Kennedy Collegiate Institute - Kencoll Yearbook (Windsor, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1957

Page 11 of 80

 

Kennedy Collegiate Institute - Kencoll Yearbook (Windsor, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 11 of 80
Page 11 of 80



Kennedy Collegiate Institute - Kencoll Yearbook (Windsor, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 10
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Kennedy Collegiate Institute - Kencoll Yearbook (Windsor, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 12
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Page 11 text:

THE KENCOLL 1957 Page 5 VOL. XVIII — KENCOLL — 1957 PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS OF THE KENNEDY COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE WINDSOR, ONTARIO EDITORIAL WILLIAM COSTELLO KENNEDY The copper-hued sun hung upon the rim of the horizon and transformed the sky into a brilliant dome of coloured glass, before it sank to quench its fire in the deep blue waters of the coast of Florida. A white gull, outlined in a golden haze was momen- tarily silhouetted against a saffron cluod and then wheeled suddenly to plunge to the azure blue be- low. The last rays of the tired sun reached their rosy fingers skyward, softly fading, fading . . . into the white radiance of Eternity. Soon a blanket of indigo covered the soft-dying day ; the sea shim- mered. Downy twilight drooped her wings. On the pier at Naples, Florida stood a small group of people observing this spectacle of nature ' s gran- deur ; among them was Honourable William Costel- lo Kennedy, a Canadian cabinet minister who seem- ed to be particularly enjoying this sunset on January the seventeenth 1923, blissfully unaware that this was to be his last. At 6:30 Mr. Kennedy sat down to dinner. During the meal he was sud- denly taken ill and died shortly before seven o ' clock. His death, so untimely, so stunning, removed from the government a minister, from the business world a capable and clever man, from the community an able public servant and from the common people of Windsor a kindly gentleman and a real friend. It was a fitting tribute when the end came for Hon. W. C. That there was a genuine sorrow from the humblest cottage to the grandest mansion and a black pall of grief settled over the district he loved so well. In the newspaper account of his death, the journalist closed his eulogy by these words, Bill Kennedy — our Bill Kennedy — we ' ll miss you, old friend. Truly these same words were echoed in the hearts of many that day. But how had this man gained the respect and admiration of so many dif- ferent people? Born August 21, 18o8, William moved to Toronto with his parents where he attended the separate schools and graduated from De La Salle College. When he was twenty-nine, he moved to Windsor and engaged in the oil and natural gas business. For fifteen years he was prominently identified with the business life of the Essex peninsula. His political career was not only fascinating but also inspirational. His youthful days were spent in an atmosphere well calculated to kindle political activities as he had become a page in the Legislative Chamber of the Ontario government where he was fascinated by the transaction of public affairs. He was a self-made man and rose to the ranks of Wind- sor ' s prominent citizens through sheer hard work and native ability. One of his first public appoint- ments was in 1914 when he became the Separate School representative on the Board of Education. During the next three years he was very active in charitable organizations and in his church, St. Al- phonsus. He practised a remarkable charity and hundreds of poor families in the Windsor district benefitted through the unostentatious generosity of Mr. Kenned}-. In the fall of 1917 when a general federal election was held the hour of the future minister ' s destiny was struck and he was elected. The comfortable majority gained by William Kennedy was a true barometer of his personal popularity. Kven those whose politics diametrically opposed his, were proud to count him among their greatest friends. Hon. . C. had a winning personality and a great capacity for making friends. Few men in all Canada had a wider acquaintance and to know him was to be a friend. Of fine appearance and noble presence, he enjoyed to an unusual degree that power invaluable to public men. of making those whom he encountered feel at home in his company. His was the political seventh sense, for he was able to estimate the effect that any political declar- ation or act of legislation would produce. Moreover, he did not believe in criticism for the sake of criti- cism but regarded Parliament as a body elected for the specific purpose of conducting public affairs rather than as a battle-ground for opposing political parties. THE KENCOLL STAFF Editor NANCY BODYK Assistant Editors DOREEN MOODREY, DILL RUSSELL Bus. Manager Ed Marshall Asst. Bus. Manager .Mary Stewart, Jean Stover Upper School Activities Lois Earl Lower School Activities I liana Patrick Social Editor Carole Finlay Girls ' Athletics Shirley Boyd Boys ' Athletics Gordon Saf ranee Minute Biog. 13 Anita Tarcia, George Gerenser Frances Chambers Jony Marshall, Dawn Moncrieff Minute Biog. 11C Marg McGinnis Kathy Krdelyan, Anne Onel Carole Suffield Cartoonist and Photography Bob Lane Sketching Jony Marshall Humor Arthur Barat Special Articles Ann Sinclair Exchange Editor ...Bette Mossman School Club Editor Lydia Paskevicius Secretary Virginia Tarcia

Page 10 text:

Page 4 THE KENCOLL 1957 THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF CANADA



Page 12 text:

Page 6 THE KENCOLL 1957 SCHOOL STAFF Third Row: Mr. M. C. Thomson, Mr. D. J. Mahon, Mr. W. Wear, Mr. E. W. Fox, Mr. A. Fletcher, Mr. A. W. Green, Mr. H. Ward, Mr. M. W. Wass, Mr. O. E. Robbins, Mr. W. Gross, Mr. R. Warwick, Mr. R. Bartlet, Mr. J. Durrant, Mr. T. D. Walter. Second Row: Mr. A. F. S. Gilbert, Mr. O ' Brien, Mr. H. J. Laf ramboise, Mr. G. Arnott, Mr. G. Letourneau, Mr. D. Hyland, Mr. J. A. Donohue, Mr. F. D. Knapp, Mr. D. McArthur, Mr. R. R. Deagle, Mr. M. W. Ryan. First Row: Miss S. Pullen, Miss M. Mcintosh, Miss E. Blair, Mrs. B. Neely, Miss P. Bondy, Miss J. McNeill, Mrs. A. Gailius, Mrs. L. May, Mrs. Hem pie, Mrs. J. Unger, Mrs. M. Aitcneson. THE KENCOLL STAFF Third Row: B. Russell, E. Marshall, M. Biro, B. Barnes, D. Heward, J. Biro, A. Barat. F. Chambers, B. Lane, Mr. J. J. Donohue. Second Row: Mr. J. Durrant, L. Earl, D. Patrick, M. Stewart, J. Stover, B. Mossman, A. Sinclair, First Row: V. Tarda, L. Paskevicius, A. Attikin, Mr. T. D. Walter, N. Bodyk, D. Moodrey, A. Tarcia, J. Marshall, C. Finlay.

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