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Page 19 text:
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RAVEN ' 51 ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF Administrative Staff Left to right: Miss H. G. Gifford - - Librarian A. R Maybee — Assistant to President F. J. Turner — Bursar Dr. M M. MacOdrum — President Mrs. Grace E. Maynard (Personnel Assistant) Dr E. F. Sheffield — Registrar Miss E. . Buckley — Assistant-Registrar — 13 —
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Page 18 text:
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RAVEN ' 51 FACULTY Faculty (1) Left to right: Dr. John M. Morton, Dr. Allan M. Munn, Dr. H. H. J. Nesbitt, John A. Porter, Lome N. Richardson. (2) Dr. Donald C. Rowat, Donald M. Shepherd, Donald M. Smith, Ernest W. Stedman, S. G. Tackaberry. (3) James S. Tassie, Edmund A. O. Turnau, Dr. J. Perry Young, Morris Zaslow, Eric L. Davey, M.D. (Students ' Medical Adviser) — 12 —
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Page 20 text:
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RAVEN ' 51 HISTORY From a fledgling idea to a reality in eight years is the story of Carleton College. In 1938, a Y.M.C.A. committee, headed by Dr. H. L Keenleyside was formed to discuss the need for a non-sectarian institution for higher learning in Ottawa. Before any decision were reached, the committee was forced to disband because of the outbreak of war. By 1941, Ottawans realized their need for a college was even greater when thousands of young people left their studies to work in government offices. A second committee, this time under the chairmanship of the late Dr. H. M. Tory, discussed this problem with university heads and prominent Ottawa citizens. It was found that many university teachers who were in temporary wartime positions were willing to lecture to evening classes. When a group of citizens granted sufficient funds for an experimental period, the Ottawa Association for the Advancement of Learning was established on June 18, 1942. The hopes of the experimenters were far exceeded when over 700 students enrolled for Carleton ' s first academic year, 1942-1943. Classes offered for first year of Arts, Commerce, and Science were held in spare rooms in the High School of Commerce and Glebe Collegiate. Before Carleton was a year old, her students had formed their own government, a council of elected representa- tives and published a bi-monthly paper, The Carleton College Bulletin . — 14 —
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