Alma College - Almafilian Yearbook (St Thomas, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1955

Page 38 of 68

 

Alma College - Almafilian Yearbook (St Thomas, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 38 of 68
Page 38 of 68



Alma College - Almafilian Yearbook (St Thomas, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 37
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Alma College - Almafilian Yearbook (St Thomas, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 39
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Page 38 text:

ALMA GRADUATES SONG ' 55 Our Alma Days are past, Grad ' s here at last, And as we bid adieu to all our friends We will recall these ivy walls, The Bell that calls us to Our work for a future bright and clear. Toujours En Avant our motto true To guide us forward all the long years through. Our memories dear, hold the thoughts Of chapel talks and candlelighting too, To cherish now and forevermore As we close the door Of dear old Alma. Tune: No Other Lo ve. MY HOME-TOWN In the haven of the bluffs it lay, My peaceful, small home-town, And stretched beyond it the sapphire bay And distant mist like a shimmering gown. And high up above in the deep blue sky, I see little snow-white clouds float by; As the sweet scented breezes come whispering roun ' I think there ' s no place like my own home town — Josephine Smith SOLUTION A dog bctrks, a cat yowls. In the tree, I hear two owls. All four make a great ado. I cannot sleep, What to do? Shut the wiiidow? Throw a shoe? I simply must stop that ado. Then a brilliant idea appears — Now I sleep — plugs in my ears. — Anonymous

Page 37 text:

LEFT TO RIGHT: 1st ROW: — Grete Schroeder, Frances Peets. Sandra Irvine, Betty Cunningham. 2nd ROW: — Terry Linn, Miss Mooney, Coach, Lois Foster. 3rd ROW:— Carol Boomer, Helen Wall, Ginger Robbi ns, Miriam Tregunno, Mary Ellen Anthony, Marita von Olderhausen. Beverley Feick. Alma Athletic Association Our A.A.A. consists of the sport ' s captains of all the houses. The executive is chosen from this group with our sports instructor, Miss Mooney, as an honourary member. There were the following members: First Term Lois Foster (Upper Mac) Frances Peets (Warner) Terry Linn (Ryerson West) Grete Schroeder (Lower Mac) Helen Wall (Ryerson East) Marita von Olderhausen (Ivory) Mary Ellen Anthony (Dobson) President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Second Term Sandra Irvine (Ryerson West) Miriam Tregunno (Ivory) Beverley Feick (Upper Mac) Betty Cunningham (Lower Mac) Carol Boomer (Ryerson East) Frances Peets (Warner) Ginger Robbins (Dobson) The arranging of inter-house tournaments, the directing of after school sports, and the selling of hot-dogs at basketball games were undertaken by the Athletic Association with the guidance of Miss Mooney. We are very grateful to her for all the assistance she has given us in making this work successful. For future years the Association hopes to do even more to provide a better athletic programme for the girls of Alma. Sandra Irvine Page 35



Page 39 text:

HANDS The human hands are man ' s most remarkable tools. The tiny, groping hands of the newborn baby who is unaware of their importance in the years to come. The strange fascination they hold for the tiny tots. The creative hands of the youth as he fumbles clumsily with his jalopy motor. The quick, intelligent hands of the college student alert every moment to discover new things. The capable, steady hands of the faithful doctor going about his never-ending work of healing. The gnarled hands of the farmer roughened with work. The trembling toil worn hands of the old that have felt their way through the long journey of life. All this the young soldier thinks as he gazes bewilderedly at his bandaged stumps and wonders hopelessly how he will live without his hands, hands that are the symbol of faith, hope, happiness and success. Daphne Agnew. THREE LETTERS Beverley Searle . The small, white light at the end of the hospital room shed its dim glow over the beds nearest it. They held some of the broken, wounded soldiers of the Korean war. Some of the men were sleeping, their fear and pain forgotten for the moment, while others lay awake, too racked with the agony of injuries and fears to sleep. It was to one of the latter the army nurse came. She knew the soldier lay awake in his bed, yet she had done all that she could to relieve his pain. He was a very young soldier capable of stirring compassion even in the most calloused heart. He had become rather special to the young nurse because he seemed to need more care and attention than his fellows . He put up a hard and bitter front but through his eyes , one could see the scars of an unloved childhood and the hurt of an insecure manhood . The nurse approached his bed quietly and paused there a moment. She knew that he didn ' t really care if he lived or died and that he was feebly tottering on the brink between the two extremes . The previous night she had promised to write a letter home for him and although she doubted the wisdom of his seemingly queer plan, she did not have the heart to ref- use to take part in it. So it was that she began to write this very important letter dir- ected by his barely audible voice . About a week later in a large city of the United States, a letter from overseas was delivered to a fashionable home. The butler received it at the door and handed it over to the maid, who in turn ran up the stairs, and delivered it to a cold austere-looking woman in her mid-fifties. Only a part of that letter needs to be recorded here -- that part which meant life or death to the young soldier fighting his way through a maze of pain and mental anguish. —and so, Mother and Father, could I bring my buddy home with me? He is very badly wounded and will require constant care for some time. He will never walk again, as he has lost both legs, and to sum it up, he is pretty badly chewed up by the Reds ' shrapnel. Maybe you ' ll find it hard to understand but this means a lot to him, for if you refuse, he won ' t have much to live for. You see, he has no family at home to care for him — The woman, and the man who had entered the bedroom just in time to hear the let- ter, looked at each other, an angry frown on the face of the woman and a cold unfath- omable expression on the face of the man. Pag 37

Suggestions in the Alma College - Almafilian Yearbook (St Thomas, Ontario Canada) collection:

Alma College - Almafilian Yearbook (St Thomas, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Alma College - Almafilian Yearbook (St Thomas, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Alma College - Almafilian Yearbook (St Thomas, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 11

1955, pg 11

Alma College - Almafilian Yearbook (St Thomas, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 35

1955, pg 35

Alma College - Almafilian Yearbook (St Thomas, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 42

1955, pg 42

Alma College - Almafilian Yearbook (St Thomas, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 41

1955, pg 41

1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
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