Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada)
- Class of 1987
Page 1 of 128
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 128 of the 1987 volume:
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TT'3'iiT1ff L 1 . H I -QE:-:S1f:fn'J?Ti:5r - if ' , .-,,.., ..,.. ...,.-.4 I , . ,M ...-.. ...-..Y ..--4-1 L, ........ . gn--nun n. an M:-..,.aT. xi N er-L .-- f..:f--:L ug-fr Tziqsllig K ., -'2 ?'.2'ES15:f:::l'iH,. 3 . A. 1.15 rzrr. N his ' .fi . z M -7 . , 5 A ' 4 X .- '1 l 1 .512 ,. W . 9 , , . I , A Y N. -:gint-4 D , l . itifl-,gm -.1 ' 'wg 4 f V h Y ' A.-1-1--J .-- I '- f! I - ' f 'x s' , . , . -. , -Q f V V, MQ! . .,, ,, Q, I -'-'-Ni i QQ vm 04- A -ww .. , X' f ' ' A ,, ' F - - - :E R..-' .-,-1f,- f 17' ..-,., .--' 1.555.551-'E-ge -4 ,A-1.5 ' 31 ' 0 ' I use , J,- lx sX I lil, . -5 1 'L v' v I f 4 I l 'I C. .i , - 'r 4 u., ' 1 'LJ L. . N 4 H Y I l 1 Q A 1 'fu Q S . L . i. This edition of The Voyageur is affectionately dedicated to William Henry Jackman in recognition of his lifelong support of Pickering College. Henry came to the Hilltop in l94 l, married Helen Hislop and together they became the surrogate parents of Firth House prepsters until l969. On their retirement. Henry and Helen continued to live on campus and support the school. When Helen died in l979, Henry established a scholarship in her memory and their name. ln his gentle yet pervasive way. Henry's influence continues to inspire the people of Pickering. WILLIAM HENRY JACKMAN I 93 5 - Toronto Normal School, First Class Certificate. l94l - Appointment to P.C. Faculty. l943 - Housemaster, Firth House. l953 - B.A. University of Western Ontario. - Married Helen Hislop. l955 - B.Ed. Ontario College of Education. l958 - M.Ed. University of Toronto. l959 - Appointed Director of the Junior School. l969 - Retired. l I I .J 1' BOARD OF MANAGEMENT PICKERING COLLEGE I986-87 Chairman Secretary-Treasurer Headmaster Edward G. Mack '38 Andrew J. Fasken '72 Wilf Coutu '44 Allan D. Rogers '4l Roger W. Warren '5l Sheldon H. Clark Mark Oelbaum '65 Jack Houghton '47 F. Michael Walsh Ike Williamson '4 I MEMBERS OF THE CORPORATION OF PICKERING COLLEGE I986-87 Harry M. Beer '3l Charles Beer '59 Jane Burton John A. Brownlee '56 Dixon S. Chant '3l Sheldon H. Clark Ward Cornell '43 Wilf Coutu '44 Rodger M. Dorland '3I Andrew J. Fasken '72 Eric V. Hall Gordon C. Hay '39 Burton S.W. Hill John W. Holmes Jack Houghton '47 B.W. Jackson '33 W. Henry Jackman Burton Kellock '52 Donald Laitin Edward G. Mack '38 Keith G. McLaren Dorothy Muma David L. Newlands Mark Oelbaum '65 Allan D. Rogers '4I Friedrich Schmitz-Hertzberg W. Reginald Smith Taylor Statten '33 Fred G. Sherratt W. Duncan Waddell '48 F. Michael Walsh Foger W. Warren '5l Arnold L. Wigston '44 Ike Williamson '4l LeRoy Jones PICKERING COLLEGE ASSOCIATION EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Chairman Deputy Chairman and Annual Fund Director of Alumni Affairs Mark Oelbaum '65 Edward G. Mack '38 Brian Purdy '56 .lack Houghton '47 Jack Rutherford '49 I986-87 Wilf Coutu '44 Ike Williamson '4l John Lockyer Charles T. King '38 Bruce Foster '46 Burton Kellock '52 Adam Shully '78 Blake Melnick 'SI THE VDYAG EUR SS F vot eo Julvf 1986 TABLE OF CONTENTS Dedication ............................ ......... I Headmasters Message ................ ......... 4 ln Memorium: Harry M. Beer ......... .....,... 6 Graduates ................................. ......... 9 The Grades ........................... .....,. I 8 The Faculty ......... ....... 3 I The Staff ............. .......... 3 8 School Sports .......... .......... 4 4 Student Life ............. ....... 6 4 Junior School .............. .......... 8 6 Pickering People ......... ........ I OO Literary Section ....... ........ I O6 Awards ................ ........ I I2 Leaving Class ........................ ........ I I8 Front Cover: Jamie MacRae. Student Contributors: Eric Breton, Jonathan Knaul, David White, Naushad Hirji, David Drain, Frank Nardi, Noel McCahon, Miguel Mansilla. Andrew Skafel and Tony Rinomato. Staff Contributors: Lu Taskey, Jonathan Greenbaum, Don Menard. Co-ordinator: Cyril A. Howarth. A Personal Word from the Headmaster Harry M. Beer Harry Beer planned for life. He pursued the Good, the True and the Beautiful in classical fashion. The pursuit of the Good led him to discover for himself and, therefore, for others, the living potential for improve- ment in all with whom he came into con- tact. He was the first to realize that worthwhile challenges, translated into ac- tive goals for young people, would help build their character and help to make them good human beings. Harry could make extremely strong demands upon students, colleagues, friends and loved ones, and simultaneously communicate an ovenvhelming and abiding affection that made people incapable of refusing his requests. This ability to inspire the good potential within never failed to lift the spirits to new endeavours. Pursuit of Truth, although at first glimpse idealistic and utopian, Harry rendered as everyday and practical. In Harry's terms, Truth was seen as the quality of the relationships he shared on an individual basis. Truth was the recognition that fallible human beings were struggling for survival on the same lifeboat planet and necessarily needed to co-operate for mutual benefit. To him, the quality of a relationship was a sacred trust. A sleepless night might be spent because a relationship had gone awry. During his later years, he spent many peaceful nights because he knew in his heart that his relationships honoured the same sacred trust reciprocally. Harry went into great detail to assure that his living relationships were express- ed by compassion and understanding and, when called upon to honour the memories of deceased friends, would ap- ply the same attention to details so that all could enjoy and celebrate the lives of the people he chose to honour in a special way - Don Stewart, Rick Veale, GR. Blackstock, Joe McCulley. Harry's pursuit of Truth led him to direct his energies in three specific direc- tions: to his family, and especially his wife, Betty: to Pickering Colleges and, to the Religious Society of Friends. He knew that family and friends, school and even religious orthodoxy, can sometimes fall short of meeting any of life's demands. He infused a spirit of forgiveness that dif- fused anger and permitted everyone to recover their composure and once again walk confidently into the future. ln the pursuit of Beauty, Harry simply loved the elegant, the uplifting, the im- aginative twists that ceremoniously per- mitted Grace to infuse time and place. Harry felt tremendous empathy with parents, particularly mothers. He found great beauty in the role of motherhood. He enjoyed a very strong relationship with his own mother and recognized from his formative years the need to support other mothers as they watched their sons go through the adolescent years. Very often ladies would identify quite quickly this empathetic quality and com- municate with Harry about their sons in a way that enabled him to help those children grow up and learn to respect the sacrifices that had been made for them. Dinner parties or just quiet times with friends or school functions carried the stamp of Harry's attention to the details and as a result, the aesthetic sense that he developed would emerge through careful planning. The academic year l986!l987 car- ried with it, for the students, staff and faculty of Pickering, all of the changing elements that any year encompasses. This particular year was marked by Harry's death on March 23 and it is in honouring his life that we celebrate the values he strove so hard to exemplify by convince- ment and conviction at our school. It is, therefore, fitting that on this occa- sion A Personal Word from the Head- master be directed to the memory of Harry McWaters Beer. Sheldon H. Clark KXQLQ N HARRY M. BEER II9 I 3- I 9875 Student I927- I 93 I Master I93 I- I 953 Headmaster Pickering College I 9 5 3 - I 978 A MEMORIAL MINUTE - HARRY MCWATERS BEER APRIL IS, I9l3 to MARCH 23, l987 I have so much yet to learn and understand in the realm of the spirit. With these words, Harry McWaters Beer submitted his letter of application for membership in Yonge Street Monthly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends to Elmer Starr, Clerk, May 2 I, l956. Harry was forty-three years old and had been attending Yonge Street Meeting since l946. Harry's spirit reached out to friends for the next thirty years as he practised his religious convictions in his vocational life as Headmaster of Pickering College. Over the years, Harry's attendance and presence with the Yonge Street Meeting enabled him to listen and give caring support and guidance to those who came his way. He served the Monthly Meeting as Clerk and as an Elder, providing nurture and sen- sitive encouragement. Harry derived spiritual strength and serenity from the Meeting. Harry Beer was born in Brandon, Manitoba, then moved to the Beaches area of Toronto in I9 I 5. with his elder sisters, Eleanore and Marjorie, his brother Charles. and his parents. In l927, Dr. Edwin Charles Beer and his wife, Eleanore McWaters Beer, sent their son to Pickering College, where he came under the influence of the young Headmaster, Joe McCulley. Harry flourished under the guidance of the Pickering College faculty graduating with distinction and a love for History, English, French and German languages and literature. Harry returned to Pickering for a post-graduate year as a tutor before he completed his formal education at Vic- toria College at the University of Toronto in History and Modern Languages. When his father died during Harry's final year of university, Joe McCulley assumed the responsibility of an adult counsellor and friend to the impressionable and idealistic young man. After a sojourn in Europe as a private tutor and companion to one of the Eaton children, Harry Beer applied to his former Headmaster for a teaching post. The rest of the story is legend. Harry returned to his beloved Hilltop to work, to marry Elizabeth Holmes, to raise their three sons. David, Charles and Jim, and to direct the destiny of this Quaker-founded school for over a quarter of a century. He had the pleasure of seeing his grandson, John, enter and graduate, and to watch his wider family grow and develop through the myriad challenges of day-to-day living. Harry Beer truly strove to fulfil John Cairds definition of religion: Religion is the art of being, and of doing, good: to be an adept in it, is to become just, truthful, sincere, self-denied, gentle, forbearing, pure in word and deed and thought. And the school for learning this art is not the closet, but the world - not some hallowed spot where religion is taught, and proficients, when duly trained are sent forth into the world - but the world itself - the coarse, profane, common world with its cares and tempta- tions its rivalries and competitions, its hourly ever-recurring trials of temper and character. This is. therefore, an art which all can practise, and for which every profession and calling, the busiest and most absorbing, afford scope and discipline. At Yonge Street Monthly Meeting from the mid-5O's to the 7O's Harry and Elma and Elmer Starr often met together keeping the Meeting alive until other friends began to loin. Harry's willingness to reach out to others to be involved with all ages, and quite recently, to teach First Day School, revealed the blending of faith and practice in his life. Harry Beer leaves to his many friends around the world the wonderful memory of a firm, friendly companion and a profound legacy summarized in his own words: When our love of good survives the challenge of the world. then we reflect the spirit of God. GRADUATES W W? X pr' jf S ff X M Vigo 'v 5 if cv N. any the W 55' E W LQ WQMEQC WW fjwf 01,154 X AW,s,.,1 WW ' mf . W x v' f'9 ' 10' 1693, The Class of '86. Mark Ayin David Barat Kevin Benner Marshall Bldck Peter Bond Eric Breton Chris Campbell Frederick Chwang Mark Cooper Paul Crake John Davies Matt Gissing Naushad Hirji Stuart Hunt Robert Keyes-Krysakowski Jonathan Knaul Eddie Lee Jimmy Leung Massimo Lizzola Johnson Mak Olun Riley Robert Soukoreff Glenn Stants Roald Veldhuis , 1:- MARK AYIN. Mark, a citizen of Trinidad, is also known as 'Nermee'. He at- tended Pickering College for two years and was a member of Red House. Upon arriving at this hilltop, he brought his Trinidadian lifestyle with him - Hot sauce. reggae. etc., etc. He took part in a number of sports activities, such as Tennis, Con- ditioning. Soccer and Badmin- ton. He is planning to go to York Univ next year. Good Luck. Mark. KEVIN BENNER. Kevin came to Pickering two years ago from his home in New Brunswick. His positive outlook allowed him to be a stron in- dividual and he was welF ac- cepted by his peers. Kevin made a large contribution to Red House life and also served as Duty Assistant to the teachers of P.C. A talented track athlete competing at O.F.S.A.A.. Kevin was also a strong member of both the First Rugby and Basketball teams during his two years here. Kevin plans to con- tinue training to achieve his personal goals, as well as fur- ther his education next year in Toronto. PETER BOND. Son of an Old Boy, a five-year vet of P.C. Peter. otherwise known as 'Bondus' hails from Kingston. A member of the Silver House Champions of i982-83, he 'defected' to Blue House in l984. Without being elected to office he lived with Grant Nickalls in the 'Beefy' Chairmans Rm f2Oll Peter has progressed steadily and con- tributed in many areas of P.C. life. Badminton. Cross-country skiing, electronics, Drama and especially music are among his interests. He played bass and lead guitar in the two P.C. groups. On to Queens. DAVID BARAT. Coming to P.C. two years ago, from the 'Party Capitol' of Windsor. Ontario, Dave im- mediately became a staunch member of the smoking-hut group. While enjoying to the ull 'the good life' and with a lit- tle help from his friends lAlice Cooper, Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrisoni he breezed through his courses. Daves sports. weight-lifting and volleyball seemed to claim his interest and energy somewhat less than his more social weekend activities. Daves leadership and sense of humor will serve him well at the Univ of Windsor where he will continue to study the female form and song lyrics. MARSHALL BLACK. Was given the label 'Rocker' on arrival at P.C. three years ago because of his hair length and his musical lRaging Black Metall interests. Somehow his below shoulder-length hair was not appreciated by other students some of whom took direct action. but without suc- cess. Since those days, Marshall has gained many friends, much respect and several new and dif- ferent attitudes towards the essentials of life. Although a ter- ror on ice rinks all over the province, he retains a great sense of humour and can hold a discussion on any subiect, re- sponding appropriately as the occasion demands. A larger- than-life personality who wil be sorely missed on graduation. ERIC BRETON. Came to P.C. in l982 at the age of I4 and soon became known as Mr, Academics, alias Webster, las in Dic- tionary.l Throughout his years at Pickerin Eric has been a resident of Red House and was one of the first exchange students to go to France. Eric was an active member of the Harry M. Beer Soc: the Debating and Bilingual Finals, in l986 and contributed to the Voyageur and the Quaker Cracker. His acting credits in- clude important roles in 'Dogg's Hamlet' and 'You Can't Take It With You' Although no 'lock' in sports, Eric made a most significant contribution to athletics in his final months. culminating in his captaincy of Red House on the '87 Sports Day. U of T for Arts courses then on to Law. CHRIS CAMPBELL. Chris. a member of Silver House, came to Pickering five years ago. A resident of Newmarket. he was a day-boy for four years, and the 'B' team duty assistant in his last - live-in - year. Chris was a very active member of the school communi- ty, always showed a positive at- titude and was very enthusiastic about school activities. A keen sportsman, Chris played on the first Soccer and Hockey teams and earned both his third and second colours. Other interests include music, lRushl. On to Wilfred Laurier University in '87 MARK COOPER. a.k.a. 'Bernie' Mark has spent just one year on this Hilltop, a year of entrepreneurship in ppp, stocks and change in Silver ouse and also a year of friend- ships made and remembered. Mark, like most graduates has applied to three Ontario niversities and will decide later where to go. JOHN DAVIES. Has been with the school for five years, and brought with him a bizarre sense of humour and a keen intelligence, which two qualities, perhaps natural- ly, involved him in debating, the yearbook and school newspaper and other wide in- terests. An individual rather than a team sportsman, John loves swimming and especially. tennis, eventually rally-driving and who knows. maybe one day he'll fulfil a secret ambition and become a public speaker! John has a bright future which. after P.C. will take him to Trini- ty College at U of T on the road to a medical career. Motto: Once a preppie. always a preppie. GR DUATES V - il 2 7gQ'W'5'2f.i'r::-33 1 ' x , T' ' ' fir ' .we filgft 'tc .: .. ewyx phases 1+ J . ,N fr my . di, X kg - .' g- f. , 4. .., N' , 4. 'rig 3.1 , 4 .5 .,. 'R' FRED CHWANG. Fred came to Pickering last year from Singapore and led a very active life on the Hilltop making many contributions to school life. Although he was. for the most part, a diligent student. he enioyed many extracurricular activities. During his short time here he was a strong, en- thusiastic member of the First Basketball and Senior Badmin- ton teams and always exhibited the finest ideals of sportsman- ship. After a distinguished career at P.C. Fred is going on to study Electrical Engineering at Boston University. PAUL CRAKE. A day-boy from Bradford, Paul has spent a most active year at PC. contributing strongly in all aspects of the school, A Blue House member who par- ticipated in lst Soccer. Hockey and Alpine Ski Teams with as great a determination as that devoted to his hobbies of sleep- ing, partying, partying, party- ing . . . With these qualifica- tions he should do well at Western Univ en route to Medical School eventually. When fully qualified. Paul in- tends opening practices in Lon- don, Rome. Paris and New York at the same time acquiring a family and a modest girth. MATT GISSING. A native of Oakville, Ontario, Matt came to P.C. with the sole ambition of completing his last year of High School. Matt was ed House chairman for the fall term and school chairman for the spring term. Although somew at reluctantly, he par- ticipated in sports with very creditable results. Matt was a member of the Smokers Club and the Latenight Club and seemed to derive pleasure from a late-night shave followed by a bedtime story! ls determined that next year will see him at U of T unless prevented by cir- rhosis ofthe liver. Overall, Matt has probably been one of the best 'bad examples' this hilltop ever had. NAUSHAD HIRJI. Originating from Kinshasa, Zaire in the continent of Africa, Naushad was very popular dur- ing his three years at Pickering and contributed much to the family atmosphere of Red House where he served as chair- man for a term in '86-'87. A strong member of the first Soc- cer team especially when up against superior odds. In order to attain his ambition of making mucho dinero Naush will be taking business courses at Western or York and. with his great ersonality and brains should Rave no problems. Apart from sleeping. his hobbies in- clude reading, music and, of course, calculus! ROBERT KEYES-KRYSAKOWSKI. Robert. a native of Poland. came to Pickering College for his final high school year and was a most pleasant member of Blue House and founding member of the Algebra Club. As well as his studies, Rob en- joys Badminton and his almost daily visits to Fitzgeralds. A friend to all, his only 'weakness' perhaps was perpetual talking during Physics class which sent his teacher up the wall. Rob will be studying Business at York University next year. EDDIE LEE. Eddie came to Pickering two years ago from Hong Kong. He was a very active sponsman: he was involved in the badminton team and played on the First Soccer and Basketball teams as well. His good-humoured spirit added life to both Silver House and the Algebra Club. Next year Eddie holpes to attend the University of oronto. His lively spirit will be missed by every- one on this hilltop - we all wish him good luck in the future. STUART HUNT. - First Colour recipient, '85-6 - Gold House Sports day Captain, '85-6 - Day Boy - York Univer- sity for Business. - Matching socks! Just some of the ac- complishments of Stuart who, over the last four years as a day-student at P.C., leaves a deep impression of sincerity, determination, quiet leadership and reservation. Love those Argyle sox! JONATHAN KNAUL. Came to P.C. as one of those bratty grade 8 preps and to- day is one of the few left here to have lived throu h the famed fire. Jon always Ted an active life - public speaking. photogra- phy, Yearbook, Duty Assistant and, in his final year, Valedic- torian and Sports Day Captain of the victorious Blue House, Active in school sports, Jon competed in track, alpine ski- ing, cross-country running. soc- cer and rugby. After this most distinguished career at Picker- ing Jonathan is starting the next sta e at R.M.C. Kingston where hei be majoring in Engi- neering. perhaps selling Electric Chairs as a si eline! JIMMY LEUNG. Having arrived from Hong Kong three years ago, Jimmy finished his Grade I3 education at P.C. a member of Silver House, he contributed both academically and physically to his house and sc ool. Jimmy did well in his various subjects, achievin an academic average in the Sgs. He was also always willing and able to help out his classmates with their work. Jim' my competed in soccer. basket- ball and badminton. Next year he plans to study architecture at t e University of Toronto. CLASS OF '86 J 1 l l i i i l MASSINO LIZZOLA. Max or 'Nemo' as he has come to be known, has been a regular at P.C. since l982. First admit- ted as a 6 ft grade 9 student, he has continued to grow ever since! Max has been a regular contributor to the Voyageur and the Quacker Cracker. Never swayed by the status quo. Max's ideas have always been rather radical and always interesting especially when speaking to his favourite sub- jects. A native of Blue House. Max settled into Trailer City in grade 9 but was thrilled to move into New Bldg. and even more delighted when he became the proud owner of a car thus becoming a Day Boy. To study for the fast lane of the business world. Max is off to Trent or York. OLUN RILEY. Came to us last Sept from sunny Trinidad and took on a full load of seven grade thirteen subjects. He took part in House League sports including basketball and plans to be a sprinter on the T S team at Univ, Oluns arrival at Pickering was also his first visit to Canada and although he finds Canadians to be friendly. the snow he can live without! Olun has an incredible and natural ability to create cartoon characters and stories. His latest work of animated adventures can be seen in Rin Lords Olun has worked T1ard to perfect his humourous and adventurous line of characters. He plans to pursue his career in Graphics and Animation at Univ. of Guelph. GLENN STANTS. Glenn has been at P.C. for five years and in that time has ex- celled in all aspects school- community life. He is an avid sportsman and has played on many of the schools teams from houseleague hockey to first team basketball. Also Glenn became familiar to all around P.C. as a member of the Gold House committee. He is moving on to Ryerson next year to con- tinue his education, specialising in Business subjects. GR DU TES f .N 'VE V 'Y ,4- ,, A 5, V-1 i 1 ,i JOHNSON MAK. Johnson lChung Shunj Mak. who comes from Hong Kong. has been studying at Pickering for three years. Johnson's name has appeared very frequently on the Headmasters Honour List - by now, his name is probably imprinted there for life! Johnson is also an avid badminton player and hopes to become orld Champion one day - and why not? He is headed for Ll of T next September and we are sure that with the diligence and commitment shown at P.C. he will be successful. ROBERT SOUKOREFF. Came to P.C. two years ago from Markham. Ontario and soon became known as a kind and creative student. He loves to build and expand electronic items: for instance, with Eddie Lee, he built a gas laser system. Rob is also outstanding academ- ically. beside the seven courses for grade I3 he participated in the l.B. rogram and the Alge- bra Club and passed various Province of Ontario testing pro- grams with distinction. Rob was a member of Gold House and a duty assistant helping students and teachers. He will be further- ing his studies at either Queens or Waterloo and will be. no doubt. one of their finest Engi- neering students. ROALD VELDHUIS. Originating from the bowels of the Hamilton steel industry. Roald managed to adjust to this new life during his two ears here on this Newmarket hintop. Known far and wide for his clut- tered and remarkably tacky room. and his Dance participa- tion. Roald has done well for himself. Track and field. cross- country running, hockey and soccer kept him busy - and sweating buckets. Roald hopes to attend any higher learning facility which wil accept him next year to study architecture andlor the Hindu and Muslin religions. iPerhaps his expan- sive theatrical ex erience will land him an ljvy League scholarship?j Valedictory Speech y by Jonathan Zvi Knaul Mr. Chairman, Mr. Headmaster, Honoured Guests, Faculty and Staff, Friends We, the Graduating Class of l986. sit here today as one. This then is a very special occasion. In a matter of moments, farewells will be taken. a few last addresses exchanged, and each of us will walk his solitary way. Before we came here, the Hilltop did not exist for us. ln some deep magical way. when we first walked through the Pillars, Pickering became instantly and brilliantly alive and remained so for our time as students here. When we leave this afternoon, the magic will seem to end for us. Pickering will fade in our memories though not in our hearts, and we will be left to face our individual futures. The most frightening part is that the road ahead is unknown and untried. We may achieve surer footing if we remember the words of Joe McCulley. former Headmaster of Pickering College. lt is my profound conviction that this universe of ours, vaster than our wildest dreams. more complex than the most complicated machinery that ever could be devised by the mind of man, is a universe of law and of purpose. l am sure that in all the ages and in all the countries those who have achieved greatly for their fellows have somehow or another sensed this fact even though they haven't always agreed on the name. As you go out from school don't let the cynics and the hard-boiled realists tell you that the age of man's glory is finished. Let your faith be a burning torch. Let your faith be an overmastering passion, an overpowering ideal. Only for those who greatly believe and who greatly venture can great dreams come true. On behalf of the Graduating Class of l9S6, l bear messages for all here today. To our parents, we wish to thank you for all that you have done for us. Your presence gives the importance to this occasion. For each of you whether Mr. and Mrs. Chwang who have travelled from as far as Taiwan, 20.000 km away, or Mrs. Hirji from Zaire 7,000 km away or Mr. and Mrs. Campbell from Church Street. a few hundred meters away. it is your son who is graduating today. We not only strove to achieve our own goals, so that we could respect ourselves, but we strove to achieve so that you could be proud of us as well. Through it all, these years of boarding school have been a struggle: even though you may not have been there physically. you always stood by us, Your love and support was a refuge in the storm, For those of us who can't be with our families much during the year, Pickering becomes our home away from home, and the Faculty are like our parents. When times were toughest in these past years. and even though we suspected that sometimes the teachers were responsible for the hassles. they were also somehow there to help us. Each and every student here knows of one faculty member upon whom he can rely to be understanding when he really needs a hand - the type of help that you can only go to an adult for, Harry M. Beer once described this special relationship: At Pickering it is the opposite of the traditional master-student role. lt is not softness or permissiveness. it has the strength of oak and the gentleness of the blossom. lt is firmness and affection. to coin an old phrase! 14 Somehow. however foggy it appears to us at the time. through your counselling on the fields, in the residence, in the dining hall and in the classroom. we have achieved a better realization of who we are and of the world that lies before us. However much older you may be than us, you are still growing up too. We've walk- ed a segment of that road together, we've grown some, and we've learned from each other's mistakes. Lastly. to the Faculty, we would suggest the following items that although not present physically would prove helpful to you. For Mr. Cowan, it is a new pair of skiis, with a roll-bar attached. For Mr. Pape and for Mr. McCuaig, it is a poem and a set of directions. The poem lwhich is good advise for the graduating class as welll reads as follows: As you travel along life's highway, be mindful of your goal. Keep your eye on the donut and not on the hole. So. if you wish to keep your eye on the donut, take the Toyota-family mobile or the turbo Cadillac, turn left at the end of the driveway, drive past the lights, and keep your eyes open for the big For Mr. Lockyer, it is a place in the Guiness Book of World Records for the largest amount of Monday macaroni ever consum- ed in one 25 minute lunch period. To the members of the Grade I2 Class, who are returning next year. You are about to enter a year that shall be demanding of you, but you are the right ones to lead our school fonfvard. That is now your task and your joyful responsibility. You may not realize until your final days here how much Pickering means to you. For the people are Pickering, and the spirit, the high thought, and the holy devotion must live on cheerfully in you next year. lf you can learn to support each other and to become a unit, you will be able to make this place greater, better and more beautiful. Finally, Grade l2, the Graduating Class has six points of essential advise for you. l . Think seriously about next year's events and beware of the Mike Bolt theory on how to have an adventurous after'formal party. 2. Be prepared for l I0-mark quizes in Mr. Clark's pseudo PHD. English l I course. 3. lf you want good study habits. don't call Rob Soukoreff. -l. .lohnson Mak wanted you to know that anywhere over 9094: on an algebra exam is nothing to cry over. 5. lf you have a sudden desire to move a large dining hall, call Acme Movers and not Matt Gissing. 6. And lastly. Grade l2's. beware of graduation panies held by people such as Max Lizzola. Olin Riley seems to think that the odd entertainment could have been the evil doings of someone like . . . maybe . . . a person such as . , , SATAN! To the members of the Grade 8 who are also returning. Your graduation today is important. You are moving into the big league now - you'll get to go to bed a whole half-hour later, you'll receive a raise in your allowance, and maybe Josh will finally decide on what colour his hair should be. Yet, more seriously. if you look at those like the David Whites in our school and understand why they have remained here so long, you will realize that it is because Pickering is as much as you make of it. Never walk with your head down. Cherish these moments here while you have them, for when you must give it up, as we are doing today, you will realize how great Picker- ing really is and how quickly time does pass. Finally, to the Graduating Class of l986. First of all, congradulate yourselves, the road to success this year was not only long and winding, but it dipped, twisted and continued to bear surprises. But we sit here today - we made it - we've worked long and hard, we've seen good and bad, but everyone of us. no matter what our marks. has earned the distinction of a place here today. What needs to be said about our class is that although we weren't as much the group that we might have been, the bonds between us are still very strong. We've been going to classes together. eating together and living together, some of us for more than five years, and even on this final day of school. we still don't quite realize that it is now all over - we just take for granted that our life together would still go on as usual. No matter how much you may believe that we are not part of each other, we are. We've flourished together, and in that sense we'll always be brothers. But today is the day that this family parts and each goes his separate way. We must part then as friends as we have tried to live and work as friends. Memorize today each face, keep- ing in mind whose it is, and why you will always cherish it. We are different than any other grad-class. We are the Graduating Class of l986. We may look the same as any other class from the outside but anyone who looks closely, will find that we are more like a finger-print, made up of thousands of intricately interwoven whorls and ridges that distinguish us from all others. We have not been a traditional class. We are the class made up of the Stuart Hunts and the Peter Bonds. the Brook Tullys and the Jimmy Leungs. the Marshall Blacks and the Eric Bretons. Now. look at each other, take the last careful look, iust like our final walk around the campus, and to- day you will see new things in old familiar faces. Let each walk the road ahead with the realization that however distant from the Hilltop we may be, we share a common experience and heritage born in this place. After today, we will pursue different challenges and seek different goals - whether in the work force, at university or elsewhere. Today, we are all full of excitement and apprehension. We enter a world that combines cruelty with compassion, brilliance with illiteracy, hunger with abundance, war with peace, strength with weakness, and always the cries of the destitute and the lonely. Can we not then take comfort in the fact that well-planned foundations have been laid for us. and that if we remain loyal to this school whose stamp we bear. maybe we can make a difference in this world of shocking contrasts. lt is in this way my fellow graduates that I hope I have fulfilled my duty to you as your valedictorian. Please stand and join me now as we say together one last time, those so familiar words of the Promise of the Athenian Youthz' We will never bring disgrace to this our city, by any act of dishonesty or coward- ice, nor ever desert our suffering com- rades in the ranks. We will fight for the ideals and sacred things of the city, both alone and with many: we will revere and observe the city 's laws and do our best to incite a like respect and reverence in those above us who are prone to annul or set them at nought: we will strive unceas- ingly to quicken the public's sense of civic duty. Thus in all these ways, we will transmit this city not only not less, but greater, better and more beautiful than it was transmitted to us. 1 S yr, . GRADUATES, CLASS UF 86 X157 Q M...-.. ,-V..-. 5 it ? THE GRADES 9- I 2 'SJQQA G ,ww f -. - ,rx , RADE l 2 'Q Linden Achen Kevin Allan its ,QU Q--rv Michael Bolt Calvin Chau 1- s-25 A Richard Chung john Coppa may og Bradley Cork Armando Del Monte I 1.1.2 Matthew Gordon n ,I K Q 'i f My Q21 X so -Q x , of R v Q., Q19 David Howard Shamshir Jaffer Tim Jones IC' CK Stephen Dissman David Drain Aw M N, ..- Wjg, . - ' , . , Chris Dushinski Sandy Finlayson igizkgigz J' ,gf ' 31 3' , 1 my H - . . . ff? Y ' X X -'fglrw 1 , 1 ia' 243 ' ,', .: 4,- ' L ,jf+:Q' Q ilftfaff ' 1 31 1. 1 E A . W x Yb.. , M y :wpq,, Feda Karkour Andrew Lennark Mlguel Mansllla Adnan Melnlck Frank Nardl Nagel Noone QWYQ AU! JH V 7 M X 3 ,M Anthony Rmomato Graham Scott Y , s ff ' 2. , , ,T - ' ' f ' 1 N. ' Y A i lisa, 1:- 1 1 15 qginzt- ' ' - ' , 132'-fx 2' ' b A ' 'V ... ,xt 3 V A , . V . V , h ' L Ea I . :Nj f , ' ,M an v .QV Xfgf ' ' f - li 14-iffy YI. Q ' NK .5 f J xx' , . ..5 , xv kg P' - ' ' , ' 1 ,al ' I Q S , ' , ' . ' . -kg? I 1 Y '44, ' . -1. ,A,fi,.-: . 'J Q H N' ,. ., 'Vx 'jj' I, .QA H' ' .nf ' ' : SLSMAVJ 22 W GRADE I 2 David Shadbolt Owen Sirrs KTTH' 2,41 Andrew Skafel Eric Tse Brook Tully Tom Tvedt Carlos Vidal of 1 David White Robert Wiss lan Witherspoon Chris Biack Oswald Chu Robert Czarnik Marc'Andre Davis David Hwang Farouk Janmohamed Franklin Jonas Thomas Kim Christopher Ko Kevin Leung Lamarque Lockhart Noel McCahon 24 zf' Jason McVeigh Grant Nickalls Gregory Noone Robert Osborne Joseph Sabeeney Keith Singer Aaron Vadera Tony Vega Patrick Verity Patrick Wulfers Michael Anderson Andrew Bullock Sean Burns James Butt Charles Davies Alexandro Gamez David Hung John Hung John Hun! Jonas Israel David Kerr Richard Krafsur GRADE I O pu. 'S-as-7 W .f luv-M, Louis Pisano Jamie Morgan Steven Morrison Corey Mostyn Mitchell Paxton Christian Petersen Curt Pitter Dimitrio Rodriguez Mathew Scala Salim Shamii Franco Spina David Tvedt Gordon Willard Enrique Aguayo Chris Brown Gavin Cooper Chris Cumming-Corbett Stephen Fulton Jeffrey Hewett Quinn Korchinsky Corby Loft Antonio M'Bakassy Conrad Niem Jamie Ross Bobby Sahota 28 GRADE 9 !,..n 'Q ,aff WWW? tr - ,s in W cv lvl ..4 -' W I 4... Alan Samuels Justin Taylor wt Kristian Thompson wi Wifi An Addition to the Faculty , , ...J Baby-Shower at P.C. I am I am I am I am I am I am I am I am Even I am always here to talk with you always here to listen to you always here to Understand you always here to laugh with you always here to cry with you always here to stand beside you always here to comfort you always here to protect you though we might not be together always here to love you . . . Frank Nardi Mary-Ellen and Rex with Bromwen Ramsay Taylor. born I3 April, l987. 30 J 16 3.3, 'L i 1 , X 1 ww, ii I986-8 ...jwg v-5 Cloclzwise: Danny McCIymont with Mary-Ellen Taylor: Martin Cruttwellz Peter Sturrup: Jonathan Greenbaum. THE FACULTY C3 5 Cloclzwsse Don Menard Athletic Director Rex Taylor Lawrence Taylor Larry Cann Doug Cowan Don McCuaig T., 1986-8 Clochwiser Jane Zavitz: Alec Seretis: David Gosset: Fred Meagher: Hans Pape. Dean of Studies: Carol Prender- gast. Nurse. was Teachers Teach -1 'Q' 'Y 1lihvlvuIguu.g-,,,,,1- Rv we 1. V r i 4 . . . and Students Learn I I f'N Q Ty '-'M ' e ,Tw- TZ, Wf .'?' THE STAFF Grounds Staff The two people whose lives are affected more by the demands of weather are P.C.s 'Men for' All Seasons' Freeman King and Don Proud, who between them look after grounds and gardens. arena, track E- field and the inevitable snow-plowing. i ina: I F ' 1 e ' of i H' ' Q Q: . if , f Q ...Q i .,.,.. gf al A 'Z mfg, Centre: Freeman King and Don Proud preparing what promises to be a magnificent Rose Gar- den. ur- Dining Room A famous army General once said that, '. . an army marches on its stomachi' If this is in fact true then Pickering students have had a pretty good start on their roads to life. Look- ing after the dietary needs of the staff and students: John Cassar. Chef. Kim Natale. Dwayne Carson. June Croughan. Aida Azzorpardi. Ruby Crittenden with part-time assistance from Janice Penfoid and George Peet. Q5 THE STAFF MAINTENANCE The three 'Nighthawks' Howard Edwards Carl Koch Ross Caldwell g- , . ,. ig Maintenance A word that covers everything from the foundations to the chimney tops with ever thing in- between, is admirably taken care of by, Cloczwise: Jim Tausney, Buildings Manager: AI Kellingtonz Ed Loisele: Steve Kaczkowski: Bill Adams: George Smart: and Walter Moswiak. Carpenter Ed Loisele: the three 'Nighthawks' and King of the Dining Room, George Smart. GI 'Mfg HOLISEKEEPING A Bouquet to the P C Ladoes In Resadence who manage to combme thelr housekeepmg duties and unofficial surrogate motherhood ssdellne with a ear round sense of knndl cheerfulness and understandin Thanks to Edna arquhar Stella Biggs ary Lubbons Thelma Hockey ons Adams and Lulllan Gardner. THE STAFF OFFICES EXECUTIVE agp' Q l 1 I L l 0 Mary Martyn, Headmasters Secretary, with her predecessor. Valerie Ives. Sheldon H. Clark, Headmaster. J.:-5 3 Barb Watts whose smiling face and cheerful voice greets all visitors to this Hilltop. NI' The Pickering Ladies: Valerie Ives. Marie Cattet, Mary Londry. Doreen LaBrash, Louise Carter, Fiorence Nordlund and Barb Watts. H Q- ADMINISTRATIDN AND DEVELDPMENT Doug Clark. Business Manager. John Lockyer. Development and Alumni Affairs in Doreen LaBrash. 'Everyones Mother' Tracey Kidd, successor of Florence Nordlund. FLL -'. 4 QQ, 4 X ' ' Nl Q H !--... I 51 H , ...U V ' 'I G :. A. ,, . ' 3 , it Q VI ha, 44 V SPORTS SOCCER X'COUNTRY BADMINTON B BASKETBALL CONDITIONING Boolcfk RuN RIDING FALL SOCCER X ' ul' LA fy, .J' F 5,1 1' ' ry' 1 4 Q 'I ' ,xiii , -1: 5'-. I K 5 XP . f. all .gnu--I-,,4,, sq.. ' 'M - . . -is- . , , A S, 1 . . , 1 4! . . Q -an-qpw -,,. ,. , ..q. ag ',- . 44 , 4 O, . Q Q vfxk s . A . .Q Q F QW I.-gy w O A ' 1 D I ff r ' , .. L K. 5 A A K , 1 5 m, -x Q L 1 ACTIG H 7 f ' i -5' f ' 5 'K .. 3 , , ' 'A k 5 ,:,. fl- , x 3,1 R A., y .Y ff . 'wax' xx . 4 X JQZW 5 'v 1 43 L '4 L.: g .f . xl , qs If ,J .4 8 in x M v ,J viii, Q P .v , , '- 3' RA all -: 3' 6:41. ft fat., -1 .- i,f',2,. f' V, 'D .esp ' -wit: V- , '11 9 ,, ., - L4 f 9 5, ,. 5 5 , f Q . '. ' 4 - '- ' 'Q I ls. :Jah .A' ' 3 lm tg, .V 8 . - L V. 4. ...M - ,iQ Q -at., - s -t 4 4 55 l 1' v 11, 0 gf .ina 3, . ' W A L ' 2 an A f' - S 4 . , 1 M ' Q sw - 1 . mf J f I Ur? I, ,V J A ' ' -.. ..-S f- 'nw . I 1, L21 . Q fix V 1 ,, f oun- Q 'L 1 J, , . ,. - W. - 1 V' 445.5 J, N . Av ,r W -f V .,, 45, 1 - . .. ., V.. r'-v 4 .V, ,k , . -, X ss ff. 1 -wtryf ny' , ,, ,M , 'lv 5 V, , , ,H . wang, r ' - . fa, .. u . . f. ., , V , , ., I f:,' M '4. , 1211 1. q ,,, .. - A ,,, .1 I if , 'HT s 2 , . -, , -. Y A, Q Y R ,Xl y 'F ., gr-my f Haig' ad. v 'li V s 5 , sf 'Q J, 'ei Y is a 'A 1 Y -I! 44 0 ' -' ' '. T l i :Im I7 S Under Soccer. Standing, L to R: Mr, M. Crutl- well, G. Noone. C. Petersen. C. Capobianco, G. Willard, T. Jones. G. Scott. S. Morrison, J. Hunt, R. Veldhuis. S. Jaffer, D. Tvedt, D. Howard, Kneeling. L to R: O. Chu, F. Karkour, R. Krafsur, A. Melnick, K. Singer, co-captain with J. Sabeeney. M. Anderson. T. Vega. I5 S Under Soccer. Standing, L to R: Mr. J. Close, M. Paxton. R. Czarnik, C. Pit- ter, C. Niem, J. Morgan, Cv. Cooper, A. Samuels, J. Hewett. J. McVeigh. Mr. D. McCuaig. Kneeling, L to R: S. Shamii, J. Butt, B. Sahota. Prep Team Soccer. Standing, L to R: Mr, L. Taylor. J. Jay. M, McLean, L. Martinez. E. Aguayo, J. Ross, G. Shully, M. DeCiantis, J. Aguayo. N. Parsons, Kneeling. L to R: K. Cassar, A. Matthews, 48 FALL l986 First Soccer Team. The l986-87 was not the most successful for the Pickering College First Team. There were eleven rookies in the squad with few ex- perienced players who understood the level of competition and dedication required to win at this level. The team had a couple of wins and two ties yet was very competitive. Most of the losses were by only one goal and these often occurred in the final minutes of the game. Appleby went undefeated yet only beat our team from a free kick taken in iniury time. There was a lot of soccer talent on the team but it was not always easy to get this talent to blend into a team effort. There were often flashes of brilliance and then a lack of consistency would set in revealing our inex- perience. There were two Grade Niners, two from Grade Ten, two from Grade Eleven and the rest from Grades Twelve and Thirteen. Most of the other schools would draw their players from the two upper Grades, yet they showed a lot of respect for the Pickering team. If the Pickering team can start the coming season with a seasoned base of players. the opposition will have more cause for concem for the outcome of next year's games. C.F.B. First Soccer Team, Standing L to R: Mr. C. Boyd. Coach. C. Campbell, N. Noone, P. Crake, S. Sherk, N. Hirji, Q. Kor- chinsky, T. M'Bakassy. P. Wulfers, F. Nardi. S. Hunt. P. Bond, Managerg Kneeling, L to R: C. Dushinski, L. Lockhart. L. Achen, C. Vidal. E. Lee, A. Gamez. A. Rinomato. Left: The P.C. Hooligans. a.k.a. Masters. who played all four student teams in 4 x l 5 minute periods are. tanding L to R: Jonathan Greenbaum, Martin Cruttwell, Lawrence Taylor. Danny McClymont. Rex Taylor, Sheldon Clark. Kneeling, L to R: Scott Croucher, John Close. Don Mc- Cuaig, Charles Boyd, David Gosset. A magnificent game, enjoyed by all, even after allowing for the flagrant disregard for the off-side rules by the 'P.C. Hooligans' BADMINTON CONDITICDNING The conditioning squad was led by Jamie McRae iand his illi Nelson bandanai along with Don McCuaigf - a man with the inspiration of Mr. Universe. hroughout the years condi- tioning has been considered a 'slackards' sport and everyuyear students are surprised The st ents entered the sport with beer- beilies and smokers lungs, but this was to chan e in the months to come. From sit-ups to bend?-presses and leg raises to squats, it was a strenuous work-out - even 'Rocky' would have had a difficult time. This went on for four months with the teachers in charge putting up with students complaints. ln the end it was a successful winter of hard training and determination, making it possible for students to show off their tough bodies to their irlfriends. We truly thank Mr. McRae and Mr. lliciiuaig for their long-lastiw support and encouragement throughout. A inner Quits S A Quitter Never Wins - Naushad Hirii. 2 1 l, A 3 ,fl Q 1 ',gv.vis,, s lliriw , 1' l P y fs pgs: i ,4 V' K , 3 Q ' 5. lg -. . M .1 si it 7 X - t ' is 2-f'. ,gg The competitive badminton ractice has been started ear 7 iipthefscf t - l The team is led by' our coach? Mr. Pape and the ' Johnson Mak as t e senior singles players: Brook TullyylieithySin i?? 1, l Skafei and Steve Dissman as oursenior doubles teams: theiunior 1- Chwang and Jonas Israel as the singies2fpiayers.s s 'f The team practice is led by Johnson and myself in the eveningyatgi f 35 f every Friday we practice with the Nevrmarket Hi h School s Last year we had not won anything inthe York Worth ikegiongjff ih ffifi' i competitions, however we had avery, good seasonzgeve m g z f their best during the games and the practice. We hopeitorgave if is f i ,, Sys , , ft year this time and wish everyone a good season in wqrkjsqmlixgmz c - l .V f -emi me Z .. i f ,., Left: Eddie Lee, Badminton team! captain. Beiow: i k recreational players some of whom played'competitiveiyg, 'Q' . V, ,, , u 23 giy ff 3 we 'F' . ' Z r' A 523' ,V 52.33 3? V A ugh -, .fa 4 V .M ' gi. i vi -3 ssc? - + .' V, :i x .K , 'ttf g ,, M M . ,, M Ogg, ?f f N THE BGOKER RU WINTER SPDRTS Hockey X-Country S Downhill Skiing Basketball Conditioning Ifwv' I.. BASKETBALL CGND ITIONING f .M wx HOME ' WSUBBS 4 in 'x -yi- 'P 1 iaQ,x The l987 Alpine teams here at Pickering did not fare very well as far as standings go, but went all out at ever meet encouragin each other to do well. On the Junior A team, Mor- rison and A. Bullock placed well, followed by C. Fyffe. M. McLean and B. Smith. The B team brought u some developing young skiers: J. Butt. N. igrsons, A. Matthews, B. Monk, B. Robinson, J. Israel and M. Paxton were all con- tributing members of that team. The Senior A team did not place as well as they might due to some untimely falls. P. Crate. S. Hunt, T. Jones. S. Dissman, P. Verity and T. Rinomato held the positions on the A team. The Senior B team was made up of R. Wiss, J. Knaul, J. Hunt. A. Skafel. C. Davies and A. Melnick. The best showing of the season came from five individuals who attended the D.Y.S.S.A. in- vitational ski meet. Pickering placed fifth out of nineteen participating schools up at Blue Moun' tain. Thanks should be given to Mr. Taylor for supponing the P.C. Ski eams and his continu- ing encouragement. Mr. E. Dawson-Damer and Mr. Cowan should also receive a 'Thank You' for helping the teams out on the hills Below 8 Left: Spectators watch some of the tense moments. Centre: Frank Nardi and Paul Crake were the referees in the Masters v. Under l 5 team and did an ex- cellent iob. The winning team insisted that the scoreboard be included in their picture! Under I5's: - Standing: C. Petersen. G. Cooper. J. McVeigh. G. Shul- ly, S. Morrison. J. Hewett, A. Bullock. Kneeling: J. Ross C. Fyffe. C. Pitter, J. Sabeeney, A. Zourdoumis, D. Kerr. Masters: D. Gosset, L. Taylor, R. Taylor. D. McCuaig J. Greenbaum, H. Pape, D. McClymont, J. Close. Goalkeeper, M. Cruttwell. E., U A , ,irate LL. . .tw an . .K kgl. e,.J 2 3? 'll Lu , ww Hockey. by its very nature, is a pretty rough kind of sport and its participants ex- pect to get and to give their share of bumps and bruises. However, Frank Nardi. in one of the early season games sustained a back injury which gave everyone cause for anxiety. For- tunately, Frank made a swift and complete recovery and was soon back on the ice. YT' Y s 5 s if Biff .pai 71 A . U'Jg SPR! G 5 1 ltan -- - 4 ...gun-m-alll N 'sv :fa ,sf ,. Wir Rugb Bawball Badmintah f. mal f 7 9 wi . -212, 1 ' .2115 wi' . J 7 . 'fl ,3.,,j , V 1 79 4 71,255 'i PM - Wi X gs V 4 ,m Z, V Zi ., ' , 1 1 V ' ' ,- iff ,. f' .. 2 Lf ' .f 1 'EQ..f?n:' 'K -152' Ni tay,,,-f Q ,sf Track amd a A. W A Wai?- ,' iff '1 Q Q., in SPORT ilsdlfv Ax is' we gf wk ' r if - n, mlwx' - 'fifff L - ' ' f A A i - In ,W ,..z.. fW f f I s',Q, .J r-- A C .,, .J .-w ,,, 'J 'Va 'ffm A A 4' Rv. u , .. ,4.,,,1,f . A , .1 Qu. X .1 xx L x ' ' f ,, N X 3 N 'Q e v f' J L -ff-' 1 -rf-A, RUGBY 9'N. w... X. 4. :' 1,, em, nwg, , 5,15 ', 1 hh XA v Q S a K D ,. A 4 ,W 1 K' erffi' 1.7, Wav '41, ,, , 1 -n. ,P 1 Q 'E ff' 'vi Mil. Q G 1. N if fy' -rg 'A 'fl , Y' . 4' 12 1 wr- ,4 4' '23 J' tl 'Ki if x , 9 glagf.. SPR: G '87 1 1 A Z . L s 251.9 2, N 'Y . l J, I' ' ' . ' ' .sw , 5 4 ' 'Mg ' Q 1. ,,, . - '- ,eg K4 Zvi? .-fn Mi fy , New: ' vlxkgi ,. .. :Q - . ' 5-1 x X A , s. iw-Q, ,C X X M 37150 I ,K w n 1 Eh ,. gg -53 ,' Q, -A rm. 0:5 'wx f 115 ,QT ,,- mg 4, , if i K4 N 3 iz 41 s,, 5 512,11 ,-9 i,5Q,gX , nfsvjf-an 3 A . ,. tj , - M .i K ,A NY . ,. g fs'99 i ' ui ,Af 2 4 . Q , .4 ff Q 'fl , . .f 1 . 4 ' 1' ' ,N 'mx . Q rx, , 4 I , ,K Q X I B f' t - ,xwr Q, . JT' v f ' , , . ms in - -:Sw of -Q 3, v-, llf T1 - .x.s'- x 'X' ,L4 .' ml tKv'.iZ'1k .i51Du1 Ts BANTAM Hurdle Relay 40M 60M Softball ong Hu 400 Relay MIDGETS Hurdle Relay 60M M 400M ot Long 400 Relay JUNIORS Hurdle Relay 60M l00M 200M 400M 800M I 500M 3000M ong Hu Triple ot SPORTS DAY RESULTS Blue 2 Red 3 Gold 4 Sulver Muller 2 Robunson 3 Mohamed 4 Cassar Zanon 2 Hardman 3 Jay 4 McLean Robunson 2 Muller 3 Mohamed 4 Cassar 0 2 Zanon 2 Hardman 3 Jay 4 McLean Zanon 2 Hardman 3 Jay 4 Robinson 52 90 Zanon 2 Hardman 3 Jay 4 Robinson 4 Hardman 2 Zanon 3 Robinson 4 McLean I 35 Gold 2 Sulver 3 Blue-4 Red 6 4 Gold 2 Blue 3 Red 4 Sulver Hardman 2 Zourdoumus 3 Weunzweug nnes Matthews 2 Shumovuch 3 Fyffe 4 Smuth Taylor 2 Aguayo 3 Parsons 4 Monson Weunszweug 2 Innes 3 Zourdoumus Shumovuch 2 Matthews 3 Fyffe 4 Smith Aguayo 2 Hardman 3 Parsons Martunez Martunez 2 Parson 3 Hardman Aguayo Aguayo 2 Shumovuch 3 Fyffe 4 Parson Black 2 Martinez 3 Parsons 4 Aguayo Blue 2 Silver 3 Gold 4 Red Blue 2 Red 3 Gold 4 Sulver Loft 2 Cooper 3 Bulloch 4 Jonas Burns 2 Hewett 3 Putter 4 Monk Korchinsky 2 Sahota 3 Shampu Paxton Loft 2 Taylor 3 Bulloch 4 Jonas Anderson 2 Petersen 3 Putter4 Nuem Shamuu 2 HungJ 3 Gamez4 Hung Burns 2 Tvedt 3 Chu 4 Aguayo McBakassy 2 Sahota 3 Korchinsky Paxton Hung J 2 Hung D 3 Veruty 4 Mostyn Butt 2 Petersen 3 Putter 4 Chu 4 2 0 99 9 4 4 0 29 22 28 69 McBakassy 2 Sahota 3 Paxton 4 Taylor 26 84 Krafsur 2 HungJ 3 Israel 4 Taylor Davues 2 Krafsur 3 Ross 4 Aguayo 2 M Bakassy 2 Burns 3 Davues 4 Krafsur 4 Davues 2 Krafsur Korchinsky 2 Paxton 3 Hung J Sahota Davies 2 Gamez 3 Sahota 4 Butt l245 HungJ 2 Rodruguez 3 Putter 4 Taylor 9 68 Korchmsky 2 Anderson 3 Cumming Taylor I2 70 I ..,. ' 3I.5 I. ' . ' . . 7.l I. . . . 5.9 I. ' . ' . . I . I. . . . 8.5 I. . . . ' . L I. . . . ' .33 'gh I. . . ' . . I. . ' . . 3. Hi Parson Hardman 3. Aguayol4. Black Discus I Javelin I 4 400 Relay I INTERMEDIATES IO0M I I I I 200M 400M 800M I 500M 3000M ong Hi Triple ot Discus Javelin SENIORS I 00M 200M 400M SOOM I 500M 3000M Hi Long Triple ot Discus Javelin 400 Relay I Gamez 2. Loft 3. Tvedt 4. Monk 23.43 Korchinsky 2. Burns 3. Anderson Cumming 42. I9 Blue 2. Silver 3. Gold 4. Red . Chung 2. Melnick 3. Osbourne 4. Morison Breton 2. Achen 3. Noone 4. Willard Chwang 2. Jaffer 3. Wulfers 4. Nickalls Karkour 2. Hunt 3. Dissman 4. Bond Davis 2. Lockhart 3. Singer Chung 2. Ko 3. Gordon 4. White Kim 2. Leung K. 3. Spina 4. Morgan Melnick 2. Morison 3. Osbourne 4. Bond Wulfers 2. Dissman 3. Breton 4. Sabeeney Karkour 2. Hunt 3. Leung J. 4. Jones Davis 2. Lockhan 3. Noone 4. Mansilla Davis 2. Jaffer 3. Karkour 4. Nickalls Scott 2. Vega 3. Jaffer 4. Noone Scott 2. Vega 3. Sirrs 4. Nickalls irrs Lockhart 2. Davis 3. Karkour 4. Jaffer Lockhart 2. Nickalls 3. Hunt Lockhart 2. Chwang 3. Karkour Sabeeney Hunt 2. Wulfers 3. Jaffer 4. McCahon Davis 2. Scott 3. Morrison 4. McCahon Morgan 2. Morrison 3. Wulfers 4. Achen Witherspoon 2. Tvedt 3. Barat 4. Gissing Wiss 2. Ayin 3. Black M. Benner 2. Lee 3. Noone 4. Crake Wiss 2. Witherspoon 3. Cooper 4. Keyes Davies 2. Stants 3. Gissing 4. Tvedt Nardi 2. Hunt 3. Rinomato 4. Riley Benner 2. Veldhuis 3. Lee 4. Noone Benner 2. Veldhuis 3. Knaul 4. Noone Bolt 2. Campbell 3. Hunt 4. Davies Bolt 2. Veldhuis 3. Knaul 4. Mak Bolt 2. Soukorefl 3. Black M. Lee 2. Keyes 3. Black M. 4. Crake Lee 2. Crake 3. Nardi 4. Hunt Crake 2. Hunt 3. Lee 4. Barat Nardi 2. Barat 3. Noone 4. Wiss 52.5 I3.5 I3.0 l2.9 I2.4 29.38 29.48 29.42 28.52 27. I 6 25.20 6 . I2: 2 5.90 . 0 l2.05 23.28 32.76 ef 24.4 2: -O 41ss.3 uo.4s l0.89 I . 6 Hunt 2. Black M. 3. Veldhuis 4. Black C. 27.53 Nardi 2. Black M. 3. Witherspoon Del Monte 38.87 Blue 2. Red 3. Silver 4. Gold HOUSE CHAMPIONS Ist - Blue' 2nd - Gold' 3rd - Red' 4th - Silver. I II9 I I I 7 I I I 4I 8l I I Sl I I 74 I I7 75 I I33 I 237 I II4 I 502 I IS I 4 II3 L I I gh I I5 4 7I I Sh I 2 4 II33 I 39 Sh I gh I I36 I I 6 5 I I I2 I I38 I 86 I I30 I Anderson2 HungJ 3 Vadera4 Verity 8 3 I Nardi 2. Stants 3. Riley 4. Hirii I2.4 I 84 I II8 I I 2 7 4 80 I 273 I I43 I 257 I I35 I I I3 I 535 I I34 I I I I 4 I24 I I gh I I53 I I 555 I I I 6 7 Sh I I7 I 24I I I ' 52l I I 4 L I 497 4 5I4 gh I I52 I Sh I , . . 4 STUDENT LIFE I 986-8 7 Drama 0 Sky-Diving The Houses fr Sports Day Athletic Banquet Spring Formal HaIIowe'en A 6 BLUE HOUSE wt, '- ,my-n.w ' 'tu4nQ..:f.u:n..1z,4,. K. Allan, L. Martinez. M. Mclean, T. Morison. A. Matthews. J Taylor. Mr. J. Close. Mr. J. Greenbaum, A. Bulloch. S. Shamji D. Hwang. P. Bond, R. Krafsur, Mr. C. Boyd, Mr. D. Mc Cly mont, N. McCahon, G. Cooper. B. Robinson, A. Innes, A M'Bakassy, R. Wiss. D. Hung, G. Noone, D. Barat, K. Singer, .. Q.:-seam.-aux-zuarmn. M2143-klunum .un .nxnrwtilm-rul1.NBlAIL4n .. M. Lizzola, J. Butt, J. Morgan, F. Nardi, J. Davies, M. Bolt, R Keyes-Krysakowski, G. Noone. C. Davies. G. Nickalls, R. Czar nik, C. Dushinski, A. Skafel. P. Crake, J. Knaul, C. Chau, C Niem, T. Jones. K. Thompson, J. Tanuwldgapa, A Hardman, K. Gray, A. Zour- doumis, Mr. D. McCuaig, Mr. M. Cruttvvell, Mr. P. Sturrup, D White. A. Rinomato. L. Achen, Mrs. J. Zavitz, Mr. J. McRae. Mr. R. Taylor, J. Black, A. Vadera, C. Loft. M. Gordon, M Anderson, K. Leung, J. Leung, D. Shadbolt, E. Lee. D. Drain, C. Campbell, F. Chwang, R. Osborne, M. Paxton. B. Monk, J. Israel, R. Cork, S. Shumovich, D. Howard. M. Cooper, C. Cum- ming, A. Del Monte, J. Coppa, C. Black. SILVER HDUSE RED HDUSE lHP W' '?i --2-Liaigka-RFE-nva-f9!'NilE7V'Q-w9iaI-gssvx-.wv.,+ soggy-vqgmwyy--1 ,gina , ,.. S Miller, K. Cassar J Weinzweig, R. Mohamed. J Jay, Mr. H. M. Black, C. Pitter. E. Aguayo, G. Shuuly, J. Mak, O. Riley. B. ' M. P. , M . A. Seretls. Mr. D. Clark. A. Lennark. Chung. C. Sahota, A. Samuels, S. Burns. T. Tvedt. F. Karkour, M. Ayin. ape r Fyffe, E. Breton, Mr. E. Dawson-Damer, Mr. D. Gosset, S. Jaffer, Gissung, B. Tully, O, Sirrs. N. Noone, P. Verity, M-A. Davis, T.Kim, F. Jonas, J. Hung, A. Melnick. N, Hlrli, F. Janmohamed, Prendergast. Mr. L. Cann. C. Petersen. S. Finlayson, S, Hunt. J Hewett, J. McVeigh. J. Hunt, R. Soukoreff, P. Wulfers, G. Scott D. Rodriguez. C. Mostyn. G. Willard, R. Veldhuis. L. Lockhart. S. Fulton, B. Smith, N. Parsons. M. De Ciantis, R. Hardman, Mr. L. Taylor, Mr. D. Cowan, C. Ko. E. Tse, G. Stants, D. Zanon, l. Witherspoon, Q. Korchinsky, S. Morrison. J. Ross, J. Sabeeney, L. Pisano, D. Kerr, O. Chu, Miss. C. GOLD HDUSE ,fr mx. . . -,A R 'E' I , . V 1 I' 0 v -:- -Q. . Q- K'-w .f f r ., V. I v . . 0: ' X A 'H' '. HJ ' 'K Guy? -lpn. 35 .I 1 Q ' f, , In C -Q .ff ' 5 1 .Ha 'Hx lf. 5 ,-J: it . .1 .,.,--.- . 712 , 1, w. A ,r iff 42 Q.. S 'iii- HAI.I.OWE'E I 9806 69 ,Ad M Yv- 1 'Y C F' ff af Q. Q, -,U wh, , . .. .Igffsf 'Z s 1'8- ' L Ngim ' H'-i32eTr V41 -I A nr A ,W it . 's 3 it 49+ 'X ' . .Wu -' z I Af 'W ' 1 0 ' I ,ff P F 5 'A -sg R-. 3.- . 'N- x. 31 WE,-f '1i FLA'- 4? P f VI fl xv pq, V. . .fs W swf 1 3... A M 99 Q. K 75 JF'-:dv J. 1 x -55 s J Ev, 4' A Y-'Y.,, 2 1 aa ,. YY'-wg. 3.5. -'Q Q 254. 'P' 1 Q 'V ,:1 :ff 1 J-15 '-1-.K Yi' ff, Q, lx , ,gg V 4- , . , A Tum -3 FEW- f .-'1'.v'c v l--IQPSFV. , ,: .V .L f' . - V' 1 5 '. 2 14334 , A idx- 1 'Q Q V ,, 1, fag- 'Q' ., V V' 1 ' - A -. V, T ' . lt?'af2j'fx ' s-gg. Q -I H iq V- 115 .fV Q , : ,WP X ' 'Ltfm A -1 - vw 1-'nf -A - 4- '- P D'-5 1-5' ev .iv A .f r ,-1 1- Ae., ., 1 .Y .-1 , . ,I - 'sift , r :q4V.J . Y , V if V ' mi... f-EQ 555' g' f M- . 1: -2-141, ., 'cw' Q-' -gf gb: 4-.V -. . . . 3 4.3 N 1 . ,.V I , I .. ,-',f,,'5,'5 53-5 ,Hffl V A3 4- . 1 ,V -px .' V' if - X j V U ' ,M P , -- . 1 . 'Q ii. flkfi' , ' VL :EM :- 'V . g3?,,it1z.: 1,5 f A 1 .. , g 5 xt j- ,, ' V :Q .. z . 5 KV 4. -:T ,fr T 4? . X .J X 5 A 1..,.g x 4 -J.,.. ii.: 3,549 .:. V W 5 A 4, V sf 4451 ls ,I WYJQ1 3 E' -. ft-' 1 .f . P In LT 2 , .dau v gf! I w.mLVfY': A VV , Wy! ,wr .. 21- l 0 4V,1'a:?- Z . . . . ,V V. r . J V 11. : 1, V A , V. ..' If - 3 U 5 1 QQ Q 3 .V . .1 f ' - Ni: .145 ', If ,rf -yy .' .- AHA . -153,4 fx . , -- 5 6 U N ' . ,I 4 , WW- 4112! ,,,V,.,, x A: .- ..,,, .1511 :L-M.. mr' M-of if 51. Y r aGf4 'S .ag Q U f? 1 Q ' if '35 ff nv n NI U wi. . 4-. r 'Q' ' 1 ' 1, , 4 J x .1 1' 4 .. 'O DN V TQ' 1 'C' ' ' 'saw . , f . flaw ,, Q. eu. 'wig F 6 . . 1 ' , - 4 - 1 'LS X 'GT ,f if ' 35 1: -.lg v f ,, , ,, .h f 'N l ,.. , , i ,QI ful k s. gl ,ff 5 l tr Q'-. C ,fb 1 ' f - xx-. ifm if O , 1 Q, ef ' g , 5 ' ' x ' I .3 ,- wf' ' if IV? if - lf Y . J 3 . ' A ' ' U .M ' 4 , -,, - ' ,- .ni , F, I, A a, f ff f A , f' I N 1' 295' ffp..-41,5-ln, f 4 ,fs 0? wfiiifsaaaf- ' - 'ff' ,t - 'Q N A4 3.9. xmgf. l V 4fih-r':- ,.. ,. 5 1 ' A :ll 3' ' C',.::' 1 .5 ' .. 'S' ,Q , 517. ln .1 L: i.. .-Ngyxii,-f2lf5 f?Sv o awgftWnyr fa.,.w Q2-fifreg, . ,rt . af PWM H 45 I align. I A 1 4 'll' 'K U., i i 5'-E QQ, 47, :Q-. fv. 3 W k s I I I 1 Y R '4 1 'O ATHLETIC BANQUET - JUNE I987 gf! I 1 I Af' 4- O. N.. 0. . fs N -. v-. Q 1-, . .-.. K 1-ana 4 '56 ' X 3 f-4 A:..4m1 - fp..-M-' QW: 1 ., Y 4. 5-' X , an 0 O I 1 IK . J' '. . . ...-- '- W i'M-rf' -'3 '- 51 - T, W. : ' . i S- ' .-4 ' ' ...... , , .0 ,, in Q Y w-.. I Wg, 5 L -4 - k.,, - '. ...- C 2 5 '0 ' A A x I ,.,. ,-V Reflections - Junior School. Once more we have come to the end of another busy year - the time when everyone says, I don't know where the time has gone. The days have passed very quickly and a great deal has been accomplished. The Junior School boys ac- counted for themselves very well in every activity, both academic and social, that were part of the Pickering year. Firth House has the added interest of a greater number of 'Day Boys' this year, they brought a new pers ective to each day with their weather forecasts, road conclltions and the latest movies on late night T.V. The Day Boys and their parents were also very generous hosts, many of the boarders enjoyed a day or a week-end at their respective homes. . As usual, t e Junior School had its own Committee. This year Adam Matthews and Jon Black were the two elected Chairmen, while Juan Aguayo, Luis Martinez, Rocklyn Mohamed, Morgan McLean, Andrew Innes, Steve Shumovich, Gerrod Shully, Richard Hardman and Tom Morison all had a turn on the Committee. The 'Prep Soccer Team' was coached by M. Lawrence Taylor again this year. They had an excellent season, with some very accomplished soccer players on the team coupled with great enthusiasm and courage. We will all miss Lawrence next year, not only for the soccer but for his con- cern and interest in Firth House. Miss Carol Prendergast was our nurse. She gave the boys lots of T.L.C. along with the pills and Kleenex. Mr. Doug Cowan and Mr. Larry Cann were the other senior masters. Rob Soukoreff, Kevin Benner and Jonathan Knaul were the duty assistants and helped to make the Firth House roster complete. , During the latter part of the spring term all the boys en- joyed several outings either with their counsellor or in House parties. The Prep also had their own House party with the usual pizza S pop with an added treat of popcorn and cookies supplied by Andrew Innes and a movie courtesy of the Hardman brothers. With all the activities here on the campus the Junior School didn't take the usual Metro Zoo or Wonderland trips. The outstanding Highlight of the year for the Junior School was the birth of Mar Ellen and Rex Taylors daughter, Bronwen. The boys all felt a personal interest in the baby and certainly missed Mrs. Taylor from the classroom while she was on leave. We look forward to Bronwen 'oining us for a few classes next ear. The Atl-iletic Dinner, final exams and the Leaving Class Ceremonies brought the year to a close. Everyone was happy to leave for home and a well-deserved vacation. Mrs. Gib- bons and Walter are now busy performing the usual miracles with the House in preparation for September, '87. Alvin H. Jewell Director, Junior School. ...................... 1 my .4-A Junior School Teachers: Mr. Sheldon H. Clark, Headmaster, Mr. Fred Meagher, Mr. Don Menard, Mr. Dan McClymont, Director Junior School, i987 - Mr. Lawrence Ta lor, Mrs. Mary Ellen Taylor, Mr. Alvin H. Jewell, Director Junior School !969- I 987. Junior School students: A. Innes, J. Aguayo, G. Shully, S. Shumovich, J. Black, B. Robinson, C. Fyffe, R. Hardman, A. Hardman, D. Zanon, N. Parsons. M. De Ciantis, M. McLean, B. Smith, R. Mohamed, A. Mat- thews, K. Gray, J. Jay, J. Weinzweig, L. Martinez, J. Tanuwidiaia, T. Morison, S. Miller, S. Kikuchi, A. Zourdoumis, K. Cassar. I Q? Q 'lf' S 4? If Eg u 1 U 5 . I I as N H x F V H 4 Q .txqjj N 5--. 'M , I k 7 5 l 3? 5 1 I N' 'X 3 04 4 1 ,, 1- fx ,g g -iq - - -, cf 1- 2 . K ...-.fin Q '1 , Ni'-,H Q: f 'X 1 ' ': ' F 3 V. - V t N 1' ' Q' ., K 4 'Q 'fgilgf -,LK f -:Yi -if .5 I 1-an 'S Q. J-,A K . 551 .AAI .M , ,- -QA mga ma, Wi w 22 ww! . sly fx ,4 , iw?-ff ya , ,J I Ax ',:f ,5g:1:6?T 4. w, W Q --,fcg,:,- -in b Q,-4 49 H' 215 If -Q ,Q x ff' .N 4.,'f1 ff'-E y. nr an Wi .O ' I., f , -fo F. I '! I - 1 9: N ., , , 'Ii . .- , ,slr ,v. 9 .vs .QI go . J p 0 Zz' . x. 1 . '- 1 , ' 91 s gk 5 'I RI' Q ya J' 4? ' Z ,, 2'-. ' ' .f - 'x ,-51, A '. :leg A! 'U' X rNn.? ' 1 ,Ju -in Waxman .., 0451 ' 31, J 4 ,ig 8- Y I 'S 'N H J 1 L 'I 4 Q. fx A dV1f i K , Q 1 ' if A X ' 9 ' V -J ti it Vw 1 5.5. ..-....-..-xg - s iwl, 1 , . ' s - 1' ' . j f '-4 , 4 , . 4 ' ,ffl 1 5 gi iii , a I , W AUBURN SEDILE John Lockyer KILLERS HEAD Sam Shepard E E l el 5 1 l l Z The l986-87 drama season at Pickering was a good one, especial- ly for our new Director, Doug Cowan, himself an actor on the Pickering stage during his student days. The fall production, the visits to Stratford and some Toronto pro- ductions and the spring Indepen- dent Schools Festival gave any boy who wished it, an opportunity to learn to appreciate theatre more. Those who wanted to be active - to try acting or stage crew work - had plenty of opportunity to do so. From the perspective of chances to learn things about theatre. this was . A very good year :M . Uffkf E' ylG'CO ' s V ...- Q if gXxl's. Y STRATFORD '86 Theatre is simply what cannot be expressed by any other meansg a complexity of words, movements, gestures that convey a vision of the world inexpressible in any other way. - Eugene lonesco. On the 23rd September this year all Pickering students visited Stratford where they saw a great perfor- mance of Shakespeares 'PERICLES' The grade I3 English students also stayed on for an evening perfor- mance of 'A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS.' by Robert Bolt. Pericles, Prince of Tyre. is shipwrecked on the coast of Pentapolis after fleeing from Antioch where he discovered his intended bride living incestuously with her father. In Pentapolis he meets, loves and marries Thaisa, daughter of King Simonides. The couple sail for Tyre and their daughter is born at sea, alas, at the ap- narent cost of the mothers life. Thaisa is buried at sea 82 but the coffin is washed ashore where she miraculously recovers! All three, Pericles, his wife Thaisa and their daughter Marina go their separate way. each believing the others to be dead. After many years their paths finally cross and the play ends with the family reunited. After the downfall of Cardinal Wolsey. Sir Thomas More is appointed Lord Chancellor of England and is thereby drawn into conflict of Church v. Crown. This is brought to a climax when Henry Vlll seeks to divorce his wife in order to marry his mistress, Anne Bullen, and expects Sir Thomas' support. A Man For All Seasons is a fascinating study of Sir Thomas Mores behaviour when faced with an impossible dilemma. Considering all the effects of his decision on his family, his career and, indeed, his very life, is the essence of the play and draws a compelling portrait of its central figure. GUILD LLINCHEON The Guild luncheon, arranged tradi- tionally to coincide with the day on which all students with most of the teachers visit Stratford was this year held on Tuesday, 23 September with the Honourable Pauline McGibbon as the Guest of Honour. Mrs. Gail Davies, Chairman of the Pickering College Parents Guild, in- troduced this years guest to all members of the Guild at a reception before the luncheon, after which Mrs. McGibbon addressed the gathering of one hundred and twenty members on The Spirit of Volunteerism. Pauline McGibbon began her main text with a definition, A volunteer is Above: Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Davies greet the Honourable Pauline McGibbon on her ar- rival at Pickering College. Left: Headmaster Sheldon H. Clark es- corting the Hon. Pauline McGibbon to luncheon. Below: Mrs. Allan D. Rogers chats with the Hon. Pauline McGibbon and Headmaster Sheldon H. Clark at the Guild reception. a person who gives freely of time, money and effort to others. She spoke with convic' tion as she herself exemplifies that definition admirably. The first principle of volun- teerism is the recognition that people are important. The uplif- ting spirit of people helping people in adversity added grace to many enterprises. Dther aspects include the adventure into friendship, the principle of inclusion, the 'we are one' and the value of selflessness. 83 933.5 .f Q I I v 'ffm-r l 1 w N I 1 4 1 1 1 1 no Q , my J, A 'f .1 4' fag, ... 'Z ,, 5?-1 ilu-gg, 2 if 1' YZ? , .f 1 tj: . A V 'fa QV? 4 1 1' ' , 5' 2' 3 j Q xl .S . 5 ,x?Q, 1', YN il 1' FN Q1- ax . F gi. 93 2 52f.:: ,- any ,- -f ,QM -3. 5 i 5 1 A :,., 11- , I k 1, . bb ' -. iii 1 L ,ma 9 ,37 4' Og :ibm 644 ,,3.,?i Q , , Lg 9 QA wiv?-' -RK. if N 'N if.: x 14 'fs . n , ra - A , , .Q ,, sf v M ' :HA 5 ,A ., .qw L . ., K ms , -. - . H f . 5 E. Y xv' N ,. 'ig ' ki S fu, i 41 Y I W4 1 gm wi x K ' X X 5. 3 ,ii iid .J am, r. f -4 1812 if Uq xl 1'1- 'L I 1....f5 l 73' ,nw X. , 'x ned-14' E 'V Efaxvw, Qgpfg -f x g X xx zxv ' W m-J I i , -, .- .4 M. V 1 g ,. Hp., , l' a Tx'x 'tl' ' W fi? +3132-1,l4 A b M---f , U A K I A uv 'Sk 7 5 ,u ' x j 3,71 L K Q .Vg , xi , s .ik Q D ' A gg 0 'lx ...-..' 4- I 1' - ' I ,P vt 1 , V wi K N 1 1-it ., 'Q ', , . as . ' 1 , . 55881 ll aa 'JD E T' ,Q if 1 . Wf , if - I WE A . ,S M Q ' , W2 . ' ' ,l,xg.ff X ' .4 E 1 n - I' W ' 541 ' 'f Y ix ' . . 'lfxw f' M x if -s 75.'r'5:'3S Q x , . 7 - . ' 'V -A ' 'Nr 4, 5' . ,. QL, uf. f Q -1' I fs, 1 4311, 1 'fi et. fx 'I-as 5. Q li. '.w:s - I f' 1'--' 7 4 1 ' ' 'nu' ,', V' x Lg: Y '. N' 4 ' . fx . Q ,A , QI. x, J, 54' FA- 4 'F' '-'R - Jin A, ML. auf! 4, v 2 , ' 115525 M 1 , n,w,,:' 2. , V ,, ' 1 N 4 N X, 1 ff M WZ. - ff- 7' ':f?fx'7i'? H --v ' a. , -4: - lm H L K xv- , 0 4 .ttigiqf ' II exv V1 4, 1 V ,D ,dt .ff - .N 1 Y. - 1' , - ,Ig A It SD 'ha QYXX' A' 552 'F 11' :za-dai ',:- 3 !'4 , 'f .,,,, 'P w. A1293 .k 1 HA !T , X ,JS wan' I my vt Q4 Morgan Mclean Sacha Miller Rocklyn Mohammed Brett Robinson Jay Tanuwidjaia David Zanon 90 Kevan Cassar Matthew De Ciantis Kevin Gray Andrew Hardman Jeremy Jay H GRADE 7 N. 4 . 1 , f if 5' -i -.4 A-, Wagga 53 Juan Aguayo Jon Black Carson Fyffe Richard Hardman Q L, A at ,Q , UL ' A -w ar .yt , N 5 . 'je 'ire X' ,nw X if ,ns ' 'sfglf , if-'Vp A az. X ' . . ,fn . +V -af , ' S f-A QM A 43,4 it 551339 ,g,f.v,. .X N W AT ,E fish af , 'X-M775 1 mf rr 1' ,fa '1 N' Andrew Innes Luis Martinez Adam Matthews Tom Morrison Nicholas Parsons Gerrod Shully Steven Shumavich Bradley Smith Joshua Weinzweig Aesop Zourdoumis 92 JUNIOR SCHCOL I 986-8 f' 1-' Vf - A .5 . ugg.. 4-use-f ....,, , ,AA . .:., 44 A 'M' cv- V at ' N rzanhnj ' ' - -W '-- '? ..lI' X b ' 'l -'lll!- , x -H .., ..i W M ' W anti - . wiv' ' ' W .Q A-ar 'M . 't , ' , 4 ,V ' ,y ,,,,,,-. A W Q N N ' V, , -N ,, V Mm -M -Q-ff ,, f in .,, P- .,4:1':- A . .. f lq vu 0 b Y A 9 ,,,,,. W -H , ,, AM, ,K I986-87 JUNIOR SCHDOL Juniors and +1 , X.. Q Their Teachers THE HEADMASTER'S LIST for I 986-87 ln the course of the year students who make a particularly fine contribu- tion to the life of the school are recognised on a list produced by the Headmaster. Congratulations to those students who distinguished themselves by earn- ing a place on the Headmasters List. Two paths lead to the List: honour results andlor honour effort. lt is a worthy reward in itself and is not accom- panied by any specific privileges. The basis for selection is: lay an overall average of SOM: with no mark below 6OWo and no effort rating below 3, or, ibl no mark less than 6O'Mv with no effort rating below 2. Enrique Eric James Richard Frederick Bradley Paul Chris Joe Matt Andrew Naushad Farouk Thomas Jonathan Christopher Johnson Rocklyn Nicholas Curt Jamie Steven Owen Robert Eric Brook David AGUAYO BRETON BUTT CHUNG CHWANG CORK CRAKE CUMMING FREZELL GISSING HARDMAN HIRJI .IANMOHAMED KIM KNAUL KO MAK MOHAMED PARSONS PITTER ROSS SHUMOVICH SIRRS SOU KOREFF TSE TULLY WHITE HGNOUR SOCIETY DINNER F .,. s V 1 gf Dr. Ken Roberts, Top Left, introduced by Headmaster Sheldon H. Clark. Top Right, addresses students on the Headmaster's List at an Honour Society dinner Dr. Roberts, a respirologist at Newmarkets York County Hospital, spoke on A matter of Life and Breath. -ADV!-if in 5, FMR 1 ,: fe in y,1..., ,sk J 'ffV 'if3yfs-1, ' QW t '. g ry Pu Q g- W.,-1' .f Q tif Q if 5' ' ' , 5 Q ki 1 . .. 4 KVA ' ' u X. 2 1 3 . 1 ., Q wit Sf 'R ,kb fs. 'Qs , Q 1 Q 'I R R' Ra-YQ' My X . V4 V L . .. x '.' l+.i..'gg. ' 1 'wb' l986-87 Some You Gain R V ay .. .W T- s- fx if s V Q., W , .. ,, -if J. fx ',-,f ' f -If Q -.? 1 Page 98: A fond farewell to those members of P.C. staff who moved on in the last year. - Scott Croucher. David Gosset, Lawrence Taylor and Jonathan Green- baum, Teachers. Casey Van Beek and Shirley Walker, Housekeeping. Valerie Ives and Florence Nordlund, Office staff and Gary Verhaaf, Catering. Page 99: A warm welcome to the newcomers to P.C. - George Peet and Kim Natale, Catering. Mary Martyn and Tracey Kidd, Office staff. Carol Prendergast, Nurse. Four new teachers, John Close, Doug Cowan, Martin Crutt- well and Peter Sturrup. Edward Dawson-Damer both came and left during the school year. This fine, well-travelled young man not only taught, tutored and duty'd like a veteran but, with his distinct 'Brit-Aussie' accent, made a lasting and pleasant impression on everyone he met. Good Luck, Ed. 99 Y Q ,V sir Q l 'i F , Q Ev! 5' y ' ai'-ur 5 if 'x' . . f 'M Q A ,ffw2 g?'u'A ft 'Nix ,-Ians.,f,, lf Mx ' ffvhw' ff 1:21 .. ii.. ,,. J x. A! ww.. 'wx H 5,!w 0 4 . V' l X 'W W if- '1i 'g 6 1 Y 11 . n , Q i A , A . 4 .5 hw' 1 if E 5 ,A A 1 get ' mx v 5, , A A 'NI qfrx Y ' Jv PICKERING PEGPLE O 0 9 W, - UU ' Q ' 1 NW ' X- : a , f ig, Vww-' STUDE TS ---. 0. M, ! an iyfyin ...Q- ix -....,- ' . 9' -I Avi i i 2 1- G , Rocks to Roses by David Drain I give you two stubborn rocks. These rocks deny their own feelings. I give you two fulfilled roses. These roses follow their feelings. The rocks are close. but not touching. The roses are closer, they entwine. The rocks want to be with each other, but are afraid. The roses want to be with each other, so they are. The rocks communicate, but only on the surface. The roses communicate, at all depths. For years we have been rocks Now we are roses. Lord On A Bike Across from the high school He waits On a bike That is low and has a concave banana seat. Sullen, He watches and waits Looking so cool that his quest can only be urgent .lean-clad and sneakered under a red mackinaw He lights a smoke As he waits On a bike that is too small For his daddy-longlegs legs Now his eyes, come alive, dart fiercely - Suspicious spears flaming to life - They follow girls who disdain pearls But shadow their eyes with amethyst When at last two girls cross to him He is ready: Slung low in his machine He eyes the rings of smoke that escape his lips Lips that are hard And give nothing away But a curl of disdain Or an exquisite sneer The girls With Voices conspiratorial Discuss important things: like Who's seein' And What are Ya doin' on Saturday nite? When suddenly, as if seized by a fright He draws himself upright And cracks a slap Into a defenceless ass She shrieks in a rage of shame and delight Whipping herself around To hear the thin sound of his command: 'We're goin' now' So she nods And with a helpless shrug D Stamps out her cigarette Saying, 'See ya tomorrow' While he watches without sorrow - A sulky lord On a bike That is low and has a concave banana-seat Jonathan Greenbaum. Who? LITERARY Don't Turn Away Tony Rinomato. You say your dreams are burned to ashes and your smiles have turned to tears, It seems to me you welcome sadness as you surrender to your fears. You say your heart is lost forever and always give your love in vain, So you paint yourself a lonely portrait and hide your love away again. So now l'm asking you this question Am I gonna give you all my love in vain? Do you wanna drown in your own sorrow, Or are you gonna try to love again? You turn away from what you feel inside you can't forget all your foolish pride, Don't turn away from what you feel inside You should try to forget about All your foolish pride. THE ELDERLY slowp Bent Twistedz Crippled: Weathered But Wise. LIFE. Living is Life, Life is Living, Full of Uses And various abuses. Depression and Disappointment For Some: And for still others Challenges and Changes await. Andrew Skafel. Dirty Sweat Socks Noel McCahon. Dirty sweat socks sitting on the floor, Smell so bad you want to throw them out the door Guess you won't wear those socks anymore! Dirty sweat socks that can walk on their own. Oh my God the aroma has grown. My mom wants them out of her home! Dirty sweat socks - why do they smell like that? Smells so bad it scares the cat, I sure hope I don't smell like that! Dirty Sweat Socks nothing smells the same. Although the smell your .shoes can also claim, Dirty Sweat Socks always take the blame. .FT 'uk' '4 13' 1, 9 , . y i 91' M! I 1 A , if 1 t,' sf 'W' 'f I 5 ' K , 'lg I Q 1 Z' L fig, I, 4,1 au..,,,.,, wi? x if 99 ilwvr 1'-'Ci 9091 4.. ' PQ 'Nl 213'-s J, 5 ' : '-si, ,lx 'Eng ,ix x ' ' 1 'llpiqnv 1115?-Q' N.. -...W u 'Q mv 3. tial, ' . .- r ,'w,. -J fx. G I 7 . ls A I lzl ::'n fl .. Y .l'.' 41 ' . at 9- llllf 1 gil 4 .Vi 1 , -..L-f1-4-5--- 'L :nuns nu Q-jg. he -' Q ', . l D Q ',':, N L 3 l I ni 9' ' ?,: I A - I6 .W I Q ig QQ? fkvfif 'MSN' ip Q? 51 ' I 'f QQ L. . O- 1 1 'QP tw 3 I db , af Eff sr' k , , W , :N.M- ,g Aqimg x. 4 X f F KA 1 4 My mv- I A1 Q J Av' gf: 1 ,W . R ,. J q 1 'J' I -1... y 4.11 L. - A 'nfl f fab! f 1 X 5 x if 's A -A .64 1 5 W ix QV. ,L-, il Q . , f I ,H wg A U - fw--in ' nfA a' ' ., 1 xi-f I M. f' A-, 1, ' Y A 4- 'J Qc N N al I N -I 'w 'trio exit JUL 14, ,Q 1 . .K J, tiff ,- Qlkiffi. 'fx . trys 2: tt, .. Y., of ,5 Y, if r' ,vf ,gi ,' nw P' , if ..s..'.-. and .wg sg- rg... . . veils? - , Gi I ,tv 1 -. 2. . -, . mu, e v are . ' 4 f . -. G V f '-r.2,.,:,?'- - ij, tit'-4 f ' Ms' yiqtfa., Q , NEWMARKET, ONTARIO A Pickering Student Respects the Ideal of Freedom A Pickering Student is Co-operative A Pickering Student is Tolerant A Pickering Student is Loyal A Pickering Student Ls Ambitious A Pickering Student is Independent A Pickering Student Ls Courteous A Pickering Student :Lf Honourable A Pickering Student is a Sportsman A Pickering Student is a Member of a Community The School Code S He understands that the exercise of his personal freedom is limited by the freedom of all other members of the group. He recognizes that his right of personal freedom and choice must always be used in such a way as to promote the best interests of the school as a whole. He is always willing to co-operate cheerfully with others, in any way will improve our school life. This co-operation enables staff and students Q work together towards a happy and efficient community. He welcomes all races and creeds to his community, accepting them as indiildnzls and judging them on their individual merits. He respects the opinions of ioiers, and willingly abides by the will of the majority when a decision has been He is loyal to his school, his home, and his country,--but above all loyal highest ideals. ' He is ambitious to develop his best capacities--mental, moral and physicllgi recogi nizes the value of knowledge and therefore strives to attain his achievement so that, when opportunity arises, he may make some worthy to human welfare. He neither asks, nor expects, ?ecial favours but endeavours at all times to ' Q 'lil 1 place as a free citizen in a ree society by the contribution he is wi H i Q' if I common welfare. His independence of thought and action is the detriment of any fellow-student or the school as a whole. A ' ' ' 4 in He knows and respects the customs of polite society, showing by his h appreciation for the feeling of others. He takes an active interest inf alleviate human suffering and to promote human happiness. g He endeavours at all times to fulhl his promises and to induce in others I sim respect for truth as the basis of satisfactory human relationships. He plays a game to win but he respects his opponents and always plays the game fairl and cleanly. He is willing to subordinate himself and his personal desires to ncbi the success of the team. He is loyal to his coach and cheerfully follows indmctio laid down for team guidance. He belongs to a community which includes those who have preceded him, those are associated with him, and those who will follow him. He will endeavour in if ways to transmit his community, not only not less but greater, better and more than it was transmitted to him. AWARDS THE GARRATT CANE Above: Headmaster Sheldon H. Clark presents the Garratt Cane iointly to Jonathan Knaul and John Davies at the School Leaving Ceremony. The Elwood Garratt Cane, a beautiful gold-headed heirloom, was presented to Pickering College in l932. The staff and school in that year decided that it should be used as an annual award to the member of the graduating who, in the opinion of his fellow students, came closest to the ideals for which our school stands. The Garratt Cane is the greatest honour the graduating class may bestow on one of its members. First Colour reci pients Tony Rinomato, Eddie Lee. Paul Crake and Stuart Hunt with Headmaster Sheldon H. Clarl- and the Athletic Dept's Director Mr. Don Menard and Mr. David Gosset. ATHLETIC COLDURS AWARDS I986-87 FIRST corouizs THIRD cotouras T 2 v . , T NEW: Anderson, Michael Jones, NEW Exlcidzlul Rinomato OHY Barat, David Morgan, Black, Chris Q Black, Marshall Noone, v OLD' Hum' Stewm Bulloch, Andrew Scott, Davies, Charles Wulfersg,Patrlclgg 1 ' NEW: Achen, Linden Morrison, Steven mae Jonas A VV'e Chwang, Fred Nardi, Frank , . QQ Dushinski, Chris Singer, Keith Ol-D5 :?'PPTllf Ehgs Zlzk' A E Korchinsky, Quinn Willard, Gord 'ru' aus a 3 eeney' L 1 Krafsur, Richard Wiss, Robert t 4 'A M'Bakassy, Antonio FOURTH COLOURS t we 4 nx,, Vine ,E NEW: Jay. .leremy Shully. OLD: Davis, Marc-Andre Lockhart, Lamarque Martinez, Luis Smith, Brad i j Hunt, .lohn Witherspoon, lan Black, .lon 4 A , 55.3 523-l ' 114 C R BLACKSTDCK AWARD INTRAMURAL PANEL AWARD This award is presented to the House - Gold, Silver. Blue or Red - which accumulates the most points during the year in in- tramural athletic competition. culminating in the final efforts on the annual Sports Day. This year the BLUE team, captained by Jonathan Knaul, won the overall championship. Above, Blue team captain Jonathan Knaul with Sheldon H. Clark. Head- master and Don Menard and David Gosset of the Athletic Dept. The C.R. Blackstock Award gives annual recognition to a senior student for his contribution to the school spirit through athletics. The award commemorates the memory and the ideals of 'Blackie' Blackstock, former Director of Phys Ed and of Firth House. Eddie Lee, this year's recipient, is presented the award by Mr. Brian Blackstock. Z' Q, . A H. SCHOLASTIC AWARDS Above: Curt Pitter, GrlO stu- dent and l986-87 winner of the College Scholar Medal. Each year Pickering honours that student who achieves the highest overall academic per- centage in the Senior School. Curt is returning to Gr I I in 87-88. Right: A rather special scholas- tic award in the form of a Book Award was this year won by Rob Soukoreff in the National Scholarships Program from the Univ of Toronto. Through his fine efforts Rob gains honour for himself and for his school. September '87 should see Rob at either Queens or Waterloo on the Engineering program. THE WIDDRINGTON AWARD The Widdrington Award was first presented in l94O and has continued to be given each year since then to one or more students for notable contributions to community life. The in- spiration for the award came from G.N.T.Wid- drington who served as Assistant Headmaster from l927-39 and also as first Housemaster of Firth House from l93l-37. This award, not granted for intellectual talent or skill in games, would stem from contributions to such specifics as the school committee, drama. the glee club. interest clubs, music, arts and crafts, Meeting for Worship as well as the intangibles of spirit as expressed through active leadership or quiet conviction - a force for good in a be oved com- munity. The original plaque donated by Mr. Widdrington hangs in the Dining Hall corridor and ens rines the spirit of the award in the words engraved on it: 'The Second Mile! and 'The Neighbour as Tliyselff This year the reci- pients are John Davies, Peter Bond and Robert Soukoreff. Congratulations. Honorary awards went to four leaving teachers: David Gosset, Ed- ward Dawson-Damer, Lawrence Taylor and Jonathan Greenbaum. 117 Cloclzwise from Above: Mr. Ran Ide, distinguished Guest Speaker - Graduates, Vale- dictorian Jonathan Knaul on extreme left - more Graduates - Mr. John Lockyer is the subject of a light-hearted moment - The Headmaster, Mr. Sheldon H. Clark with teachers and guests. A PRAYER FOR OUR SCHOOL God bless our school, all who teach herein and all who learn. May those who go forth from this place of Friends take with them, deep in their hearts, a concern for others and a will to make our world a beloved community. May they, and those who remain, hold close the ideals and sacred things given us by our founders: compassion, integrity and our belief in the Divine Spirit. May the people of Picker- ing, both here on the Hilltop and in the world outside, strive to live nearer the vision set for us by the men and women who have loving ly given heart and mind to form the character of our school. And may all of us here today pray that we may strengthen the foundation they have entrusted to us. tls- Q-in-are -Sl i' no - snaps. 9 r,.,....,..,..............s Mark AYIN. 809-62-83703 Lot 7, Ramloga Dev, La Seiva, Maraval. Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, West Indies. David BARAT, 5 I9-969-7 I63. 3435, Ouellette Ave, Windsor Ontario. Kevin BENNER, 506-433-6400, R.R. 92 Sussex. New Brunswick. Marshall BLACK, 6l3-629-4923, 5, Riverside Cres, Manotick. Ontario. Peter BOND, 6l3-389-6973, 4226, Bath Rd. Kingston, Ontario. Eric BRETON, 5I4-93l-9l39. 32 I, Kensington Ave, Montreal, Quebec. Chris CAMPBELL, 4 I 6-895-3440. IS2, Church St, Newmarket. Ontario. Frederick CHWANG, O-8862-709-6460, 7C, 3630, Tun Hwa South Road. Taipei. GRADUATE DIRECTORY Mark COOPER, 4 I 6-8 52-502 5. R.R. II2, P.O. Box l498, Uxbridge. Ontario. Paul CRAKE, 4 I 6-775-4666, 267, Orsi Ave, Bradford. Ontario, John DAVIES, 4l6-895-5779, R.R. Ill, Sharon, Ontario. Matt GISSING, 4I6-844-403 5, I487, Lakeshore Rd, East, Oakville, Ontario. Naushad HIRJI, IAirmail via Switzerlandj BP I l973, Kenshasa, Zaire, Africa. Stuart HUNT, 4I6-773-6558. R.R. Ill, Kettleby. Ontario. Robert KEYES-KRYSAKOWSKI, 4 I 6-232-2237 l36, Prince George Dr, Etobicoke, Ontario. Jonathan KNAUL, 4 I 6-7 82- IOS6. 57, Alexandra Wood, Toronto, Ontario. Eddie LEE, 4 I 6-49 I -7095. Jimmy LEUNG, 852-5-7906479, 3, Boyce Road, Butler Tower, SIE Block, Apt C Jardine Lookout, HONG KONG. Massimo LIZZOLA, 4 I 6-833- I 825. 4, Simcoe Rd, Kettleby. Ontario, Johnson MAK, 4 I 6-497-749 I. Apt I2 I 2. 2330, Bridletown Circle, Scarborough. Olun RILEY, 809-625-2930. l9. Coblenz Ave, Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, W.I. Robert SOUKOREFF, 4 I 6-294-362 I . 7 I, Walkerton DR, Markham, Ontario. Brook TULLY, 9 I4-723-5934, 9, Fairview Rd, Scarsdale. N.Y. lO583, U.S.A. Gleen STANTS, 4 I 6-44 5- I 82 5, 3 I, Swansdown Dr. Willowdale, Ontario. Roald VELDHUIS, 4 l 6-627-4593, Taiwan, Republic of China. clo Phebe Wong, 9, Jordanroch, Scarborough. 4. Fallsview Rd, Dundas, Ontario. Published by IOSTENS CANADA ,Y- V Q A . .H 1 - '54 ' U-I lv - I . 1 - 'QQ x J . . 1, n - iv Y li A: -' ' 4.1: K Q qua 'W W, 'I W 'P 4 vi, 1 f 1- . Q ., , , x ' - . - A , A .f1,.4. -,5.,, ' A ,, -I 7- ,., . 4 --5 - -uf - rl 'Q J Q '. tffii J, V' f n i 'X 5 gt. 1 - I, n h t ' 4. j 'K 'I Al' Aix .,,, V Y ' ' Q1-fr 5, . 'xt i ' .5 ' X' :sys 'f . , . , I ,, ff 4-'Q ' .4 ' Aa!! Sw-,'g','f.l FV- .' 'Zyl .gt-. 'Q-. A r'-.- - a-.xv ff? 1- .- 'QV' IA AW . fp ' .fx if: wa-1. Q . ' f - Q . ' - ' 1 -K 1 - '- 1- ' .S nfl 4. 5511.4 'fnvxxfiiui 'Q-' . --. 8' 3 'hfiix :fn - 7 wwf' R a K SK' ., , 'IA' ' . .-',1 QQ:-,.'?' 'A X' A - 6 ' 'f f .' 'i9w'f- f ' 4. ., M' fl 0 ' ' 1' ' l ,. 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