Lakehead University - Yearbook (Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1951

Page 15 of 84

 

Lakehead University - Yearbook (Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 15 of 84
Page 15 of 84



Lakehead University - Yearbook (Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 14
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Lakehead University - Yearbook (Thunder Bay, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 16
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Page 15 text:

LAKEHEAD TECHNICAL INSTITUTE YEAR BOOK KARL — Continued At least once a day Karl made me laugh. Just listening to his deep rum- bling giggle interspersed with husky staccato statements as he conversed with the others brought a twinkle into the bluest of Mondays. I discovered once during the singing of God sees the little sparrow fall that Karl thought the second line was Its meat was tender, too, Karl could be relied upon to misinterpret many ideas. He was quick and very eager to expound his theories. One day, as he stood beside me reading, he nudged my bosom with his elbow and informed me confidentially that his mother had some of those, too. Karl was a bully and a coward. His victims were the kindergarten children. I assigned to him the very important job of holding open the door for the kindergarten class and then following behind to see that no one both- ered them. No royalty guarded by squadrons of policemen were better look- ed after than those youngsters protected by Karl. Later I worried about Karl. True, I knew he could go downstairs like the others now; that he had learned to use his handkerchief, but what else had he learned? Was it enough to overcome his poor homelife and to lead him to a glimpse of a better life? These questions troubled me as I watched him shuffle out on the last day of school. He turned and smiled and disap- peared down the stairs. When a student receives his graduation certificate from the Lakehead Technical Institute, many doors of opportunity are opened to him. The staff and students at the Institute follow with interest the achievements of the alumni. Below is a list of the graduates of the second and third sessions, and where they are this year. — E. H. ALUMNI CLASS OF ' 49 Technical Mining Maurice W. Murtack Walter Kostantin Arvo Hannula Alberta Nisto Mines, Saskatchewan Hard Rock Gold Mines, Geraldton Technical Forestry Thomas Inglis Black-Hanson Co., Port Arthur 13

Page 14 text:

LAKEHEAD TECHNICAL INSTITUTE YEAR BOOK KARL The marriage of a Finnish-Canadian soldier and a Scottish girl produced a child, who, when grown to six years, presented me with many problems, laughs and worries. Karl appeared the first day of school and sat quietly in his desk. I realize now that it must have taken all his power of self-control to do this. He re- sponded to his name with a gesture of a grimy hand. I followed the hand to its source. It was attached to a small body clad scantily in rough, soiled clothing. I was to become accustomed to viewing the traces of Karl ' s breakfast advertised liberally on his sweater. Above the small shoulders sat a head at a very jaunty angle. The face was large-boned and angular. All the bones sloped sharply upward and back. The ears were large and they also slanted back. Over his face bones was stretched, none too generously, a coarse, ruddy skin. The forehead was obscured by a veil of straight, sandy hair surmount- ed by tufts of the same standing at attention across the top of his head. At the sound of his name two gray-green eyes came out of their hiding place and began to shine. A grin spread from one ear to the other and was held in place by several stubby, sparsely placed teeth. This was Karl. Karl was a problem at first and remained a problem all year. I don ' t believe he was ever disciplined in my classroom. I could find him anywhere but in his desk. I could hear him from the moment he entered the room until he departed. After one particularly hectic day for both Karl and me, he slipped his hand into mine and in that thunderous voice of his said Geeze, you is nice, Miz Hamilton . Karl had won me; he could now commit any misdemeanour. Karl reminded me of Pinnochio, the same disjointed little frame with every limb hanging a different way. His hands and feet acted as though they had had a difference of opinion and even his eyes had joined in the argu- ment. In his hands a pencil could do extraordinary things — but not printing. His printing never became legible. In spite of his muscular handicap he learned to read quite well. To watch Karl read was an ordeal. He stood rigid, gripping a ten-page book as though for support and shouted the words until the radiators rattled. Although Karl could not transcribe his ideas, he learned everything I taught him. Poor Karl ' s quick mind was hampered by a very short concentration span. Every morning he would stamp his way to my desk with his galoshes (or someone else ' s) on the wrong feet, his trouser buttons undone, and a yard of scarf trailing behind him. His apparel was baggy at the knees and saggy at the coat pockets. A perennial drop hung from his nose. He would dig deep in his pockets to unearth a key, four or five beebees, some gum wrappers, and lastly, for me, a life-saver discolored with pocket dust and recognizable only by its hole. Once it was a bubble gum ball, well marked by teeth. Often it was a magazine picture folded so many ways that its subject was indiscernible. 12



Page 16 text:

LAKEHEAD TECHNICAL INSTITUTE YEAR BOOK ALUMNI — Continued Applied Science Ronald Anderson Queen ' s University Neil Black Queen ' s University Gerald Dyer Queen ' s University Alexander Fleming Queen ' s University Mauri W. Martola Queen ' s University Thomas McCavour Queen ' s University Thomas McDonald Queen ' s University Donald F. Nelson Port Arthur Michael Pugsley Queen ' s University Philip Salem Port Arthur Robert Spencer Falconbridge Nickel Co., Sudbury Robert Williamson University of Toronto Frank Wood Queen ' s University Arts Lorraine Adderley Graduate of Lab. Technology, General Hospital, Hamilton Mervin Anderson University of Manitoba James Barclay University of Western Ontario Burton F. Kelso University of Toronto Philip L ' Abbe University of Toronto Frances Lovelady Graduate of Lab. Technology, General Hospital, Hamilton Class of ' 50 Technical Mining Jack Keir Boyles Bros, Port Arthur Harry Taylor Yellowknife, Yukon Technical Forestry George McCormack University of Minnesota Carl Rydholm Marathon Jack Starr Abitibi Power and Paper Company University Forestry Ray Aro University of Toronto Donald Reid University of Toronto Applied Science Douglas Law Queen ' s University Gerald Waghorn University of Toronto Frank Wright Queen ' s University Arts Joyce Booth Teaching, Hornepayne Maureen Black University of Toronto Ruth Hancock Queen ' s University Robert Knutson Queen ' s University Norma MacLennan Port Arthur Business College Horace McCubbin University of Manitoba Rosemary Moles Lab. Technology, St. Michaels Hospital, Toronto Murdo Nicolson Queen ' s University Oscar Rechtshaffen University of Toronto Eleanor-Elizabeth Richmond Ottawa Normal School Helen Smith -. Queen ' s University Monterey Stout University of Minnesota 14

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