenix way.
Compliments

BIRD'S

of

PHOENIX
DANCE STUDIO

RESTAURANT
AAA

22A

N.

Cumberland
Dl

St.

Port Arthur

4-9000

Compliments of

Compliments

of

SAVE-WAY
CLEANERS
220 Cook

Street

Port Arthur

109

�COMPLIMENTS OF

BLACKWOOD HODGE
MINING AND CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT DISTRIBUTORS

Compliments

NIFTY CLIP

BARBER SHOP
"Lose Your Shaggy Look Here"

12A

St.

Paul Street

Port Arthur, Ontario

of

THE INTERNATIONAL
TRANSIT LIMITED
"CHARTER TRIP SPECIALISTS

1 '

WE ARE

LICENSED FOR CHARTER
TRIPS TO ALL PARTS OF ONTARIO

MINNESOTA, WISCONSIN
INCLUDING LOCAL AND DISTRICT
POINTS

no

�PAYS TO
SHOP AT EATON'S
IT

THE STORE FOR

YOUNG CANADA
•

Largest Assortments

•

Best All-round Values

•

All

backed by the Famous Guarantee
"Goods

THE

Satisfactory

or

Money Refunded"

EATON CO. LIMITED

T.

PORT ARTHUR BRANCH

COCQ

LE

THE FLORIST
Serving the Lakehead and District Since
It's

a

Must

to

Have Your Flowers
Styled

by LeCocq

1911

�AT

GRADUATING TIME
The Graduates are going

God
To
But

much

—

and stubborn world

run this hard
Just as

forth

them every one!

bless

should be run;

it

fear they'll find that facts

I

Don't always track with dreams;

And

running

this

As easy as

The graduate

He's but to ask

not

is

seems.

prone to think

is

wisdom

His

old world
it

is

complete.

— the world

will

lay

trophies at his feet.

Its

But schooldays

He

done and work begun,

learns to his regret

The college of experience

He has

not mastered yet.

The world has garlands and applause
At graduating time;
But

may

Life

is

day

forget him the next

When

he attempts to climb.

a battle where each one

Must seek and hold

He who would

rise

his

above

own.

the clouds

Must scale the heights alone.
This

is

the rule of

As

it

The world bestows

Who
Beneath
It

THE POWELL EQUIPMENT COMPANY

It

little

to-day,

its

smile on those

have the strength

all

to win.

outward semblances

looks for merit true.

cares

But asks,

112

life

has ever been:

how much you know,
what can you do?

�JAMES

ST.

STEREO CENTRE
Largest Music Store

Compliments

of

S.

TOMLINSON

the Lakehead

Complete Line
Records

W.

in

—

—

Players

Tape Recorders
Baldwin organs and pianos
When you think of music
Stereo

See
St.

202 Arthur

Compliments

ANDREW
MC CORMACK
204 Arthur

Street

Port Arthur

Street

Compliments

of

INSURANCE

James

LTD.
Port Arthur

of

CANADIAN TIRE
CORPORATION
Association Store
106 N. Cumberland

St.

Port Arthur

113

�Compliments

of

INTERNATIONAL
CO-OPERATIVE STORES
LIMITED
We

take great pride

our Co-operative in the Lakehead
area and we welcome new shareholders to join us and become
part owner of this organization.

A Co-operative

in

one which belongs to the people
who use its services, the control of which rests equally with all
its members and the gains of which are distributed to the members

in

Enterprise

is

proportion to the use they

Head

Office, 176

Algoma

make

of

its

services.

Street, South, Port Arthur, Ont.

LOVELADY
AND SONS
CAMERA SHOP
F.

BEST WISHES

FROM

LIMITED

THE

WAVERLEY HOTEL
AND
THE SHORELINE

MOTOR HOTEL
in

114

cameras

�Congratulations
to

Graduates

1961

Lakehead College of Arts,
Science and Technology

We

emphasize industry's need for graduates of higher education,
and our interest in young Canadians with degree standing in the

sciences.

GOOD LUCK

ABITIBI

to all of

you

in

your further studies.

POWER &amp; PAPER

LAKEHEAD WOODLANDS

—

PORT ARTHUR, ONT.

Best Wishes

From

DORAN'S

NORTHERN ONTARIO
BREWERIES LIMITED
Port Arthur

Fort William

�•

Progress and employment

in

Canada's mining enterprises

will

depend more and more on technological advances.
•

Technically-trained personnel are able to participate

in

this

progress.
•

Where do YOU

fit

in!

STEEP

ROCK

IRON MINES LIMITED
STEEP ROCK LAKE, ONTARIO

CONGRATULATIONS
FROM

SHOP-EASY STORES

LOU'S

CUPBOARD

FORT WILLIAM

PORT ARTHUR
A.

116

�������������lakehead College year book.

31429

INTER-COLLEGIATE PRESS

— Manufacturers
— Yearbook Covers

Publishers

Yearbooks
Diplomas

— Graduation

Factory

— Home

Kansas City

Announcements
Office

— Winnipeg

U.S.A.

UUXHEAD
.jjNlVERSmr

����</text>
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if

K

I

!

���PRESENTED
TO

THE LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY
LIBRARY
BY

DAVID MORGAN

/A

I

Y/A

�Published by the Students of the Lakehead College

PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO.

�DEDICATION

\
The thirteenth edition of the Nor'Wester is dedicated with much
and gratitude to an exceptional historian, philosopher, educator, and
litterateur of Lakehead College, Dr. T. B. Miller.
He has devoted himself

pride

selflessly to instilling the spirit of critical thinking into his students since his

arrival in

1954 and has repeatedly given

staff advisor to

Dr. Miller represents

of this school.

poetry

in

his

his

experience and wisdom as

our yearbook.

He
soul.

is

much more than a great teacher

a man with humour

in his

to the students

heart, wit in his mind,

and

�CONTENTS
DEDICATION

BOARD OF GOVERNORS
PRINCIPAL'S

MESSAGE

FACULTY

STUDENT BODY
EDITORIAL

48

STUDENT COUNCIL

50

ATHLETIC COUNCIL

52

PUBLIC RELATIONS

53

STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS

54

SPORTS

COMMENCEMENT

NEW

LECTURERS

STUDENT DIRECTORY
ADVERTISING

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���THE PRINCIPAL'S MESSAGE

It

is

a pleasure to extend congratulations and every good wish to the Graduates

of 1962.

You are going out
during the
in

last

two or three decades

You

world history.
Responsible,

will

We

world's people

who enjoy

The Christian

human

is

so great that

is

I

doubt

this

type of government

gave

to

Western

is

has ever been exceeded

happening.
is

one

smaller today than

civilization

great

our

of

But the percentage of the

it.

it

ever was.

a high regard for the value of

began 500 years

individual; but Islam, which

it

is

government

parliamentary

fought two world wars to preserve

religion

The rate of change

changing rapidly.

be gravely concerned with what

representative,

achievements.

the

world which

into a

later

now

than Christianity,

has more adherents.

The painstaking perseverance of our

we have

fight disease that

ever known.

scientists

has given us the best weapons to

At the same time, they have enabled us to

enough atomic bombs to destroy life on earth.
Our engineers, through automation, have made it possible

stockpile

human

with less

labour.

produce more goods

to

At the same time, we are plagued by problems of unem-

ployment.

These are

just

many problems you

a few of the

will

them, not to discourage you, but to challenge you.

The

survival

be concerned about.

mention

Problems provide opportunities.

depend on how you, and others

of our civilization will

I

like

you, take

advantage of them.
I

would suggest that the only basis on which we can build a

peaceful world

is

We

understanding.

tradition, but at the

same

awareness of

A

in

our

strong desire for education

young nations but the means are inadequate.

this fact

good

we must be realistic in recognizing that there are other
ours, and we must make an effort at understanding them.

Universal understanding requires universal education.
exists in all

is

time,

traditions at least as valid as

already

and

truly civilized

must hold fast to that which

and attempts are being made

to

help.

There

is

a growing

Examples familiar to

you are the African Students' Foundation and the American Peace Corps.

You as graduates are members
education that you, and others
leadership and responsibility.

We

is

common.

and

to

The

of privileged groups of the world society.

you, have received has equipped you to accept

my

earnest hope that you are prepared to do

pass on to you our traditions with our problems.

tradition to other traditions
in

It

like

apply

this

It

knowledge

is

this.

your task to relate our

to the

problems

we

share

�H. S. Braun
B.

A. (McMaster) Principal

J.

W. Haggerty

B.Sc. (F) (U.N.B.)

D.
B.E.

J.

McKenzie
(Sask.),

D.

R.

M.Sc. (Sask.)

Lindsay

B.A. (Queen's),

A. H. Higgs
B. Sc.

T.

(Wales) A.F.R.Ae.S.

W. Page

B.Sc. (Idaho), P. Eng.

M.S. (Wisconsin)

FACl

T.

B.

Miller

B.A. (Toronto), Ph.D. (London)

�S.

Markovich

C.

B.A. (Western)

Lie.

Fonda

C. R.

Classica (Trieste), Dr. Col.

Gale

B.A. (Wichita),

M.A. (Columbia)

Sc. (Naples)

R.

Phil. (Leopolis),

polis),

W.

Grodzicky

R.

M.

B.L.S.

M.Div. (Leo-

(Toronto),

M.A.

P.

Mackinnon

D.

B.Sc.

(Engr.)

(Man.),

F.

M.E.I.C.,

M. Doan

M.A. (Western), Ph.D. (Toronto)

Eng.

(Montreal)

LTY

Miss A.

W.

Christensen

B.Sc. (U.N.B.)

J.

B.

Leonard

B.A. (Dalhousie)

�OFFICE STAFF

Miss Linda Mitchell

Mr. Alex

Mrs. Helvi Johima

Horbow

'Frank"

SESSIONAL LECTURERS
Miss N.

Browgham, Mr. W. Buryniuk, Mr. G.

R.

Mott, Dr.

Ram

H. Paul, Mr. C. Stamp.

�LIBRARY STAFF
TOP: Joanne Zubec, Mrs.

E.

Bogel, Mr. Dowasyr, Mrs. Nori Scott, Miss Jeannette

INSERTED:

McCabe, Dr. Roman Grodzecky.
PART-TIME:
Miss Jane Braun, Miss Myrna Kaukola.

Miss Florence

Dubo

�����ROYAL, Robert

SAKAMOTO,

F.

D.

Bruce T

FORESTRY ENGINEERING

BRUCE, Douglas D.

V*

��������������������C * 1
ARNOTT, Robert
BUSCH, Mervin

CROMPTON,

f

I

KARI, K. Edward

GORDON,

W

Kenneth

Joseph

ft*

*jl

RUSLING, Harry

YEREX, Hugh A.

/

�MINING TECH

I

BEDARD, Albert

EWACHA,

E.

Paul O.

FLATT,

J.

Bruce

McLEOD, Ray

C.

MINING TECH

HALL, Ian

SRIGLEY, Alfred

II

���ARCHITECTURAL TECH
BANTING, Lawrence

BUCHANAN,

Bertrand B

�ARRESTED
On
had

day

the sixth

home

to his

and

land, Nyasaland,

Congress, the only

ment

all

for the people.

order to lead the Nyasaland African

in

African political party

He

40 years, returned

Britain for over

in

Nyasaland. He wanted

up the Central African Federation and

to break

man who

of July, 1958, Dr. Hastings Banda, a

lived in the United States

self-govern-

initiate

started his organization from Karunga, which

on the northern side of Nyasaland and moved to Prot Head

is

90%

Soon

in

the

became members of his political party.
The Federation became shaken and worried because they believed that the allegience of the Elite, people who are not really
They were worried because Dr. Banda wouldn't
nationalists, couldn't lead the people properly.
They didn't have a way of bribing him
accept a bribe of any kind so as to sell his fellow Africans.
or hiding his political operations.
Why? He was a dependent man who knew the colonials for quite a
long time.
He knew his European history and was educated for the task of emancipating Nyasaland
south.

from Colonial
Dr.

of the people

rule.

Banda

told

Powel Wolenski, the Prime Minister of the Federation, that federation had been

The Africans

imposed on the Africans.

didn't

Federation for

like

many

reasons but only a few are

pointed out here.

The Central African Federation began on the

When

government.
In

other words, the only responsible people

democracy.

Thus,

was a

Also, there

Federation,

the

with only fifteen Africans

mean

were

not

the

Europeans and therefore only they can run
understand the principles

to

a House of 55 seats.

in

qualitative franchise rather than a universal franchise.
to vote

because

voter's roll

for

grade 13 or over and the lower

special roll for those with

run

the Europeans themselves.

instead of being a representative government, was represented

and obviously most Africans weren't entitled
was divided into three sections, the common
however,

Africa, are the

in

people can

only responsible

that

They claimed the Africans were not educated enough

the government.
of

belief

the Europeans say responsible people, they usually

entitled

vote

to

in

the

federal

their

It

was based on income
The

incomes are so low.

anyone who earned 1300
roll

elections

£

voter's roll

per year, a

for those with a small income.

and therefore out

of

These,

approximately

8,000,000 African people, only 9000 voted.

When Dr. Banda was convinced that the people were properly organized, he called for an
emergency conference on January 24, 1959.
The Delegates who attended this private conference
discussed matters of finance, co-ordination of the party and co-ordination of political parties throughMeanwhile, the government thought we were planning a massacre

out Africa.

On March

1959, the state of emergency was declared

3,

plot.

Nyasaland and every member of the

in

Nyasaland African Congress was rounded up and arrested. That was called Sunrise Operation. The
about one A. M.
It was
war and excitement to most of the people partly because

arrests started

know

they didn't

On
door.

I

the reasons

why

they were being arrested and partly because they didn't know what

emergency was.

the state of

my family and were all in bed.
and rushed towards the door but before

that particular night,
lit

the lamp

policemen rushing into the house.
they were doing, the only answer

searched

my

house and took

Suddenly

I

all

I

opened

I

it,

heard a big bang on the

heard a crash and saw

I

They grabbed and handcuffed me and when
I

received

my

books.

was a slap across my face and

I

I

asked them what

kept quiet.

Then they read the warrant which went

Then they

like this:

"Akogo

Kenyanya, you are arrested under the emergency regulations and on the orders of the Governor of
Nyasaland Protectorate. You will be put in a prison indefinitely."

With these words,

where

I

found about

On March

six

I

was pulled
of

my

outside

and

led to a boat

about 300 yards away from

my home,

colleagues.

we were removed from prison and placed on a steamer which took us about 300
From there we boarded a train which carried us another 100 miles. After disembarking, we were loaded into a truck and taken to an airport.
From there we were flown to Southern
Rhodesia. There we were put in the Khami Prison, with about 1300 other prisoners. We all had a cell

miles from

4,

home.

about 10 feet by

where we were kept

for about three weeks without any news from the outside. No
was allowed.
Slowly we were allowed a little more freedom until our final release 16 months later. Meanwhile,
however, we had to undergo intensive interrogation and torture. Some of us were able to hold back,
but we were not used to torture and many told lies to stop it.
six,

noise, talking, or singing

���/"

i

GENERAL HOSPITAL
TOP: BOOTH,

GREENLAND,

ROW: HICK,
MARYSCHAK,

CROCKFORD, C;

J. ;
J. ;

D. ;

HANEY,
LARSEN,

^ ^
ST.

F. ;

MOLSTAD,

T. ;

ERATIE, G. ;

HAYES,

E. ;

J.

SECOND

MACKINTOSH,
J. ;

J. ;

;

;

;

;

PETERSON, M.

^

f%

JOSEPH'S HOSPITAL

TOP: ARMOUR, E. COTTON, H. D E L O R E N Z
C;
DESLAURIERS, P.; DUMAIS, L. GRAY, L. HEGLER, M. E.
;

HOLMES,

I

;

;

;

,

;

;

SECOND ROW: JEANSONNE, Y. KOKOKURCHINA, H. MACDONALD, R. MACLEOD,
C; MARTIN, D. MATHESON, D. THIRD ROW:

C.

RUDZ, E.
N. MAKI,
;

BOTTOM: READMAN, H. ROULSTON, B. TWEEDLEY, J.
WACHTER, S. WILLIS, S. MISSING:
AAALTO, I.; BILOWUS, D.

;

;

;

;

MATWEYW,

A.;

McCARTNEY, M.

;

PARADIS, V.

;

PAV-

RADAWIEC, L.
ROBB, B. BOTTOM: ROME, K. SANTUCCI, F. SAXBERG,
E. SKILLEN, M. STENABAUGH, H. WHITE, M. MISSING:
LETIC,

M.

;

PEROSA, M.

;

PISCO,

;

;

;

;

;

McCUTCHEON, M.

V. ;

;

�h

r'i

n i$

^^pP^

^^^^

MCKELLAR GENERAL HOSPITAL
TOP: ALANEN, A. M. ALEXANDER, S. E. AMES, M. J.,BEEBE, S. BUIE, P. M. CALLANDER, J. C; CHILDS, J. R.;
CRAIG, C. A. SECOND ROW: CROCKER, E. J. DUMBRELL,
M. E. GATHEROOLE, M. D. GAYOSKI, J. A. GEMMELL,
HAMILTON, K. C; HODDER, M.
GORDON,
J. L.
R.
C. THIRD ROW: KELLY, M. E. LAYNE, A. J. LOCKING,
;

;

;

;

;

;

;

;

;

I.

;

;

;

LOCKMAN, D. R. MADILL, M. A. MOONEY, W.
MUZYKA, J. A. NASCIMBEN, M. A. FOURTH ROW:
PAULSON, C. F. PIERCE, J. A. POE, M. F. REITH, M.
E. SANDVIK, M. A.
SLATER, D. L. BOTTOM: STEWARDSON, M. J. STINSON, J. A. WARREN, G. R. MISSING:

S.

L. ;

;

P.;

;

;

;

;

;

;

;

BAROUDI, A. M.

;

;

��ACTIVITIES

�'62

NOR'WESTER
STAFF
"Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow!"
familiar these words are.
They rep-

How

motto of not only we, of the

resent the

College,

but

also

many

of

of our

fellow

Canadians.

We
eager
Carole Andruski

worlds,

into

contact.

task

is

set

it

of one.

Then we ban together to

criticize

and complain

if

rest.
all

prepared

to

we come

which

us,

This

we

tend to put

altogether, hoping

done by someone
until

and

with

energy,

with

However, when the actual

before

or disregard

the

bursting

adventure,

for

undertake anything

Ed/for

and

fling ourselves into the business

professional

is

it

it

will

off

be

and overlooked by
carried on by the majority
else

the burdens rest on the shoulders

done

right

achieved during our school years.

We

the

least

little

thing

is

not

or on schedule.
This procrastination
start at

is

begun very early and protection

a slow pace and gradually work up to a gallop, leaving homework and essays to the

minute, or not even bothering about them at
or laziness,

we

This also

criticize

to

many

if

failure

results

last

because of our wastefulness
us.

to build

of the clubs

some

of our spare time in helping.
in which we will be proud, we must learn
own
home
and school. We must not put off for
in our
the
most
of every minute we have for "time wasted
must make

a big and better Canada, a country

accept and share responsibilities right

tomorrow what we can do today.
is

Then

our teachers for poor lecturing or claim they dislike
in

responsibility ourselves or render

we are

all.

We put things off and
and activities of the school.
poor organization on the campus while we are not fully prepared to accept any

goes on

complain about the

If

is

existence;
In

when used

closing

I

would

to the Sports Section,

it

is

like to

and

We

life."

my deep appreciation to Bill Shannon who contributed greatly
Donna Ernewein, who aided immensely in the Advertising Section.

express

also to

��STUDENTS
PRESIDENT'S

MESSAGE
In

the highly specialized

as those existing
impossible

to

live

obligations to

order to keep

anarchy

in

and competitive

societies such

the world today, one discovers that

ignorant

in

society

and

One

isolation.

himself,

this unit functioning.

which he must
If

he

fails in

fulfil

many

this

many people were nomin-

year,

refused to stand for election

were interested

A
We,

not peculiar to the College.

glance at any newspaper

will

It

—

How-

not because they

pursuing their academic careers, but be-

in

cause they were not interested enough to take responsibility upon themselves.
is

in

these duties,

ated for different positions on the Student's Council.

titude

is

the product.

is

At the beginning of

ever,

it

has certain

Apparently

this

apathetic at-

a Canadian problem.

is

reveal the lack of public interest

as university students are obliged to take an active part

in

in

municipal, provincial

and federal

affairs.

our communities and to provide leadership when-

ever and wherever possible.

We
we

critical,

about and condemn such

like to talk

reveal

ourselves

as typical

A

typical

communism, fascism and

Canadian has evolved

not take his proper place

in

racial
into

issues,

a

but

loud

doing

in

so,

severely

talking,

the community, but leaves

his

minded people.

has been fortunate that these few people, such as those elected to municipal, provincial and federal offices

have been a conscientious, competent group.
will

issues as

He does

but totally irresponsible person.

obligations to a certain few civic
It

Canadians.

come when unscrupulous,

participate

more

materialistic

which

fully in this society

Despite the lack of nominees to
elected were highly capable

was able

to initiate the

first

fill

However, we cannot

men

we

will

rely

on

this

good fortune

A

to continue.

time

supplant these idealistic citizens, unless we, as Canadians,

are prone to condemn so quickly.

the positions on the Student's Administrative Council,

and efficient. Besides taking an active part in student's
Lakehead College Carnival and provide other new and

affairs, the

I

feel

that those
7

Student Council

beneficial social events for

the student body.

Ward and

and the work time they gave selflessly to the
help and advice they gave throughout
think that many local merchants and business concerns also deserve credit for the help they gave
the year.
throughout the term to the students of the Lakehead College.
I

would

student body.
I

like to
I

thank Rod

would also

like to

Tim Jokela for

their help

thank Mr. Braun and the

staff for the

�COUNCIL
dill

J.

Dorothy

Leo Lafontaine

E.

Maki

Sin

Secretary

Vice-President

Soo Kung

Treasurer

REPRESENTATIVES

r,.

Tim H. Jokela

Ian Hall

Ronald Paakanen

„

David Trochimchuk

mm*

Hugh

H. Yerex

Patricia

L.

Weaver

Harry Hanson

1

'**

Denis Lake

C-f
"

John Thomas

Phillip

B.

Russell

—

&gt;

Terry M. Hurtig

Ray

C.

McLeod

�ATHLETIC
PRESIDENT'S

MESSAGE
If

athletic

hard work

the

is

way

success,

to

programme must have been very

Every person on the athletic council did
to bring the students of

programme

1961-62

successful

indeed.

his

Lakehead College a

share and more

full,

well

rounded

of sports.

The greatest excitement

amalgamation
Mustangs

then the

of

year was caused by the

this

Lakehead College with the

Arthur

Port

form the Lakehead College Mustangs.

to

The

stu-

dent body had every reason to be proud of the team and

through to the

last

The Mustangs then went out on the

on to the stadium.

field, beat the Ukes, and advanced into the finals
The Redskins proved to have too much finesse for the rookie studded Mustangs and beat

against the Redskins.

them two

they proved it with strong support from the start of the season
The students paraded from the school through the down-town business section and

game.

straight to gain the championship.

Ray Inaba and

Practices start

Tomlinson took care of curling

Bill

this

the season without a loss

and

rivalry

between teams was a thing

Squash was also a new sport started

game

will

it.

year and did a tremendous job of

it.

to see.

and

at the College this year,

take off more pounds and put a person

in

it

proved very successful

proved

to

number

Mel Coutanche

of years.

set

we

until

shape faster than any other sport

Table tennis was another sport that was received with a great deal of enthusiasm after being
the school for quite a

was

Curling

The competition was so even that no team went through

our best participation sport with fourteen rinks entered.

of racquets. This

1962 on July 15 and the Mustangs have the

in

championship and have a better than even chance of doing

intention of winning the

I

ran out

have

tried.

away from

up a few tournaments during the year, and Jim Arnot

be the school champion.

is here to stay.
It was met with such enthusiasm we had forty persons out for our first three practices.
and Roger LeBlanc coached the team and were ably assisted by Gordon Pearson. Although we did not

Hockey
Gilles

win

many games,

it

was not due

head Teachers' College and Terrace Bay, and put
this

year winning four and losing four.

the

first

We

changed from

five pin to ten pin

I

bowling

a good showing at

in

this

year,

and

it

don't believe

it

all

games.

to

we have been
Arlene

the year.

As

I

the

girls'

in

was

it

could have been as successful without the work they put into
for the

it.

second year run-

the league.

representative at our council meetings

and was a tower

of strength

all

through

Arlene and John Pugliese were the work horses at our very successful banquet, and they deserve

the credit for

nice to

well represented

Waugh was

played eight games

be complimented on the way they

Ron Maines and Mel Coutanche did a bang up job with the basketball team, and
ning,

We

Hillcrest High, Lake-

proved very successful considering that

Ray Inaba and Dan Wolframe are

time for most of the students.

ran the bowling league, for

The team played Port Arthur Collegiate,

to lack of desire.

its

all

success.

look back upon what

have a strong

council.

I

I

have

written,

I

notice

wish to thank them

on broomball by Ken Smith and Keith

Srigley.

To

all
all

I

didn't

work half as hard as

for their wonderful support

of them,

I

thought had. It sure was
and mention the work done
I

I

say goodbye and thank you.

�COUNCIL

�CAMERA CLUB

Ken Buckell
President

Sin

Soo Kuny

Vice-President

Denis

Hill

Secretary

The Lakehead College Camera Club started
membership of

thirteen but as the year passed,

it

in

October with a

decreased to eight.

The Student's Council made a grant of one hundred and
dollars, with

fifteen

which chemicals and equipment were purchased. Various

types of papers were experimented with, and some very interesting
pictures resulted.

Although the

was enjoyed by

life

all.

of the club

was

brief, the art of

photography

�anew

Since starting
to

As

grow.

is

"Hams" kept the
During

the

undertaken.
transmitter

An

year
kit

ambitious

several
buildi ng

and proved

quite

projects

built

a

were

60-watt

The

were on

talks

informative

and

electronic

interesting

to

the members.

A

class
in

was

started

the club.

short-wave

listener

contest

new members

tions off the

broadcast band.

was held to
number

with the vast

an

effort to

make a few
their

on the new transmitter and a few hams who could

decipher our

efforts,

were contacted.

Most of the members

I'm sure that the club will

to the interest stirred

A

up

will

be leaving

this

year,

and

better
of sta-

proved

club like ours can

to

be even bigger next year due

this

contacted other universities

acquaint the

in

The members practiced

the job of keeping the club moving will be up to a few.

transceiver.

group was organized with

discussion

contributing.

group

code

new "hams"
skill

and a high frequency

informal

everyone
topics

club alive.

The

A

year the club has continued

last

usual, a core of eight or ten dedicated

year.

do much
like

for a

college.

We

McGill and Western, and

them that a smaller College can have as active

a station as the largest University.

�BACK ROW:

CIRCLE K

Douglas Bruce, Wally Mitchell, Leo laPat McGrath, Mr.
Berglund, Doug Brown.

Philip

Asseff,

FRONT ROW: Rod Ward,

fontaine, Denis Lake.

McKenzie,

The

Eric

K club

Circle

campus and

a service organization for college men operating on the

is

similar to Kiwanis

is

and other

service clubs.

It

is

a leadership and

campus and community.

character-building group which serves the
Circle

K

is

leadership

in

a college community that service clubs are giving

an opportunity

for

College men because

it

provides a means of
business

the

in

and professional world.
Circle K

is

an opportunity

available

to

leaders.

It

professional

leadership
schools to
sibility

assist

students

through

personal

Circle

contact

tie

K

in

social

It

provides the

and academic

with the community
is

medium

As
to
it

live.

in

Kiwanis, the Circle

The

Circle

K club

is

K motto
not just

is

"We

business

with

initiative

rehabilitation programs.

and the Canadian

Build",

It

and enhances the campus-community

It

a building for

is

and
and

helps the

the responprojects to

maintains an
relationship.

an opportunity for the community and the nation because

it

helps

founded on freedom,

heritage.
justice, liberty,

an organization but a driving

creates a better college or community today.

K broadens the op-

for accomplishing

to develop future leaders and citizens whose philosophy
initiative,

through the fostering

among students not to be found in the regular curriculum.
make its students conscious of basic Canadian ideals and of

the school

Circle

universities

provides a means for the development of

of preserving them.

important

George Kenyana

and

any other on the campus.

of an organization unlike
portunities

for the colleges

democracy, and a better world

force, developing the leadership for

in

which

tomorrow while

���SPECIAL EVENTS

Carnival Princesses

Presentation of the Trophy

Formal Guests

�������BROOMBALL
Weatherman, two teams

This year, thanks to Mr.

ended up

a

in

Technology

II

for

tie

and

Arts

Broomball was
sport with a

lot

first

They were Forest

place.

still

our real rough and tumble

Perhaps the

highlight

of

the

season

spirit.

was the

all

in

round good team, with very few individual

They were dangerous at

stars.
it

I.

body contact and good team

of

an

by tying

for the championship.

the league

for the

the

won

championship.

They seemed

wide open play.

be on top

of the ball at all times,

and beat them

in

Forest Technology

and

Of

their

the final
II

minutes of the game.

were the champions

knowledge seemed

to carry

course, the play of Ted Kari

added a

lot

to

their

wear them down

them

in

Kozyra
the

last

year,

close second.

this

year.

good number

and Ken Crompton

offensive punch.

Taras
player

Arts

I

had

All the

other teams

one game, but were out

at least

team and

They

provided

broomball with

spectacular

to

and proved

enjoyment of the game rather than winning

desire of the small but fast Mining Technology team.

but the larger teams seemed to

times

all

is

their

was voted the

league with
Taras was
of goals.

many

fast,

much

hard

most
other

the

of

hitting

and

valuable
players

a

clean and scored a

He was a standout on

well deserving of the

award.

his

�BASKETBALL

In

the second year of sponsorship by the Col-

lege and the Mustang

team was entered

Athletic

into the

basketball

Lakehead Senior Basket-

League.

ball

After

the

first

few games, the team seemed

destined for the top with

such

hitting for points.

But as the season

grew

basket began to get farther away,

old,

were

tied for

game

first

When

schedule was completed,

place with Westfort.

better for-and-against point total,

we

and

we found

ourselves fighting for the final playoff berth.

the twenty-two

Due

we

to as

lost out.

However, the boys must be congratulated for
their

the

David Trochimchuk

players as Gerald

Doug Brown, Mel Coutanche, and Denis Lake

Bell,

the

Club, a

undying desires and tremendous attempts to
final

whistle,

while

their final examinations.

they were

burdened with

Our congratulations go

to Denis

turing the most valuable player

Mel Coutanche
In

few but

closing,

(court).

award and

for the most points scored
I

faithful,

corralled, the

Lake for cap-

would

like to

and add,

Mustangs

thank our supporters,

that next year

will

also to

award.

stampede

when

to the

un-

range

��Douglas Bruce

Douglas Brown

Melvyn D. Coutanche

�BOWLING

LEFT T ° RIGHT: Kenneth Chomut
Barth,

The bowling season started
voted

in

Marbes Barbara

Peter B

&lt;

-

'

Dan Wolframe.

off

on a different note

favour of having a ten pin league.

this

Eight teams

season when the bowlers

were formed and within a

few weeks competition became keen as bowlers old and new alike "took

to the alleys"

on Thursday evenings.

The season consisted of two
championship

in

series

with the winner of each

The teams contesting

for this

to

1470.

The

final

Girls High
Girls

High Average
Mens High Game
Mens High Double
Mens High Average
It

the

The Chomut team won by a score of

standings were as follows:

Game

High Double

Girls

for

final.

honour were team No. 3 captained by Mike Matich

and team No. 4 captained by Ken Chomut.
1515

competing

a two game, grand aggregate point sudden death

Carole Andruski

172

Lorraine Zizman

320

Lorraine Zizman

136

Eugene Prpich

236

Eugene Prpich

429

Paul Dennison

162

can be undisputedly said that

this

Lakehead College has ever produced.

was without

question, the best ten pin league

��Lead,

CURLING

This year

was no exception

by the college
of curling.
rinks.

Due

students,

in

to the increase in
girls,

the participation,

in

number and

girl

on each

two events. The

Dillabough

rink

rink,

first

with

event was

Carole

it

won by

Andruski,

second event was won by the Ray Inaba

Andy

Styffe,

third;

consisted

the Gerry
third;

rink

Pat

rink

won 10

to 9, gaining the

curling championship.

As
two

usual, the staff

played an active

rinks in the club this year.

tender, Mr. McKenzie

role, placing

The perennial con-

and a new comer Mr. Marko-

Although Mr. Markovich was a beginner, he

vich.

great strides of improvement during the year.

made

I'm sure that

he

will

with

Curling Club

own

if

he continues

be a strong contender

We

Bud Buchanan, second; and

these two rinks met

Bertrand B. Buchanan;
T. Inaba.

Raymond

play-offs, the Inaba

The

hope that

executive

will

in

in

to

the "roaring"

any

rink.

the near future, the College

become large enough

and

game,

to form

its

play an important role with the

Athletic Council in promoting sports at the College.

Yurex, lead.

When

Second,

Yerex;

Styffe; Skip,

sports-mindedly took the task of skipping a rink and

Flanagan, second; and Peter Graham, lead.

Maureen

and

the third position.

The schedule was drawn up so that
of

interest

the Curling Committee de-

cided to place at least one
her curl

in

the rapidly rising sport

A.

M.

The Curling Club consisted of fourteen

on the part of the

let

Hugh

Third, Lois

in

the sudden death

��FOOTBALL
into

1961-62

Lakehead College launched itself
another era of sports endeavour — football.
In

This year

Lakehead College amalgamated with

the Port Arthur Mustangs to form the

Lakehead Col-

Mustangs Football Team, and no happier a

lege

Leod and our Backfield Coach, Mr. Ted McKenna.

The team had a hard working manager
of Alex

the

individ-

most yards gained was won by Dennis

was won by

Trevisenutto, the scoring championship

Mike Henderson and the top lineman

of the

year

set of

field himself to help the

No

Not only did we do well as a team, but

believe,

I

would have put on a

marriage can be seen anywhere.

ually,

Horbow, who

how

matter

were, the 1961-62 Mustangs was primarily the team

happened

then,

to

the

team?

environment,

second best kicker

team,

seemed somehow

players, Ted Bradford,

have been

camp
if

will

our

Bob Climie and Bob McMillan

invited to the

Regina Roughriders training

for a pro try-out, but as yet,

they

of

have not decided

go, due to former commitments here at

the Lakehead.

great

who was ably

it

College.
Principe!

and

Dr.

For
of
R.

or

this,

R.

deal

of

assisted

our

by our

Line

Coach, Rod Mc-

And what
again

and a

What,
was the

to

tremendous

the

team

of next year?
little

tougher to beat.

to

the

be connected with the
Mr. H. S. Braun,
D.

Clarke,

have shown
to

be proud

The team

stronger, a

Jr.,

Board of

Directors on the

insight they

a

it

happened

College, Mr.

Mutrie,

in full force,
lot

perhaps

we can thank

Lakehead

Governors for the

Perhaps

whatever

But

ing the College with a

good showing in the
1961-62 season was due to the hard work and many
hours put out by Danny O'Gorman, our Head Coach,

A

and

loyal our fans

that finished a dismal last the year before.

crowds.

Three

coaches

the

managers were, and no matter how

College

league.

possible,

team.

College

the

the person

in

were

it

pads and gone on the

excellent

was won by our Kevin McGonigal. We were runners
up for the rookie of the year award and had the
in

if

provid-

in

of.

will

little

be out

smarter,

������A NORTHERN DAY

Silence in the lonely crystal spaces
Sun-glittering magnificence

Breath of Liberty.

Shrouded

in

a snow-mist

Unfathomably deep
In

slumber pure the Northland-Spirit

lies,

His dark, green branches silvered through with snow.

Dream-visions of

mighty sleep

his

Are the windy clouds that drift
Across the azure-metal of

his

skies;

Manifestations of his holy power.

Now, the cadence
Is

of a distant song

heard from far upon a vagrant wind;

Beautiful in sadness,

From

sweeping low

the scattered reaches of the earth;

all

The fury of the

fire-winds, whispering

Eternal lamentation to the world.

Suddenly
All tumult ceases, frozen;

The

noon

brilliance of

Grows

softer in the long

blue afternoon,

While moving shadows lengthen on the snow.
Twilight

A

comes upon the sleeping

vast blue

chamber

is

earth,

the darkened sky.

Alone, the splendor of the evening star
Rises

on the dying

fires of

day.

A winter's day has passed;
Now comes the silent mantle
He

of the Night;

hides our earth from us

But opens up the star-built Universe.

The tumult of

this

strange and lonely land,

Inwreathed with silence and
Lies

calm beneath the

lucid

celestial

fire,

moonlight

Dark shadows of the midnight wait

still;

for day.

G. C. Coutanche.

�TO THOSE THAT LEAVE

Why

do they

leave,

They that leave

for distant places

Across seas and continents,

Beckoning with

Of

fair

promises

riches?

Do they

think of

what they go to

Rather than what they leave behind?

Wiser-years

later,

sitting

alone

in

Dry distant lands, do they remorse

— and

think of the green

Thick sun-shut

—

hills,

woods and rambling

Blackberry bushes with dark, oval

fruit

Hanging from prickled branches intertwined

Some

youthful, hidden secret

The path
The

oft-tred

clear, oval

by young

in

down

feet

pond that gave

to protect

their depths,

to

seclusion to their youth,

Its

willows dipping lowly their slender branches

In

the cool ripples of

its

surface,

Playing shades to the black, wiggly

Tadpole and gaily splotched newt,

On

swallow-sultry

— and

summer days?

think of their street, bare to the foreign eye,

But holding something extra to those that leave,

Holding each stone, each post, each fence as a memory,

Down

to the inn

on the corner, where noises come,

With music, laughter, and the

To each there

is

clatter of glasses?

such a street.

Do they return? Yes, some return,
Overcome by the deep, empty feeling
Some will never return, some will die
But

still

of their lives,
of

it

—

they go.
Chris Andrews.

�NEW LECTURERS

Miss

Lakehead

New

Waunita Christensen came

Alice
after

Brunswick.

the

graduation from the University of
Born and grown up

speaking community
try,

to

a Danish-

in

that province's potato coun-

in

she has always had a particular love for the

wonders

of nature.

One year

at Teachers' College

and teaching could not have been the

UNB and

for she returned to studies at
B. Sc.

in

She

1961.

is

and

game

is

reported to have

for her rink.

her main concerns are biology for nurses
istry labs,

and

intricacies

of

at

home

sewing a

earned her

a welcome addition to the

all-male teaching staff here

saved many a curling

right choice,

she

is

At work

and chem-

learning to master the

collar

for

a

coming summer should see her return

blouse.

The

to the Mari-

times to disprove popular claims concerning studied

women's marital prospects.

�Born

in

Frank M.

Ontario,

Eastern

Doan has

come to Lakehead College well prepared to teach
He received

philosophy.

his

B.

A.

and M. A.

at the

many

His vast experience also includes

on

tions

and

metaphysical

publica-

problems

linguistic

in

professional journals such as Journal of Philosophy,

and Phenomonenological Research and

University of Western Ontario, and then continued

Philosophy

on at the University of Toronto where he received

Review of Metaphysics.

He

an Introduction

writing
Dr.

Doan's extra-campus

lecturing

many

to

ophy,

and

Science

in

Philosophy.

activities

have included

He contends

groups.

local

he has no hobbies, but that

engaged

presently

is

text in

that

his interests lie in Philos-

especially

improvement

the

in

of education.

Mr. James

Leonard, a Novia Scotian by birth

B.

and breeding, passed
rural
In

formative years, he resided

his

where

later Halifax,

gree with honours

Coming
year

in

district.

Dartmouth and

1960 he received the A.

in

academic

he spent the 1960-61

pursuing

Kingston,

University,

course of study toward the M. A. degree

English department.

Lakehead College

—

English

Leonard's future

plans

in-

of study for the Ph. D.

not necessarily at a far-western univer-

however.

sity,

not surprising that these

is

It

have aroused

and many

Encouraged by a rather

fine records, he has

for music of the

baroque and

and Mozart being

Bach,

migratory years

and, looking up-

his interest in travel

ward, astronomy.
set

and

rhetoric,

M. A. degree, another year

his

and a program

of teaching,
in

composition,

Mr.

literature.

clude completion of

taught successfully

their noise,
in

to

and,

last fall to lecture in English,

and

a variety of courses
general

the

in

came

farther west, he

Still

a

English.

in

While at Queen's, he also taught part-time

despite the nurses

de-

B.

English at Dalhousie University.

in

west,

Queen's

at

the distinctly

in

Annapolis Valley apple

of the

setting

early years

his

low-fi

developed a taste

classical ages, Vivaldi,

his

composers.

favourite

Although the strenuous requirements of teaching over
half
his Ph. D. in
in

1952.

His teaching career

expanse and experience.

lecturer at the

left

and the

is

both wide

Doan began

University of Toronto,

at Indiana University

He

Dr.

as a

continued on

University of Houston.

Houston as an Associate Professor of Philos-

ophy and

travelled to

Lakehead College.

of the

student

has taken

most

found time

for

a

full

time,

his

curling

and

he

has

social

of

broaden

head students

that

his activities

Novia

With
in

the

and show the Lake-

Scoticins

and hard as the rocky

English

occasionally

functions.

teaching year behind him, he hopes

future to

so cold

of

body the rudiments

are not necessarily

terrain they inhabit.

�REFLECTIONS
When we came two

We
A

years ago,

found a land of

and snow,

ice

land with darkness and with night

But friendly people

made

bright.

it

The students helped to make

With broomball,
Parties,

pong-a-thon,

curling,

dances, stags, and song;

Memories we

My

will

take along.

colleagues also
in

Sometimes

discussiin,

And even

made

our stay

every way;

Enjoyable

sometimes advice,

fishing through the

But most important of them

And

that

is

what we

Lakehead has a

A

hall

fun

it

hall

will

ice.

all,

recall,

learning—

of

which keeps the candle burning.

The Light of knowledge gives man Sight,
Gives him Power, gives him Right,

And

points to him without amiss,

That ignorance

is

NOT

When we came two

We
A

found a land of

bliss!

years ago,
ice

and snow,

land with darkness and with night,

But Lakehead College gives

it

S.

light.

C. Markovich.

��STUDENT DIRECTORY
A kAC
NAwC
k

APPLIED SCIENCE
COUTANCHE, Melvyn D.

414 Shuniah

DAY, Ronald

573 Egan

E.

FORBES, William

GORDON,

John

GREEN, Jack

Adrianus

Street,

317 Cameron

Street,

S.

Street,

Hill

205 Alder Avenue,

McDONALD,

345

Ray Boulevard,
S.

McKESSOCK, Donald W.

322

MITCHELL, Wallace M.

378 Van Norman

POWELL, Gary

182 N. High

RIDLEY, John

335

B.

ROYAL, Robert

SAKAMOTO,

T.

Bruce

SKILLEN, Michael

E.

Street,

Street,

1507 Donald

VIBERT, David M.

R.

R.

A.

A.

P.

Francis Street,

65 Rupert

T.

J.

P.

F.

3-6671

513 W. Gore

Street,

F.

W.

3-7624

317 Cameron

Street,

F.

W.

MA
MA
MA

Street,

New

Chatham,

A.

P.

Street,

W.

F.

Brunswick

3-6504

220

2-7743

1505 Cameron

3-8995

233 N. Syndicate

Dl

4-3601

205 Alder Avenue,

MU

3-6331

229 Grenville Avenue,

3-3296

Vickers Street,

S.

Street,

F.

W.

F.

W

Street,

322

Franklin Street,

S.

W.

F.

378 Van Norman

Dl 5-7235

234

1st

2-1320

335

E.

3-7860

1807 Hamilton Avenue,

MA
MA

A.

P.

Box 264, Manitouwadge, Ont.

Dl 4-4674

W.

W.

F.

A.

P.

Street,

A

P.

Kenora

Street, N.,

Francis Street,

W.
W.

F.

F.

Longlac Townsite

Little

3-8554

1507 Donald

2-5892

R.

R.

Street,

W.

F.

Fort William

2,

(FIRST YEAR)

ANDERCHUK, Ronald
ANDRUSKI, Carole

A.

B.

ANDRYCHUK, Allan J.G.
ARMAND, Sharon M
ARNOT, Judi G.
AYLWARD, Ernest G.

381
221

1201
R.

Avenue,

Franklin
1

R.

F.

W.

Brown

F.

W.

F.

1,

Street,

MA
MA
MA

W.

64 Prospect Avenue,

BARTH, Barbara A.

500

W.

BELL, Gerald A.

W.
176 E. Frederica Street, F. W.
500 N. May Street, F. W.

BERGLUND, Donald

CHOMUT,

Court,

E.

Kenneth G.

DEMERS, James W.

47 Jean

DENNISON, Paul H.
DEWHURST, Joseph R.C.
DUNDAS, Glen T.
ERNEWEIN, Donna M.E.

1424 Isabella

24 Leys

FRANKLIN, Sharon

338 A Arthur

GAUDINO,

P.

Vincent A.

GRACE, Penney

GRAHAM,

F.

100 Elmwood Crescent,

Street,

163 McKibbon

341

Dufferin

GROULX, Ronald A.
HANSEN, Lawrence

142

Ontario

A.
P.

HURRELL, Peter W.

45 Ray Boulevard,

KATAINEN,

Louise

V.

P.A.

P.

333 Dufferin

G.

1428 Moodie

Street,

15 Knight Street,

KOKANY, Dorothy

1318 Stanley Avenue,

419 4th Avenue,

Ihor G.

KRUPPA, Melvin

366

S.

D.

MAINES. Ronald

R.

J.

64 Prospect Avenue,

500

100 Elmwood Crescent,

3-9088

176

3-6323

500 N. May

3-8223

W.

F.

Avenue,

P.
P.

A.
A.

Luci

Court,

W.

F.

Street,

74 Timmins

4-5089

163 McKibbon

Box 899, Dryden, Ontario

Street,

A.

P.

Dl 4-7009

R.

Dl 5-7550

341 Dufferin Street, P

A.

Dl 4-2757

93 McKibbon

A.

Dl 5-9892

Manitouwadge, Ontario

Dl 5-9639

477 Lyon Avenue,

Dl 5-6153

142 Ontario

2-1230

5-6192

3-8580

Dl 5-6324

MA

3-7009

MA
MU
MU

R.

R.

Dryden, Ontario

1,

Street,

Dryden,

1,

1428 Moodie

333 Dufferin

P.

A.

P.

Street,

Street,

45 Ray Boulevard,
B.

A.

P.

A.

P.

Africa

P

314 Dewe Avenue,
368 N. Algoma

W.

F.

Street,

Nyasaland,

A.

P.

Ontario

A.

P.

Street,

P.

A.

1318 Stanley Avenue, F.W.

419 4th Avenue,

Mary

P.

A.

Street,

F.

W.

2-5514

366

3-6053

382 Grenville Avenue,

P.

3-6053

382 Grenville Avenue,

P.

£.

P.

A.

Dl

5-8157

275 Argyle

St.

F.

W.

MA

3-6922

1400 Arthur Street

Dl

5-8226

102 Elm

A.

W.

F.

Box 582, Port Arthur, Ont.

Street,

P.

Red Rock

Street,

5-5343

MA

W.

W.

F.

Street,

1424 Isabella

1400 Arthur

102 Elm Street,

W.

F.

Frederica Street, F

E.

275 Argyle

E.,

A.

P.

2-4028

Dl 4-4424

A.

P.

Street,

382 Grenville Avenue,

E.

LANCASTER, Wallis

LONG, Myrna

Mary

382 Grenville

LAKE, Denis

Norman

E.

W.

F.

W.
Picton

Dl

MU

A.

P.

F.

E.,

2-2322

Dl 5-9869

Street, P. A.

Street,

Street,

Dl

Dl

A.

A.

Brown

Hurkett, Ontario

Dl 4-3717

A.

P.

P.

P.

314 Dewe Avenue,

W.

F.

Street,

368 N. Algoma

KOZYRA,

A.

W

2-8843

R.

KAUKINEN, Gary G.
N.

A.

Street,

HENDERSON, Alan D.
HODGE, Norman M.
HOLMAN, Sandra L.

KANYANYA, Akogo

A.

P.
P.

Port Arthur

477 Lyon Avenue,
D.

A.

P.

Street,

Street,

1201

348 Main

A.

P.

F.

2211 Arthur Street,

2-6928

Dl 4-0765

Street,
Street,

MA
MA
MA
MA
MA

Franklin Avenue,

381

3-6508

Dl 5-8483

A.

P.

W.

MA

W.

F.

Street,

Street,

94 Birch

Peter H.

F.

Box 582, Port Arthur

93 McKibbon

S.

F.

A.

P.

Street,

2-3018

Dl 5-6853

A.

P.

Street,

Luci

Dl 4-4315

A.

P.

Arthur Street,

163 East Frederica

LAKE,

410 Harold

Dl 5-7955

F.

Fort William

2,

3-6604

MA
MA

A.

P.

Street,

MA
MA
MA

W.
W.

F.

Street, P.A.

573 Egan

MA

W.

F.

Street,

414 Shuniah

5-8387

Dl 4-9289

A.

1807 Hamilton Avenue,

F.D.

A.

P.
P.

Street,

W.

F.

A.

P.

229 Grenville Avenue,

Franklin

W.

F.

Street,

KASMA, Esko O.
KUNG, Sin Soo
Craig A.

W.

F.

Street,

HUME ADDREbb

Dl

Dl 5-9204

A.

P.

Vickers Street,

1505 Cameron

233 N. Syndicate

L.

W.
F. W.
F. W.

F.

513 W. Gore

220

K.

A.

P.

Street,

376 South

L.

GROOTENBOER,
HAYS, Ean

D.

Dl 4-8685

Street, P. A.

Street,

410 Harold

J.

FREDRICKSON, Colin
GOFFAS, George P.

ARTS

PHONE NO.

LAKtncAU AUUKbbb

1

Street,

Street,

P.

P.
E.,

A.

A
A

A.
F.

W.

�NAME

PHONE NO.

LAKEHEAD ADDRESS

MAKI, Dorothy

E.

MALICKI, Richard

E.

MANORYK, Walter H.
MAZURKEWICH, Dennis
UBEKljH, ausan

P.

P.

A.

432 Marion

P.

A.

Street,

42 Gordon Avenue,

PERRAS, Albert

PUGLIESE, John

R.

Patricia

ROSS, Michael

J.

SPICER, Charl.

E.

Southern Avenue,

231

H.
P.

4,

R.

54 College

Street,

1825 Moodie

44 Carrie

Street,

Street,

SWAIN, Robert W.

168 Summit Avenue,

SYMES,

412 South Norah

Wolseley

1207 Ford

L.

WALDUCK, Donald

Street,

1417 Hamilton Ave.,

WAUGH,

Arlene

J.

241

WEAVER,

Patricia

Christina Street,

Heights,

F.

W.

321

St.

Vincent

St.,

P.

WILSON, Lana

289

E.

318

First

ZIZMAN, Marie

ARTS (SECOND
ARGES, David

Avenue,

W.

F.

A.

Frederica Street,

W

F.

A.

P.

542 Piper Avenue,

L.

W.

F.

192 Rupert Street,

A.

P.

ARNOT, James C.
BOYKO, Alex M.

64 Prospect Avenue,

BUETOW, Bernhard G.M.
COUTANCHE, Guy C.
GIBSON, Gerald B.
GOLOMB, Edward W.

222 Pine

JOHNSON.

332 N. Algoma

A.

P.

309 Grenville Avenue,

Frederick

W.

Street, P. A.

414 Shuniah

Street,

132 Pine Street,

223 Van Norman

A.

P.

A.

P.

Street,

Street,

A.

P.

A.

P.

62 Machar Avenue,

KOTYK, Eugene

539 Prince Arthur Boulevard,

KOZYRA, Taras B.
MASYNYK, Jennie

419 4th Avenue,

P.

124 Front

P.

MATICH, Michael
Bert

NAWALKOSKI,
NEWFIELD,

22 Lake

L.

439

S.

WORKMAN,

Street,

Street,

A.

P.

Katherine

Patricia A.

432 Marion

P.

A.

2- 3609

1003 Alexandra

Dl

5-6434

MA

3- 9440

2-3305

62 Ruttan

Street,

42 Gordon Avenue,

R.

W.

F.

Port Arthur

4,

236 W. Victoria Avenue,
54 College

Street,

2-1384

1825 Moodie

Dl

4- 3177

44 Carrie

Dl

5- 7083

360 Wolseley
P.

Street,

W.

F.

A.

P.

Street,

A.

P.

Box 14, Red Rock, Ontario

O.

412

3- 8290

1207 Ford

Norah

S.

Street,

Street,

W.

F.

W.

F.

3661 Craigmiller Avenue, Victoria

MA
MA
MA

3- 3863

241

2- 2920

Vickers Heights,

Dl

5- 8931

321

St.

MA

3- 6668

289

E.

Dl

5-6839

318

MA

2-4250

542 Piper Avenue,

F.

Dl 5-8156

192 Rupert Street,

P.

Dl 5-6853

64 Prospect Avenue,

1417 Hamilton Avenue,

F.

W.

F.

Vincent Street,

Avenue,

A.

P.

Frederica Street,

First

W.
W.

F.

Christina Street,

E.

W.

A.

P.

Street, P. A.
Street,

W.

F.

352 N. Syndicate Avenue.,
Baird,

222 Pine

Dl 4-8685

414 Shuniah

Dl 5-9200

132 Pine

F.

W.

Ontario

A.
A.

P.

Street, P. A.
Street, P. A.

Street, P. A.

Dl 5-8163

223 Van Norman

Dl 4-0638

116 Elm Park Road, Wpg.

Dl 4-6786

62 Machar Avenue,

MA

3-6766

5-8466

Dl 4-6096

W.
F. W.

F.

A.

P.

539

Prince

124 Front

439

P.

2-1818

Street, P. A.

Fort William Road,

219 W. Frederica
165 Martha

Dl 5-5733

155 Pine

P.

St.

F.

Street, P. A.

Street, P. A.

327 Catherine

352 N. Syndicate Avenue,

Street,

Baird, Ontario

(FIRST YEAR!

BICKMORE, John W.

337

S.

BODNAR, William N.
BRODACK, John W.

801

W.

75 Clayte

BUCKELL, Kenneth

109 Banning Street,

J.

COLOSIMO, Albert
DAVIDSON, Ronald

A.
R.

321

90

S.

Marks

Street,

May

728 N. Brodie

DYNES, Donald

37 Farrand

E.

F.

J.

58 Margaret

333
91

S.

W.

F.

May

P.

F.

A.

P.

W.

F.

Street,

W.

F.

A.

P.

Street,

P.

A.

Street,

F.

W.

Lawrence Avenue,

MA
MA

3-9365

Same

2-6584

Same
Same

Dl

4-6150

109 Banning Street, P.A.

MA

3-7636

321

Dl 4-1295

A.

Street,

W.

Dl 4-3872

A.

P.

Street,

Pine Street,

DILLABOUGH, Gerald O.
DURANCE, A.S.Bryon
Patrick

Street,

Frederica Street,

P.

MA

3-8105

Dl 4-2216
Dl 5-7518

MA
A.

3-3889

Dl 5-5566

S.

May

90 Pine

W.

Street, F.

Street, P. A.

728 N. Brodie

Street,

F.

W.

Box 329, Dryden, Ont.

37 Farrand

333

S.

W.

W.

2-4845

90

A.

F.

3-6865

Murillo

F.

Street, P. A.

Dl 4-3697

MA
MA

Man.

A.

1415 McGregor Avenue,

MA

8,

A.

P.

Arthur Boulevard,

419 4th Avenue,
22 Lake

Street, P. A.

ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

FOSTER. Edwin

W.

F.

A.

P.

309 Grenville Avenue,

Dl 4-5932

Dl

Street,

165 Martha Street,

W.

3-8061

Dl 4-7555

A.
A.

P.

219 W. Frederica

327 Catherine

A.

YURICK, Peter G.

FLANAGAN,

W.

F.

A.

P.

Street,

2- 4106

2- 4524

A.

P.
P.

Southern Avenue,

231

W.

F.

A.

P.

55 Ray Boulevard,

R.

A.

P.

Street,

Street,

MA

Dl 4-4424

Fort William Road, P. A.

155 Pine

Robert

F.

A.

1415 McGregor Avenue,

E.

POTESTIO, John A.

TOD, Katherine

3- 8041

MU

A.

P.

JOKELA, Tim A.

MEDWID,

MU
MA

Street,

YEAR)

E.

MICHELS, Robert

A.

Dl 4- 2727

A.

W.

Vickers

Peter

P.

MA
MA

W.

F.

P.

F.

WEST, Adrian

WOJCIECHOWSKI,

43 Summit Avenue,

Dl 5-6968

A.

W.

F.

A.

E.

A.

P.

P.

Street,

Street,

WATSYK, Myron

L.

W.

F.

Street,

225 McKibbon

R.

5-7864

Dl 5-5953

A.

P.

360

R.

Dl

MA

W.

F.

A.

P.

STYFFE, Lois M.

Cyril

383 Mclntyre

Dl 5-1357

236 W. Victoria Avenue,

J.

R.

John

TABOR, Roberta

W.

F.

A.

P.

5-9138

Dl 5- 6781

A.

P.

HOME ADDRESS

Dl

Dl 4- 1696

A.

P.

55 Ray Boulevard,

E.

PIOVESANA, Roy

STROMBOM,

43 Summit Avenue,

1003 Alexandra Street, F. W.
62 Ruttan Street, P. A.

S.

OLIVE, John A.

RUDMAN,

Street, P. A.

383 Mclntyre

May

Street, P. A.
Street, F.

91 Lawrence Avenue,

W.
P.

A.

F.

W.

W.

�NAME

PHONE NO.

LAKEHEAD ADDRESS

HENDERSON,

Robert

HINDLE, Douglas

HODGSON,

616

E.

Norah

S.

Street,

Clarence W.

345 Ray Boulevard,

87 Winnipeg Avenue,

INGLIS, John D.

595 Van Norman

LAFONTAINE,

493 N. Marks

Leo

J.

MIRONSKY, Lawrence

G.

R.

R.

56 Margaret

NIEMI, Donald A.

399 Conmee

POLOWSKI, Kenneth

464 Adams

PRPICH, Eugene

332 Pearl

RESCIGNO, Robert
ROGERS, George D.

528 N. May

RUSSELL,

464 Conmee

Phillip

SMITH, David

SPEARMAN,

Robert

TURNER, David

WOLFRAME,

ZERABNY, William

FOREMAN,

W.

F.

Street,

Street,

J.

A.

P.

A.

P.

A.

P.

A.

P.

A.

P.

Street,

A.

P.

A.

P.

Dawson Road,

2,

R.

F.

129 Prospect Avenue,

A.

P.

W.

F.

W.

F.

Lloydminster,

St.

5-6667

87 Winnipeg Avenue,

Dl

5-6950

595 Van Norman

MA

2-2930

493 N. Marks

Street, P. A.

W.

Street, F.

Fort William

R. 2,

56 Margaret

Street,

Dl

4-4279

399 Conmee

Street, P. A.

MU

3-8407

464 Adams
332 Pearl

W.

F.

Street, P. A.

Street, P. A.

3-6909

528 N.

May

3-7609

709

Norah

S.

Sask.

A.

P.

Dl 4-4549

MA
MA

W.
W.

Street,

45

Street,

Dl

Dl 5-5508

Street,

Street,

Secord

A.

P.

Street,

A.
A.

A.

157 Pine Street,
R.

L.

Terrence

W.

P.
P.

P.

Street,

Duke

231

J.

Daniel

Street,

Elizabeth

Clayte

9

Eric

Street,

Norah

S.

190
61

A.

P.

F.

Norah

S.

4721

R.

Street,

Street,

370 River

Stanley G.

THOMPSON,
TIIHONEN,

B.

S.

A.

Street,

Street,

413 Oakdale Crescent,

Dl 4-9289

A.
P.

616

2-2300

Fort William

2,

NIELSEN, Jens

709

W.

F.

P.

HURTIG, Terry M.

MA
MA

W.

F.

413 Oakdale Crescent,

C.

HOME ADDRESS

3-8398

Street,

Dl 4-6954

464 Conmee

Dl 4-1890

370

Dl 5-8632

190 Duke

W.
W.

F.

Street,

F.

Street, P. A.

River Street, P. A.
Street,

A.

P.

Dl 4-1240

61

Dl 4-7698

184

Dl 4-2660

231

Dl 4-3195

157 Pine Street,

Dl 4-0843

R.

R.

2,

Dawson Road,

P.

A.

5-6063

R.

R.

2,

Dawson Road,

P.

A.

P.

A.

Dl

P.

A.

Dl 4-5036

Elizabeth Street,
1st

St.

A.

P.

Kenora, Ontario

S.

Secord Street,

A.

P.

A.

P.

ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY
(SECOND YEAR)

ANDREWS,

Christopher

Banning

160

Street,

9

La

BECOTTE, Gary

609 N. Harold

P.

Street,

10 Water Street,

HUIE, Allen M.

JAMIESON, James
KLINGBERG, Evert

A.

c/o Mr. Oliver,

E.

207

S.

KORONIAK, John M.

717

S.

MARBES,

14 Manion Street,

Peter

Norah

226 McKibbon

O'HAGAN, Dennis
PAAKANEN, Ronald

91

TOMLINSON,

Crown

270 W.

William

J.

William

St.,

122 Farrand

P.

Line 23

A.

W.

F.

Street,
P.

W.

F.

A.

P.

Street,

Street,

F.

W.

W.

F.

Street, P. A.

Street,

Manitoba

Prairie,

609 N. Harold

St.,

10 Water Street,

c/o Mr. Oliver,

W.

F.

A.

P.

R.

R.

3,

207

S.

Rockwood Ave.,

S.

Norah

MA

2-5693

717

Dl

4-5349

14 Manion Street,

Street,

226 McKibbon

W.

F.

A.

P.

4-9209

1

MA
MA

2-5517

270 W. Christina

St.,

2-5513

1205 Donald

St.,

F.

W.

Dl 4-2181

122 Farrand

St.,

P.

A.

2-1969

A.

A.

P.

St.,

W.

F.

P.

Dl

MA

W.

F.

R12

Dl 4-0438

Dl 4-2895

A.

P.

A.

Christina

1205 Donald

129 Myles

ZOLDY, Allen M.

3,

Street,

2-2844

Dl 4-0393

Rockwood Avenue,

MINAKI, Shig

SHANNON,

R.

R.

MA

W.

F.

A.

P.

Portage

Ave.,

Assiniboine

Fevershom, Ontario

129 Myles

St.,

W.

F.

W.

F.

UNIVERSITY FORESTRY
BRUCE, Douglas

50 Lynngrove Ave., Toronto

D.

FOREST TECHNOLOGY
(FIRST YEAR)

ADOLPH, Douglas
BEERS, William

K.

K.

Douglas

530 Harold
J.

78

Harold W.

Rupert

48 Jean

HARLING, James W.
HENRY, Robert

LAROCQUE, Leonard
LEROUX, Raymond

McGRATH, Patrick
MICHAUD, Richard
SHORTYK, Lome
SMITH, Kenneth

W.

THOMAS, John
URBANSKI, Frank

J.

488 Van Norman

684 Niagara Street

Dl 4-9283

R.

R.

1,

P.

A.

P.

A.

Dl 5-7514

488 Van Norman

S.

Hill

Street,

P.

A.

Dl 4-2542

3232 Robert

S.

Kenogami,

P.

A.

Dl 4-3332

11

411

Adams

48 Jean

1710

A.

Street,

Lillian

423 Queen

280 Pearl

F.

Street, P. A.

Street, P.

A.

Street,

A.

Street,

P.
P.

25 Third

A.

A.

Adams

Burlington

St.,

St.

E.,

Fort Frances

3-8720

411

Dl

5-8490

27 Queenston Crescent, London

MA
MU
MU

3-9648

1710

3-6607

331

13

3-6607

328

Lillian

St.,

P.

9 Elizabeth Street,

W.

P.

MU

Street, P. A.

Sills

553 Dawson
328

A.

P.

St.,

892 Hwy 40, Mooretown, Ontario

180

P.

Ontario

Welland, Ontario

N.,

Gormley, Ontario

215

Street,

Preston,

Street,

Courtland, Ontario

Street,

Street,

Bracebridge, Ontario

St.,

Dl 5-8490

Street, P. A.

78 Crown
P.

A.

P.A.

Street,

149 John

855 Laurel

A.

P'.

345 Ray Boulevard,

HOLMES, Ronald G.

Dl 4-1239

A.

P.

P.

Street,

814 Howey Drive, Sudbury

A.

P.

Street,
Street,

Crown

318

GILL, Terry

SUTTIE, John

Dufferin Street,

160 Banning

BRICKER, Grant C.

BROWN,
BROWN,

343

Dl 5-8739
Dl

5 9740

Sills

St.

St.,

A.

S.,

Brampton

Fort William

N. W., Calgary
St.,

P.

A.

73 Coulson Ave., Sault

Ste.

Box 146, Roblin, Manitoba

Marie

�PHONE NO.

LAKEHEAD ADDRESS

NAME

HOME ADDRESS

FOREST TECHNOLOGY
(SECOND YEAR)
ARNOTT, Robert

35 Strathcona Avenue,

BUSCH, Mervin

539 Oliver Road,

CROMPTON, Kenneth
GORDON, Joseph

311 Wolseley Street,

KARI, K.

376

Edward

MU

A.

P.

A.

P.

A.

P.

3-8503

35 Strathcona Ave.,

Dl 5-9118

517 Second

Dl 5-5329

311

St.

Wolseley

A.

P.

Frances

Fort

E.,

A.

P.

St.,

N.

Hill

Street,

P.

A.

Dl 5-9204

Douglastown,

408 Tupper

Street,

P.

A.

Dl 5-8967

408 Tupper

Dl 4-3332

39 Norway Ave., Welland

Dl 5-9118

205

S.

Kenogami Avenue,

RUSLING, Harry

215

YEREX, Hugh A.

539 Oliver Road,

S.

A.

P.

A.

P.

1st

R.

R.

St.,

1,

B.

A.

P.

Port Dover, Ontario

Ave.,

MINING TECHNOLOGY
(FIRST YEAR)

BEDARD, Albert

EWACHA,
FLATT,

132 Regent Street,

E.

Bruce

J.

McLEOD, Ray

C.

NAIDA, Daniel

R.

P.

A.

457 Black Bay Road,

P.

404 High

P.

R.

R.

Street,

N.,

Dl

89 Winnipeg Avenue,

YOUNG,

264 Van

Home

5-9424

Dl 4-0865

Port Arthur

St.,

3-6665

457 Black Bay Road,

A.

Dl

4-3348

120 Balsam

MA

2-3951

Dl 5-8262

R.

R.

2,

A.

P.

Atikokan

Rd.,

W.

F.

89 Winnipeg Ave.,
1166 Mono

Street

A.

P.

MU

A.

P.

132 Regent

40 Dublin Avenue,

A.

Fort William,

2,

WANSON, Warren
David

A.

P.

40 Dublin Avenue,

Paul O.

A.

P.

Port Credit

Rd.,

MINING TECHNOLOGY
(SECOND YEAR)
HALL, Ian

323 River

SRIGLEY, Alfred

18

Street,

A.

P.

Avenue,

Melvin

A.

P.

Dl 5-9096

323

Dl 5-5156

is Melvin Avenue,

River Street, P. A.

A.

P.

RYERSON ENGINEERING

TECHNOLOGY
ASSEFF, Philip

1310 Victoria Avenue,

CAMERON,

240 Wolseley

Robert

226 McKibbon

CIUPA, Dan

DUQUETTE,

Street,

DZATKO, Joseph

2040

HEIKKILA,

R.

Eino

R.

Port

2,

A.

P.

A.

P.

Avenue,

Victoria

A.

Street,

233 Ray Boulevard,

Clifford

Arthur

HILL, Dennis

825 Hodder Avenue,

P.

A.

652

F.

W.

Crescent,

Thistle

KIVINEN, Francis

159

Banning

KOVAC, Joseph

521

Prince

LEWIS, Frank

621 Winnipeg Avenue,

Street,

Arthur

MAKI, Clarence

169 Machar Avenue,

NIELSEN, Regner

319 Tupper

Street,

A.

P.

A.

P.

PEARSON, Gordon

106 Birch

RUDD, Donald

Box 21, West Fort William

L.

STUBBS, Arthur

E.

VESTERBACK, Ronald

Street,

343

E.

468

Merrill

Christina

A.

P.

Street,

Street,

F.

A.

P.

W.

F.

A.

P.

W.

W.

F.

Dl 4-2895

Box 766, Sioux Lookout

Dl 5-8228

Box 363, Geraldton, Ontario

Street,

2040

Victoria Avenue,

R.

2,

Dl 4-2329

825 Hodder Avenue,

2-8659

R.

652

A.

P.

Dl 4-9975

2-3664

Dl 5-6008

Boulevard,

1310 Victoria Avenue,

240 Wolseley

MA

A.

P.

3-8916

Dl 5-8181

MA

W.

F.

KANTOLA,

Peter

MA

W.

F.

P.

W.

F.

A.

P.

173 Hillsboro

2-2629

521 Prince Arthur

Dl

5-8250

6340 Spruce

Blvd.,

F.

169 Machar Avenue,

Dl 5-8304

47

A.

P.

Dryden, Ontario

Street,

Dl

4-6534

106 Birch

MA
MA
MU

3-8485

Box 21, West Fort William

2-2494

343

E.

3-8447

468

Merrill

Street,

A.

P.

Christina Street,
Street,

W.

Sudbury

Street,

Dl 4-3762

Princess

W.

F.

Sudbury

St.,

MA

A.

P.

Crescent,

Thistle

P.

F.

W.

A.

ARCHITECTURAL TECHNOLOGY
(RYERSON)

BANTING, Lawrence

BUCHANAN,

Bertrand

INABA, Raymond

T.

68 N. Algoma
B.

Street,

250

LENTON, David

18

PARADIS, Gary

910 W. Frederica

SMITH, Barry

339

SYMONS, Charles
TROCHIMCHUK, David
WARD, Roderick

S.

Leslie

408 Adams

Ray

A.

P.

Street,

Avenue,

P.

A.

Street,

P.

A.

Boulevard,

P.

A.

P.

1617 Woodward Avenue,
41

W.

F.

Empire Avenue,

Prospect Avenue,

MA
MA

W.

F.

415 Heather Crescent,

KIPIEN, Michael

Dl 5-9871

A.

P.

430 Neebing Avenue,

A.

F.

F.

W.

W.

498 Buchanan

Alameda Saskatchewan

2-4400

415 Heather Crescent,

Dl 5-7567

250

Dl 5-8672

38 Rupert

MA
MU
MU
MA

Street,

2-9592

S.

Sudbury

F.

Empire Avenue,
Rd.,

P.

910 W. Frederica

3-8840

339

3-6038

408 Adams

2-8536

1617 Woodward Avenue,

Dl 5-7055

41

Ray

A.

Kenora

2-3256

Leslie

W.

Street,

Avenue,

P.

F.

W.

F.

W.

A.

Street, P. A.

Blvd.,

P.

A.

��ADVERTISING

�the value
of a smile
It

costs nothing, but creates much.

who receive, without
poverishing those who give.
It

enriches those

It

happens

sometimes

It

rich that they

its

can get along

benefits.

creates happiness

goodwill

it

and none are so poor but are

it

richer for

and the memory of

lasts forever.

None are so
without

flash

in a

im-

in

the home, fosters

in

a business

and

is

the counter-

sign of friends.

It

is

rest to the weary, daylight to the dis-

couraged, sunshine to the sad and nature's
best antidote for trouble.

Yet

it

cannot be bought, begged, borrowed

or stolen for

it

is

something that

earthly good to anybody

And

if it

till it is

ever happens that

is

no

given away!

someone should

be too tired to give you a smile

may we ask

you to leave one of yours?
For nobody needs a smile so

THE POWELL EQUIPMENT COMPANY

who have none

left

to give.

much

as those

�AMATEUR RADIO
Compliments

of

CLASSES

HEWITSON
CONSTRUCTION

COMPANY

Subjects Taught:

Morse Code
Radio Theory
Schematic Diagrams
Amateur Radio Regulations
Amateur Radio Operating Practices

LIMITED

47 N. Cumberland

Classes
St.

will

commence September

As enrollment

Port Arthur, Ontario

DIAL

limited,

MA

2-7287

BOARD OF EDUCATION

THE

FOR THE
CITY OF PORT ARTHUR
The Members of the Board of Education offer
Congratulations to the Editors and Staff of the NOR'WESTER
on the publication of their '62 Yearbook

BOARD OF EDUCATION

1962

Trustee Ken MacGray, Chairman of the Board

Board Members
Trustees
Mrs.

Mary Burns

George
H.
J.

17th.

prospective
students are invited to enquire without
delay.
is

Eric

W. Cushway
M. Goulet
W. James

Peterson

George Sutherland
Mrs. J. Van Der Flier
E. T. Whiteley

Crittall

Griffis,

Business Administrator

�BANK OF MONTREAL
A new

milestone

in

the development of the Lakehead College of Arts,

Science and Technology was reached

November 23rd, 1961 when the Bank
The office was established
bring modern day banking facilities closer

of Montreal opened an office at the College.

as a convenience to students to

to home and, while banking hours at present are from 12:15 to 1:45 P.M. on
Thursday of each week, additional service will be provided when the need
arises.

It

is

stressed that students

Campus Branch

will

who

use the facilities of the College

not have their banking arrangements confined to the

week all records for
Cumberland and Park

office hours in effect at the College. During the rest of the

the sub-agency are carried at the Bank's

Main

Office,

where full-time facilities are available at regular banking hours.
The office is under the direction of Don McNeill, Accountant of the
Bank of Montreal's main branch, who will be most happy to meet and discuss banking arrangements with the students.

Streets,

CONGRATULATIONS TO
THE 1962 GRADUATES OF
LAKEHEAD COLLEGE OF ARTS, SCIENCE
AND TECHNOLOGY

We emphasize
and our

industry's need for graduates of higher education,

interest in

young Canadians with degree standing

in

the sciences.

GOOD LUCK

ABITIBI

to all of

you

in

your further studies.

POWER &amp; PAPER CO.
Lakehead Woodlands

LTD.

�B of M's

the

REVIEW-OF-THE-MONTH
CLUB

.

.

m

In Toronto and Vancouver

Copenhagen
the
B of Ms Business Review
garded as an authoritative summary
Calcutta and

.

developments

of

and

trends

in

Canada's economy. Businessmen in all parts of the
world keep up-to-date on Canada by reading this

monthly diagnosis of the current Canadian
economic scene.
concise,

you would

club" and receive this
month, it's
yours for the asking. Just drop a line
today to: Business Development TO 3 MILLION
CANADIANS
If

valuable

Division,

like to "join the

report

each

Bank of Montreal, P.O.

BP
Bank, of Montreal
Box

6002, Montreal

3,

P.Q.

Port Arthur Branch, 27 South Cumberland

THOMAS JUDAH,

St.:

Manager

Lakehead College Campus Sub-Agency: Open Thursday 12:15 to 1:45
Inter City Branch:

LORNE BENSON,

Manager

WORKING WITH CANADIANS IN EVERY WALK OF LIFE SINCE

1817

�Compliments

Compliments

NEWAYGO

of

YOUNG &amp; MARTIN
Barristers, Solicitors,
Port Arthur, Ont.

TIMBER

CO. LIMITED
Subsidiary of

Notaries

Phone Dl 4-8431

of

Consolidated Water Power and

Paper

Company

Port Arthur

BIRKS STITT LIMITED

Ontario

BONIN-DOBIE
j

JACKSON, LIMITED
Cor.

Court and Arthur
Port Arthur

Sts.

Home of the famous
"AQUATEL"

604 Public

Utilities

Bldg.

Port Arthur, Ont.

General

Insurance

Phone Dl 5-7309

�AUDITORIUM AND CLASSROOM
FURNITURE

BOOKS &amp; PERIODICALS

"Designed With The Student

Current or Out-of-Print
in all languages.

in

—

Building Collections
Irregular Serials
International Congresses

Search Service

ALBERT
P.

0.

B.

352

J.

BY

CANADIAN SEATING

PHIEBIG
White

Plains,

Mind"

CO. LTD.

N.Y.
1

8

Canmotor Avenue
8, Canada

Toronto

1

compliments of

AND WINSTON
OF CANADA LIMITED

HOLT, RINEHART

Educational Publishers
833 Oxford

in

Canada
Toronto 18, Ontario

Street

Everybody Reads

�UNIVERSITY of
WESTERN ONTARIO
Tines

�ROYAL EDWARD
HOTEL
RUTLEDGE
STATIONERY LIMITED

—

FREE

Fort WiiiiarrVs

Stationery
Greeting cards
Books
Office Supplies
Office Furniture

—

6A

512 Victoria Ave.

Owned

Community
Hotel

Coffee Shop

N. Cumberland

Port Arthur, Ont.

Fort William, Ont.

MA

PARKING

2-9675

Dl

4-5122

Catering to Weddings

Luncheons, Banquets

R.

GORDON WILSON, MGR.
FORT WILLIAM

Established

1907

FITZSIMMONS
FRUIT CO. LTD.
181

Ambrose

Compliments

SARGENT AND SON
21

Street

N. Court Street

Port Arthur, Ont.

Port Arthur

Wholesale Dealers
Fresh

Fruits

and Vegetables

CONFECTIONS and TOBACCO

of

�Compliments
of

OSCAR

STYFFE LIMITED

Wholesale Lumber Yard No. 5 Dock
Port Arthur, Ontario

Compliments of

BARNETT-MC QUEEN

COMPANY

LIMITED

Engineers and Constructors

FORT WILLIAM

�with the Compliments and Best Wishes of

The Corporation

of the

OF FORT WILLIAM

CITY

H. Reed

E.

Mayor

ALDERMEN
N. Day
M. Hennessy
H. M. Limbrick

A. Anderson

A.

W. M. Asset
J.

T.

O. Booth
H. Carroll

E.

G.

H.

J.

Littleford

E.

J.

Carson

S.

W. Lukinuk

Cook

W.

S. H. Blake
City Administrator

D.

H. Spicer

M. Martin

City Clerk

ASSUMPTION UNIVERSITY

OF WINDSOR
congratulates the

1962 graduating

classes

of

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE
and welcomes your
your education

in

inquiries about continuing
any of the following fields

ARTS
PURE SCIENCE
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

ENGINEERING

HOUSEHOLD SCIENCE
NURSING
For information about scholarships, bursaries, student
Registrar,

400 Huron Line

loans,

contact the

Assumption University of Windsor

CLearwater 4-9246

�With the Compliments

of

THE GREAT LAKES PAPER

COMPANY,

LTD.

FORT WILLIAM, ONTARIO

Components

of

ATKINSON'S JEWELLERS
LIMITED
Home

of

BLUEBIRD DIAMONDS

AND ALL FAMOUS NAME WATCHES

"The Lakehead's Leading Quality Jewellers"

�From
Best

"the

Home

of Canada's First

High School Conservation Camp"

Wishes to the 1962 Graduates and to the Students of the
Lakehead College of Arts, Science and Technology

DRYDEN PAPER

CO., LTD.

DRYDEN, ONTARIO

COMPLIMENTS OF

BLACKWOOD HODGE
MINING AND CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT DISTRIBUTORS

�BEST WISHES
from

NORTHERN

WOOD

PRESERVERS, LIMITED
Kiln

Treated

Dried

Wood

Lumber
Products

Port Arthur, Ontario

G.

DUNCAN &amp;

R.

CO.

LIMITED
Realtors - Insurance
121

S.

May

Street

14 Zeller Block

William
Port Arthur

Fort

�With compliments

of

Compliments

F.

H.

BLACK &amp;

TEXACO CANADA

COMPANY

LIMITED
4 Victoria Block

Port Arthur

Fort William

of

Fort William, Ont.

Winnipeg

The Most Wanted

DIAMONDS
in

the World

are at

Compliments

of

KIWANIS CLUB OF PORT ARTHUR
FORT WILLIAM INC.
Willow Lodge

-

North

Li lie
I

Fort William, Ontario

Street

�LEARNING
IS

THE

The

Public

Utilities

GATEWAY TO PROGRESS

Commission operates

for

the

citizens

of

Port

Arthur a modern Electric Distribution system, Telephone system, Water
system and Transit system efficiently and economically.
Through constant engineering and improvements to the capital plant, we are able to
offer industrial, commercial and residential services free from nuisance
interruptions at rates which invite comparison with rates in other parts of
Canada.
This progress is only possible through learning and planning.

PUBLIC UTILITIES

COMMISSION

Port Arthur
Commissioners

T.

J.

McAuliffe, O.B.E.

G. A. Wilson

J.
J.

M. Allen
Currie

Mayor, S. Laskin
Manager, E. A. Vigors, P. Eng.
Asst. Manager, J. C. Gilmore, P. Eng.
Treas., F. S. Dewhurst

�YOUNG

TREES ARE LIKE

CHILDREN

THE FUTURE DEPENDS

ON
Kimberli|

-

Clark

WOODLANDS DEPARTMENT

THEIR

PROTECTION
Pulp

and

Paper Company

Ltd.

LONGLAC, ONTARIO

�A

strong sense of duty, readiness to accept

responsibility

are

ability to lead

.

.

.

leading to a university degree and

Canada's Armed Forces. The de-

pares cadets for a career as officers in their

modern age demands the
tion and training.
this

in

best in educa-

will

sponsor, through the Regular Officer Train-

(ROTP),

a selected

chosen service, the Royal Canadian Navy,
the Canadian

Army

or the Royal Canadian

Air Force.

The Department of National Defence
Plan

sities,

the Queen's Commission. This training pre-

velopment of these leadership qualities

ing

Colleges or through most Canadian univer-

the qualities required of an

some of

officer in

and the

number of

There

is

also a limited entry for those

would choose
the

who

to obtain higher education at

Canadian Services Colleges

at their

own

qualified high school graduates to obtain an

expense, and serve after graduation as officers

education through the Canadian Services

in active

components of the Reserve

forces.

Full details concerning the Regular Officer Training Plan, or entry into the

Canadian Services Colleges, as a Reserve cadet, can be obtained without
obligation

from your nearest Canadian Armed Forces Recruiting Centre or

by writing to the Director

ROTP, Department of National Defence,

Ontario. Closing date for candidates applying for 1962
1 July,

Ottawa,

fall classes

is

1962.

REGULAR OFFICER TRAINING PLAN

�INTER-COMM SUPPLY

COMPANY

LIMITED

For Out of Print Books
Literature
Fiction

—

Wholesalers
Radio - T.V. Parts and Equipment
Hi-Fi-Radio Test Equipment

Components and

Kits

Where

Best

Service

Inquiries

PHONE

MA

—

2-0671
Fort

Dl

4-7691

is

Order From

BLEECKER BOOK
SERVICE

Welcome

WRITE

—

Brooklyn 38, N Y.
Supplier to Libraries

VISIT

1315 Victoria Ave.
William
194 S. Algoma St.

Port Arthur

KU Mi/'i JLmid
ARTHUR

PORT ARTHUR

ST.

THE LAKEHEAD'S QUALITY

Compliments

of

SHAW BAKING
COMPANY,

LIMITED

Importers - Distributors
WORLD-FAMOUS MERCHANDISE

Bakers of enriched bread, buns,
cakes and pastries
Serving Northwestern Ontario
Dl

• CASUAL WEAR
• DRESS WEAR
• SPORTSWEAR

5-7327

shown

Styles as

—
—
—

Sweaters
Blouses

Shoes

in

—
—

Fashion Magazines

—
—

Casual Jackets
Slims
Skirts
Scott AAcHale and Ritchie
Dresses
Coats
Shirts
Continental Suits

• IRISH LINENS
• HUDSON'S BAY

•
and

BRITISH

—

WOOLENS

KENWOOD BLANKETS

�THE FORESTER'S PRAYER
"O

who watches over

the seeds in the soil and the
look with favour, we beseech Thee, on Thy
wondrous creation, the manifold trees in the great and bountiful
forests.
Guard them from the terrors of fire; protect them from
the ravages of disease; save them, both great and small, from
wasteful, destruction by wanton hands.
And grant that, under
Thy tender care, they may grow and prosper and, joining with
the winds of heaven, ever sing Thy praise with joy and gladness."
flowers

Lord,

in

the

field,

This Message

sponsored by

is

THE ONTARIO PAPER

COMPANY

LIMITED
Thorold, Ontario

KING'S BUSINESS COLLEGE
Port Arthur

Fort

The value of business education
come apparent in recent years.
King's specializes

in

Make
to

every kind of career has be-

intensive

— taught
standards — on an

instruction

in

professionally in one season

business skills
actual office

rapid,

in

William

the vital

— up

to

individual plan.

King's the school of your choice for business training

—

be combined with your academic education towards a more

successful career.

Remember

—

your future depends on education now.

particulars on request.

Established

1902

All

�The

City of Port

Arthur

ONTARIO

Compliments of

THE CORPORATION OF THE
CITY OF PORT ARTHUR
Mayor

Saul

Laksin

Aldermen

James

Edagr Laprade

Gerald

Waino W. Laakso

Edward V. Anton
Sam Ashton
Sydney P. Smith

Gavin H. Young, Q.C
Ronald V. Wilmot
Cliff S. McNeill

St.

W. Thomas Arnott

City Clerk, Arthur H. Evans, O.B.E., F.C.I. S.

�THEJ
NEV

EAUTIFUL

REMINGTON

ELECTRIC

beautiful to operate, too

It's

There's only one thing that equals the

beauty of this newest Remington Electric: the
ease, comfort and speed of typing with it.
The combination of perfect machine and happy

iiMiria

iozn\A/ii
1860 Walsh

r

Street

Phone:

MA

—

i-

Fort

2-6481

William

secretary makes for flawless correspondence.
Select your own, individual type face. Choose
from 6 soft pastel shades to match office
decor. See the 1962 Remington Electric at your
local Remington Rand office today.

�COMPLIMENTS OF

FORT WILLIAM

BOARD OF EDUCATION

THE UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA
1961-62 SESSION

Courses Will Be Offered Leading To Degrees

HOME ECONOMICS

AGRICULTURE
ARCHITECTURE
ARTS

LAW

COMMERCE

MEDICINE

INTERIOR DESIGN

DENTISTRY

PHARMACY

EDUCATION
ENGINEERING

SCIENCE
SOCIAL WORK

FINE

AND

In:

APPLIED ART

(Painting, Sculpture, Ceramics)

•
•

Valuable scholarships and bursaries.

•

Residences.

Excellent athletic

and recreational

facilities

in

the

new

University

Gymnasium.

AGRICULTURE
And To Diplomas

For full particulars write to:

or Certificates:

The Registrar,
The University of Manitoba,
Fort Garry, Manitoba

In:

APPLIED ART

MUSIC
NURSING EDUCATION
PHYSIO THERAPY &amp;
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

�RUTTAN-BOLDUC-ADDERLEY
LIMITED
16 South Court Street, Port Arthur, Ontario

Insurance and Mortgage Loans

MICKELSON, FRASER, HAYWOOD,
ASSOCIATES
Fort William, Ont.

Compliments of

PROVINCIAL PAPER, LIMITED
Port Arthur Division

�Compliments

of

Compliments

FILIPOVIC

&amp;

of

CANADA MALTING

DUBINSKY

CO. LIMITED

19-214 Arthur Street
Port Arthur, Ontario

Port Arthur, Ontario

Compliments

of

MARATHON CORPORATION
OF CANADA LIMITED
Woodlands

Division

PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO

Mill

Division

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HAIR FASHIONS
213 Park

Compliments of

St.

Port Arthur, Ontario

"Where

W.

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TOMLINSON

coiffures are created"
Dial

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Greetings and Best Wishes from the

EXECUTIVE STAFF

AND MEMBERS

of the

LUMBER AND SAWMILL
WORKERS UNION
Local 2693, of the United Brotherhood
of Carpenters

&amp;

Joiners of

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Representing the Bushworkers, Shops and Millyards
and Construction Workers
T. Miior,
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�ISP
READY
MIXED

Compliments

CONCRETE

of

GATEWAY
DEVELOPMENT
"Builder of Fine

Homes"

Port Arthur, Ontario

R. P.

ALLSOP &amp; ASSOCIATES
Consulting Engineers

Members

of the Professional
Fort William

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— Toronto

LIMITED

�CAN HELP YOU
CONTINUE YOUR EDUCATION"

"CREDIT UNIONS

CALLON, PUSTINA

AND

ZELINSKI

Barristers,

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and Notaries Public
Callon Block
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Greetings from the

GREAT LAKES PAPER
CO.
EMPLOYEES' CREDIT

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Build your bank balance...

Build your peace of mind

THE
3UILDS

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Over 1260 branches

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Fort William

to serve

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�A

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The

successful development of

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given Ontario a pre-eminent position

Canada .... has made
In

man

it

many
in

a better place

resources has

the
in

economy

which to

the field of mining few areas can offer

more

of

live.

to the

of imagination than Ontario's vast mineral empire

.

.

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an unlimited potential of nearly 300,000 square miles of
rock formations favourable to the deposition of minerals useful to

man.

In

become one of Ongrowing, and as it de-

only half a century mining has

tario's greatest industries.

velops so do jobs

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still

with a future.

The mining

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interesting jobs with a purpose

industry

is

looking for young

pecially those with degrees in geology, engineering

allurgy to

fill

jobs

es-

and met-

positions of major responsibility.

THE

ONTARIO DEPARTMENT
OF MINES
Hon. James A. Moloney, Q.C.

H. C. Rickaby

Minister

Deputy Minister

�•

employment in Canada's mining enterprises
depend more and more on technological advances.

wi

•

Technically-trained personnel are able to participate

th

Progress and

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•

Where do YOU

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STEEP

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���������INTER-COLLEGIATE PRESS, LTD.

— Manufacturers
Yearbooks — Yearbook Covers
Diplomas — Graduation Announcements
Publishers

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Winnipeg, Manitoba

����</text>
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                    <text>���cJ

Digitized by tine Internet Archive
in

2014

https://arcliive.org/details/lu1963

�VOLUME:

SESSION:

14

EDITOR: Carole Andruski

Published by the students of Lakehead College

PORT ARTHUR. ONTARIO

1962-63

�On behalf

of the students of Lakehead College, the Yearbook Staff would like to extend

gratulations to Dr. H. S, Braun,
life of this country.

grown
Arts,

who was recently honoured

for his great contribution to the

its

con-

educational

Under his prudent but purposeful direction, the Lakehead Technical Institute has
and now, to the degree-giving Lakehead College of

in the past decade, first to a Junior College,

Science and Technology.

self selflessly to instilling

As the principal of

an enthusiastic

spirit

great achievement and one in which everyone

this thriving institution, Dr.

of education into his students.

may

well take pride.

Dr. Braun's Alma Mater, McMaster University, which
HONORIS CAUSA, in October of last year.

conferred upon

Braun has devoted him-

This, manifestly,

is

a

That pride was also shared by

him the degree of Doctor

of Laws,

�CONTENTS
PRINaPAL'S MESSAGE

BOARD OF GOVERNORS

FACULTY
EDITORIAL

STUDENTS' COUNCIL

NEW LECTURERS
PATRONS

STUDENT BODY

ALUMNI

STUDENT ACTIVITIES
SPORTS

ADVERTISING

�THE PRINCIPAL'S MESSAGE
TO THE GRADUATES:
This was an eventful year at Lakehead College.

September

for

registrations.

and then helped to

move

Some

The Men's Residence was

barely completed in time

of you filled out the required forms, paid your fees,

the beds from the trucks to the residence rooms.

room and board,

Years from now, when you

have returned as Alumni, you will recall the first morning when you shaved without mirrors and ate
breakfast from make -shift plywood tables. There were no complaints. Your eager enthusiasm was contagious.
It was soon evident that our Residence was making an even greater contribution to Lakehead
College life than any of us had anticipated.
In

October the Board of Governors announced that a contract has been

University Centre.

a large part of this space will be used for

completion by January and those of you who are now in

confident that

The most

it

will add

even more

of the students

first

now enrolled

much

academic purposes.

in first

Lakehead College than the Residence

of the credit must go to the students.

it

many

it.

1

first

am

has.

to

As a result of this decision

graduating class of Lakehead College.

people have worked hard and long.

Ultimate-

Their achievements have provided very real evidence of

the quality of work done at Lakehead College.

I

scheduled

when the Board of Governors decided

year Arts will form the

To achieve

It is

year will look forward to using

degrees will be granted to May, 1965.

This will be a memorable milestone.
ly

to life at

first

significant event of the year occurred in January

advance the date on which the

some

let for the construction of a

will house, eventually, a student lounge, cafeteria, auditorium, student offices,

In its initial stages,

etc.
for

It

extend heartiest congratulations and sincere good wishes to the class of 1963.

����OFFICE STAFF

Ruth Dundas

Linda Mitchell

Peggy Bishop

Bill

Shannon

SESSIONAL LECTURERS
Mrs. A. Armstrong

Mr. W. Buryniuk

Miss N. Brougham

Mrs, D. F.

Moran

Mrs. P. Skula

Mr. G. Mott

��'63

NOR'WESTER
STAFF
One

the atom.

it

holds out the promise

of a life of plenty.

Editor

In 1941,

is

us with annihilation; on the other

Carole Andruski

first

phenomena facing
On the one hand it threatens

of the most important

humanity today

an all-out program of to harness nuclear energy

successful test of an atomic

bomb

in the

for

wartime use was begun. By 1945, the

United States was made. A short time

later,

two of these

bombs were dropped in Japan- -one at Hiroshima and the other at Nagasaki. Within seconds after these
bombs were dropped, both cities were in ruins. The destructiveness of the atomic bomb was infinite.
At present, there are enough nuclear weapons to annihilate everything in the world, -- animals,
vegetables and minerals, -- many times over. However, there is a brighter side to the picture, in that
nuclear power can be used for better peacetime living.

Atomic energy can be harnessed

to heat and light our

homes and

sea will be mined by atomic power and airplanes will be propelled by
streets

and airfields of snow and fog, and weather

Already,

we

itself will

industrial plants.
it.

Some day

Atomic energy

the

will free city

be guaranteed long in advance.

are benefiting from radioisotopes, useful in the study and treatment of certain diseases.

Rays from irradiated cobalt, cesium or gold can attack cancerous tissue.

Now

that

we have

firmly and inescapably embarked on the atomic age,

will be an age of unlimited destruction or well-being.

must leam to work together with

dom and

all

If it is

we must decide whether it
we want, then we

the positive future that

peoples, regardless of race, creed or color. In order to have free-

dignity for all, a co-operative world venture

is

our best hope.

�Mr. Gnarowski
Staff Advisor

�STUDENTS'

have many aspects, but perhaps the

Life and growth

most essential

is

The changes involved may be

change.

gradual, and over the short term, almost imperceptible,
or they

may

be so rapid and extensive

as to

we must remember

Yet,

revolutionary.

seem almost

that these great

changes result from the accumulated pressures of the
small ones.

Our College
rapid change.

Dorothy Maki

approaching

is

New

buildings,

represent all of you

when

ambivalent sentiments;
take place too soon
-

it is

ever, in all

beacon

and that of Lakehead College.

I

its

sure

I

for,

while these changes cannot

breathtaking.

As

in our

some
how-

for

emissaries,

its

Alma Mater.

So, let

its

challenge be

everyday tasks with the dignity of dedicated belief in

For we must
coming obscure the recognition of the continuity of growth, both our own

not let the changes which are

of

am

Enjoy the benefits of working hard; cultivate the an of always learning.

your profession.

much

is

1

and unfortunately have not

we cannot observe and share those following at first hand.
segments of society, we will have ever -increasing cause for pride

to your career, lighting the routine of

But

it.

view these changes with rather

sad that

Certainly the magnificence of the future you are entering
a

-

I

of

professors, and

rapidly-expanding recognition await

President

of us

such a period

just

new

These changes insure progress; without change and progress,

life loses

meaning.

would like

too numerous to

to express

name

-

members of my council and to all of you - far
meaning to our presence at Lakehead College. For this 1 am
represent you. I hope that you will pause occasionally to reflect on the past,

my

who

proud to have been able to

sincere gratitude to the

strove to give

on your fellow students, your instructors and your associations here.
capture something of the warmth of the relationships which help to
institution that

it is,

and which provide pleasant memories

Perhaps as you do, you will re-

make Lakehead College

for students

and

staff alike.

the unique

�FRONT ROW,
(McKellar).

Left to Right:

BACK ROW:

Raemonde Bedard, Carol Cotton

Ron Holmes, Daryl Beesley,

Geny

Dillabough, Bill Hall, Ken Schroeder, Peter Phillips, Jim Sinclair,

Jack Green, Frank Mitchell.

Matheson, Marilyn White.

MISSING: Peter Hurrell, Heather
Staff Advisor

Mr. McKenzie

�NEW LECTURERS
MISS CATHERINE
with

first

MC

class standing in

LAY: Miss McLay received her B. A. from McMaster University in 1957
Honours English, and her M. A. from the University of Toronto in the spring

of 1961.

During the years 1957-8 and 1958-9, she taught at Fisher Park High School, Ottawa.

MR.

MURRAY PATTERSON:

In June of 1961, Mr.

Patterson graduated from the University of Illinois with a

Master of Science Degree. After his graduation he was

employed

in the research staff of the University of Illinois.

In the capacity,

he was responsible

sponsored by the National

Warm

for

one of the projects

Air Heating and Air

Heating and Air Conditioning Association.

His duties in-

cluded the writing of progress reports on the project and
their presentation to the Research Advisory Council of the

Association.

On two

occasions, he presented research

papers to the Annual Convention of the sponsor.

Mr. Patterson also accepted an appointment to serve on a technical committee of the American
Society of Heating Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers.

�MR, MICHAEL GNAROWSKI: Mr.
Gnarowski was born in Shanghai, China and
received his primary and secondary education
there.

He came to Canada in 1951 to attend
He attended McGill University and

university.

Then he proceeded

received his B. A.

to the

University of Montreal and there received his

M.

A.

Mr. Gnarowski

is

presently engaged in

writing his thesis for his Ph.D. from the
University of Indiana.
is

The

subject of his thesis

Canadian poetry.

Before coming to Lakehead College to lecture in English Mr. Gnarowski taught

of

at the University

Sherbrooke in the province of Quebec.

In his spare

his wife

moments Mr. Gnarowski

edits a literary paper called

"YES", reads, and relaxes with

and baby daughter.

MR, ERIC GREEN: Mr. Green has a first class
B. A. in Mathematics (Queen's 1955) and an M.
Mathematics (Queen's 1958). From September 1958

honours

Sc.

in

to

June 1961, he was a graduate student on a Ph.D. pro-

gramme

in

Mathematical

North Carolina.

Kenora-Keewatin

In

Statistics at the University of

1961-2 he taught Mathematics

District

High School.

he taught Mathematics and Science
Collegiate Institute.

Lakehead Technical
ing the

summer of

Murray

Hill, N.J.

Institute for half year

(1956a and

at

He

at

at the

From 1955-57
the Fort William

also taught Calculus at the

Queen's University

or a year (1957-58).

1960, he worked with the Statistics group at the Bell Telephone Laboratories,

Dur-

�DR.

KLAUS HERRMAN: Dr. Herrman was
He resided in Shanghai, China

born in Germany.

from 1940 to 1947.

Then he

spent seven years

on active duty with the United States army.

While

in the

United States Dr. Herrman studied

at the University of

and obtained his

B.

Minnesota
A.

in

Minneapolis

M. A. and

,

Ph. D.

After

obtaining his Ph. D. in Economics, Dr. Herrman

was on the Faculty on Economics
sity of

Minnesota.

Just prior to

at the

coming

Univerto

Lakehead College Dr. Herrman was with the
European division of the University of Maryland;

he instructed United States military personnel

in

Morocco, Germany and Spain.
At present Dr. Herrman
a paper on the
Dr.

Herrman

Germany

also likes to

latest political

is

doing research for

of the 1920's and 1930's.

keep abreast of the

developments

in the world and

is

a keen observer of the current political processes.

To

relax during his free

his favourite or if

May

it is

moments

Dr.

Herrman

Tuesday night he

likes to read and listen to music, Viennese Operetta

likes to

is

watch Perry Mason.

MR, N. TINES: Mr. Tines received his M. A. Degree in Psychology from Assumption University in
of 1962, and proceeded immediately to Lakehead College to take a post in the Psychology Depart-

ment.

DR. M. T. MYRES: Dr. Myres obtained his B. A. at
Cambridge in 1953, his M. A. from the University of
British Columbia in 1957 and his Ph.D. from the University of British Columbia in 1960.

His experience includes being a Field Assistant for

Oxford University in 1953-54, a Teaching Assistant for the
University of British Columbia from 1954-1957 and a

Research Officer for Oxford University from 1959-1961.

Awards: Wildlife Conservation, Fellowship, Canadian
Industries Limited, 1955-1958.

Studentship, National

Research Council of Canada 1958-59.

Field Research

Support, Arctic Institute of North America, 1958 and

1959.
credit.

Dr.

Myres also has several publications to his

��APPLIED SCIENCE

������������ARCHITECTURAL

TECHNOLOGY
BACKMAN.

Hov/ard

BEALS, John

COLOSIMO,

Albert

GRONENG, Martin

HOLOPAINEN,

Eric

HOLOPAINEN,

Ernie

POLOWSKI, Kenneth

���������������A MESSAGE TO THE

1963 GRADUATES...

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

...FROM THE
The Lakehead College Alumni Association was formed

in 1S57 with the

aim of helping

further the growth

and development of the college; and to provide a means whereby former students can keep in touch with one
another and keep abreast of happenings at the college.

1960 the Alumni Association presented a collection of "The Great Books of the Western World" to the

In

College Library in

memory

years, the Association has

W.

of the late Mr.

Armstrong, a former teacher at the college.

S.

awarded an annual scholarship

In recent

Convocation.

at the Spring

The Association's plans for the future include the formation of a Lakehead Branch to be composed of
who make their home in this area the year round; a greater participation in the activity of
the College; and more social gatherings.
The annual business meeting is held in the College Library during the week between Christmas and New
Year's, to enable those who work out of town or attend other universities to be present. The tentative date of
Monday, December 30.
the 1963 meeting is 8 p. m,
All students who have attended one full session, either in the day or evening courses are eligible for
membership in the Alumni Association.
those graduates

,

A

strong

alumni association can be a great

tion needs interested, active

endeavor, won't you

Keep

members.

To accomplish

asset to a college.

When you

purposes, the Associa-

its

leave the Lakehead College for new and wider fields of

lake an interest in the development of Northwestern Ontario's own college?

still

in touch through your

Alumni Association

McKELLAR HOSPITAL

BACK ROW: Middleton
SECOND ROW: Jones J.
Bodnar

G.

Bicknell D.

,

DaggJ.

,

,

Fildey

R,

,

Wilson D.

Limerick

,

B.

McLean

,

K.

,

McClelland M.

P.

THIRD ROW: Marr J. Inouye S. Falcon
FOURTH ROW: Mitchell J. Nicholson R.
,

,

,

Bussmann

N.

,

Cotton C.

Barber

,

,

Potts

J.

Savela

,

Kathryn, Zabiuk

P.

,

J.

HoUan M.

,

Oja G.

,

Long

L.

Gienow

,

,

L.

Anderson

B.

,

1.

FIFTH ROW: Brennan P. Stevens L. Neely L. Jussup M. McCranor M. Pine S. Jermyn M. Bell M.
SIXTH ROW: Burachinski D. Fuchihara L. Lunn E. Gammon D. Freed M. Canfield S. Lunn W.
,

Sauriol

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

S.

SEVEN ROW: Steeve

S.

,

Perkins B.

,

Folino

S.

,

Morrison

H

.

,

Noga

C.

,

Toombs M.

,

Wallwyn W.

,

Kist C.

�,

GENERAL HOSPITAL

FOURTH ROW: Owchar N. Hohn B. Page J. Hilton D. Ewacha K.
THIRD ROW: Matheson H. Abbott R. Vierikko A. Kotilainen L. Smith E. Staruck A. Hade A.
SECOND ROW: Gordon M. Pearson C. McCorraack L. Thomas C. Aho D. McCoombs E. Whitney C.
FIRST ROW: Taylor J. Kennedy J. Zakrev/ski M. Bums L. Rowson B. Johansen A. Hickerson D.
,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

ST.

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

JOSEPH'S HOSPITAL

SEVENTH ROW: Warkola J.
SIXTH ROW: Fitzpatrick A.
FIFTH ROW: Berube D.

Forbes

,

,

Exley M.

,

J.

Woloch
,

,

F.

Burns
,

I.

Van

Barker K.

,

Brunt L.

,

Butvin B.

,

Unick H.

,

,

Gordon

Kinoshita

Kennedy C. Bicknell B.
Cawley C. Campigotto J. Olsson

Riddell D.

,

,

B.

J.
,

Mele

,

,

Byzinski R.

Harris N.
S.

,

Aubin

,

Beazley
P.

Birch M.
McGrath G.
B.
FOURTH ROW: Wood G. Stadey D.
THIRD ROW: Viita, H. Whent M. Ruscitti S. Krelove C. Redl E. O Beirn M. Du Bois C.
SECOND ROW: Kerr J. McCuaig A. Raycevic S. Jaklitch H. Bobyk E. Lehtsalu, H. Murphy P.
FIRST ROW: Gillson E. Ichikawa R, Pickering V. Melnyk D. Fedun V. White M. Daciw L.
,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

,

L.

�STUDENT ACTIVITIES

�.

"

CAMERA CLUB
In the

1962-63 school year, the College's Camera Club had as

its

executive

J.

Antero Elo, President; Dave

Kenneth Guise, Treasurer. Besides the executive there
were two committees appointed. The first was to look after advertising and was headed by and composed of
Peter Guise. The second looked after the darkroom. It was nominally headed by Tony Toplak with much assistance from Reinder Postuma. With its allotment of money from the S. A. C.
the Camera Club stocked the
darkroom with chemicals and bought a few new pieces of equipment. Two photography contests were planned
Krull, Vice-president; Shirley Barabash, Secretary; and

,

for the year.

Throughout the year, the darkroom received very active use from the club members.

Very often

the red warning light outside the darkroom on the second floor would be on almost continuously from eight o'clock
in the

morning to nine

at night.

All in all the

Camera Club had

a very successful year.

FRENCH CLUB
... Je te chercherai, sourire, qui nous coiiduise

The French Club can look back on 1962-1963
opened

its

year with a reading of

by a lively discussion.

In

TARTUFFE

November

un

soir

de Mai mieux que I'enfance irrefutable.

as a year of satisfying

with club

members taking

of 1962, the Club invited as

William, who spoke on the Roman Catholic position

its

December was
genuine

'tourist

On January

The decor was

The Club
The reading was followed

annual guest speaker. Father Delisle of Fort

The

talk was well attended and

to listen and stayed to join in the discussion,

a quiet month, the Club devoting itself to a business

Club's dance was held in February.

.

and entertaining activities.

various parts.

in relation to birth control.

the Club was pleased to welcome its non-member friends who came
which followed Father Delisle's remarks.

.

meeting and to planning

for 1963.

The

'french cabaret'; the punch 'heady', the posters on the walls,

agency', the atmosphere intimate and the music 'a I'americaine'.
15th, the Club spent a hilarious evening, courtesy Joe Dewhurst and his 'adjusting friends' from

the insurance industry, complete with the richest of Quebec's accents,

who

put on a skit dealing with the folklore

of their profession.

The piece de

resistance of the year's activities was the visit of the Cercle Moliere de Saint-Boniface,

put on a superb performance of "La Grammaire"

-

"Edouard et Agrippine" et

"1' Affaire

de la rue Lourcine.

who

�KANGAROO COURT

For selling apples
to your friends!

Just married.

FACULTY OF INTERIOR

DECORATION
I

knew I shouldn't
have come.

�SOCRATICS
This hardy perennial of Lakehead College bloomed frequently during the 1962-63 session.

executive to receive credit

-

As there

is

no

the unavoidable organizational work was handled by Joe Dewhurst under the skillful

prodding of Dr. Doan.

Two meetings

during the fall term, with topics involving the eternal campus interest

cessful, both in the calibre of the discussion and the interest displayed by the

many

Sex

-

-

were very suc-

students attending.

In the

spring term, the emphasis shifted from religious and moral interests to the intellectual aspects of art and literature.

While the calibre of discussion remained high, the numbers of interested people tended
During the entire year,

There

very stimulating.
if

is

all

who attended found

to vary.

the opinions expressed and the interchange of viewpoints

no scorecard by which the success or failure of the Philosophy Club can be measured;

the students have been helped to find valid reasons behind the beliefs which they previously accepted without

question, to formulate

new

beliefs, or to use an old

and hackneyed phrase, "to come to grips with life," then

the Socratics had a good year.

The

S.

C.

M.

is

a group for searchers.

There are such groups of searchers throughout the world on many

University Campuses.

The purpose

of the local unit

Membership

is

is

to relate the concerns of the University to the truths of the Christian gospel.

open, with no formal

roll or fee.

All

who partake

of the spirit of inquiry are partakers of our

purpose.

we need organization. We have found this ortwo steady advisors, a local General Secretary, and an Advisory board

In order to get signs up, doors opened, and stamps bought,

ganization in the form of an executive

composed of

Ministers, professors, lay people, and student representatives.

this year, considered such concerns as

Campus,
J.

-

treated, respectively, by Mr.

Guy, and Dr. Kajander with Dr.

On Wednesdays

at

noon,

we have,

Canadian Literature, the Future of Lakhead College, Divorce, and Sex on

S. R.

M. Gnarowski, Mr. H.
MacLeod. In relation

the Cuban Crisis, and Mr. D. Fisher with Dr.

J.

Parsons, the Reverend

J.

to current issues, Dr.

Miller led a discussion on

Jordan with the Rev.

Calquhoun presented the Medicare question.

met once a week, considering such subjects as the Nature of Man, Canada in International
Drama of the Bible, with Dr. Doan, Dr. Miller and The Rev. Don Ross, respectively.

Three seminars

Affairs,

and the

At the end of March, an afternoon's discussion on personal belief took place, with two clergymen and two
professors as resource leaders.

Mention should also be made of the cultural pursuits of the group. We opened a permanent book room where
may browse over, talk about, buy, or order books relating to almost every possible topic. Finally, we

students

held a showing of the motion picture film "Hiroshima
the years to come.

Mon Amour.

"

We

hope

this

may become

a regular feat in

�TREASURE VAN

�RADIO CLUB
The College Radio Club began
chaired the

its year by electing the administrative executive.
Jack Green
meeting and was elected president. The position of treasurer was taken by Antero

first

and that of secretary by Tony Toplak.

In the following

Elo,

meetings a budget was drawn up and presented

The bill was passed and a sum of $110. 56 was allotted to the
The money has been used for the purchase of radio tubes, spare parts, a tool

to the Students' Administrative Council.

club for the fiscal year.
kit,

electrical

equipment and instruments that are of importance

radio equipment.

The

kits that

assembled by Ken Guise, a

The

club's

equipment

for the

maintenance and operation of

were purchased such as the variable power supply and voltmeter were

member

of the club.

consists of a Halkcrafters receiving set, a revolving

antennae control, a

Keathkit citizens band transmitter and a powerful 1000 watt Marconi transmitter.

The

club's 1000 watt

transmitter has enough power to send messages around the world.

Although the college has no regular radio program on the air
future,

when

facilities permit, the

university cities.

it is

hoped that

in the not too distant

College will have a program broadcasted to radio hams and other

��STANDING: Barbara

Myrna Long, Sharon Melnyk, Margaret Dyneski, Joan
Donna Ernewein, Carol Bell, Marlene Grand Maitre, Pat
Weaver, Judy Arnot, Susan Valley, Dorothy Kokany, Lorraine Zizman.
SEATED: Pat Franklin, Pat Connor, Secretary-Treasurer; Maureen Styffe, President; Gwen Thrower,
Barth, Marilyn Spidell,

Kleinendorst, Helen Boegh, Pat Rudman,

Vice-President; Carole Andruski, Dorothy Maki.

NEMISSA
At a dinner meeting at the Boys' residence
ing all girls

at

just prior to

Lakehead College should be formed.

was formed with Maureen Styffe

as President,

Christmas,

it

was decided that a club includ-

Accordingly, elections took place and an executive

Gwen Thrower

as Vice-President,

and Pat Connor as

Secretary -T re asurer.

It

was not

until the

beginning of the year, however, that the club was really organized and

name

its

ob-

was finally chosen.
It will be known henceforth as "Nemissa," an Ojibway word meaning "Sisterhood," which we feel conveys the meaning behind the formation of the club. Mrs. Gnarowski and Mrs. Page have kindly offered
After a great deal of careful deliberation a

jectives clearly stated.

for the club

their services as advisors.

At our second dinner meeting, our guest speaker for the evening was Miss

Mary Balenchuk, guidance

Drawing from her experiences in "Levana, " the girls' organization at
Queens and other University Clubs, she gave us many helpful suggestions for further projects such as
fashion shows, inter-school sports, the development of a "big-sister" system and the compilation of a
teacher at Selkirk High School.

list

of suitable boarding houses for out-of-town students.

Our
February

first
1,

project as a group consisted of decorating the

Norman Room

for our

Carnival Formal on

followed by a tea on February 23 which was to acquaint high school girls attending Open-

House with college

life

and to encourage them to attend Lakehead College.

Since the club got a late

start this year,

looking forward to a successful year, playing

activities
its

were rather limited, but next year "Nemissa"

role in the

development of a great university.

is

�BACK ROW:

Jack Green, Harold Brown, Pat Lacey, Brian Ridley, Richard Michaud, Bob Lailey, Dave

Parsons, Frank Mitchell, Ron Anderchuk, Dave Krull, Gerald Dillabough, Jim Lunny, Dan Naida, Hugh

Mayers, Peter Hurrell, Andy Robinson.

SEATED:

Phil Asseff, Secretary; Pat

McGrath, President; Doug Brown, Vice-President; Roy Piovesana,

Treasurer.

CIRCLE K
The Circle K Club is not a fraternity but a service organization for College men operating on the
campus and is similar to Kiwanis and other service clubs. It is a leadership and character-building group
which serves the campus and community.
The Circle K Club

of

Lakehead College, which received its charter, from Circle K International
this year.
The charter was presented to the club on October 20, 1962.

in

Chicago, swung into service

Projects for the year included unloading and setting up the Treasure

Van merchandise, decorating

a tree and constructing a Divinity Scene in the school at Christmas, assisting in the construction of the

school rink, arranging and supervising the Monte Carlo night during the college carnival, erecting the
college float and entering into the Fort William Carnival.
division.

The

by the club
visit to

The

float

won second

entire club donated blood at the Red Cross Blood Clinic.

as a fund raising project.

the College.

The

The members acted

A

prize in the novelty

beatnik dance was organized

as ushers for the office during the grade 13's

club also provided service to the Kiwanis during their Easter Seal Campaign.

On February 15, 16, and 17, six members attended a Circle K conference in Ottawa. At this conmany new ideas and procedures for service work were observed by the members. With this ad-

ference

ditional

knowledge and with the ideas gained during the past year the club looks towards next year with

increased desire to serve the College.

�/
^'iUit^ Good Grm.
.

*«.

���CARNIVAL QUEEN AND PRINCESSES

LEFT TO RIGHT: Judy Wenzel, Sue Valley, Margaret Dyneski,

Pat

Rudman, Donna Ernewein.

����SPORTS

�ATHLETIC

At this time

I

would like to express

the Athletic Council.

from

I

my

appreciation to the students for electing

have enjoyed serving

in this capacity,

me

as President of

and have gained valuable experience

it.

I

would like

to

cils in the school.

encourage future students

They

at the

will be sure to benefit, as

College to participate in the various clubs and coun-

my

council and

Athletics are important for the maintenance of physical fitness.
university years.

A person should keep

tion should be given to keeping the

his

body

in condition

body physically

fit

1

have.

This

is

even though he

as is given to

a significant fact during the
is at

school.

keeping the mind

Equal atten-

fit!

This year the Athletic Council purchased weight lifting apparatus which has been installed in the

ping-pong room.

A new ping-pong

table was also bought.

Although the basketball team did not win

all their

games, they did

considering the amount of time the students could devote to the game.

as

well as could be expected

The main

thing

is

that the

players enjoyed the sport.

1

would like

to thank

my

able executive in the persons of Murray Tomes, Vice-President;

Thrower, Secretary; and Richard Michaud, Treasurer.

I

would also like

the Council for their co-operation in making the Council a success.

to thank the other

Gwen

members

of

�COUNCIL

Murray Tomes

Gwen Thrower

Richard Michaud

Vice-president

Secretary

Treasurer

�BASKETBALL
A team from the College was entered in the Lakehead Senior Basketball League during the past
They were, as in the past, sponsored by the Student Athletic Society and the Mustang Athletic

season.

Association.

Starting the schedule with few practices, the

team got

off to a poor start in the league competition.

Doug Brown, Richard Michaud,
Dave Parsons, S. Christianson, Mike Wiktowy, Gary Nystrom, Pat McGrath and Fred Shaw,
the team managed to become victorious by mid -season.
However, with the unwavering loyalty of such players

as Eric Berglund,

Barry Schick,

Congratulations are extended to the winner of the outstanding basketball player award,

by Dave Parsons.

A

special thanks

is

also extended to Bill

team and reviving the spark of hope which

is

Shannon

for his

necessary in a team sport.

won

this

year

endeavours of re -grouping the

�BROOMBALL
I

this

would like to congratulate

all those

who helped

make

to

year in spite of "Mr. Weatherman's" attempt to ruin

weather, and postponement of some was inevitable.

it.

However, Arts

broomball championship with a 7-0 won-lost record,

of the

in the finals.

(May

I

quote Forestry

at this

time,

The "Rookie of the Year" award was voted
contest the "Worst Referee" trophy to Peter
vs Staff

game which

school, (he

still

the girls

won by

"We was

to Larry

Wochy

the broomball league such a great success

A majority
II

of games were played in bad
emerged as undisputed (??) winners

as well as a 7-1 victory over Ryerson

"The Hawk" Hansen

(for his fine display of

a score of 5 to 3).

(Arts

when the

goals per

II)

and in an undisputed

"one-sided" calls in the Girls

His fine job did not go unrecognized in the

canies an axe handle to protect himself from the professors).

able goaltender was abandoned

Tech

robbed. ")

game average

The race

for

most valu-

rose to the hundreds mark, and I'm

convinced Ron Hodowanski, our statistician, goofed.

I

would also like

to thank the Athletic

Mr. McKenzie who risked

games

(not to

life

Council

for

organizing the league and equipping

mention the enemies he gained each time he called

The members of the

Arts

it,

and

and limb on the ice and devoted his time to referring the inter- faculty

II

team are

a penalty).

as follows.

P.

Wojciechowski

I.

Kozyra

R.

Anderchuk

J.

Scarnati

R.

Groulx

D. Mazurkewich

L.

Hansen

E.

Berglund

�BOWLING
The bowling league

consisted of eight

teams

this season as

bowlers again attempted to knock over

ten pins in preference to five, Thursday evenings at the Big M. Bowl.

Team #6, captained by Gerry Dillabough, with players, Pete Marbes, Sue Valley, and Gary
Anderson, took the series, and in the playoffs, won the championship. Veteran Barb Barth bowled for
Gary

in the playoffs and

Due

was a welcome

to the efforts of Secretary

asset to the

team.

Dan Wolframe, "Harvey," who was

Pete Wojciechowski and Ron Anderchuk on the

money end

successful year for ten pin bowling at the College.

The

final standings

were

as follows:

High Singles

High Doubles

High Average

Zizman

-

Lorraine

-

Eric Berglund

-

Lorraine

-

Peter Marbes

Zizman

Zizman

-

Lorraine

-

Jim Mayes

a

welcome help with the

books,

of matters, this could be chalked up as a most

-

201

-

215

-

358

-

396

-

147

-

157

�CURLING
Forty-four rinks were entered in the College Club which
out the season.

made

Although there were a great number of beginners,

success of the curling year.

Before Christmas

it

some

interesting curling through-

did not

seem

to

hamper the

A great number of these beginners promise to be fine competitors

future due to their interest in the

His team ended the

for
it

overall

in the near

game.

was predicted by many that Bob Lailey's crew would take the club championship.

first

half of the season on top, but things began to happen after the Christmas vacation.

Strong efforts were put through by the Sweet, Pattyson and Dillabough rinks which pushed Bob aside.

These three

rinks

ended the year

To determine
to

in a

three-way

the champion team, a sudden-death playoff was drawn up.

win very easily with a

fair

margin of points

The winning team was composed of the

I

tie for first place.

would like to take

Jim Sweet then seemed

in his favour.

following:

Jim Sweet

-

Skip

Jim Lunny

-

Second

Murray Steele

-

Third

Gwen Thrower

-

Lead

this opportunity to express

my

thanks to the curlers.

and good sportmanship the year's curling would not have been a success.

Without their co-operation

���!

The 1962-63 Lakehead College Mustangs put

forth a

team producing the

most formidable opposition the Lakehead rugby football union has ever seen,
and missed the championship by a mere three points.

The

Ponies, built around size on their big offensive and defensive lines,

used strong running to wear dovra their opponents.

Emerging

as

league leaders

at the

end of the season, they fought the Fort

William Redskins down to the wire in a best-of-three finals, winning the
game 24-14 and losing the last two thrillers by scores of 8-7 and 25-23.
Bill

first

The Mustangs, a never-say-die team, won their share of silverware as
Mokomela collected the league's scoring title trophy, along with the

Most Valuable backfielder Award.

^
"

Kevin McGonigal, a perennial winner of

the Most Valuable Linesman Award, again took the honours.

A

great deal of credit for the year goes to

Danny O'Gorman, the lead

coach, and his able assistants Jack Duffy, Joe Delvecchio and Ted McKenna.

new faces appeared on the field this year as Pat McGrath, Terry
Nick Doneff, Bob Engisch and Ron Holmes donned the pads, adding much

Several
Gill,

to the success of the

team.

This year serves as a warning to the opposition, of the potential possessed

by the Ponies.

Beware

�This was by

far the

most successful year the College has ever had in Hockey,

as the

team

sailed

through the year never tasting defeat.

The

first

game of the season saw the Lakehead Teachers' College go down to a 13-4 drubbing as
warmed up for the year. The old rivals, Port Arthur Collegiate, became the next

the college team

victims as the College scored a 7-4 victory in a

and the College searched
William,

many

of

for

whom had

new

rivals.

fast,

rugged contest.

A group of very

fast

It

was the

last

seen of Collegiate

and experienced gentlemen from Fort

played semi -pro hockey, consented to a series of games.

despite their experience and finesse, they too failed to conquer the College, and the

However,

team

finished up

the year with a no-loss record.

With such
Bell,

stars as

Dave

Vibert, Ricky Porter, Colin Sutherland, Arney Friske, Roger Stover, Ross

Ron Calvert and Don Richardson, the forward attack was unbeatable.

Nick Doneff, Terry Gill and
by Lance Divine and Don
character to the team.

Bill

Inglis,

Shannon proved too much
as they carried on their

Coach Terry

Gill,

manager

Engisch rounded out the working end of the team.

by

all.

Bill

The

for the

Competition.

own type

of knock-out

Shannon, trainer

All in all the year

strong defensive work of

The

antics carried on

hockey added much
Lloyd Miller and referee Bob

was very successful and enjoyed

��ADVERTISING

�This year, the Norwester staff has tried something new
advertising for section of our yearbook

Although

it

has not met with

total

—

in

the

Patronizing.

success in its first year, we
We would like to express

are looking forward to a bright future.

our sincerest appreciation to the following for aiding us

in

our

campaign.

GREAT LAKES POWER AND PAPER CO.
MICKELSON, ERASER AND

HAYWOOD

GALLON. PUSTINA AND ZELINSKI
G.R.

DUNCAN AND CO.

YOUNG AND MARTIN
HEWITSON CONSTRUCTION CO.

�Finest

in

Quality Jewelry and Gifts

Compliments

of

BIRKS STITT
F.

CREDIT JEWELLERS

H.

BLACK &amp;

COMPANY

LIMITED
Fort William

Port Arthur

Arthur and Courf

Port Arthur, Ontario

Winnipeg

St.,

ROYAL EDWARD
HOTEL
Established

FREE

1907

PARKING

FITZSIMMONS
Fort William's

Owned

Community

FRUIT CO. LTD.

Hotel

Coffee Shop

181

Ambrose

Street

Port Arthur, Ont.

Wholesale Dealers
Catering to Weddings

Fresh Fruits and Vegetables

Luncheons, Banquets

CONFECTIONS and TOBACCO

R.

GORDON WILSON, MGR.
FORT WILLIAM

�Compliments

of

Compliments of

NEWAYGO

TIMBER

CO. LIMITED

GATEWAY

Subsidiary of

DEVELOPMENT

Consolidated Water Power and

Paper

Port Arthur

Company

"Builder of Fine

Ontario

RUTTAN-BOLDUC-ADDERLEY
LIMITED
16 South Court Street, Port Arthur, Ontario

Insurance and Mortgage Loans

That we must reap what we sow must
give

many

of us

anticipation.

much

pleasurable

Think with what wild

excitement one can look forward to
reaping a harvest of wild oats.

Homes"

�Tte StoAwt well eqjyiippccl
ler ENGLISH LITERATURE...
GLASSES
ROAD MAPS

(for viewing

fof Xanadu,

Skylarks, Ravens,

Shangri-La,

Nightingales, etc.)

Atlantis, etc.)

SUPPLIES
(tor'Do-lt-Yoursdf

Eng. Lit)

The

student well equipped for making

the

most of future opportunities

carries a

sHm

which

is

red volume on
inscribed

"Bank of

Montreal, Savings Department."

Bank, of

Montreal

Port Arthur Branch, 27 South Cumberland Street

VERNON MACREADY,

Manager

Lakehead College Campus Sub-Agency: Open Thursday 12:15

WORKING WITH CANADIANS

IN

to 1:45

EVERY WALK OF LIFE SINCE

1817

�ENGINEERING AND EDUCATION HAVE BROUGHT THE HOME-HEATING FIELD FORWARD

FROM THE DAY OF THE OPEN-HEARTH HEATING TO THE ULTIMATE OF ALL-ELECTRIC
LIVING.

THIS

NEW WONDERFUL WORLD OF WARMTH

IS

NOW PROVING TO BE

SAFEST,

HEALTHIEST, AND CLEANEST HEATING AVAILABLE. ROOM BY ROOM CONTRUu OF SOFT,

WONDERFUL HEAT

IS

NOW YOURS AT COSTS COMPARABLE TO ANY OTHER FORM OF

HOME HEATING.

ADDED TO

THIS

IS

THE ABUNDANCE OF ELECTRICAL OUTLETS AND LIGHTING

FIXTURES TO MAKE YOUR HOME CONVENIENT FOR YOUR PRESENT AND FUTURE REQUIREMENTS.

ONLY THROUGH THE PLANNING AND THE FORESIGHT OF ENGINEERS HAS THIS
ACHIEVEMENT OF ALL-ELECTRIC LIVING BEEN MADE A REALITY TODAY.

PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
Port

J.

Currie

Arthur

- Chairman

G.A. Wilson

T.J. McAuliffe, O.B.E.

Mayor —

Manager — E.A. Vigors, P. Eng.
Treos

S.

Laskin

Asst. Manager
.

Nattress

D.I.

—

F.S. Dewhurst

-

J.C. Gilmore, P. Eng.

�Compliments

of

Management and

Compliments of
Staff

PROVINCIAL PAPER.

of

LIMITED

OSCAR STYFFE

Port Arthur Division

LIMITED

R.P.

ALLSOP

§

ASSOCIATES, LTD.

CONSULTING ENGINEERS

Fort William

Toronto

�THE UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA
Winnipeg

Canada

1963

Courses

-

1964 Session

will be offered leading to

degrees

in:

Home Economics

Agriculture

Design

Architecture

Interior

Arts

Law

Commerce

Medicine

Denti stry

Nursing

Education

Pharmacy

Engineering

Fine

Science

&amp; Applied Art

Social Work

Ceramics)

(Paintin,g, Sculpture,

and to Diplomas

or Certificates in:

Music

Agriculture

Applied Art

Nursing Education

Education

Occupational Therapy

&amp;

Physiotherapy

with the Compliments and Best Wishes of

The Corporation

CITY

of the

OF FORT WILLIAM
E.

H. Reed

Mayor

ALDERMEN
Day
M. Hennessy
H. M. Limbrick

A. Anderson

A. N.

W. M. Assef
J.

T.
E.

H.

0. Booth
H. Carroll
G. Carson
J.

S. H. Blake
City Administrator

J.

W. Lukinuk

W.

Cook

D.

Littleford

E.
S.

H. Spicer

M. Martin

City Clerk

�Compliments

Compliments of

CANADA MALTING
CO. LIMITED

of

BLACKWOOD
HODGE

Port Arthur, Ontario

Mining and Construction

Equipment Distributors

SUPERIOR
Compliments of

GREAT LAKES PAPER

BOTTLING CO.
Drink

COMPANY EMPLOYEES'
CREDIT UNION LIMITED

Crest
IT'S

BEST

Fort William,
Ontario

211 Southern Ave.,
Fort William

�Congratulations!

.

...Class of '63

Build your bank balance...

Build your peace of mind

THE
BUILDS

CANADIAN IMPERIAL

BANK OF COMMERCE
Over 1260 branches

Compliments

to serve

you

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE
ALUMNI
ASSOCIATION

of

SHAW BAKING
COMPANY,

THE

LIMITED

BONIN-DOBIE

JACKSON, LIMITED
604 Public

Bakers of enriched bread, buns,
cakes and pastries
Serving Northwestern Ontario
Dl 5-7327

Utilities

BIdg.

Port Arthur, Ont.

General

Insurance

Phone Dl 5-7309

�The

City of

Port Arthur

O NTAR lO

Compliments of

THE CORPORATION OF THE
CITY OF PORT
Mayor

Saul

ARTHUR

Laksin

Aldermen

James

Edagr Laprade

Gerald

Waino W. Laakso

Edward V. Anton
Sam Ashton
Sydney P. Smith

Gavin H. Young, Q.C
Ronald V. Wilmot
Cliff S. McNeill

St.

W. Thomas

Arnott

City Clerk, Arthur H. Evans, O.B.E., F.C.I.S.

�THE FORESTER'S PRAYER
"O

who watches

over the seeds in the soil and the
look with favour, we beseech Thee, on Thy
wondrous creation, the manifold trees in the great and bountiful
forests.
Guard them from the terrors of fire; protect them from
the ravages of disease; save them, both great and small, from
wasteful, destruction by wanton hands.
And grant that, under
Thy tender care, they may grow and prosper and, joining with
the winds of heaven, ever sing Thy praise with joy and gladness."
flowers

Lord,

in

the

field,

This Message

is

sponsored by

THE ONTARIO PAPER

COMPANY

LIMITED
Thorold, Ontario

The new, non-denominational

UNIVERSITY OF

WINDSOR
(with which

Assumption University merges
July

1963)

1,

congratulates the 1963 graduating class of

Compliments

SARGENT AND SON
21

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE OF ARTS,
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

of

N. Court Street

and welcomes

your

inquiries

tinuing your education

in

about con-

any of the

fol-

lowing fields

ARTS

Port Arthur

PURE SCIENCE
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

ENGINEERING

HOUSEHOLD SCIENCE
NURSING
For

information

about scholarships,

bursaries,

student loans, contact the Registrar,

ASSUMPTION UNIVERSITY OF WINDSOR

�To
of the

the Board of Governors, Faculty, Students

Lakehead College

of Arts, Science and Technology.

Four years ago the Industrial Foundation on Education stated that Canadians must create
a

new

university, each year for twenty-five years, each capable of

3,000 students just to maintain the enrolment of 25
ally capable of attending university.

-35%

of

To reach even 50%

accommodating from 2,500

to

young Canadians who are intellectu-

of those intellectually qualified would

require Canadians to treble the facilities existing to-day.

One

of our biggest exports, yet little publicized, is that of trained brainpower to the United

States and other countries. Vol. 2 of the Proceedings of the Special Senate Committee on

"Man-

power and Employment", 1960, reported on page 56 a net loss through emigration of Canadian
professionals of 25,885 from 1950 to 1959 inclusive, the rate of net loss more than doubling
ten years.

education

A
is

not compatible with our inability to keep

The two

efforts

—

to train

tention of all interested parties

Canadians must succeed

What

in

greater effort to provide more and more qualified young Canadians with a university

is

true for

economic growth

in

in

in

Canada what we

train

and what we need.

and to retain - must be parallel. They demand the combined

—

universities, governments, industry, and the Canadian public.

this dual effort to continue to see

Canada as

at-

a

whole

is

much

of their best brains emigrate.

certainly true for Norwestern Ontario.

our region will determine whether our best brains work at home.

The

rate of

To stimulate

regional growth the Special Senate Committee proposed: "research and study to determine the

best economic potentialities of the areas concerned, the provision of capital on attractive terms
to build

new productive

facilities,* retraining of

provision of social capital

STEEP

in

manpower along the appropriate

lines,

and the

the form of utilities and other public services."

ROCK IRON MINES LIMITED

�"

I

MINING

A CAREER WITH A FUTURE

There's great scope

for the right

people

in

our expanding mining industry.

Geologists, geophysici sts, engineers, metallurgists, chemists and geochemi sts— al
are in

them

demand

for

to

discover our mineral resources, bring them

to the surface,

and prepare

man's use.

IT'S A CHALLENGE AND AN OPPORTUNITY
FOR LEADERSHIP IN A REWARDING CAREER

Write to the Ontario Department of Mines for your free copy of "Careers

in

the Mineral

Industry.

The motion

picture "Nation Builders" is available for showing

other interested groups.

It

follows the

to the beginning of his career with a

Apply

to the

life of a

in

classroom

or to

student through his university years

mining company.

Department's Film Library

in

Toronto.

THE ONTARIO DEPARTMENT

OF MINES
Parliament Buildings-Toronto

Hon. G.C. Wardrope
Mini ster of Mines

D.P. Douglass
Deputy Minister

�From

"the

Home

High School Conservation Camp

of Canada's First

Best Wishes to the 1962 Graduates and to the Students of the
Lakehead College of Arts, Science and Technology

DRYDEN PAPER

CO., LTD.

DRYDEN, ONTARIO

SOON
Tomorrow

To

I'll

study systematically

Will

temptations to goof

resist

Will plan

my

Work toward

On

begin

future emphatically

my

goal

the stage of life

Play an entirely different role

will

I

work

tirelessly

Great lives are built

And

.

.

.

1

will begin

this

way

tomonow.

or the following day.

.

�PROPOSED EXPANSION OF LAKEHEAD COLLEGE

Mr. David W. Morgan, Vice-Principal
ings for

Lakehead College

for the

-

Administration demonstrates present and projected build-

period 1963-1968.

The main buildings

to

be added are the University

Centre, due for completion in December, 1963, a University Library capable of holding up to 150, 000

volumes, due

for

and Laboratories

completion
for the 1,

in 1965,

a Science and

Academic Building to provide the Lecture Rooms
Gymnasium - Auditorium to provide the

000 students expected by 1970, the

necessary athletic facilities, due for completion in 1968.

An
1964.

It

artists
It

conception of the University Centre which should be ready for occupancy by January

1st,

will be the focus for all College extracurricular activities.

will include:

a 400 seat Auditorium for Assemblies, Special Lectures, Plays and Musical Per-

formances; a Cafeteria

-

Lounge

for Students;

A "Great

Hall" suitable for Dances, Examinations and for

Art and Sculpture Exhibitions; Class Rooms, Seminar Rooms, Club Rooms; Faculty Lounge; Board of

Governors Rooms; Locker and Shower Rooms for Men's and Women's Athletics.

�������INTER-COLLEGIATE PRESS, LTD.

— Manufacturers
Yearbooks — Yearbook Covers
Diplomas — Graduation Announcements
Publishers

Inkster

Boulevard at Bunting Street

Winnipeg, Manitoba

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PRINCIPAL'S MESSAGE

BOARD OF GOVERNORS
ADMINISTRATION

FACULTY

NEW LECTURERS
STAFF
EDITORIAL

STUDENTS' COUNCIL
ARTS AND SCIENCE

TECHNOLOGY
ORGANIZATIONS
LITERARY

ATHLETICS

WINTER CARNIVAL
UNIVERSITY CENTRE

CANDIDS

��Three hundred and fifteen full-time students enrolled

at

Lakehead College

in

September

1963. Six years ago the corresponding figure was one hundred and twenty -four. Six years from

now

it

should be almost one thousand. During the past year over one thousand full-time and

part-time students enrolled in courses at Lakehead College. Those of us who were associated

with the old L. T.

I.

on Cumberland Street will never forget the

hope and aspiration we experienced there.

still

We
It is

It is

warm

feeling of comradeship,

most gratifying to see that

evident in spite of the growth in numbers and facilities.

I

hope

it

this

hope that you will feel that you have played a real part

in

it

is

taking place.

and that your interest

will be maintained through the years ahead.

I

spirit is

will always be this way.

appreciate and share your interest and concern in the rapid expansion that

my

same

extend heartiest congratulations and every good wish to the class of 1964.

Principal,

Lakehead College

�'Bowd
W.G. Tamblyn,

B.

N. Paterson, B. A.

D. W. Morgan, B.A.

M. W. Babe, B.A.

M.W.

H.S. Braun,
J.

,

CD.,

,

,

,

,

Ph.D.

B.A., LL. D.

H. Charnock. C. A.

D. C. Clark, B.Sc.

G.P. Dalzell, M.A.
T.B. Fallows,
R.J.
J.

B.

B.

Paed.

Com.

,

B.

Mutrie, M. D.

F. R.

,

Q. C.

W. Stevens, M. C.

F. L.

Stevens, B. Sc.

,

G. H. Young, Q. C.

R. Hyslop, B. Sc.

R. S.

U

Young,

B. Sc.

F. R.

C.

(F).

A.L. K. Switzer, B.Sc.

Goodall, B. Sc.

C. S.

Prettie, Esq.

Shaffer, B. A.

D.F. Hassard, Esq.

^Bomd Hoom

,

G. Pallister, B.Sc.

R.J.
B.

B. Sc.

M.D.

Alderman S. W. Lukinuk, B. Sc. F.
F. R. C. P. (Q.
J. R. Machan, M. D.
K.A. Miners, C. A.
E.

M.S. Fotheringham, B.Sc.
E. L.

,

R. R.
,

Flatt, Esq.

M. Fleming,

,

T.J. Kane,

Q. C.

Bartley, B.Sc.

M. Com., Chairman
Vice-Chairman
Barr. &amp; Sol.
Vice-Chairman
M. B. A., Secretary

A. Sc.

D.I. Nattress, B. Sc.
J.

Govmou

off

(F).

(F).

Hew COtwmUi/ Cenke

S.

�(/ice-

7mcifd

ADMINISTRATION

DAVID W. MORGAN

A. (McGill)

B.

M.

B. A.

(Harvard)

Mr. Morgan was appointed Vice -Principal (Administration) in

May

of 1963

by the Board of Governors. Previous to

he had served

as a sessional lecturer in

when he was appointed

this

appointment,

Economics from 1960-62,

Bursar.

The spring of 1963 saw Mr. Morgan hard at work with the
He was chairman of the administration

building-fund campaign.
division.

The

students this year and for

many

raising

committee

in

come can
members of the fund-

years to

appreciate the efforts of Mr. Morgan and other

succeeding to meet and surpass their

$750, 000. 00 objective.

7)eM
GORDON

O.

ROTHNEY

B. A.

o{ Aril

(Hist.

Hons.) (Bishop's U.) M. A.

,

Ph.D.

(King's College, U. of London, Eng.)

Dr.

Rothney was appointed Dean of Arts in 1963, and comes to us

He served on
Quebec from 1939-

with a formidable record of studies and achievements.
the staff of Bishop's College School in Lennoxville,

41, then proceeded to Sir George William's College in Montreal where

he taught until 1952. From 1952 until 1963 he lectured at the

Memorial University of Newfoundland, except for the interim 1959-60,
during which he was on sabbatical leave from the university. During
this time he was in New Delhi, India, on a Senior Research Fellowship
from the Canada Council, and was in attendance at congresses held at
the Universities in Moscow, U. S. S. R.
and in Stockholm and Uppsala,
,

A

graduate in honours history, Dr. Rothney' s research interests have been mainly in the fields of

international history.

Canadian

history.

He

commonwealth and

has studied considerable the history of Newfoundland, and has taken a keen interest in French-

In 1959, he published a brief history of

Newfoundland, and

is

presently engaged in writing a text-book

on twentieth -century history for use in high-schools. Articles by Dr. Rothney have been published in various periodicals,
including the quarterly revue issued by

1TNSTITUTE d'HISTOIRE de l'AMERIQUE FRANCAISE, an

he has been a director since 1947. This year, Dr. Rothney

is

organization of which

chairman of the Humnaities Research Council of Canada.

Born in Richmond, Quebec, Dr. Rothney received his basic education in Sherbrooke High School.

He was married

in

1943 in Asbestos, Quebec, and now has two sons and one daughter. Will and Russell are both in attendance at Lakehead
College, and they have a pre -school -age

The

sister

Elizabeth,

who was born

we

are assured of only the highest quality leadership

New

Delhi, India in 1959.

we have such a renowned personality
emanating from him.

students at Lakehead College can certainly be proud that

here, and

in

as Dr.

Rothney

�PRINCIPAL

/963

Braun

Harold

S.

CD.

B. A.

,

,

LL. D.

(McMaster)

ft
Frank M. Doan

Carlo Fonda

M.A.

Lie.

(Western)

Ph.D. (Toronto)

Douglas
B.

R.

Lindsay

A. (Queen's)

M.S. (Wisconsin)

Michael Gnarowski

Classica (Trieste)

B.

Sc. Eng. (Manitoba)

M.E. I.C.

,

P.

(Montreal)

Donald McKenzie

Donald MacKinnon
B.

A. (McGill)

M.A.

Dr. Col. Sc. (Naples)

B. E.

Eng.

P.

(on leave of absence)

,

M.

Sc.

(Sask)

Eng.

SouomL
Miss Brougham
Dr. Gallego

Mr. Vukovich

Don Martin
W. Kembal

�VICE -PRINCIPAL

%mhm
1164
David W. Morgan
B.

A. (McGill)

M.

Eric
B.

A.

Green
,

Dr.
B.

M.

Thomas

M.
M. Div.

Phil. (Leopolis)

B. Sc.

,

P.

B. Sc.

(Toronto)

Eng. (Idaho)

C. Gehrels

Skula

Mr. C. Stamp

Mary O'rourke

(F.)

(New Brunswick)

M. A. (Montreal)

J.

Murray Patterson

B. Sc.

M.

Mrs.

Dick Bridgeman
W. Buryniuk

(Leopolis)

B. L. S.

A. (Harvard)

Jack Haggerty

Trevor W. Page

Miller

A. (Toronto)

Ph.D. (London)

Jlectmeu

Grodzicky

Dr. R. R.

Sc. (Queen's)

B.

(Queen's)

Sc. (Illinois)

�1963
MRS. MYRTLE ARMSTRONG B. A. (Queen's) M. A. (Toronto)
Mrs. Armstrong taught Economics on a part-time basis here

last year,

and

is

now

a full-time lecturer in Political Science.

Born and educated

Toronto, she worked as a trade union organizer for a short

in

time, and has run in a federal election. In 1951-52, she worked as a tutor in Politics
at

Queen's. Her chosen topic

her doctorate

for

is

the study of

em pi oyer -employee

relationships in the public sector.

Mrs. Armstrong

DR.

married, and has two children.

is

EDMUND BLOEDOW
Dr.

A. (Toronto) Ph. D. (Wurzburg)

B.

Bloedow was born

in Killaloe,

and was educated in Killaloe, Toronto,

Chicago, and Waterloo. For his doctorate, he wrote on the Hellenistic History of
Egypt.

He won

a three-year scholarship from the Deutscher

Akademischer

Hustauschdienst.
His current interests are

-

modern

literature (Egyptian), culture, travelling,

Chinese history, skiing, Communism, Sculpture, and mountain climbing.

MR. JOSEPH
Mr.

CACCAMO

Caccamo

is

B.

Comm.

(Carleton)

M. A. (Toronto)
comes to us with considerable

a lecturer in Economics, and

experience, having taught at the Universities of Alberta (Calgary), and Saskatchewan

He

(Regina).

present time

speaks English, French, Italian, and several other languages. At the

he

is

doing research on International Finance, his chosen topic

for his

doctorate.

Mr.

Caccamo was

MR. KAYE

born in Ottawa, and educated in various centres across Canada.

HAYA SHIDA

B. A.

Assistant Professor of

(McMaster) M. Sc. (Western)

Zoology and Lecturer

Mr. Hayashida was born in
there.

He

attended high school in

McMaster and Western.
He is married, and has

DR.

EDWARD KOTT

B.

A.

,

in

Hammond, B.C.
St.

,

Anatomy
receiving his elementary education

Catharines, Ontario, and then went on to

four children.

Ph. D. (Toronto)

Lecturer in Zoology
Dr.
in

Kott was born in Toronto, and has received all of his formal education there

Toronto schools. For the past two years he has held a national research scholarship,

and has been studying population sampling of small mammals, and doing research

work

in the control of

small animal populations.

�JLectmm
MR. HUBERT LUE KIM

A.

B. S.

M.

,

S.

A. (Federated Colleges, Affiliated with

the

University of Toronto) Lecturer in Botany

Mr. Lue Kim was born in Manchioneal, Portland, Jamaica, and received his
primary and secondary education in Jamaica. Following graduation from Agricultural

He
He is

College, he spent two years working in the research department there.
in studying plant

physiology and plant biochemistry towards a Ph.D.

is

interested

married, and

has two children.

MR.

S.

RICHARD MacGILLIVRAY

B.

A.

M.A. (New

,

Brunswick)

Lecturer in English

Mr. MacGillivray was born and educated in

attendance at the University of

and in 1962 was a candidate
studies in

DR.

Canadian

St.

for a

New

John,

New Brunswick he was

Brunswick. While in

the recipient of six scholarships,

Rhodes Scholarship. He

interested in furthering his

is

Literature.

DAVID McDONALD
Born and educated

B.

A. (Missouri) M. A.

in the

,

Ph. D. (Washington)

Lakehead area, he attended Upper Canada College,

University of Toronto, and completed his studies in the U.

S.

A.

He received

several

fellowships and scholarships, and since his graduation has served on the staffs of the
Universities of Missouri, Washington, Toronto, and California (Los Angeles). Dr.

McDonald
is

is

currently working on a research project in physiological psychology, and

interested in brain functioning.

He

is

the consultant psychologist for

St.

Joseph's

Hospital, and acts as staff advisor to the Psychology Club.

MR.

GORDON MOTT

(McGill) M.

B. Arch.

B.

A. (Tulane)

Assistant Professor of Architecture and Lecturer in Business

Admin.

Mr. Mott taught architecture on a part-time basis for two years at Lakehead before
joining the full-time

He was born

staff.

in St. Boniface,

education in Fort William.

DR.

GEORGE MERRILL
Born and educated

B. A.

He

Manitoba, and received his primary and secondary
married, and has a family of two.

(Boston U.

in the

graduation from Boston U.

is

He

)

Ph. D.

(Birmingham, Eng.)

Boston area, Dr. Merrill taught high school following his
served in

Germany with

the

army from 1956-58, and

then went to Birmingham, England where he began studying Elizabethan literature and
history.

He received

his doctorate in the fall of 1963,

and has submitted a book to the

Bibliographical Society and the Oxford University Press for publication.

As Dean of Residence, and

"K", Dr. Merrill

is

staff advisor to the S.

kept quite busy.

A. C.

,

the Yearbook, and Circle

�STANDING: Mrs.
SEATED: Mrs. L.
INSERT:

BACK ROW:

Bill

R.

Dundas, Miss

Phillips, Mrs.

E.

R.

Kallio, Mrs. P. Bishop, Mrs. E.

Dusome.

LeMay.

Shannon.

Mrs.

J.

Hutchison, Miss

MIDDLE ROW: Miss A. Taipale,
FRONT ROW: Miss L. Aedy, Dr.

J.

Reesor, Miss A. Akerval.

Mrs. Z. Fonda, Miss
R.

Grodicky.

J.

Hawkins, Mr. G. Dawosyr.

��Penny Grace, Co-Editor

Susan Valley,

To

Co -Editor

all

who

of the efforts of

read this book

many

people.

- may you enjoy it.
Nor 'Wester
To them, we are indebted.

Our special thanks go to Sue
staff advisor,

To

to

those to

Ross,

for

'64

is

the culmination

her sketch of Dr. Braun, to Dr. Merrill, our

Mr. Gnarowski and Mr. MacGillivray, who judged the literary contest.

whom

happiest days of all!"

this

book

is

dedicated,

we

say, "Here's to college life, the

�Mr. M. Gnarowski, Mr.

S.

MacGillivray: Literary contest judges

�Student

The past year has been another very eventful one

in the history

of Lakehead College and in the lives of each of the students
fortunate enough to be able to attend this institution.

was increased

new

a great deal,

professors acquired.

new

We,

Enrollment

courses were offered, and

as students,

many

were offered new

challenges and new worlds to conquer.

When

new council was elected

the

last fall,

they had a tremendous task ahead of them.

It

was

left to the

discretion of your elected representatives to allocate the student funds to the various student groups and organiza-

New

organizations were formed, and the council worked hard to see that there were

tions,

and to do so

many

group and social activities functioning. The dinner dances were very successful, and

fairly.

anyone who attended them can vouch

for that.

The

I

am

certain that

faculty dances were most enjoyable with their variety of

themes. "Carnaval du College" was a smashing success, and the closing formal could be classed as the highlight
of the social year here at Lakehead.

The opening of the new University Centre has given the students a wonderful building for many activities.
art club, drama society, yearbook, and book room have all settled in the new building, and the increased
space in the cafeteria and games room offer added convenience and enjoyment for the students.

The

The announcement

of a

change

in

name

for

Lakehead College of

Lakehead University seemed to be favorably received by

all.

Arts,

Science, and Technology to

Projected plans for development of new buildings

and addition of new courses has given all of us a keen insight into the future of our University.

One
stitution.

of the greatest projects undertaken

The Alma Mater Society

by the council was the preparation and establishment of a new con-

will take over student government in the fall of '64, and the Students'

Administrative Council will cease to exist. Whether the new organization will work or not will depend on the

co-operation
is

maintained

it

receives from the students in the '64

at all levels of student

In closing,

I

-

'65 year.

wish to extend thanks to

all those

who

number

will

be up to the students to see that harmony

so willingly gave of their time and efforts to work on the

Council and on the various organizations and committees.
sufficient

It

government.

of workers to carry on where the '63

-

We

can hope that

in the

coming year there

will be a

'64 Council left off.

Robert W. Piper

Vice-president, Students' Administrative Council

���������������������������ROGER YURICK

P
MISSING: JOHN BULACA, BRIAN

MICHAEL SMIEGIELSKI

LARRY BLACK

JOHN BICKMORE

EDWIN FOSTER

PROPERTY
OF

JOHN DRAHO

O'HAGAN

HUGO RDUCH, MICHAEL ROSHKA
ANDY SITARIK,

RICHARD WILKES

LAKEHEAO
.UNIVERSITY^

��RICHARD BELLE

GORDON BANT

LEN BULMER

PETER

BLACKMON

ANTHONY GARBAZ

RONALD CUSSON

KEN HAAPANEN

MICHAEL GRAHAM

�����THOMAS HAMILTON

ANDREW HARJULA

JOHN HILLIER

EA RLE JOHNSON

EDWIN KUKKEE

DENNIS LARMAND

JAMES LEGGETT

GRAHAM LONGMIRE

�����GERALD CHONY

�������toMM CM
The Camera Club this year saw a sizeable increase over last year in club membership and enthusiasm. This
was uplifting as well as encouraging to those concerned with the future of the club.
The '63-64 executive

consisted of Gerry Hashiguchi, President; Layne

Montgomery, Vice-President; and

Shirley Barabash, Secretary-treasurer. Layne succeeded Gerry as President in the second term. Both did an excellent

job of

managing club

affairs.

Club members were very active
and other highlights of the year. The

this

year covering all College activities; dances, sports, the Winter Carnival,

results of these efforts

can be seen throughout the pages of the yearbook.

A

special photo contest was featured on the Winter Carnival.

Taking pictures

Camera Club

is

only half of the enjoyment of photography. Darkroom work comprises the other half, and the

boasts a fully equipped darkroom with all of the facilities necessary for developing, printing, and

enlarging one's own efforts. This
It

was a very good year

is

for the

great fun and the results offer personal satisfaction to the photographers as well.

Camera Club and we hope

%idw

that the succeeding years will

be as

fruitful.

CM

The Radio Club has enjoyed another very interesting and successful year. Although most of our equipment
miraculously disappeared over the summer vacation, the Radio Club managed to get along extremely well. We
are still licensed to operate an Amateur Experimental Land Station - a "ham" station in everyday parlance under the call sign VE3ECT. However, although it was licensed to operate, the station found very little use
because of the difficulty
first

steps to convert

used for

On

two-way

the G. R.

S.

all

in finding a licensed operator.

Realizing

this difficulty,

the Radio Club this year took the

unnecessary equipment to the General Radio Service Band. This new equipment

may

be

radio communication, under the direction of the Radio Club, by anyone over the age of 15 years.

band we can be heard trying to remember the correct combination of numbers

XM36210. The walkie-talkies

that most of you probably saw during the Winter Carnival

G. R.S. equipment. Incidentally, the Radio Club also handled

all

in our call sign

were the

first

-

of this new

sound equipment during the Carnival.

This year's president was Allan Enders-; the secretary was Will Rothney; and the treasurer was Antero Elo.

�TUrnim

mm

v

At a meeting held early
elect their executive for

this year,

president, Pat Connor, vice-president,

After the club was organized and

plans were

made

for projects to

was the sponsoring of

a

the girls of

NEMISSA, 1963-64.

Lakehead University met

Gwen Thrower was

and Judy Greer, secretary-treasurer.

its

objectives had been clearly stated,

be undertaken for the year.

The

Hallowe'en Dance, the "Witches' Whirl".

success of this undertaking, plans were

made

for

In addition,

first

project

After the

Slave Day which was held in

conjunction with Winter Carnival, and also for a tea which would acquaint high school
university life.

to

elected

girls

with

Nemissa also took charge of the Queen Contest and the Formal which were

held during Carnival Week, and also assisted with the opening of the new University Centre.

With
with

new

all the

ideas and enthusiasm exhibited during the past year, the club looks toward next year

ideas and plans.

�"

....

STANDING: Antero
SEATED: Marilyn

Elo,

Spidell,

Sttdwt

Ken Mucha, Jack Reynolds.
Chuck Spicer, Doug Brown, Len Anderson, Sharon Moon.

The Student Christian Movement was the most active organization in the College this year. It is open to any
who is interested in seeking and testing, through study, discussion and practice,
the truth of the conviction that "in Jesus Christ is found the supreme revelation of God, and the means to the full
realization of life. " One had only to look at the bulletin boards this year to discern the great variety and the
extent of S. C. M. activities.
student, regardless of his beliefs,

In early

September, Marilyn Spidell, Doug Brown, Len Anderson, and Rev. John Guy attended a Conference

at Bala, Ontario,

where they, along with delegates from twenty-two other Canadian universities processed the

national policy and business of the S. C. M. for the

coming

year.

Students from the College also attended the

Christmas Conference of the Western Region in Winnipeg. The theme was "The Individual in a Mass Society.

During the

first

term the movement sponsored two visiting speakers

-

Dr. Katherine

Hockin who conducted a

seminar dealing with World Missions and opportunities Overseas, and Mr. Fred Caloren who lectured on Biculturalism in Canada. Len Anderson and Rev. John

Throughout the year,
Successful themes were:

S.

Guy capably handled

these arrangements.

C. M. evening seminars were held in keeping with the overall effort of the movement.

"The

Failures of

Modern Religion" and "Sexual Morality.

"

�CkUtim %ooamt

Under the direction of Roy Piovesana, the movement ran a book

store dealing in quality

paperbacks at

reduced prices. Students were able to buy otherwise unattainable books on all subjects. The store was well
stocked, and the great turn -over demonstrated the large extent to which

Lakehead vicinity. The new location in the University Centre
C. M. for the store's services will be expanded considerably.

of the
S.

Jack Reynolds and Sharon Moon, co-editors of the weekly
their excellent job of publishing this source of student
in finding appropriate

future, the S. C.

M.

The movement

matter

for the sheet.

It is felt

will be forced to discontinue

S.

is

it

was appreciated by

C. M. newsletter, are to be given due credit

As

that if the students

do not contribute more readily

this

is

one of the movements' largest

among

Every Wednesday noon -hour the
lecture series and his assistant,

S.

C.

movement had

Ken Mucha

M. Film Society found

we

fields of

endeavour

a lecturer

A

come

who attended found they

hoped that more enthusiasm

to the College and speak on a political,

lot of credit is

due Chuck Spicer, the director of the

for their efforts.

a far greater response

from the Lakehead people to the presentation of

progressed into the new year. Antero Elo, with the aid of Dr. Ruth Kajander,

obtain about ten enlightening and controversial motion pictures, filmed in

Rev. John

it is

the students next year.

social or philosophical topic relevant to student concern.

The

Guy and

Rev.

Don

many

Ross deserve a special note of thanks for the

managed

the

remember

Doug Brown, the
movement.

the folk singing groups he conducted

president, must

Looking back on the past year
purpose.

It

it

be acknowledged

for

way they have helped

is

to set us up,

Many

some noon-hours.

he organized and co-ordinated

cannot be denied that the movement

has been a successful year, and the future

to

countries.

and keep us moving. Rev. Guy, our general secretary, was an excellent advisor throughout the year.
students will

in the

it.

also offered opportunities for students to probe into and discuss problems facing the world

about them can be aroused

foreign films as

for

news and expression. The co-editors had many problems

today. Marilyn Spidell, the study director, organized several interesting groups. Those
profited greatly.

all the students

a great asset to both the students and the

promising.

made

great

all the effort within

headway

in establishing its

�7)e6atwj Society
i l

STANDING: Ken Mucha, Maurice Koroniak.
SEATED: Carol Bell, Alan Bitz, Sharon Moon.

Lakehead University

this

year

made

its

debut in inter -collegiate debating, placing sixth in the

I.

U. D.

L.

,

Central Canada Tournament. The team defeated such institutions as Queen's, Ottawa, Carlton, and McMaster.

This has encouraged us greatly and

The Debating Society

for better things next year.

also staged an inter-high school debating tournament during the annual open weekend.

This was done primarily to give our

To sum

we hope

members experience

in adjudication.

up, the Debating Society had a very busy year and was the

first

group to enter Lakehead 's colours

into inter -collegiate competition.

This year's executive were: President, Alan Bitz; Treasurer,

Ken Mucha; and

Secretary, Maurice Koroniak.

�"

JLoMmA

Iwjert
During the

The show,

Godaje

term an hourly college radio programme was presented each Tuesday night over C.

fall

J.

L. X.

called "Project Lakehead College," featured music popular with College students, student editorials,

interviews with staff

members and campus club

opinion polls recorded in the

officials,

Common Room,

and

student panels which discussed such a wide range of topics as birth control, labour unions, biculturalism and

The programme was organized

university education.
to express themselves.

image of the college

It is

in order to give students from all faculties the opportunity
hoped that "Project Lakehead College" did some positive good in presenting a good

to the people of Northwestern Ontario.

Anderson, would like to thank

programme

will be

back on the

The Lakehead College
-

all those

who helped him

The programme

in its production. It

"Socratics" (philosophy club)
for the

is

a student- directed

at least,

and,

I

think, professor -inspired

The meetings,

usually held on

about two hours, took the form of a lecture followed by a period of discussion

-

in spirit,

akin to the Socratic method of philosophizing by an active interchange of ideas.

Space does not permit more than a
in the

-

purpose of stimulating further thought on areas of

philosophy already encountered and of gaining some insight into new topics.
for

hoped that a college radio

air next year.

group which meets several times during the year

Tuesday evenings

director of the series, Len
is

listing of the topics discussed at the

meetings, most of which were held

second term. In chronological order, the speakers and topics were: Dr. Carlo Fonda, a lecture on

"The Place of Man in Nature" Dr. Tom Miller, "Toynbee: a Prophet Vindicated?" Mr.
"A Philosophy of Education" Father W. J. Fenlon, " The Theory of Natural Law" Dr. F. M.
Doan, "Art and Creativity"; Mr. D.J. McKenzie, "Scientific Knowledge and its Bounds" and Mr. Eric Green,
Cherdin's theory of

;

Peter Hennessay,

;

;

;

;

"Conjectures in Mathematics.

Those who attempted
the professors

-

and others

to capitalize on the
-

who were

advantages offered

so willing to

in this setting

owe

a sincere vote of thanks to

add to already burdening schedules the amount of research,

meditation and writing required to produce the scholarly presentations delivered at the meetings.

�Wodl

Swice

Uficowttif

i

BACK ROW: G. O. Rothney, Susan Valley, M. Gnarowski, G. Merrill.
FRONT ROW: Bob Bond, Marlene Grand Maitre, Lorraine Garton, Bob Vigars.

In early

October a meeting was held

for the

Service of Canada. World University Service

is

purpose of organizing the

Lakehead College Branch of World University

first

active in seventeen countries throughout the world and

its

aims are to aid

universities and their students in the underdeveloped countries of the world, as well as promoting scholarships in our

own

nation.

Mr. Gnarowski and Susan Valley were chosen as delegates to the Annual Meeting of the National Assembly held in

Quebec City on the thanksgiving weekend.
The first project of the Committee was Treasure Van, which was held on the Campus, October
Under the direction of Susan Valley, students from all faculties co-operated to make this effort a
In November, Mr. Douglas Mayer, visited our campus and was entertained by the Executive

21st, 22nd,

and 23rd.

success.
at a

luncheon after which

an interesting discussion was held on various aspects of the work of World University Service.
Early in

December

Seminar. She spent

six

the Selection Board

met and chose

a candidate,

Marlene Grand Maitre, to attend the Algerian

weeks in Algeria and then travelled independently

in

before she returned home. Next year the seminar will be held in Chile and

North Africa, Spain and France for three weeks

it is

hoped that Lakehead College will once

again have an opportunity to send a delegate.
In order to raise

its

share of the funds for the Algerian Seminar, the Local

Committee held

a "Slave Day" in connection

with the College Winter Carnival.

During the months of February and March, the Committee sponsored a Shakespearean Film Festival, open to the public.
It is

hoped that next year will be as successful and that more students will become acquainted with the goals of W. U.

S.

C.

�ViMim

(Jm

���"When power

When power

man

leads

poetry reminds

him

toward arrogance,

of his limitations.

narrows the areas of man's concern

poetry reminds

him

of the richness and

When power

diversity of his existence.
corrupts, poetry cleanses.

"

-

John

F.

Speech

Kennedy.
at

Amherst, 1963

October does not draw to a normal conclusion

month,

like any other self-respecting
but,
in a

black magic night

of wandering witches and erring ghosts,

she burns herself

down

into the ashes of november.

and then november dawns
circumspectly,

on the day of

all saints;

dawns over a lake
with only a

silver -cold,

memory

of revels

and the moon butter -gold,
caught in the bare arms of willows

and spilling over onto
the stiffening of frost -green grass and gardens.

and now even the memory
by stringent

shafts of

is

avenged

november -sunlight,

neutralizing

the bright octoberfest;

the fire

and

Marilyn Spidell
Arts

II

�oft

tie

CJbe

om

mm

ffum

mm, nd

ike

twelve,

iefou ike liimi/ etfwfuated

aim)

A framed

five -piece gray monotone,
bound by cemetary conifers
and arching lamplights.

no need of the vinegar sunlight
of a

november morning.

nobody,
not even

merrill-english

needs

I

it.

mean,

Shakespeare
sheds his

own

light

from one old globe
to another.

Marilyn Spidell
Arts

ike

ifwe

"Hey, there he
again"

is

II

p&amp;j

it.

�;

Mom/
A

GwMm

coin

Clinks,
Spins dizzily for a

moment;

Circumvents a cement square,
Tilts,

Then

A

dies.

small young hand,

Reaches down;
Soft, white

and insecure

Reaches

And

is

crushed,

Crushed by a heavy black boot

Smooth,

The

sun glistening on the well kept leather,

So smooth.

Then, a calloused hand

A hand
A hand

that has cradled an infant,

that has heaved muck and mud
And more muck,
With nails crammed full with dirt,
And black with the ground in grime of toil

Reaches,

Then, a powerful hand

A

taking hand,

Grab and take
Take and grab,
Clean, kept, skilled;
Reaches,
Grasps,

�%. 4
do you know him?

someone would

say,

you answer
quickly
unthinkingly
yes

how you can know me
when I know not
myself
myself

—

not the several

spirits

false ghosts

who

represent

me

me

consider

as literature

one book
so

many have

my

read

story

from the cover

do you care not enough
to turn
at least

one page.

Tom
Arts

Hm

3
I

could write a

My

thought

and

my

pen

is

is

Kelly
I

poem

set

poised

and the words are piled deep,
prepared to flood a paper with that potential

charge they can possess, when the

tail gate's

raised and they flow forth in their articulate

abundance,
in a purge.

Yet there is something

I

am

without

the opening bars which set the key
the "Our Father" to

commence

the prayer

the heavy sludges to smash the high guage steel
doors of man's logic behind which lies
in reverent sanctity

the Truth and the God.

�The following was

written as an examination without the aid of any texts or notes by a second

year Arts student, Garth

LE

McLeod.

THEATRE DE GIRAUDOUX ET LA CONDITION HUMAINE

et pour cette raison beaucoup de gens le
comprendre. Apres la premiere lecture d'une piece de Giraudoux, quelqu'un qui ne
le connait pas dirait que ses pieces sont trop symboliques, mais quand on comprend 1 'esprit de
Giraudoux et les motifs qui l'ont pousse a ecrire, elles ne paraissent pas telles.

Le theatre de Giraudoux appartient au theatre moderne,

trouve

difficile a

Son

theatre appartient au "theatre d'ecrivain." Ses pieces ne sont pas

Moliere. Elles n'ont pas le but de faire rire
spectateur voit

une piece de "theatre

theatre,"

1 il

qui ont pousse I'ecrivain a construire sa piece.
lui,

il

tout

comme

celles

de

Il

"L'Avare" ou "Les Femmes Savantes." Quand un
ne doit pas penser ou mediter sur les raisons cachees

ne va au theatre que pour s'amuser,

et rentre

chez

songe plus.

n'y

Mais

du

comme

"theatre d'ecrivain" est tout a

le

fait

different.

Le but du "theatre d'ecrivain"

n'est pas

de

faire

bizarres,

si

extraordinaires que

teur est force a mediter, a penser sur la vraie signification de la piece.

Il

ne peut pas rentrer chez

rire. Il a le

lui et

but de

des aspects qui sont

faire penser! Il y a

Poublier entierement.

;

si

le

specta-

*^gjHjP

peu d 'action. Les personnages restent dans le meme endroit
ne font que discuter un sujet que l'auteur met dans leurs bouches.
Par leurs bouches, l'auteur nous revele sa pensee et sa philosophic On comprend mieux les pieces
d'un ecrivain tel que Giraudoux quand il les lit que lorsqu'il les voit representees au theatre.

Dans

le

"theatre d'ecrivain"

pendant presque toute

Quand Giraudoux
ouverte vers

homme

la

la

scene.

avait

y a tres

lis

commence

nature, les plantes, les

n'est pas ouvert au

pensait-il,

il

monde,

a ecrire,

animaux

disait-il,

il

il

et

pensait

meme

n'est pas

n'aura pas de preoccupations terrestres,

il

que l'homme

devait garder

une

attitude

vers l'univers entier qui l'entoure.

heureux.

Un homme

n'aura pas de soucis,

et

il

qui

est

Quand un

sensible au

sera heureux.

monde,

Giraudoux,

il etait au college se pensait comme un de ces hommes, qui, a cause de sa sensibilite, etait
heureux et il meprisait les autres parce qu'il ne gardaient pas une attitude ouverte vers le monde. II
pensait que ces hommes voulaient etre ce qu'ils ne sont pas. II pensait que l'homme ni peut ni jamais
pourra depasser les bornes de la condition humaine.

quand

rendu compte du fait qu'il y avait quelque chose qui empechait
monde. Auparavant, il avait dedaigne les hommes a cause de leur
refus de s'accorder avec l'univers. Maintenant il commencait a comprendre que cet accord etait impossible, a cause des limitations dont souffre l'homme meme et qui lui ont ete imposees par une force
Mais plus tard dans

sa vie,

l'homme de s'harmoniser

surhumaine. Et quel
tin qui,

par

nom

les limites

qui l'entoure, avec

il

avec

s'est

le

attribue-t-il a cette force

memes

surhumaine?

les etoiles, les

Il

l'appelle le destin.

imposees sur l'homme, Pempeche
plantes, et les animaux.

qu'il a

a

Car

c'est le des-

s'harmoniser avec l'univers

l'homme d'atteindre son arche-type, par les
Dans "La Guerre de Troie," le destin joue un role
tres important. Giraudoux nous dit qu'a cause du destin et des limitations qu'il impose, la guerre
etait ineluctable. Il nous apprend que la guerre est inscrite dans les conditions sociales et economiques
de l'univers, qu'elle est "suspendue dans l'air." Il dit aussi que la guerre possede cette qualite d'ineluctabilite seulement parce que l'homme est impuissant a l'eviter. Il y aura toujours des hommes qui
veulent la guerre. Dans "La Guerre de Troie," nous voyons les bellicistes qui essayent de faire eclater
la guerre. lis avancent des raisons par lesquelles la Guerre de Troie aura lieu, et quand on en disputent
Maintenant

il

etait

convaincu que

le

destin empechait

limitations qu'il imposait sur les etres humaines.

le

theatre

comique de Moliere ou de Rostand, par exemple.

�la validite, ils

avancent d'autres.

lis

sont determines a ce que

la

guerre

eclate, et ils refuteront toute

raison pour qu'elle eclate. Le heros, qui represente l'humanite en general, tache de refuter les raisons

pour

la

guerre, mais

il

lutte

en vain, quoi que

des pretextes. La vrai raison pour

la

les

guerre, c'est

raisons que donnent les bellicistes ne soient que
le

destin

et

aucun

homme

ne peut

le

disputer.

Le ton des pensees de Giraudoux au sujet de la condition humaine est un peu sombre, mais il
Comme Giraudoux lui-meme, son heros connait le destin. Dans la piece, "La

n'est pas pessimiste.

Guerre de Troie," Hector, le heros sait d'avance que la guerre eclatera. II se rend compte que les
imposees par le destin empechent 1'homme d'eviter la guerre, mais il lutte contre
la guerre tout de meme. Il tache de faire ce qu'il sait d'avance destine a la faillite, mais c'est la dans
l'inanite de cet effort desespere que reside la dignite de 1'homme. Chez Giraudoux, la condition
humaine n'est pas pessimiste. La mythe de Sisyphe, l'histoire d'un homme condamne a une inutile
tache eternelle subit une interpretation differente dans l'oeuvre de Giraudoux. Chez Giraudoux, il n'y
qu'admiration pour cet homme qui essaie d'accomplir une tache qu'il sait etre impossible.
limitations

a

D'abord, Giraudoux, avec I'univers, meprise 1'homme parce qu'il ne s'harmonisait pas avec l'unmais dans son theatre, il dirige son mepris vers les dieux. L'homme est impuissant de depasser
ses limitations et Giraudoux dit que les dieux sont impuissants aussi d 'aider l'homme a depasser sa
ivers,

condition. Les dieux, dit Giraudoux, sont totallement indifferents aux besoins de rhumanite

pourquoi

il

les

Le destin dans "La Guerre de Troie,"
par un "je ne
II

est caracteries aussi

quoi" indefinissable qui vit
pas aux besoins de l'homme.

sais

ne s'interesse

et c'est

meprise.

Le hero chez Giraudoux meprise

un peu

l'humanite a cause de son refus mais au

a l'ecart.

l'humanite.

meme temps

le

par l'indifference. Le destin y est represente

II

maintient une attitude distante de l'homme.

Il

se sent

hero sent

un peu superieur du
le

reste

de

besoin aussi de soladariser, de

fraterniser avec le reste de l'humanite.

Giraudoux, quoiqu'il pense que l'humanite est impuissante a changer le destin, il croit qu'elle a
une pesee dans l'ordre de I'univers. L'humanite est necessaire, pense-t-il, pour maintenir la balance de
I'univers.

Giraudoux exprime dans son oeuvre
lutte,

qui se

sacrifie,

qui essaie de

Appreciation: Exposition nette,

de

la

respect et

1

'admiration qu'il nourrit pour cet

claire.

Idees precises

et

homme

qui

impossible.

suffisamment developpees. Quelques citations

piece auraient ete tres appreciees. Connaissance tres

doucienne.

Mark: 78

le

faire ce qu'il sait d'avance etre

bonne de

la

pensee girau-

���StmmU

rfwetic Society

ATHLETIC SOCIETY REPRESENTATIVES, BACK ROW: Bob Vigars, Ron Haworth, John Morris, Howard
FRONT ROW: Dave Balla, Bob Climie, Don Toelly, Bob Engisch, Jim Koski, Nick Doneff.

Walker.

�It

and

me to serve
my work and

has been a great honour and pleasure for

College during the past year.
all.

However,

sincerely hope

I

as President of the Students' Athletic Society for

feel that the S. A. S. and the school could

I

Lakehead

the work of the entire council has been satisfactory to one

have had a better year, sportswise,

if

the students had

taken some interest in school activities. During the entire year there were never more than two or three spectators at
college basketball games, which was disappointing.

The college

spirit

couldn't have cared

which

less.

I

prevalent in every college seemed to be carried by only a few students, while the others

is

say

this,

that if our college

is

to pick

up and be recognized as a university,

its

students

should pick themselves up so that they can be recognized as students of Lakehead College, and not just lumps of clay.
University

is

only what

we make

it,

and the attitude of most students

at

Lakehead College

is pitiful.

spirit was
programme. If

School

definitely lacking, as shown by the fact that quite a few students completely ignored our sports activity

the students cannot support school functions, including athletic events, then they cannot be called students.

School participation and student support can mean the difference between winning and losing championship games.
As long as student interest remains stagnant, the school's progress will remain stagnant. So, come on students! Show
some pride in your school, your university; support everything, and if you can, participate. It is the only way to progress
towards better things.

BACK ROW: Bob
fourth,

Vigars, second,

Bob Brown,

Graham Longmire,

third.

FRONT ROW: Layne Montgomery,

first.

�BACK ROW:

Terry Gill, Bill Shannon, Coach; Don Richardson, Jim Hayes, Ron Calvert, Wayne Broughton, Ron
Hodowansky, Colin Sutherland, Bob Engisch, manager.
FRONT ROW: Peter Phillips, Dennis Larmand, Dwight Danielson, Edwin Yarzab, Camille Turcotte, Nick Doneff.

�DAVE PARSONS

The 1963-64 edition of the Mustangs boasted
captured the Lakehead Junior Basketball

title,

scoring potential was never fully realized because of lack of practice and

Colin Sutherland, Dave Parsons, and Bob Elvin were

all

His habit of cherry -picking enabled

The

him

weak

high scoring guards

outside shooters. All had the experience necessary for good back-court
scorer.

The team easily
The team's tremendous

a wealth of experience and all round ability.

suffering only one defeat in eight games.

opposition.

who excelled

as

playmakers and

men. Sutherland was the league's high

to lead the league in layups.

forwards, Bob Elvin, Jose Kushnier, Bruce Evans, Ferg Penner and

Dune Cameron

all

had height and

experience. Elvin was one of the high scorers on the team and excelled at rebounding. Ron Eger played centre for
the Mustangs and was by far the best in the league.

He had

a deadly

jump

shot and

was immovable under the

boards.

It

took the team a few weeks to get used to playing together but as the playoffs approached, they had moulded

into a unit and experienced little difficulty in the finals. This

basketball at Lakehead College. Four of the

first

team was undoubtedly the most talented ever to play
Bob Elvin, Bob Vigars, Colin Sutherland and Ron

string players,

Eger were league all -stars. Congratulations on a job well done, fellas!

�BOWLING CHAMPS:

Forestry

Ken Crompton, Lloyd

-

Bill Beers,

Bob Engisch,

Miller.

BACK ROW: Jack Tarnowski, Ferg
FRONT ROW: Edwin Yarzab, Nick

GUEST SPEAKER:

CURLING CHAMPS:

Henry Akervall.

Basford, Peter Hindle, Skip;

Larry Black, Evelyn

Penner, Bob Engisch, Terry Gill, Bob Vigars, Bob Climie.
Doneff, Colin Sutherland, Dave Parsons.

Doug Brown.

���Stww Sculftm

THE WINNER!

Eeek! What

is it!

BONHOMME DU CARNAVAL

Yippee!

It's

finished!

�Outdm

S&amp;ettU

�����DONALD

A. MARTIN BURSARY
SANDERS SCHOLARSHIP
LADY GREY CHAPTER, I. O.D.E. SCHOLARSHIP
HYDRO ELECTRIC POWER COMMISSION OF ONTARIO BURSARY
C.J.

PRINCIPAL'S

GOLD MEDALS

John D. Reynolds
Sharon

Moon

Geraldine white

Donald Storey
Arnold Alanen

Ben Giedraitis

PATERSON BURSARY
CITY OF PORT ARTHUR SCHOLARSHIP
MARATHON CORPORATION OF CANADA SCHOLARSHIP
INCO SCHOLARSHIP
LAKEHEAD COLLEGE ALUMNI SCHOLARSHL
DR. CRAWFORD MC CULLOUGH SCHOLARSHIP
MARION E. TOMLINSON BURSARY
GREAT LAKES PAPER COMPANY BURSARY
THE PATERSON BURSARIES
M-

Mm

CITY OF FORT WILLIAM SCHOLARSHIP
LAKE SUPERIOR CHAPTER, I. O. D. E. BURSARY
BOARD OF GOVERNORS ENTRANCE SCHOLARSHIP
PORT ARTHUR AND FORT WILLIAM LIONS CLUB ENTRANCE BURSARY
ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION, FORT WILLIAM BRANCH NO. 6 ENTRANCE BURSARY
ABITIBI POWER AND PAPER CO. LTD. BURSARY
BETA SIGMA PHI XI UPSILON CHAPTER SCHOLARSHIP
PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERS' WIVES ASSOCIATION BURSARY
NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO TIMBER OPERATORS' ASSOCIATION TROPHY
PORT ARTHUR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BURSARY
PETER MC KELLAR SPENCE MEMORIALS SCHOLARSHIP
EVA CLENDINNEN MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
PORT ARTHUR LODGE NO. 244, I. O. O. F. SCHOLARSHIP
ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION, PORT ARTHUR BRANCH, BURSARY
CANADIAN INSTITUTE OF FORESTRY BURSARY
PRINCESS BEATRICE CHAPTER, I. O. D. E. BURSARY
NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO LIFE UNDERWRITERS* ASSOCIATION BURSARY
LAKEHEAD BUILDERS EXCHANGE SCHOLARSHIP
THUNDER BAY DENTAL ASSOCIATION BURSARY
NATIONAL COUNCIL OF JEWISH WOMEN SCHOLARSHIP
JESSIE MACKEY MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP

FACULTY

PRIZES

Edward Stanyk
Gerald Mercier
A.J. Robinson

Maurice Salvador
John Childs

Rosanne Candido

Diane Wragg
Jack Smyth

Marlene Grand Maitre
oan Kleinendorst
Ronald Calvert

Sharon

Moon

Carol Bell

Rosanne Candido

Moon
Wayne Broughton
Sharon

Donald Richardson
Jovyne Vettorazzo
Brian Raittinen
R. E.

Perry

Penny Grace
Patricia

Sharon

Connor

Moon

William Rothney
R.E. Perry

Arnold Alanen

Norman Brown
Ken Mucha
Donald McLean
Donald Lysak
Carol Knox
Carol Knox
Arnold Alanen, Forest

Technology

II

Ben Giedraitis, Engineering

Technology

ROBERT POULIN MEMORIAL TROPHY

Antero Elo

II

��UfUVWitif

GmtM

Jelmwi 1164

Performance by Lois Marshall
Faculty Lounge

Display of paintings in Senior Lounge

��Nor* Wester '64

40301

INTER-COLLEGIATE PRESS, LTD.

— Manufacturers
Yearbooks — Yearbook Covers
Diplomas — Graduation Announcements
Publishers

Inkster

Boulevard at Bunting Street

Winnipeg, Manitoba

OF

��Seek her side
to win her blessings;
Throng her gates
to hear her name;
Leave her gates
to sing her praise;

Go afar
to

spread her fame.

��</text>
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                    <text>�DT36

PRESENTED
TO

THE LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY
LIBRARY
BY

DR. H.

S.

BRAUN

����Digitized by the Internet Archive
in

2014

https://archive.org/details/lu1960

���METAMORPHOSES

Yearbook

of the

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE
and Technology

Arts, Science

EDITOR

W.

VOLUME:

11

T.

MELNYK

SESSION 1959-60

PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO

Published by the Students of the Lal(ehead College 1959-60

�eek her side
to win her blessings;

Throng her gates
to hear her

name;

Leave her gates
to sing her praise;

Go

afar
to spread her fame.

4

���:

Acknowledgement
The task of producing a year book is difficult but tolerable. That it is difficult is evidenced by
the quality and quantity of the finished products, and by the fact that the book takes well over one
thousand hours to complete and costs two thousand dollars (twelve dollars per book) to print. Yet, the
task was made tolerable by a persevering staff, a staff who were always ready to do more than was
expected of them.

The problem of raising $1,500 through advertising was given to Don LeCocq, our business manager.
He completed the work with efficiency and ease and instead of quitting when his job was done,
he helped to gather literary material and edit the boook.

I

can never say enough to cover justly the work done by Janet Thorn, Florence McCabe, and Jany

and brought in a large percentage of our advertising.
stop, and without a whimper of complaint.
have often seen them type for five hours without
It is
to them, also, and to "Doc" Miller and Miss Matthews, our staff advisors, that we owe congratulations

Stilwell.

These

girls

typed over four hundred

letters,

a

I

for an excellent literary section.

Ed MacKinnon
a

is

person without

a

whom

this

book would have been
this was Ed's job.

person to do an assignment quickly and thoroughly

—

a failure.

We

We

often needed

can thank him, too, for

his idea of "Letters to the Editor."

Bob Michels, Bruce Mace, Frank Murphy, Wendy Irving and
They helped us meet our $1500 advertising objective.

Sin Soo Kung, aided
in

the book this year.

Thanks also
advice, even

make

this

if

book

Liz

Evans were our "clutch fighters."

by Reg Rea and Bob Watson, was responsible for the plentiful photography
of the individual snaps were taken by Lakehead Photo.

Many

to Mr.

Dan Scott of the Times Journal Printing Department, who gave us technical
In fact, thanks to everyone who helped to
him at eleven o'clock at night.

we phoned
a success.

7

�TABLE OF

8

.

.

.

�CONTENTS
Editorial

Principal's

--------Message

-

-13

-

-----15

Student President
Faculty Pictures

-- -- -- -- --- -- -- -- --

-

Student's Council

-

Convocation '59

10

-

16

-

20
23

-

24

Year Book Staff

-

B.A.S. President

------------

-

Sports Reporter

-

-

Debating Team

-

Camera Club
Library

Arts Faculty

-

-- -- -- -- -- -35
-- -- -- -- -- --36
-

-

-

-------------

Applied Science
-II

Engineering Technology

-

Forestry Technology

-

II

Forestry Technology

-

I

Medical Technology

-

Ryerson Technology
Student Nurses

-- -- -- --

-

-

62

---66
--70

I- -- --

-

Candids

Student Directory

-

72

74
75

-

-

40

--58

-

Letters to the Editor

Literary Section

I

38

50

-

Engineering Technology

Social

29
30

Sports Candids

New

26

-- -- -- -- --76

------

-

78

-- -- -- -- -- -88
-- -- -- -- -- -119

�EDITORIAL
year that we have a great
cannot find themselves.
However, this situation is counterbalanced quite
adequately by the staff who have realized this
problem early in the year and have gone out
of their way to reach out to the lost ones. They
have delivered dynamic speeches
"Goof-off"
lectures, "Changez la vie" lectures, which have,
at least, led some of us to take account of ourselves.
Most of us are being brought to realize
that it is our moral obligation to do our best, and
in this realization, we have had to repent our
past.
But, do we all know what repentance is?
It

number

appears

this

of students

who

—

It is often the easiest way to see a thing
can clear from our minds the misapprehensions which accompany it.

if

we

First of all, though repentance may conremorse, repentance is not remorse. Remorse,
as such, has no power in it to set us on the
right road.
It is a mental torture often containing elements of self-loathing, but leading rather
to utter despair than a new way of looking at
life.
People in remorse tend to excess, or even to suicide.
They do not feel it to be essentially a
healthy state of mind.
In repentance, however searching it is, however upsetting, and however distressing, the soul feels good when we have repented.

tain

not fear of consequences.
Often our spirit is stabbed by thoughts of what might
out.
The mind during some sleepless night, makes terrifying phantasies of the
results of exposure of what we should feel if our friends knew what we were really like.
Such fears
may make a temporary difference to our way of living, but they have no power to change the direction
of our lives.
Thus, with this fear alone as our motive for repentance, we are soon back in our old way,
perhaps however, taking greater pains to prevent exposure.

Repentance

happen

if

is

we were found

Repentance is not the mere sense of wrong. Our conscience is well able to tell us, "This is right,"
"That is wrong," but it too, has little power to change the current of our lives. As Butler said: "Had the
conscience the power as it has the authority, it would absolutely govern the world."

Repentance

is

feeling plays a part

not to be measured by feeling.
true repentance, but you can

in

common

is

a

a

true repentance without

you can have deep emotion, without ever having repentance.
emotionally to

way

of

this

influence or that.

We

Quite often, deep
deep emotion, and
Again and again we have responded
did not repent.
We did not change our
misconception.

This

have

were moved, but we

life.

our way of life, a complete "METAMORIt is bringing our
steering under a new star.
whole life into subjection. It is not only giving up this vice or that, it is a new, positive change of direction, affecting the whole of our lives, the use of our time, our money, our leisure, our talents, the manner
in which we do trivial things, and the way we react to our neighbours.
The happy soul has found a new
star to steer by, which will bring it to where it has longed most to be in its best moments.
This is

Here
PHOSIS."
It

we have
is

the answer, repentance
changing our way of looking

is

a

change

at life.

It

of

is

repentance.

W.

T.

Editor.

10

Melnyk,

���May

extend heartiest congratulations and sincere good wishes to the Class of 1960. The fact that
new decade gives extra reason for both reflection and anticipation.
Miss Barbara Ward, writing for the New York Times magazine, said recently: "The breakthrough accomplished in the Fifties in weapons, in space research, in every type of scientific advance;
the political breakthrough of a score of new nations; the emotional breakthrough of a third of humanity
hungering for new economic growth
expand explosively to make the Sixties a
all these forces will
period of challenge and change unequalled in human history."

you

I

will participate in the ushering in of a

—

If

we

are to

meet the changes and challenges of the

handful of leaders will

complex

not suffice.

In

a

democracy,

we must have leadership. A mere
thousands of them at all levels in our

Sixties,

we need

society.

Our society has made available to you the whole web
will be
mitted through the ages by human scholarship.
It
You should be able to think for yourself, to analyze facts, to
objectives may well be realized by those who have not had
by those of unusual character and ambition.

of learning and wisdom saved and transyour responsibility to make the most of it.
guide opinion in the right direction. These
the advantages of higher education but only

In the short time you have spent at Lakehead College,
very real sense of citizenship and responsibility toward society.
years ahead.

a

Good

many of you have already demonstrated
May this continue and expand in the

Luck.
H. S. Braun,
Principal.

13

�BOARD OF GOVERNORS

FRONT

ROW

(left to right):

F.

A. Blatchford,

L.

Goodall (chairman), A. V. Chapman.

E.

G. Pallister, D. Hassard, A.

G. Tamblyn,

J.

M.

Stitt, J.

L.

K.

Shaffer, H.

BACK ROW:

Switzer,

A. Crooks.

B.

E.

M.

B.

S.

Braun, D.

W. Stevens, W.

Jellett, J.

I.

L.

Nattress,
C. Greer,

Paterson, K. A. Miners,

R. J.
F.

S.

L.

Flatt,

E.

Stevens,

Young, W.

�1

S.A.C. Message

I

On entering the Lakehead
new project in life, and,

started a

new

College, we
as with any

groundwork, the foundation on
has a major influence on the
finished product.
This has a two-fold meaning:
project, the

which

it

is

built

First, the foundation we as graduates build for
the College, and secondly, and more important
to the individual, the foundation the College
can provide for us, as citizens and men of learning.
Let us look at the construction more closely.

Due

our

small size and
are limited in
inter-collegiate competitions, and social functions.
Nevertheless, although these factors are definite
liabilities, they contribute to a closely-knit and
well-informed student body inside the college
itself.
Staff, students and faculty are melted
to

relatively

isolated geographic location,

we

together to form one complete whole.

We

by the

staff

is

readily

made

available to the student

who

students in first year university, will
find that the firm foundation required to make
a success in later life is quite adequately attained
in a school of this size, where individual attention
requests it. The wise take full advantage of this

situation.

Here, at the Lakehead College, the staff does not remain on some aloof pinnacle.
Teachers parin most student activities, including chess, and bridge tournaments, soccer games, curling matches,
stags, banquets and dances.
Those who have attended larger schools cannot but agree that such a
situation is rarely found, and when it does exist, it is an advantage both to the staff and to the students.
ticipate

The intermingling of faculties is beneficial to all concerned.
Rather than forming cliques conone faculty, discussing topics of interest only to them, the students mix, and learn to discuss
subjects pertaining to other faculties
Forestry, Applied Science, Arts, Engineering, Technology, Medical
Technology.
The student here is in an environment more like the one he might find in the outer world.
In these surroundings, a technical student is often persuaded to pursue a university degree, rather than
sisting of

—

quitting school with a limited technical capacity.
in years to come, when we return to the Lakehead to live and practice our pronot forget the College, but return to its folds in the capacity of teacher, alumni advisor,
or member of the Board of Governors.
We are the people who are founding this institution, forcing it
to grow and expand.
Be prepared to use your criticisms constructively as you lay the groundwork for
this hall of learning.
Be prepared to promote the College verbally, physically and academically, so that in
later years you can be proud to say "I went there."
I

fessions,

hope

we

that

will

This year will be one of the most memorable years of my life because
was given the opportunity
serve you as President of the Students' Administrative Council.
have acquired
From this position,
a wealth of knowledge and experience which will help me in future years.
To try to thank all who have
aided me in past functions would be unfair, because of the ommissions would make. Each student, am
sure, can think of an incident in which they partook to help make this year a success.
I

to

I

I

Thanks

to

principal, without

years of

my

my

eager and willing executive, our
would have had a tough

whom

I

staff
job.

I

advisor, Mr. McKenzie, and Mr. Braun, our
Thanks again, for one of the most memorable

life.

Jay

Sinclair.

15

�THE FACULTY
A.

H.

B.Sc.

-

HIGGS
Wales
Wales

M.Sc. A.F.R.Ae.S.
A.F.Inst.

M.

Inst.

'37
'44

Pet.
F.

J.

H.

S.

B.A.

-

B.Sc.

(F)

DR.

C.

MR. LINDSAY
-

U.N.B.

McMaster

Dr.

B.A.

-

BRAUN

Lie.

M.S.

W. HAGGERTY

Queen's '49
Wisconsin '51

FONDA

Classics
Col.

Sc.

-

Trieste

-

Naples

�17

�SESSIONAL LECTURERS
G. KOUHI, B.A. (AAcGill)

18

A.

LEHTOVARA, B.Comm.

C.

WHITAKER,

D.

MORGAN,

(Queen's)

B.A. (Man.) B.Paed.
B.A.

��THE STUDENTS

�COUNCIL

�22

�—

Convocation '59
May

The eleventh annual convocation of the Lakehead College was held on
William Collegiate Institute.

7th, 1959, at the Fort

"O Canada," the Reverend S. R. AAcLeod, D.D., delivered the invocation. The welcome
and guests was given by the Principal, Mr. H. S. Braun, after which the diplomas and cerDr. W. L. C. Greer, and Mr. D. C. Clark conferred diplomas in the Technical
tificates were presented.
Division, while Mr. M. W. Babe and Mr. E. L. Goodall presented certificates in the University Division.
Following

to graduates

Introduction of the guest speaker, Dean M. St. A. Woodside, Principal-Elect of University College
University of Toronto, was by R. J. Flatt, Chairman of the Advisory Committee.

After the presentation of scholarships, trophies

and awards, the convocation closed with "God

Save The Queen."

Scholarships and Bursaries
JESSIE MAC KEY MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
Presented to Joan Peden by Mr. E. M. Jellett

WOMEN

NATIONAL COUNCIL

OF JEWISH
David Andrews by Mrs.

Presented to

NEEBING RIVER BOAT CLUB SCHOLARSHIP
Presented to Gordon

PRIZE

Franklin

Presented to Stewart Smith

SCHOLARSHIP
Susan Greer by Mrs. J. W. Strom

LADY GREY CHAPTER,
Presented to

LIMITED

by Mr. A.

Barbini

I.O.D.E.

CANADIAN LEGION (PORT ARTHUR BRANCH) SCHOLARSHIP
Kenneth Boegh by Mr.

Presented to

by David Mason

SCHOLARSHIP

Pergamit

H.

S.

MARATHON CORPORATION OF CANADA

H.

MARATHON CORPORATION OF CANADA
Presented

to

LIMITED SCHOLARSHIP
Franklin by
S.

Gordon

David

Mason

Scarnati

CANADIAN

NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO TIMBER OPERATORS
ASSOCIATION BURSARY
Presented to Peter Matrosovs

by Mr.

A.

R.

Hallonquist

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION SCHOLARSHIP
Presented to William Mokomela by Mr. J. Commisse

LAKEHEAD BUILDERS' EXCHANGE SCHOLARSHIP

INSTITUTE OF FORESTRY AVENUES
Presented to Robert A. Zarn by Mr. Alan Boyle

PORT ARTHUR LODGE No. 224, INDEPENDENT ORDER OF
ODD FELLOWS SCHOLARSHIP
Presented to John

Smith

by Mr. M.

Handford

LAKEHEAD ELECTRICAL ASSOCIATION SCHOLARSHIP
Presented to Bernard

E.

Doughton by Mr.

Barber

R.

Presented to Armas O. West by Mr. Jack Raynard

WORLD UNIVERSITY
LAKE SUPERIOR CHAPTER
Presented to Robert

T.

I.O.D.E.

Workman by

BURSARY

Presented

to

SERVICE SCHOLARSHIP
Charles Mountford by Mr. J. Paterson

Mrs. R. A. Limon

PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERS' WIVES' ASSOCIATION BURSARIES
PRIZES TO PART-TIME STUDENTS
Economics— Robert Orr; French— Frances Barrett; Zoology
Myrol
History Lothar
Psychology— Ronald
Bamuk;
Bode;
Campbell:
Philosophy— Ross Elliott; English— Dolores
Long.
Presented by Mr. J. P. Bertrand

—

to

be

announced. Presented

by

Dr.

B.

W. Stevens.

DONALD CLARK CUP AND ATHLETIC AWARDS
Winner

to

be announced. Presented

by Mr.

EVA CLENDINNEN MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP

B.

Cook

-

UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB
Presented to Geraldine Maki by Mrs. C. Whitaker

PORT ARTHUR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE SCHOLARSHIP

ROBERT POULIN MEMORIAL TROPHY
Winner

Presented to Erskine Flook and Gary Koreen by Mrs. V.

D.

Presented to Diana Jarvis by Mr.

NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO

Hamilton

R.

RETAIL

DRUGGISTS'

ASSOCIATION SCHOLARSHIP

Clark

Presented to Wilbert Mikkola by Mr. Walter Love

HYDRO

ELECTRIC

POWER COMMISSION OF

OF ONTARIO SCHOLARSHIP
Presented to Donald

T.

Siira

by Mr.

D.

I.

WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION OF THE MINING INDUSTRY OF

CANADA SCHOLARSHIP

Nattress.

Presented to Anthony Filyk by Mrs. W.

CITY OF FORT WILLIAM SCHOLARSHIP
Presented to Constance Anne Stevens by Mayor Seppala
A3ITIBI POWER AND PAPER COMPANY LIMITED SCHOLARSHIP
Presented to David Andrews by Mr. F. L. Stevens

CITY OF PORT ARTHUR SCHOLARSHIP
Osmo M. Kaustinen by Mayor Wilson

Presented to

L.

C.

Greer

BETA SIGMA PHI XI UPSILON CHAPTER SCHOLARSHIP
Presented to James Erickson by Miss G. Chisamore

LIONS CLUB BURSARY
Presented to Geraldine Maki by Mr. A. Chisamore

THUNDER BAY DENTAL ASSOCIATION BURSARY
by Dr. Gordon Bowles
to Robert Workman

Presented

23

�THE YEAR

�BOOK STAFF

25

�B.A.S.

PRESIDENTS

MESSAGE
Perhaps the best way for me to begin
synopsis is to outline the formation of the
Athletic Society and its function.
As September drew to an end, a general
meeting of all students was called by Mr. Braun.
During this gathering, nominations were taken
for positions on both student societies.
A short
time later, each candidate was required to speak
briefly to the student body and so followed the
election.
The Athletic Society was composed of
a President, Vice-President, Secretary and Treasurer.
Each faculty then elected one representative to the society with the exception of Arts and
Engineering, who elected two representatives.
We then received a grant from the S.A.C.
which consisted of a portion of the twenty dollars each student contributed.
This money was
used for equipment and necessary rentals
throughout the year.
The main function of the Athletic Society
was to provide different types of sporting activities for the students.
Because of the limited
size of the College we lacked many facilities and we therefore had to restrict ourselves to certain sports.
The main activities consisted of curling, hockey and broomball. Some of the students formed a basketball
team and a couple of bowling teams to complete the program.
Hockey was played once a week at the FortWilliam Gardens with about thirty-five participants
making up two teams. A broomball league was again set up consisting of three teams with twelve
players each.
Curling seemed to be the most popular sport with approximately one-half of the student
body taking part in the weekly draws. This year the staff entered a rink and under the skilled broom
of Mr. McKenzie harmonized very well with the other rinks.
Since there are no other universities in the immediate vicinity of the College outside competition
was restricted to the high schools, and an all-star broomball team played several exhibition games with
this

the Fort William and Port Arthur Collegiates.
The annual hockey night was cancelled this year because we were unable to get ice time in the
Gardens at a convenient date. So, all the high schools were contacted and an elimination tournament was
One game was played a week until
set up in which all of last year's participants were allowed to enter.
the winner was decided.
It
is
my sincere hope that this situation will be remedied in the future, as
hockey night, in the past, was one of the highlights of the school year.
Socially, the Athletic Society held one dance which followed a broomball game with F.W.C.I. and

was highly

the entire evening

successful.

The annual supper dance was held at the Westfort Hotel marking the last event before the final
examinations.
At this time trophies were presented to the winning curling teams.
In closing,
would like to extend my appreciation to the members of the Athletic Society. First,
Jim made most
Jim
to
Harnett, the Vice-President, who worked very hard for the welfare of the Council.
of the purchases for the society, which included hockey and broomball equipment and sweatshirts. Thanks
Jim, for a job well done.
Then to Pat Moran, our Secretary, who took charge of curling and arranged the
Our Treasurer, Bud Rollins
the schedule.
ice time, besides drawing up the events and maintaining
handled the financial end of the organization very efficiently and also gave his best to make the year a
I

success.

have sincerely enjoyed every minute that
This year has been one of immense satisfaction to me.
have spent on the Council, and
hope that have served the students well. Once again "Thanks to all
those who helped to make the year successful sportswise."
hope that this year at Lakehead College
wish every student the best of luck in the future and
has been an enjoyable one.
I

I

I

I

I

I

Ross Faulkner.

26

�— FRONT ROW: Jim

B.

A.

S.

Harnett, vice-president, Ross Faulkner, president.
Robinson, Gary Jessiman, Ron Sisco, Bill Jerome. THIRD
Yosh Tatebe, Bud Rollins, treasurer, Jim AAartindale.

Left to right

SECOND ROW: Murray
ROW:

BROOMBALL
The College

team took part in three exhibition games during the past winter season
and this reporter is happy to say they were not defeated once, although they were once tied.
The All-Star team consisted of: A. Saxberg, G. Jessiman, D. Chrusz, J. AAartindale, F. Kushnier,
J. Harnett, J. Sinclair, R. Faulkner, J. Wochy, G. Fenton, A. Bartholemew, K. Pascoe, A. Ekroos, R. Klemacko, Manager.
The first game was played against a select group of the highly rated F. W.C.I. Blue-Bears. The
smooth working machine of College athletes, gave the out-classed Blue-Bears, a lesson in the finer
arts of the game of Broomball. The final score shoed the College Selects with 2, Blue-Bears 1. Tireless
Jay Sinclair scored the opening goal on a booming twenty-footer, which no one even saw, including
the goalie. This goal came after many a fruitless effort to score by the Stars. Blue-Bears however, were
not to be held scoreless and came back minutes later to tie things up on "Fisherman" Watsyk's goal
and set the stake for a hard driving third period.
With about ten minutes left in the game, the Stars got the break they had been waiting for.
Harnett intercepted a Blue-Bear pass at centre ice, with Faulkner on the left wing and only one Blue-,
Bear back. Harnett slipped a forward pass to Faulkner who moved in close but chose to return the
pass to Harnett across the goal mouth, who merely directed the ball into the open cage to give the
stars their margin of victory.
Offsides: Sinclair was without a doubt the pick of both teams and he never let up all through
the game. Honorable mention goes to Jessiman for his fine defensive play and Dan Chrusz, who was
a tower of strength both ways.
Game number two was against P. A. C.I. who boasted a good crop of rookie broomballers, but
when the chips were down the College Vets came through once again with a hard-fought two-one
All-Star

victory.

Wearing smiles of victory after placing third during a debate tournament at the University of
Minnesota, Duluth, two teams of debaters returned to their studies at the Lakehead College of Arts
Science and Technology. Left to right
Donald LeCocq and Robert McAlpine, who formed one team,
Dr. T. B. Miller, who accompanied the students and Patricia
Shannon and William Melnyk, second
LCAST team which brought home the third place honors.

—

27

��THE SPORTS REPORTER
HOCKEY
active part in our sporting schedule. About 30 boys took active
The players ranged from "hasbeens"
our national game every Tuesday afternoon.
(Marvin Saxburg) to up and coming professional prospects such as Tinker Mithrush, Leroy Hogue and Ken

Hockey once again played an

participation

in

Pascoe.

These Tuesday afternoon sessions brought out of retirement such greats of a few years back as
A. Ekroos, J. Morrison and S. Seely. The boys were split into two teams, the whites coached by R.
Faulkner and the blues coached by J. Harnett. The league champion was never decided as both teams
ended the season in a tie for first place, giving little pick between the two teams.
Mike Cowan won the scoring championship quite easily. He averaged 3 to 4 goals a game
and would have been a big help to any junior team had he played for them.
Our hockey team was probably the strongest in the history of the school, and would have won
the Perciante &amp; Laprade trophy this year if ice time at the Fort William Gardens could have been
arranged for the annuual competition.

CURLING

On Wednesday afternoon at 4:30, the Port Arthur Curling Club is the scene of the Lakehead
College's contribution to the "roaring game." The league was comprised of 13 rinks from the student body
ardently trying to solve the intricate strategy of the teacher's team skipped by that wizard of the ice lanes
"Hog

line"

McKenzie.

Each curler paid a fee of three dollars with the Athletic Council contributing another three dollars
per person.
Other expenses were incurred in the form of broom rentals and some of the boys were putting out the odd 30 cents here and there for "incidentals."
The female populous of the school decided not to be outdone and placed their talents in the
services of their lords and masters, the skips.
For novices they showed amazing ability at solving the
intricacies of the game.
The calibre of the play was amazingly good considering the amount of ice time
allotted and the games were fiercely contested by each and every team.
At the time of writing it appears
that Wayne Robinson's rink has the edge in play followed closely by Glen Eklund and Gus Candido, with
the rest of the teams trying to upset the "big guns."
On the whole, the season was a complete success. The feeling prevalent was that this game provided excellent recreation and it is hoped that in succeeding years the students will keep the Lakehead
College prominent in the curling fraternity.
P.

Moran.

SOCCER
With the purchase of

a

soccer ball early

in

the

fall

by the Athletic Council,

interest in the

game

of

seemed to be aroused at once. There was even talk of forming a league, but to no avail as "Mr.
Weatherman" would not co-operate. However, two games were arranged and played between the
Engineering Tec.
All-Stars and Arts All-Stars.
With "Two Gun Higgs" and his flute as referee, and Bren;
Park soccer field as the site, the two games were staged.
The odds were definitely in favor of the Applied Science and Arts All-Stars. Some "bookies" were
giving as high as ten to one, but the underdogs came through in the opening game by a wide margin.
The score at full time was Eng. Tech.
All-Stars 5, Applied Science All-Stars 0.
The victory itself came on sheer determination, desire, superb goaltending, and most of all, hustle
and unity. The outstanding star of this game was Dan Chrusz, who turned in a hat trick and an assist
to collect 4 of a possible five points.
Honourable mention must go to James (Boomer) Harnett, who
assisted on all three of Dan's goals while playing goal for Eng. Tech. II.
This was the one-two punch in
the game.
goal, loop a booming kick up to Chrusz, who
Harnett would make the stops in Eng. Tech.
would take the pass in full stride, break in on the Applied Science and Arts goal and score with ease.
Joe Wochy also must receive mention for his fine game.
In fact, all the Eng. Tech.
boys played fine
soccer

II

II

II

II

soccer.

The second game was played one week later, and with the betting odds now favouring the
"swelled heads" of the Eng. Tech. II All-Stars. Well the "Bookies" lost again as the Applied Science and
Arts All-Stars turned the trick and came home with a hard-fought but well-deserved two-one victory.
With the score dead-locked at one-one in half-time, the stage was set for the gruelling last-half battle.
With time running out, the Eng. Tech. II All-Stars were awarded a penalty shot from fifteen yards out,
but a neat stop by Tom Adams in the Applied Science and Arts goal kept the light of a possible win
alive.
Then with less than five minutes remaining in the game, Eng. Tech. II committed a foul and the
Applied Science and Arts Al 1 Stars were awarded a penalty shot. This was made good by Gus Candido,
as he beat Harnett in the Eng. Tech. II goal cold, thus giving the Applied Science All-Stars their margin
of victory in another tense, thrilling and sometimes even rough soccer game.
Mr. Higgs, the referee, then declared the Eng. Tech. II All-Stars the chamipons on the strength
of the two-game, total goal series, as they out-scored the Applied Science and Arts All-Stars six-two.
Jim Harnett.
... 29
1

�SPORTS CANDIDS

30

�.

.

.

31

�32

�33

�34

�Lakehead College Debaters Do Well
Competing against 21 debating teams from
universities in the United States, a team from the
Lakehead College Arts, Science and Technology placed third during the third annual debate tournament
at the University of Minnesota, Duluth branch.
The Lakehead College debaters made up of William Melnyk, Miss Pat Shannon, Don LeCocq and
Robert McAlpine, formed the two debating teams from the Lakehead College which participated in
the tournament.
Only five teams came through the three gruelling rounds of debate undefeated. Of these Wisconsin State won, for the third successive year, with a total of 36 team points. North Dakota was second
with 35 team points and the Lakehead College team of Melnyk and Shannon was third with 35 team
points, ahead of UMD which scored 30 points, St. Cloud with 29 and the rest of the field.
The Lakehead College teams were the only Canadian participants. Each team had to debate in
three rounds, taking both the affirmative and negative sides of the U.S. National debate topic: "Resolved that Congress should be given the power to reverse decisions of the Supreme Court."
The local college team debated on short notice on the national debate topic which all their
opponents had been studying and debating on for two months. The local team laso had to use U.S.
debating rules, practices and techniques, which differ in some respects from those with which Can1

1

adian debaters are familiar
Other teams debating on the topic included those from Wisconsin State College, Eeu Clare; Mankato State College, Minnesota; St. Cloud State College, Minnesota; Superior State College, Wisconsin;
Hibbing Junior College, Fargo; Gustavus Adolphus College, St. Peter; North Dakota Agricultural College,
Fargo; Northland College, Ashland; and St. John's University, Collegeville.

... 35

�THE CAMERA CLUB

BACK: Dave

After

Uusitalo,

Reg Rea, Bob Watson,

year saw the camera club emerge
years existence the camera club
only beneficial to its members but to

This

from

several

has
the

Bill

the

confines

finally

been

Brown. FRONT: Sin Soo Kung, Alex Bartholomew.

of

able

the

dark

to

fulfill

room and enter
its

original

a

purpose,

useful
to

position

function

in

as

a

school
unit

life.

which

entire student body. This we firmly bel.eve we have done and
hope that
foundation, will continue to do so.
Our first meeting of the year took the form of an informal get-together of all those interested in forming a camera
club. This meeting served to acquaint the members with one another, and to provide an opportunity for all to look over the
On Nov. 21,
dark room facilities and decide what add.tional equipment would be needed for the proper operation of the club.
1959, at our second meeting, the executive was elected and it was decided that we ask the student's council for a grant
of one hundred five dollars with which to buy chemicals and equipment.
The following is an excerpt from the brief presented to ths students' council by Sin Soo Kung, the club secretary-treasurer.
"Once upon a time there was a camera club in the Lake head Technical Institute. Somehow it had disappeared. Today the
Lakehead College has inherited a fortune of about two hundred dollars worth of photographic equipment."
During the past years the school camera club has tried to undertake the job of photography for the year book, but this
has never been successful because of lack of membership and necessary equipment.
members, the largest number since the history of the college. One hundred and five dollars will
This year we have seven
purchase the necessary equipment.
The council granted the camera club the money and on November 5, 1959, the camera club opened a current account
Dominion Bank.
at the Toronto
On November 9, 1959, Alex Bartholomew, the club president, and Sin Soo Kung, the secretary-treasurer, spoke to Mr. Braun
and informed him of the club's plans for the coming year. Mr. Braun proved to be of great assistance to us in that he was able
to acquire, through the Board of Governors, a 12" x 18" print dryer, an 18" print washer and a timer. This, of course, greatly
is

not

future

clubs,

for

whom we

reduced our expected
of

student

council

expend

have

laid

tures

and the excess could now be put

a

solid

to

a

use

which wou'd before have

fallen

into

the

category

affairs.

by the students council and the camera club that the club be made responsible for candid pictures
expenses thus incurred. At long last the club had begun to function as a useful unit in school activities.
An even greater acceptance of camera club responsibilities was accepted by Sin Soo, when, with the assistance of Reg Rea
and Bob Watson, he undertook the photographing of the various school organizations and the members of the faculty, for the yearbook. It must be pointed out here that Sin Soo is also the candid photographer for the yearbook.
As a result of the combined efforts of all the members of the camera club the Lakehead College now has a fully outfitted
darkroom containing over 30 pieces of modern photographic equipment. We are proud of our club and we are proud to be able
to say that we, the members of the 1959-1960 camera club of the Lakehead College, played some small part in paving the road
It

was decided

for

the yearbook

for

those

to

jointly

and for

all

follow.

ALEX BARTHOLOMEW.

36

����ARTS FACULTY

ARNOT, JAMES

C.

COUTANCHE, GUY

C.

DONOVAN, DONALD

A.

BURAK, WALTER W.

COSTANZO, ANTHONY

40

�GUNSON, JOHN

IRVING,

WENDY

R.

J.

HALL,

WAYNE

F.

41

�JOHNSTON,

JAMES

H. E.

MACKAY, ALISTAIR

KUSHNIER, FRANK

P.

LECOCQ, DONALD IAN

42

�MELNYK, WILLIAM

T.

MARTINDALE,
JAMES R.

MICHELS, ROBERT

MATICH, MICHAEL

L.

E.

�McALPINE, ROBERT

D.

RAHKOLA,
DENNIS L.

McCABE,

FLORENCE

M.

OMAE, TAKUO

44

...

�SHANNON,
PATRICIA

V.

�STILWELL,

H.

(J

ANY)

TR IN MARK.

KENNETH

ill
THOM, JANET

WATTS,
E.

W.

M.

ANTHONY

�47

���APPLIED SCIENCE FACULTY

CAN D DO,
GASTONE L.
I

50

�FENTON, GARY

B.

COULSON,

LAURENCE

L.

DAVIDSON,

COWAN, MICHAEL

J.

BRIAN

F.

GROOTENBOER,
A.

(EDDY)
51

�GUNSON,

REGINALD

E.

JONES,

GRANT

W.

HOGUE, W. LEROY

KASOWSKI, WALTER

Ml
INSHAW
JOHN A. C.

52

.

.

.

J.

�MITHRUSH,

MICHAEL

J.

MORRISON
ERNEST V.

MIKKONEN,
MAURI E.

MURRAY, DENNIS
.

.

.

53

�NISHIKAWA,

GEORGE

SPOONER, PAUL

PETERS, DONALD

A.

SMITH,

SCARNATI, JAMES

54

.

.

.

J.

J.

BARRY

S.

M.

�TRACZ, PETER

J.

TATEBE, YOSH

YEMCHUK,
EUGENE M.

TOMLINSON,
WILLIAM S.

JANIUK, PETRO

55

���ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

II

FACULTY

CHRUSZ, DANIEL

4i
JESSIMAN.

GARY

DANZIE, RAPHAEL M.

KLEMACKI,

RONALD

HARNETT, W. JAMES
58

P.

R.

�SCHRAML,
SIEGFREID,

LI

M BRICK, RONALD

R.

H.

SINCLAIR,
J.

SAXBERG, ALLAN

Mcl. (JAY)

L.

UUSITALO, DAVID

T.

�VENNES, JOHN

WEST, ARMAS

S.

O.

UNIVERSITY FORESTRY

FRANKLIN,

GORDON
60

S.

��ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

I

FACULTY

BICKMORE, JOHN W.

MURPHY, FRANK W.

KOIVU,

RAY

A.

PASCOE,

KENDALL

KUNG, SIN SOO
62

.

.

.

F.

A.

�SR1GUEY, ALFRED

SELF, CHARLES

K.

O.

STAPLES, RICHARD

D.

SITCH, KEITH R.

TURESKI, WILLIAM

S

��65

�FOREST TECHNOLOGY

II

FACULTY

MATROSOVS, PETER

BROWN,
WILLIAM JOHN

SUOMU. LEONARD

JEROME,
WILLIAM

C.

66

�:

FORESTRY
Our school year came into full swing in September, 1959 when we left Port Arthur to attend a government-sponsored scaling
course at Longlac, Ontario. Ten days later we returned, all having been successful in obtaining an Ontario Pulpwood Scaler's Licence.
Upon returning to the Lakehead we immediately set to work in the forestry lab, studying aerial photographs and laying
out cruise lines for a two-week timber cruise which we were going to conduct in the college forest. This excursion to The
college forest served a dual purpose: It gave us a clearer understanding of what is expected of a timber cruiser, and it supplied
the first year foresters, two of whom were with each of us, with the basic knowledge of cruising procedure. However, the most
important factor of all was that this cruise gave each of us a little, yet invaluable experience in leadership.
Our first visit to industry took the form of a tour of the Northern Plywood plant at Nipigon. In addition to seeing the
complete fabrication of poplar plywood we also spent some time watching the company's woods operation. This trip provided us
all
with a good deal more appreciation of the usefulness and value of this new product of our northern forests.
Wood structures, unlike those of metal, are always plagued by the ever-present processes of rot and decay. Our tour through
the Northern Wood Preservers plant in Port Arthur provided us with a wealth of information about creosoting, one of the many
wood preserving processes. This tour also presented us with the opportunity to observe the workings of a saw-mill and the production of finished lumber.
The pulp and paper industry is the largest industry in the Northwest and the third largest industry in the world. It is also
the industry in which we as Forestry students are most interested and some day hope to be employed. For these reasons, visits
to the mills and forestry departments of the various pulp and paper companies in the Lakehead have constituted the
greatest
part of our field trip time. Abitibi Pulp and Paper Company's Provincial Mill in Port Arthur came first on our agenda. Now, the
steps in paper making which we had learned in the classroom became no longer a matter of memorization but a matter of fact,
which would never be forgotten.
Next came a visit to the Great Lakes Paper Company. We were all amazed by the high degree of automation and the
absolute accuracy with which all operations were carried out in the mill. Another very important part of our field trip was spent
Great Lakes Paper Company Limited and the Marathon
in the forestry departments of the Abitibi Paper Company, Limited, The
Corporation Limited. We divided ourselves into three groups of two and every Friday each group visited one of the above
Each company explained
companies until all three companies had been visited by each group.
in
detail
the functions
and
operations of its forestry department thus providing each of us with basic understanding of the purpose and function of a forestry
department.
Guest speakers throughout the year have provided us with many an interesting and informative afternoon. Speakers
from the Dept. of Lands and Forests, Timberland Machines, The Lumberman's Safety Association and the three paper companies
previously mentioned have given us much of their valuable time so that we may be better equipped to meet the high demands of
industry.
It

A

little

has been
older,

a

a

little

deep within us there

A year of hard work and just rewards
for us all. A year of fond memories and close friends.
and with heavy hearts, we leave the Lakehead College. We have complained, for we are human, but
always be a feeling of love and respect for the Lakehead College of Arts, Science and Technology.

good year
wiser,
will

A.

BARTHOLOMEW.

FORESTRY TECHNOLOGY
ALEXANDER BARTHOLOMEW-Brantford,

II

WRITE UPS

Ontario

Bart, our representative to the Students' Council, and an active member of the Camera Club, has a connoisseur's eye for a
turned ankle, proving, of course, that he appreciates the finer things of life. "Numbers" is plagued with the incessant inability
to add, and perhaps this is why he has told us twelve times about Port Credit. Last summer Alex worked as a compassman on an
inventory cruise for the Ontario Paper Company, Limited, and his ambition is to become a graduate forester of h. H. B. Bart has
been known to answer to Bat, Yorn, Numbers, and even Alexander. He considers the ideal way to spend leisure time is skiing,
hunting and fishing. "For
sake, Pete,
bid!" "Would you Bart," "Oh Hum, another day, another sheckle."
WILLIAM JOHN BROWN-London, Ontario
Bill
may be found wherever there is something to eat, and most of his leisure time is spent in trying to develop a distinguished-looking mid section. Dad completely loses all self-control, an dutters strange guttural sounds at the sight of any tracked
vehicle. Sylvia, a London school teacher and Bill's biggest weakness, pulls the strings and checks up on him with a regular,oncea-week phone call. An active camera club member, and a real ice fishing enthusiast, he spent last summer as a compassman on
Bill's ambition is to someday have the letters B.Sc.F. after his name.
an operational cruise for the Dryden Paper Company Limited.
"Say, that's quite a big lunch you've got there, Gord— let's have a little snack."
GORDON STANLEY FRANKLIN— Dryden, Ontario
Here is a lad who dreams of becoming a logging superintendant with a half-ton and a German Shepherd. He'll probably wind
up as a Union Steward with a Ford Fairlane and a bottle of whiskey. Gord has gained notoriety through the use of timely
puns, e.g. (and we quote) "I'm in the nude for love." Skinny Lester has an incurable weakness for weekends in Dryden, power saws
and Cianti, and that's a combination you won't find very often. Gordie's extracurricular activities include Wednesday arid Friday
night meetings at the Club "W", weekends in Dryden and the playing of almost any musical instrument he con get his hands on.
Gord was employed last summer as a compassman on am operational cruise for the Dryden Paper Company Limited. In a few years
".
he hopes to be among the ranks of professional foresters. "Wa'll you know a young feller could almost
P.S.
(Gord is
taking university division forestry this year but we still consider him "one of the boys.")
WILLIAM CHARLES JEROME-Stoney Creek, Ontario
Bill, one of the bachelors,
is
our representative to the athletic council. His claim to fame is his phenomenal abdominal
capacity— for milk, of course! Ace, a member, in excellent standing, of the Club W., is uncertain about his future but we have
visions of him becoming an Indian "Affairs" Agent. The truth concerning the mysterious Kitty Morgan was revealed at Longlac,
and since then Bill has developed a host of other weaknesses which include, bank tellers, Saturday classes and Molson's X. Son
worked?— for the Department of Lands and Forests last summer and this may have kindled his great fascination for hard work— he
can sit and watch it for hours! "Come on, Frog, five us a croak." "Just a minute, I'll see if Su&amp; will let me go." Hey, white man!
PETER MATROSOVS-Brantford, Ontario
If Peter
says it's oak— it's oak! Pete's favorite pastime is arguing and even when he knows you are dead right he can prove
you dead wrong. Most of us agree that his future occupation should be that of a silent partner in bid whist tournaments, but John
figures Pete will wind up as a "Cords per nacre" calculator. Pare'full Pierre has an uncontrollable weakness for antique guns and
airplanes, both of which he asserts he will someday own. His true ambition is to become a graduate forester of H.H.B.
Last summer
he worked with the Dryden Paper Company as a compassman on an operational cruise, "he's voiding
pass."
JOHN PAUL SENYK-Port Arthur, Ontario
This lad has talent to burn. He possesses an uncanny ability to whistle S's; a more eager moose hunter doesn't exist; he can
bend elbows with the best of them, and it is a matter of common knowledge that John carries a lot of weight around the school.
Moose worked as a park attendant with the Department of Lands and Forests last summer and within two weeks he was stickerlicker superintendent for the whole region. John plans to attend H.H.B. next year and hopes to get a degree in forestry there.
Actually, our crystal ball sees him as a founding father of a world-wide string of Club W's. "Two hearts?— Gorp!" "Three spades!—

well

—

I

Glom." "Fantastic."

67

�LEONARD HELMER SUOMO— Waters Township,

District of Sudbury
head chef at the apartment, says he doesn't mind his own cooking, but we all know that his greatest joy in life is eating
at other people's homes. Leo has his mind set on graduating from U.N.B. and becoming one of those rara friendly Finnish foresters.
Having a mania for traps, snares, and wires we have no doubt that he wilf someday be one of this country's finest poachers. So far
as we know, Bear's only weakness aside from the stove, is the Sauna, although we do have suspicions about a spry young waitress
in Aarnios. Len was employed as an engineer's assistant with the K.O.P. Company, Limited, last summer. "Time for a little nap."—
"Say, he's just about roast-pan size."

Len,

��FOREST TECHNOLOGY

I

FACULTY

ARNOTT, ROBERT W.

I

BURROWS,
FREDERICK

HAM AK

I

,

LEO

R.

JOHNSON,

NORMAN EARL

EKLUND, GLENN
70

R.

O.

�ROBINSON,

WAYNE

C.

MACE,

HOWARD BRUCE

SILC,

TONY

POULTON, ROBERT

SISCO,

RONALD

�72

��FAULKNER, ROSS

74

A.

PANTOULIAS,

MARTIN

�STUDENT NURSES

—

From left to right FRONT ROW: Lorraine Jardine, Myrna
Madeline Morrison, Dianne Robinson, Joanne Young, Gail
berg, Dawn Bromley, Lois Murray.

Vrooman, Carol Zub. BACK ROW:
Diana Bredenberg, Sylvia Wick, Ruth Rothen-

Rossi, Frances
Bell,

75

�LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
To The

Dear

My

Editor:

and foremost

some,

should

I

clean-cut

like

missed the article on
Herzegovenian Nationalism by W.
W. W. Grizzlykick, who,
have
been assured is an authority on the
subject. The inclusion of the thoroughly enjoyable article by Dr. Taj
Mahal on the Methods and Purto say that

Sir:

As the mother

Sir:

First

Dear

felt

my

it

duty

of a fine, whole-

Canadian

boy,
representing all
I

I

mothers of all fine, wholesome,
clean-cut Canadian boys, to comp-

I

poses of Rajptanian Education during the Gurjara-Prathihara Dynasty,
some of whose opinions are utterly
unbelievable and no doubt are lies,
no way makes up for this
in
omission.

plain of the corruptive material in

your yearbook. As was, of course
censoring this book, before allowing my son to read it
was horI

I

discover several perverted

rified to

articles,
and
obscene
pictures,
which
sincerely feel should not
be shown to any fine, wholesome,
clean-cut Canadian boys.
As
was scanning the photoI

I

section,

was informed that
by H. S. Boob with the
I

of T. B. Millstone on
Intoxication on
of
a

doubt would
palates of

treatise

assistance

The

Effects

Controlled
suppressed. It no
have offended the

was

Groupe

a

many

sensitive readers.

The smothering of the nauseating
article and Fossiles in Macaceous
Cchish by T. Der T. Page shows
that the censors of Metamorphoses
exhibit good taste.
Nevertheless,

I

can not but feel

wholesale censorship of
articles, even though they lack literary merit, is a direct assault on
freedom of thought.
Our morals
that

this

are

protected;

noticed

I

my

(like

boy),

that

students

were

liquid

refreshment,

every

indication

consuming
which gave

of

originating

from that immoral hole, that den

—

the L.C.B.O.
am
of iniquity
sure that none of these fine young
men, the future leaders of Canada,
would so debauch themselves.
I

was

I

further

shocked

when

I

discovered a number of students
were unclothed!
am sure that
these photos were super-imposed
and, my son, and the fine pure
young lads with whom he associates would never behave with such
indecency.

—

I

came
In the Literary Section,
across an article, which to my horror dealt with a subject, never,
in
our home.
never!! discussed
What sort of ideas is my son going
I

this

book

has

al-

ready been burned.

Constance Chatterly.

from it? Such an article
on the S-X life of animals, simply
amounts to inciting our daughters
to biting the heads of their boy
to gather

Dear

Editor:

friends,

My

best friend, C. Self, had submitted to your staff, a very touching

poem on

his

dog

Black.

Is

and

you, Mr.

is

this

If

coming

to,

feeling, then

part of

is
what the world
hard, callous and unI

am ashamed

to

be

An

And

Editor's

Indignant Mother.

Note:

assure you that
Mr. Pascoe,
one share the same feelings
aout dying dogs that you do. HowI

I

for

ever,

I

was over-ruled by my

liter-

and not being a follower
had to give in to
of Anarchism,
staff,

I

X. Pascoe.

.

be to blame.

Signed:

ary

it.

Editor will

mantis,

it

product of these nuclear times
that no one could see how warm
and sentimental this article was?
It is obvious that none of you have
ever had his dog, his partner since
childhood, drag himself to your
feet, roll his mournful eyes up, to
take a last glance at the hand that
fed him, and then, die before your
a

eyes.

the praying
our sons to

like

lure

the majority.

��78

.

.

.

�.

.

.

79

�30

.

.

.

�.

.

.

81

�82

�83

�84

�85

�86

.

.

.

�.

.

.

87

��THIS LAND OF
This

is

land of God.

a
It

land as
is

majestic mountains;

all

a

land

it

is

other lands,

endowed by

full

a land of freshness

lame and the blind; but above

of the halt, the

the Almighty with

GOD

many wonderful

and of wilderness.

This

land

is

gifts,

all

it

lakes, vast plains

is

a

and

Canada.

they who have changed this panorama
The early inhabitants of Canada came
mainly from England and France; they were men of an industrial revolution at home. They came as
pioneers bringing with them only the gifts of God. With courage and perseverance they have built
their economic institutions, with a sense of justice have developed their English inheritance
parliamentary government, and with tolerance and good will have established their religious institutions.

Perhaps the greatest

of wilderness

into

a

gift

great nation

lies

with the people; for

loved and respected

by

is

it

all.

—

Today they come from many lands and for many reasons to join the sons of those who came before
them, and it is hoped that they too bring the gifts of God for their task is to make greater that which is
already great; and perhaps some day their children will stand with pride and say: This is my wilderness turned paradise.
R.

Teachers
A

jungle

is

—"things"

Danzie.

they remind us of

of wierd animals and exotic birds and our jungle is no different. As
corridors we will probably first encounter a long-legged, well-adapted giraffe;
very very far from anywhere, for this is his domain. Close by we come acrossj
moving little English sparrow and perched across from him is a wide-eyed

typically full

we wander

through

strategically

located

its

and

nervous, sharp, quick
owl; and contrary to belief the two get along quite well. Near by we find a rare mocking-bird, typically capable of many various sounds and his shining skin-coloured head feathers give him a regal
air. Not far off we find an unpredictable water buffalo, a good-natured fellow, but not usualy argued
against successfully. Progressing through the menagerie we come across a mother ostrich vainly trying
to control her brood.
a

In a quiet and less frequented area we happened
upon a pleasantly shy wibwarian, not too
often seen. Progressing deeper we pass the lair of the dingo. Seldom at home, he is tending to the
business of others and keeping things running smoothly. Close by one another are, a restlessly pacing
and slow moving lion, and a restfully dozing jackal. Way off in one corner, bothering no one and
not wanting to be bothered is a powerfully wise bear.

This is our jungle. From it we may learn many things
those animals and birds of our jungle and any other jungle

Wayne

if

—

we
is

are careful. Any similarity
quite possible.

Robinson, For. Tech

between

I.

89

�Is

This

You?

Sylvester had been an exceptional student in high school.
Both teacher and student alike respected
his keen intellect, the intestinal fortitude with which he pursued his goal and perhaps his
greatest asset, the unceasing ability to refrain from being enticed by any distraction which could possibly
hinder his intellectual endeavour.
All predicted a brilliant scholastic future for Sylvester.

and admired

He had heard of the "Common Room," but regarded it disdainfully as a cancer in the side of eduand he prided himself on not having once, during the first term entered this breeding ground
of the future Van Gorens.
But soon, even Sylvester discovered that all work and no play makes life
rather tedious and gradually, he deevloped an ambivalent attitude towards the "Room."
From time to
time he would make determined efforts to enter, but each time the strong habit he had built up during
Sylvester was in a dilemma and he condemned
the years managed to prevail over his new-found desire.
himself to no end for what he called his "moral cowardice."
cation

effort he found himself beyond the point of no return and made a someImmediately, he experienced what he thought was a dangerous omen, for a heavy,
dense black cloud passed over him. He stood motionless, paralyzed by a feeling of wonder and fear. Then
a sigh of relief escaped from his lips he realized that this phenomena that he was seeing for the first,
time was nothing more than the Common Room "cigarette cloud", a vast accumulation of twenty-five different brands in search of a final resting place.
Finally,

what

with

a

supreme

hesitant entrance.

Sylvester made no atempt to move, for he was apparently overwhelmed by the fascinating allure
new experience. Soon he regained his old composure, and with a critical eye he made a careful
scrutinization of the room.
Littered ashtrays and empty paper cups were prevalent eevrywhere.
Then he
noticed the tables, and around each were huddled stone-like figures, each reflecting intent thought. The
language was completely foreign to him, although he did manage to pick out the occasional curse. Why
there was Bill, and Mike, and Larry, and at another table he saw Frank.
He hadn't seen them since reof this

He had assumed they were

gistration.

ill.

"Hi ya, Sylvester," a voice soon olted him into reality

—

"we need

a

fourth.

C'mon, get

the

in

game."
"But

— he

sides"

complete

getting

my

"Aw,
them
"Well

—

he stammered, for he was caught completely unaware. "I've never played before
bestated firmly, having by now gained complete control, "I have to get back to the library to

I-I-",

essay."
Sylvester, it doesn't have to be in for a
in on time, anyway."

—

I

don't think

I

really should

—

month

yet.

Besides,

the

prof

isn't

too

strict

about

."

The basic fundamentals were quickly explained, and Sylvester was amazed at his ability to understand them so easily.
In one sitting he had learned the rudiments of good bidding, and the fine art of
the finesse.
It soon became apparent to the other three that they had produced a giant, for Sylvester was
one of those rare possessors of a high bridge I.Q.
In aperiod of three weeks, Sylvester's authority was unquestionable, and day by day he began
develop the characteristics of one who is suddenly in power. He had little sympathy for beginners,
and indeed, without hesitation he would ridicule those with years of experience, if they dared commit
To insure this peran error.
Sylvester was a perfectionist, and he demanded perfection in a partner.
By special permission
fection he began a policy of segregating the players according to their ability.
from the principal, who was also an astute bridge fan, Sylvester ha da special area of the common

to

room

restricted to the better players.

He was regarded with awe and reverence everywhere he went,

fitting

homage

for such a superior

He guarded his position
His closest friends referred to him as "Grand Slam Sylvester."
utmost care, eliminating any who posed serious threats to his authority, as they are always the
artist.

frequent concern of those

who

with

most

possess absolute power.

Almost a year later, in the same Common Room, Sylvester was engaged in a very difficult bid
and he paused for a moment to look around. Suddenly his face lost its colour and an uncontrollable
shaking took hold of him, for at that very moment he paused, there came through the doors of his
kingdom, a thin, bespectacled, intelligent looking youth known as Percival. The youth was wearing
that same look of fascination he had experienced himself.
He saw how the fascination gradually faded
into contempt as ePrcival carefully took in everything within his scope.
Sylvester did not return to school the next day nor any other day, but there is no doubt that his
bespectacled, intelligent-looking youth known as
is in the capable hands of that thin,

vacant position
Percival.

Ken Trimark.

90

�The Lakehead
With faintest heart and frightened head,

Atop the

steel

What

I

swiftly sped;

surpassed by greater dread.

All fears

lay before

me?

With vibrant motion

And

was covered,

steel

the while forebodings hovered

all

Of rougher times

to

What

me?

lies

before

The

idle

phantoms

All

that's

lost for

A

fearsome

Is

this

flailed the

what

fate, a

before

be discovered,

mind;

—

to find

unkind?

life

me?

"Merlin, Merlin, touch the ball;

See the future

Can

I

—

me

tell

stand or shall

I

all:

fall?

Wizard, answer me."
"Student, Student, look ahead:

See

a world free of dread,
With people quick, not living dead.

This

before you.

is

"See the school, the boys, the

girls;

Note the happy social whirls,
See the hearts like finest pearls.
This

Life

before you."

is

is

much

nicer here than

That warmer place from which

And
For

'though

you

my

some day

I

ran

heart will always yearn.
T.

Editor's Notes:

I

shall return

BULGER.

The following note was attached

to

poem, when

was handed

as

a

assignment to Miss Mathews: "Dear Miss Mathews, my friend
tells me that this is
work of genius. I'm sure that you will agree because you wouldn't want to dampen the spirits of
budding critic
or would you ?

a

(i)

this

literary

it

in

,

—

(ii)

T.

Bulger

is

a

stranger to our

district,

hailing

from Ottawa, Ontario.

The above

is

his

a

im-

pression of the Lakehead.

9}

�The

Specialist

Mr. President and Gentlemen:

You've heard a lot of pratin' and prattlin' about this bein' the age of specialization. I'm a carpenter by trade. At one time
could of built a house, barn, church or chicken coop. But
seen the need of a specialist in my line, so
studied her.
got hef;
she's mine. Gentlemen, you are face to face with the champion privy builder of Sangamon County.
I

I

I

I

Luke Harkins was my first customer. He heerd about me specializin' and decided to take a chance.
built fer him just the
average eight family, three holer. With that job my reputation was made, and since then
have devoted all my time and thought to
that special line. Of course, when business is slack,
do do a little paperhangin' on the side. But my heart is just in privy buildin'.
And when
finish a job,
ain't through.
give all my customers six months' privy service free gratis.
explained this to Luke,
and one day he calls me up and sez: "Lem,
wish you'd come out here; I'm having privy trouble."
I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

So

gits

I

and drives out to Luke's place, and hid behind them Baldwins, where

the car

in

could

I

get

good view of the

a

situation.

was

It

the middle of hayin' time, and them hired hands

right in

was

goin'

in

there and

anywheres from forty minutes

stay in'

hour. Think of that!

to an

"Luke, you sure have got privy trouble." So

sez:

I

takes out

I

my

kit

of tools and goes

in

to

examine the

structure.

the catalogue hangin' there, thinkin' it might be that; but it wasn't even from a reckonized house. Then
looks
at the seats proper, and
see what the trouble was.
had made them holes too durn comfortable. So
gets out a scrool saw and
cuts 'em square with hard edges. Then
go back and takes up my position as before— me here, the Baldwins here, and the privy
there. And
watched them hired hands goin' in and out for nearly two hours; and not one of them was stayin' more than four
First

looks

I

at

I

I

I

I

I

I

minutes.

"Luke,"

solved her." That's what comes of bein'

"I've

sez,

I

a

gentlemen.

specialist,

house, and then after that the biggest plant up to date— a eight holer.
Elmer Ridgway was down and looked it over. And he come to me one day and sez: "Lem,
seen that eight hole job you done
down there at the Corners, and it sure is a dandy; and figgerin' as how I'm goin' to build on the old Robinson property,
thought
I'd ask you to kind of estimate on a job for me."
'Twarn't long

after

I

that twin

built

the school

job for

I

I

"You come

the

to

man, Elmer,"

right

I

sez.

be out as soon as

"I'll

I

get the roof on the two-seater

I'm

puttin'

up for the

Sheriff."

Couple of days later
drives ut to Elmer's place, gettin' there about dinner time.
knocks a couple
see they got a lot of folks to dinner, so not wishin' to disturb 'em,
just sneaks around to the side
Elmer, here
am; where do you want that privy put?"
I

and

I

I

I

of

times

door and

on the
yells,

door
"Hey,

I

by

we

Elmer comes out and
big Northern Spy.

a

get to talkin'

about

a

good

He was

location.

fer puttin' her right alongside a jagged path

all

runnin'

"I wouldn't do it, Elmer,"
sez; "and I'll tell you why. In the first place, her bein' near a tree is bad. There ain't no sound in
nature so disconcertin' as the sound of apples droppin' on th' roof. Then another thing, there's a crooked path runnin' by that tree
and the soil there ain't adapted to absorbin' moisture. Durin' the rainy season she's likely to be slippery. Take your grandpappy
goin' out there is about the only recreation he gets. He'll go out some rainy night with his nighties flappin' around his legs ,and like
as not when you come out in the mornin' you'll find him prone in the mud, or maybe skidded off one of them curves and wound
up in the corn crib. No sir,"
sez, "put her in a straight line with the house and if it's all the same to you have her go past the
I

I

woodpile.

"Take

why.

you

tell

I'll

woman,

a

— out

fe rinstance

she goes.

On

the
the

way back she'll gather
wood box without any

five

wood, and the average woman

of

sticks

On

will

other hand, take a timid woman,
if she sees any men folks around, she's too bashful to
go direct out so she'll go to the wood-pile, pick up the wood, go back to
the house and watch her chance. The average timid woman— especially a new hired girl I've knowed to make as many as ten trips
to the woodpile before she goes in, regardless. On a good day you'll have your wood box filled by noon, and right there is a

make four

or five trips a day. There's twenty

sicks

in

trouble.

the

—

of time.

savin'

"Now, about
got

the

better to have a

sight

dug; and you

'er

"And when

diggin'

little

of

You

her.

privy over

a

though

got that disconcertin'

ain't

sez; "dig her deep and dig her wide. It's a mighyt
privy over a little hole. Another thing; when you dig her deep you've
stealin' over you that sooner or later you'll have to dig again.

be too

can't

big hole than

a

careful about that,"

I

big

"I can give you joists or beams. Joists make a good job. Beams cost a bit more,
but they're worth it. Beams, you might say, will last forever. 'Course
could give you joists, but take your Aunt Emmy, she ain't
gettin' a mite lighter. Some day she might be out there when them joists give way and there she'd be— catched. Another thing
you've got to figger on, Elmer,"
sez, "is that Odd Fellows picnic in the fall. Them boys is goin' to get in there in fours and sixes,
singin' and drinkin', and the like, and
want to tell you there's nothin' breaks up an Odd Fellows picnic quicker than a diggin'
party. Beams,
say, every time, and rest secure.

comes

it

construction,"

to

I

sez,

I

I

I

I

"And about
best people has

"A

lean-to

disconcertin'
I

sez,

under.
they're

as

her roof,"

lean-tos.

a

it

I

sez.

was

can give you a lean-to-type or a
myself, I'd have a lean-to, and I'll

pitch

"I

fer

tell

roof.

Pitch

roofs

cost

a

little

more, but some of our

you why.

two less corners fer the wasps to build their nests in; and on a hot August afternoon there ain't nothin' so
wasps buzzin' 'round while you're settin' there doin' a little readin', figgerin', or thinkin'. Another thing,"
gives you a high door. Take that son of yours, s hootin' up like a weed; don't any of him seem to be turnin'
has
lot

of

"a lean-to
If he was tryin' to get under

a

pitch

roof door he'd crack his

head

everytime.

Take

a

lean-to,

Elmer;

they

ain't

stylish,

but

practical.

"Now, about
pa,

If

for

instance;

her

he's

of

the box and keeps peace

or hook for the catalogue, and besides, a box for cobs. You take your
he'd prefer the box; so put 'em both in Elmer. Won't cost you a bit more for
the family. You can't teach an old dog new tricks,"
sez.

furnishin's.

the
in

old

I

can

school

give you

and

a

nail

naturally

I

we're on furnishin's, I'll tell you about a technical point that was put to me the other day. The question
was this: 'What is the life, or how long will the average mail order catalogue last, in just the plain, ordinary eight family three
holer'? It stumped me for a spell; but this bein' a reasonable question
checked up, and found that by placin' the catalogue in
there, say in January— when you get your new one— you should be into the harness section by June; but, of course, that ain't through
apple time, and not countin' on too many city visitors, either.

"And

as

long

as

I

"An' another thing— they've been puttin' so many of those stiff colored sheets in the catalogue here lately that it makes
Somethin' really ought to be done about this, and I've thought about takin' it up with Mr. Sears Roebuck hisself.

it

hard

to figure.

latch fer her,
can give you a spool and string, or a hook and eye. The cost of a spool and string is practically
but they ain't positive in action. If somebody come out and starts rattlin' the door, either the spool or the string is apt to
give way, and there you are. But, with a hook and eye she's yours, you might say, for the whole afternoon, if you're so minded.
Put on the hook and eye of the best quality 'cause there ain't nothin' that'll rack a man's nerves more than to be sittin' there ponderin'

"As to the

I

nothin',

without

92

a

good, strong, substantial

latch

on the door." And he agreed with me.

�sez, "what about windows; some want 'em, some don't. They ain't so popular as they used to be. If it was me,
say no windows; and I'll tell you why. Take, fer instance, somebody comin' out maybe they're just in a hurry or maybe
they waited too long. If the door don't open right away and you won't answer 'em, nine times out of ten they'll go 'round and
'round and look in the window, and you don't get the privacy you ought to.

"Now,"

Elmer,

I

—

I'd

"Now, about ventilators, or the designs
cut in the doors.
can give you stars, diamonds, or crescents— there ain't much
choice— all give good service. A lot of people like stars, because they throw a ragged shadder. Others like crescents 'cause they're
graceful and simple. Last year we was cuttin' a lot of stars; but this year people are kinda quietin' down and runnin' more to
crescents.
do cut twinin' hearts now and then for young married couples; and bunches of grapes for the newly rich. These last
don't very often suggest 'em, because it takes time and runs into money.
two designs come under the head of novelties and
I

I

I

I

"I

any snap

wouldn't take

judgment o nher
Doc Turner

the structure. And do-i't over-do it, like
he's sorry. But it's too late; 'cause when
lookin' at a ventilator that ain't to your

"Now,"
the way

I

cut

Elmer,"
sed, "Because they've got a lot to do with the beauty of
He wanted stars and crescents both, against my better judgment, and now
'em, they're cut." And, gentlemen, you can get mighty tired, sittin' day after day
ventilators,

I

did.

likin'.

"how do you want

swing? Openin' in or out? He said he didn't know. So
sez it should open in.
The door openin' in, say about forty-five degree. This gives you air and lets
the sun beat in. Now, if you hear anybody comin', you can give it a quick shove with your foot and there you are. But if she
swings out, where are you? You can't run the risk of havin' her open for air or sun, because if anyone comes, you can't get up off
was right."
that seat, reach way around and grab 'er without gettin' caught, now can you? He could see
This

is

sez,

I

it

works

that door to

Place yourself

out:

I

there.

in

I

built his door like all my doors, swinin' in, and, of course, facing east, to get the full benefit of th' sun. And
tell you,
So
gentlemen, there ain't nothin' more restful than to get out there in the mornin', comfortably seated, with th' door about threefourths open. The old sun, beatin' in on you, sort of relaxes a body— makes you feel m-i-g-h-t-y, m-i-g-h-t-y r-e-s-t-f-u-l.
I

I

"Now,"

I

contrast

— just

"If

daytime,

I

like

beautiful

a

was you,

I'd

lot

job;

paint

and you can spot

"There's a

What

do you want

'er, Elmer?" He said red. "Elmer,"
sez, "I can paint her
any one of a half dozen other colors, and they're all
ain't practical to use a single solid color, and I'll tell you why. She's too durn hard to see at night. You need
it
they use on them railroad crossin' bars — so you can see 'em in the dark.

"about the paintin' of

sez,

and red makes
mighty pretty; but
red,

of fine

'er

or

her

a

easy at

points to

I

her.

can paint her

bright
night,
puttin'

red,

color

a

with

when you
up

a

bright green,

white
ain't

first-class

—

trimmin's just like your barn. Then
got much time to go scoutin' around.

privy

amachoor, take my word on it. There's a whole lot more to
Why, one of the worst tragedies around here in years was
this kind of work, and they didn't.

I

or

it

that

than

the

average

man

you can see by

because old man Clark's

she'll

match

up

nice

in

the

about. It's no job for an
squints at your nabor's.
boys thought they knowed somethin' about
don't

just

think

takin'

a

few

"Old man Clark— if he's a day he's ninety-seven— lives over there across the holler with his boys. Asked me to come over
and estimate on their job. My price was too high; so they decided to do it themselves. And that's where the trouble begun.

93

�"I was doin' a little paper hangin' at the time for that wid der that
lives down past the
old creamery. As I'd drive by
could see the boys a-workin'. Of course,
didn't want to butt in, so used to just holler at 'em on the way by and say, naborly
Ike: 'Hey, boys, see you're doin' a little buildin'.' You see,
didn't want to act like
was buttin' in on their work; but
knowed
all the time they was going
to have trouble with that privy. And they did. From all outside appearance it was a regulation job,
but not being experienced along this line, they didn't anchor her.
I

I

I

"You

see,

I

my

see any of

I

I

put a 4 by 4 that runs from the top right straight on down five foot into the
upset Hallowe'en night. They might pull 'em out, but they'll never upset 'em.

ground.

That's

why you

never

jobs

"Here's what happened: They didn't anchor theirs, and they

painted

it

red— two bad

solid

"Hallowe'en n'ght come along, darker than pitch. Old man Clark was out
out for no good, and they upset 'er with the old man in it.

in

there.

Some

mistakes.

of

them

devilish

nabor

boys was

man got to callin' and his boys heard the noise. One of 'em sez: 'What's that racket? Somebody must
So they took the lantern, started out to the chicken shed. They didn't find anyth ng wrong there, and they
started back to the house. Then they heerd the dog bark, and one of his boys sez, 'Sounds like that barkin' is over towards the privy.'
be
It

at

"Of

course, the old

the

chickens.'

being painted red, they couldn't see she was upset, so they

started

over

there.

man had

"In the meantime the old

gotten so confused that he started to crawl out through the hole, yellin' for help all the
time.
The boys recognized his voice an dcome runnin' but just as they got there he lost his holt and fell. After that they just
called— didn't go near him. So you see what tragedy that was; and they tell me he has been strictly ostercized from society ever
since."

Well time
piece of

finest

and

passed,

work

the

in

I

got

finally

Elmer's

job

gentlemen, everybody says

done; and,

that,

next to

my

eight

holer,

it's

the

coiintry.

Sometimes, when
get to feelin' blue and
up chiropracty or veterinary,
just pack the little
Elmer's place along about dusk.
I

I

hitched up
and the kids

thinkin',

I

woman

my wagon
in

to the wrong star, and maybe
should have took
the back of my car and start out, aimin' to fetch up at
I

we stops. slips the gear in mutual, and we jest sit there lookin'
the woodpile, painted red and white, mornin' glories growin' up
over her and Mr. Sun bathin' her in a burst of yeller color as he drops back of them hills. You can hear the dog barkin' in the
distance, bringin' the cows up fer milkin', and the slow squeak of Elmer's windmill pumpin' away day after day the same as me.

When we

at

that

beautiful

gets to the top of the hill
sight. There sits that privy

overlookin'

on that

his

place,

I

near

knoll

heaves a sigh of satisfaction, my eyes fill up and
As
look at that beautiful picture of my work, I'm proud.
sez to myself,
ever done.
know
done
"Folks are right when they say that next to my eight holer that's the finest piece of construction work
right in Specializing I'm sittin' on top of the world; and
hope that boy of mine who is growin' up like a weed keeps up the good
I

I

I

I

I

I

I

work when

I'm

With one
boy that's got

gone."
last

look

hisself

a

as

we

privy,

away,

pulls
a

slips

I

m-i-g-h-t-y,

my arm around
p-r-e-t-t-y

m-i-g-h-t-y,

the AAissus and

I

sez,

"Nora, Elmer don't have to worry, he's

p-r-i-v-y."

Thank you, gentlemen.

The wind shivering along over deserted tracks,
Like last night's news on broken wine bottles
Past dead ash heaps end deserted shacks
Out to the oily water.
Oily

.

Dirty

.

.

.

.

.

Dead.

Nothing but an unbroken ripple of green benches

Abuse, and dimes;
The price of dignity

Oh

yes, there are

empty

box-cars, sleet

and

Toothless trash that served the purpose of a wife.

And blood
And fire
And sweat
And coal
And a dirty, grey
Which soon

is

face bobbing gently;

gone;

Leaving no record but a few dying ripples,

And

the oily water.

Oily

.

Dirty

.

.

.

.

.

Dead.

M. HENDERSON.

94

a

�A
My
My

Simple Treatise

is boiling over now,
head is seething hot,
For
must write a silly poem,

blood

I

And know

that

cannot.

I

For
believe that it is true
That verse is but an art,
And masterpieces can't be
If one has not the heart.
I

made

Because the whims of someone else

Have forced me

to invention,

produce a work of art
And thereby break convention.
I

can't

For poetry, as

I

can see,

Must come out by

itself,

cannot be procured by force
Or any worldly self.
It

know not of the copyright,
But legally or not,
I'm quoting here a simple verse
Whose author forgot.
I

I

feel not, when they make
pleasure in creating,
The world, in its turn, will not take
Pleasure in contemplating."

"What poets

A

The

fact that

May

not at

can write a

I

be

all

But this thought
all the tasks

is

To

poem

true,

quite pertinent
do.

we

So, if
must produce a work
Against which
rebel,
I'll
likely play the hypocrite
I

I

And

thus not do

Yet suddenly

it

well.

see things clear,
despite
My anger, myself believe
The things which here
write.

And know

at

I

last,

I

I

And

therefore by

poem

some reasoning,

been creating
Should qualify to something worth
The while of contemplating.
This

So

I've

me

say in closing, if
not what you've read,
Forget about my verses here,
And write your own instead.
let

You

like

MICHAEL

COWAN

�My

School In Italy

by Dr. Fonda
As the school in Italy has a character of its own and
methods vary sensibly from those in use in this country, it
would be necessary perhaps to see what has been the
position of the school in the world in these last fifty or
sixty years.

Ecole

Today, we like to speak of the New Education or
Nouvelle as distinct from the old or traditional school.

To give

a

definition

of

new

the

school

is

rather

a

difficult

based on many different elements that
sometimes are in disagreement among themselves.
We can say, however, that the New Education is the
result on one side, of the studies in psychology carried out
during the last part of the eighteenth century and the first
part of the nineteenth century and, on the experiences of
life
in
common which were carried out on a large scale
primarily in
England and Germany, following a tradition
dating back to Jean Jacques Roussaau and Pestalozzi.
Although Rousseau is regarded as the Father of
task,

since

Modern

it

is

Education,

the

new

first

England and the merit of

schools

were

started

in

goes to Cecil Reddie who, in
the year 1889, founded the school of Abbotshol me: the first
New School in the world.
His example was soon followed in England and elsewhere. In Germany Gustav Winicken founded the "Island of
the Youth", in France, Demolini's organized "L'Ecole des
Roches"; in Switzerland, Tobler started the School of Oberchirche, in
Italy,
Maria Montessori founded "The Homes
it

for Children".

of

new

But particularly in America these
Progressive Education.

were received with very great enthusiasm so

ideas

that the

New

Education took the

name

not

Famous American educators such as John Dewey, William Ki rkpatrick, Fredrick Burk and others contributed to the New Education
only with studies and research but also with the establishment of new schools.
Conversely, the traditional school presupposes the authority of the teacher on one side and a respectful, obedient child on

the

other.

The fundamentals of the traditional school are: the teaching ex cathedra, the study from the books and the written essay.
There is no doubt that this teaching, thanks to tradition and the real ability of the teachers has reached a high grade of
perfection.

As

said

I

and Russia

before, the

Italian

School

1.

Its

2.

A

humanistic

tradition

richer concept of

in

he

that

Its

didactico which,

by being

less

For these reasons, the Italian School

neglect the psycho-spiritual

To appreciate
as

it

differs

from the School

in

America, England, Switzerland

Italian
School suspicious of any technicism in Education;
regarded not only as a natural and physical process, but also as

superior

formal

attitude

rather

than

as

a

privilege

or

a

and more

inclined to neglect

of

the

right,

and

a

spirit

and person

values;
artistic,

Italian

make

the school

intolerant of

precepts and rules

education, to deny value
social function of the school.

psychology

each student, to ignore the

individuality of

particular

this

is

is

Humanism, the Renaissance and Risorgimento, and

Religion
in

own, and

its

makes the

that

man

endowed with freedom and many
3.

character of

has a

for:

in

to

professional

in

education.
selection,

to

School, one must keep in mind that Italy was the cradle of such movements
the freedom of the spirit has always been regarded as a
for this reason perhaps that German idealism found a more fertile ground

that consequently
it

is

Italy.

Consequently the Italian thought in Education has maintained the primary full meaning of man, the sense of insufficiency of
psychology and technicality, the sense that culture has no substitutes.
At this stage
could mention perhaps what has. been the position of the school in my own school days in Italy under Mussolini.
The first reform of the school under Mussolini was brought about in the year 1923 by the then Minister of Education, Gentile. Being
himself an idealist, his reform aimed to the development of the freedom of the spirit which he reached by giving the schools, teachers
and pupils the freedom of following the principles of their own development. To him, education was a science concerned with the
growth of man as man, while the intrusion of biological analysis with its rules, techniques, methods, devices and theories based
on how the mind works would lower it to the position of a pseudo-science.
At the beginning, where Mussolini came to power, Gentile's idealism was not only accepted but even welcomed by the
dictator.
Two new subjects were introduced in the curricula to strengthen the ties of the school with the Party: Military Culture
and Doctrine of Fascism, but, on the other hand, he liberalized history much more than it had been done in the past by any
government, and books were enriched with passages taken from the best authors of the countries concerned and illustrating this
or that particular period. To Mussolini goes the merit of improving physical training which under him became a basic subject
compulsory for all boys and girls.
Soon after, however, Mussolini made his first attempt to bring the school under the control of his Party. As a result. Gentile
resgned. It was the time when the O.N.B. (Opera Nazionale Ba ilia. Fascist Youth) was organized and later placed under the
I

I

control of the Ministry of Education.
In
1939, however, Mussolini wanted to have his own reform of the school. Accordingly, he instructed Bottai, then Minister
Education to prepare what he pompously called the Fascist Carta of the school. Bottai was himself under the influence of the
Crolce-Gentile philosophy, and his reform did not alter in substance the philosophy of his predecessor.
This article wouldn't be completed without drawing a comparison between the Canadian and Italian schools. However, the
topic is too vast and complex to be dealt with in a few lines. We shall therefore confine ourselves to illustrating some aspects of

of

96

�—
life in Italy which somewhat depart from the Canadian way.
The Italian student goes to school from eight o'clock in the
morning to one o'clock in the afternoon: His school day however, is not over. He will have to do his homework that will take ma
ny hours of his afternoon and sometimes of his evening to complete. In grammar schools particularly, the amount of homework is ex
cessive and parents have vainly complained for years.
The fact is that the grammar school is by definition a selective school and therefore only a small percentage of top students

school

may

to succeed in it.
There are no extra-curricular

aspire

in

activities

within the

school

(elementary

schools

excepted)

so

students

generally

join

private

or

where they may engage in activities such as sport, or music according to their liking. Incidentally,
Mussolini's time, such activities were carred out wthin the youth organizations of the Fascist Party.
Discipline in the schools is strict, and all disciplinary powers rest with the Principal. However, he generally seeks the opinion

religious

clubs

or

associations

of the staff before adopting any drastic measure such as suspension or expulsion. This does not mean, however, that
Italian
In almost every flock there are black as well as white sheep.
students are better behaved than Canadians.
Another interesting feature perhaps is the fact that the Italian student has no option of subjects except in the choice of a
foreign language (one may take French instead of Spanish). On the other hand however, there is a large variety of schools, each
specializing in some branch of human skill or knowledge.
As to teachers in Italy, they are divided into two separate groups: Elementary school teachers, commonly known as masters,
school and College teachers, known as professors. Their training, of course,
Since the Italian school system is centralized, all teachers are members of the civil
prestige which is proper to all liberal professions.

and High
the

is

substantially

service,

but,

at

different.

the

same time they enjoy

"The Lesson"
The sun, with the vista of day
Rises, throned upon magnificance

And rules the earth.
No small form below
Its

golden grace

—

can change

Not when it scorches living earth;
Not when its gentle power of life
By light of Heaven grows the flowers;

Never while the day

lives.

Even when Night conquers
Moon conquers Sun,

Day,

They must worship the cold moonlight,
Though the Moon is a lesser Queen,
It

is

changeless as the Heavens.

Fierce pride;

no

gift of

God,

But man-conceived, man-borne;

Spawned from dominion over

sea and land,

Inflames them with a restless agony,
For they cannot search the stars for

power

—

They cannot change the Universe.
Thus the sun and moon; the flame of
Day; the death of Night; all these

Which are one with time

itself,

have shown them

But humility, the greatest of God's
Is

lost

And

to

gifts,

them;

they cannot believe.

GUY

C.

COUTANCHE

97

�Character
Character

not a quality,

is

Which can be suddenly acquired
in later life by some trick,
It is a virtue which is manifest
an early age.

at

And whether
In

it

is

born or acquired,

the very young

But

it

With

will

a

difficult to say;

is

the substance

if

is

there,

grow,

happy and healthy home

background, and developed by
the right training at school.

Whatever life holds for you,
You will become either a leader,
or one who is led.
The choice in large measure,
will be up to you.

Never shirk

responsibility,

or be afraid of
It

is

it.

one of the greatest
can

that

Because

it

gifts

come your way.

will give

you the

opportunity,

To show what you can do,
In

helping others, and helping
to

forward the

ideals,

Which you hold dear and believe
to be right.

WITH SPECIAL THANKS TO

POWELL EQUIPMENT CO.

LTD.

�Look next

to

you when you ride on a bus

!

We usually don't pay much attention to the people who ride buses with us but did you ever
who's next to you ?
always seem to have elderly ladies. You know, the kind with grandmotherly faces and shopping bags.
Her clothes are shabby, showing many years of use, the style
somewhat archaic. This is no comparison to the lady she once was with her jewels and personal maid.
The section we are going through now wasn't always tenements.
It
used to belong to her class,
to people who spent half the day getting ready for a party and then the whole night at it.
Do you
think she's remembering the grand parties that were held in these houses ?
The nights she danced
The carriage rides through the moonlight with
till 4 a.m. with young men of wealth and promise ?
suitors ?
The magnificent coming-out parties of hers and her friends ? Or does she remember the day
she brought Tom home ?
Her mother had threatened, persuaded, cajoled
That had really been the worst day of her life.
and finally disowned her but she couldn't give him up. They moved away from the city to the country
where she would not have to meet any of her friends and Tom was happier where he could work
among people he liked. Their days had been long and full, full of people and happiness and children.
Children, her life was still full of them.
Right now she was going to their hospital to play and
read to them.
She was happy at this in a way she hadn't been happy in years. She could talk about
the old days, tell them stories she had heard of the people living near her in the country, wander literally in one afternoon through sixty years of living.
Now Tom could tell stories much better than she.
He really acted them out so that it was like watching an actor on the stage. As a country doctor he
knew everything that was going on. Of course, he heard all of the people's troubles but they also
saved their good jokes and stories for him too. When she talked to the children she was only repeating
all she had heard through fifty years of listening to the finest actor the stage ever lost.
Thinking of those tiny people now made her sad. John, down the private hall by himself so the
others wouldn't disturb him; Jimmy who tried so hard to stay awake while she was there but just couldn't
he was so weak; and Susan, her pet. There was no hope. She would miss Susan terribly.
Five afternoons a week were spent there on that miniature floor.
That was the only place she
could forget that she lived in a small dingy room, the room where fifty years ago a maid had slept but
now must contain an elderly woman, her few possessions and many memories. It wasn't easy to live
alone, to have out-lived family and friends.
She hadn't seen anyone she knew in the old days
Friends ?
for nearly forty years, ever since she married Tom and left the better section of town for the country
settled for the most part by Irish immigrants.
But she certainly had to admit that for kindness no one
could outdo those poor kindhearted Celts.
Each time a child had been born in her house, and that had
been often, her new friends had cared for the little ones. These were the things that flitted through
her mind now as she waited for her stop.
Only a few minutes and she would see "her" children.
The post office, the library, tne grounds are in sight now. She strains forward in her seat slightly
to reach the bell cord
There, she's gone.
notice

I

.

.

.

Florence McCabe.

The Limp
was frightening. The hobo shuddered in the corner, cringing from the raging elements, hiding
fellow man, existing in a world of hate and bitterness, in a world which had offered no home
to him, no understanding
nothing at all, only the back door and the road.
Here, in the wastelands, he had found temporary refuge in a small tin shelter, with a lot of spiders
and a nest of barn swallows. He would have felt safer if it were not for the wind and the weather and
his memory that over the hills to the east and across the plains to the west lay civilization, which if
encountered would mean more embarrassment, more shame, and more running. He was always running
It

from

his

—

and tripping and falling.
There was that time in the small village by the sea-shore where the pleasant odour of the ocean
air had given him new hope and a feeling of belonging.
But, it hadn't been long before the blacksmith
had picked a fight with him; and he fled from the laughter and jeers of the crowd.
He had headed, as
usual, through the nearest exit, leading to nowhere; that nowhere, where he might find his peace, where
he could build a life, and where he would be able to reap the happiness which he felt the world owed
him.
His

screaming

mind returned to the present
him.
He could come out.

—

the rain

had stopped, the wind had died,

it

was no longer

at

The sun was rising over the dark, jagged cliffs of the horizon, sending luminous beams reaching
seemingly chasing them from the day that was coming.
Perhaps this day would be that long searched-for day
the day that might show him the right
road, the day that might start his new life.
He walked away. The past was his limp; hope was his cane.
G. Gunsen.
into the clouds,

—

99

�Everyday the Same
It

morning

starts in the

This

life

With

And

A

to be,

juice,

shredded wheat,

cup of

a

tea.

quick cigarette,

And

a race upstairs

To be

first to

the sink

To comb one's

hair.

The time grows shorter
As you gather the books
For the on-coming classes
With the "gobbledygooks."

You pull out the plug
From the old TR-2,
Only to find that
She won't start for you.
Quick, a panic

To good Old

call

Bill

To see if his lemon
Can push you still.
You're finally away,

And wheel down

to get

To find he's

sleeping

As

A

still

Klem,

usual, again.

toot of the horn

And

a few minutes silence
Then out staggers Ron
A pure form of essence.

Five minutes late

The college ahead
You speed down the track
To the place that looks dead.

As you

And

shift

down

to

second

the corner you round

There's Butch just ahead
Lets run

him down.

You missed good old Butch

And come

to a stop

Climb out of the can
And plug her in on top.

You

race to the doors

Down
Only

the hallway, the den

to find

You're thirty seconds early again.

FRANK MURPHY

1

00

.

.

.

�On

Being Clean

"Faut qu'on soit bien nettoye, mandit !" Charlie Mailloux spoke French as only a French Canadian
In any case,
can, in a manner that would curl the hair of a French grammer professor.
was being admonished for my careless handling of the syringes. "We've got to be very clean," continued Charlie.
He was in charge of the feeding and the
Charlie Mailloux was the logging company barn boss.
!

I

A number of these horses were quite sick due to having
stalls of seventy-five bush horses.
been exposed to below-zero weather while being transported to the camp in open-boxed trucks. One
of the town doctors had recommended penicillin for the sick horses, but since the doctor hadn't been
able to travel the fifty-odd miles to the camp, the job of injecting the horses fell on Charlie.
was the company scaler, and among other things, looked after the company store, showed the
wasn't surprised when the camp foreweekly movie and did a number of other jobs about the camp.
was actually eager for the job,
man instructed me to help Charlie with the treatment of the horses.
because Charlie was very humorous, as most French Canadians prove to be, without meaning to be
humorous.
The penicillin arrived on the tote-truck on Saturday afternoon, so Charlie decided to begin the
treatment the same evening.
must add here that Charlie had probably never before seen, let alone
used a syringe, but the thought of his sudden aspiration from the position of barn boss to that of a veterinarian was quite a boost to his ego).
He got together a dozen or so brands of horse medicines, linaments,
salves, powders, the penicillin, several syringes, and three bottles of rubbing alcohol, the latter being
supposedly "for sterilizing the needles," as Charlie put it.
well,
always tried to posiNow, have yet to meet an unhealthy barn boss, but cleanliness ? ?
After all, a barn boss' environment doesn't suggest or encourage cleantion myself upwind from Charlie.
liness.
was very surprised when Charlie mentioned sterilizing needles.
For these reasons
had naturally assumed that Charlie had taken the alcohol to drink.
We eventually arrived at the barn, me with pockets crammed full of medicines, the syringes in one
hand, and a gas lamp in the other. Charlie carried the penicillin and the rubbing alcohol.
We placed
the assorted equipment on a shelf near the first stall, and Charlie reproached me for possibly getting
germs on the syringes by my inexperienced handling of them. Then he sized up the first "patient," a
big bay mare, and began preparations for the injection.
He partly filled a bowl
Charlie was going all out as a germ fighter, there was no doubt about it.
He then began applying alcohol to the
with alcohol, and placed the needles in it "to soak" as he said.
The absorbent cotton proved a
muscle just behind the horse's foreleg, where the needle would enter.
failure for this job, so Charlie splashed on the alcohol, then began rubbing it in with the sleeve of his
coat.
(I
leave it to you to imagine the condition of the sleeve of a barn boss's coat after six months use
as, among other things, a handkerchief, a table napkin, and the Lord knows what else, while still being
cleaning of

I

I

I

I

—

I

I

I

I

used as

a coat sleeve, of course).
Charlie then clasped
This done, he removed a needle from the alcohol with a pair of tweezers.
the needle in his bare hand and screwed it on the syringe. He injected the mare, and we moved on to the
Charlie continued to stress cleanliness, and
didn't have the
next "patient," to repeat the process.
heart to tell him that although he had the right idea, his manner of approach was wrong.
I

Charlie was extremely proud and attributed the cure to his
Surprisingly, all the horses recovered.
use of the alcohol, and his awareness as to the importance of cleanliness when treating sick
animals.
was quite surprised that all the horses got well. Perhaps an explanation of their recovery is
the fact that horses are as strong as horses.
Fred R. Burrows.
liberal

I

Mr. Higgs
A

little man with a stern English face,
Looks through twin glass windows upon the place
They call the soccer field situated with mode
Half way between the college and Oliver Road.
Now Mr. Higgs is a man of reason
Why did the goal posts go up so late in the season?
And why he wonders with awe
The high concrete slab right in the middle of it all.
In the lecture all students like to see his smile
When he sees one of our "celebrities" once in a while
But something that really takes the cake
Is his well used expression "Deliberate mistake".
His manners, his laugh, and his words of wisdom

Completely eliminate monotony and boredom
They set the light of knowledge burning

And

increase to capacity our desire for learning.
T.

Adams.
101

�Out

Wouldn't

it

be funny

—

someone

if

My Head

of

the Great White

stole

aid at a college party
Bulls just

—

if

when

and the

Father's

hearing

was raided by the

joint

greatness was pouring

his

.

the Great White Father didn't have the necessary

bail.

—
—

if

Butch stopped supervising the construction on the

and

library

actually finished.

known

if

Ekroos, better

Tee Pee cleaner

If

lost a

was

it

a

grease-monkey

—

drag race to the G.W.F.

'He3vy-toes'

new

—

Murphy

if

at

was

as the Preacher,

Reservation

the

actually

instead of a

Loop.

at the

'Mel' got caught using Jess's birth-certificate in the

Waverly.

—
—
—
—

—
—
—
—

if

'Bronco' slipped with his razor and scalped himself.

swore back

if

'Butch'

if

the 'Prez'

if

if

Limbrick had

if

Liz

if

I

if

if

if

had

was

a

if

if

I

if

secret night-time

lover.

went out
was bending over in

Frank caught the G.W.F.

lover.

lover.

secret night-time

got some good ideas for

of control just
its

this

in

when

path.

column.

the Kimberly during

hours.

Wochy was
Company.

"Twinkle-toes"
Ballet

Harnett (better

'Stretch's'

—

support me.

secret night-time

Liz's

Canadian

—

a

girl to

Frank's floor-washer

office

—

actually an alcoholic.

did find that rich

I

the G.W.F.

—
—

was

at Frank.

pad that

the school had

known

actually a

as Vociferous)

member
went

of

to

night.

enough money

to afford a

real

commissioner.

—

if

Helvi

made

a

mistake on the slip-stack and passed

me.

—

If

I

passed without Helvi making the mistake.
R.

102 ..

.

Klemocki.

�A Summer

on the North Shore
All the

of

Lake Superior

beauty of the rugged Northland

me

before

Lies

And around me;
Above, below, in the valleys and on hills,
Yes, this wonderful creation on every hand,

My

unsatisfied longing

the

In

stills.

newborn sunshine stands

A

willowy

birch,

Prouder than

a church:

walls painted a flaky white,

Its

And
Casts

green lacy strands

a roof of

shadows on the

After being hidden

light.

in

the green

The stream crashes,

On

rocks splashes,

Breaking up into

a

Each droplet causing

A

prattling waterfall,
to

it

wean

rainbow tinted wall.

Always moving, ceaselessly in motion,
Haphazardly and indirect,
In any color you select,
Buzz and

hum

the insect hordes

Like specks of dust in

They spin

their

commotion,

wierd mysterious chords.

Beyond are silhouetted against on horizon,
In shades and hues,
In greens and blues,
The ancient, granite cored Laurentian hills,
With spires of dark pines etched on
A field of tender greens and frills.
The other margin of the sky

is

on the Lake,

Which, while far out
Is also 'roundabout

The probing points of land, and

A

soothing breeze

On

the

Above,

silk

now

in

the bays.

dips to leave a wake,

smooth surface, as

it

plays.

a silver seagull stalks the rising currents;

A
A

duck wings
falcon seeks

its

its

way;
prey;

The cowbirds busily scratch for juicy food;
The robin, warily hopping, finds its dividends;
The sky-lark rises in a singing mood.
The sky, which
Is

By

sets the pattern of

our days,

blue and untainted
lightly

painted

Whisps of delicate white in fluffy patterns.
The air around is sulfur pure, and rays

Of sunlight make moisture droplets

into lanterns.

Ed Grootenboer.

.
I

103

�Snap Line
could be sitting in a cool air conditioned office right
in heaven's name am
doing here?
could have a clean white shirt and tie on. There might even be curvacious young secretaries
flitting around and maybe
could be going out for a nice cool beer with the boys tonight.
"Spruce eight!"
had to be the hardy outdoors type and go cruising. Well,
asked for it and
Oh no, not me
got it. Here
am, knee deep in loam
and the damn black flies are so thick
can't take a breath
without inhaling a dozen of them.
"Spruce six!"
Hot? Oh, brother, is it hot! The back of my shirt is wringing wet and where it touches my body
the mosquitoes bite right through.
do the black flies will
can't open my collar or roll up my sleeves; if
get in and eat me alive.
"Spruce seven!"
even more for a dry pair of socks. Oh, what difference
I'd give anything for a dry pair of boots
would they make? Five minutes in this swamp and they'd be just as wet as the ones I've got on. Bite
hate this greasy stuff. "Repels mosquitoes,
me, would you? Take that! Where's my six-twelve? Lord,
black flies, gnats, etc., etc." What a laugh! I've got enough on my face now to lubricate a Blue Ox, and

What

now.

I

I

I

I

—

I

—

I

I

I

I

I

I

—

I

still biting me.
"Spruce nine! Only ten chains to go. Let's get a move on and get out of this hole."
don't know how Morris stands the bugs the way he does. All he ever complains about is the
have my doubts about that. Not long
bad bush. He and Frank say you get used to them after a while.
to go now; another few minutes and we'll be out. We should be back at camp in half an hour.

they're

I

I

"How

did it go today,
"Naw, we had a snap

Bart?

Rough

line today.

used to the bugs. They didn't bother

me

line?"

You know,
half as

Frank,

much today

I

think

you guys are

as they usually do."

Alex Bartholomew.

Confession
Hey Popula!
What is this stuff?
"Popularity"

Oh

most people its a
What's your angle?
"Haven't any"
Haven't any what?
"Not a thing on Venus!
that, in

rarity.

"Don't write that"
Write what( of yeah,
a cup of Venus, a tin-cup
of Venus, a tin-cup of Venus Pencils.
How's business, star - (ted) - yet?
"Oh, I'm brushing up"
Brushing off on what?
"Shorthand"

—

Your short on what?
"Popularity"

Most people

are!

Break-up
A

once there was,
that because
His cat Mary-Jane just digged the phrase.
Lovers were they by the pale moon-light
Beatnik's cockroach

His

name was John-Henry and

Holding each other with great delight,
with six pairs of legs that's their legal right!
Mary-Jane's father was not quite so hep,
Man he was worried they'd get out of step
So he up and decided to end it all.
He succeeded.
Moral
Even cockroaches have to break-up.
Wally, J.K.

Why
Now

—

104

right

about getting

�The Beast
A

ball

An

of

tawny muscle

bouncing to and fro.
independent potentate
always on the go

A
A
A

yellow dandelion,
spider on the wall
little

Perhaps

bit of

a

paper

ping pong

He waits
He stalks
He pounces
Our lion plays

his

ball

game

But soon his purr announces

That our King of beasts

is

tame.

Avis Extincta
The wedgercock

is

a

bird

Whose beauty is amazingly
One may choose

descriptive.

similes

metaphors and
hyperbole

in

profusion

To relay the breathtaking sight of this fowl from one soul to the next;
But alas, the world will never know the true exquis iteness of the wedgercock,
For only one person in this vast universe has seen this phenomenal bird;

And

I'm

not telling!
Larry Hansen.

�Observed
A body

of spirit, of will

An avowed

and of looks

earnest bent on liking the books

part quite successful, in part rather

In

frail,

The grinds got the marks; the supposed brains did
The bridge decks got thicker and fatter each day,
Revealing degrees of all sorts of decay.
In

fail.

my friends professed to be broke
common room fumed with cigarette smoke.

chorus

But the

Attendance and studies and books and what nor
archaic and shallow and shot
The courses had moderate volumes to beat
Quite in line with the task of the man on the streeT.

Were considered

may hit you as overly wry,
does not uniformly apply,

This picture

But

it

Some, to their credit, did well, to be sure.
The others will find the appropriate cure.
The mark of distinction was not yet success,
But pass

work

at

no more, no

Easter:

less,

Quite slow they were here, but as busy as bees.

They

will

be

in third

year to get their degrees.
Lother Bode.

Attention Bounty Hunters
(Re:

Mouse Catching Champion, Lakehead

College)

A recent survey by the Dept. of Lands and Forests shows an over population of mice in this area.
As a result a trophy has been set up by the S.A.C. to be awarded to the hunter submitting the highest
weight aggregate of mice.
The following
1.

rules shall apply to this tournament:

Mice must be trapped within the walls and halls of the dwelling known as the Lakehead College of
and Technology.
Such mice will be identified by the marking "Property Lakehead
College" on their bellies.

—

Arts, Science

2.

Professional trappers (Frank) and his traplines are considered out-of-bounds.

3.

Competitors are not allowed to purchase or receive mice from Frank.

4.

Mice

will

members
5.

Stuffing

6.

Closing

be weighed,

to the

nearest gram,

in

Chemistry Lab.

the

mice with lead or feathers,
date of this

contest

is

etc.,

midnight,

is

illegal,

Friday,

i.e.:

2'/2-inch

March

11,

mouse weighing 10

1960.

by order of
Jay

Editor's Note: This notice

106

under the supervision of two

of the S.A.C.

was placed on

the bulletin

Sinclair, President.

board, by the S.A.C.

lbs.

�Dr. T. B. Miller's Lecturte on Goof-offs
(SCENE: Class Room).

A

tall,

his chair,

tilts

seedy, gum chewing prof, ambles in, kicking the door shut on the way. He slumps into
it back, puts his feet on the table and
throws the students a delicious yarn. He lights
his pipe and then begins.

"The

arts students this year have earned themselves a
highly enviable reputation. Their social,
psychological and appetitive diversions are such as to leave the classrooms empty. They are
mainly conspicuous in my classes, as in others, by their absence. An absence en masse that is truly
without precedence, in an institution reputed for its absentee list, the Lakehead College of Arts, Science

cultural,

and Technology.
You're just the biggest gosh-durn bunch of Goof-Offs I've ever seen. Mind you, Goof-Offing's
not so bad, but Lord Harry you're not even good Goof-Offs. The trouble is - uh - the trouble is - uh the trouble is
what the hell you've got to work sometime. You need a strong mind to be a good
Goof-Off. You need a full week of good steady knuckle-grinding brain bruising work to compensate
for your missed lectures. A pack of benzedrine tablets can be your best friend the night before the exam,
and a gallon or two of midnight oil. Many's the time went on the Bennies myself. You're sure not pulling
the wool - uh - pulling the wool - uh - pulling the wool - uh - you're sure not fooling me.
was one of
the best Goof-Offs in Ontario in my day. Mind you not the BEST, but Lord knows
easily made the
top ten."

—

I

I

I

(At this point he pauses to relight his pipe).
lot it just wrenches my heart to have to chastize you. A more
sweet bunch of lambs you just wouldn't find. I'd just love to pat you on the head and
pinch your cheeks and pass the whole damn works of you.
(He manouvres into a cheesecake position and pauses to relight his pipe).
There's three types of Goof-Offs, which for convenience sake have been classified as Type A, B
and C.

"Gee whiz, you're such an amiable

affable, pleasant

Goof-Off type

A

This type is just too darn interested in the inner
is the Goof-Off of the mind.
things, the true subtle essence, to bother with the broad generalities of the course. This type
the university usually flunks out and brands as a failure, only to have him become an international

meaning of

much

success,
type.

to

its

shame and

discredit.

The universities usually wish they never had

(At this point he pauses to relight his pipe

laid

eyes on

and fan away the cloud of smoke beginning

to

this

form

around him).

Type B is the Goof-Off of the soul. Type B sub. 1 is the romantic Goof-Off. This boy's in love.
Not immature, hand-holding, tickle prod and giggle "puppy-love" but real true, ardent, deep passionate
tonsil-licking love. It doesn't matter if he comes to class or not, 'cause the darn fool doesn't hear a
thing anyway.
Type B, sub. 2 is the one with a real tough burden. He's got family psychological troubles, a
"grandmother-complex". He hates his Grandmother. Or else the brother that shares his room is lousy and
he just can't get to sleep at nights. As a consequence he has to sleep in class.
(Meanwhile the cloud of smoke has grown to such an

move

Type C Goof-Off
fellow you
of

irritating

size that several of the

students

to the back of the class).

just

is

can't touch,

perhaps the most common, the Divertismon or divertionist. Sub
he's the

wholesome divertismon. You

worthwhile extra-curricular activities like students council, Boy
is
just too darn crammed to give him time for classes.

find this one engaged in
Scouts and the curling team

the

is

1

all

sorts

and

his

schedule

Sub 2 is the unwholesome divertismon. He's the real evil one who plays bridge, checks the women
and boozes it up. You find this type almost exclusively in the common by day and the pub by night. If
you can catch him in time you can do something with him, but if not, then Lord Harry' he's bound
straight to hell with no holds barred.
(At this point, a brilliant piece of timing enables him to re-relight his pipe just as the bell
sounding. The class quietly (and unnoticed) begins to seep out as "DOC" continues talking).

is

find that the most interesting are the pseudo-type A specimens who play by day, then go home
and work. They really hedge their bets. You usually hear them say "I didn't study a minute" just
before the exam, if they fail, they've got full and instantaneous protection in the "I - didn't - study - a
minute" clause. However, if they DO fake off, it must have been, they leave us to conclude, on sheer
I

brute intelligence.

Harry

The Arts students of '60 have got me, shame to say, thoroughly and completely
you are intelligent, then the only thing you're good at is hiding itl

baffled. Hot

if

Bob McAlpine.
107

�And You Think YouVe Got

Probliems!

studying the higher and lower animal forms in biology a question grew in my head, and eventually
obsession. This "thing cin my mind", is the question "how"
how can the seemingly helpless moth find
she may be miles away
when he can see only a few yards, can't hear, and specially when the fussy fellow

While

manifested

—

an

as

itself

his

—

when

Juliet,

demands

a

virgin?

How

does

How

does

a

How

does

nature

creature

a

female

the

like

porcupine

prickly

who becomes

bat,

manage

mate

to

pregnant

creatures

in

of

spite

in

shrimp,

the

anatomical

its

succeed

spring,

the

in

like

mating

in

are

that

peculiarities?

the

in

males,

part-time

fall?

part-time

females?

As
searched out the answers to these "hows",
found that there are many puzzlers typical of the reproductive problems of
animal kingdom, where, say the men who know, sex behaviour is bizarre, baffling and sometimes unbelievable. One scientist,
studying the sex lives of creatures ranging from 200 tons to m inute microscopic beings, was moved to call sex "nature's greatest
I

I

the

mate

wonder". Among animals, says biologists Louis
still
is
beyond human understanding.

and Margery

J.

J.

"sex

Milne,

behaviour often

an

reaches

organic

complexity

that

Just to find a mate in the vast spaces of sea, air or wilderness, can become a task of unbelievable proportions. For example,
consider the Cecropis moth. The nearest female can be half a mi le away, yet the male has been known to fly to her
that is, if
she still has her honour. Otherwise, he won't be bothered to fly even a few yards. The secret is a perfume released by the
lady, a magic intoxicant so powerful, that it not only draws a male moth through an ocean of air, but this "love potion No. 9",

—

What

can also arouse his desire.

system!

a

way of helping Mr. and Miss Bug find themselves in the dark. Many insects, like the female
use luminous signals. The female comes equipped with a big red headlight, and a series of eleven
lights along her sides that give her the odd appearance of a miniature lighted railroad car. No beau can miss her when she flicks
her signals on and off.
Nature

cunning

another

has

worm

railroad

(actually

beetle)

a

Now

here's one that is hard to swallow. The common Eastern firefly traces out a check mark in the darkness, snapping off
on the upstroke. If any fair maiden of his own species sees the glow, she says "yes", by turning on a light of her own,
exactly two seconds after he has turned off his. Seeing her light, the excited male promptly flashes his again. Again the lady snaps
light

his

on her

light.

the female

If

because he knows she

doesn't

—

taboo

is

back

signal

two seconds

in

(there's an

the deep, dark depths of the sea, nature finds herself faced

In

swim

solved by having the fish

—

phenomenon

unexplainable

allowable error of

1

/5th

of

second)

a

ignore her,

he'll

probably from some other species.

overwhelming

with

mate-finding

And

schools or return repeatedly to ancient, reliable mating places.

in

how

is

many

that

it

swim

will

fish

amazing

with

accuracy,

the

to

which

problems,

we

here,

are

have another

where

place

usually

scientifically

kind

their

has

always spawned?

The

breeding

longest

taken

journey

wherever her search for food and better
Islands

where she knows

Alaska,

off

What

areas.

a

Land

to

will

mammal, the Alaska

sea-going

a

has taken

conditions

be waiting

—

her

creatures

employing

too,

"off-breeding"

that

the

sense

For

cougars

season,

rugged

this

are

mating

smell,

of

her,

in

calls

and

instincts

individualist,

who

animals

solitary

mate-finding

avoid

and hot, she hurries

male makes

regular

a

circuit

over

and

track

this

snake.

stranger

amazing,

a

is

—

it

male, or

when you

Many
a

Is

He brushes against

consider

creatures

out.

female from another species,

a

are

the

it,

he can't smell

lamprey and

pulls.

to the perch,

he's

the

lamprey

But,
his

spouse,

If

it

"In

deduce the likelihood of

suggests

physical

before

biggest elephant.

It's

a

how does he know he
go of the

lets

like

We

Flynn".

way

to

a

can

coax

rock, they

can

eliminate

problems are not
he

a

in

her

phenomenon

in

will

clear

from

travel

the

to

Pribilof

both

fall'

scourge of

male

all

that

the

to

bed.

These

that baffles

this

animal

disorders

scientists:

With

his

tracks

few

the

is

—

by

because

a

As

species,

a

However,

territory.

male.

If

somehow

during

these

she

tracks

aware

is

days.

a

continues

his

He

mate.

slithers

along

until

he comes to

him what he wants to know.

contact tells

search.

This

discrimination

is

all

If

by the behaviour of what they think may be

he comes to another lamprey clinging to

a

rock.

He

can't

powerful suctorial mouth, he fastens himself to the other

grease the

in

this

if

the other lamprey stays fastened

species for coquettes. This

story

about

rocks.

has to put up with. He has to overcome psychological disorders
effect

the

more

the

are.

absolutely no place

creature

left

trail

back and separate. Wrong guess! But,

see here that there
the

until

upon

mates.

accomplishment.

other's

almost

all

male

animals,

from

the

tiniest

coyness of the female.

W.

108

seal

—

to find

ability

major

a

each

spot near the

partnership, simply

water

has a female?

a

brief

this

away and

sex

a

the

upon

"touch" to identify

thousands of species of snakes that there

able to

so

it,

along

Amazingly,

he turns

prospective mate. The male sea lamprey swims about

see

sense of

his

find

to

it

be

will

become

can

she comes
at

uncanny

exhibit an

encroaching

home ground and keeps travelling until
after him. If not, she lies down and waits

The male snake depends almost entirely upon
another

lady

eager anticipation. The lazy male never leaves the mating

for

mating season, the she leaves her
are recent

The

seal.

perhaps off the coast of China

life!

Take the cougar for example.
the

in

male

a

credited

is

living

T.

Melnyk

insect,

up

to

in

the

�a demand to be chased, the females of some species expect elaborate showmanship
female fiddler crab won't mate unless the male puts on a colorful display, using h!s ability to change
the colour of his body from brilliant hues of orange, to blue, purple and green. Even after he's done this for hours, this coy girl
often snubs him by retiring into her burrow and locking her door behind her.

Though coyness often takes the form of

on the part of

A

suitors.

female humpback whale is
completely out of the water.

The
times,

at

their

However,

as to

completely

standoffish

her 50 foot

until

beats

suitor

out with

himself

leaps

take

that

him,

there are exceptions to this one. One type of female fly does all the pre-coutal wooing, shimmering
seductive leg movements. The male, the altar-shy bachelor goes dashing off, and pretends to ignore her

rules,

all

her wings, and engaging

in

movements.

come-hither

Whereas,

crab spider

a

interesting to note here, that

not

will
in

give

female

the

He grabs her and rapes her. Rape is the
kingdom, only man, and crab spiders practice rape.

chance to be coy.

a

the vast and complex animal

all

rule.

It

is

Some of the greatest marvels of sex in nature are the myriad schemes worked out for the mating process itself. And one
of the strangest is the operation carried out by the sea squids, the type we study in class. These creatures can mate when they are
yards apart. The male takes the sperm, which is wrapped in cigar- shaped packets, in one of h's tentacles, which may be 30 feet
long, slithers them out and across the water, and tucks them into the female receptacle
sort of a "Do it yourself kit".

—

And here's an action the humiliation of which all males, be they bug or men,
when he finds a female, proceeds to woo her. Capering about her, he shows her a
she comes

desires,

pouch, where they

his

in

are fertilized,

little

have decided that the male sea horse possesses something like the ordinary placenta, and nurtures the unborn
body. He further twists the conventions of courting, by having several mothers for his children.

Scientists

young from

and puts her eggs

live down. The little male sea horse,
pouch in his abdomen. If he arouses her
and he becomes pregnant. Yes, HE becomes pregnant!

never

will

his

—

As a bit of "Advice to Youth", we have the lesson taught to us by the female Preying Mantis
"Never lose your head
over a woman." The female Preying Mantis is much larger than the male, and exacts her superiority to the "end" degree. During
the sex act, she suddenly twists and bites off her husband's head. Boy, is he surprised! However, he doesn't let this bother him,
and like a true Don Juan, continues his mating with increased fervour.

And who
eleven
actual

can

story

of

elephant?

the

eats six

More unbelievable

the process. Incredible!
time in the sex act.
in

investigating

In

—

too simple

answer

the

as

For,

still

how

to

which does everything in a big way — weighs up to
fifty gallons of water a day, spends less time in the
that he, the biggest of land mammals, spends only thirty seconds
that the whale, also a mammal, spends about the same amount of

huge

This

day and drinks

a

the

fact

a

it's

the

is

fact

as

beast,

much

as

porcupine can mate,

prickly

was disappointed. The answer was too

I

and

short,

the female simply flatter.s her quills.

Now,

these

all

concerns the

which

incidents

However,

witnessed.

actually
It

the

believe

hundred pounds of food
process of mating than any animal alive.
tons,

fiddler

here

crab,

a

have mentioned

I

one

is

which

act

mentioned

already

creature

from various

taken

are

performed

saw

I

my

in

and

books

summer, on

last

and

articles,

none

them

of

have

I

not too populated Atlantic beach:

quiet,

a

article.

The female fiddler crab has two small claws, whereas the male of the species has one small, and one overly large claw. Well,
pop in and out of their burrows and scuttle side wise on the sand when the tide is out. In the mating season, the
male Fiddler will stand in view of a passing female and brandish h's claw before her. This is simply a wolf call, with dishonorable
intentions. If the lady is "in the mood", she recognizes the signal for what it is, and they scuttle off together to some quiet
hole on the beach. Without his claw, the poor boy hasn't a chance, for this is his badge of maleness.
these

crabs

common American brown

The

of nature. The sperm

man, the longest

can

I

teeth

safely

female. Almost

all

female whenever

say

—
of

all

is

Sex,

male
that

if

it

is

is

separate

get

is

a

very

from

He

is

and

doomed

concerned with

to

associate

bright

These
that

our

are

with

colors

but

own

a

a

male.

answer for

an

—

starts out,

are

Here

spring.

release.

When

alive.

wonder

another

is

any other

In

including

creature,

he meets his bride-to-be,

of

rest

degenerate.

everything,

appears

oddly enough,

as

his

as

life

sort

a

he fastens his

appendage

of

remains

apparatus

sex

His

somewhat mixed

be

to
a

to

when

up

boy, but the next year he

is

to

the

fertilize

the

it

comes to

female! Perhaps,

a

beside the point. But can you imagine what the

is

many home experiments which

and there are
then

place

If

them

together

he bites a male, there

knowledge

few of the problems and

difficulties

the

until

its

human world

and half the age of women, with the prospect of maternity always ahead of them.

rear.

This

for

spend the

reproduction,

as

not the bright colours of the male that set him apart for another
its

time

henpecked being

most

the

loose.

born

not

are

until

hours.

good memory. However, that

interesting,
birth,

thirty-six

is

the young

but

fall

over the winter,

sub-existence!

has

usually

half the size,

approach another gumpy, and bite

now

about

frogfish

about

Talk

now

the

in

half the size of the female

men were

animals

in

gumpies

is

can't

which

itself,

—

the female shrimp needs
like

alive

except those

organs,
ready.

mates

bat

the female's vagina

male

the

that

his

she

the shrimp. The male

would be

in

and then he

Nature

Indeed,

stored

sperm can stay

a

her side

into

is

infinitesimal

as

is

learned,

quirks

that

not

is

adults.

male.
a

If

fight.

you
It

is

be carried out. One of these

can

The males

can't

watch
in

this

each

tell

closely,

way

you

that

other
will

the

apart.

see

male

to

is

This

raise

proves

a
male gumpy
gumpy comes to

instinctive.

face the creatures of the animal

compared to these. So boys

—

don't

kingdom. You

will

agree

with

me

complain!

109

�The Urge

to Kill

Would his plan work? George had thought it all out very carefully indeed — and now it was about to happen. He and
were on their way to the cottage for the weekend. It was a fine, autumn day, that day they drove up to the cottage.

Henrietta

cottage,

Their

beautifully

situated

the

in

country,

hilly

near the

which shone different colours

cl iff,

the

in

sunlight;

was spectacular of the little waterfall opposite. They had spent their honeymoon at their secret hide-a-way
George was jarred abruptly back to the present. Ke had been thinking back over good old times; but everything
things were different now.
there

I

am

you

"George,

are

of

cats."

stray

"Yes,

sure

you

locked

answered George

dear,"

door?"

back

that

Henrietta's

do be

careful

came through

voice

to

him.

had

changed;

"You know how

afraid

patiently.

Nervously,
Henrietta's
piercing
voice went on,
seemed to
it
his head. Will we never get there, he wondered. Miles passed, and
to the door of the cottage.

"George,

shrill

the view from
the country.

in

carrying

know

you

china;

that

we

fill
still

every corner of the car; it seemed to go right through
the nagging voice kept on. Finally, the car drove up

any broken pieces."

can't afford

dear."

"Yes,

"George,

how many

must

times

I

you not to slam that door?"

tell

"I'm sorry, dear."

"George, for goodness sake, you are without

a

doubt the slowest person

.

.

."

And

so on came the comments 'ad infinitum'. "Ahhh", muttered George under his breath, "please, be quiet; just for one
little minute, please, SHUT UP." But the naggi'ng
voice kept on and on. Henrietta did not notice the thoughtful, concentrated look
that had crossed George's face, nor did she recognize a new and different tone in his voice as he casually asked: "Henrietta, how would

you

like to

take a

"Oh,
"I'd

little

George,
like

"Well,

it,"

George was

said

a

little

"Coming, dear." So
Henrietta

cliff,

where we went so often when we were younger?"

was

sentimental,"

foolishly

his wife's cutting reply.

George quite honestly.

—

George?"

"Coming,

being

you're

suppose

I

up to the

stroll

I'll

be ready

what

nervous;
shrieked
far,

his

in

minute."

a

if

his

wife's

plan

didn't

voice

work; what

from

outsids

if

the

she suspected; what

if

.

.

.

cabin.

good.

so

chattered away as they walked together, arm in arm, to their own secret hide-a-way. He must be very careful, so
not suspect. Here they were at the cliff: Hen rietta chattered aimlessly: now was his chance: the plan had worked
everyone
th's was what he had been waiting for
push would do it
if
he just leaned a little towards her

that she would
so well: a little
would think it an

—

accident

—

—

—

no one would know the

real

truth.

"George, do you see that strange bird over there? Don't you

think

he resembles

something

of

an

ill-omen?

George?

.

.

.

GEORGE!
The whole atmosphere was
walls of the

filled

with

a

horrid

panic-stricken

scream which gradually

died

away

in

echos

vibrating

off

the

cliffs.

George woke with a start — beads of perspiration covered his forehead, sweat trickled from his clenched fists. He had
been snoozing in h!s office: it was 3 o'clock Friday afternoon. How realistic his dream had been! Then as if suddenly urged by
some firce even greater than himself, he picked up the phone and dialed a number.
"Hello,

Henrietta:

dear,

how would you

like

to

go up

to

the

cottage

this

weekend?"

Janet Thorn.

The Harbour
Earth browns the liquid to a brazen hue
While breezes snatch up amber undulations;
A slimy slick of salmon red and egg-shell blue
Slithers 'round fleets mobilized from far-off nations.

Columns of a platinum grain elevator.
Sprawl among the waves,
While in the distance black obelisks
Mark the seamen's graves.
Along the shore emeralds shimmer
In

the sun;

And naked

children in the stream
Prance and play and run.
A rangy vermillion sentinel clings.
Against the sky.
While splotchy orange blossom filminess
Treads by.

Ed MacKinnon.

no

�How

the

Lakehead Hit Higgs
I'm disappointed. Not once have
had to
harassed way to the College through hordes of
scalp happy braves; not once have
had to chop my way
through charging Chippewas; not once have
had to descend
from my covered wagon grasping a gridiron and grapple
with a growling grizzly; not once have
had to brace my
back against a bent and battered birch tree and make
ready to mangle with masses of marauding moose. And
when you decide to cut adrift from the considerable comfort
of the Old Country and move to the wild bush country of
Northwestern Ontario, that's what you expect to have to do.
Mind you, the country is rugged, all right. Where
else could you find such a superb selection of pot holes,
lined with squelching mud or choking dust depending on
the time of year, and which its natives, for some reason

Frankly,

I

my

hack

I

I

I

which evades me, refer to as "roads"?
And the people are rugged, too! They've got to be,
nerveto withstand the radio programmes! For it's very
wracking for the radio listener who, being urged to drop
everything and rush to Whosits for a sensational bargain,
afraid to go because he might miss hearing about a
is

more sensational

bargain

Whatsits.

at

Instead

of

saving

X

on something he doesn't want, had he been less
impetuous he might have saved (Xplusl) dollars on something he has no use for!
But what of the College and the students? Are they
very different from their English counterparts? Of course,
dollars

their
I

thought

to find

zed,

it

that

was

either

they

all

not a zee.
Again, their

a

doctor's

prescription

spoke English and even

or

perhaps

a

pronounced

list

of

their

lesser

the

words

in

a

saw my first class list,
names are different; when
known Moluscs of Southern Anatolia. It was a relief
had expected. A zed was a
more English way than
I

I

went in to take my first class,
had been used to. When
was more flamboyant than what
soon discovered that there was not a pansy among them.
into a bed of tulips. But
And there are those who work and those who don't with all the emphasis they can summon to such a negative action.
would say the general standard of
There are those who are courteous; there are those few who are not, but on the whole,
behaviour is well up to what
was accustomed to in England.
Now this smattering of Old World courtesy in Lakehead College students, find is in sharp contrast to what is experienced
down town. There the law of the jungle prevails and it's every man for himself. No one, entering a store, would dream of
holding the door open for someone following close behind him. Rather, he would let it swing and if it nearly knocks some matron
off balance and she drops her parcels, that's too bad. This contrast indicates, perhaps, that intelligence and courtesy are in some
thought that

mode

had

I

of

dress

I

I

I

strayed

inadvertently

I

I

I

I

way

related,

What
include

another.

or

curling,

This

possibly that
find

I

ski

aspect

may be thought

it

pleasing

particularly
parties,

of

dinners,

College

is

dances,

life

is

to

that

to

etc.,

and

me

the

a teacher is both impolite and impolitic.
take place outside of normal College routine. These
know one
opportunity for staff and students getting to
and most pleasant. Long may it so remain.

be inconsiderate to

frequent

the

all

activities

afford

most

an

striking

that

Higgs.

Mr.

The Melnyk's Tale
Whan

that April

I,

with his shoures soote,

The droght of learning hath perced to the roote,
And bathed every breyne in swich licour
Of which vertu engendered is scholour,
So prick us from our scoleye plentevous;
For us were levere seken straunge strondesFerne unknowe places in sondry londesBut specially from this digne batiment,
Thogh wal we weren learned arte bestement,
slepte namoore than doth a nyghtyngale;
played, and wroughte, and eek hente and werre,
And learned the loore of "Per angusta ad Augusta.")
Us thinken now to go on pilgrimages

(We

We

Were

verraily felicite

parfit

gentlemen.

Glossary:
soote

—sweet
—
feme—

such liquid
swich licour
plentiful
scoleye plentevous
distant

—

—

studies

digne batiment worthy building
school motto
Per angusta ad Augusta

—

W.

T.

(Dan) Melnyk.

Ill

�Among

Strife

And

came

it

arose strife

day that there

to pass in that

among

the

in

the land of

his

brother and

leaders

LCAST. For each was envious of

the Leaders

"Arise, get thee

and readjust

sought to supplant him.

And

lo,

came

there

decree from Harrius

a

Caesar that there be no more

was

decree

And

strife.

when

made

first

Zacchaeus,

But
sir,

answered and

'"No,

said:

not me, boy!"

this

was

Sinclair

up and fight mine enemy,

his thermostats."

president.

And Satan spake again a second time: "Art
thou so blind that thou dost not see that mine
enemy

But

the

leaders

liked

Caesar and rebelled, and

them,

saying,

to take

all

not

words of

is thine also?
Canst thou not see how
he covets thine office and thy floor polisher?"

the students with

'Wherefore dost

from us our

the

intellectual

this

man seek

freedom?'

When

And they murmured amongst themselves,
and heeded not the words of Caesar, but increased in bitterness towards each other.

by name, had been appointed to deliver summonses unto all those who parked their cars
in front. Moreover he was upright in heart, and
took care to carry out all that Caesar had com-

manded

steadfast,

quitting next year

this

he was afraid,

answered:

anyway, so he

"Nope,
have

kin

I'm
it."

But Satan entreated him
ing:

And one amongst them, Nebuchednazzar

Zacchaeus heard

holding

but

"Take heed,

lest

all the more saymine enemy and thine bear

false witness against thee to Caesar."

Then did Zacchaeus tremble, for he feared
Caesar exceedingly, and went with haste to do
Satan's

bidding.

him.

was envious and wanted

But Satan

this

appointment for himself for he had often been
passed by. And opening his mouth he spake

When Nebuchednazzar saw what had been
done unto him, he was wroth, and sought out
Zacchaeus

to

rebuke him.

thus:

But Satan, lighting his pipe for the fourth

"Lord

Harry,

it

is

not

meet

that

paladin of virtue, be passed by. Behold,

and smite mine enemy; neither

arise

I,

I

will

the
will
his

works prosper.

time,

went unto Nebuchednazzar and

thou not

-

uh

-

should thou do

"Moreover,
Caesar, for

who

to enslave our

And

will

I

is

ill

-

commandment

uh

-

"Hast

Hast thou

that in nothing

to thy brother?"

not heed the decree of

Caesar, that he should seek

minds?"

straightway he arose, and went unto

Zacchaeus who was tending his floor polisher
and sought to entice him, saying:

112

hast thou not

not heard Caesar's

said:

And Nebuchednazzar repented
that he

of

his

sin

had done unto Caesar, and went out,

and wept

bitterly.

—Jany

Stilwell

and

Liz

Senyk.

�What About Jazz?
To most people at the Lakehead the music
jazz is quite remote and not worth much
interest. Our exposure to it is relatively small, with
television and radio the principal sources. Most of
the people have never witnessed a jazz musician
at work, and, consequently the misconceptions which
arise are varied, and in some respects away off base.
There exists, mainly among the older crowd (and
called

say this with all due respect), a kind of archiac
conservatism. These persons know jazz exists, but
nevertheless fail to acknowledge it. They can't seem
to shake the feeling that here is a subject not to
be spoken of at the dinner table.
They regard
jazz as loud and blarey, or vulgar and played by
a crew of half-stewed, sensation seekers. However,
think they are a slight bit confused. The music
they refer to is more than likely not jazz, and the
so-called musician that does fit into this category
has long since ceased to be classified as a jazz musician.
One of the questions the layman often asks a jazz musician is: "Why do you have to play all
those useless notes, where's the melody?"
Most jazz men either dismiss the question with a sneer of superiority implying that if you have
to ask you'll never know, or with a simplified explanation of chordal structure and the pursuing of individual lines of thought within that framework. The first reaction results because most people who
should know neither have the inclination nor the desire to explain what is happening within a jazz group
or what is more probable that the whole subject is rather murky in their own mind and they consequently
make a rude coverup for inarticulation. The second reaction although clear enough to any musician leaves
the layman as completely bewildered as before he posed the question. But is the question naive?
don't
think so. Jazz is an art form, it seems to be the only genuine American culture and as an art form it should
be laid open for analysis and exposition.
A person must, think, develop a taste for jazz. A few bandleaders like Benny Goodman, Dizzy
Gillespie and Louis Armstrong have made goodwill tours abroad and the results have been inspiring. There
heard and received enthusiastically by
is scarcely a spot in the world where American jazz hasn't been
think, a taste must be developed for true appreciation. Jazz becomes,
all listeners. But nevertheless,
after a while a personal thing, something you know is shared by others but still uniquely fitting for
I

I

I

I

I

your

own

feelings.

Jazz rhythms create what can only be called momentum. When the rhythm of one voice (say one
alto sax) anticipates the beat, it starts what you might call a series of new beats above the basic underlying one. The result is an exhilarating forward motion
a tension of sounds. The tempo tightens, goes
on top and becomes even more exact. The rhythm section's playing although intense and emotionally
charged, is usually more sparse and simple. In the jazzman's vernacular "things are cookin". It is in this
that the jazzman creates, that the art of jazz is unveiled, the
medium
the tension of sounds
reflections of the society in which we live are realized. It is in this atmosphere that a person with a
good command of his instrument and sheer musical and creative instinct can elicit feeling, shared
with others, that he has accomplished something worthwhile, that his work is really a work of aft. All
this may sound a little pretentious and a little too dramatic but it has truth. Someday you might visit
a jazz club or be in an audience when things start "cookin" and then you'll realize what
mean.
The audience is a basic influence today, probably more so than most good jazz musicians care
to admit. It is what can be called a participating audience, a critical group of people who mean more than
reception, size, and conduct. They have a very real and subtle influence which involves commercialism
and ego satisfaction. Jazz-men generally fall into two camps in regard to audiences and commercialism.
The first refuses to "play down" to people, feeling that this is a prostitution of self and jazz. The second
camp feels that the use of certain musical devices which "sell" is not prostitution but a means of selfapproval mirrored in the audience reaction and probably a good vehicle for public acceptance of jazz.
In every audience will be found the inevitable "fakers". The female sex is more prevalent among
these, that is persons who are trying to be contemporary, by an attempt of associating themselves with
good jazz, (a medium of culture) and thus establishing themselves as of those "in the know" and therefore one rung higher on the social ladder.
The concept of audience importance is best emphasized by the story of Charlie Parker, or "Bird"
as he was better known. He was a great musician, the innovator of bop, and a true genius but also to
my rnind a character in search of the audience, the audience the lesser musician Dizzy Gillespie enjoyed.
What more is there to say? There is one hell of a lot more to say, this could go on for pages but
if you have read this far
hope you have recognized part of the picture. Jazz, with its sometimes complex rhythms and harmonies should not be shyed away from because you are not able to immediately
grasp its meanings; basically, it expresses all our moods.
Regardless of conditions, jazz, and the people
who make it will continue to develop because what they have to say will always be important; it is a
sincere description of the society from which it evolves; it is also the sort of thing you and
would say
in those moments of truth, when you talk to a goodfriend and are not afraid of making a fool of your

—

—

—

I

I

I

self.

Buddy

Rollins.

�MATTHEWS

MISS

(The Trinity Story)

After graduating from the University of Toronto in Modern History
Miss Matthews was awarded a scholarship from the Dutch
Government to spend a year of studies in the Netherlands.
She taught in a girls' school in England for a year and at the
close of the year joined the Economic Research Division of the Bank of
Ca.nada. Upon finding the bars on the vault too thick she left and
worked for a year with the Toronto Planning Board. Miss Matthews then
occupied herself in Canadian History Research in the Ontario Provincial
Archives. In order to complete the "progress of a beat" she came to
Lakehead College.

and

Politics,

Miss Matthews
and Norway and she

has

won

many

spent
the

Athletic

years

skiing,

Canada,

in

Colours

Varsity

in

Austria

skating

at

the

During the summer months between semesters she
worked at Jasper and Lake Louise and found time to do much horseback
riding and mountain climbing. She is an accomplished bagpipe player
and she *s now learning to play the accordion.
With all this, we have one question to ask — "What does she
do in her spare time?"
University

DR.

of Toronto.

GRODZICKY
Roman

Raphael

(now Western

Poland

Grodzicky
Ukraine).

was born
He attended

1919

in

the

Kaminka

in

University

of

Str.,

Leopolis,

where he majored
in

in philosophy and theology and received his diploma
1944, graduating scond in a class of eighty-nine.
During the later stages of World War Two, Dr. Grodzicky was

arrested

for

where he

his

nationalist

for six

activities

months

and

removed

to

a

German

prison,

squad.
When Dr. Grodzicky was liberated by the Americans, he enrolled
in the
University of Munich. Here he pursued his graduate training in
philosophy and after three years was awarded his Ph.D. magna cum laude
in every subject in Pure Philosophy.
In
1948, Dr. Grodzicky emigrated to Canada. His first position in
his adopted country was with the T. Eaton Company, which he left after
six months to do library work in Niagara Falls. The following year he
returned to Toronto to complete his Library Science studies, emerging
with the degree of B.L.S. This led to a position in the University of
Saskatchewan library. Eight years in the university library saw Dr.
Grodzicky acting head of the library department, interim acting head of
Slavonic Studies and joint author of an anthology on Ukrainian literature
which is now being used as a text in second year.
This year Dr. Grodzicky was invited to join the staff of Lakehead
College as head librarian and lecturer in psychology. Since 1952, he has
been taking summer and correspondence courses in Slavonic Studies and
recently received his M.A. from the University of Montreal. He has also
almost completed his thesis for his Ph.D. (in Slavonic Studies).
academic pursuits, Dr. Grodzicky
In the midst of his multifarious
has found time to get married and become a skilled chess and bridge
player. Dr. Grodzicky has done a wonderful job with the new library.
There are actually some new books! And what's more, you can find them.
lay

in

daily

terror of the firing

MR. McKENZIE
Mr. McKenzie was hatched in Regina, Saskatchewan, and was
incubated at the Central Collegiate Institute at Regina. Upon graduation
he entered university and received his B.A. from the University of
Saskatchwan at Saskatoon. During this time he acquired many numerous
and varied hobbies, such as photography, bridge, chess and beer. At
one time in his career he tried to play the trumpet and for his efforts
became known as The Western Harry James.
at blowing he
During the summers he worked in the Yellowknife and no doubt

met many

a

fine

Outside
led a pretty

of

Eskimo.
all

his

tame existence.

risque

activities,

Mr.

McKenzie seems

to

have

�Death

this was how it was
He could feel the cold

So

to

be

,

The relentless cold from which there was no escape
These were the feelings of death.
Death

—

the end of

or the beginning

life

He did not know

How
Not

often had he thought of death
this

way

but as a more romantic

exit.

«

j

:

mind wandered into the past and future
Haunting memories now lost to the human grasp
Sunset of long ago, scenes that were fixed in his mind
He thought too of the future and of the rosy dreams he had once hoped
But they were all lost.
His

His

body no longer

felt

The distant flickering

to real i:

the biting cold

stars

beckoned him onward

He could not move
The present only remained
Biting cold and piercing wind
Then for an instant past, present and future joined as one
Time stood still
Death

!

His eyes blank and sightless stand out
Out across the endless barrens to the horizon
And far beyond the scope of human vision
Out where, to man, time is lost and only the cold

perceive

Somewhere

A

solitary

in

its

glittering stars

passage.

the distant lonely wastes

wolf raised

its

The Aurora Borealis sent
The wind stopped.

voice
its

in a

long endless sorrowful wail

shimmering colored bands across the cold

arctic s

Silence.

LEONARD SUOMU.

�The

Social Year

November 6 - Dance

Room
November 20 -

A

in

the

Common

of the College

Supper Dance at the

Prince Arthur Hotel

December 4 - Beatnik Dance

in

the

Common Room
January 30 - Ski and Toboggan Party
at Loch

Lomond

February 10 - Bridge Night

March 12 -Ski and Toboggan Party
at Loch

May

1 1

- Convocation Reception at the

Royal

116

.

Lomond

Edward Hotel

�117

�118

�1

Student
NAME

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ADAMS, Thomas

91

BULGER, Thomas S
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L

COULSON, Laurence

L

COWAN,

Michael F
Gary B

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Brian

J.

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Ernest

MIKKONEN, Mauri

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48
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JANIUK, Petro

Cumberland St., P.A
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3- 9274

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P.A

F.W

St.,

135 Concord, Ottawa, Ont.

1

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334 Ontario

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TATEBE, Yosh

Hester

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4-0926

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J

A

MITHRUSH, Michael

SPOONER,

446 N. Cumberland
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411

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KROKER,

Alder Ave., P.A
RR No. 1 P.A
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241

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P.A., Ont.

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1

F.W., Ont.
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Heron Bay South, Ont.
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ARTS

ARNOT, James

C
BURAK, Walter W
COSTANZO, Anthony
COUTANCHE, Guy C

DONOVAN,

A

Donald

FUCHEK, Patrick V
GIBSON, Gerald B

GUNSON, John
HALL, Wayne F

R

HANSEN, Lawrence D
HENDERSON, Thomas
IRVING, Wendy J
JOHNSTON, James

M

H. E

KUSKNIER, Frank P

LECOCQ, Donald

Ian

MACKAY, Alistair
MACKINNON, Edmund A
MARTINDALE, James
MATICH, Michael L
MELNYK, William T
MICHELS, Robert

MORAN,

R

E

Patrick

F.

McALPINE, Robert D
McCABE, Florence M
OMAE, Takuo

RAHKOLA, Dennis
REPO,

L

Toini

ROBINSON, Murray
SAUNDERS, Melvyn
SAXBERG, Marvyn

R

447 Prince Arthur Blvd., F.W
242 S. John St., F.W
180 E. Brock St., F.W
400 Leslie Ave., P.A
386 Leslie Ave., P.A

E

SEELEY, Sidney R

SENYK, Elizabeth S

SHANNON,

V

Patricia

TAM, Arthur

THOM,

Janeanne

H.

Janet

S.

S

WATSON,

M

Robert E

WATTS, W. Anthony

Dl 5-8567

MA

2-3289

Dl 4- 8685

Dl 5- 7235

MA 2-1930
Dl 5-9200
Dl 4- 1765

MA 2- 8947
Dl 5- 6153
Dl 5-9373

MA 3- 7766
MA 3-9010
MA 2- 1660
MA 3- 9493
MA 3-6997
MA 3- 9735
Dl 4- 321
Dl 5- 8466

MA 2-4905
MA 2- 1993
MA 3- 9691
Dl 4- 4086

MA 4-1581
MA 2- 6321
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Dl 4-6146

MA 3- 6737
MA 3- 7151
MA 2-0624
MA 2- 2526

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1002 McLaughlin St. ,F.W.
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510 Luci Court, F.W.

403 Ambrose St., P.A.
22 Lake St., P.A.
743 S. Norah St., F.W.
1415 McGregor Ave., F.W.
8-226

536
430

S.

Vickers

St.,

Leslie Ave..

P.A.

Patrick's

Sq.,

St.

F.W.
P.A.

120 E. Mary St., F.W.
38 Centre St., P.A.
RR No. 4 Port Arthur

706 Catherine St., F.W.
447 Prince Arthur Blvd., F.W.
242 S. John St., F.W.
Brock

180

E.

Leslie Ave., P.A.

St.,

F.W.

Dl 4- 3165
Dl 5- 7174

78

RR No. 3 Port Arthur

Dl 4- 0743

RR No. 3 Port Arthur

315 Dufferin

Dl 5- 8935

10 Yee

Dl 5-7695

Box 176, Longlac, Ont.

174

E

TRIMARK, Kenneth

(Jany)

Dl 5-6853

400
386

78

SLISKOVIC, Frank
STILWELL,

64 Prospect Ave., P.A
373 N. Court St., P.A
622 McBain St., F.W
414 Shuniah St., P.A
182 N. High St., P.A
222 Empire Ave., F.W
132 Pine St., P.A
486 Oliver Road, P.A
615 Leland St., F.W
142 Ontario St., P.A
189 Summit Ave., P.A. ..
742 S. Norah St., F.W
349 Harvard St., F.W
1002 McLaughlin St., F.W.
632 S. Marks St., F.W
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22 Lake St., P.A
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S.

S.

Algoma

Hill

118 Ruttan

1320 Ford

St.,

St.,

182 N. High

P.A

St.,

P.A

St.,

St.,

P.A

Dl 4- 3925

Leslie
S.

Wo

P.A

Dl

5-5276

118

F.W

MA

3- 9869

1320 Ford

St.,

P.A

D 5-7235
I

Ave., P.A.

Algoma

Ruttan

St.,

Hong Kong, China

St.,

St.,
St.,

P.A.

P.A.

F.W.

1306-22nd Ave., Rock Island,

III.,

U.S.A.

119

�ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

I

W

6ICKMORE, John

337

KOIVU, Ray A

KUNG, Sin Soo
MORRISON, John
MOSA, Danny W
MURPHY, Frank W
PASCOE, Kendall
SELF,

W

S.

Ill

Banning

229 Grenville Ave., P.A

Dl 4-1332

229 Grenville Ave.,

337 Van Norman

Dl 4-1754

337

78 Crown
621

K

ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY

EKROOS, Allan- J
HARNETT, W. James
JESSIMAN, Gary R
KLEMACKI, Ronald P
LIMBRICK,

Ronald

SINCLAIR,

J.

Mcl.

St.,

P.A

Dl 5-6222

205

Dl 4-1 147

520 Van Norman

Dl 5-8490

10 Van

Farrand

P.A.

St.,

Home

P.A.

St.,

Dryden, Ont.

Ave.,

Dl 4-9284

480 Superior Ave., Terrace Bay, Ont.
18 Melvin Ave., P.A.

I

MA 3-7275

F.W

St.,

D 4-4428

P.A

St.,

I

249 W. Miles
206-6th

F.W.

St.,

Rainy

St.,

Ont.

River,

II

145

MA 2-3096

423

D 5-8739

151

601

R

P.A.

814 Northern Ave., F.W.

D 5-5156

E.

MA 3-7782
Dl 4-1866

St.,

RR No. 2

Hilldale

MA 2-1298

F.W

P.A

Mary

Dl
Rd.,

UUSITALO, David T

100 N.

VENNES, John S
WEST, Armas O

521

RR No. 2 Port Arthur

WOJCIECHOWSKI, Joseph A

318

P.A

St.,

Red River

P.A

F.W

St.,

Hill

Dl 4-3637

F.W

St.,

Southern Ave.,

E.

MA 2-0222

P.A

St.,

316 River

215

I

P.A

St.,

Amelia

244 Egan

(Jay)

P.A.
St.,

P.A

599 Dawson

H

Van Norman

P.A

Cummings St., F.W
Queen St., P.A
1418 W. Gore St., F.W

M

SAXBERG, Allan L
SCHRAML, Siegfreid

P.A

3-3169

P.A.

Rd.,

Oliver

25 Melon

Raphael

MA

F.W.

St.,
St.,

18 Melvin Ave.,

249 W. Miles

DANZIE,

P.A

P.A

St.,

STAPLES, Richard D

Daniel

I

St.,

St.,

TURESKI, William S

CHRUSZ,

P.A

St.,

520 Van Norman

SITCH, Keith R

Marks

337

St.,

Banning

205 Farrand

A

F.

SRIGLEY, Alfred

MA

F.W

3-9365

S.

814 Northern Ave., F.W

0

Charles

Marks

D 4-4843

Ill

Rd.,

P.A

423 Queen

1418 W. Gore

151

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R.R.

No.

215

E.

I

Dl 5-8388

100 N.

Dl 5-8028

Rainy

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No.

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Road, P.A.

F.W.

St.,

P.A.

St.,

Ont.

River,

First

F.W.

Ave.,

Hilldale

2,

R.R.

F.W.

St..

St.,

Mary

318

P.A.

P.A.

Southern

601

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St.,

St..

316 River

P.A.

St.,

Amelia

E.

244 Egan

F.W.

St.,

St.,

599 Dawson

MA 2-1 119

Dl 5-6839

Ave., P.A

First

4-1100

Cumming

145

P.A.

2,

Ave., P.A.

UNIVERSITY FORESTRY
FRANKLIN, Gordon S

FOREST TECHNOLOGY

78 Crown

35

Strathcona

Ave.,

46

Dixon

P.A

215

S.

St.,

P.A

Kenogami Ave., P.A

Dl 5-8408

35 Strathcona Ave., P.A.

Dl 5-9234

9

Dl 4-3332

Nestor

Tony

SUMMERS, Murray G

No.

476

N.

Winnipeg Ave., P.A

MA 5-8000
MA 2-4897

S.

I

P.A

Rd.,

Norah

F.W

D 4-1756

P.A

Rd.,

Algoma

I

496

S.

Norah

Howard

Dl 4-9387

78

P.A

423

C. William

Avondale Ave., Willowdale, Ont.

Queen

St.,
St.,

D 4-5036

567 Franklin

Dl 5-8739

35 Wharncliffe Rd.

I

P.A

St.,

160 Banning

Peter

P.A
P.A

St.,

P.A

Ave.,

P.A

'.

38 Grove Crescent, Brantford, Ont.

I

400

Leslie

St.,

P.A

Dl

4-2650

R.R.

No.

99 Rupert

St.,

P.A.

.Dl

4-3920

99

A

REA, Reginald

120

A

P.A.

Copper

Cliff,

Ont

Rupert

St.,

P.A.

I

1007 Alberta

PANTOULIAS, Martin

Ave.,

1,

Hamilton, Ont.

5,

I

Vickers Heights,' F.W

332

N.

St.,

Syndicate

F.W
Ave.,

RR No. 3 Fort William

F.W

Ont.

Dl 4-3925

No.

R.R.

82 Ontario

Elizabeth J

Ont.

London,

D 4-5036

2,

SUOMU,

Leonard

S.,

Box

I

400

Leslie

Brantford,

St.,

D 4-2650

SENYK, John Paul

William

Ont.

II

82 Ontario

LITT,

Timmins,

Ave.,

330 Arthur

JEROME,

FAULKNER, Ross

Ont.

206 N. Rockwood Ave., P.A.

160 Banning

RYERSON TECHNOLOGY

Cliff,

F.W.

St.,

Dl 4-4335

St.,

Ont.

P.A.

P.A.

19 Poplar, Copper

733

Frances,

St.,

206 N. Rockwood Ave., P.A

BARTHOLOMEW, Alexander
BROWN, William John

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY

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St.,

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St.,

Ont.

Ont.
P.A.

2,

D 4-8796

St.,

Chapleau,

St.,

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P.A

486 Oliver
F

R.R.

Kenogami Ave., P.A

476 N. Algoma

733

Pine

First

Hilldale

EVANS,

Dryden, Ont.

1,

255

91

MATROSOVS,

No.

R.R.

Dl 4-3332

S.

POULTON, Robert
ROBINSON, Wayne C

FOREST TECHNOLOGY

5-8490

RR No. 2 Port Arthur

215

MILLER, James E

SILC,

Dl

I

W

ARNOTT, Robert
BURROWS, Frederick R
EKLUND, Glenn R
IHAMAKI, Leo O
JOHNSON, Norman Earl
MACE, Howard Bruce

SISCO, Ronald

P.A

St.,

MA 2-1 789
MA 2-3533
MA 3-9150

Vickers

Heights, F.W.

1007 Alberta

St.,

F.W.

332 N. Syndicate Ave., F.W.
R.R.

No.

3,

F.W.

.

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151

151

ATKINSON'S JEWELLERS

SCOTT
UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO

146

147

ASSUMPTION UNIVERSITY

J.

138

LTD

SALES

LTD

153
153
153
153

LOWERY'S LIMITED

154

ROYAL EDWARD HOTEL

154

140

SHOP-EASY STORES

154

140

WILLSON STATIONER

154

�CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GRADUATES
OF "60"

PORT ARTHUR
Dl 4-2428

LeCocq
Serving the

It's

A

Must

to

THE FLORIST
Lakehead and Distrct

Since

1911

Have Your

Flowers
FORT WILLIAM

Styled

by

MA

3-7441

LeCOCQ
123

�EVERYBODY READS

Compliments of

LAKEHEAD SUPERMART LTD.
YOUR RCA VICTOR DEALER
VICTORIA AVENUE

FORT WILLIAM
637 SIMPSON

COMPLIMENTS
OF

ST.

259 ARTHUR

PORT ARTHUR

ST.

FORT WILLIAM

SUPERIOR

BOTTLING CO.

CANADA
SAFEWAY LTD.

Drink

Cmt
IT'S

BEST

5 Stores at the

Lakehead

At Your Service
124

211

SOUTHERN AVE.

FORT WILLIAM

�THE

TIMES-JOURNAL
COMMERCIAL PRINTERS
The Largest Commercial
in

Ths Sign of

Fair

Printing

Plant

Northwestern Ontario

Wages

Satisfactory

Working Conditions

Dependable Service

S.

MAY

STREET AT

FORT WILLIAM, ONTARIO

ARTHUR

COMPLIMENTS OF

CANADIAN

[$11

PITTSBURGH

INDUSTRIES LIMITED
268 ARTHUR

PORT ARTHUR

ST.

1056 MEMORIAL

AVE

800 VICTORIA AVE.

PORT ARTHUR
FORT WILLIAM
125

�COMPLIMENTS OF

NORTHERN

ERING&amp; SUPPLY Co. Ltd.

ENG!

COMPLIMENTS OF

SIMPSONS-SEARS LIMITED
FORT WILLIAM ROAD

AND

PH. Dl 4-3581

ISABEL STREET

WOOE)GATES
The

107

S.

MAY

M can's

Shop

FORT WILLIAM

ST.

The Most Wanted

DIAMONDS
in

the World
are at

126

�127

�NATURE

responsible for the

is

abundance of ore mined
of the once primitive

at the site

and beautiful

Steep Rock Lake

O

FACETS OF NATURE

NATURE
that

It

is

with

a

development

love of nature and

true
at

is

respects,

it

is

with

the

and wilderness areas

the Atikokan vicinity

keen understanding for the rights of fellow men that mining
of

must suffer

in

complete assurance that sportsmen agree nature's benefits are maintained

in

is

unsullied

kept

under

rigid

control

so

that

beauty

the

and

and unspoiled.

While the demands of modern society and

some

in

abundance

Steep Rock Lake

surrounding countryside

a

responsible for the beauty

abounds

forests
in

is

industrial

development are such

that

nature

Northwestern Ontario by Steep Rock's diligent application of the rules of nature preservation.

IRON MINES LIMITED
STEEP

ROCK

LAKE, ONT.

�From the Conservation Centre of Canada

1959 Greduates and Students

Best Wishes to

of the

Lakehead College of Arts, Science and Technology

DRYDEN PAPER CO.

LTD.

Dryden, Ontario

COMPLIMENTS OF

.

.

.

COMPLIMENTS

SUPERCRETE

OF

(ONTARIO) LTD.
Established

To Serve
Your Every
Concrete Need

ALA
578

S.

-

DAA

SYNDICATE AVE.

Fort William

129

�tyiicijyiUty/A
ARTHUR ST.

limited

NOTICE

PORT ARTHUR

THE UKEHEAD'S QUALITY

AFTER THIS DATE THE

WATER
Importers - Distributors

Will Take

Water from McVicar's Creek

Above

• CASUAL WEAR
• DRESS WEAR
• SPORTSWEAR
shown

—
—
—

Sweaters
Blouses

Shoes

m

—
—

•
and

LOCAL HEALTH BOARD

KENWOOD BLANKETS

PAYS TO
SHOP AT EATON'S
IT

The Store

for

Young Canada
Assortments

Best All-round Values
All

backed by the Famous Guarantee

"Goods

Satisfactory or

Money Refunded

T EATON
CANADA

C°

PORT ARTHUR BRANCH

130

.

.

,

USE

By Order

WOOLENS

Largest

IN

FREEZING UP

—

BRITISH

THE PIPES AT

PRESENT

Slims
Skirts
Casual Jackets
Dresses
Scott McHale and Ritchie
Continental Suits
Shirts
Coats

• IRISH LINENS
• HUDSON'S BAY

Brewery

the

OWING TO

Fashion Magazines

—
—

Point

at a

WORLD-FAMOUS MERCHANDISE

Styles as

CARRIERS

7

LIMITED

�Strong and honourable traditions provide the
foundation of firm training in leadership
expressed today in the motto of the three
Canadian Services Colleges: Truth-Duty-Valour.
Allied to the prestige of the past is
a university degree education
given by these colleges to the officercadets of Canada's armed forces. Carefully
selected high school graduates are trained
for challenging professional careers as
officers in the Navy, Army or Air force,
for the responsibility of holding

the Queen's Commission.

Through
Plan
tional

the Regular Officer Training
the Department of Na-

(ROTP)

Defence

will sponsor a limited
of qualified high school graduates to obtain a university degree education, either at the Canadian Services
Colleges or at designated Canadian
universities. Full details of this spon-

number

sored education can be obtained without obligation from your nearest Armed
Forces Recruiting Centre, or by mailing this coupon now.
'Closing date for candidates applying
for 1960 fall classes is 1 July I960'.

Director ROTP
NDHQ, OTTAWA,
Please send to

me

TS-60-3HSA
Canada

full

information on the Regular Officer Training Plan

Name
Address

Prov

City/Town

Age

Education

Service Choice

Navy

Army

Air Force

.

131

�Compliments of

The Corporation
of the

CITY OF PORT

MAYOR

N.

R.

ARTHUR

WILSON

ALDERMEN
SAUL LASKIN

CLIFF

WAINO W. LAAKSO

JACK M.

EDGAR LAPRADE

SAAAUEL

ASHTON

ANGELO

G.

DANIEL

H.

RONALD

COGHLAN

V.

WILMOT

CITY CLERK:

ARTHUR

JEAN
H.

EVANS,

McNEILL

S.

T.

STITT

MAURO

ROBINSON

O.B.E., F.C.I.S.

�QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY
— AT
KINGSTON

INCORPORATED BY ROYAL CHARTER

FACULTY OF ARTS

AND SCIENCE:

1841

Courses leading to the General B.A. (three years), the B.A. with
years), the Honours B.Sc. (four years).
The offerthe Faculty of Arts and Science include Courses in the
Humanities (Language and Literature, Philosophy), the Social
Science, (Psychology, Economics, Politics, History); Mathematics,
Experimental Science (Chemistry, Physics, Biochemistry, Biology,
Physiology, Geological Science).

Honours (four
ings

in

FACULTY OF APPLIED SCIENCE:

Courses leading to the degree of B.Sc. in Chemistry, Geological
Science, Physics; and in Mining Metallurgical, Chemical, Civil,
Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.

FACULTY OF MEDICINE:

Courses leading to the degrees of M.D. and M.Sc (Med.); Diploma
of Public Health and Diploma of Medical Radiology.

FACULTY OF LAW:

Courses leading to the degree of

SCHOOL OF NURSING:
SCHOOL OF COMMERCE:

Courses leading to the degree of B.N.Sc.

Combined Course

in

LL.B.

Courses leading to the degree of B.Com.

Arts and Physical and Health Education: Courses leading to the B.A., B.P.H.E.

degrees.

Graduate Courses in Arts and Science, Applied Science and Medicine leading
and Science), M.Sc. (Applied Science), and M.Sc. (Med.).

to the

degrees of

Ph.D., M.A., M.Sc. (Arts

Write to the Registrar for Entrance and Matriculation Scholarship Bulletin

SICK HORSES

COMPLIMENTS OF

Any person having
delicate

J.

at

sick or

G.

PAYNE

Captain McNab's over the creek.

Warrants to make them all right
without the use of drugs.

QUALITY

PALM QUALITY
DAIRY PRODUCTS

a

horse should apply to

FOUND
A

bay horse, with white hind feet and
in forehead; also a bay mare, with
one white hind foot.
star

,

,

They can be seen by applying

PHONE MA 3-8483
E.

EMMONS

to:

�With the Compliments of

The Corporation

CITY

of

of the

FORT WILLIAM
^AADC \
\pl\Ko.)

(~

CCDDAI A
otrrALA

ALDERMEN
A
D
IX

ANDERSON
A AAOPHAM

.

T.

H.

\A/
vv.

REED

n.
l-l

CARROLL
^PITFP
oriVwCK

H.

J.

0.

BOOTH

H. AA. LIAABRICK

C.

H.

MOORS

F.

A.

J.

PUPEZA

W.

REV. A. N.

WILLIAMS
C.

McKENZIE

ADMINISTRATOR
S.

STUDY

DAY

F

H.

IN

BLAKE

CITY CLERK
D.

M. MARTIN

THE NATION'S CAPITAL

People living in Ottawa have educational and cultural opportunities unique in
Canada: departmental libraries of the Dominion Government, the Dominion
Archives, the National Museum of Canada, the National Gallery and many more.
Students attending Carleton University profit from close relations with these
institutions and their expert personnel.
There are exceptional opportunities for
undergraduate and graduate study in new buildings on the Rideau River Campus.
Carleton offers bachelors' degrees in Arts, Science, Commerce, Journalism, and
Engineering; AA.A., M.Sc, and Ph.D. programs; special Public Administration
studies; scholarships, bursaries,

and

loans.

For complete information write to the Registrar

CARLETON UNIVERSITY
OTTAWA, ONTARIO

134

�FOR THE

Compliments of

Finest
in

Sportswear

.

.

Coots

.

Dresses
Formal and Bridal Creations
Suits

THREE LOCATIONS TO SERVE

.

.

.

YOU
SHOP AT

224 ARTHUR ST

514 VICTORIA AVE.

PORT ARTHUR, ONT.

FORT WILLIAM, ONT

A ndre s

and

RIDGEWAY PHARMACY
RIDGEWAY &amp; VICKERS

ST.

FORT WILLIAM, ONT.
12

Look

to

S.

CUMBERLAND

PORT ARTHUR

ST.

Your Main Asset

Carry on Students
Continuing

Education"
Your

Home

Service Centre

Before -

Now

ALWAYS USE THE
NEVER
THE

ICE

FAILS.

ICE

- Future
CREAAA THAT

REACH FOR-ASK FOR

CREAAA WITH TOP HONORS.

NORTH AMERICAN
LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY
CO. LTD.

SCOLLIES
ICE

1

003 MYLES

ST.

600 CATHERINE

CREAM
ST.

FORT WILLIAM

FORT WILLIAM, ONT.

DIAL 2-1945, 2-1674

AAA 3-3405

PHONE

AAA 3-3406

�REOCH &amp; CO.

HOT AND COLD

BATHS

BOARD OF HEALTH SCAVENGERS

The tender of this firm being the lowest and
having been accepted by the Board of Health
they are prepared to do

all

scavenging work

promptly and cheaper than anyone

Rates

— sanctioned by

50 cents per

coal

oil

the Board: For night
barrel;

SOUTH WATER STREET

else.

ashes,

swill

OPPOSITE TEMPERANCE HOTEL

soil,

and

NEXT DOOR TO THE BAY VIEW

garbage, 15 cents per barrel; ashes, swill and

garbage $1 for double horse load, 50 cents for
single.

ALSO

TEAMING

H.

J.

CARTING

YOUNKER, PROP.

OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS DONE

NOTHING

20 SHOP!

10 x
Where everything
small shop.

We

is

handy.

I

tell

LIKE IT!

you

it

is

astonishing

the conveniences there

are

in

a

can find

PLENTY OF ROOM FOR MONEY
If

you don't think

course,

want

we

can, just try us. For the

to find out

benefit

of

those

who

don't

know, and of

where

THE PIONEER FRUIT STORE
we would

is,

say that

it

is

two doors

DELICIOUS FRUITS, and the

An

largest

east of the post office,

and freshest assortment of confectionery

.

.

in

excellent stock of winter fruit at fair prices.
E.

\36

where you can get the MOST

.

KNIGHT,

MANAGER

Port Arthur.

�we ve
analyzed
the
college

man

and have come up with the formula for finer
style and quality at a minimum cost

Now

you

handsome

can

successfully

best on a

limited

look

budget, as

Chappies have the fashions that

campus

life,

social

life

your

fit

your

and your clothes

LIMITED

allowance. See us soon!

13?

�With the Compliments of

THE GREAT LAKES PAPER COMPANY,

PORT ARTHUR

-

FORT WILLIAM

KELLOUGH BROS. DAIRY

LTD.

PORT ARTHUR

FORT WILLIAM

SEVEN-UP BOTTLING
(Fort William)
131 N.

COMPANY

LIMITED
ARCHIBALD STREET

FORT WILLIAM
ONTARIO

.•

.•

e

LTD.

�For

You - The

Future

Your future advancement, both cultural and material, will depend on
none more important than your use of the years immediately
following your graduation from high school.

many

factors,

Never before has university training been deemed so imperative
young people who sincerely wish to make the most of their capabilities.

for

you are interested, the University of Western Ontario is ready to tell
wide-ranging educational facilities, to show you how Western can meet
your needs.
By writing to the Registrar now you may obtain an interesting
illustrated folder which outlines Admission Requirements, Courses, Scholarships
and Fees.
If

you of

its

The

University of Western Ontario
LONDON

-

CANADA

MADSEN RED LAKE
GOLD MINES
(NO PERSONAL

Officers

and

LIMITED
LIABILITY)

Directors

Board of Directors

JOSEPH AAcDONOUGH
MARIUS AAADSEN
FRED R. MARSHALL, Q.C.

Toronto, Ont.
Toronto, Ont.
Registrars

Toronto, Ont.

HUGH MACKAY
HORACE G. YOUNG, M.E
A. H.
S. J.

SEGUIN

Toronto, Ont.

BIRD, C.E

Toronto, Ont.

Executive Officers

JOSEPH

McDONOUGH

FRED R. MARSHALL, Q.C.
MISS M. MASTERSON
E. G. CRAYSTON, P. ENG.
DR. E. G. BISHOP

Transfer Agents

Rothesay, N.B.

Montreal, Que.

GUARANTY TRUST COMPANY OF CANADA
70 Richmond Street West
610 St. James Street West

THE BANK OF
President

and

Toronto, Ont.
....

Montreal, Que.

NEW YORK

48 Wall Street

New

York, 15, N.Y.

Vice-President
Secretary-Treasurer

General Manager
Consultant

.

.

.

139

�Compliments of
CLARE
.

MAPLEDORAM
LIMITED

A G E N C ES
I

Perciante

&amp;

Laprade

Sporting Goods Limited

Home

of

Insurance
TWO

STORES TO SERVE YOU

and Real Estate
112

S.

Syndicate

Avenue

Fort William

125

S.

MAY

STREET

9

S.

Cumberland

St.

Port Arthur

FORT WILLIAM

ONTARIO
GUY PERCIANTE

EDGAR LAPRADE

Compliments of Thunder Bay

AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ASSOCIATION
S.

J.

HILL

&amp; SONS

LAKEHEAD MOTORS

PORT ARTHUR MOTORS

DOMINION MOTORS
GIBSON MOTORS

KAM MOTORS

LTD.

JESSIMAN MOTORS

140 ..

.

�Congratulations
to

1960 Graduates
LAKEHEAD COLLEGE OF ARTS,
SCIENCE and
We

TECHNOLOGY

emphasize industry's need for graduates of higher education, and
in young Canadians with degree standing in the sciences.

our interest

GOOD

LUCK

to

all

of you

Abitibi

in

your further studies.

LAKEHEAD WOODLANDS

For Fine

&amp;

Power
-

Paper

PORT ARTHUR, ONT.

Furs

Van Peteghem

Furs

Manufacturing Furriers
REPAIRS

-

RE-STYLING

-

STORAGE
DIAL

PORT ARTHUR, ONT.

8

S.

Dl

5-6341

COURT

ST.

PILKINGTON GLASS LIMITED
INTERNATIONAL VARNISH CO. LIMITED
VICKERS

AND

VICTORIA STREETS, FORT WILLIAM, ONTARIO

TELEPHONE

Dl 2-7701

�IDfctorfa College
in the

UNIVERSITY OF

TORONTO

Founded by Royal Charter
in

the various

in 1836 "for the general education of youth
branches of Literature and Science on Christian Principles."

As one

of the Federated Colleges in the Faculty of Arts of the University
of Toronto, Victoria College enrolls students in all courses leading to the
degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Commerce and preparatory to
admission to the schools of Graduate Studies, Divinity, Education, Law and
Social

Work.

the Annesley Hall Women's Residences accommodation is available for
students of Victoria College.
In the Victoria College Residences
accommodation is available for men students of the College.
In

women

Men and Women

in Residence may be assisted
through Residence Bursaries.

For

full

information, including calendars and bulletins,

apply to the Registrar, Victoria College, Toronto.

Compliments of

BARNETT-McQUEEN COMPANY LIMITED

FORT WILLIAM

142

�HARNESSING IDEAS
Canada's problem

in

the 20th century

to harness the ideas of

is

Ideas in electronics and automation;

its

men

of learning

medicne, chemistry, and physics; in
forestry, agriculture and mining; in engineering, production and business ... in all these
fields, university-trained minds are needed to translate blueprints into action.
and genius.

This
All

is

the reason behind the continual

who

study today

at university

time, they can enter one of the

call

in

for

more and bigger

making full use
Canada offers them.

are indeed fortunate. By

many rewarding

A Message

careers that

universities.

of their

from

THE ONTARIO PAPER COMPANY LTD.
THOROLD, ONTARIO

HERON BAY - MANITOULIN ISLAND

BEST WISHES

FROM

NORTHERN

WOOD

PRESERVERS LTD.

PORT ARTHUR

143

�WITH THE COMPLIMENTS
AND

BEST WISHES
OF

DORAN'S (PORT ARTHUR) BREWERY LTD.
PORT ARTHUR. ONTARIO

FLEETWOOD
RECORD PLAYERS
Compliments of
"The Pick of Them All"

Newaygo

29.95 to 99.95

Timber Co.
LIMITED

subsidiary of

CONSOLIDATED WATER POWER and
PAPER

BROS. LIMITED

COMPANY

Since 1906

Hardware
PORT ARTHUR

—

Furniture

—

Appliances

ONTARIO
VICTORIA

AND SIMPSON

PHONE

FORT WILLIAM
44

MA 3-6478

�THE UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA
ANNOUNCES

THE OPENING OF THE

1960-61 SESSION

Courses Will Be Offered Leading To Degrees

HOME ECONOMICS

AGRICULTURE
ARCHITECTURE
ARTS

INTERIOR DESIGN

LAW

COMMERCE

MEDICINE

DENTISTRY

PHARMACY

EDUCATION
ENGINEERING

SCIENCE
SOCIAL WORK

FINE

AND

In:

APPLIED ART

(Painting, Sculpture, Ceramics)

•
•

Valuable scholarships and bursaries.

•

Residences.

Excellent athletic

and recreational

And To Diplomas
For

particulars write to:

full

facilities

in

the

new

or Certificates:

University

AGRICULTURE
APPLIED ART

In:

MUSIC
NURSING EDUCATION

The Registrar,
The University of Manitoba,
Fort Garry, Manitoba

STAGE
TO THE MINES
MOUNTAIN AND WHITEFISH LAKE
STAGE AND TRANSFER LINE

SILVER

Gymnasium.

Compliments of

TAYLOR'S
MEN'S

WEAR

Leaving The Northern Hotel, Port Arthur

Mondays and

Fridays at 7 a.m.

40

S.

CUMBERLAND

ST.

Calling at

TAILORED TO

FIT

RABBIT MOUNTAIN,

BEAVER, TWIN CITY, SILVER FALLS

&amp; SILVER MOUNTAIN MINES

TAILORED TO

WEAR

TAILORED BY
TAYLOR'S MEN'S

Supplies Carried At Moderate Rates

WEAR

�COMPLIMENTS OF

MARATHON CORPORATION
OF CANADA LIMITED
WOODLANDS

DIVISION

PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO

DON'T BE DUPED
When you

INDIANS

ask for the "Cable" or "El

Padre"

Fort Worth,

1885

ON

—

THE WARPATH
The Indians are again on

brand of cigars see that you get them, don't be

the warpath. The inhabitants are fleeing

persuaded

dreds, terror stricken.

to take inferior

interest of dealers to sell

larger

profit

goods, as

it

is

to the

them because of the

made on them.

the savages.
Fort

Deming

Two

scouts

in

were shot by

pursuit of the hostiles.

COCHRANE HARDWARE
(WESTERN) LTD.

146

hun-

Troops have been dispatched from

Compliments of

FORT WILLIAM

in

PORT ARTHUR

�Compliments and Best Wishes

From

ANACONDA

IRON ORE (ONTARIO) LIMITED

COMPLIMENTS
OF

BLACKWOOD HODGE

MINING AND CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT DISTRIBUTORS

147

�Assumption University of Windsor
congratulates the I960 graduating classes of

LAKEHEAD COLLEGE OF ARTS,
SCIENCE

AND TECHNOLOGY

ARTS

ENGINEERING

PURE SCIENCE

HOUSEHOLD SCIENCE

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

NURSING

For information about scholarships, bursaries, student loans,

contact the Registrar, Assumption University of Windsor,

400 Huron

Line,

Clearwater 4-9246

Compliments of

PROVINCIAL PAPER, LIMITED

Port Arthur Division

148

.

�Eat
COR. COURT &amp; ARTHUR STS.

SHAW'S

PORT ARTHUR

Home

Famous

of the

"AQUATEL"

ENRICHED

WHOLESOME
BREAD
240

S.

ALGOMA

ST.

DIAL

Dl

PORT ARTHUR
5-7327
Antimagnetic
Self-Winding

Waterproof
30 Jewel

'The Watch for the

Man

of

Tomorrow*

Compliments of

Rutledge Stationery
LIMITED

Crooks Rexall
GREETING CARDS

Pharmacy

-

BOOKS - OFFICE

STATIONERY
SUPPLIES

OFFICE FURNITURE

PHONE

PORT ARTHUR

MA 2-9675

FORT WILLIAM

512 VICTORIA

AVE

ONTARIO

FORT WILLIAM

149

�ONTARIO

Opportunity Unlimited

.

.

.

production in Ontario continues to spiral upward to new heights.
Ontario's Mines increased their yield in 1959 to an outstanding high of $962,756,000 representing an expansion of about $161,000,000 over the previous
Many new areas have come into prominence in the last few years as
year
the result of rich discoveries, and names such as Manitouwadge, Elliot Lake, Bancroft and many others, which were little known a short time ago, are taking their
rightful place beside the old established mining fields.

Mineral

—

!

—

With all this continuing expansion more men are needed men trained in engineering, geology, and the related sciences.
To all young men with the will to succeed, mining in Ontario offers a challenge
and opportunity unlimited.

—

—

"Ontario
An Expanding Mining Empire in 1959" a new booklet reporting
the activities of The Ontario Department of Mines and progress of the Mining
Industry.
For your free copy write:

THE ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF MINES
HONOURABLE JAMES
MINISTER OF MINES

A.

MALONEY,

Q.C.

H. C.

RICKABY

DEPUTY MINISTER

�CLAYDON COMPANY

LIMITED

General Contractors and Builders
WINNIPEG

PORT ARTHUR

FORT WILLIAM

A

1

KtNUKA

IKAJKAN

DUNCAN AND WATERLOO

108 N. SYNDICATE AVE.

PORT ARTHUR

FORT WILLLIAM

AAA 3-8444

AAA 3-8444
BRINGS A

LTD.
TO YOUR DOOR
24-HOUR TAXI, GASOLINE AND
111

North Brodie

OIL SERVICE

Fort William

St.,

JAMES
STEREO CENTRE
ST.

ATKINSON'S
Jewellers Limited

Largest Music Store at the Lakehead

Complete Line
-

RECORDS
STEREO

-

TROPHY CUPS,

PLAYERS

PINS,

MEDALS, RINGS

TAPE RECORDERS

BALDWIN ORGANS AND PIANOS
Lakehead's Leading Quality Jewellers

When you

think of Music

See

ST.

JAMES

202 ARTHUR STREET

8

S.

Cumberland

St.

Port Arthur

PORT ARTHUR
151

�DOWN

GOES THE CLOTHING

BARTLES
Having decided
business,

to close out this

we now

including

branch of our

balance of our stock,

offer the

men's, youths' and boys' suits at

ACTUAL COST AND UNDER
Call

and be convinced that

this

sale

is

genuine

OVERCOATS
IN

RACOON, DOGSKIN, BUFFALO AND BEAR

ROBES
IN

JAPANESE WOLF, GOAT, BEAR AND BUFFALO

Winter Stock Complete

J.

H.

in

All Departments

BARTLE
1885

�TELEPHONE

Dl

5-9972

DON MURPHY CONSTRUCTION LTD.
Genera
ROOM

Contractors

NORTH CUMBERLAND STREET

8

8

I

PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO

RUTTAN BOLDUC ADDERLEY
-

-

LIMITED

Insurance and Mortgage Loans

COMPLIMENTS OF

.

.

.

SCOTT
The

J.

McLennan
Lumber
H.

COMPANY

MOTOR

SALES

LIMITED

Quality Used Cars
Building Supplies

Hardware - CIL Paints
Coal - Fuel

Oil

318 SOUTH SYNDICATE AVE.

FORT WILLIAM, ONTARIO

Rental Tools

153

�ROYAL EDWARD
HOTEL
LOWERY'S
FREE

LIMITED

PARKING

Community

Fort William's

Owned
Everything for the Office

Hotel

NEW MODERN

ADDITION

Catering to Weddings
DIAL

Dl

Luncheons, Banquets

PORT ARTHUR

4-6666

R.

GORDON WILSON, MGR.
FORT WILLIAM

CONGRATULATIONS
FROM

&lt;§fil/iLLSON

SHOP-EASY STORES

MOST COMPLETE

f "-COMPANY-

Stationerx

OFFICE OUTFITTERS

FORT WILLIAM
18

PORT ARTHUR

COURT

PORT ARTHUR

PHONE

154

ST.

Dl

4-9618

1

17

S.

SYNDICATE AVE.
FORT WILLIAM

PHONE MA

3-8521

���������</text>
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                    <text>���3

c/

��We

Dedicate

To

��Chancellor's

Message

My

first

by asking

me

words are an acknowledgment and an appreciation of the honour you have bestowed on
to be your

first

Chancellor.

To be Chancellor

so promising is not only exciting but also inspiring.

lives of

remember, and

Higher education becomes more important in the
to concentrate

is

it

must not be

the purpose of a college education.

attain these qualities, the brain must be trained like an athlete, but a person

that this training must be

me

new university with the future

each of us with every day. Some of the studies seem unnecessary to many, but

forgotten that to learn, to think, to

To

of a young,

accompanied by heart and kindness and consideration

must also remember

for others.

No one can

achieve greatness without friends.
This University
is

is

located in the heart of Canada's most promising mineral development so that

complement the study of the Arts. A great
must always bear in mind there is lots of room at the top.

appropriate that Science and Technology should

ahead

for

My

Canada and students

best wishes to all of you.

N.

M.

Paterson.

future

it
is

�Mr. W. G.

Tamblyn

Chairman

Board of Governors
Machan

Mr. M. W. Babe

Dr.

M. W. Bartley
Mr. J. H Charnock
Mr. D.C. Clark

Mr. K.A. Miners

Dr.

Mr. J.A
Mr.

.

CP.

Dr. R. R. Mutrie

Mr. D.I. Nattress

Crooks

Mr. E.G. Pallister

Dalzell

Mr.

Mr. J.E.J. Fahlgren

Mr.

M. Fleming
Mr. M. S. Fotheringham

Dr.

Mr.

J.

J.

N. Paterson

Mr. R.J. Prettie

Mr. R.J. Flatt
Mr.

J. R.

Mr.

B.

Shaffer

B.W

.

F. L.

Stevens
Stevens

Goodall

Mr. A.L. K. Switzer

Mr. D.

F.

Hassard

Mr. W. G. Tamblyn

Mr. T.

S.

Jones

Mr. G. H.

E. L.

Dr.

T.J.

Mr.

S.

Kane

W. Lukinuk

Mr.

R. S.

Young
Young

�Principal's

Message
TO THE GRADUATES:
Within a few weeks an Act will be submitted to
the Legislature of the Province of Ontario to change
the

name

of Lakehead College of Arts, Science and

Technology

Lakehead University.

to

sity for the first
first

They

time.

,

K. G.

achieve

this goal,

Univer-

Norman

by our

Paterson,

under the authority of our

St. J.

,

Senate. As one of

May, degrees
this

will be granted

Chancellor, the Honourable

LL. D.

In

and Science will be granted by

in Arts

first

many who have worked hard to
I deem it a distinct honour to

bring greetings and very sincere best wishes to the

members

of this

first

graduating class.

Lakehead University will retain the motto
adopted by Lakehead College: "Ad augusta per
angusta". This motto

the password used by the

is

ERNANI by Verdi which he
The transhighest things". You are going

conspirators in the opera

derived from the drama by Victor Hugo.
lation

is

"Only by going through difficulties may you reach the
which is certainly not lacking in "difficulties" but,

into a world

same time, the

at the

,

opportunities to achieve "higher things" have never been greater.

Many

of the "difficulties" as well as the opportunities for "higher things" will stem from

the rapid introduction of increased automation in the next few years.

the

way people work,

it

will also bring with it a

work and more

to a life of less

provide.

but

new philosophy

It
-

will not only affect

a philosophy adjusted

leisure to enjoy the arts and graces that a

Whether or not we achieve the higher things

in life will

wholesome

can

life

depend largely upon the

soundness of our system of education.

No college

or university

can give you an education. Becoming educated does to follow

inevitably from anything done by anyone else. Theodore Roosevelt once remarked

am

to be,

I

am now becoming". What

by many things

-

way you

the

studied, the

you responded to your colleagues
not

-

As members of the
I

am

first

way you participated

in brief, the

change when you receive your degree

close scrutiny.

or

way you

I

speak

in other activities, the

diploma because

it is

for

way

a continuing process.

the entire Faculty

when

I

many

say that

confidence in you.

We

I

lived each day. Obviously, this will

graduating class of Lakehead University,

sure that

"What

you derived from Lakehead University was determined

wish you well.

H. S. BRAUN.

eyes will give you
I

have the highest

��Mr. D.

R.

(1956)

Lindsay

Dr. F.

Doan

(1961)

�Mr. K. Hayashida
(1963)

Mr. H. Lue
(1963)

Kim

��Dr. J.G. Rideout

(1964)

Mr.

J.

D. Wilson

(1964)

�Office Staff

BACK ROW: Mrs. Helvi Johima, Miss V. Bemko, Miss
FRONT ROW: Miss R. Kujala, Mrs. D. Laban, Miss E.

C. Primack.

Kallio, Mrs. L. Phillips, Mrs. R. Dundas.

INSERT: Mrs. M. Bishop, Mr. W. Shannon.

Library Staff

BACK ROW:
Mrs.

J.

Mr. G. Dawosyr, Miss G. Prontack, Miss A. Taipale, Miss M. Wilson, Miss

J.

Hawkins,

Hutchinson, Mrs. M. McMurtry, Mr. C. Thorsteinson.

FRONT ROW:
INSERT: Dr.

Mrs. Z. Fonda, Mrs. D. Gnarowski, Dr. R. R. Grodzicky, Miss L. Aedy, Miss V. Handy.
R. R.

Grodzicky, Chief Librarian.

�Cafeteria Staff

Mrs. K. Morrison, Mrs. O. Goodsell, Mrs. O. Hanneson.

Janitorial Staff
ill

Hi

BACK ROW: F. Dyer, E. Forbes, G.
FRONT ROW: E. Maki, A. Chedore,

Gini,

MISSING:

Thibault,

E. Perrier,

INSERT: Mr.

P.

H. Seifert,

L.

Ubriaco, BUILDING

R.

M.

Intravaia, A. Prezio.

Armstrong.
J.

Maki.

SUPERINTENDENT.

���President's Message
"Aspiration
ideals, if

is

the seed of growth.

It is

not enough to have lofty ambitions and

we do nothing about them. They must be

put in practice or they will not

contribute to growth."

us at

These words by the Canadian poet, Bliss Carman, are of special significance to
Lakehead University, for the aspirations of a young college have been realized

and an expanding university established. We,
involved in this exciting process of growth
us an intense pride for our

augusta per angusta".

Alma Mater and

-

as students,

have been intimately

a process which has created in each of

a growing dedication to the motto

"Ad

�Alma
Mater
Society

Dr. G.J. Merrill

Advisor

BACK ROW: Nick

Doneff, John Morris, Gary Murchison, Robert
Hall, Antero Elo, Roy Piovesana, John
HxUier, Pat Connor, Leon Nicol, Dave Parsons,
Tom Brewer.

FRONT ROW:

Neil McGregor,

Merrill, Jerry Hess.

Ken Mucha. Susan Valley, Carol

Bell,

Gary Tocheri, Dr

George
fe

�"We Pine

for

a B.Sc. (F)

Lakehead University

�GRADUATES

�Len W. Anderson

Judi Arnot

Shirley Barabash

Gen.

Gen.

Gen.

B. A.

Pol. Sc.

Fort

William

B.

A.

B.

A.

French

English

Port Arthur

Port Arthur

aVa
Carol Joan Bell

Maurice G. Black

Robert M. B

Gen. B.A.

Gen.

Gen. B.A.

History

Psychology

History

Port Arthur

Fort William

Kenora

B.

A.

f

^^^^
Brown

Att^^A^

Allan A. Carlson

Gayle

Gen. B.A.

Gen. B.A.

Gen.

Psychology

History

French

History

Port Arthur

Fort

Douglas

Fort

L.

William

Fort

William

S.
B.

Carlson

A.

Robert G. Cerutti

Gen. B.A.

William

�TS

Mrs. Irene

Gen. B.A.

Mrs. Liz Dougall
Gen. B.A.

History

History

English

Port Arthur

Port Arthur

Fort

William

AnteroJ. Elo

Patrick

Gen. B.A.

Gen. B.A.

Gen. B.A.

Math.

History

French, English

Port Arthur

Fort

4

w

J.

Dawson

Mrs. Ruth Collins

Gen. B.A.

Penny

Fuchek

William

S.

Grace

Port Arthur

A A VA

Marlene Grand Maitre

Gordon Harle

Hazel Hebden

Raymond W. Hodowansky

Gen. B.A.

Gen.

Gen. B.A.

Gen.

B.

French

History

English

Pol.

Sc.

Port Arthur

Port Arthur

Fort

B.

A.

William

Fort

A.

William

�Kendall House

Joan Kleinendorst

Wallis

Gen. B.A.

Gen.

Gen.

B.

History

History

Port Arthur

Fort

A.

Phil.

William

J.

B.
,

Lancaster

A.

Pol.

Sc.

,

William LeMay

Gillis

J.

Gen.

Gen.

B.

B.

A.

Economics
Fort

Garth

Gen.

R.

B.

McLeod
A.

Kenneth
Gen.

French

Pol.

Port Arthur

Fort

Econ.

Baie d'Urfe, P.Q.

P.

William

Mucha

B. A.

Sc.

William

Mrs. Doreen

Lemieux

Gen.

A.

B. A.

Economics

English

Longlac

Fort

William

Leon A. Nicol

Douglas A. Numbers

Gen.

B.

Gen.

Pol.

Sc.

A.

Manitouwadge

B. A.

History

Atikokan

McGrath

�Robert W. Piper

Mrs. Susan Piper

Gen.

Gen.

B.

A.

Psychology
Fort

Mrs. Pat V. Ofner

Gordon Peterson

Gen.

Gen.

B.

A.

Fort

Roy H. Piovesana
Hon.

A.

B.

Latin

Psychology

History

Port Arthur

Port Arthur

Fort

B.

A.

Economics

William

Fort

William

Charl. E. Spicer

Gwen A. Thrower

Katherine A. Tod

Edward Tymkin

Gen.

B.

Gen.

Gen.

Gen.

Pol.

Sc.

A.
,

Phil.

Fort William

,

Psych.

B.

A.

B.

A.

B.

A.

Latin, French

English

Psychology

Port Arthur

Fort William

Red Lake

A.

William

Mrs. Joyce Ray

Gen.

B. A.

English, French

William

B.

�AWA
Susan M. Valley

Donald Walduck

Peter Mojciechowski

Gen.

Gen.

Gen.

B.

A.

B.

A.

B.

A.

English, Psych.

Economics

Economics, History

Port Arthur

Port Arthur

Port Arthur

Science

Dale W. Blaine
B.

Ronald K. Eger
B.

Sc.

Patricia

Sc.

B.

Connor

Sc.

Biology, Chemistry

Biology, Chemistry

Fort William

Port Arthur

Peter R. Hindle
B.

Sc.

Biology, Chemistry

Math.

Dryden

Fort

Dennis Mazurkewich
B.

,

Chemistry

William

Sc.

Biology, Chemistry,
Fort William

Psych.

��Robert G. Campbell

K. Childerhose

Bonnie Chisholm

P.

Stefan Chyril

Margaret Coghlan

Thomas Covino

Wendy Duncan

Christensen

David Christie

Berta Eggel

II

���Sandra Lysak

Bruce MacDonald

Thomas MacLeod

John McClelland

William McEachern

Gerald Mercier

Patricia

Matheson

Robert McLaren

Donald Mayhew

William McLaren

Donald McLean

Louise

McGoey

Clifford Miller

Charles Mitchell

��Donald Sutton

��Heather Ylimaki

Richard

Zimmerman

Arts

Ronald Zorzes

II

Raymonde Bedard

�Philip (Rev.

Judith Greer

Lawrence Hansen

Ronald Haworth

William Hay

Roger Huber

Ulla Idman

Leo Julien

Robert Kelly

)

Florip

Robert Hensrud

Carol Knox

����Wayne

Everett

Gerry Hashiguchi

Michael Gilbert

William Hampe

James Hanneson

James Hart

Dianne Hughes

Frederick Johnson

Seppo Kasma

Donald Kerr

�Zeonon Kozyra

Dominic Lam

Hugh McBride

Daniel

Mundy

Bruce Lenton

Frederick Lein

Michael Naida

David Magee

Bialosa

Okonkwo

Keith Pringnitz

�Science

II

�Terttu Vuorinen

��II-

^^^^^^ j^ffc^^

Peter Kruzliak

Henry Kulik

Allan Kurki

Russell

Kwiatkowski

William Lankinen

m
Douglas Lawrence

Richard

Layman

Gregory Love

C. Neil McGregor

Allan O'Brien

David Stirling

George Pachovsky

James Redden

Kenneth Sisson

Robert

Thomson

Richard Staples

�For

when

the

One Great

Scorer

comes

write against your

He marks

-

to

name,

not that you

won

or lost - but

how

you played the game.
-

Grantland Rice.

�TECHNOLOGY

�Engineering

James Andrychuk

Allan Bonnett

Jochen Buetow

Technology

I
Lome Caldwell

Donald Cliff

6
•aS"*' *

•

Udo David

.^^HHI^fak

•
.

^
1

Donald Farrow

Keith Fawcett

Lome Gander

.^fl^^Hlfe*.

W^^%

^^^1

1
Jerry Gothard

William

Griffis

Cecil Henley

Ian

Hogg

Frank Jaklitch

�Henry Miro

Allan Peltola

Eugene Plant

James Robinson

Robert Stampler

David Vibert

�Joseph Przybylek

Timothy Rowe

Maurice Salvador

Andy

Sitarik

�Forestry

Technology

I

���Forestry

Technology

II

James Bauch

John Brewer

Douglas Burn

Ken Cleary

Brent Coates

Nickolas Doneff

Karl Goodwin

Thomas Hamilton

Andrew Harjula

John Hillier

Edwin Kukkee

Dennis Larmand

Graham Longmire

H. Gary Murchison

�David Mutch

Robert Newstead

Delbert Parker

David Parsons

Ronald Perry

Arthur Robinson

Robert Ruault

John Shoup

Barnett Smith

Edward Swiatloski

Ryerson
Architectural

Technology
Angelo Bottos

James Childs

Donald Colborne

Carol Dutchak

��Ryerson
Business Administration

Ain Alatalu

Daniel Balyk

Pat Baranuik

Howard Berg

Richard Belle

Ronald Buckno

�Robert Duke

Terence Eyton

James Fay

Jim Geravelis

David Gibson

James Gushak

David Fernie

Lome

Hassard

Ian Gatherum

Ronald Hider

���Ryerson
Engineering Technology

�����Student Christian Movement

FRONT ROW: G. Kwong, C. Spicer, President; K. McLellan.
BACK ROW: D. Brown, M. Spidell, E. Pattyson, M. Mitchell.

Circle

FRONT ROW:

B.

"K" Club

Ruault, D. Larmand, H. Mayers, T. Kelly, President; P. Gardner, Dr. G. Merrill,

Advisor; D. Parsons.

BACK ROW:
man,

R.

B. Prout, K.

Runholm,

J.

Hillier, G.

Yurick, B. Edward, B. Gauthier.

Hammet,

J.

Lunny,

R.

Stinson,

J.

Gushak, G. Good-

�Another successful year has been enjoyed by the Lakehead S. C. M. The noon-hour lecture series consisted of
These topics included "The Playboy Philosophy" "Man

five sets of lectures organized to consider specific topics.

Against Mass Society"

,

"

Intelligent Christianity"

ing seminars were presented

and

"Communism and

-

"Rome and

,

,

"Political Perspectives"

the Ecumenical

,

and "Communication". Three even-

Movement", "Crosscurrents

in

Psychology and Religion",

the West". Each of these seminars provided an opportunity to consider a topic through two

lectures, a panel discussion, and a question period.

Five study and discussion groups on a variety of topics pro-

vided a chance for a small group of students to learn and to exchange ideas in weekly meetings.

The

S.

C.M. again

sponsored the International Film Society as a service project. For the

first

time

this effort

provided a significant source of revenue for the group. Profits from the films were used to partially subsidize the
cost of sending six delegates to the S. C.

M. Western Regional Christmas Conference at U. B. C. As another serall proceeds going to Oxfam of Canada. The effort

vice project, the group sponsored "Folk-Concert '64", with

was an outstanding success as overflow audiences enjoyed the highly polished performances.
Finally, a Fall

Camp

in

mid -October and

a Spring

Camp immediately

exams provided

after the final

a real

opportunity for group fellowship and discussion.

The Circle "K" Club has made
academic year. Circle "K"

a

present
ter

is

is

number

community during the

of significant contributions to the university

an international service club sponsored by Kiwanis groups. The local chap-

become more and more

the only group between Toronto and the West Coast and as such, our activities will

significant as additional groups develop in this vast area.

The club

is

open to any male student having a willing-

ness to work.

Activities of the club have been quite varied as the following
for the sale

and distribution of the University jackets, sweat

list

shirts,

indicates.

The club has been

responsible

and Forestry sweaters; a Christmas show

for

the patients at St. Joseph's Hospital; ushering, parking, and coatroom attendants for various functions at the
University Centre; sponsoring of the Hallowe'en Dance; the presentation of a University pennant to the visiting

Kwansei Gakuin University of Japan

as a gesture of international friendship; the presentation of a scholarship to

be presented at Convocation exercises; organization and participation in

many

of the Winter Carnival activities

including the Carnival King contest, Monte Carlo night, the pancake lunch, design and construction of
the Ice Palace, as well as participation in

A
ters.

delegation of

members from

At that time liason was

set

many

other stunts designed to promote the

image

the local group attended the convention in Toronto for Eastern

up between the groups

in the East

much

Canada chap-

and our own group in order to keep better

posted on the activities at other universities.

The Lakehead University Circle "K" Club has enjoyed

a most successful year, and

it

looks forward to con-

tinued growth and expansion with the advent of greater numbers of students and members.

of

of the University.

�FRONT ROW: M.
Coghlan, B. Grant,

M.

Rodgers, R. Bed-

ard, President; C.
Bell,

J.

Greer, H.

Ylimaki.

BACK ROW:

S.

Wallace,

Hall,

S.

M. Skoropad,
Okada,

Nemissa

Ukrainian Club

FRONT ROW: M.
Skoropad,

R.

Petry-

shyn, President; E.

Stodolny.

BACK ROW:

G. Babin,

M. Warywoda, C.
Boyko,

S.

Prodanyk,

Kazsor, D.
S.

Chyril.

S.

K.

Valley.

�Doug McKessock,
Roy Piovesana, Ken
Mucha, Dennis
Mazurkewich.
INSERT: Dr. M.E.
Arthur, Advisor.

Debating Society

Psychology Club

FRONT ROW:

Dr. D.

MacDonald, Advisor;
C. Knox, P. Probizanski, D. Brown.

BACK ROW:
R.

A. Elo,

Petryshyn, P.

Gardner, D. Prod any k,
L. Julien, L.

inson.

Rob-

�World University Service

BACK ROW:

Dr. G. Merrill, Marlene Grand Maitre, Gerald Hess.

World University Service began

its

1964-65 program with an educational campaign in the

fall.

In October

Mr. Gnarowski, Marlene Grand Maitre, and Susan Valley represented Lakehead University at the annual assembly
in London, Ontario.

Treasure Van visited the Lakehead University campus on October 19th, 20th, and 21st and was a phenomenal
success due to the efforts of Marlene Grand Maitre and her committee.

At a meeting of the selection board

last spring,

University at the Canadian Seminar in Chile in the

In order to raise

money

It

and

Kelly of Arts

to sponsor our delegate to Chile,

college toques as well as sponsoring Slave
February,

Tom

summer

W.U.S. C. presented

its

Day

II

was chosen to represent Lakehead

of 1965.

W. U.

S.

C. undertook the sale of beer

in conjunction with Nemissa. In the

mugs and

months of January and

second annual Film Festival.

was the main aim of the 1964-65 executive to acquaint the students with the goals and work of W. U.

if this

was achieved, our year was a success.

S.

C.

�A. M.S.

Book Room

BACK ROW: F. Penner, D. Brown, B. Piper, K. Mucha, S. Kasma.
FRONT ROW: D. Laakso, J. Antero Elo, editor and manager, LUP; G.

Hashiguchi.

���Students' Athletic Society

FRONT ROW: R. Thomson, W. Tocheri, D. Parsons, President;
BACK ROW: N. Lauder, L. Miller, D. Mutch, D. Larmand.

Goodman, W. Shannon, Athletic Director

G.

President's Message
At

this

time

This help has

I

would like to express

made

my

appreciation for the assistance which has been given

possible the expanded athletic

programme which

me

this year.

the University has enjoyed over past years.

Particular thanks should be extended to Mr. William Shannon for his timeless efforts in our behalf.

A well-rounded

athletic

programme

is

important

for physical fitness of faculty, staff,

Equal attention should be given to keeping one's body physically
alert.

A

fit

and students alike.

as well as keeping.one's

mind mentally

These two aspects go hand -in -hand.
notable addition to the athletic

programme has been the appearance of the girls' basketball team, and
them for the fine showing which they made in the Thunder Bay

particular congratulations should be extended to

Women's League

as well as in their thrilling victory against Northwestern

programme during
own gymnasium and field house.

Further participation by all students should ensure a greatly expanded

look forward to the day when Lakehead University has

its

College in Minneapolis.
future years as

we

��Mustangs

Barry

Asano
Bill

Shannon

Manager

Lome
Gander (A)

����shoulder, Gerry."

"Ooooooohhhh!

!

!

"

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��Record Established
11

Hrs. 2 Min. 23.6 Sec.

L.U. to U.M.D.

��"That's not so far!"

"What do you
crystal ball!"

see in the

�LIBRARY CORNERSTONE

�ROLL OF CHAMPIONS
Golf:

Lome Gander

Gross:

Net:

Randy Stinson

Bowling:

Men's High Average: Jim Geravelis
Ladies' High Average:

Frances Krcel

Team Champions: Bob

Cerutti, Dennis

Larmand, Glenn Jacobson, Allan O'Brien
and Charlie Core
Curling:

Champions: Allan Jones, Julie Wierzbicki, Don
Patton, and

Dave Vibert
Female Athlete of the Year:

Broomball:

Champions: Arts

II

and

III

Table Tennis:

Champion: Dominic Lam

Male Athlete of the Year:
Dave Parsons
Most Valuable Hockey Players:

Squash:

Champion: Lome Everett

Lome Gander and

Ian

Hogg

Most Valuable Men's Basketball

Handball:

Champion: Richard Staples

Player:

Dave Parsons

Most Valuable

Girls' Basketball:

High Scorer:

Terttu Vuorinen

Terttu Vuorinen

Men's Basketball:
High Scorer: John Sihvonen

Player:

Girls* Basketball

Judy Perlin

Most Valuable Football Player:
Ferg Penner

�Athletics

Awards'

Night
March

19,

1965

/

Myron Warywoda

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����������INTER-COLLEGIATE PRESS, LTD.

— Manufacturers
Yearbooks — Yearbook Covers
Diplomas — Graduation Announcements
Publishers

Inkster Boulevard at Bunting Street

Winnipeg, Manitoba

��have nothing to offer but blooc
"
toil, tears and sweat.
- Winston S. Churchill

"I

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�</text>
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                    <text>���Db97

-(21

PRESENTED
TO

THE LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY
LIBRARY
BY

DAVID MORGAN

�Nor'Wester

Volume

Session 1965-66

17

Editor:

Lome

G. Everett

Published by the students of

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY

Port Arthur, Ontario

o

�Mr. W. G.

Tamblyn

President of Lakehead University

��THE SENATE
CANADA

Chancellor's

Message
"Every day
on

it

as

time goes

becomes more evident

how important higher education
is to this fast growing Canada
of ours.

Lakehead University

has a great role to play in the
training and

development

to our present day:
to

communicate

"To

of students to take their place in developing a great nation.

learn to attain knowledge,

that knowledge,

a sentinel at the door to drive

My

4

to share that

away the needy

continued interest and pride

to

become

wisdom with
is

wise

is

I

quote a very old ritual so fitting

a necessity to every truly noble soul.

To

teach,

others and not churlishly to lock up our exchequer and place

equally the impulse of a noble nature and the worthiest work of man.

in our university is

very great.

"

"

�M. W. Bartley
Chairman

Dr.

Board of Governors
Mr. M. W. Babe,

A.

B.

Mr. G. C. Carruthers,
Mr.

J.

H. Charnock,

Mr. D. C. Clark,

Mr.

J.

Mr. G.

Mr.

Barr.

,

C. A.

B. Sc.

Dalzell,

J. E. J.

B.

B.

A.

,

B.

Paed.

M. Fleming,

J.

Mr.

E. L.

Goodall,

T.J.

Mr.

S.

,

M. A.

B. Sc.

J. R,

Mr.

K. A.

Mr.

E.

Mr.

R.J.

Mr.

B. Sc.

Kane, M. D.

W. Lukinuk,

G.

B. Sc. F.

Machan, M.

,

C.

E.

Dr.

F. L.

B.

D.

F. R.

,

C. P. (C),

F.

Pallister,

Prettie,

P.

B. Sc.

Esq.
,

Q. C.

Stevens, B. Sc. (F)

W. Stevens, M. D.

,

F. R.

C.

S.

,

F. R.

Mr. G. H. Young, Barr. -at-Law, Q. C.

Young,

Mr. D.

F.

Hassard, Esq.

Mr.

Mr. T.

S.

Jones, Esq.

Mr. D. W, Morgan, B. A.

R. S.

A. C.

Miners, C. A.

Mr. B. Shaffer, B. A.

Fahlgren, Esq.

Mr. R.J. Flatt, Esq.
Mr.

Dr.

Dr.

(F)

A. Crooks, Phm.
P.

-at-Law, Q. C.

A.

B.

B. Sc. F.
,

M.B. A.

,

Sec'y.

C. S. (C)

�t

President's Message
This has bee n the

extremely good
they appear so

knowledge

ne.

&lt;»:

first

Perhaps

it is

always be exciting.

shoulcj

for

many

;ity.

With the challenges that

lie

ahead

I

am

this has

to the admiriistra tion on

for all of us,

this

atmosphere of

credit.

None

growth

To

Your executive

not detracted too seriously from your extracurricular activities.

They have been a tremendous help

numerous occasions and have certainly been worthy representatives of the student body,

be a

vital factor

development of Lakehead University.

ancj

those of

for

of you have all the physical facilities of the University that you

entire spirit of enthusiasm and co-operation of the students has been and will continue to

in the

that

greatly impressed by the student body at

:

The

me

years both within the University and beyond.

has assumed thei responsibilities seriously and executed them efficiently.
-

has been an

it

There are a great many of you pursuing your education under difficult circumstance

which you deserv e tremendous
should have, anc yet

believe

However, the combination of faculty and students seeking out

cannot maj ke comparisons with other institutions, but

Lake head Univer

I

because the University atmosphere and the challenges are new to

teresting and fascinating.

ir

excitement will continue
I

year in the formal history of Lakehead University, and

ou

f

who

are graduating this year or leaving to further your education elsewhere,

the utmost sincei ity, that you achieve your goals and your fondest dreams in the years ahead.
this University

tit s

you have done

fc

r

helped you along your chosen path and has fulfilled
it.

We

hope that

as

Alumni you

because, in fact, a part of you will always be here.

its

we

We

wish, with

pray that

obligation to you in return for what

will continue to feel that

you are a part of

this institution

��7

��Mr. B. Bristowe
(1965)

Mr. A.J. Bruley
10

(1965)

Mr.

J.

Caccamo

(1963)

Mr.

W. Chu
(1965)

Mr. A. Costanzo
(1964)

�Mr. D.

R.

(1956)

Lindsay

Mr.

S.

MacGillivray

(1963)

Mr. W. D. Mackinnon
(1949)

11

�Mr. Paul Andrew-Cotter
Mr.

R.

Bridgman

Mr.

S.

C. Buckley

Mr. W. Buryniuk

Mr.

L.

Chisholm

Mr. C. A. Gehrels

Mr.

P.

Inksetter

Mr. D.J. Kelly
Mr.

W. W.

Kembel

Mr. N. Markus

Mr. D. A. Martin
Mr. D. Mazurkewich
Mr. T. W. Page
12

(1950)

Mr. M. N. Patterson
(1962)

�Dr.

J.

G. Rideout

(1964)

^^^^
Mrs. M.

Rideout

(1965)

Dr.

Sarbadhikari

P.

(1965)

Mrs. P. Skula

(1963)

A. L. Smith

Dr.

(1965)

C.

Mrs.

Time

White

(1965)

Mr.

1965-66

J.

Whitfield

(1965)

Mrs. J.J.

Mclntyre

Mr. A. D.
Mr.
Mrs.

J.

Numbers

A. Palko

J.

St.

John

Mr. G. Smith

Mr.

P.

Spare

Mr. C. Stamp
Mr. M. Stitt
Mr. D. D. Sudar
Mr.

L.

Vidlak

Mr.

I.

Wyshinsky

Mr. G. Yurick
Miss

S.

A.

(1965)

Wray

Mr.

J.

Macdonald

(1965)

���Alma Mater
Society

Council

President's

Message

As the student enrolment rapidly increases over the next few years the

keep pace with

this

Alma Mater

Society Council must

expansion by the addition of several new innovations that will provide a broader program

for the students.

Several proposals of last year's Council have already been instituted, such

Union of Students, construction of student executive

To combat

We

16

as;

participation in Canadian

and revision of the society structures.

the increased responsibilities of the A. M. S. Council a full time secretary and business

administrator are imparative in the

week

offices,

coming

year.

feel that an accelerated extracurricular activities

will create a stronger and

more

program introduced by a well planned orientation

unified university atmosphere.

�17

�FRONT ROW,

Left to Right:

Heather Ylimaki, secretary

Don

Patton, vice-president

Gerry Hess, president

Wayne Tocheri,

MIDDLE ROW:

treasurer

Jack Edwards, Science Society Rep.

Wayne Aitken,

University Schools Society Rep.

Andrea Roger, Arts Society Rep.
Gary Bloomfield, University Schools Society Rep.
Frances Krcel, Arts Society Rep.

Dave

Parsons, Arts Society Rep.

Roman Petryschyn, Arts Society
Dave Vibert, University Schools

BACK ROW:

Rep.

Rep.

Al Robinson, University Schools Society President
Leo Kornas, University Schools Society Rep.
Ernie Ross, University Schools Society Rep.

Barry Smith, Science Society President

Tom

Kelly, Arts Society President

John Sihvonen, Student Athletic Society President

Michael Wainwright, Arts Society Rep.
Ferg Penner, Science Society Rep.
Joe

St.

Amand,

University Schools Society Rep.

f

�Graduates

��Richard

Lome
Fort

G.

Everett

William

Bachelor of Science

Fort

J.

Ezack

William

Gerald V. Hess

Bachelor of Science

Port Arthur

Mathematics

Bachelor of Science

Biology

Biology

Rene A. Kaukinen

Kennedy McLellan

Gary G. Kaukinen

Port Arthur

C.

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Science

Red Rock

Bachelor of Science

Mathematics

Bachelor of Science

Mathematics

Chemistry

Terttu A. Vuorinen
Barry
Port

S.

Smith

Hope

Bachelor of Science Math.

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Science
Biology

Geraldine
Fort

S.

White

William

Bachelor of Science Math.
21

��\

j

Jack Cop

Anne M. Cernigoy

Port Arthur

Ross Elliot

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

History

Bachelor of Arts

French

Philosophy, English, History

Vincent A. Gaudino

Diane
Fort

I.

(Wragg) Fawcett

William

Bachelor of Arts

ft/

J

John G. Grant

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

French

History

English

Judy M. Greer
Fort

i

William

Ronald

J.

Haworth

William A. Hay

Port Arthur

Fort William

Bachelor of Arts
Bachelor of Arts
English,

Psychology

Bachelor of Arts

Economics
History,

Political Science
23

�i
Ulla A.
Robert C. Hensrud

Idman

Leo Julian

Port Arthur

Kenora

William

Fort

Bachelor of Arts

Bachelor of Arts

ii k
Bachelor of Arts

French, Psychology

Psychology

History

i/A
Carol M. Knox

Joan Kleinendorst
Fort

Fort

William

Lawrence Kwasny

William

Fort

Bachelor of Arts

Hon. Bachelor of Arts

Psychology

Psychology

History

•A

t

1

Donna Laakso
Elizabeth A.
Fort

Kozak

William

Bachelor of Arts
History
24

William

Bachelor of Arts

Grant

B.

Laprade

Port Arthur
Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts
Bachelor of Arts
English
History

�Robert Lindey

Donald Lake

k \\1
Lyons

Fort William

Barry

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

History

Bachelor of Arts

Psychology

English

Heather

Mary

MacDonald

E.

J.

Maki

McKinnon

Port Arthur

Brian D.

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

Latin

Bachelor of Arts

E.

Psychology

English

Helen
Rod W. McLennan
Fort

William

Bachelor of Arts
History

Newman

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts
English

Tuire Nordin
Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

French

25

�3b

L&lt;

MA

Edward
Fort

O'Brien

F.

Charles O. Olutola

Sandra

Nigeria

William

Bachelor of Arts

Bachelor of Arts

English

A
Probizanski

Patricia E.
Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

George Rendall
Fort

William

Fort

Psychology

English

Rodgers

William

Bachelor of Arts
Latin
26

William

Fort

Bachelor of Arts

Russell G.
I.

Andrea Rodger

Bachelor of Arts

Psychology

Marilyn

Pelto

Bachelor of Arts

Economics

History

English,

S.

Port Arthur

Rothney

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

Economics

Carl A. Runholm
Fort

William

Bachelor of Arts

Economics

�Martin
Richard D. Sanderson
Fort

William

Bachelor of Arts

R.

Schultz

Glenn

Churchill, Manitoba

J.

Scott

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

Bachelor of Arts

Psychology

English

History

\

Arthur

Richard D. Smith
Fort

William

Bachelor of Arts

S.

Somppi
Jon D. Thrower

Port Arthur

Port Arthur

Bachelor of Arts

Bachelor of Arts

History

History

History

Constantine Tsekoures

Gary M. Tocheri
Vickers Heights

Bachelor of Arts
History

Fort

William

Hon. Bachelor of Arts
History

i

i
Dale Willoughby
Fort

William

Bachelor of Arts
English,

History

27

�3«

#t rmortam

Janet

The fairest lillies are the first to fall,
The sweetest first to fade,
The fondest, dearest, best of all,
At peaceful

rest

is

laid.

As some sweet blossom droops and dies

When

blighted by the

frost,

She faded from before our eyes,

And

all too

soon was

lost.

But in God's garden free from pain,

Where grow His

We know

fairest flowers,

we shall meet
bloom of ours.

that

This fairest

-

again,

Anonymous

Cox

��Ian

E.

Hogg

Hammett
Newmarket

Kenora

Frank

Engineering

Port Arthur

Engineering

Technology

Engineering

Gary

J.

Technology

F.

Jaklitch

Technology

Allan A. Peltola

Zygmont

J.

Magierowicz

Port Arthur

Timothy Rowe

Fort William

Engineering

Toronto

Engineering

Technolgy

Engineering

Technology

Technology

Zbigniev M. Tracz
Fort William

Rainy River

Engineering

Rosslyn

Technology

Engineering Technology

Engineering Technology
30

David M. Vibert

Robert G. Stamper

�Edgar Waller

William

Fort

James C. Berry
Edmonton
Forest

Technology

Engineering

Gary
St.

Bloomfield

R.

John

Forest

Technology

Technology

Charles N. Core

Lloyd H. Chandler

Brampton

Brampton

Forest

Forest

Technology

Dronzek

F.

Winnipeg
Forest

Technology

R,

Technology

Evans

Woodstock
Forest

Day

Sarnia
Forest

Robert

John

Robert M.

Technology

Technology

Dwight A. Fryer
Monetville
Forest

Technology
31

�Thomas
Leslie F.

Gordon

Atikokan
Forest

Hamilton

Michael

Forest

Technology

Technology

London

E.

H.

Technology

Pembroke
Forest Technology

McCron

Long Lac
Forest Technology

Paul U

Moore

Technology

Robert K.

Technology

Arthur G.

Knights

Lacelle

Ottawa
Forest

J.

Port Arthur

Forest

Larry

James Leggett
Forest

G.

Barrie

R.

Nellis

Toronto
Forest Technology

Donald

E.

Patton

Cranbrook
Forest

Technology

�John O. Sihvonen
Allen

L.

Robinson

Bancroft
Forest

Technology

Toronto
Forest

Technology

Arthur M. Stephenson

Red Deer
Forest

Technology

��Candids

�������42

��1

How
How

stonily

And

yet

I

1

A P
1

you

\

stare at

me,

cold and distant,

find solace here

Alone with you.

come often
To contemplate

I

the past.

Primitive you are,

Raven, frog, and grizzly bear

Aged totems
To mystic spirits.
Cold and wind

-

swept

Alone

You stand and stare
And age with me,
Upon this quiet hillside.

N

'

REVERY
Patiently
I

await your coming

And watch

the world pass by

In lusty disarray.

Flowers bloom, leaves

snow

fall,

Each year brings memories and

A

flies,

joys,

multitude of sorrows.

Yet

I

remain untouched by

all,

Aloof from every thing
Except the thought of you
I

wait and find

The melancholy

loneliness

More comforting
Than all the superficialities
Around me
Here
Sandra Knight

Arts

I

�!

RESTLESS

YOUT

Routine inducing deep discontentment,

Excited bubbling trapped in a closed urn.

Why do

linger a singer of songs

I

That no longer charm

Why am

I

still

I'm

thirsty,

soul?

a reader of books

That no longer calm

The search

my

still

my

restless spirit?

driving me, the quest

so thirsty--and all

Like autumn,

all

is

still

depriving me,

parched dry;

windblown and withering

am

I.

********
A glimmer

of red in the sunset --

Perchance the spark will alight

No

night, but day,

No

thirst unsatisfied,

-

talent unexpressed,

But creative and vital, no interest suppressed,

New

songs and

Abloom

as the

new

faces,

erases the past.

summer, and wandering wild

'Mid scenes ever-changing,

at last

reconciled

Within me, the torment and stifling seem

Replaced by fulfillment
This

—

is

—

cool, fresh as a stream

my dream

Vivien Masseau

�DECEPTION

Painted glass --

Witty,

A

Confiding tone

false friend;

zealous,

Shadows pass

Turn'd cold and jealous,

And chapters end.

Tense

Two

the same,

Broken mirror --

Mirrored reflections

Reflections' loss.

Together came

Nothing here

By God's direction.

But painted glass.

So

Two

I

in

youth

trusted her,

Who covered

- -

alone.

apart

We'll always be,

truth

And

in

my

With gossamer.

A memory.

Friendship

A

And

understanding,

Fin'lly grew

/

heart --

lesson too

'11

keep with me:

\
"Woman, have
I

To reprimanding.

-- Vivien

Masseau

�47

�LAST WILL^ND TESTAMENT OF AN OLD

My
My
My

body lingers where

I

do not

thoughts,
heart,

my

soul

Lie far beyond

Midst the grass
in

endless plains

always green and fresh
rich with a

new dew

and glazed with misty light

There

I

am
my wife

And there

I

wait

To spend forever
When He permits

at

your side

"i^wa\not|iing tjutia spark

An ember glowing amongst

the dyin

Don't mourn the ash
But light a

new and warmer

fire

By which to pass the night

And you, world
You magnificent

thing

Not knowing from whence you came
Nor where you're heading
Ply on noble ship

And God's Speed
Richard Smith

48

MAN

�Winter Carnival Committee

FRONT ROW,

Left to Right:

Mary Skoropad, Heather Ylimaki, Raymonde Bedard,

Lyniie Seabrook,

Julie Wierzbicki.

BACK ROW: Wayne
Jack Edwards.

Tocheri, Gerry Hess, Joe

St.

Amand, Barry Smith, Dave

Vibert, Ian
,

Thompson,

.

Organizations

�50

�LEFT

LEFT

TO

TO

RIGHT:

E.

RIGHT: C. Knox,

Haner,

S.

B.

McLaren, D. Laakso,

Kaszor,

FRONT ROW, Left to Right: J. Stuart,
BACK ROW: M. Coghlan, S. Kaszor,

R.

F.

Wilmot.

Bedard, W. Duncan, M. Coghlan.

K. Okada, S. Woods, Jo-A. Cain.
R.

Bedard, G. Szychter,

S.

Hagdu,

E.

Strerz.

51

�Pure Science Society

FRONT ROW,
BACK ROW:
52

Left to Right:

Erin Pattyson,

Bud Edwards, Barry Smith,

Fay Rowley, Geraldine White.

Lome

Everett.

��FRONT ROW,

Left to Right:

Donald Downey, John Sihvonen, Brenda Bowell, Charlie Core,

Mike Knights.

BACK ROW:

Terry Eyton, Glenn Miller, John Stefiszyn, Jeffrey Parker, Chuck Sameluk.

��Dave Parsons

s
George Kelly

0

Jim Fawcett

John Sihvonen

Men's Basketball
Most Valuable Player:
Ray Halverson

Ray Halverson

High Scorer:
Bob Elvin

Coach.

Myron Warywoda

������Champions
BADMINTON CHAMPIONS

Singles

Doubles

Dan Mckenzie
Dan Mckenzie
Kathy Buie

CURLING CHAMPIONS

Lead

Second
Third
Skip

MOST VALUABLE PLAYER TO

HIS

TEAM

GOLF CHAMPIONS

Jim Hanneson
Glen Yurick

Ted Mavor
Merv Tomski
Jim Sweet

High Net

George Kelly

High Gross

Bob Arvelin

SQUASH CHAMPION

Lome

Everett

ONTARIO INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
SQUASH CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM

Lome

Everett

Keith Fawcett
Fred Viinikka

Chuck Sameluk

TOP FOOTBALL PLAYER

George Paddington

HANDBALL CHAMPION

Prof.

TABLE TENNIS CHAMPIONS

Singles

Doubles

J.

Whitfield

Dominic Lam
Dominic Lam
Jim Naida

ONTARIO INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
SINGLES TABLE TENNIS CHAMPION

Dave Parsons
Keith Prignitz
Peter

Young

Dominic Lam

��������Snow

����Beard Growing Contest

74

�����������Student Mailing List
1965-66
Science

I

Agha, Liaquat H.

No

186 Farland
Arvelin, Robert

,

,

P. A.

Z

R.

Scarborough

Kerr,

St.

zo Melon

St.

oo ivnignt

ot.

lot)

Cole, hdward

L,

r,

,

VV

.

Main, Glenn

Maki, Donald

iviyron R
d.

A/Iirri-\n

Noran

ZOO
St.

w.

F.

,

Danis, Joseph A.
T

T

Raymond B,
OOQA Artnur
Arthur ot.
Qt
oooa

T.J

'

W.

F.

,

,

DA

Alg01H-[Ulll

Thomas

ncdLiici

Thomas

k^ici).

in,

r.

,

r. A,

vv

oyuuicdic avc,

McLellan, Daryl

404 Ambrose

Fukushima, Gordon
St.

F.

,

W.

Miller,

Godin, Leonard D.

,

r. vv.

L,

St.

P. A.

,

Gosselin, Leland A.

,

P. A.

Glenn A.

Mitchell,

F.

W.

Mervin G.

351 Hartviksen

St.

,

P.

A.

Morrill, Stephen R.

Rainy River

Unknown

Halonen, Jorma K.
Grassy Narrows

Mundell, Brian

S.

Armstrong

R.

141 Cherry Lane,

Thomas

J,

St.

110 Pinedale Place,

497 Van Norman

James

,

Utterson

Kenora
208 Rowand

Ave.

A.

McKenzie, Dennis

r, a.

Mclntyre Twsp

,

E.

McGregor, Campbell N.
^mo

Davis,

o.

Marston,
"rtzo

~1 « ~ J A _ . „
Ave.
o05 Leland

P. A.

,

R.

22 Lancaster Ave.

D
A
F. A.

,

w.

f.

J.

lzz Juniper Dr.

K.

OC A On A Ave.
A nn
oo4-znu

P. A.

,

L,

Fioit Place,

Magee, David

Comishin, Timothy M.

Heritage,

Lee, Murray

yyu

Dryden

Hart,

N. empire Ave.

Kowloon, Hong Kong

A.

IvldlKi O

No Address

Foley,

w.

F.

,

Lau, Yuen Cheung, K.

r. A.

,

Cocks, Ivan W.

/'AC

St.

Ville de Brossard

Cameron, Robert

JN.

S.

Kwiatkowski, Russell A.

Briden, Frederick C.

ozo

Donald G.

Kwan, Kui K,

Toronto

t^ostan,

A.

P.

,

zlO N. Noran
A.

P.

,

r. A,

,

J.

St.

Kulik, Henry

A.

P.

,

Bornstein, Ronald

/^""/id-oil

WllbUll OL,

Bowmanville

Boland, Elizabeth A.

o.

A.

X

205 Aider

J.

Berezowski, Kenneth M.

OOl

/

Kasma, Seppo

151 Balsam

W.

Cooksville

Donald

Arthur

\tt

Jung, Robin K. T,

Dryden
Baylis,

F.

ffO,

A.

P.

,

L.

Hughes, Margaret D.

A.

J.

Dewe Ave.

Asselstine,

St.

c

44.0

R. K.

P.

St.

n

r&gt;

Anderson, Russell H.

317

Bruce

1 14

Herman, Ted

address

G.

P. A.

Murphy, Charles
117 Cherry Lane,

P. A.

85

�Palko, Frank

Zeleny, Joseph

I!.

58 Winnipeg Ave.
Robert

Pavletic,

43 Ruttan

Science

St.

3S5

Creighton, Warren C.

Vickers Heights,

Thomas
E.

D.
St.

Tarmo

742 Harkness,

W.

F.

,

St.

P.

,

A.

Charles H.
St.

Christina

Edward

St.

W.
W.

F.

,

Toronto

W.

F.

,

Hampe, William, W.
Hanneson, James

B.

S.

#1,

R. R.

Ottawa
High

St.

P.

,

213 Robertson

A.

Hughes, James

L.

,

F.

W.

Cooksville

Rauno K.

Johnson, Frederick

Kaministiqua
Tsekouras, Harry

J.

Cumming

St.

A.

P.

,

377 N. Cumberland

St.

,

P.

A.

Lein,

P.

#1,

Naida, Michael
R. R.

P.

#2, F.

Patel,

Wiseman, William

J.

W.

Mithal D.

Calgary

B.

Pattyson,

Ajax

Erin E.

99 Elm

Woit, Judith A.

380 Empire Ave.

W.

F.

,

P.

,

St.

Penner, John

,

P.

A.

F.

Kenora

Wolframe, Daniel W.

Pleau,

A.

Raymond A.

135 Penfold

Wong, Tarn K.

St.

,

P.

Pringnitz, Keith D.

Marathon
Wynalda, Peter

P.

Nigeria

E.

Geraldton

St.

,

Okonkwo, Bialosa

Willowdale

157 Pine

G.

228 Winnipeg Ave.

R.

A.

Whitney, Ronald

Atikokan

E.

451 Lyon Ave.

,

Rowley, Fay

P. A.

B.

Nipigon

Ylimaki, John A.

Norman

P.

Philip

F.

McKay, William

Kenora

Walford, Charles

,

Beardmore

Valleneuve, Doreen

Natto, Philip

B.

71 N. Rockwood Ave.
Lam, Dominic M.
Hong Kong

Turgeon, Wayde

576 Van

St.

F.

2138 Russett Rd.

Unknown
Tornquist,

E.

A.

P.

Hashiguchi, Gerald M.

Edward M.

Taylor, Joseph

R. R,

F.

Eagle River

Swiatloski,

Van

,

L.

Fedorowycz, Roman

Pilton

1212

A.

122 N. Selkirk Ave.

A.

P.

,

Smith, William A.

336

P.

J.

Wayne

Everett,

Skrepichuk, Sylvia A.

Speers,

,

408 Heather Cres.

552 Egan

E.

87 Melvin Ave.
Evans, Bruce

O.

Nipigon

390

W.

F.

Dutchak, Donald M.

Rome, John E.
399 N. Cumberland
Ronkainen,

W.

F.

Daniels, William L.

Christina

Siljander,

II

P. A.

,

Sudbury
Petrie,

A.

P.

,

P. A.

,

R.

Leo V.

Penttila,

R.

St.

J.

376 Grenville Ave.
Peirce, Larry

374 Queen

P. A.

,

St.

,

Yuan, Andrew Y.

Kowloon, Hong Kong

P.

A.

Shperuk, Michael T.
Fort Frances

Skula, Bernard T.

A.

A.

A.

�R. R.

Broadway Ave.

#1,

F.

,

W.

Tomski, Mervin O.
1317 Edward
Wilson, Glenn

19 Jewell St.

St.

J.

A.

P.

,

Cordingley, Don W.

W.

F.

,

Thorn hill

R.

Dawson

#2,

R. R.

Coghlan, Barbara

Rd.

Coski, Carol A.

P. A.

,

Yurick, Glenn M.

132

Baird

Cumming

Craig, Douglas

St.

W.

F.

,

R.

228 W. Ridgeway Ave.

Arts

I

429 Heather Cres.

127

Unknown
Marks

St.

F.

,

241 N. Harold

St.

Eickmeiner, Fred G.
Schreiber

Ekholm, Robert D.

Aylward, Timothy A.
160 Banning

St.

186 Banning

P. A.

,

822 McLeod

Richard

,

F.

,

W.

F.

W.

217 N. Marks

St.

St.

F.

,

,

W.

W.

Mae
St.

P.

,

A.

J.

C.
P.

,

A.

Goold, David C.

J.

St.

,

W.

F.

Brantford

Goodwin, Karl A.
St.

,

F.

W.

Port Stanley

Gray, Fred T.

J.

Neepawa, Man.

123 Prospect Ave.

Cain, Jo-Anne

P.

,

A.

Gray, Lynne C.

332

Eagle River

E.

Christina

Grieve, Charles

L.

634 Rosewood Cres.

,

F.

Chisamore, Donald C.

W.

St.

Marathon

532 Thorndale Cres.
30

Summit Ave.

,

P.

Guzzi, Fiorine K.
St.

,

F.

F.

,

W.

444 Queen

W.

L.
,

F.

Groult, Paul T.

Clue, Harvey

May

F.

,

102 Bentwood Dr.

A.

P.

F.

,

J.

Goodman, Thomas

Kathy A.

S.

St.

Hudson

A.

P.

St.

208 N. Norah

315

Arden

Godin, Randolph

,

325 Catherine

Calonego, Judy

E.

E.

191 Farrand

A.

P.

St.

William

W.

F.

,

Atikokan

Glover, Judith

J.

,

Bryan, Lawrence

Burns,

St.

William M.

Balmertown

P. A.

,

Brown, Robert A. K.

Buie,

Norah

461 Heather Cres.

W.

Bourret, Paul G. A.

241 Arundel

S.

Atikokan

Gillis,

Maurice

62 College

612

361 N. Brodie

W.

97 Rupert

W.

Gibb, Joan

21 Prospect Ave.
Bourret,

W.

F.

,

Gauley, Foster W.
A.

S.

Robert C.

Botly, John

St.

Frederickson, David

F.

R.

York, U.

Blaine,

F.

Fitzgerald,

Franklin St.

Delano

St.

J.

907 Crawford Place,

New

A.

P.

,

L.

Fedyk, Karilyn K.

116 Simpson

Baumann, Berthold
Bird,

236 Dease

W.

F.

,

Clarence

15,

S.

St.

St.

Fawcett, James

Balina, Frederick N.

751

W.

F.

,

Goderich

W.

F.

,

Quibell

Battiston,

W.

F.

,

M.

Endenburg, Bram

Archuk, Victoria V.

Ste.

Brodie St.

736 Grey Cres.

W.

Angus, George E.J.

Battiston,

S.

Delski, Peter

Allen, Shelia D.
S.

W.

F.

,

Dandridge, Anthony C.

Alatalu, Ain

329

F.

,

Crockett, (Frederick) Greg

St.

,

P. A.

A.

W.

�Lehto, Karl

Halabisky, John G.

W. Francis

•251

St.

SO N.

1420 Ridge way

A.

P.

,

Haner, Elizabeth A.
R. R.

Lesyk,

Stanley Park,

#2,

F.

W.

St.

F. VV.

,

Brock

Terry

St.

F. VV.

,

L.

St.

Winston Hall,

W.

F.

St.

F. VV.

,

P.

,

A.

R. R.

R.

St.

P. A.

,

P.

,

2830 Redwood Ave.

A.

F. VV.

,

Knight, Sandra G.
F.

,

W.

Kopechanski, Larry W.

St.

Maeva

315 N. Nora St.
Menuz, Gregory A.
St.

St.

Mary

F.

,

F.

,

W.

Munford, Rodney

W.

W.

F.

,

Mithrush, Patricia

L.

St.

,

W.

F.

J.

1736 Victoria Ave.

L.

A.

P.

,

McVicar, Mary M.

Morrison, Donald

Kurbatoff, George

F.

,

W.

F.

Eagle River

St.

Murphy, Donald

F. VV.

,

E.

2-401 Grenville Ave.

Gosselin, L. A.

Rainy River

P.

,

A.

Nigro, Betty G.

Kuz, Kathleen M.

62 Banning

Windemere

St.

,

P. A.

Mary

St.

,

P.

A.

Noyes, John D.

Nolalu

Kyryluk, Joyce D.
St.

F. VV.

,

Larsen, Niels O.

Nurmi, Roy W.
R. R.

Fort Frances

#2,

P.

A.

Nyyssonen, Tita V.

819 Detroit Ave.

J.

460 Heather Cres.

,

F. VV.

St.

,

P.

,

P.

A.

A.

Oborne, Paul D.
117 Marlborough Rd.

Lehtinen, Herbert W.

B8

S.

732 N. Brodie

Atikokan

178 N. Hill

P.

W.

F.

221 Dease

2114 Victoria Ave.

Don

#1,

W.

F.

,

McQuat, Charles D.

Joseph, Larry Ed.

Lees,

St.

123 Blacquier

63 Strathcona Ave.

840 McMillan

W.

F.

,

Scarborough

Jordan, Jean A.

E.

W.

F.

,

#6 Bowlker Block,

McLaren, Ruth

Jordan, Charles

St.

McLaren, James

Fort Frances

150

A.

P.

E.

Mary

E.

Myles

St.

Johnson, Georgie-Lynn

S.

R.

,

McBride, Hugh H.

Archibald

317 Dawson

Owen

St.

158 Ernestine Ave.

289

272 N. Court

132

S.

Mavor, Edward A.

Johnson, Dennis Ed.

E.

C.

Marks,

Bobaggeon

272

MacCready, David

159 N. Hill

Johnson, Allan H.

Koskitalo,

A.

,

Markall, Frederick

W.

F.

,

Hunt, James H.

S.

St.

Sioux Lookout

Howard, Mike

308

Mary

E.

R.
P.

St.

MacLeod, Ian

Hilton, Glenn D.

110 A.

346

Bob's Motel,

Ottawa

Unknown
510 Brown

W.

F.

,

Marathon

Hewson, Lorn a A.

Hill,

St.

S.

Low, Brian Fraser

502 N. Brodie

E.

William

329 John

Terrace Bay
Heald, Lois N.

375

J.

Logozzo, Joseph

Hayes, Marjorie C.

[,

I

707 McLaughlin

F. VV.

,

A.

P.

,

Sioux Lookout
Lenton, Bruce

E.

St.

St.

Lemmon, William

Raymond E.
Kenogami Ave.

Halverson,

Hamilton, George

E.

5-421 Egan

W.

F.

,

Parsons,

David

B.

,

P.

A.

,

F.

W.

�415

Marks

S.

415

St.

William

Parsons,
S.

W.

F.

,

228 Winnipeg Ave.

Marks

St.

W.

F.

,

202 Leith

Paularinne, Pentti A.

175 Carl Ave.

A.

125 Glendale Ave.

517 McPherson

St.

W.

F.

,

Pentney, Alan G.

Stefiszye, John

P.
St.

F.

,

W.

360

Perry, Ron E.
St.

Paul

913 Mcintosh

E.

St.

E.

Mary

St.

W.
W.

F.

,

Francis St.

F.

,

W.

Mary
St.

W.

F.

,

R.

St.

A.

P.

,

E.

F.

J.

Hedda

Viinikka, Fred

Elizabeth A.

138 Pringle

St.

I.

1201 Edward

St.

Sanders, Kenneth

W.

St.

P.

,

A.

St.

F.

,

W.

,

A.

P.

Samuel

208

E.

Mary

St.

F.

,

W.

B.

St.

W.

F.

,

150 Winnipeg Ave.

69 Manion

Dryden
75 Parsons Ave.

St.

A.

A.

P.

,

R.R.

A.

P.

,

A.

P.

,

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P.

Wile, Bonita

B.

Rouyn,

Q.

P.

A.

Williams, Rodger C.

S.

345 Ray Blvd.

St.

Wedding, Bernd H.

Seabrook, Robert Ed.

Shanks, Donald

P.

,

Watson, James W.

J.

Schilke, Ronald N.

P.

,

379

A.

Shewchuk, Rod W.

Conmee

St.

,

P. A.

Wilson, David M.

Kenora

Residence

Wong, Judith

R.

819 McLeod Place,

F.

Smith, Alasdair Duncan

254 Empire

St.

A.

Watson, Grant K.

Saurial, John A.

Slivchak, Emil

P.

127 N. Franklin

Edward W.

1027 Dease

McKibbon

Walter,

407 N. Court

,

E.

Walker, Ted C.

E.

International Falls

Savage, Susan

109

A.

P.

,

S.

Vuerinen, Eero

F.

,

St.

98 Oswald Ave.

A.

P.

,

Jean, Catherine Y.

A.

P.

Toronto

527 N. Court

Unknown

60 Rupert

W.

F.

,

127 Cherry Lane,

Trognitz,

Rice, Frederick M.

Sas,

179 Banning

Traynor, Brian

346 N. Brodie

St.

St.

Tomlin, Richard

Reid, Ruth E.

Rogers,

W.

F.

,

Vermillion Bay

Hamilton

Rekszynski,

W.

M.

Titze, Anita

Rammo, Armas

E.

F.

J.

Thrower, Patricia

3-210 Victoria Ave.

,

Kenora

W.

F.

,

W.

Edith A.

Stuart, Joan

Quirk, Helen,

481

St.

606 Hargrave

W.

F.

,

F.

Atikokan

W.

F.

,

Strerz,

Pugh, David

Brock

E.

,

R.

Stewart, Edward

550 Francis

W.

S.

118 N. Selkirk Ave.

Gerald

222 W. Henry

317

F.

,

1612 Mountain Ave.
Stapansky, Joel

Dryden

Plata,

W.

F.

,

Stadnyk, Cynthia D.

Pentick, John L.

Perrier,

St.

Springgay, Bryan W.

P.

,

A.

P.

,

Speziale, Giouanni

E.

St.

Smith, Joseph A.

Red Lake
Spence, Robert D.

,

F.

W.

W.

76 S.

Hill St.

Woods, Sharon

,

70 Gordon Ave.

Woroski,

P.

A.

E.

Wayne

,

1116 Centre Ave.

Young, Peter A.

P.

A.

J.
,

F.

W.

�454

Mary

E.

St.

Gordon, Alexander

W.

F.

,

322 Robertson

St.

Gordon, Stewart A.

F. VV.

,

3-317

Zawadzka, Donna C.
314 Lesley Ave.

High

S.

St.

116 N.

L.

Maplewood

537 McTavish

II

64 Prospect Ave.

R. R.

A.

P.

,

O.

F.

,

W.

St.

Inglis,

346 Hartviksen

St.

P.

,

A.

100 Lawrence Ave.

160 College

P. A.

,

St.

Chyrik, Stefan

B.

St.

F.

,

W.

F.

,

St.

F.

,

W.

P.

A.

617 Atlantic Ave.

,

F.

W.

Gerald K.
St.

St.

P.

,

A.

St.

A.

P.

,

B.

St.

A.

P.

,

329 Catherine

St.

W.

F.

,

1730 Murray Ave.

185

A.

P.

E.

Mary

St.

F.

,

F.

,

MacDonald, Bruce

L.

W.

F.

,

1717 Victoria Ave.

,

F.

W.

512 Brown

St.

Masseau, Vivien

E.

St.

F.

,

W.

W.

F.

,

W.

J.

2239 Moodie St.
MacLeod, Thomas F.

Nipigon

E.

132 Elm St.
F. W.
Mayhew, Donald G.

W.

,

Duncan, Wendy D.

Fort Frances

Terrace Bay

McEachern, William H.

Eggel, Berta M.

31-104 N. May

St.

,

F.

W.

301 N. Marks

McGoey, Louise

J.

St.

,

F.

W.

St.

,

F.

W.

St.

,

F.

W.

J.

Kapuskasing

McLaren, Robert

Gerry, Robert C.

Norah

W.

F.

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Lysak, Sandra Betty

J.

Norah

W.

F.

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Leeney, Peter Francis

Dorval, Madeleine, M.

S.

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109 McKibbon

73 Crown

L.

159 McKibbon

315

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P.

Lannon, Paul N.

621 McLaughlin

1530 Donald

A.

,

Krcel, Frances

F.

St.

Cupples, Colleen

S.

Norman

419 -4th Ave.

J.

,

P.

Kozyra, Zenon

Brodie

Ryde Ave.

A.

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William

#2, F. W.

R. R.

J.

928 Mcintosh

W.

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F.

,

Covino, Thomas

Dampier, John

K. Gwens,

Kolisnyk, Eugene

Coghlan, Margaret

Currie, Douglas

W.

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L.

818 Alberta

A.

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2238 Myles

Robert

W.

St.

Kishi,

St.

David

Dove, Lloyd

F.

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Kaszor, Sheila M.

Christensen, Paul

113

St.

Jones, Alan G.

Chisholm, Bonnie A.

Elvin,

J.

St.

Marilyn

595 Van

W.

F.

,

Childerhose, Kenneth A.

6

W.

48 Ray Blvd.

#2, P. A.

Campbell, Robert G.
2239 Isabella

c/oA.
Horrell,

Antonie A.

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2604 Woodlawn Ave.

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Howard, David

Bowell, Brenda M.

329 Heron

W.

F.

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Holmstrom, Linda M.

Port Credit

Christie,

St.

254 W. Amelia

Fort Frances

Ken

St.

Hemsworth, Peter

Baldwin, Gary C.

R. R.

W.

Hayashi, Toshihiko

Arnot, Donald W.

Brink,

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Hamalainen, Marg
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St.

Hagdu, Shirley A.

Kenora

Arts

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P.

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Grebax, Aldo

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Zroback, Michael

B.

Schreiber

Eleanor M.

Zaroski,

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McLaren, William M.

186 N. Rockwood Ave.
Thompson, Ronald O.

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Miller, Clifford L.

455 Heath Cres.

Sarnia

321 Hodder Ave.

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Todd, Tyrone

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F.

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152 Banning

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F.

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Wainwright, Michael

J.

2-2604 Woodlawn Ave.

Europe

Warywoda, Myron

Okada, Karen Sakae
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F.

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203 N. Waterloo

633 Southern Ave.

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F.

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Cummings

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Prodanyk, Donald
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J.

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F.

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J.

Ylimaki, Heather M.

Robinson, Lowdru H.
Apt. 5A,

St.

187 Marlborough Rd.
Wilson, Daniel

Petryshyn, Walter R.

Hanley

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Wierzbicki, Julie

Parenuik, Ernest

3

St.

Wadas, Krystyna A.

Murray, Robert K.

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193 Ruttan

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Wayne M.

Tocheri,

Mitchell, Charles M.

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F.

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P. A.

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2210 Cedar

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F.

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Victoria, B. C.

Zorzes, Ronald

Robinson, Ronald A.

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124 N. Marks

Red Lake

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F.

,

Rusak, Peter T.

Toronto

Applied Science

Ryczko, Walter

Dryden
Anand, Mavin C.

Sakamoto, Mary
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413 Syndicate Ave.

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F.

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Salmi, Ross G.

214 McCullough

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205 Rupert

539 Luci Court,

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Govas, Theodoros C.

Scheibler, Edward W.

Montreal

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Grieve, Robert A.

Seabrook, Maureen
S.

Ste.

Gillson,

Sameluk, Charles

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Rockwood

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Shrive, Peter A.

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Atikokan

Ghogue, Maurice A.

Siegers, Johanna H.

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McLaren, G.J. Duncan

Stodolyn, Elizabeth A.

Strey,

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Love, Gregory G.

Ernest O.

Calgary, Alberta
Stinson,

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Kurki, Allan A.

Skoropad, Mary

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635 Prince Arthur Blvd.
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P. A.

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325 Bolton Cres.
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105 Pine

65 Jean

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St.

P. A.

,

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Andrew

324 Pearl

Owen

Trist,

76 Ruttan

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Cruickshank,
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Mona St.
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Montreal, Que.

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P.

,

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P.

,

Thomas

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Varelas, Christos

Nalezut, Reg.

Cromarty, Frank
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St.

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P.

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Kenora
W.

F.

J.

St.

St.

Cox, Greg G.

R.

2723 Willow Place,
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F.

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F.

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W.

F.

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L.

Peterborough

Forestry Degree

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635

S.

Marks

St.

Fearn, Geoffrey

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,

W.

Algonquin

Fishbein,

Howard C.

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St.

Thomas

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Ottawa

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Kiteley, Jon C.

Kenora

Engineering

Ladelle, Donald
R. R.

Technology

I

#2, F.

J.

W.

Lampshire, Richard

J.

Kenora
Andrukaitis,

Ronald

Laurent,

St.

P.

Lawson, John Michale

Q.

736 Kelly

Angove, Rodney C.
755 Harkness

St.

Barabash, Gary

155

W.

F.

,

P.

McKibbon

St.

P.

,

A.

Brantford

W.

St.

A.

P.

,

2639 Arthur

St.

F.

,

W.

R,

Kenora
St.

McMillan, Charles H.
A.

P.

,

Dryden

Belrose, Brain G.

Mercer, Douglas

43 Prospect Ave.

,

P.

A.

Brian S.

214 Banning

I.

657 Oliver Rd.

P.

,

A.

Ortgiese, Heinz
St.

,

P. A.

Brown, Leslie W.
13 Hanley St.
Burton,

378 Rita

McMillan, Alan

Walter, Lawrence

Bida,

F.

,

Margarit, Robert N.

Bahrynowski, David C.

79 Kelly

St.

Lehtonen, Risto U.

William

,

P. A.

St.

,

F.

,

F.

W.

,

P.

A.

B.

Kenora
Plant,

J.

707 Holly Cres.

Coak, Robert H.

938 Simpson
Parmeter, Allan

W.

Eugene G.

54 Elizabeth

St.

Poluchowicz, Walter A.

A.

A.

R.

St.

David C.

319 Hallam

C.

B.

P.

,

A.

P.

,

Godeski, Michael

2637 Isabella

Cranbrook,

St.

P.

,

Gallinger, Robert G.

Mirell, John Roger

Parker, Jeffrey

A.

A.

P.

,

P.

,

153 Strathcona Ave.

McVeigh, John D.

Ruault,

45 N. High

St.

Fowler, Stewart

Kingston

St.

Christopher
S.

253

�1007 Alexander

St.

F.

,

W.

Lakeview Motel,
325 Munroe St.

Catharines

St.

Sandmoen, John
420 Cuyler

Hudson, David N.

J.

1112 Mountain Ave.
Simpson, Raymond G.

531 Luci Court,

F.

,

W.

Edmunston, N.

W.

F.

Toronto
Johnstone, Hal T.

Beardmore
Urquhart, Lyle

R. R.

E.

17 Marlborough St.

P.

,

A.

P.

A.

R. R.

Wm.

497

Foreman,
220

A.

P.

F.

Residence
John

Malaguti, Paul A.
,

F.

W.

Welland

G.

R.

Wayne

Mattice,

Cumming

Labine,

#2,

Lewis, Robert

Christina St.

E.

P.

Islington

M.J.

Unknown
Vick,

,

Kinnear, Samuel W.

#1, F. W.

R, R,

Rd.

Kenora

Wilson, Diffie D.

Pelletier,

Townline

Kapush, Stanley M.

Kenogami,

S.

#2,

Juhala, Lloyd W.

Watts, Donald B.

131

B.

Johnston, John A.

Germano

Squissato,

B.

Woodstock

A.

P.

,

Sawchyn, Kenneth

A.

P.

,

Holdsworth, Richard

B.

St.

Robert N.

Helesic,

Roy, Joseph O.

St.

F.

,

W.

T.

Residence

R. L.

McKinnon, Gordon A.

Residence

Paisley

Moore, Brian

Forest Technology

I

J.

156 Ray Blvd.

P.

,

A.

Munroe, George M.
Toronto

Asseline, Robert

397 College

St.

P.

,

Breckenridge, Robert

Murphy, Daniel

A.

Toronto

Nipigon

J.

Nylund, Frederick

Residence
Buckley, Donald A.

R.R.

Wayne W.

Fort Frances

1513 W. Gore

B.

Ottawa

Ross,

Deluca, David A.

Rosslyn Rd.

2226 Isabella

St.

Gillespie, Peter S.

Hakala, Kenneth

L.

Unknown
Hardman, Perry G.
Catharines

W.

Seibert,

Gary

R.

,

F.

W.

Shatford,

Alexander G.

A.

F.

,

W.

Stryland, Kees (Jan Cornelis)

Willowdale

Thede, Richard

Willowdale

St.

F.

282 Empire Ave.
P.

,

E.

Residence

Faid, Terrence G.

29 Stokes

,

R.

St.

W.

Niagara Falls

Dubray, Douglas A.
#1,

F.

,

#2, Kaministiqua

Schmid, Auguste

Elmore, Franklin

St.

Kenneth W.

R. R.

Timmins
R. R.

R.

W.

F.

Presunka, Wesley T.

Bathurst, N. B.

Crowell, Lewis

#3,

Perin, Sergio F.

Lesbard, P. Q.
Carroll,

David V.

Nuttall,

Broad, William

F.

Arnprior

I.

I.

Port Elgin

Thompson, Douglas

R.

Terrace Bay

Thompson, Ian Forbes

�Toronto

William H.
Atikokan

Russell,

Vanson, Gilbert W.

Soder,

Oshawa

414

Whyte, Bruce G.

Wayne
Brock

E.

Stone, Robert

Winnipeg

St.

W.

F.

,

J.

Kenora

Ryerson

Tallon Jackie C.

Engineering Tech.

Tapak, Richard

130 Strathcona Ave.

625 McLeod

349 N. Algoma

St.

P.

,

A.

St.

W.

F.

,

407 Prince Arthur Blvd.
Valley, Albert

Coutanche, John
Gehl, Ronald

A.

Thorier, Ronald E.

Aslund, Eric D.

414 Shuniah

P.

,

P.

St.

28 Peter

P. A.

,

St.

Woods, Ross

R.

407 Oliver Rd.

F.

W.

A.

P.

,

St.

440 N. Court

A.

P.

,

,

E.

St.

P.

,

A.

Zakrewski, Maurice T.

Green, Gary

214 Theresa

St.

Grogan, Robert

72 Shuniah

P. A.

,

St.

P.

,

Zroback, Michael

B.

A.

J.

Residence

Nipigon

Hodgson, Harold T.

Ryerson Architecture

Niagara Falls

Hogue, Victor

J.

Allcorn, Robert

Car am at

214

Holloway, Richard
69 Melvin Ave.
Kallion,

P.

,

S.

A.

Murillo

Kondreska,

Winnipeg

Lome

S.

449 Empire Ave.

Erickson,

W.

F.

,

314 Pearl

Labine, Donald A.

Silver

Laponen, Raymond

St.

St.

,

P.

A.

A.

P.

,

St.

C.

757 Carlton Place,

F.

W.

Magowski, Walter M.
Toronto

Milanese, Brian A.

362 N. John

J.

Mountain

Kuneman, Maurice

Longlac

McDonald, Morley N.
Red Lake

,

Parisien,

W.

F.

Robert M.

345 Ray Blvd.

Ostaff, John

William

Rd.

,

P.

A.

,

P. A.

Pellegrin, Louis A.

Cooksville

Probizanski, Ivan

Roberts,

Unknown

Wayne

E.

Residence

Ratz, Richard G.

216 Archibald

St.

,

F.

W.

Sammons, Richard

H.

Cooksville

B.

Watson, Reginald A.

Residence
Richardson, William G.

353 Foley

St.

,

P.

A.

#3, P. A.

Riley, John

Ernest

Mining Technology

M.

352 Ray Blvd.
Ross,

E.

Hunnakko, Raymond

Cochenour

R. R.

Kenneth

Gregorovich, George G.

Cochenour

James

W.

L.

444 N. Algoma

Labine, Barry M.

Revill,

F.

,

Residence

Teddy

Ft.

St.

Calver, Gary D.

Dagg, James

494

J.

Norah

J.

Kapiskasing

,

P. A.

Decarle, Robert

Noranda, Q.

J.

�Gibson, Donald C.

Weston

Beeton

Daniel, John

Goodyer, Donald D.

Danielewski, Henry

Simcoe
Hodder, David

215 N. Algoma

S.

543 Andrew

St.

P. A.

,

Dean, Donald A.

Kornas, Leo

214 W. Frederica

Kenora

Doust, Douglas

MacNeill, Raymond

540 Andrew

St.

St.

A.

Ferguson, Donald A.

A.

Gander,

633

P.

,

Pilgrim, Clair D.

Splawski, Peter

St.

F.

,

W.

A.

P.

,

Stevens,

St.

F.

W.

St.

,

F.

W.

W.

F.

Gracey, David W.

Albert V.

2135 McGregor,
Hall,

W.

F.

Graham W.

Brantford
St.

Tapics, Michael

W.

F.

,

Hilden, Marja-Liisa

208 S. Windemere,
Hookham, Gregory J.

J.

Red Lake
Yeates, Evan

,

Atikokan

W.

F.

,

Jamaica
Strombom, John
315 Dufferin

St.

J.

Gorup, Sonja

Stanyk, Leonard D.

626 McBain

Norah

Lome

2110 Ridgeway,

St.

W.

F.

,

Gardiner, Donald N.

J.

326 N. High

S.

132 Balmoral

Franklin

St.

J.

Geraldton

J.

P.

,

Fernand A.

228 Lincoln

S.

A.

P.

,

Schreiber

Waterloo

718

J.

St.

Davis, Roy K.

Karges, Robert W.

Pelletier,

R.

Cooksville

401 Oakdale Cres.

J.

Edmonton

Kelly, George T.

Business

Kennedy, John H.

,

P.

A.

F.

W.

614 Ovendale Place,

F.

W.

Cooksville

Administration

I

Kierzkowski, Christine

231 Woseley

Klomp,

Agostino, Joseph N.

296 Windemere,
Aitken,

Wayne

485 Queen

Allan G.

543 Andrew

St.

W.

St.

Montgomery, Donald M.
P.

,

A.

Sioux Lookout

Morgan, Douglas V.

Erhard G.

286 Leslie Ave.

P.

,

A.

Thissalon

Ohlgren, Donald

Bilec, Sylvia

R.

1824 Hamilton Ave.

White River
Calder, James

A.

P.

,

Atikokan

A.

P.

,

William A.

Kenora
632 Oliver Rd.

3B-320 Dawson
Owen, Robert D.

,

P.

116 W. Walsh

A.

St.

St.

P.

,

F.

,

W.

St.

,

P.

Cott, Frederick George

A.

333

E.

Brock

St.

Pajunen, Olaui N.

,

F.

A.

W.

Paddington, George H.

L.

189 N. Court

F.

,

Olinik, Dennis L.

R.

Campbell, Lome A.
Connors, Ian

F.

Rose M.

Moffitt,

209 Winnipeg Ave.
Bartol,

,

Martin, Jane

Burlington

Bartley,

St.

Kaministiqua

Graeme

Bartlett,

A.

Maki, Vernon W.

T.

Dryden
Barr,

P.

P.

,

Jerrold C.

2019 Donald

A.

P.

St.

W.

�Bickmore, Hugh M.

Nolalu
Penny, Graham

337

R.

York

East

James H,

Phillips,

127

1-2600 Victoria Ave.
Pike, Gordon

James

,

Duke, Robert

F. VV.

,

908 Alexander
Stewart, Clifford

P. A.

,

St.

W.

F.

,

Hider,

St.

P. A.

,

1512 Empire Ave.

F.

,

W.

P.

,

St.

F.

,

Thompson, William

A.

W.

Mendek,

Jerry H.

Mercier, Gerald

Kenora
St.

Whitman, Daniel

336

E.

S.

F.

,

W.

P.

Archibald

St.

,

F.

W.

Morris, John B.

P. A.

,

2102

L.

Sills St.

,

F.

W.

Panula, Michael A.

Atikokan

297

Wilding, Robert G.

666 Dawson

St.

St.

,

P.

A.

St.

Amand, Joseph

,

F.

W.

A.

Sault Ste. Marie

17 College St.

Sweet, James A.

P. A.

,

100 Shuniah

Zachary, Robert W.

701 W. Frances

St.

Zadorozny, Ronald
,

F.

Yarzab, Edwin

W.

F.

W.

Fort Frances

Business

Administration
Ronald D.
Cres.

St.

,

P.

A.

J.

522 N. Syndicate Ave.

R.

Zub, Warren, M.

Elmwood
Howard E.

P. A.

,

621 W. Francis
St.

Ted W.

St.

St.

Peterson, Lawrence L.

P. A.

P. A.

,

High

174 College

R.
,

Wilson, D. Murray

172 Cox Cres.

S.

Parry, Jeffrey R.

Marie

Wilmot, Frederick

Geraldton

W.

A.

1513 Broadway Ave.

A.

Tomaszewski, Victor

Berg,

P.

,

Mcintosh, Robert A.

F.

,

Atikokan

415 N. Brodie

100

W.

R.

1842 Victoria Ave.

May, Gery V.
233 Angus St.

Carol A.

1309 Ford

F.

,

Ronald T.

Krawchuk, David W.

A.

P.

,

Taniwa, Norman

Bell,

P.

Geraldton

529 Thorndale Cresc.

Wilson,

E.

Johnson, Kenneth

Stockla, Gary V,

Sault Ste.

W.

Brant fold

L.

Kenogami Ave.

Court

F.

,

1024 River Ave.

Frederick T.

S.

St.

Atikokan
Fernie, David

Stevenson, George

224

W.

Fay, Jim G.

420 Franklin Ave.

Storey,

F.

,

Atikokan

Guiana

99 Penfold

St.

J.

Eyton, Terence

Shorrock, Gary H.

Stirling,

W.

F.

,

Kenora

P.

Shivrattan, Jeffrey B.

186 S.

Frances

E.

1811 Walsh
St.

Monetville

British

St.

Cusson, Ronald A.

F. VV,

E.

2617 Moodie
Porcell,

Marks

S.

Brownlee, Gloria D.

,

F.

W.

II

,

F.

W.

�INTER-COLLEGIATE PRESS, LTD.

— Manufacturers
Yearbooks — Yearbook Covers
Diplomas — Graduation Announcements
Publishers

Inkster

Boulevard at Bunting Street

Winnipeg, Manitoba

����</text>
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                    <text>���mo
3

PRESENTED TO

THE LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY
LIBRARY

BY

Mr. Gerry Haschiguchi

G'3111

��Here at the Head of the Great Lakes...

and its Lakehead University are situated
head of one of Ontario's and Canada's great
fresh water lakes, Lake Superior.
Port Arthur

at the

In Thunder Bay.

.

.

in
a
Port Arthur lies buried
blanket of mid-winter snow as

the

sunrise

reflects

off

frozen

Lake Superior. The majestic grain
elevators rise out of the city to

dominate the horizon.

2

�In the Heart

of

Growing Industry...

Gateway

and

to

East

One
of

West...

of the industrial sites of the twin cities

marks the progress

many

of the Lakehead.

such sites which

make

It

is

the Lakehead an

industrial centre.

Manitoba Pool 2 stands proudly as one of the oldest grain elevators in the Lakehead. It and its sister elevators store the golden harvest of the west before it is
sent out to the eager markets of the world.

3

which

only one

�In the "Land of the Sleeping Giant

An

the
aerial photo graphically illustrates the close relation of the University to

city

framed

in

the background by "the Sleeping Giant".

Lakehead University
the

campus

This, the original

academic

block of the University is
now being taken over by
the administrative staff.

4

�ill

The largest and newest building on campus to date is the
library which is being expanded to six floors during the
current academic year.

Wing "D" was added
academic

to the old

during the
summer of 1966 in order to
provide necessary lab space and
offices for expanding teaching
building

staff.

The Student Union building
houses student offices and publications,

and provides

facilities

for leisure activities in the

games

room, cafeteria, auditorium and
senior lounge.

The

meandering Mclntyre River flows
past our co-educational residence peacefully situated amidst the towering pines.

where
5

O

•

0

�in a modern academic

atmosphere...

The architects have graciously
provided a cleanly designed and
spacious lobby for our newest
building, the library.

Modern, well
lighted lecture
halls such as
this

one

in

Wing

"D", are becoming

more common
on campus.

From

this

Gaudino

control

directs

up

panel,

Vince

to forty stu-

dents during their language lab
periods.

Language lab

allow students to improve
a new language.

facilities

their oral abilities in

6

�The science department's closed circuit
T.V. program got underway this year under the capable direction of Mr. B. Currie.

This reference section provides excellent facilities for undergraduate research.

�we

study...

Large lecture rooms such as
the "snake pit" enable professors to reach as many
students as possible.

Smaller lecture rooms place
the students and professors
in closer proximity in order
to insure a better rapport
between the two.
This material

can then be

digested

in

study cubicles.

If

they desire, individuals

plement
further

their

lectures

may

sup-

by getting

materials from our library

stacks.

8

individual

�search for knowledge

Students may freely observe research projects being carried on
by the various professors such
as this project of Dr. Hawton's.

The Physics Dept. has provided
the best equipment necessary for
the purpose of carrying on both
study and research.

but university

life

also offers...

9

�the leisure time...

to discuss...

10

�11

�to

participate

as entertainers...

entertained...

�13

�Life in
Food has always been a
meeting ground

common
for

people, and the cafeprovides the place

teria

where good food and good
conversation are combined.

F1

Relaxation comes in many
forms: an informal card
game in the lounge or a
gab session in the hall.

The setting
of this

university
makes skiing

a natural
pastime.

Ordinary work must also
find

its

place

in

the univer-

sity scene.

14

��Future...

EXPANSION
Lakehead University
into a
first

modern campus

stage of

ties for

this

will
in

be converted by a $22,500,000 expansion program
man-made lake. The

the round' built on the shores of a

expansion

is

slated to be completed by 1969, providing facili-

3,000 students.

A dam

will

be built across the Mclntyre River

lake will serve both as a flood control project

appropriate summer and

in

order to provide the lake. This

and as a means

for indulging in

winter recreational activities. The buildings to be built

around the shores of the lake will be mainly 3
connected by underground tunnels.

to

4 storeys high and

will all

be

will be built a Centennial Complex housing
and administration. Among the impressive list of equipment to
be found in this building will be a $750,000 computer to be used in research and
by the administration. Five other buildings and additions are included in this first

Opposite the University Centre

science, technology,

stage of development.

words of Dr. Tamblyn, these buildings will combine a blend of functionand beauty in order to serve as a framework for the extension of knowledge
through study and research.
In

the

ality

16

�1

FACULTY
ft*

ADMINISTRATION

STUDENT GOVERNMENT

�DEDICATION

The Students of Lakehead University

1

proudly dedicate our C e n

edition 'of

t e

nnia1

the Nor' Wester to our

Chancellor....

Senator N. M. Paterson

�Senator N. M. Paterson

CHANCELLOR'S MESSAGE
While tradition has certain values, there are also compensations for a new
University. These

might be

listed

as an opportunity to start the University with

high principles, high standards of both education and deportment and high ideals.
I

would

like to

suggest that one of the important things of higher education

is

not

only the building of the mind but also of character.

No

faculty can

have too much

of this as they

both character and great thinking. This

new

have

in their

charge the making of

University has everything before

not only the chance to build character for the future but to

great universities

in this

fast

growing nation.

19

become one

it

of the

�President

and
Vice- Chancellor

Dr.

W.

G.

Tamblyn

FROM THE PRESIDENT
This
It

volume

of the

Yearbook

records achievements

in

sets out

which

spite of the lack of facilities

all

your

activities

of us at

during the 1966-67 session.

Lakehead can take

from which every new University

carried out successfully a varied

program of student

At the Canadian University Press Conference

just pride.

suffers,

In

you have

activities.
in

Janaury, the "Argus"

judged the best student newspaper published by the new

universities.

It

was

has also

some different judgments from local sources.
saw the inauguration of the University Committee, a group of seven
students, four faculty members, and three administrators, who sit with the President
to discuss anything and everything that concerns the well-being of the University
and its students. There have also been other committees with student representation, and it should be noted at this time the great contribution that has been made
received

This year

by the students

who have

taken their position on these committees so seriously.

20

�We

would also

like to

thank, on behalf of the University,

A. M.S., the S.A.S., the various clubs,

have meant such a great deal

and

the time

effort that

is

to

all

our general well-being.

We

are also very proud of the record

made to enrich the
made by our various

the past year. The hockey

but everyone

who

has participated

in

successful Winter Carnival

pation of our students

While

athletic

stands or

edge.
tastes,

falls

and

in

all aware of
and are deeply

University generally.

teams during
team have distinguished themselves,
the athletic program generally has conThese successes, together with an equally

team and the

tributed to the record of the University.

of the

University that

are

required by these various positions

appreciative of the effort that has been

We

members

the

and other groups within the

athletic

ski

and Model Parliament,

highlight the increasing partici-

extra-curricular activities.

social activities are vital parts of student

by the vigour and integrity with which

its

life,

the University

members pursue knowl-

knowledge which unites people of different capacities,
temperaments, and degrees of learning into the community known as a

It

is

the pursuit of

University.

Those of you
bits of
If

who graduate

this

year

will

take to society,

I

hope, more than the

information you have garnered from your courses at Lakehead University.

the time you have spent here has been fruitful, you will have developed the

to yourself, to society, to the political and economic
hope we have also gendered in you the capacity to search
for meaningful answers to the questions you raise.
Society always needs knowledgeable men and women who will question its
assumptions, its customs, practices, and institutions. These same men and women

ability to

pose questions

institutions of our day.

will

I

not hesitate to involve themselves

question

elicits

University will produce graduates

judgment

of a

in

false or irrational views of

who

will

effective
life.

It

donate

is

remedial action

when

the

our ambition that Lakehead

to society the

discernment and

"knowledgeable" mind.

W. G. Tamblyn
President and Vice-Chancellor,
Lakehead

21

University.

�Director of Finance

David W. Morgan,
B.A. (McGill),
M.B.A. (Harvard)

Registrar of the University
B.A., (Sir

Chief Librarian
Eric J. Belton,
M.A. (Oxford)

22

Donald E. Ayre,
George Williams)

�23

�24

�Board of Governors
John N. Paterson, Esq.
Vice Chairman

John Andrews, Esq.
Murray W. Babe, Esq.
Henry Bell, Esq.
George L. Carruthers, Esq.
Donald C. Clark, Esq.
Robert

E.

Costello, Esq.

Gordon P. Dalzell, Esq.
John E. J. Fahlgren, Esq.

David

I.

Nattress, Esq.

Robert

J. Flatt,

Esq.

Ernest G. Pallister, Esq.

J.

Murray Fleming, Esq.

Lome Goodail,

Roderick Philpot, Esq.

E.

Robert

J. Prettie,

Donald

Mayor

Ernest H. Reed, Esq.

P. P. Ribotto,

Esq.

Esq.

Bernard Shaffer, Esq.
Burnley

W.

Stevens, Esq.

25

F.

Esq.

Hassard, Esq.

Thomas S. Jones, Esq.
Mayor Saul Laskin, Esq.
James R. Machan, Esq.
Donald McMillan, Esq.

�Arts

Dr.

F.

M. Doan

Professor of Philosophy

26

�Mr.

J.

Caccamo

Assistant Professor
of Economics

Dr. A.

Beltran-Chen

Assistant Professor
of Sociology

Mr. D. Crozier
Assistant Professor
of English

Mr. K.

Dawson

Assistant Professor
of Anthropology

Mr.

J. E.

MacDonald

Assistant Professor
of Psychology

Mrs. A. Moscovitch
Assistant Professor
of French

27

�Dr. J. Whittle

Assistant Professor
of

German

LECTURERS
Mr. A. Alexander
Mr.
Mrs.

Political

Alleyne

J.

-

Mr. A. Alleyne

-

English

-

~

..Latin

and Ancient

Anderson
Mr. J. A. Brigham
Mr. M. Chen
Mr. M. Colina
Mr.

English
History

Spanish

Geography

Davies

I.

Mr.

J.

Mr.

J.

Psychology

Harding
Leach

D.

K.

Mr.

_

English

_

Morrison

L.

Mr. D.

..Economics

_

Mr. A. O. Menhart

Mr.

Political

Sudar

D.

Miss

Russian

Wray

A.

S.

Science

Anthropology

G. Szudy

L.

History

Economics

F.

Mr.

Science

Psychology

Allan

K.

Psychology

LABORATORY ASSISTANTS
Miss

Mr. V.

Laboratory Assistant

Tracy

R.

Gaudino

..Supervisor of

in

Anthropology

Language Laboratory

SESSIONAL LECTURERS
Miss
Mr.

Hurley

J.

T.

A.

Mrs. M.

Mr.

I.

Mr.

P.

S.

Latin

McKee

Sociology
French

Rideout

Wyschinsky

Ukrainian

G. Yurick

English

TEACHING ASSISTANTS
Vervondel

Mr.

R.

E.

Mr.

P.

Wesley

J.

French

Psychology

28

�29

�Dr.

L.

D.

Hawton

Assistant Professor
of Chemistry

Mr.

E. J.

M. Kendall

Assistant Professor
of Physics

Dr. S. G. A.

Magwood

Assistant Professor
of Zoology

Dr.

M

Marchand

Assistant Professor
of

Mathematics

Dr. A. T.

McEwan

Assistant Professor
of Computer Science

Mr. D.

J.

McKenzie

Assistant Professor
of Physics

Dr.

G.

W. Ozburn

Assistant Professor
of Zoology

30

�Dr. C. Shih

Assistant Professor
of Biology

LECTURERS
Mr. W. Allaway
Mr.

B.

Mr.

A.

Mathematics
.Zoology

Bristowe
Bruley

_

_

_

..Chemistry

_

Mr. W. Chu

Mathematics

M. Hawton

Mrs.

Physics

TEACHING ASSISTANTS
Mr.

L.

D.

Chisholm

_

Geology

._

Mr. D. A. H. Jackson

_

Mr.

_

T.

Northcott

_

_

_

_

Mr.

P.
L.

.Physics

_

Biology

_.

Mathematics

Mr. A. Pascual
Mrs.

_

Skula

Biology

Chemistry

Tulloch

P.

TECHNICIANS
Mrs.

K.

Mr.

W.

Mr.

F.

Mr. A.

Mr.

J.

Mr.

T.

Andrews

Biology

Audio-Visual Aids

N. Currie

Foldy
J.

P.

-

Physics

Chemistry

Harding

Science

Lehto

W. Mettinen

~

31

Science

�N
Mr. W. D. MacKinnon
Associate Professor of
Civil Engineering

m
Mr

Mrs. C. J. White
Associate Professor
of Nursing,

0.

Alexander

Assistant
Professor of
Business

Administration

Mr. P. Coulter
Assistant Professor of

Mechanical Engineering
Mr.

W.

R.

Crowe

Assistant Professor of

Susiness Administration

32

Sister

Barbara

Assistant Professor
of Nursing

�Mr. H. Elmslie
Assistant Professor of
Business Administration

Mr. G. Mott
Assistant Professor
of Architecture

Mr. H. North
Assistant Professor
of Mechanical Engineering

LECTURERS
Mr.

H.

Akervall

Mr.

W.

N. Bodnar

..Forestry
Civil

__

_.

Mr. M. Zablocki

__

Engineering

Business Administration

__

LABORATORY TECHNICIANS
Mr. C. M. Lai

Microbiology

_

SESSIONAL LECTURERS
Miss

Aedy

L.

Library Science

Mrs. M. Coulter

Nursing

Mining

Mr. A. Grant

W. L.
W. Kembel
Mr. W. Kyro

C. Greer

Dr.

Library Science

____

Engineering Drawing

Mr.

Lone

Dr. F.
Dr.

Drafting
-

Microbiology

-

Magwood

K.

....Biology

Mr. D. Martin
Mrs.

E.

Murray

Mr.

P.

Mutchler

Mr.

J.

Palko

Mr.

D.

Business

Sharp

Law

...Nutrition

Basic Library

Methods

Engineering Laboratory
__

Basic

_

Library

Methods

Engineering Drawing

Mr. C. Stamp

TEACHING ASSISTANTS
Dr.

S.

Zingel

Forestry

Mr.

L.

Vidlak

Forestry

33

�Alma Mater
Society

Wayne M.

Tocheri

A. M.S. President

President's Messaqe
The three year period since the inauguration of the A. M.S. has been one of
unparalleled growth for Lakehead University both academically and materially.
Similarly, the student

body has exhibited a new maturity

in

meeting the demands

required of active participants on the Canadian University scene.

and participation in, such vital new foundations as the
and the "Board of Athletics" exemplifies this student
maturity in our University government. Our dynamic new student newspaper,
the Argus, will continue to provide, as it has in this past year, an avenue for free
expression of student opinion. We have made even further provision for our own
The

institution

of,

"University Committee"

future by establishing the "Board of Trustees" to offer experienced counsel on

large student administrative endeavours.

The A. M.S.

this

year has surged forward rapidly amid the fresh excitement of

a young, developing university.
sibilities to

This institution

me

in

It

has displayed

full

recognition of

its

respon-

serve the need for leadership roles.

my opportunity
many years ahead.

which has nourished

even greater bondage

in

the

34

to serve,

and

to lead, holds

�35

�Alma Mater Society Council

—
—

—

Vice-President, Dawn Brownlee
Secretary, Wayne
Ron Hider
Treasurer, Janice Holmes
Nursing rep.
Standing: Dave Sulphur
University Schools rep., Don Cordingley
Arts rep.,
Peter Rusak
Chief Justice, Wendy Ticknor
Science rep., Doug Robson
University Schools rep., Karen Nielsen
Nursing rep., Joe St. Amand
President of
University Schools, Natalie Sadowski
Arts rep., Jack Lemmon
Arts rep., Bob
Jordan
President of Arts, Rick AAarwood
Science
Arts rep., Morley Mitchell
rep., Peter McCormack
Arts rep. Missing: Ferg Penner
President of Science,
Helen Haavisto
University Schools rep.
Sitting:

Tocheri

Ian

—

Thompson

President,

—

—

—

—

—

—
—
—

36

—

—

—

—
—
—
—
—

�Arts Society

Executive:

Tom MacLeod

Margaret Coghlan

—

—

Vice-President, Morley Mitchell
Treasurer.

Secretary, Bonnie Jordan

—

—

President,

Arts Council:

—
—
—

Year
Peter McCormack, Mary Greer, Don Colburne, Rod
Second Year
Pentti Paularinne, Jean Jordan, Rod Munford.
Third Year
Gary Baldwin, Don Sutton.
First

Science Society

Executive:

Wayde

Turgeon,

Ferg Penner,

Robert Ruault.

37

Phillips.

�University Schools Society

Executive:

—
—
Robert Yatkowsky —
Amand —
Joe
Fred Wilmot

Carole Storey

Treasurer,
Secretary,

Vice-President,

President.

St.

University Schools Council:

— Admin.
— Admin.
Urquhart—
—
Joseph's
Janice Holmes — Nursing,
— Mining
Brown —
John
—
Richard Thede —
Karen Nielsen — Nursing, General
Mike Whitton — Mining

Graham Penney
Terry Eyton

Bus.

II

Bus.

Ill

Eng. Tech.

Lyle

Shirley Hall

I

Library Tech.

I

St.

Tech.

Fern Pel letier

Eng. Tech.

Les

Snell

Hospt.

II

II

(Ryerson) Eng.

Forestry Tech.

II

Hospt.

Tech.

38

I

�CLUBS and
ACTIVITIES

�French Club

Frances

Krcel

Don Murphy

—
—

Treasurer; Krys
Vice-President.

President;

Secretary-

Wadas

—

;

1

Engineering
Institute

of Canada

Student

—
—
Graham —
Ron Green —

Mr. R. Bruley
Bruce Murray
man,-

man;

Sec.

Bill

Advisor;
Vice-ChairChairSecretary-

Treasurer.

40

�Varsity Christian

Fellowship

Mike
Bonnie

—
—
—

Panula
Wile

Publicity;

Secretary;

Social Convener. Standing: Tony Dandridge
President.

Jean Fisher

—

41

�Nemissa

—
Kidd —

Jo-Anne Cain
Bayne Beyak
dent; Irene

Treasurer.
Szychter

—

—

President;

Vice-Presi-

Secretary-

Standing:

Gwen

Publicity.

Winter Carnival
Executive

—
—
Wierzbicki —

Maurice Mailhot
Jean Jordan
Julie

Treasurer;
Secretary;

man; Alex Shatford

Chair-

—

Co-

ordinator.

Circle

Fred Cott

—

K

Vice-President;

Dave Bahrynowski
dent;

Jim

Purcell

tary-Treasurer.

42

—
—

Presi-

Secre-

�43

�Arts Dinner Dance

�45

�Nemissa
Nemissa, a
in

girls'

club at the University

distinguishable

Caper". The

girls

garb

for

their

went on stage

"Campus

Cuties

from the various faculties held

this

event to become better acquainted with one another.

The evening consisted of humorous

portrayals

of

contestants for the queen of the faculties at the University.

A

fashion

show presented their somewhat
modes in the numerous areas

different views of the

of fashion today.

46

�Students assemble
around one of the

booths

article

what

anticipating
to buy.

Treasure Van

At

this

particular display
girls mill

over

the glass bangles,
ivory carved statuettes,

and braided

wife leaders from
India.

The

W.U.S.

brings

to

Treasure

the

world-wide selection of
ticles

such as

Greece which
classic

Van

University

a
ar-

pottery from
illustrates the

beauty of

this

ancient

land.

Hand-made

Morocco's contributions are
both
practical
and orna-

articles

are one of the

mental consisting of goods

main

such

features.

as, hand bags, blanand other hand decor-

Here, an

kets,

engraved mask

ated leather goods.

from Africa
attracts those

with a taste for

something
different.

Toys are also a part of
the Treasure Van's
up.

Gary Baldwin

that puppets

peal for

all

make-

illustrates

hold an ap-

ages.

47

�48

��Folk Music
The Folk

Festival,

fied success

talented

due

undertaken by the Arts Society was an unquali-

to the direction of

performers

from

the

Tom

area

Kelly coupled with highly

and from the

University.

Capacity audiences were rewarded with a diversified evening of

humour and song.

Morley Mitchell

"The Folk

Maureen Joy

50

�Spectacular

Bill

Houston

51

�Dawson and
pile

Discovery at Whitefish Lake

Professor

Dawson and

his

Archeological team spent the

summer

of

1966 excavating their recently discovered ritual burying ground at
Whitefish Lake, west of Fort William. These remnants of a past Indian
civilization are approximately 2,000 years old and require extreme
care

in their

excavation.

With delicate tools a skull is
carefully ridden of the surrounding earth.

52

his

team discuss and com

data from the day's digging.

�Once unearthed, all the artifacts are carefully
indexed and their position in the site recorded.

Ritual Burial

Mound: team shown here

at

main

site; l-r

Jack Redden, Ken Dawson,

Ruth Tracy, Jennifer Sharpe.

53

�Lalcehead

U.

helps out.

"United Appeal Campaign

54

��8HBBHHHB

s

a*

aPI

President's

Message

Charles

E.

Sameluk

President

"HE

WHO

WILL

USE OF ANY PART OF HIS
TO RECREATION."

MAKE A WISE

A GOODLY PORTION OF

IT

LIFE

MUST ALLOT

These words by Locke are particularly meaningful to the "Student Athletic
Society" at Lakehead University.

hockey

We

spirit

Athletic Field

this

I

am

in

an

effort to

The tremendous

my

role

as President of the S.A.S., have allowed

key to achieving a fully developed undergraduate career. For

grateful.

would

particularly like to thank Mr.

Henry Akervall, and Mr. William Shannon

for their efforts on our behalf. To the fellow
I

plateau

Athletics.

we have acquired, the creation of the Athletic Board, and the
House which is being built, bear witness to many of our efforts.

to discover the
I

first

in

which

The events of the past year and

me

have reached our

student administration, and participation

strive for

members

of

my

executive

and

say, thank you.

Charles

56

E.

Sameluk

council,

�A*

S.

Council

Row: C. Kierzkowski, G. Miller, C. Sameluk, M. McGregor, M.
Hamalainen. Back Row: T. Groulx, K. Childerhose, B. Brymer, L.
Gander, D. Christie, D. Wilson, J. Stefiszyn, J. Halonen, D. KrawFront

chuk, D.

Magee.

57

�58

�Head

Coaches
Mr. H. Akervall

Hockey

Mr. B. Bristowe
Basketball

Ozburn
Squash

Dr. G.

Mr.

Mr. W. Shannon
Women's Basketball

R. Browne
Rowing

59

�Men 's

Basketball

Team
Mr.
B.
Bristowe (Coach),
Siemienuik,
J.
Johnstone,

Holmstrom,
Bemko, AA.

B.

Elvin,

D.

Pero, B.

L.

Wainwright

G. Kostyshyn,
Missing: !. Conners, R.
ager),

M.

L.

(ManHebert.

Cameron,

M. Warywoda.

Hockey Team
Front Row: R. Hamilton, A. Holt,
J. Stefiszyn, L. Gander, M. Miyata, D. Siciliano, J. Kennedy,
K.
Pringnitz, A. Johnson. Back
Row: Mr. H. Akervall (Coach),
R. Morancy, J. Pronger, M. Smith,
M. Tracey, D. Stirrett, J. Fallis, K.

Kivisto,

D.

Olinik,

(Manager). Missing:

Women's Basketball

Team
P.

Chicoine,

L.

Thomas,

J.

B.

Dunn,

S.

Savage,

Shannon

(Coach),

McKenzie, B. Browning, L.
Martin, M. Hamalainen (Capt.).
Missing: M. Riekstins.
S.

60

D.
B.

Magee

Battiston.

�Cheerleaders

Cheerleaders

in action.

and Majorettes

P.

Pehkonen, M. Abercrombie,

M. Parkinson.

61

�Murray Smith

I.C.H.A. Third Leading Scorer Tries Again.

62

�NOR'WESTERS

I.C.H.A.

CHAMPIONS

The regular season of the newly formed International Collegiate
Hockey Association saw Lakehead University Nor'Westers and
Bemidji State College Beavers tied for the championship. Both
teams had identical ten win and two loss records but the Nor'Westers won on the basis of a better points for and against average.
Besides taking the championship the Nor'Westers also captured the top three places in the scoring race. Dave Siciliano,

Dwight
in

Stirrett

and Murray Smith placed

first,

second and third

the standings respectively.

Congratulations Nor'Westers on a successful season.

Mr. Henry Akervall
directs his

team

63

�In tercolleqia te

Squash

9
The squash

te.

m

from Lakehead University, defend-

ing Ontario Intercollegiate

Champions were soundly

OIAA tournament hosted by York
The team was composed of Dave Hether-

defeated at the
University.

ington,

Lome

Everett

and John Sihvonen.

Hetherington and Everett were both defeated
first

of

round while Sihvonen

the double

went on
Lutheran

to

win

lost in

his

in

the

second match

round robin knockout. Hetherington
in the consolation match. Waterloo

University

won

the

1967

OIAA Squash

Championship.

64

�In tercollegia te

Rowinq Team

JUNIOR VARSITY

—
—
7—
6—
—
4—
3—
2—
Bow —
Cox

G.

Stroke

Miller
I.

_

Petrie

___.T.

5

Roy

Kowalchuk

R.

Comishin

_T.

Simpson

R.

_

____B.

Weiler

Zatulsky

.J.

G. Skinner

Lakehead University Oarsmen under the direction of Head Coach
R. Browne participated in the Mid-American Intercollegiate Rowing Association's Fall Regatta

in St.

was composed of crews from the
Wisconsin and St. Thomas College.

SENIOR VARSITY

—
—
7—
6—
—
4—
—
—
Bow—
Cox

G. Miller

Stroke

5

3

2

__.N.

McGregor
R.

_

Gerry
J.

T.

Roy

Comishin
T.

Petrie

Colquhoun
C. Sameluk

E.

B.

Weiler

65

Paul, Minnesota. Opposition

Universities of

Minnesota and

��67

�After a

dismal opening day

Intercollegiate Curling
ton, LU's curling

the Consolation

in

the

Championship

Ontario

at Hamil-

team came on strong to salvage
Championship in that bonspiel.

The bonspiel, hosted by Mohawk College in
saw LU drop its first game to Northern
College, win the second over Osgoode Hall then
Hamilton,

lose to the University of

Waterloo Lutheran.

The second day had LU's squad skipped by

Randy Stinson with Bill Hodgson, Bruce Kennedy
and Rick AAoates, show their true ability by
defeating Laurentian University then Northern
College for the Consolation Championship.

Icome CURL£RS|
COUHTPY

10

II

12

ClUrf

131415

ia|

^|
18!

PORT ARTHUR GOLF AND COUHTRV CU

6 7 89I0III2I3I4I!

In tercolleqia te

Curling

68

�In tercollegia te

Ski Team

O.I. A. A. Ski

Champions

The capture of the LU Invitational

Ski

Champion-

was the start of
which was climaxed

with a victory at Sudbury

OIAA

Tom Morton, Mike Wren,

ship

for the

crown.

a highly successful season

Gary Kunnas, Dave Dobbin composed
the Nor'Wester squad. Wren and Burton with
Manager Bill Shannon represented LU at the
Canadian Championship at Banff, Alberta for the
Bill

Burton,

Ontario team.

69

�70

�Look Ma!

Bill

I

can

fly.

Gordon, Pro at Chappies Memorial

Golf Course gives lessons to LU golfers.

Pat
LU's

takes advantage of
modern dancing sessions.

Lund

71

�Oh

72

the

wages

of

sin!!!

�WINTER CARNtmi

�Foresters' kick-off

Winter Carnival

The opening of the Winter Carnival was highlighted by the "Foresters' Kick-off
Dance". The 100% support of the Foresters made it a rousing and tremendous
success.

74

�Those present were given a preview of the Carnival Queen candidates.

The main feature of the evening
the crowning of King Carni-

was
val.

Rob Gerry

(left) is

seen

in his

regal throne surrounded by gifts.
Hedda Trognitz (below), Miss
Lakehead University 1966 congratulates the king.

75

��r

fill

Miss Science

Wendy Ticknor

Miss Ryerson

Tech.

Deb by Bryant

�Miss Business Admin.
Barbara Lone

Miss Nursinq

Donna Fletcher

�Miss Engineering

Tech.

Marjolein Niels

��Miss Dominion of Canada
visits

Lakehead University

�Para d e

.

.

��84

��Slave

Day

The "superior sex" were given

their

annual op-

portunity to be a "King for a day". Girls

were

put up for sale and consigned to spend the day

doing menial tasks
their masters.

etc., to

satisfy the

whims

of

�87

�Open House Day

Klondike Supper
Under the sponsorship of Nemissa, the pubKlondike stew dinner
lic was invited to a
which was served in the University cafeteria. In keeping with the Centennial theme,
the cafeteria was decorated to create a colonial atmosphere.

Public Tours

The public

is

given an opportunity to learn of the

and progress. (Left) Dr. Tamblyn uses the closed circuit TV to explain future plans.
(Lower left) People view a display of a collection of
old books. (Below) The science labs offered many
University's activities

interesting projects.

88

�Monte Curio Niqht

��Torch

���Carnival Wind-up

The Winter Carnival was ended by a
gala formal ball held at the Exhibition Park Coliseum which had been
gaily decorated in Carnival spirit by
students working around the clock.
The decorations depicting the various facets of Canadian life was in
keeping with the Centennial theme
of the Carnival.

��Winter Carnival

Royalty

��Introduction of

Nutsin (j Programs

—

FIRST CLASS
First row:
Heather Nolan, Fort William;
Sharon Weller, Fort William. Second row: Janice Gaynor,
Port Arthur,- Karen Anderson, Fort William; Kathy Galvin,
Port Arthur; Leslie Reid, Dryden. Third row: Linda Zanette,
Fort William; Linda Thomas, Fort William; Gwen Brunn,
Rainy River, Darlene Cymbalisty, Kenora,- Alice Zuliani,
Beardmore.

THE BASIC DEGREE PROGRAM is offered to high school graduates (grade 13).
is a four year program in which general education courses and professional

This

courses are given at the University. The practice
is

done throughout the academic year

in

giving nursing care to patients

at the local hospitals

and other health

agencies under supervision of University faculty.

Upon completion
Science Degree

in

of the

program the student

will

be granted a Bachelor of

Nursing, and will be eligible to write examinations to

become

a Registered Nurse. The graduates from this program will be prepared for
level positions as

bedside nurses, head nurses, teachers

first

a school of nursing or

in

public health nurses. They also have the basic preparation which will enable

them

on to a Masters' Degree should they wish to do so.
September 1966 the first class of 12 students was admitted. They came from
the Lakehead and other areas in Northwestern Ontario.
A SECOND PROGRAM leading to a Bachelor of Science Degree in Nursing is
offered to Registered Nurses who wish to continue their education and improve
their clinical competence. This program requires approximately three academic
years and upon completion of the requirements the nurse is prepared for first
level positions as a bedside nurse, a head nurse, a teacher in a school of nursing
to continue

In

or as a public health nurse.
In

September 1966, 30 Registered Nurses were admitted

are admitted to both programs. Nursing students have
responsibilities of full-time students at the University.

98

program.

Men

the privileges

and

to this

all

�tt

M D presents

"The Parable of the

Excused Doll"

"The

Parable

of

the

presentation

of

audience

ever forget

Theatre

will

Company

such

Excused

calibre
its

Doll,

no

that

was a
member

theatre
of

the

presentation. The Insurgency

of U.AA.D. introduced a

mode

of

drama

which makes the traditional "stage drama" seem quite

tame
and

in

comparison. Gone

stage,

and replacing

is

the separation of audience

this

intense inclusion of the audience

—

separation
in

is

the

very

the actual play, both

and carries on much
and aestheticallywith the actual emotional tenor of the theme striking
home to those who came to be mere spectators.
The theme of the play was very modern in its expresphysically

of

its

sion

the play erupts out of

action within the seating area;

of the

plight of people

realism of the presentation

—

reaching out vainly. The

was

graphically portrayed

in

where a young man approached various people
with his plea for help (middle and bottom left). "The
Parable of the Excused Doll" was a real Happening, one
of the most unforgetable theatre experiences ever pre-

the scene

sented at the Lakehead.

99

�New

Year's

The
a

New

Eve Frolic

Year was brought in by
and dance de-

buffet dinner

signed to include faculty, homecoming and local students in an
on-campus extravaganza com-

imaginative decora-

plete

with

tions

and go-go

girl,

(below)

100

�Midnight was acknowledged with the usual shower of balloons,

much

noise

and

.

.

.

101

�A

real

community

spirit

enveloped

this

Backstaqe

year's residence allowing the students to

enjoy
hikes,

themselves

with

masquerades,

formal discussions, or

just

plain

shenanigins.

i

102

4 y\

�in Residence

103

�Hedda Troqnitz

Miss Lakehead University 1966 qoes

First

Runner-up

Arthur,

Ont.)

;

— Hedda

(Memorial University,
garet

Ann Corriveau

Trognitz

Canadian

Miss

St.

(Lakehead

University

1967

University,

— Linda

John's Nf Id.); Second Runner-up

(Loyola University, Montreal, Que.)

104

Port

Inkpen

— Mar-

�Miss Canadian University Pageant
at University of Waterloo Lutheran

Miss Lakehead University 1966, Hedda Trognitz

was our

representative at the

Miss Canadian University Pageant hosted by the University of Waterloo Lutheran.
This

was the first time our University had entered this pageant and Hedda, to the
and the honour of her University was the first runner-up. We wish to extend

credit

our congratulations to our very able representative.

105

�Science Dinner Dance

106

�The Royal Edward Hotel's Norman Room
played host to this year's Science Society
Dinner. Guest speaker, Mr. John Kendall
(bottom left) spoke on a very timely topic
of "Communication between Faculty and
Students".

Surprise entertainment

the

Science Society

Penner

(left)

Mr.

Ferg

and the ever popular Mr.

Bob Blaine (above).

107

was supplied by

President

�The Athletic Trophy Dance was an evening acknowledging the sportsmanship and success of
participants

in

both inter-collegiate and intra-

mural sports. Guest speaker, Mr. Joe Porrier
(below) of the Ottawa Roughriders opened the
presentation of trophies with a speech on athletics in

on

—

Top Athletes: seated Marg Hamalainen (fop female athlete of the
year); standing, l-r Chuck Sameluk;
Tom Morton (top male athlete of
:

the year);

Bob

Elvin.

108

general plus a few amusing anecdotes

his life

with the Roughriders.

�Athletic Trophy Niqht

�those who couldn't play a sport

.

.

Dined, Danced,

110

etc.,

�like

SPORTS

in honour of our Sportsmen.

��The student newspaper got a fresh start this
"The
year, beginning with a new title
Argus" and an attitude which gained the

—

attention not only of the students but the
local

high schools

and general public as

well.

"Argus" published 26 ediaveraging 8-12 pages per issue with

This year the
tions

an

average

Publication

summer on

circulation
will

of

continue

2,500 copies.
throughout the

a direct mailing system.

Jorma Halonen

�Dynamite Heralds Opening

�of the Centennial Buildinq

Lord

Bowden

educationalist

of Chesterfield, a

and

scientist

from

Lakehead University's President Dr.
Tamblyn and Lord Bowden exchanged
congratulations in acknowledgment of

noted
Britain

pressed the plunger to officially break
the

ground

for

Lakehead University's

the opening of a

Centennial Building.

new

era of the Uni-

versity.

The Centennial Building
expansion

program.

A

will

be a showpiece of our $23,000,000

$14,200,000, five-storey

and Technology complex

structure,

the

be twice as large as all
other present buildings combined. Built in a sheltered "U" shape
the Complex will include an adiminstration wing, a top floor of
faculty offices, a basement level for research and laboratories

Science

and three

will

floors of classroom space. Three science auditoriums,

each seating roughly 350 persons, are included

The Complex
Centre Building.

will

An

an overall entrance

be

built

in

the plans.

adjacent to the present University

impressive courtyard has been designed as

to the University.

115

�AT THE CLOSING OF THE YEAR
we look back

in reminiscence

upon the past year.
us will return
experiences

Many

to create

and

of

new

memories....

but some of us will leave the
shelter of the University

and

pass into the larqer and more
challenging world.

116

We

are the.

��FACULTY OF ARTS

G. O. Rothney, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.
of Arts

Dean

HONOURS
BACHELOR OF ARTS

118

�Thomas

Kelly

Hon. B.A.
(English)

Port Arthur, Ont.

Carol

M. Knox

Hon. B.A.
(Psychology)
Fort William, Ont.

Ihor G. Kozyra
Hon. B.A.

(Psychology)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Heather J. Maki
Hon. B.A.
(Eng.

&amp;

Latin)

Port Arthur, Ont.

M. Nordin
Hon. B.A.

Tuire

(French)
Port Arthur, Ont.

.

Vi

Russell G. Rothney

Hon. B.A.
(Economics)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Glenn

J.

Scott

Hon. B.A.
(English)

Port Arthur, Ont.

119

�BACHELOR OF ARTS

Anton A. Brink
B.A. (History)
Port Arthur, Ont.

120

�Heather A. Campbel
B.A. (Psychology)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Robert G. Campbell

A

B.A. (French)
Fort William, Ont.

i

1/

i
Ken A. Childerhose
B.

A. (Economics)

Port Arthur, Ont.

Bonnie A. Chisholm
B.A. (Psychology)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Poul Christensen
B.A. (Psychology)
Port Arthur, Ont.

David

J.

Christie

B.A. (Eng.

&amp;

Pol. Sc.)

Fort William, Ont.

Stefan B. Chyril
B.A. (Latin)
Fort William, Ont.

Margaret

F.

Coghlan

B.A. (English)
Fort William, Ont.

121

��Lloyd

E.

Dove

B.A. (English)
Fort William, Ont.

1/

A

Wendy

D. Duncan
B.A. (History)

Terrace Bay, Ont.

Robert Elvin
B.A. (English)
Fort William, Ont.

Larry Forester
B.A. (History)
Fort William, Ont.

Robert

W.

Forneri

B.A. (English)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Denis S. Garofalo
B.A. (Psychology)
Fort William, Ont.

Robert C. Gerry
A. (Economics)
Fort William, Ont.

B.

123

(T/

�Bruce A. Gordon
B.A. (English)
Fort William, Ont.

Stewart A. Gordon
B.A. (History)
Port Arthur, Ont.

wm

Aldo Grebaz
B.A. (Eng. &amp; Hist.)
Fort William, Ont.

Shirley A.

Hagdu

B.A. (Latin)
Fort William, Ont.

^^^^

Margaret Hamalainen
B.A. (Eng. &amp; Psych.)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Toshihiko Hayashi
B.A. (Psychology)
Fort William, Ont.

Francois G. Heroux
B.A. (French)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Walter Horban
B.A. (History)
Park, Calif.

Canoga

124

�Marilyn J. Hurrell
B.A. (Mathematics)
Fort William, Ont.

Tillie Hurrell

B.A. (English)
Port Arthur, Ont.

William

P. Inglis

A. (English)
Port Arthur, Ont.

B.

Alan G. Jones
B.A. (English)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Brenda M. Juhala
B.A. (Psychology)
Fort William, Ont.

Sheila M. Kaszor
B.A. (Psychology)
Fort William, Ont.

Gerald K. Kishi
B.A. (Hist.

&amp;

Pol. Sc.)

Fort William, Ont.

Eugene Kolisnyk
B.A. (Psychology)
Fort William, Ont.

125

��127

�Dora

Mae Mose

B.A. (Latin)

Emo, Ont.

John

J.

McClelland

B.A. (Economics)
Port Arthur, Ont.

William McEachern
B.A. (Philosophy)
Fort William, Ont.

Louise M. J. McGoey
B.A. (Psychology)
Kapuskasing, Ont.

Karen

S.

Okada

B.A. (Psychology)
Fort William, Ont.

Ernest Parenuik
B.A. (Political Sc.)
Fort William, Ont.

Donald Prodanyk
B.A. (Psychology)
Port Arthur, Ont.

128

�Jessie F. Reesor
B.A. (English)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Eleanor E. Richmond
B.A. (Psychology)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Kathleen Ridler
B.A. (English)
Fort William, Ont.

Lowdru Robinson
B.A. (Psychology)
Fort William, Ont.

Ronald A. Robinson
B.A. (English)
Red Lake, Ont.

Peter T. Rusak
B.A. (Economics)
Toronto, Ont.

Walter Ryczko
B.A. (Economics)

Dryden, Ont.

129

�William Salonen
B.A. (History)

Dryden, Ont.

Charles E. Sameluk
B.A. (Economics)
Fort William, Ont.

Bernard Skula

Maty Skoropad
B.A. (English)

B.A. (History)

Port Arthur, Ont.

Fort William, Ont.

Olive Stamler
B.A. (English)

Atikokan, Ont.

Randy W. Stinson
B.A. (Economics)
Fort William, Ont.

Elizabeth Stodolny
B.A. (Psychology)
Fort William, Ont.

130

��Krystyna A.

Wadas

B.A. (French &amp; Latin)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Myron

B.

Warywoda

B.A. (English)
Fort William, Ont.

t 1/

Julie Wierzbicki

B.A. (Mathematics)

A

Port Arthur, Ont.

Dan

J.

Wilson

B.A. (History)
Fort William, Ont.

Matthew

J.

Wilson

B.A. (History)
Fort William, Ont.

Heather M. Ylimaki
B.A. (French)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Marjorie Yurick
B.A. (History)
Fort William, Ont.

132

�Faculty of Science

John Hart
B.Sc, Ph.D.
Dean of Science

HONOURS
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE

Norman

R.

Brown

Hon. B.Sc.
(Mathematics)
Port Arthur, Ont.

Lome
Hon.

G. Everett
B.Sc.

(Biology)
Fort William, Ont.

Dominic M.
Hon. B.Sc.

K.

Lam

(Mathematics)

Hong Kong
James Naida

r

r

Hon. B.Sc.
(Mathematics)
Fort William, Ont.

133

�Charles Briden
B.Sc. (Mathematics)
Port Arthur, Ont.

BACHELOR OF
SCIENCE

134

�Roman Fedorowycz
B.Sc. (Biology)

Toronto, Ont.

William W.

Hampe
J

B.Sc. (Physics)

X/

Eagle River, Ont.

James

E.

Hanneson

B.Sc. (Physics)

Port Arthur, Ont.

Gerald M. Hashiguchi
B.Sc. (Biology)

Fort William, Ont.

Gerald V. Hess
B.Sc. (Biology)

Port Arthur, Ont.

James

F.

Hughes

B.Sc. (Chemistry)

Cooksville, Ont.

135

�B.Sc.

(Mathematics)

Port Arthur, Ont.

William G. McKay
B.Sc. (Mathematics)
Cranbrook, B.C.

�137

�Elizabeth Allan
B.Sc. (Nursing)
Port Arthur, Ont.

BACHELOR OF SCIENCE
IN NURSING

Laura Butler
B.Sc. (Nursing)

Fort William, Ont.

�Mary

G. O'Rouke

B.Sc. (Nursing)

Port Arthur, Ont.

Margaret

R.

Page

B.Sc. (Nursing)

Port Arthur, Ont.

Irene

M. Pinch

B.Sc. (Nursing)

Fort William, Ont.

Catherine M. Wallace
B.Sc. (Nursing)

Port Arthur, Ont.

139

�BUSINESS

ADMINISTRATION

Dawn

Howard E. Berg
Geraldton, Ont.

G. Brownlee

Fort William, Ont.

Ronald A. Cusson
Fort William, Ont.

Robert J. Duke
Kenora, Ont.

Terence E. Eyton
Atikokan, Ont.

James G. Fay
Winnipeg, Man.

140

�David

P.

Fernie

Fort William, Ont.

Ronald

T.

Hider

Brantford, Ont.

David W. Krawchuk
Fort William, Ont.

Bob A. Mcintosh
Atikokan, Ont.
Gerald

P.

Merrier

Fort William, Ont.

Michael A.

F.

Panula

Port Arthur, Ont.

Jeffrey Parry
Port Arthur, Ont.

Lawrence Peterson
Fort William, Ont.

Joseph

St.

Amand

Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.

141

James Sweet
Keewatin, Ont.

�142

�Richard

I.

Thede

Port Elgin, Ont.

Gilbert W. Vanson
Oshawa, Ont.

143

�ENGINEERING

David

C.

Bahrynowski

Brantford, Ont.

David

L.

Dobbin

Peterborough, Ont.

John M. Lawson

Frank

F. Jaklitch
Port Arthur, Ont.

Fort William, Ont.

144

�TECHNOLOGY

Duncan McLaren
Thornhill, Ont.

Joseph O. Roy
St.

Catharines, Ont.

Germano Squissato

Raymond

Beardmore, Ont.

Fort William, Ont.

145

G. Simpson

�MINING TECHNOLOGY

Robert J. De Carle
Noranda, P.Q.

Clair D. Pilgrim
Fort William, Ont.

Albert V. Stevens

Jamaica, West Indies

146

��Peter Rusak
President

Graduating Class

Ken Childerhose
First

Vice-Pres.

Terry Eyton
Second Vice-Pres.

Robert De Carle
AAember-at-large

Mary Skoropad
Secreta ry

Dave Bahrynowski
AAember-at-large

Dan Murphy
AAember-at-large

148

�Fay Edwards
Treasurer

Executive

1967

Margaret Coghlan
Secreta ry

Keith Pringnitz

Member-at-large

Memb

149

�Convocation

1967

��Convocation address

The heart of Dr. Leddy's talk was
addressed to the graduates in an
effort to express his hopes for both
them and Canada in this our Centennial Year.

uates

He

felt

avoid

should

that the gradintrospection

and instead should combine their
ambitions and training in an effort
to better themselves and Canada.
Dr. Leddy felt that this would be
necessary for each of the graduates
so that he could

meet and conquer

the technological changes currently

sweeping our planet. He stressed
the need for the graduate to keep

abreast of

new

innovations rather

than attempting to hold on to what
is old and comfortable. In order to
do this Dr. Leddy suggested that the
graduate maintain an interest in
technology, education and politics.
Of primary importance to Dr.
Leddy was the need to understand
the best method of utilizing new

inventions while at the

same time

understanding their impact on
ety.

soci-

Technological changes are al-

tering

our world as well as our-

and we must be prepared
them and move with them.

selves
for

The

trend

people to

today

seek

is

higher

for

more

education

The President and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Winnipeg, Dr. Leddy,
a noted educationalist and holder of seven honourary degrees presenting
the keynote address at the 1967 convocation ceremonies.

"The best way we
have of building a Canada to
worthy specifications is to see that
Canadian education does not lag
behind any other place in the world, that it is
never shoddy or second-rate or merely good
enough, because in this field good enough is
not good enough." He looked to the graduates to
form the informed, interested citizen body need-

for themselves.

ed

to ensure a high level of politics in

The great
this

spirit

solidly

work

in

our Canada and

for her benefit.

Canada.

by Canadians

our Centennial Year prompted

express faith

152

exhibited

in

Dr.

the

Leddy

in

to

way we

�Poulin

Award

winner:

— Ron

Hider.

Chancellor's Medals: for the highest ranking part-

time
(centre

and
and

full-time
left)

General

Degree

graduates

Gregg Yurick and John McClelland.

�AWARDS
Braun's Medals:

Dr.

for the highest

Terence

Douglas
Brian

J.

Michael

E.
I.

ranking graduating students

in

University Schools.

Eyton

Mercer

_

Business Administration
Engineering Technology

Moore
J.

Technology
Mining Technology

___Forest

Topics

The Prizes of the Ambassador of Switzerland
graduating
languages.

for

the

students

with

the

to

highest

Canada:
standing

in

the

German

and

French

Nordin

Tuire
Lily

C.

Blin

Ade

A.

Laban

_

_..

_

French
French

German

The President's Medals:
graduating students who have occupied positions of responsibility in the student's
organizations and who by their activities and achievements have earned the gratitude
of the University.
for

Wayne

President
Treasurer
Secretary
S.A.S. President
S.A.S. Secretary
Feature Editor for the Argus

Tocheri

A. M.S.

Ron Hider
Dawn Brownlee

Chuck Sameluk
Matt Wilson
Colleen Cupples
Gerry Hashiguchi
Joe St. Amand

Tom MacLeod
Peter Rusak...

A. M.S.
A. M.S.

_

Yearbook

The Poulin Award

-

Ron

T.

Hider

presented to the student selected by his fellows, the Faculty
as contributing most to the welfare of the University through his

for outstanding citizenship

and Administration

Editor

President of University Schools
Proctor force
President of the Graduating Class and Chief Justice

student activities.

154

��Graduation

Graduation exercises came to an

end with a dinner and dance in
the University's Great Hall. The
guest

speaker,

(shown at

right)

Dr.

Rideout

gave perhaps

the best after dinner talk heard
all

He followed

year.

from

his career

his first position as a

fessor in an

all

girl's

pro-

school to

Chairman
Department at

his current position as

of

the

English

Lakehead

University.

His

talk

showed his mastery of humour
and his command of the English
language
tivated

a

in

his

fitting

that he totally cap-

audience. This

was

climax to our under-

graduate years.

156

��Editor's

This,

our Centennial

Messaqe

Year celebrates

not only 100 years of Confederation, but

young

a maturing of a
stilled in us

a pride

nation.

has

It

in-

Canada and

our

in

ourselves as Canadians. Those

who have

experienced the grandeur of our Canadian

wilderness,

and

know

full

growth of towns

the

and the marvels

cities,

Expo,

of

well this feeling of pride

accomplishment.

In

this

respect,

and

we

Nor'Wester

the

our

staff
proudly present
"Centennial Nor'Wester '67."

The place and value of a yearbook has
been questioned not only in our University

but

sonally
definite

several others as well.

in

feel

a

who

I

per-

yearbook plays a

and important

the students

ways

that

role in the lives of

pass through the gate-

of a University.

It

is

not merely an

"expensive picture book," but rather a

resume of the academic and
so organized that

we

our experiences and

moments

of

our

social year,

can readily
relive

undergraduate years.

Your yearbook

is

the stream.

time, the edges

In

like

a rock tossed into

worn and the surface polished,
with age, the essence of

I

sincerely

hope

producing for you,

recall

memorable

its

Gerry Hashiguchi

become

Editor-in-chief

reflecting

core.

we have

succeeded

in

— a "yearbook".

158

��A CKNOWLEDGEMENTS
A yearbook
ever, just as

is

essentially the product of the students for the students.

any organization can not

exist within

How-

own confines, we must
we would like to express

its

rely

our
upon assistance from off-campus sources. Therefore,
sincere gratitude and thank those persons listed below, without whose assistance,
the production of our book would not have been possible.

Penny Chadder
Ken Csapo

Pictures

University Pageant at University
of

Dan's

from the Miss Canadian

Waterloo Lutheran

Photographs of the Carnival Queen

Studio

and

and the club

princesses,

exec-

utives.

Lome

The inside color

Delinsky

liner

and several

other invaluable photographs.

Gordon Lewis

..Assistance with the

title

pages.

Photographs of the graduates and

Pouncy's Studio

the Nor'Wester staff.

Charles

University of Calgary, the photo

Szuch

coverage of our

ski

team

at Banff,

Alberta.

Cover design.

Stan Wojick

.

.

.

and

Tom MacLeod, Jim Zatulsky, and Edith
and unselfish giving of many long invaluable

also a very special thanks to

Strerz, for their

devoted assistance,

hours to the production of this yearbook.

Produced By

160

Canadian Student Yearbooks Limited
Winnipeg, Manitoba

�LAXEHEAI
LIBRARY

����</text>
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