Sarnia Collegiate Institute and Technical School - Collegiate Yearbook (Sarnia, Ontario Canada)
- Class of 1946
Page 1 of 172
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 172 of the 1946 volume:
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l e 94 M THE COLLEGIATE THE SARNIADEUTSCHENSTUDENTENVERBINDUNG 'Ilhe npper school tlertnztn elxtss organized a new club this year under the tlireetittn of Miss lleztsmztn, eztlled the Sarniadetttschensttidentenverbin- thine' for the purpose of intproving the members' volcabttlztry and conversa- tittnztl xthility in llerinztn. Severztl members intend to be foreign correspon- dents :intl wish to he ztble to speztk the lztngttztge fluently. Each Xtedtzesdzty the tnetnhers luring their luneh, :md meet in room ZII, where nothing but tiertnxtn is spoken during the noon hour. English is strictly verboten, and any forgetful intlivitlnztl lzipsing into his nzitive tongue is ostracized. Records pertaining to tlerntztn, short skits, :tntl speeches are featured at the meetings. 'llhe liighligltt of the yeztr wits the Christmas dinnelt held in room 301. The stntlents enjoyed 'llrnthzthn init lironbeeresosse, Kartotfelblatterkuchen, lirzttttsztlatt und l':SSlg'g'1ll'liC, Fleisehpztstete und Pfefferkuchen, and ended the feztst with their fztvonrite footl-Chokolade mit Schlagsahne. CAMERA CLUB 'llhis yextr with the ftwtttzttintt of the Cznnern Club students have the opportunity of exercising their own skills in the nrt of ztmzttettr photography. llolw lfisher. at tortner pliotogrztpher in the Rf..-X.F.. stxtrted the club and be- gun to instruct the members, along' with the capable help of Peter Burns. l'nfttrtttti:ttely, with llnh Fisher leztving school the club has had a setback. lint with l'ete llttrns still here to curry on the job, it is 'hoped that the Cam- erxt Chili inqty soon pick np. Si t Z SU-ED l'I'011I RONQ' tlt-tt tit rie'litt-Mzirieti Slater. Bernice Friedman, Doug. Shanks. Barry Bell, N Marjorie llnreess. Fran. lYhitnell. l'HCli New Llett tit right!-Mary -laiiniestnt, Bill XYilkinson, Pauline XX'ray. D. McIntyre, :lohn xlllCkillllN'l'llj', Betty Burns, :Xrt 170mg-y, THE COLLEGIATE 95 ' 0? Q X .fi 1 X X 3' o I J - f EDITORS-Pauline W1'ay, Bill Wilkinson THE WRITERS OF THE HYMNS HAT is a hymn? The word comes from the Greek word hymnos, which means song, generally a song of praise. And that is what a hymn is or should be to-day - a song of praise and thanksgiving. The writers of hymns are very important peoplet in the his- tory of the world. Many of them are more intluential than they ever dreamed. One of our grand old hymns: Let us with a gladsome mind, Praise the Lord, for He is kind. was written by a boyl lt was written by John Milton, the great poet, when he was only fifteen, studying at St. Paul's School. The -lews sang hymns before Christ was born, and we still sing hymns written in Greek or Latin by the saints. The hymn beginning O 'lr:s.u, Lord of heavenly grace, was written by1 St. Ambrose, who lived his noble life fifteen centuries ago. A more famous hymn, The day is past and over, is a translation from the Greek, in which it was written centuries ago by St. Anatoluis. Martin Luther was a very great hynm maker. A mighty fortress is our God is one of his best known hymns. People wandered all over Europe singing them as they went. They were carried into the castle of the noble and into the cottage of the peasant. XYe also owe a great debt for our hymns to the XYesley brothers. John XYesley wrote some hymns, but Charles XVesley, his brother and disciple, wrote about sixty-live hundred hymns. No other man ever had such a record. Oi course they were not all high-class poetry, but some of them are still among the noblest verses in the hymn-book. Dr. Isaac XYatts wrote over live hundred hymns, among them such treasures as O God, our help in ages past and jesus shall reign where'er the sunu. . The authors of some of the linest poems in the English language are unknown, for we have many fine hymns that cannot be traced to their writers. lYe have some written as they first appeared in English: we have some from unknown German and ltalian authors, and nearly fifty from unknown Latin authors. Adeste Fideles or Come, all ye faithful'. is one of the most famous of those translated 'from Latin. But of the man who lirst conceived those grand old words we know nothing. On the other hand, we know rather too much about Nakum Tate, the author of the im- 96 THE COLLEGIIATE mortal hymn XYhile shepherds watched their Hocks by night . He liived in an age when it was not considered disgraceful to drink, and he was a drunkard. Frances .lan Crosby, a very noble woman, lost her sight as a baby and never regained it. She received her education at a school for the blind, and devoted her life to malaing others good and happy. She wrote Over three thousand hymns. of which one, Safe in the arms of Jesus' is sung everywhere. To ,Phillips l-Brooks, Protestant Episcopal Bishop of Massa- chusetts, the world owes a favorite Christmas hymn: O Little Town of llethlehemf' Bishop Brooks was a celebrated preacher and an independent thinker. lle died in Boston in 1893. Yery few men receive such affection- ate tributes as are paid to Henry Frances Lyte. an English clergyman who has laid in his tomb at Nice since 1847. Among the hymns that Lyte wrote was Abide with me. lle wrote it on the nlight that he preached his last sermon, thinking not of that one night's repose, but of his eternal rest. Now we sing it at the close of evening service in churches all over the world. Over a period of hundreds of years, the works of these composers have accumulated and been compiled to form our present day hymn books. How few of us realize the number of people who contributed to them. Surely they have played a large part in the growth of the Church through the centuries. 1 Q2 lex Q ,ti 1 ' .... - SCHOOL BAND Top Row tleft to rightl-J. Cramrford, D. Eyre M. 'Wilson, K. Sutton, XV. Marshall, Doug. Shanks, G. Gander, R. Dailey, I. lViclner, F. Dagg. Middle ROW tleft to rightl-Mr. Brush tConductOrl, B. Van Alstyne, D. Park, A. Milner. D. Lewis, R. Allen, R. Geere, A. Mustard, Don Shanks. Bottom Row lleft to riehtl-G. Barnes. S. Shanks, H. Hellfwell, B. Barry, T. Kenny, R. Treitz, L. Dennis. THE COLLEGIATE 97 THE DEAF COMPOSER ECALL for a moment the great musical composer. Haydn. lYhen Haydn was dying in Yienna, in ISOQ, the French were bom- barding the town. Haydn's servants were terrified, but he took it all very calmly. He asked to be lifted from his bed to the piano' and when he was seated, he played his own Austrian Hymn three times over, while 'the guns were pounding outside. Now at that very moment, there was another composer in Vienna, crouching in a cellar, with cotton-wool stutfed in his ears. This composer was Beethoven. His hearing was beginning to go and he was afraid that the sound of the explosives would still further endanger it. Think of a musician being deaf! You might as well think of a painter being blind! Yet Beethoven, in some respects the greatest composer that ever lived, be- came almost totally deaf. The inliiction embittered all his later years, and turned an originally lovable man into a kind of surly bear. Beethoven, like Handel, did not marry. He would throw the soup in his housekeeper's eyes when it did not please him, and stamp and rage and howl over the most trivial annoyances. Let us be charitable to him when we- read these things. But Beethoven with his deafness, had a very hard life. Born in I77O, at Bonn, a pretty little university town on the Rhine, where they have pre- served his birthplace just as it was, he had to work his way up in a home directed by a father who was a habitual drunkard. The father, who was musical had heard something about the triumphs of the Mozart children in Vienna, Paris and London, and he thought he would make some money out of his own Ludwig. So he set him to work at the piano, and visitors would often see the child late at night shedding tears over the keytboard. XYhen he was about seventeen he went to Vienna, where, it is said Mozart gave him some lessons in composition, A few years later he went again to Yi- enna to study, and made his home in that city the rest of his life. lVhen Mozart tirst heard him play he exclaimed: Pay attention to this youngster, for he will yet make a noise in the world. XYel know how true that prophecy was. Beethoven's works for the Piano, particularly his Sonatas. are the grandest things of their kind ever written. Take away Beethoven's nine symphonies-the immortal nine, as they are sometimes called-and we would take away the very backbone of music. He did not write very much for the voice, for he was essentia.lly an instrumenta'l composer. but he left one beautiful song, Adelaide, and one great opera, Fedelio. He passed away in March, 1837, at the age of 57, and Vienna never before saw such a funeral as his, the crowds being so immense that the soldiers had to be called out to clear a passage lfor the magnificent procession. NNY: Marion Schell: Hey, Bet, what is a military objective? Bet Buchanan: lValk by the boys on that corner and you'll hnd out. Xflfrlsils l-'le had just stolen a hurried kiss. M. L. XVadham frather disgustedlyl: Don't you know any better than that? Dean Hawley: Sure, but they take more time. 98 THE COLLEGIATE THE FGRGODTTIEN MAN HN MUSEC N THESE Clays when there are so many soloists on the radio, in concerts, and in motion pictures, most of us are so carried away by the ability of the individual artist. that we fail to notil:e the beautiful background being played by the orchestra. To the average listener this is the case, for after all, our whole attention is being appealed for by the soloist, vt bile the orchestra sits in the background and is there for the sole purpose of supporting the performer. However, this background is carefully prepared so that it will give the soloist the most support possible without detracting the listener from the rendition of he solo. Nl'ho then, is responsible for this accompaniment? It seems that many people are unaware of the number of men who spend years of work and study in developing an ability in this profession. These men are known as arrangers or orchestrators. They take the bare melody of a tune andi create from it the beautiful score which you hear. Only a person with an extensive knowledge of music and an abundance of originality can make a success of arranging. lt is especially difficult to get started in this line of work, because of the scarcity of good teachers and texts. First, one must acquire a thorough knowledge of harmony and coun- terpoint and familiarize himself with the instruments for which he is going to write. .Xfter he is enlightened upon these fundamentals, the aspiring or- chestrator puts himself to work, gaining experience by the trial and error method. .-Xt lirst he may have to follow examples of other men's work and, if he is fortunate, the student might be able to have his attempts criticized by someone who is already adept at this work. Even with this help, the man who wishes to be successful in this profession must keep working at it until he attains accuracy, originality, and speed. The arranger is constantly confronted with new problems. One phase of arranging is the work done in preparing background or mood music for moving pictures. I have often remarked how perfectly the music fits into the scenes of the picture, how there is just the right type of music in the right place. ln order to reach this state of perfection, the arranger has -the film shown to him. He notes the exact times at which important, events 'take place, the emotions displayed in them, and their duration. Then he is given .1 minimum of time in which to complete a suitable score, and must meet this deadline so that the picture can be shown at a planned premiere. However, this is not the best-known job of the orchestrator. His biggest job is in writing arrangements for conductors and soloists. In this work he tries to satisfy his clients and yet write the type of music which he himself enjoys most. Often arrangers become so tired of trying to satisfy the tastes of or- chestra leaders and soloists, that they organize their own orchestras so that they can have their own style of nicusie played in the way which they desire. The arranger always remains in the background. His work is not done on a brightly-lighted concert stage or in a gaily-decorated ballroom. He re- ceives few compliments from the listeners, and usually his name is not even known to them. So, the next time you are impressed by the music of a good musical organization or soloist, remember that the arranger contributes to this success, without making an appearance in the performance. -Bill XVilkinson, IZB. Really, said Maxine Palmer to a fresh fellow, You take your arm from around my waist or keep it still-l'm no ukulele. THE COLLEGIATE 99 scnooi, oRcut2sTm ' Standing tlcft to right?-Miss Ramsden. Hill liruncr, H. Barnes, ll Yan .-Xlsyne, D. Guthrie, P. XYray, D. Eyre, T. Kenny, R, Gcere, Mr. Brush tionductorl. ' liront Row tlcft to right!-R. Allen, XY. Marshall. li. MacDonald: j. lftiwlev, lf. Young. Gray. a i W PERCUSSION IN THE Music 'WORLD HE MUSIC we hear today has a colourful past. XYhethcr you pat- ronize classical music, modern jazz, or both, makes no difference. Both forms go back to ooo A-XD. when an ambitious ltalian, intrigued by musical sounds, laboriously devised the music static and modern system of notation. Up until Guido d'.-Xrezzo came along there was no accurate method of transferring musical sounds to the written page. But long before d'Arezzo's time, even before the time of civilized man, savages in primeval forests had learned to utilize a crude form of music. That, of course, was percussion. By stretching the skins of animals across the open ends of hollow logs, it was possible to achieve a single tone musical effect. XYhen more than a single drum of this sort was used, there resulted a series of different tonesg and thus was the first music devised. Primitive people used the drum as a sort of communication. Probably one day when Mr. Cavemanf was far from home he must have accidentally knocked his club against a hollow log and was surprised when his spouse told him she had heard it from far off in their cave. From then on he hit the hol- log logs on purpose to notify Mom that he had been successful in a Dinosaur hunt and that Pop was bringing home the bacon ,for should I say Dinosaurb. At any rate, the drum was one of man's first inventions, and he used it to expect his moods, as a means of communication, and to entertain himself. Now, hundreds of years later, it is still being used in much the same way. Great composers have recognized the value of the drum in a sustaining mood. Berlioz, for example, scored parts for sixteen kettle drums and ten drummers in his Requiem. . ' Man has used the drum in peace and war, in happiness and sorrow. The roll of drums has been used to pay tribute to a nation's heroes, and to dmm Russian Cossacks, riding at the French, beating on drums slung on either side I00 THE CoL1.EciATE of their horses helped to turn Napoleon back from Moscow. Down'through the centuriesf the drum, fiand related percussion instrumentsj has been im- proved until today it is common practise, in symphonies amd jazz combinations alike, for complex parts to be written for mem-bers of thel drum family, just as they are. A drummer must be versatile. His sense of rythm must be In the held of jazz music, especially, has percussion suddenly become a highly important, indispensable adjunct of a musical organization. Every great dance band in the world- uses drumsg and in virtually eveny instanjce, the most ofteni publicized is the drummer, and, therefore, the most often fea- tured memlber of each group. Drummers like Gene Krupa, Buddy Rich, and Dave Tough are not only excellent soloists but equally talented as section menf' or ensemble drum- mers. lf they iveren't they'd be unkown rather than internationally noted as they are. A drummer must be versatile. His seense of rhythm must be perfect. lle must be proficient on the bass drum, struck by foot peclalg wood blocks: various cymbals: the snare drum, upon which he uses both sticks and wire brushes: cow bellsg whistlesg sock cymbals, also manipulated by foot pedal as well as by stick:1 and brushesg and any one of a dozen other implements including temple blocks, chimes, and in some cases, vibraharps. In all the world there is but one nation without drums, that nation is japan. All other nations have them and in most native areas it is the stan- dard musical instrument. And so the world of music rolls on with the per- cussion instruments providing the beat and rhythm. lil. V fN on Friend: XYhat will you do when you grow up to be a big woman like your mother? Small Daughter: Diet! wk Pk lk as llope: The doctor told a friend of mine that she mustn't neck. 'l'erais: Gosh, was she sick? Hope: No, she was the ClOClIO1'lS wife. af as as af Mitchell: lYhat shall we do this afternoon? Price: 1'll spin a coin. If it's heads we go to the show. If it's tails we go to Port Huron. lf it lands on edge we go to school. Robert Thompson on the way to school and nearly late, prayed, Dear God, don't let me be late. Please don't let me be late. Then he happened to stumble and said: you don'tl have to shove. Dk Pk is all I ean't marry you,', said the justice of the peace. A girl of seventeen must have her father's consent. Consent I yelled the would-be groom: say, who do you think this old guy with the shotgun is-Daniel Boone?l' THE COLLECIATE lOl ULUHHLE Elllllmllilf il- 5 '15 Q A vi, - NE'-. 1-dll EDITOR-joan Cowan GIRLS' SPORTS V LTHOUGH the athletic activities of the girls for 1945-46 have not been completed, those that have been, have been most success- ful and most enjoyable for all who have taken part. ' - To Miss-Ramsden especially, and also to Mrs. Wfinter, who so ef- ficiently took over Mrs. Claxton's position when she left to be with her returned husband, and to Miss VVilson, our new gym instructress, we, of the Girls' Athletic Association want to extend our deepest thanks and appre- ciation for their understanding and assistance. b This year's athletic Executive is headed by the Honorary Presidents: Mr. Sinclair Miss Ramsden Miss XYilson President: Ioan Cowan Secretary: Mary Jean Armstrong Vice-President: Ruth Hawley Treasurer: janet Helliwell Curators Track and Field, Fran Vtfhitnellg Basketlball, Lois Soperg Volleyball, Betty Byrns, Dancing, Marilyn Fox, Speedball, Jewell Dupeeg Swimming, Catherine Overholt, Qnow Barbara Geddesjg Badminton, Bernice Friedman: Softball, Hope Millholland. I should like to take a little time to explain briefly, the work of the members of the executive. These twelve girls, representing the Girls' Ath- letic Association, meet on the first Monday of each month to discuss any busi- ness that may concern their activities and to record gym work in the form of marks. They also arrange the supervision of after-school activities. Each girl on the G.A.E. has a particular night on which she super- vises the games in the gym. It is her duty to engage referees, umpires, and score keepers, and to see that games are started on time. After the games are over she gives each girl who has played, credit for playing, and each girl who has refereed, umpired, and score kept, credit for officiating. These credits are given in the form of check marks. At this time she posts the games for the following day and prepares the score-sheets. At the end of the month the check marks, which the girls receive, are totalled. Each month marks are given for attendance and costume. Also, posture tests are given several times and marks awarded according to the grade received. Marks are also given for swimming tests passed. For each game played, two marks are given, similarly for each game refereed. One mark each is awarded for an umpire or score keeping check. The captains of the different sports are voted on by their teams as to their efficiency THE CoLLEc1ATE Q. ' f- me ' GIRLS' ATHLIZTIC ASSOCIATION llxcfg Iirzv llc-it It riglitl-Fran XYhitnell, Mary -Ican Armstrong, Marilyn Fox, Mrs. XR .n.crs, Mr. Sinclair, Miss Ranistlen, Ruth Hawley, janet- Helliwell. Ifzwiiit New tlcft to right!-Jewell Dupee, Lois Super, -Ioan Cowan, Betty Byrns, Cath- tixne Uxcrliolt, Bernice Friedman. f :tml inaalza are assigned according to the vote. Everyone who has played wi tlic winning team receives a bonus mark of fifteen points, for those on the tc-inns coming gnd and 3rd, ten and five points are given respectively. 'lhe marks are posted each month and at the end of the year these are totalled. 'l'l1e girl receiving the highest mark in the Senior Division receives Lhc lst S, the Intermediate winner, a znd S and the junior, an engraved medal. Last year's winners were Ruth Hawley, Hope Millholland, and tarol Mclntyre. Those girls who receive 7554 of the average of the ten highest marks tlor llrade Nine it is 70943 receive the All Round Proficiency crests. Those l..'R'L'IYillg these crests for 1044-45 were: lfv. Aiken, D. .-Xllingham. P. .-Xrmf strong, IS. lliddlecomb., XY. Brandon, ul. Callum, B. Cook, A. Cowan, H. Dob- roski, -I. Dnpec, F. Elder, B. Friedman, R. I-Iawley, P. Hartley, I. Helliwell, li. Isaac, M. -lennings, J. Johnston, M. Jones, B. Lawrence, N. LeSnenr, M. Lucas. rl. Macliinley, I. MacCullum, C. McIntyre, Y. Miller, H. Millholland, II, Milne, IC. Norwood, VI. Palmer, R. Parker, S. Robley, I. Rosebush. E. Rutherford, L. Sands, M. Slater, P. Slater, Stratford, D. Teasell, F. XYhit- llcll, lf. kkvuoley, , A winner of a proficiency crest for three consecutive years is then presented with the 2nd S. XYinners last year were j. Cowan, B. Friedman, Ii. Hawley, M. Jones, B. Lawrence, and P. Slater. After each tournament, the executive arranges a party for all the captains of that particular sport and for the top three teams in each division, lunior, Intermediate, and Senior. Each girl on the winning team receives 11 crest and the captain is the recipient of a large banner for her home room. THE CoLLEc1ATE 103 THE GIRLS' GYMNASHUM DEMONSTRATHUN After a dismaying postponement of the Gym Demonstration from hlune the sixth until a week later, june the thirteenth turned out to be a satisfac- tory evening. tExeept for those mosquitoes lj The programme was, opened by the five hundred girls of the Sarnia 'Collegiate Institute and Technical School, dressed in blue and white, forming their traditional S.C.l. and T.S. on the rich green grass of the Athletic Park. After the formation was completed the girls came to attention, the audience rose, and God Save The King was sung. A brief speech by Mr. Harry Eyre, Chairman of the Board of Education, was given. Following Mr.: Eyre's address a spectacular marching drill was done by the complete group. - Throughout the programme were dances performed by the grade niners then the second formers and on up until the grade thirteens were reached. Gymnastic exercises were artistically arranged and interspersed among the dances. There were a number of volunteer groups which provided interesting entertainment. Tumbling was done by a volunteer group from all grades, advanced Gymnastics from eleven. twelve, and thirteen, and fin- ally the games skills from Grades nine and ten. Added to these groups was GIRLS' ALIJROUND CHAMPS i Standing-Carol Maelntyre tjuniorj Sitting-Ruth Hawley fSeni0rj, Hope Millholland tlnterinedj .THE COLL1-:GIATE 1 ' ' O 'I Queen 5 Tklnuhersntp KINGSTON ONTARIO Incorporated by Royal Charter 1841 Situated in the Oldest city in Ontario: 34 buildingsg normal registra- tion about 45003 health insurance provided during sessions. DEGREE COURSES in Arts, Commerce, Applied Science, Medicine, and Nursing Science. Matriculation Pamphlet sent On request includes a complete list of scholarships and prizes awarded on entrance and on University Work. EXTRAMURAL IVORIK in Arts and Commerce up to four courses yearly. It is possible to get a pass degree in ,-Xrts or lu com- plete three years Of an Honours Course through extramural and Summer School study. ASK FOR A COPY 'OF QUEENS IN PICTURES McVVatters: I've got the most wonderful family tree. Taylor: Wlia tiare you-the sap? Compliments of SARNIA CITY DAIRY LIMITED BETTER DAIRY PRODUCTS 320 Talfourd Street Phone 3080 Compliments of , LEWIS CLEANERS 105 S. Victoria Street A 111 Stuart Street Phone 51 Phone 950 104 Ti-IE COLLEGIATE a dance called f'La Cucaraclian which took the audience of 2.000 down 'fSouth of the Border to Mexico. This was a colorful dance of eight couples, the girls in white blouses and gaily coloured skirts and the boys ttruly girlsj in white blouses and dark slacks and large ten gallon hats. Towards the end of the programme Mrs. F. Mills presented pins to the members of the Girls' Athletic Executive. Also, crests were presented for all around proficiency in Physical Education activities by Peggy Milne. The programme was concluded by a dance done by the whole group and by Peggy Milne making a fitting presentation to Miss Ramsden and Mrs. Claxton. It was a hot night, that night of 'Tune the thirteenth! The members of the School Band as well as the girls who took part were given frost bites, provided by the Board of Education. Before concluding, it almost goes without saying ,what we. the girls, owe to Miss Ramsden and Mrs. Claxton. XYe enjoyed every minute of work- ing with them and are looking forward to putting on another demonstration in the future. GNMVD Miss Taylor: XYhich would you desire most in ahusbandfbrains. wealth or appearance? Miss Harris: Appearance-and the sooner the better. Pls lk 96 .-X won11:n's intuition is about two-thirds suspicion. CREST XYIXNERS, 1945 Back Row tleft to rightl-P. Hartley, J. Dupec, Y, Miller, S. Robley. M. Jones, J. Cowan, E. Rutherford, B. Lawrence. E. Aiken. Middle Row Cleft to rightl-R. Hawley, P. Slater. C. Maclntyre, B. Biddlecombe, A. Cowan, M. Lucas, H. Millholland, H. Friedman, J. Helliwell, F. XVh1tnell. Front Row tleft to rightl-J. Saunders. M. Slater, XY. Brandon, M. Jennings, J. Palmer, J. Calluni, T. Isaac, P. Armstrong. THE COLLEGIATE I05 GIRLS' SWIMMING Back Row Cleft to rightb-E. Hastings, T. German, J. Dupee. I. Field, I. YVhite, L. Street, 4 ll. A. Daws, M. Sinclair. Middle Row Cleft to rightl-H. Kettle, M. Quinn, S. King, E. Heisler, C. McIntyre, XY. Matthews, M. Trotter, S. WV,ill-zinson, L. jackson. B. Timpson. Front Row ileft to rightl-F. Haas, M. Edgar, K. McLaughlin, B. Marshall. B. Brock. M. YanAlstyne, M. Humphries, J. W'eirenga, M. Slterratt, M. Huggett, G. W'hitely. E. Swartz. SWIMMING AND LIFE SAVING 1945 was a very small year for Swimming and Life Saving due to the demonstration which was put on in the Spring of 1945, and the keen interest and activity shown in the competition for the Cochrane Cup by the girls of the S.C.I. However, we hope that 'the girls will come back into the competition for the Cup with renewed vigour and interest this year. Incidentally, we are having some work done to our pool. It is being sound-proofed and insulated for the further convenience and comfort of the students. Also, the showers adjoining the pool are being reniodelled and repaired. Following is the list of girls and the Life Saving awards won by them during the year 1945: Bar to Silver, Joanne Brown, janet Helliwellg Bar to Bronze, Janet Helliwell, Shirley Robleyg Bronze Medallion, Lorraine Burd, Carol Mclntyre. This Fall, there was keen interform competition to see which form could pass the most tests and swim the most lengths. In the Senior division they ranked as follows: First-C-11-B under Catherine Overholtg Second- II-A under Barbara Geddesg Third-12-A under Ruth Hawley. In the Intermediate division, the winning teams were as follows: First --IO-A under Betty Parkerg Second-10-B under jean Callumg Third- C-1o-B under Lorraine Burd. For the Juniors, the winning teams wereg First-9-11 under Marion Humphriesg SCCO11Cl--Q-I2 under Gwynneth Cordeyg Third-9-10 under janet Ifowlie. X X an wk Mrs. Friedman: VVell, have you madeup your mind to stay in? Bernice: No, I've made up my face to go out. IO6 THE COLLEGIATE BASKETBALL Last year's basketball tournament was the scene of keen competition, especially in the intermediate and senior grades. First place in the senior division lgrades Il and Ilj was awarded to 13-A under Peggy Milne, while II-,A and 12-.-X came second and third respectively. In the intermediate division 10-B led by Barbara Biddlecomb came through as victors. followed by IO-DQIJ in second place and Io-Dtzj in third. For the juniors Jessie Mclntosh led her Q-IO team to victory, with 9-5 placing second and 9-7 third. This year we are trying out, in a very small way, an extension of our usual form of competition. Some time, during the basketball season, we plan to invite two or three class teams from St. Patrick's High School to play against the leading class teams in our own school competition. If this experiment proves successful we may, another year, extend it to include more activities. more schools, and more games. The G..-XA. was responsible for sending a representative of the school, Evelyn Aiken to Londo nCentral Collegiate where she tool: a course in official basketball. She tried and successfully passed the tests. The main purpose yy as that lfvelyn should help the girls of S.C.l. with basketball refereeing. BASEBALL 1945 flood weather and good sportmanship madeithis year's baseball tourna- ment highly successful. The championships were well contested. For the seniors, Ruby Lamb led her C-12 team to victory with Ixgflb placing second and C,-11-.-X third. C-IO-.AX under Anne Marciak triumphed over the other intermediate teams with IO-D second and IO-LX third. For the juniors, l'y'lO captained by lean Gray ranked first, with Q-12 second and Q-II third. GIRLS' BASEBALL Back Row tleft to rightl-AD. NYilloclq, D. Crawford, C. Barr, B. Taylor, R. Lamb, B. Lawrence, B, Humphries, l. Randall, A. Hill. ' Middle Row tleft to right!-J. li. Murray. S. Brooks, O. Purvis, B. Neubaer, D. Robert- son, A. Marciak, H. Hiclcin, Nl. Farris, T. Rowe. D. Taylor, J. Cater, J. Forbes, D. Dunn. Front Row tleft to rightl-J. Fowlie, D. Stewart, L. Brown, F. Ellis, J. Gray, P. Pringle, H. Sparling, D. Creasey. THE COLLEGIATE 107 l - l GIRLS' FIELDBALL Back Row fleft to rightl-M. Fraser, A. Finn, I.. Hurd, H. NIc.Girr, M. XYilson, DI. Palmer, N. Graham. Front Row tleft to rightl-Y. Marshall, H. Beer, I. lVl'ight, J. Sayers, Y. Racz, li. Grant, A. Capes, I. Thiorner. fSPEEDBALL, FIELDBALL AND CAPTAINBALL The Speedball, Fieldball and Captainball tournaments were rather disappointing. The grade nine girls were very enthusiastic captainball players. In the finals, however, there were some irregularities in the observance of this tournament's regulations, and it was decided by the Athletic Executive that the whole of the Captainball tournament be discontinued. It was hard to disappoint those who had played so eagerly but it was felt that the lesson in good sportmanship was even more important for the grade 9 girls. Only two girls qualified as otficials for Speedball, so it was impossible to conduct the schedule of Speedball games already arranged. Grade IO carried on a successful Fieldball tournament the winning team being C-10-Btzj. This team was led to victory by her captain, Jane Sayers. VOLLEYBALL ' - For the past number of years, our school mag has gone to press before the Volleball tournament has been completed. Last year, we had a very successful contest, and the girls participated with keen interest. In the Senior grouping, 13-A with Pat Hartley as captain, held first place. In second and third places, came I3-B. captain Barb Moore, and C-11-B, captain Shirley Price. C'IO-.Ax led the Intermediates, captained by Donna Holmes, and Io-D and Io-B, captained by joy Moore and Marjorie Young respectively, took second and third places. The juniors entered enthusiastically into the 108 THE COLLEGIATE contest, and 9-5 came out with top honours under their captain XVilda Iirandon with or S captained by Mary 1-lurr and Q-4 by Eila Kuosmanen taking :nd and 3rd places. Yolleyball holds interest for many in the school and it has recently been added to the list of games to he played at Com-te-coll on liriday evenings. The girls are looking forward to the 1946 contest with 1,-ntlmsiasm, and we hope it will he as successful as the one last year. BADMINTON AND DECK TENNHS ln the lmadminton and deck tennis tournaments, actually three types of games were played in four separate tournaments. Both grades 9 and IO played group deck tennis. grade II played group hadminton 1,1 playersj. and the senior grades. regulation badminton. Competition in all games was keen, made evident by the number of play-offs and ties at the end of the tourna- ments. ln the senior badminton tournament Florence 'lewitt's I2-.X team scored over ljtll, captain Bernice Friedman, and ISQZT, under Maxine l'almer. These teams came in second and third respectively after several exciting play-off games. The grade II pennant was awarded to 11-llq Il led hy Terais Hughes, with 1I4.X. under Anne Cowan ,taking second place, while 11-BQQJ, captain Ruth NYcst. was third. GIRLS' DECK TENNIS AND BADMINTON Llack Row fleft to right?-M. jones, F. Iewitt, L. LeNeve, Second Row lleft to right!-H. Millholland, Y. Morrison, I. Farris, E. Rutherford, T, H D Hughes, Maclean, R. Hawley, M. Hughes, li, Dove. llurd Row llett to riglitl-A. Capes, H. Mctlirr, N. Graham, M. XVilson. L. Burd, J. R Palmer, M. Bedard, fourth Row tleft to right?-J. Henderson, J. Plain, P. Knutt, J. Maness, J. Boulton, A. Rausa, X. Carter, B. Johnstone, M. Davitch. . T1-1E'Co'LLEc1'ATE' IOQ ' - The deck tennis tournaments raged hard and long. After many ties, C'IO-BIZ, under Marguerite IYilson succeeded in undoing IO-.-X, captain Sally Wilkinson, and IO-D, captain Frances Feargueg both teams acheived second place honours. Equally interesting were the junior games. The beginners .showed considerable skill and ability. The results were Q-6415 first, under jean Punchg 9-5, second, under Valma Trumibleg tied with joan Boulton's 9-6t2j team. The tournament offered the opportunity to officiate as well as play the games. In this way many benefited even more from the tournament. TRACK AND FIELD Once again, the girls had a successful field day competition which took place on October 9, 10, and II. The girls, in teams, participated in such events as high jump, broad jump, basketball shooting, and throwffor'dis- tance, softball pitching, and throw-for-distance and many varied relays. The winners 'in the senior division were: 13111 with captain Patricia Hartley finished on top, in second place was 134-:J with captain Fran XYhit- nell, and ILA with captain joyce Kent tool: third place. The interniedieate results were IOC under Mary Kingdom in first place: C-IO-:XIII with cap- tain Margaret Haddon was secondg and third was joan IYalker,s C-IO-:X In the junior division 9-8 135, captain Donna Young was iirstg 9-10 was second under Lois Browng and 9-S tij with captain Shirley Campbell was third. GIRLS' TRACK AND FIELD Back Row Cleft to rightl-M. Fox, M. Palmer, V. Hunt, J. Cowan, P. Hartley, H. Pass- more, B. J. Gray, L. Laughlin, J. Helliwell. Middle Row fleft to rightl-VV. Brandon, J. Palmer, I. Borthwick, E. Quosmanen, V. Selman, P. VVest, I. Isaac. Front Row Cleft to rightj-S. Scarrow, I, Saunders, P Armstrong. M, Brazeau, H. Peli- arik, I. Walley, P. Tuer, M. West. ' K IIO THE COLLEGIATE , ,fy ' I .2 Q I ,JJ i, , I N 4 1 f N 1 I . ,j f M M - A ., t . b, Xfgigx -W in, . by -l- W , T A I H f ' M - I ' V lil' X ' kill.: . T ' Ql,, n 14. ,fli It M -:fi EDITOR 'W ,, life' I , 1. sf Mike Turner um fx . V , v P cf, I ' ' V , .x ' vfmw ' WOSSA RUGBY This year thc S.C.l .and T.S. pruducecl a lmrilliant Senior XX-'Ossa Rugby team to represent it in the struggle for the XYOssa title. The end of the war lifted the damper on closed XYossa activities, and Our Team surged ahead for the Cliainpitmship unly tu be offset in the linal game hy the heavy Guelph team. The scintillating spirit possessed hy the lmys has seldom been equalled on rugby teams. Much of their success was due to the expert coaching and leadership given them lay Mr. Newell and Mike Clawson, Following is an outline ofthe seasun: f BUYS' ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION FrontAI'HJw Cleft to rightl-Jack Karn, Dean Hawley, Mr. O'Dcinohue, Neil Pole, Ross en. , Back Row qleft to 1'iglitJ-'l'w111 Kenny. Joe Hackney. Mr, Newell, Don Guthrie, L THE COLLEGIATE III CHEBR LEADERS Dereck Chate, Maxine Palmer, Marjorie Burgess, Ioan Cowan, Dorothy VVells, Joan Dauphineke, J. D. Maclntyre. September 28-The team journeyed down to Chatham for the opening game of the year. After a slippery battle the Sarnia team emerged victorious over Chatham Collegiate Institute 6-4. This gave-Sarnia her first game in the St. Thomas, Chatham, Sarnia group. ' October' 5-The St. Thomas Collegiate Institute team paid Sarnia a visit. The game was close and both teams showed remarkable fight and good spirit. The game was won by Sarnia with a slight edge of 4-3. October 12-The St. Thomas Vocational School was defeated by the locals I9-O at the Athletic Park giving the school three straight wins. October I7-The C.C.I. team paid Sarnia a return visit to be severely trounced 23-I by the locals. October 20-This date marked a colourful event in the yeari The Blue and White journeyed to Port Huron to meet the famed Red and VVhites of Port Huron. This 'was not a Wossa game but' has taken place down through a number of years of school history. When the dust settledion the field of battle we found ourselves defeated 27-2, the first defeat of the season. November 21-Back to Wossa activities. St. Thomas Vocational-met its second defeat from our team in St. Thomas with a score of 13-5. October 26-Marked the second close battle with St. Thomas Collegi- ate with the locals emerging victorious in their groups 2-1. This game was played in St. Thomas and many of the students went down to See the game. IIZ THE COLLEGIATE November 9-The school entered the quarter finals against Wfoodstoclc Collegiate in a sudden death game. ln the iirst three quarters of the game an almost certain victory appeared in NYoodstock's favour. The locals seemed Cold and unable to get going. XYith only a few minutes remaining, the boys with lots of fight and luck tied the score. After an overtime period the S.C.I. came out on top 7-6. November 16: The preceding victory sent the team on to the semi- final, sudden death game with XYindsor Vocational School, played in XYind- sor. This game was classed as the upset of the year, as we emerged on top 6-3. November 34: The S.C.l. had once again earned its way to the Purple Bowl, and faced the Guelph team with high spirits and hopes of clinehing the title. ln this game Sarnia met her first XYossa defeat of the season I8-9. as Guelph Collegiate carried away the XYossa Championship. This year we welcomed back many fellows from the Armed Forces, who contributed greatly to the team's success. The effort put forth and the FIELD DAY CHAMPS AND RUNNERS UP Standing-Reg. Fpraclbrolw, J. XValker, D. Lang, twinnersj. Sitting-N, Jolms, D. Spradbrow, frunners upj. THE COLL!-:GIATE II3 standing achieved are greatly admired by the student body. One 'for all and all for one-these are the fellows that carried the School Colours to the neld of battle. B. Smith- Smitty -end. H. Henry- Hank -end. Played against St. Pats and Port Huronj. G. Smola- Georgie -inside. J. Lewis- Big Louie -inside. Qjackj suffered a broken ankle in the early part of the season. bl. MCClymont- John -end, F. Dagg- Freddie -right half. I. Swartz- ferry -quarterback. Doug. Cole- Sandy -quarterback. L. Gladdy- Lee -snap. Don Mattingly- Mat --snap. Ross Cunni-ngham- Cot -middle. Roy Garrison- Roy -middle. XV. Marshall- lVes -centre half. Don Knowles- Sleep'y-end. Don Guthrie-- Gus!'--left inside. Neil Pole- Homer -flying wing. Stew. Duncan - Dune - Hying wing. XYillard Sloan- XYillie',-middle. S. MCCollum-''Stewiel'-iniddle. Dave Kilbreath - Fatso'! - centre half, who developed a bad knee in the second St. Thomas game. Dave Mc Crae-''Knobby -quarter- back. H. Young- Hank -flying wing. Neil Craig- Sihe -quarterback. lYalter l-3illoclcf XYalt -right half -who suffered a broken nose in the Port Huron game.- B. Phillips- Bill,-end. SENIOR 'VVOSSA FOOTBALL TEAM Front Row Cleft to righltj-L. Newell Ccoachl, S. MCC-olluni, R. Cunningham, D. Cole, L. Gladdy, F. Young, J. Swartz, R. Finley, W. Phillips, R. Garrison. Second Row fleft to rightb-Ml. Wilson. W. Marshall, N. Plole, D. McRae, F. Dagg. D. Kilbreath, W. Billick, J. Lewis, G. SflHOl2i, D. Knowles, J. McClyimont, R. Allen Qtrainerl GNMWTJ Mendy: How come you get five bullseyes? The range is .zo yards but your sights are set for IO yards. ' VVhitnell: See that partitionghalf-way doufn there? lliell, I'm bouncing them off that. vklkvkvk Mr. Langan: My wife can't figure me out. Can yours? Mr. Ritchie: I don't'know. She never mentions your name. 6 THE COLLEGIATE THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA Over a Cenlury of Banking Service Capital and Reserves - 536,000,000 W. C. McKinnon, Manager Sarnia Branch Compliments of BOWMAN ANTHONY LTD. WINDSOR - SARNIA - CHATHAM WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE AND GARAGE EQUIPMENT Sarnia Phone 220 - 221 fliompsonz l'd like to get n book. Librzlrinuz Smnctlming ligt or heavy? Bob: Dwesxft matter, I have Z1 car outside. fg '-if ESTABLISHED 1905 . S L 45 ,.....: n gp M ' l M h d' 1' . USICH CFC an ISC ' l, f aflncluding Such Famous Lines as - Q I, ll' il Holton and Collegiate Band Instruments - Slingerland Drums -- ff' Harmony and Stewart Guitars - Buffet, Nolslet, Cundy-Bettoney, f Woodwinds! - Mouthpieces by Holton, Selmer, Brilhart, Otto Link, fi Woodwind - Artist Electric Guitars - Bugles and Trumpets - xx Reeds by Conrad, Symmetricut., My Masterpiece, Martin Freres, Popularie - Selmer Kr Endurro Plastic Reeds - Black Diamond, Bell, Kaplan Strings - Music 8: Orchestra Stands - Accessories for all instruments. zlcsorry we do not have in stock NOW all items listed, but we are dealers of these high quality products. M STUDENTS' MUSIC CENTRE - THE M. GREENE MUSIC CO. 57 Queen St. E. Toronto, Ontario b.. H4 THE COLLEGIATE SENIOR BOYS' BASKETBALL TEAM Back Row Qleft to rightl-Harold Henry tassistant coachj, Jack Lewis, Dereck Chate, X'Yes Marshall, coach L, Aewell. Front Row Lleft to rightl-fAlf. Handy, Dan Drown, jerry Swartz, Norm Anderson. WOSSA BASKETBALL The spirit and determination shown by the boys in rugby was by no means lacking in the Basketbalfl season. The fellows who turned out for practices and played the games showed undying fight. After a tough battle with the Chatham team the Locals secured their group title and ad- vanced into the llossa Senior A semi-finals against London Central. The semi-finals were played off in two games, one here and one in London with total points to count. The outcome was a victory for the Londoners with a total score of 58-57. ,During the season there were many colourful games such as those against St. Stephens and Port Huron High. The boys on the team took ri keen interest in their work and gave themselves nick-names based on that famous fictional charter, Dick Tracy. They could never have gone as far as they did without the splendid leadership of coach Diet Newell, who faithfully held them to a scrimmage in the gym every night. THE TEAM Don Guthrie .... ..... c entre Prune Face Derek Chate .... ..... g uard Shaky Dan Brown ......... forward HB. O. Brown Norm Anderson .... forward Stone Face jerry Swartz ....... forward B, B. Eyes Ralph Backman .... forward Limpy XYes. Marshall ..... .,... g uard Itchy Alf. Handy ........ forward Flat TOp THE COLLEGIATE lI5 BASKETBALL t ' Exhibition ga1ne ivith St. Stephens of Port Huron 59-17 tfor Sarniaj in Sarnia December 18, 1945. - Chatham Collegiate Institute vs. Sarnia Collegiate Institute and Tech- nical School 23-19 tfor Chathamj in Sarnia Jan. 18, 1946. Chatham Collegiate Institute vs. Sarnia Collegiate Institute 81 Tech- nical School 24-24, in Chatham February 1st, 1946. Chatham Collegiate Institute vs. Sarnia Collegiate Institute 81 Tech- nical School 38-32 Qfor Sarniaj to win District 'Wossa Championship, in Chat- ham February 15, 1946. London Central Collegiate Institute vs. Sirnia Collegiate Institute 8: Technical School 33-31 Qfor Londonj in Sarnia March 12, 1946. London Central Collegiate Institute vs. Sarnia Collegiate Institute 8: Technical School 26-25 tfor Sarniaj in London March 15, 1946. XVossa Se- nior A finals. London won out 58-57 on round. Dk Pk lk bk Very Dumb Student fany resemblance to you is coincidentallz If a boy is a lad and the lad has a step-father, is the boy a step-ladder? JUNIOR BOYS' BASKETBALL TEAM - Back Row fleft to rightl-B. Baldwin, E. Haddon, W. Colotelo, R. Spradbrow, D. Corey, E. Bayduk, K. Grant. Front ROW Cleft to rightb-A. Pickering, Kimball, D. Hunt, D. Illacgillivray, B. Macdon- ald, G. Arblaster. II6 THE COLLEGIATE , 70,7 5.153 'wa pg. W , l..,,w fa-g1r,,....7.1 ' BOYS, SXVIMMING CHAMPS Standing-Tom Handy Llntermediatel, Ross Allan tSeniorD Sitting-Jack NVidner Qjuniorj, Alex. Grobovi Uuvenilej 'BC Mr. Marcy: Figures can't lie. For instance, if one man can build a house in twelve days, twelve men can build a house in one day. Puzzled Student: Then 2885 men will build it one hour, 17,280 men in one minute, and 1,036,809 in one second. I don't -believe they could even lay one brick in that time. Pk wk :xc if I suppose you've been in the Navy so long that you are accustomed to see legs? Stew Duncan: Honest, lady, I wasn't even lookin'.,' A bk x ak as Roberta: I'm sorry, Tom, but I'vc some bad news for you tonight. I am calling off our engagement. Tom: VVhy, what happened? Roberta: I visited a fortune-teller this afternoon, and she told me I am go- ing to marry a handsome man. THE COLLEGIATE ll7 ,,.-.J -5 I J f - ki? 1 fl 1 AX Ak Editor-Ross Cunningham CADETS - 1945-46 This year the Cadet Corps is receiving year-round training. Since early fall, A Company has drilled last period on XYednesday and B Com- pany has received instruction during the last period on Thursday. This year cadet training is not compulsory for Grade XIII and no time is allowed during training periods. As a result the Corps has operated fall and Winter under N.C.O.'s and instructors. Instruction periods this year are conducted under the expert guidance of Capt. F. E. O'Donohue, Capt. XV. B. Ritchie, Mr. Newell and C.S.M. Squires from M.D. No. I. The signallers have been practising diligently under the instruction of Capt. Ritchie. Capt. Ritchie has had several successful semaphore signal- lers and expects a class to try exams for the Senior Morse Certiiicate. SHOOTING 1945-46 ARMY CADETS AIR CADETS ' This year the range activities of the Army Cadets have been under the supervisionsof Mr. A. D. C. Billingley. . The most successful event of the season was the firing of at least 25 rounds by every cadet. Many Cadets were qualified as snipers with a score of 58 or more out of a possible 60 . Nearly 2oo fired over 34, which is regard- ed as a satisfactory score. In early fall a I2-'ITIHH team was chosen to represent the corps in vari- ous competitions throughout the year. They entered the Province of Ontario Challenge Shield 'Competition and now are engaged in firing a D.C.R.A. Com- petition in which several cadets are turning in high averages. Fourscadets were chosen to represent the corps in the F.O. Mendizabal Memorial Trophy Competition.. They were: Lt. Ross Cunningham, Lt. Davis Smith, Pte. jack Wfhitnell, Pte. Ar- thur Storey. H8 THE COLLEGIATE. AIR CADET SHOOTING Edited by I. Lynden This year the Air Cadets were late comers to the range. They did not get started till shortly after Christmas. However, they are improving rapidly and expect to have a good team ready shortly. They are entered in the D.C.R.A, competition and are not doing too badly. The following cadets were chosen to represent the Air Cadets in the shoot for the FO. Mendizabal Memorial Trophy: IYU. vl. Lynden, Cpl. A. Pickering, Cpl. T. Running, L.A.C. Bice. The Air Cadet range work this year has been under the able direction of Mr. Needham, an ex-R.C.A.F. armament instructor, who is now on the teaching staff of the school. A. R. MENDIZABAL MEMORIAL TROPHY This competition, fired on March 7, proved to be the lceeenest compef tition of the season. The trophy was ably won by ,lack lYhitnell with a high aggregate of 254 out of a possible 300, Runners-up were Ol. Lynden 252 and B. lYest 246. XYe extend our thanks to Mr. Billingsley, Mr. Needham and Mr. Men- dizazal for their promotion of range activities this season. CADET INSTRUCTORS Back Row Cleft to rightj-Mr. Newell, Mr. Billingsley, Mr. Little. Front Row fleft to rightj-Mr. Ritchie, Mr. O'Donohue. ' THE COLLEGIATE II9 5 LORD STRATHCONA COMPETITION This competition for the best shot in the ,school was won for 1944-45 by R. Cunningham with an aggregate score of 265 out of a possible 300. Unfortunately at the time of writing the competition for 1945-46 had not been fired. ANNUAL INSPECTION, MAY 1945 The Io2nd Corps, Royal Canadian Army Cadets, favoured by fair wea- ther, turned out in full strength to climax a very successful year by placing high in Cadet Corps of M.D. No. I. Highlights of the afternoon included the traditional route marchg the salute at Victoria Parkg a surprise visit by Brigadier Ernshawg a formal in- spection of sthe Corps by Major Youngg company and platoon drillg a signal- ling demonstration by Capt. XV. B. Ritchie and his signallers: an excellent display of mass P.T. arranged by Capt. F. li. O'Donohue and Mr. Newell. The ceremonies were concluded by the forming of the traditional square and the presentation of marksmanship medals, signalling certificates and officers pins. In short addresses, both Brigadier Ernshaw and Major Young .commended the officers and cadets on their splendid showing and un- excelled discipline. That evening the Corps sponsored the Annual Cadet Ball which proved to be one of the social highlights of the season. ARMY CADET RIFLE TEAM Back Row Cleft to rightj-Phil Morgan, Roy Garrison, Dan Young. S. D. Smith, Arthur Storey, Wal.t. Murray, Jack Whdtnell. Front Row Cleft to rightl-Don Lantz, Bob Marsden, 'Brill Colotello, Leon Bach, Ross Wise, jack Grooine. 120 Ti-is CoL1.eciAT1: LJ f ul O - G-.fivsgvxr Q rx s?IJ'J.2 '90 Srff-0c',,l'f F onli AMPU C TW LK --.-s.-Y-.Nrslw-ev .w.,.,.,.,.e,,,e,.,.,.e,-,-,-e,-.-,-e,-.-.s.-.-.N--.-.---.A-.fin DAFFYNITIONS Oxide-outer Covering -of an ox. Secret-the shortest distance between two women. h . I Chesternelcl-piece ot furniture made to hold three people with 3.11 111111 at C3011 end. Love-one game not postponed because of darkness. GCS:-ill'-11 wonian with a strong sense of rumour. Pedestrian-inzin with a ear and a family of high school boys. ' Honieworlc-aii unpopular way of getting Slllaft. Lll.i..inui-something that evaporates when the sweater is too large. LATEST SONG HITS It's 11 Grand Night for Singing ,.,... Club El Colegio No Can Do ...,4........,....----.------------- -v -,---4'--- S klll Temptation .,....... .......-.,--,------.----- P Oft HUYOU I XVish I Knew ,..,.... The Answers-let'S S66 your paper Illl Buy That Dream ...................- GFHKIUHTIOH Autumn Serenade .......,......,..-.... SCIIOOI Yell?- l'1n Gonna Love that Guy ...... Marilyn Fox Our State Fair ,.....,.,...Y......i........ Brigd611 F3-if 165 been a Long Long Tinie .... XXf.O.S.S.A. Some Sunday Morning .,.....,.. Cadet Church Parade Slcwly .,..,.,...., XVe move from class to class lf I Knew Then ,,...... Fifth Forin repeaters Dig You Later .................,.,......., At Bonr1er's One'-sey Two-sey. ..... Mr. Marcyis Math class HEARD COMING HOME FROM THE PLAY IN LONDON -But why did Julius Caesar? -Put Barford off the bus! -STOP THAT ll l I l -Down with the ehaperones! -On the Atcheson, Topeka and Etc. M -Pass 'er baekf -No, I will not sit on your knee! -Have some peanut brittle? Girlsz, Remember. you only get out of a sweater what you put into it! -reev--Y-Jshlslw-:ee-A++v------v-v-v-v-- ---. -Y-:ee .-.-.-.-.-.-NW-v-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-v-.-.- -NG WHAT'S THE NAME OF THAT SONG? DEAREST DARLINGZ IT'S A LONG. LONG TIME, since I'ye had LOVE LETTERS from NANCY IVITH THE LAUGHING FACE. I thought she was an ANGEL but she said IF I LOVED YOU, you'd have to PUT THAT RING ON MY FINGER? Since Iyin no DOCTOR. LAIVYER OR INDIAN CHIEF, I BEGGED HER to wait. Then I warned her that SOON, A DOOR 'WILL OPEN if she tells JOSE GONDOLES to DIG HER LATER in the MIDDLE OF MAY, and instead of being TOGETHER TILL THE END OF TIME, I,LL WVALK ALONE. SLOXVLY she realized that I was just a KID NAMED JOE in a BLUE SERGE SUIT and left nie listening to a SYMPHONY. On the table I found a STORY OF TIVO CIGARETTES and set- tled down to read and listen to the NIGHT- INGALES. I CAN'T BEGIN TO TELL YOU that while I LET IT SNOXV ,IT INAS A GRAND NIGHT FOR SINGING. SHE NVALKED IN singing CI-IICKERY CHICK and we had a discussion of JOSE. I BEG- GED HER to LET HIM GO, LET HIM TARRY, 'but she sent me DOWN THE ROAD A PIECE, BECAUSE I'M A SQUARE IN THE SOCIAL CIRCLE. Then I NVlISH I KNEW how I got along while NIGHT AND DAY I was HOME- SICK. I toofk the LONG VVAY HOME. on the ATCHESON, TOPEKA AND THE SANTA FE. I was BEGINNIN-G TO SEE THE LIGHT when you, LAURA, started VVALKING IN MY DREAMS. Now I just DREAM ALNVAYS. DARLING. YOU AND I, and I'LL BUY THAT DREAM. THE MORE I SEE YOU MORE AND MORE I ask ISN'T IT KIN- DA FUN? GOOD-NIGHT WHEREVER YOU ARE. I LOVE YOU TRULY, YOURS, TEMPTATION. His Plaintive Wail Even my best friend wouldn't tell me- so I failed! THE Co1.LEciATE l2l LATEST MOVIES lost Weekend ..,,.,.......,,.,.,.,..... Before Exams The Spiral Staircase ......., In 'the Girls' gym Wonder Man ..........v..................... MT. Sinclair Forever Amber ,,,.,...,,,,.. Traffic lights after midnight Don't Fence Me In ...... .......... H omework On the Carpet ........,......, .......,... T he Office People Are Funny ......, ...... R uth Hawley the Clock ................i. i .....,...,. 3 .40 p.m. The Awful Truth ..... ..........,,. R eports -I-lold That Blonde ............,....... Al Pickering Anchors Aweigh ........................ Stew Duncan this Love of Ours ...., -,,. Tom and Roberta we WONDER . . . T -If there will ever be another Mrs. Clax- ton-sweet memories. -lf Miss Taylor will ever succeed in breaking up noon-hour sessions at the 2nd Hoor lockers on the corner. -Which was more fun-the out-of-town games or the bus rides home? H-m-m-ni? -VVhat the attraction in Port Huron is- eh, Clancy? tas if we didn't knowj. -Where Davie Kilbreath learned to sing so cutely. -What S.C.l. will 'be without J.D. -What would happen to Mr. Dennis ,if things were quiet. THINGS WE COULDN'T DO WITHOUT -Wossa games. -Long assemblies. -Conitecall. -Square-dancing in gym. -The hubba-hubba clulb. -Mr. Sinclair. -Our regular sing-song. THINGS WE COULD DO WITHOUT -Essay contests. -People who up the down stairs. -Homework. -People who pry lockers open. ORCHIDS TO . . . -Mr. Sinclair for 'swell co-operation. -Mr. Sperling for his sing-songs. -Returned vets for pepping up the school. -Bob Thompson for doing all his home- work. -Mr. Newell's Wossa teams. -Mr. Johnston for being a swell guy. -Miss Heasman for asking John Battram if he was Gods gift to woman. -Those behlind the wonderful Club El Co- legio. Mr. I..a.ngan's Special You heard the one about the man who called his lighter gopher because every time he wanted -to light it he had to go fur a match. ONIONS TO . . . - -Members of the staff who disapprove of ALL extra-curricular activities. -'1 hose who won't co'0perate with a swell janitorial staff. -People who get red crosses on their lock- ers. --lnose in-embers of the junior assembly who ,don't know how to behave. -The boys who skipped square-dancing periods with the girls. BON VOYAGE fBy Obviously Anonymousl It was a desperate chance he was taking, and he was fully aware of its graveness. Still undaunted, he crept stealthily from the monstrous building and plunged ,into the temporary haven of a shadow. Fearing recognition, he turned up his coat collar and gazed hxedly at his feet. He walked at a normal pace, feigning non- chalance to avert suspicion. No one must perceive his act. ' As he turned at a wire fence, he cautious- ly peered over h-is shoulder. Was he being followed? Yes-but the knowledge of this only seemed to encourage him. Now his steps grew quicker and his stride lengthened. One block and then another passed beneath his feet. Before a rather dingy building he stopped. opened the door, and disappeared into the depths followed by the pursuing one. ' He took out a cigarette and offered one to the other boy,-they had safely reached Bonner's. ED'S NOTE-This does not refer to any actual boys who patronize Albert's. PHILOSOPHY -all girls regret losing their youth unless they can get another one immediately. -the downfall of a boy is usually caused by the upkeep of some girl. -to say the least is not the girl's way of doing it. -a girl doesn't have to be a pianist to make a play for you. -a girl who wears cotton stockings doesn't need to keep her door lockedg but the girl who wears nylons gets all the runs and breaks. -laugh and the class laughs withi you, but you stay in after school alone. IIC Again- When they put a Christmas tree up in his room were they looking for Christmas bonus marks? And even more important, did they get them, Mendy? Pleasantries exchanged over the wire are very often phoney! 122 THE Cot.LEo1ATE MODEL BOY AND GIRL OF THE S.C.I. ........DANNY B ROWN Figure ,.... . BOY GIRL PAT HARTLEY MARILYN FOX ,PAULINE SLATER NORMA FERGUSON HELEN PASSMORE BETTY BYRNS, ALICE MACFARLANE Clothes ,,,, ........ I IM BRUNTON Hair ,,,,,,,, ........ RA Y MCDERMID Eyes ,,,,,,,,,...., ........ D AVIE KILBREATH Smile ...,.......,... ........ C LETE SLOANE Friendliness ..,,, ....... B ILL WILKINSON Personality ,.,,,,, ....... H ANK HENRY XVittiness ...........,.,... ....... B OB NIOHOLSON Dancing Ability ,.., Athletic Ability Intelligence .......RALSTON ANNAND ........DEAN HAVVLEY ,,,,.,.NORM ANDERSON MARY PATON DOROTHY VVELLS RUTH HAWLEY BERNICE FRIEDMLAN Oh, How True! Under the swinging street-car strap The homely girl she stands And stands . . . and stands AFad . . . and stands. IVe notice a lot of yellow sweaters among the boys. See what you started, Mr. Drn- ford lVe' lYe' NYC' lVe' NVe' lVel NVe IVe' l'Ve' NVe' lVe' lVe' lVe' we NVe' NVe' XVe' NVe' NVe' We' NVe' XVe' lVe' We' XVe' IVe' P v e ve ve ve v e e ve ve v e ve ve v e ve ve ve ve ve V e v e ve ve ve ve ve ve ve WHAT FIFTH HAS GOT got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got got Aiken but no pains Cot but no beds Dot but no dash Allen but no Fred Bell but no buzzer Byrns but no scalds Hank but no hair Dunc but no doughnuts ,loan but no Crawford Ralston but no shredded Gray but no Rinso Dean but no college Gert but no Gravel Danny but no Kaye Sine but no washroom Shanks 'but no mare Bareknees but no shorts Foxy but no wolves C???J Caesar but no translation Barb but no wire Max but no Rosenbloom Don but no juan Anderson but no Hans departs but no matriculation Passmore but no graduates to come -ba-ck next year anyway. MM, WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF . . . -Mary Jamieson got to school on time? -Mr. Trietz lost his sense of humourf?j -John Bradley stopped winking at girls? -The boys outnumbered the girls in Spe- cta . -Tom Kenny gave up loud ties? -Pat Hartley stopped ichevgring gum? -The girls started 'taking Tech? -Barb Srnitht ran out of men? -Girls stopped being late from gym? Minis ter's Sermon Skiing on the Sabbath, or Are You Young People Backsliding on Your VVeek- ends? Then there was the girl who followed the sprinkling cart 10 blocks to tell the driver that his wagon was leaking. Did you know the fellow that was so dumb that ,he thought stagnation was a. country for men only? Sign on a Hilltop Manor NVe'd better wash the windows. mother, the neighbors are straining their eyes. And what about the sailor with the Tar- zan eyes? They swung from limb to limb! Speaking of Bus Rides Cas nobody was, but let's,l: NVe hope the rumours about the trips home from the various games aren't true. Ba-a-a-a . Did Mr. Langan get a license to shoot his little lambs wh-en they give him silly an- swers? She was only an Indian's daughter but she certainly knew how ! OI1, Corn I I call my girl real estate because she means a lot to me! Remedy for Insomnia Try sleeping on the edge of the bed- you might drop off. REMEMBER? Who remembers when we used to rest on Sunday instead of Monday? fi-'HE COLLEGIATE 123 N IIOGDEMIS N I'm 'through with girls, They cheat, they lie, They prey on males Until we die. They tease and tempt, And drive us to -sin . . . Hey! Look at the blonde That just came in! How often in the stilly night I've barked my shiins on every flight, And marked the irony .of it, That I, and not the lamp, was lit. Short Story Curious fly, Vinegar jug. Slippery edge, Pickled bug! Art Fortey's Dream VVhen I am dead please. bury me, Neath a ton of sugar, neath a rubber Lay me to rest in a new machine, And water my grave with gasoline. Memories !- I! Flunked in Physics, failed in Math, I heard him softly hiss, l'd like to find the guy who said That ignorance is bliss! Silas Clam Lies dead on the floor- He tried to slam a Revolving door. VVh-en looking for that certain girl, Here is a bit of caution, Be sure she's one who knows the ropes- The kind you ling your clothes on! tree, To Those Who Don't Care WHO See Them A lover's loved by all the world, And all fall prey to cupid, But public romance is absurd, It's never smart-it's stupid. . I often pause and wonder At fate's peculiar ways For nearly all our famous men lVere horn on holidays. The Tree Toads A tree toad loved a she-toad That lived up in a tree. She was a three-toed tree-toad, But a two-toed toad was he. The two-toed tree toad tried to win The th-ree-toed's friendly nod: For the two-toed tree toad loved the ground The three-toed tree toad trod. But vainly the two-toed tree toad tried- He couldn't please her whim. In her tree toad bower. with her v-tee power The she-toad vetoed him. l've never been dated, l've never been kissed. They said if I waited No man could resist The lure of a pure And innocent miss- The trouble is-l'm fifty. A green little student On a green little day Mixed some green, pretty chemicals In a gree11 little way. The green little grasses Now tenderly wave On the green little chemist's Green little grave. Compliments of CITIES BUS SERVICES LIMITED 124 THE COLLEGIATE Dim spiral shades In crystal glades- The sun is going down. A cricket hums, 'I he wan moon comes To light your gay new gown. You have no fear As I move near- Your smiling lips are free. But soon you'll find It's best to mind The wolf instincts in me. Ode to One-Arm Drivers Onward they rushi, Heedless they whirl, XVith a head full of mush And an armful of girl! KVhy do I stand when the moon is high, NVitli my arms outstretched to the starlit Sky, kVhile on my lips is a wordless cry, XVhy do I do it?-I'm nuts, that's why. CHOICE ITEMS FROM OUR SCI-lO0L.FRONT CORRESPONDENT YVhat returned vet is causinggquite a ilutter among the girls from third form up? Brown seems to bei a favourite colour th-is season. How are the llB. girls making out in the reform of Cletus Sloane? Aw. come on, Clete, be a good boy. 2F 5 211 'll ' One of our senior lads is turning quite gray, Too close contact with a blonde maybe? XVho are the rubber boot thieves in the school-have you lost any rubbers lately? 221 3 Is Miss XVilton trying to reform Allie MacFarlane with these constant little chats? XVhy docs a certain fourth former spentl Su many evenings at Aileen Gordoifs? Do- ing homework, Freddie? sa if s' -2 VVe Wonder why they haren't got janet Helliwell writing this column? '34 'E 4' S4 Miss Ramsden's mixed square-dancing classes were certainly a lot of fun. How about that, Mr. Newell? Q . 4' 4 -. 44 NVe were amazed and gratified by Mr. Langan's unexpected appearance at a recent sweater hop. NVe didn't see him cutting any rugs, though! S: if 'E Se We hear that for every' day that Nicholson doesn't use a bad word he receives a penny from Barford and Hackney. Pretty safe proposition, eh, fellas? Pk is vi: ak YVhy was Mike Turner wall-:ing clown the hall one morning with one shoe on and the other heaven knows where? VVho was the dub who asked Mr. O'Donahue, Sir, do we wear our gym shorts? on the day they were square-dancing with the girls? Did anyone- see the bub'bles at the XVoodstoclc game? Who had soap for lunch? Who was the 'blonde Don Lantz was seen talking to the day of the game in Port Huron? Know any more, Don? How come there are so many tirst form girls who know Cot Cunningham? Maybe his motto is Get 'em early and train 'em right! I We hear Jim Brunton drove home from St. Tltonias in an hour after a football game. . . P s it true girls. THE CoLLEG1ATE I25 1- 1 Id 'U 3. , o Q :.. W 'JJ +-1 L- '- '5 2. 2 . Q 'H A E 9 , :vi . . f. . - - 'U 1- ' 2-0 'E -. - U9 'T 'S G5 I H : - if rv I 3 , .J Q, Q , , .,. fa O rv ,E 9 2 -- a -- O - H 4 o O 13 5 I 1- N 3 to - 1 2 CJ 'T' Q-1 Q C 'U , ' : 'D H GJ : 3 ii. H 3 f- O S 1 br 14 15 -S 5 3 3 w 1. E , Q S9 15 V1 'G l E2 -5 E S. ' ' 1-. O .2 1 L3 'S Q A :- 2 2 2 5 .E Q -5' :H .4 : .sz ' - U 2 A 2 : 1 .. a 3 s A -- o -1 ' I.. 5 .: 5: E ' if ' C 51 -5, au. Q O S2 H V1 4-4 U LJ --7 ns 5 2 tl: U3 fu U1 'U 'Q ' N H Us . -- , ,Q - , gg '-' N 51' EE fe 5 1.1 F J: rc rv 9' P' ,. cvs - f' Jn -1 I' ' 1... , L-4 ... ' ' E-1 9 IT' E1 Y P 9 4 5 r 9 93 F' r' F H ?' E3 C F , - Q - N : : I . - - - - - - - - - - ULTIMATE FATE L.-1 4.1 1 5911 L ttlc M C0111 eco - o1'd B1 .-. 1-4 v-1 .4 4.1 1-1 CHC? fic ,- ., .-1 1.. 1... ..-1 1-4 jz111or at CHOK I Co eg ate of Er tor AMBITION -.4 10A .-1 f-1 --4 Car ct Da lce Nrt st -4 Bl? X ..1 r .... -1 +4 ... K0 egej eco 1d Va 1 -. Ral o Tech 1 c1an I-T-1 Des g1er CHIEF WEAKNESS ... N1e Grade Gof 1 Ca 1ata a Park 4.1 v-1 Leon Mum c fCo egepj 18' PCxC Sweaters Ye om 1-1 C ot1es ALIAS .-. Ped 1 LJ Peg 1 1 JYHC C T115 ,... Gra 1 1111 NAME .-1 .-.. D-1 Manon Hu 11pl11'1es 1 Ra 1lc1 B v-4 .-1 ... Nor 11a Ferguso 1 r-4 Grace Keats S 111t1 Davls Ma11e S nc a r .-. .-. ,.. Alex Grabov1 1 tO james Brun au ine S ater ........., S ate .................. Auburn, Please ..,.,.,........ nterior -Decorator .. House Pain er's Wi e... jerry Swartz ..,,,,,,,... Sclmookie ........ Fcotbal Bench ............,.. IPediat1-ician Swartz Eeo11o111y .. 1 , ' 1 1' .. . ....,........,...... i1 ...................... ..........., ........ ..... . . 1 '. i ' - L, ., ill 1 '1 ................ 'ill ..................... l ..,......,....,.,....,................ .ind yrcn Ne son ..ICaddy . .. .. '- Mario11 Lunam .......... Lunie ................ Living ....,.........,..............,.... l 1 .. 1 ll .. John MacGi ivray .. Jack ...,........1...... Has He Onef .................. 1 i .... .. 1111 .1 .. -' Maxine Pa mer ..,...,... Max ................... Curves .........................,....... Cl1iclre11's Nurse ........ P11-up Cir ,.., ., jack Lewis .,,,,,,.,,,,..,,, jig Lewle ........ C0111111erciz1l Glamazon . XNfi1111i11g Ball earn T- ,,,4,,rr., ,A 1 1 ..... 1' . .,............-.. l 1' .1.1.....,...... f- -' .11 .. 3 51 Lewis .. 'l'1ysco11atl1ic H- Dan Brown ....,........... Danny ,.,,.,...,,,,, Basic ball .,.,,................,..,. Pl1,'sco-A11:1lys .. Wulf-Ifafivllf Rutl1 I- awley ..,,..,....... Ruins ,........,...... Gym. ............Y....................... 7. Teac1cr ., AMS' A1110 iC ASICS- W Leon Bock .......,,.,...... Atom ,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,, CO1lliCS .....................,......... Elec rician ., .Tliillillg alfillf BLINJSH-A ,,,,..,,,...,. P i .,,,.,,.,,,,,,,, .,..........,,...............,...,,, A 11-5. Bock ., Jomics ........ 5- ' 1 1 ' 1 .,.,,.,,..,., 1 ,lcd ......,,.,,,,,,,,,,,, -i ...,,.,..,..,,.,,,.,,,,i,,,,,,,,, A110 her Irerbi Pla:fi11gi11 Assembly...- Qf. And,-QW'5 Pickering i l i ............ 1 1 ........,,,,,,,,., i 1' 1'i1 ll , ,4,, ' ll .,A,, ,, 1 ll' .. S 1 1 4 4 li Wiliam Boyd .....,...... Bil ..,,...,.,..,.,.,,,. Har111o11ica ,..,.,,,,.,,..,,,,,,,,,, 1311115011 ,,,,, 1, Til Aoyzl ..............,....... . ' 'Seater i11 Pul1l'Q ,ib- H ' Frances Whitne .,,. Fran. .....,............ Men ,.,,.,,,.......,...,,,,,..,.,,,,,,,,, Engglish Teacher ,,.,,,. rary Story I1 our ....... .. . ' ............ l .................. fll ' ' ........,.,. r i 1 i ' 1 ..... 1 i A oreign G. 11 VVriter for A Bernice Friedman .... Bareknees ....... ,oclcer at Noon .......,..... , Corre-5po11de11t .,,. Collegiate .,.... f 1 ,,,,...... '1 .......,......,...... l l ...........,..,,..,.....,,,,,,,, iA1 ,,,1 'li ll i ,, 126 THE COLLEGIATE I Ross Cunningham Bernice Friedman Mike Turner .....,........... Ralph Barford ..,.,..,,.... , Max Palmer ...... Jim Brunton ....v,..,.,,..A,,. Marg. Borthwiek john Bradley ....wv..,...,,,. Pat Norsworthy .. Doug. Bayne ..... So-Ed Club ......w 9. 65. 35. will XYILL i The Mooretown Special ....,. Languages .,............,.,..,.......... Assembly Announcements ..... Assembly Announcements .... Trig, .,,,.r,..,,..,,.,....,,..,,,,,.,,.... . My Late Slips My Height Yw,... Geography .,,,,, Half My Marks Qhort-sightedness More El Cnlegios Dan Brown ....i,, .w...,... B ly Army Boots .,rr 7, Marilyn Fox .....e ,.,.eeee. 1 ly Appendix ......... .. Tom Brock ,r,..wvw ,...,eo,, 3 ly Cadet Uniform ...,iwo Y Zvla HOllaway ...........,, Aly Hair Rinse ,,,,. Dean Hawley ,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Tech, ,.,,,,,,,,.,4,,,,.,,,,,,, ,A Don Hunt .,...v................. My Sport Column ,,,., Marjorie Skerratt ....,... f'Bells of St. Marys . Neil Pole ll.......,v...,....,,.., My Father's Store ..... Bet Byrns .,.v.. .,,.,.... R ly Drawings .....rr ,lack Lewis ,....,.. ,......,.. A rsenic ......,,.....,.,.,,,,,.,,,,,,,.,, Ffall llvhitnell .v........,.... The Key to My Heart ..rr... Ed. Bagley ...,..., .....,... I 2 doz. Chess Boards Janet Helliwell ,,,,.,,r,s,.,s A Heargc ,,-,-,.,v,,,,.,,44....,,,-... Barry Bell ,.,,,,,4,,,,. 'Virginia Hunt ..... Hope Millholland Helen Karn .....,....i Helen Passmore ,. John MacGillivray ....,,...My Seat in French Classu... Rt Jyy' dy Rubes ,,,,....., My Braces ....,.... My Muscles ,,,,.,,.,,r,s,,,. My Latin Translation ..,,,. Biology lYorms ...,...... . TO Future Students Ralston Annand Barford Nicholson Miss Martin Mr. Coles . Joyce Cameron Those who take the , Periods Fred Mitchell-so we can both pass Exam. Presiders Norm Anderson Mr. Treitz Barnum fi Bailey Elaine Gray My Father Llyal Smith Frank Sinatra 3 Block Limit Varga 13's Ball Team 'XYhoever XYants It Mr. Marcy Stew Duncan-to ....,....follow his car ..,.,..Me-llll need it. Arthur Murray My Dentist Jack lVright -.,. Class of '49 Posterity THE COLLEGIATE 127 55 1 D Mclnty re Does th1s llpSt1Llx come off easlly P Salesglrl Dope Not It she puts up 1 hoht Doctor H111 ITI 1n Hou certamly h1ve icute append1c1t1s Q15 L Oh Doctor you H1tter mel Irate Church VX omen XX hy don t you Lrrest that au ful 11ud1st colon, tl11t lb d1sgrac111U the DC1g'l'lDOfl100dp Shernff I 11 ould but lt lb very hwrd to Het any thx 1g O11 them Mrs Coxx an Anne d1dn t I see you loss thwt boy you had dated last nmht? Anne XX ell 1110111 he feebly tr1ed to loss me and you told n1e to alxx us help the feeble Dot Bulman ust tlnnlx l1e tr1ed to put hls arm around me three tunes llst nlght Zol'1 hollow ay Gad' 1yh1t a11 arm' XX hen the boss told De1elx to tllte 1 lesson from the busy bee l1e st IN ed out '1ll mght 1x1th hxs honey Pttrol Ofhcer Cto occupants ln pirlted cwrj Don t you see the sxffu FINF FOR PARKING? 'Xnderson Yes and I agree Ur B1LlSl'1 to orchestrij Nou ue NX1ll1Jl'1y Rule BI'1t311I11El Ross Allen Great Scott' I just played that' J Q 'Ae f ' sf R f 1 I 1- 'I' 0 1 QQ ft ' : Q .' 1 Ib' . - v - , Q . Y I .' .: , , ' z . if ak fx x T I 'J 1 Y, I - Y '. K , Q - b U Pk Plc PF if . , . . ' . z . ' f .. 1' ' b . : fl' , , ' 1 fzy' I :nf Pk if wk 1 zj' ' ', ' 1' L ' ' 1- :sf if 1: :lf 7 ' ' ' 2' . f , 2' ak ac 11: wk r t ' r I ' r -' 1 . . . - .U ,H , 1. W4 ' .!7 1 -1 : , . X :sc X xc 1. ' C- cz- ff . ' ' 'X' l28 k THE CoLLEciA'rE ist Darkie: How did you get all that, soot all over your coat? 2nd Ditto: Dat ain't soot-datls dandruff. Dkikblfllf . Tom Sinclair tat S.C.I. dancej: Come on Joy, let's back to the car. Think of all the fun we're missing. y 4: 4: Pk Pk Ralph Backman: Do you use harpoons? Dorothy Wfells: No, my hair stays in place naturally. Pk ev: Pk HK Madsen: How come you write so slowly? Bill McKay: My girl can't read very fast. bk . Pk 4: 4: In class during a discussion of driving, a student was asked to give an exam- ple of a driving hazard. Cot Cunningham Ljust waking upj: XYell, I know of a. man who broke his leg while swinging at a golf ball. Pk Pk 4: Pk Katherine Skerrat Qtranslating Latinj: O, how often she delayed . . . she delayed just when . . . just when . . . Mr. Southcombe: just when she couldn't see her notebook. 4: 4: wk Hs I'm cutting quite a iigure said Marg. Allen as she sad on a broken bottle. bk Pk 4 Pk Young Man: Pop, what are women? Father: XVOIHCI1 are what we marry, son. Y.M.: XYe don't get much choice do we? 4: It 4: Pk Dave McRae: Betty. I dislike telling you, but last night at the party your sister promised to become my wife. Can you ever forgive me for taking her away? Betty B.: Shucks, that's what the party was for. Dk as Pk 4: Dean Hawley arrives in at .2 a.m. Mrs. Hawley: lVell, what does the clock say? Dean: 'Cock shay tick-tock. Cow shay moo-moo. Pushy shay meow- weowf' And big bear go wuff-wuff-wufff' 4: Pk Pk 4: Atomic Bomb: Device that blows pieces into pieces. A if 4: 4: Pk Mary L.: I hate to be pawed over and kissed. Jack Groom: Qkay, I'll kiss you hrst. 4- 4: 4: Pk Bill Rankin: I had an awful fright last week. Joe Brunton: Yes, I saw you with her. 4: 4: Pk 4: Doug Cole: Are you fond of indoor sports? Marg Capes: Yes, if they know when to go home. 4: 4: 4: PF - Mr. Marcy freviewing I-I.C.F. and L.C.M. quickly turns to Storeyj: L.C. what? Art fbewilderedj: Elsie the Cow? gg! --4 THE COLLEGIATE 129 Mrs. Ferguson: Have a good time dear, and be a good girl. Norma: Mother, will you make up your mind? sk as ff :sf joseph ! Yes, Ma? Are you spitting in the gold iish bowl? No-but 1,111 coming dang close ! County Constable: Pardon, miss, but swimming is not allowed in this lake. NVhy didn't you tell me before I undressed? asked Barb Smith. CC.: lVell, there ain't no law gain' undressin! :sf 11: fs as Barry: Here's a pint of Chanel for your birthday, Ev. , Ev.: Gee, thanks Barry, but it's so expensive a drain would have been enough. B.B.: VVell, I guess I'm just one of those fellows who doesn't give a dram. ' se se :lc ag ' Lloyd Dennis: Please pass me in History Miss Harris, I'm only a poor boy trying to get ahead. Miss ri.: lVel1, if you ever get one, hang onto it. :fa 7F :nf as Dean Hawley: The girls around here are biased. Gladdy: Yeah, buy us this and buy us that until we're broke. X wk :sf :sf Marg. Hamilton: I use my diary a bit differently than other girls. Paul Soper: Howls that? Marg.: I fill it out a year ahead and try to live up to it. Frank Price: Did you ever take chloroform? Bill Spence: No, who teaches it? if ak It wk Mr. Dennis: Now you all know what a molecule is. Davis Smith: Most of us do sir, but perhaps you'd better explain it for the benefit of those who have never been up in one. :sf :oc :sf Sf Miss Taylor: Alan, conjugate the verb to laugh. Pick: Je smile, tu giggle, il laugh, nous roarons, vous splitez, ils burstent. wk as ar X - Karn: Have you a speedometer on this car? Fortey: don't need one. If I go forty miles an hour the lamps rattle, at 50 the whole car rattles and if I go above that my dental plates rattle. Pkvkllfif Alf Handy: She loves to dance-dancing is in her blood. Ray McDermid: She must have poor circulation-it hasn't reached herl feet. 130 - THE COLLEGIATE Gently he pushed her quivering shoulders back against the chair. She raised beseeching eyes in which faint hope and fear were struggling. From her parted lips the breath came in short wrenching gasps. Reassuringly he smiled at her, BZZZZZZZ went the dentistls drill. He gazed adiniringly at the beautiful dress of the leading chorine. NVho made her dress? he asked his companion. UIIIH not sure. but I think it was the police. Iireshie Fran I-Iaas: Mania, he followed ine home. Can I keep him? FF ai: Pk :sf .lack Iiarn: Your daughter is going to marry me, sir. Mr. Urquhart: XYell, what did you expect, hanging around our house every night? Ahie: Fadder, you told ine you would give me a dollar effery time I got a A on iny' report. l got two last week. Iiadder: XYell, here's two dollars, ,-Xhie. Now quit studying so niuchg itis bad for you. - if wk if if If Mr. Dent tells you that water, leeched through ashes is lit for a beverage, don't lmelieye hiin. lt is a lye. 4: wk sk nk Iiatlwer tsternlyl : Young man, I saw you put your arms around my daughter last night. kIcClyn1o11t: I suppose you noticed how she struggled too. X X l I I I ' f I X X tl I I It fl I NX. i t all tIfMi.1'it- Xxx g t,.V 5 ,b ggfg, N , I K .v i ii Vlg E' A-'7 I In f, I Slit at it-MT' I ll ll . II-li i g ,. . it f it ' ' uit Y I-ill' 'Lf,1L .. . . Ltr!- Y Y' ' L - -1' 1-Q,74 i .'f,S?:ll' A ,Z i s i.. 'Ill ., ill ee '-Xq1,.1f:.:.f l'v faL2rv.,.fiiri if y . .HE E THE COLLEGIATE QW T1-IE COLLEGIATE NATIO AL CLUB Al Your Service Since 1917 SARNIA'S FINEST RECREATION CENTRE Christina Street Right Through to Front Street NATIONAL CIGAR STORE FRESH TOBACCOS - HUMIDOR STOCK ROOM DELICIOUS MALTED MILKS . Phone I07I Manager-J. M. Harris UNITED CLUBS LIMITEID CONCESSIONAIRES ESTABLISHED-1923 Phone 3331 President-M. G. Harris NATIONAL CLUB BILLIARDS I4 Superb Tables I4 THE FINEST BILLIARD ROOM IN WESTERXN ONTARIO Phone 3576 Manager G M Hams MACK S RESTAURANT Meet Your Frzends Here 24 Hour Servrce SPECIALIZINC IN CHOPS STEAKS A LA CARTE Phone 1999 Manager Bergos NATIONIAL CLUB BARBER SHOP Three Chaus No Long Walls Chrrstlna Street Manager L Peffers NATIONAL BOWLING ALLEYS 8 Smooth Fast Alleys 8 Phone 3718 Managers-Cummlng Bros . 1 llL'Zl1'CSlI ,XS l wri THE COLLEGIATE The Joe Griffith Shop Opp. City Hall Ferguson - Brodie SHOE SHOP Smart Shoes for Men and Women Linens - I-Iosiery l.. Lingerie - Cloves opp. city Hall Phone 631 BARRONNS FLOWER sHoP Greeting Cards Flowers for All Occasions 177 N. Front St. Sarn PHONE 48 Compliments of CHAMBERS BARBER SHOP in FRONT STREET iilc on lil . 1Jl'C1JZll'll1g' the morning eggs. the soldier wrote his girly! tc you this inornmg shells :irc bursting ull' around me- Compliments of PURITY DAIRY Visit Our Dairy Bar 199 N. Victoria Street PHONE 1268 -George W. Phillips NI I34 THE COLLEGIATE Compliments of Compliments of T H E RALPH PHIBBS Harrold Bus Lme GROCERY STORE 236 Cromwell St. lVlACKLIN'S FLOWER SHOP Ffne Flowers for all Occasions Lochicl St. - Phone 2 Compliments of CITY BARBER SHOP 10956 S. CHRISTINA ST. It 11 ClL'lZ1lIlC Czlpcst l' always do my th S.: XX'l1z1t's that? '1 1 . L.: Melting' up. l1Ill'ClCSt work before breakfast. KARN'S SPORTING Goons Hunting - Fishing Athletic Supplies Goodyear Tires Exide Batteries Davis and Christina H. KARN - Phone 917 CADIPUS SHIIP Sarnia's Favorite Store for SPORTSWEAR 161 N. Front Street T C 5 M MN OF Polymer Corporation Limiteci S Or arnia - n ario I36 THE COLLEGIATE QUALITY FOOTWEAR Zllibe Stark Shay at Lowest Prices INFANTS, WEAR M A H E R Sarnfa's Exclusive Baby Shop S I'I O E S T O R E . - 158 N. Front St. Phone 2540 228 N. FRONT ST. PHONE 3152 Compliments of RGSE'S MEATS AND GROCERIES 1208 - PHONES - 1209 LOW COST Life Insurance MUTUAL LIFE OF CANADA AUBREY OLDHAM, c.L.u., Manager , Branch Office: Masonic Building SARNIA Mr. Southcomlnez Pole. conjugate hic. Homer: His, hic, hoc, huius, huis, l lOllC,'lIOI'1C, honc. Mr. S.: Well, now that the road is clcglr you may continue. Compliments of Nleaver Refrigeration SALES - SERVICE ELECTRIC STOVES, WASHERS 69 REFRICERATORS ELECTRIC FIXTURES AND SUPPLIES Phone 1831 120 Russell St. N. Sarnia, Ontario THE COLLEGIATE 137 McGIBBON'S DRUG STORE COSTTICIICS RUBINSTEIN DOROTHY CRAY DU BARRY OCILVIE SISTERS 156 N Front Street For Tom0rr0w's Styles Today CLAYTON THOMSON CLOTHING DISTINCTIVE I MEN S WEAR 199 N Christina Phon 93 Miss Harris' Do You remember what hwppeued in 194' P bladdy bobh no' I C111 t ever remember uint lmppeued last mght McKAY Electric SCPVICG dRbldxg hgM Prompt Sewzce aSARN1A AUTO WRECKERS NEW AND USED PARTS GLASS INSTALLED 1 N Ch 2490 WILSON S RADIO SHOP PARTS AND REPAIRS FOR ALI4 MAKES 112 S Ch Pho e 1830 JAMIESON'S THE BEST CANDY THAT S MADE C I 7 - . ' ' e 1 . . 1 , 2. Specializes in Repairing an e ui 'n - - was in achines n I I 14 . ristinar Phone Phone 51Z'W'Z Lake Road Opposite Bell Telephone 7 I 7 9 . ristin n 106 hristina Phone 119 U8 THE COLLEGIATE TAMBLYN'S DRUG STORE DOROTHY GRAY COSMETICS ensure satisfaction in your Beauty Problems YOU ARE UNDER NO OBLIGATION WHEN YOU COME IN TO LOOK AROUND J. O. Patterson IMPERIAL SERVICE STATION COMPLETE LUBRICATION and BATTERY SERVICE ATLAS TIRES BATTERIES 8: ACCESSORIES Mitton and London Road PHONE 1629 lmlph: I suppose you dance? rusy: Oh yes, I love to! If 1rfo1-dz Great! Thats even better than ancing. d Compliments of The F reeda Shoppe Smart Clothes for the Ladies Style Without Extravagance 142 Christina Street N. PHONE Z383'R : Grant's Gift Shop : Collegiate Pins and Rings Fountain Pens and Pencils Novelty Jewelry - Watches 149 N. Christina Watches Repaired DRHVK -E PEPSI-COLA li Hits the Spot Sarnia Soda Water Works B U Y Y O U R Collegiate Styles ...aIl... WALKER STORES, Limited 167 N. Christina 170 N, Front Authorized Bottlers Phone 225 Sarnia OF IMPERIAL GIL LIMITED If l40 THE COLLEGIATE Compliments of The ilamhtnn Yluan anh iinhestment Qlnmpanp C. H. BELTON G. C. NORSWORTHY President Manager Sarnia - Ontario - I Mitzi L.: You know, I used to think you xx ere very dumb. Tutbby Elliot: Did you? M. L.: I wasn't sure of anything then. Compliments of Complimenls of B L U E W A T E R K N O W L E S T A X I S H O E S T O R E -L- Phone 2202 - Sarnia Compliments of aaFRED9r W A R W I C K -TAILORING- B R 0 T H E R S MADE TO MEASURE sU1Ts FROM 530.00 GROCETERIA For Expert Alterations, Repairs, - Etc., See Us OAKWOOD CORNERS 204 N. Front St. Sarnia THE COLLEGIATE ' l4l Compliments of QHEARLESC GRACE GENERAL EXCAVATING SEWER CONSTRUCTION, ROAD GRADING Phone 3390 St. Clair Avenue, Point Edward GORDON LINK INSURANCE 10 Masonic Bldg. Phones 3304 - l748M Sarnia, Ont. Represenialiue of Sun Life of Canada T. Rawings: Say, whatever become of that girl you were hugging in the hammock ? ' Big Louie: Oh, her?-well, we just had 21 falling out. Compliments of The Harry I Watson Co FORSYTI-IE Shlrts and Pyjamas 164-6 North Front Street FLOWERS for all occaszons E SAVAGE GREENHOUSES Phone 2210 Capel at Exmouth Street O O O I O oo. I I 142 THE COLLEGIATE Compliments ALMA COLLEGE of St. Thomas, Ont. A. ZIERLER Furniture, Stoves and House Furnishings 171 LOCHIEL STREET Sarnia, Ontario PHONE 2273 Affiliated with the University of Western Ontario in Arts and Home Economics Other courses include High School, Secretarial Studi-es, Music, Fine Art, Dramatics, Home Makers', Handi- crafts. Excellent equipment for Swimming, Riding, Tennis, Hockey, Golf, etc. For Prospectus Address the Principal P. 5. DOBSON M.A., D.D. Men are born fools so that women woift die old maids. FERGUSON'S F FSH MARKET GROCERIES - CONFECTIONERY -GAS - OIL SMOKED AND FRESH MEATS Cor. Exmouth and Cemetery Road Phone 777 MOORE PAINT SERVICE Successors lo Carler's Wallpaper' Shoppe QUALITY PAINTS -i- SUNWORTHY WALLPAPERS CHEW S BILLIARD PARLOR NEWEST TABLES IN TOWN Drop in for a Came Cromwell St. Between Christina and Front Steve uCl'le'vv'n C0lOdy, Pgropfrietor, LEPAGE Electrical Contractors DEALERS - SALES SERVICE and REPAIR 120 Davis St. - Phone 3748 W Front Street , l THE COLLEGIATE Compliments of Compliments of STEWART F U N E R A L LIMITED HO M E Reiailers to Thrifty Canadians H D STEWART 182 FRONT ST 254 George - Phone 27 Mr. Fer uson: Normw who was here to see you last ni ht? Yormw' Only Sis Dad Xlr F XX ell tcll Nls she left her plpc on the sofa lIFfIDllRS6Y6lIFllllIl Gwe Ham Slurts and Pyjamas for Bwthday Gzfts Forsyth Pajamas S2 50 and S3 00 Forsyth Shirts S2 50 S3 00 and S3 50 Forsyth Neckwear S1 00 and Sl 50 Brown 8: Urquhart LIMITED Phone 3242 176 N Front . . . cr cr .5 ' f v as a l L . L, , . . ' V,. . , . , - - . .. , a . 9 0 o 9 Q f . ...... . . . ..--.. I I , l I . . . 3 1 THE COLLEGIATE Your Friendly Furniture Store Since 1916 LAMPEL 8: ZIERLER Phone 991 135 N. Front St. R O B E R T S O N ' S FRUITS AND VEGETABLES 207 N. Christina St. Sarnia Phone 665 Compliments of . . . GOODWIN HARRLS 8: COMPANY Stock Brokers and Bond Dealers TORONTO, ONT. SARNIA, ONT. Members: V The Toronto Stock Exchange The Vancouveri Stock Exchange Canadian Commodity Exchange Inc. 185 Front St. N., Sarnia PRIVATE WIRES Roger Wilson, Mgr. Phone 3630 r NEWS FLASH- Young girl in court swears she has never been kiisedm That's enough to make any young girl swear. HEADQUARTERS IN SARNIA FOR C.C.M. BICYCLES, SKATES AND SPORT EQUIPMENT OF ALL KINDS THE SARNIA SPORT SHOP ull Pays fo Play Phone FAMILY LAUNDERERS 5 DRY CLEANERS P s A R N I A PHONE 15 Davis at Vidal I44 THE COLLEGIATE FOWLIE' ,S FERRIS 1 Importers of FINE ENGLISH CHINA, l- POTTERY AND CRYSTAL ICE CREAM WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Front and Cromwell Sts. Phone 2522 Corner George and Mitton REMINGTON' RAND ' LTD ' Your Next Evening Plan to Spend OFFICE MACHINES, SYSTEMS , , al , , AND EQUIPMENT glue dqaaefl 143 Cromwell St. Foxie: How do you ever think of 1111 those jokes? M. Paton: IVell. I just have rt good laugh and then I think backwards to find out what I was laughing at. Compliments of Esquire Grill COURTEOUS SERVICE WE AIM T0 SATISFY , 110 S. Christina Phone 1799-W P.O. BOX 291 TELEPHONE 3696 A o Shaw Construction CUMPANY Ceneral Contracting Ready Mixed Concrete F1-IE COLLEGIATE JOHN BROWN 8: SONS Famous Shamrock Llnens Sold by The Fred Mllls Store 139 Lochlel St D J ROBB Funeral and Ambulance ben uzce Davls at Vxctorla Phon 1 C ompl ments of GOWER FURS N Chrlstma St Phone 884 Compllmenis DALTON FUELS Ross M111 lu mx old plue I toon thm s prettx eelbx Boss ll ell lt 1s not th'1t xx ax here ue keep 6X6lXfl111l laeked M40 ofa V500 Bo x.PM Belle: Llght Do You Know THAT one quarter of our young people suffer from clefec txve vxslon THAT' three quarters of all people over hfty Buffer from defective vlsxon THAT mnety five per cent of all people over slxty have de fectlve eye sight Inadequate light xs a prominent cause of these troubles Long Llfe Lamps For Home Offlce and Factory The Hydro Shop Phone 765 Cor LOCHIEL 8: VICTORIA Sts P I45 1 I ' u 1 1 e 8 l 145 . ' ' . :S l zz: -' . ', ' g' V' rj. 1 ' ' 'J' . ' 1' ' , ' ' ' 'g up. Bm. Sight H dm llllllllllllllllllllllllllllflwllllIlllllllllllllvlllllllllll'lllllli? 4 U 146 THE COLLEGIATE Opportunity . . NICDONAI-'Drs is DRUG .STORE urgently calling to Young People with . . . Sarnia Business College Training Corner Cromwell 125 N. Christina St. DRUGS After Collegiate it is the Essential Link between a High School Edu' CalZl0l1 and 3 Pl'3.CtlCi':ll Position f0l' YOU. I 1' . V hceler: To get the ninsic across. Dennis: XY115' do they put bridges on violins? Headqua1'lei's for School Books and Collegiate Supplies S 4 Church Supplies Papers - Fountain Pens - Magazines - Office Supplies X - Latest Fiction M A N L E Y 9 S The Store That Gives You Service 145 LOCHIEL ST. PHONE 1002 THE COLLEGIATE I47 Compliments of ART FORTEY WHITE ROSE STATION TIRES - BATTERIES LUERIICAT-ION Phone 2834 London Road D. HISLOP CENTRAL SHOE 8: HARNESS REPAIR 241 George St. Phone 2524 J. E. E I S E N B A C I'I For Better Quality M E A T S GROCERIES and VEGETABLES Prompt Delivery 271 Devine - SARNIA - Phone 414 Compliments of Western Freight Lines Limited STAN ALLEN Branch Manager Nlarshallc Did you ever take one of those German mud-bath treatments? Fmlay: No, but I played in the rugby games last fall. Experts in KODAK IVIcFEE'S GARAGE THREE STAR GASOLINE PHOTOGRAPHY MARVELUBE OIL 'Ilia your pictures printed PHONE 29 ln double size prints. Taxi Service Towing Truck No Extra Charge Cromwell Street FOR SPORTSWEAR . . . Visit the HeIen's Sport Dept. Where you'll find the Smartest Selection of Skirts, Blouses, Slacks, Sla-ck Suits, Jackets, Peasant Brbomstick Skirts, and a complete line of Beach Wear. THE I'IEI..EN'S LADIES AND KIDDIES SHOP h 140 Lochiel St. Logan Block Compliments of Browrfs Silk Shoppe The Shop for SMART YOUNG WOMEN 17316 N. Christina Phone 152 l48 THE COLLEGIATE Complimems GAS AND ELECTRIC of APPLIANCES CLARK BROS. SELECT HOME QUALITY FURNISHINGS Foods, Fruits and Provisions l RADIOS - PIANOS F Experl Radfo and Washm' Frcsh and Cured Meats Se,-Dice 1 W. MCPHILLIPS ' Ltd. PHONE, 268 TI-IE FRIENDLY STORE 338 S. Christina Street - Sarnia I70 Ni. Christina Phone 3210 Marg. Allen: Anything you say goes . llcllcriniclz Splendid, old thing. fxlzlrg.: ln one cur and out thc other. The ilnhustrial uttgage rust umpanp ESTABLISHED 1889 I Money in a Savings Account is the most dependable of all ,friends in time of financial emergency. During sickness or unemployment it gives a sense of security that nothing else can equal. Before you can -even hope to succeed, you must first start: to save! ii V JOHN COWAN, K.C. W. R. PAUL President SARNIA Manager TI-IE'COLLEGIATE Compliments of GUS' BILLIARDS 1 TOBACCO - PIPES SUNDRIES MAGAZINES SHOE SHINE Phone 3428 Y Pole' Siy my g' I i' 'III 'In I We Cater to the Natiorfs Greatest Asset . . . THE CHILDREN Clothes for Kids From Kindergarten to College JUNIOR' FROCK SHOP VERA H. WILSON PHONE 846 163 Lochiel St. S Su art: You never expect to ee hel II mme do xou? EVERYTHING IN BUILDERS HARDWARE HOUSEHOLD FURNIISHINGS PYREX AND CHINA IAQAQQQQAI The Sarma Hardware CO. Ltd The Store of Serwce 182 N CHRISTINA PHONE 110 A. .pc , II' be c ge. 1 ---n I 'Z 1 4' S ' 1' , ' . , O A O ss . - n u I50 THE COLLEGIATE INGERSOLLVS DRUG STORE Headquarters for Barbara Gould and Belcona Toiletries DRUGS AND PRESCRIPTIONS INGERSOLUS DRUG STORE Phone 66 - We Deliver Compliments of L. N. Phippen's Ltd. irmcrz Ili there! XY1mt :irc you doing in my cherry tree? I irst Fm-iucrz 'lllicrds ll nutice down there to keep off the grass. Compliments of R E I S S Ladies' Wear Where the Smartly Dressed Girls Get Their THE FLORENCE SHOPPE EXCLUSIVE APPAREL Clothes WOMEN'S AND MISSES' ' COATS . . FROCKS img N. CHRISTINA si. SUITS between CAPITOL AND IMPERIAL -1- THEATRES i Phone 329-7 N. Fl'0llt st. Sarnia THE COLLEGIATE I5 BARR'S Jewellery Store for COLLEGIATE RINGS PINS AND MILITARY EMBLEMS A in PINS . . RINGS . . CRESTS JAMES C. BARR JEWELLER Compliments of .DUSTBANE PRODUCTS LIMITED 77 KINGSTE. TORONTO Vi XYhen people ask you to sing, don't be bashful-go ahead and do it. It x be their own fault. ...BONYD CLOTHES... MADE TO MEASURE FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN Next to Imperial Theatre Roy Smith, Manager THE' WONDER BAKERS - Quality and S-ervice is Our Motto 9 NEAL S VITOS FOR HEALTH Varieties of Bread, Buns, Rolls, Pies and Wonder Cakes PHONE 377 i SALESMAN WILL CALL RANDOLPH OFFICE SUPPLY Greeting Cards Stationery School Supplies Archie B. Randolph, R.C.A.Mf.C. Phone 2558 129 N. Front NORTH END AUTO SUPPLY 156 N. VICTORIA s'r. - WHOLESALE AND RETAIL New and Used Parts - Monarch Batteries - Dominion Tires and Tubes Vulcanizing - Safety Glass Installed I52 THE COLLEGIATE Complimenis of C mfJ'1m'f fS A. W. CHARMAN Of FEEDS - SEEDS W O O L Fresh Pedigreed and Tested Seeds Bulbs - Plants - Nursery Stock s H o P - 188 Victoria St. Central Ontario Compliments of Transpgrts R. A. C a, In p lb C 1 l Efends Its Complimenls to ihc GROSEFEE3' SEATS' School! ' ' PHONE 895 PHONE 3312 Russell ah Cameron St. I wuc: I'm going to marry Il pretty girl :md Z1 good Cook. Llvmfmtz You c:m't, can you. Thz1t's Higamv. 4 QUALITY Get Your AND VALUE FAVQBITE YOU CAN TRUST at the TIP TOP HARRISON - D A I R Y B A R T A I L O R S L I M I T E D LICI-IT LUNCI-IES Phone 3040 148 Front St. Sarnia 139 S. Mitton St THE COLLEGIATE I53 For Smart Clothes . . . I Complimenis of Shirley Withers RED SLQXIEEER DRESSMAKER Wellington near Mitton 208 Ross Avenue Phone 1013-W A. E. BONNERY Proprietor I-I.W.McRITCI-IIE WELLINGTQN HOME SPECIALTY SHOP - il L U N C H B A R The best place to buy your Curtain . Drapes, Blinds, and - - Sherwin-Williams Paints STUART AT WELLINGTON ACROSS FROM COLLEGIATE 139 S. MITTON STI PHONE 1966 George is only Z1 coal ClCZllCI'!S Son, but hfoly Smoke, whore hc has bin. SARNIA HEATING AND ELECTRIC HEATING - AIR CONDITIONING - ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES 155 S. Mitton Phone 2732 HOWARD Sz MUNDY HARDWARE c.v. PAINTS, GLASS, PLUMBING sl SI-IEET METAL SUPPLIES 'S 130 Ontario, Phone 684 Corner Davis and Mitton, Phone 3471 CANIADIAN TIRE CORP. ASSOCIATED .STORE G. F. Brown, roprietor Corner Davis and Euphemia P A Phone 3160 SUNSHINE DOUCHNUTS ARE BEST! Get Them FRESH at Mitton near Davis I0 THE CoL1.EGxATE Manufacturing Furriers Since 1910-Repairing, Remodeling, Relining Our Specialty Fure Storage in Fireprool Vaults on Premises FOR BEST VALUE IN QUALITYFURS-Visit Co' E. M. SHAPIRO, Mgr. Sarnia Branch 135 N. Front St.-4 doors N. of Wolf's Phone 218 THE KING MILLING CO. For best results use King's WHITE SATIN flour for pastry and BONNIE DOON flour for Bread. THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE Inuiies and Welcomes Your Business Capital and Reserves - 360,000,000 Front and Lochiel Streets J. F. GILLESPIE Sarnia Branch Manager - He: XYhnt would you do if I kissed you on the forehead? SCI I'd call you down. Best ishes SARNIA THEATRES ODEON CAPITOL IMPERIAL' PARK I54 T1-112 COLLEGIATE We Aim to Serve You Better 1 WILLARD POLE-PHONE 707 DRUGGIST - AT THE RED s1'oRE i -Kodaks- -S tationery- -Candy- Norma Ferguson: May I speak to the captain? First Mate: He's forward, Miss. Norma: Oh I'm not afraid. I've been out with the I2-C boys. is if is 4: Kenny ftelling about his recent huntj: XX'hy fellows, my gun let Out a roar, and in the clearing ahead of us there lay two dead rabbits. Brunton: How long had they been dead? FRED N. KILBREATH, PHOTOGRAPHER Portraits, Wedding Groups, Child Portraiture, Commercial Photography and Amateur Finishing. SUPPLIES AND PICTURE FRAMING Phone 1087 For Appointment' - 118 South Mitton KILBREATH PHOTO STUDIO A bum had parked himself in front of a -lew's jewelry shop and the Jew came out and expostulated thus: If you buy a vateh, buy a vatchg and if you don't wanta buy a vatch get oud of der road and let the vatches see the people. wk ac in if Miss Harris: Viihat was Brock noted for? Hunt: His wonderful memory. Miss Harris: XVhat makes you think he had-a great memory? Don: Didn't they erect a monument to it? Compliments of . rontier CPrinting Co. a NORTH FRONT STREET PHONE 154 T1-1E COLLEGIATE. 3155 M E L E N G L I ,S H Compliments of D R U G S T O R E TARTAN SWEETS 109 S- Mitt0H St- Your Favorite Confectionery and . . . . L lx R Prescrlptzon and Vztamm unc com Specialist Greeting Cards for all Occasions PH-ONE 2192 125 s. 1v111'1'oN w. 1-1. PARKER Compliments Compliments of FRANK ' P R A I L L S MERZTHALL - F L O W E. R S Confectionery 103 Ontar' . 108 S. M'tto Stre abistrate: After you were held up did you call the police? VICLIII1 Yeh b1r every thmb I Lould thmk of 111 thzee 1111 111 L I1-S Complzments of TSI1 DoDSch PASTRY SHOPPE SCI-INARR S Home Furnlshers FINE P1135 CAKES FURNUURE AND PASTRY cAs AND ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES RADIOS FLOOR COVERINGS 161 Mtton St S Pho e 1337 RED STORE CORNER Phone 1910 W Our Locaiwn Saves You Money of Y 1oSt 1 n et INTO' , ' 2 l, 'RO' X .' ' .g.g1s. ,V I , C. . cnarr n , nayr , . ..for.. Y i . . n THE COLLEGIATE U AM 5 Ax? OV-me 'T Ti Q CL. ,. Yjr Wjsff I iff 124,, I ,...,q513Eji? :2.--'. ' ' ' . -jay Z zzgz.-.4 4.:,g:g:5E5iw' ...J - rf. iff, f ':1..--.1.,151r-' . s ,aa , 5-egsg5g5g::- I f -.. ..-. .,gg1j.j.j:,1f' ew ,ff .1. -.g:1f5:3:f:Z:S ' . Q e,:::::1.1,:f:4 :::::: .3:::5:5:2-1-':- 5513 'E -Eff-2-If-f-::'.2-153: - 211' 5.z.ag,:i5i2i2-23229. 5 SN I ,:::N:::g: ,..-M: .,: 2:55 .fb ,,.::::g .. .. :5:1, :g151g2g5Q:g5gE JK Gnd .ffl -xx-Q I.. .51 , .zz ,-113, .- :gf 51,1 ,. 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THE COLLEGIATE Brufessnunal mzttnrp TAYLOR, JAMIESON 8: KNOX BARRISTFRS XRD SOLICITORS Henry 'VI Taylor County Croun Attorney D Park -Ianneson M RC KC W J Stuart Knox Alan Fouler Lambton Loan Bu1ld1n COWAN 8z MILLMAN BARRISTIIRN SOLICITORS ETL Sarnla and Watiord john Cowan RC VV Logan Mllllnan J LX Dunlop 1937 N Plont Stxeet Phone 10 G W CULLIS PLBLIC XCLOLNFAINT Royal Banl Buxldzn Sarnn Ont LESUEUR DAWSON 8: NETHERY N L LeSueur 1xC P P Duxson KC A H Nethery Phone 1000 Capxtol Theatre bld Branch Omce NVXONIINC Open Monday LOGAN 8: LOGAN BARRISFERS SOLILIFORS NOTARIES EPC Ino R LO an I Gordon Logan R Hampden Logan Sh1rley A IX Lo an B A Telephone 53 140 Lochlel Street Ofnces Sarnra W at ord Brlgden A A FISHER REAI KSIVXTE AND INSURANCE 1-115' Loclnel bt Sdrnma Ont Phone N39 Resxdence 137 N Blocl St Reb Phone 3w34 NORMAN B FORBES M R A I C ARCHITECT Phone 230 VV 197 N Chtrlstxna Street lllllllllllllillllll IllIllllllllllllllllllllllillllHHHllllllllllllllllllllllll Illllllllll llllllllllll Illllllll I Illlllllllllllllllll llllll IIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII llllllHIIIIIllIllllIIIIllllllllllkllllllllllllIlllllllllll11011111 Complnnentb of T V ANDERSON OSTEOPATH 171V N C11I'1Sl11112l Street Phone 508 I I - : nuziullllummumunwu.mu'umwwanlmn:nlzuummumwmrumumxmI.nuluuunu:muu,':m.mmm.1mlmuu1.anuummmmmum! 1,1ll1HHHK'llllllllllllllfwllllllllllllllllIlllI1I11llIHllllllllllllllillilllllllllllllllllllmllllllllllll . 1 4 -. 4 T , - 1 1 . , ' . 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' , ' V g' , - L, - - Illl1lllIIIII!llHII'iIIHllI unmwnmuuu Ilhlllllllllllllllllll1lllllllll1IIII'IIIILIIi!IIllIHll'lIlllliIilIIlllllll1I'llli1'IIIIIIIIIIlZ IIliI.I!IlullIllIl HE'AhlllliEKII'IIIIIIIIIIEIKHIIIIIIIIIIIIH1l1lllHNll!IIlllIllIllllllIIlIIIIIl.IIIHlIlIIIl mnmmn I wr 4 1 1 1 r ' r S, - -., - . . rO' . . C, 4 I v K . C . . g , . . . ' T, ' C ' . , 1 , HIu:InIIu.uuIInIzu1111nlllllsenmnnuuurmuw1111n114m1uIInlululu::,ummmwmmwww1wwwlm1umm-:munumuuwmumuummmuuuummmwmmmxInanmnumrux1I.Inuuuumuumuluumuuwmmmmmuulnmunnu . . 4 4 1, 1 . , . . . C2 '.,Q' ' . - -I ' Z ' . ' Q . '. I wwnuInI'uIInunuuzmunununummnulumummulwwmlmIulIlumenunuInIulIvunurmmuInxInm'm:':nuur:nunu Ihllill111lllllllllillllllllWHl1llHlllllllllilillllllllllllllllllllllllilllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll . , . . . . . 1 N , X, z I 1 11 .e 4' 1 :. ' z 0 1 1 4 . . - - 2 - T1-IE COLLEGIATE 1345.3 N. P1 1 11111111111'Il 11111 11 1:1052 fx. 1 1 11111 1 J. F. af J. NEWTON INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS Phones: Day 195 - Night -189 and 90-1-XV Front Street Sarnia, Ont. '111111111 '11'1'1'111'111l11I111'111111111111 -H911 111i11111111111111111 i11:11l1I'11'l1I1 9.111111111111'1i11i1I111 111111111111111IIl111I11I111111111111111111111llllIl1IlIl1I1111111lll111ll1111l1l1111111111IllI1ll Established .3-1 Years W. J. SCOTT AGENCY RE.-XL ESTATE AND INSCRANCE Front Street Phone 66.5, Res. 106 ,, ,,,,.,,, ,, ,, ,,,,, ,.H,,,,,,N,, ,,M,',,N M, X !,1,,,,, M m,,,MN,,M,, ,H VH,,WW,,,,H,,mlmmmm,W,.IImm,,,,,m,W,Hmm' OWEN M. LOCKHART 13.-XRRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY. ETC. 18812 N. Front Street V A Phone 3315 1 1 1 .'1i1.I11l1111111' '1 .11111111 11111'1'111111i111111yi111111 1 1 1. 1 1 1 1 , 1111111 11 1 1 I1 11111111111 111111111 1111111111111111111111111I111111lIl1111l1ll11111111 W. C. NELSON REAL ESTATE Royal Bank Bldg. Phone 1201, 1892-R 1 1 1,111111'11111' H '111I1i1i1W11.. i'1.'111 11 1111111 1 1 1 1 I 11 1111111111 11 1 1.11111111111111111111111l111111111111111111lI111111111111111111111111l111I11111111 H. D. VANHORNE1 BARR1S'1'ER, ETC. 18-115 N. Front Street Sarnia. Ont. Q111 '1i ' 111 1 '1 1111 ' 1'1 1 11'I1'1I11111. 1 1111 - 1i.i1..I .1111..11 1 . 111111111111111111i.11iI...t.1i111111111111ll1111111111I11111111111I11111111111'111111I11111111111111111111111 Masonic MUTUAL LIFE OF CANADA ACBREY OLDHA11. C.L.L'.. District Manager Bldg., Sarnia Phone 180 1111111111111 11 111111111111 11 11111111111 1 111 11111lI111111I11111l1111 1 11111111 1l1111I11l1I111111111111111111 1I11 11111111 111111111l11l11 11111111111111111111111I1111111 11111 l1111111I1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 II G. A. NICOL, D.0.Sc.,i B.O. OPTOMETRIST EYE SPECIALIST 157k N. Front Street, Sarnia Phone 627 THE COLLEGIATE INSURANCE FRANK COVJAN and HOMER LOCKHART 203 N. Front Street Pho-ne 1 II1IlIIIIII1I11I111I11III II IIlI11II111IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII11111111111111111111-,IIIIIIII l'I1111I11 11l11111l11IlIllI' 1''III!I1II'I.1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIlIIII1II1I1I1I11111II11111111111I1lIIl C . L . B R O W N REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE and LOANS 125 N. Front Street, Sarnia Phone 101 l'IIIIIIIII111I11I111I1'1lllll1IlllIlIIIII1II'I1111111111'llIl1llI1IllllIlIIIllllI11I111IIII1111111111:1111111,1111lIll1111111111111111111111111111111I1111III11111111111111IIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111I1II1111111IIIIl1III1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl R.W.GRAY,KL. BARRISTER 18993 N. Christina Street Phone 3378 III 111IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111I1I1IIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIiII1lIII11l11111111III1 llllllI1'I ll III IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 111111 111111 IIIII I IIII IIIIII II III IIIIII IIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII11IIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII11I1IIIIIII11111111II11II A . M . L A M P E L BARRISTER 157 Lochiel Street Phone 3384 I!IIIIII11III1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII111I1l1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII11IlI11IIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIII I11111I11111I1111 11lII 1III I 1111 I 1111111 IIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 11III1I11111II1IIIIIII1IIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII TAIT OPTICAL CO. LTD. OPTOMETRISTS and OPTQICIANS 131 N. Front Street Phone 2595 111111111 III IIlIIllllIIIIll111I11I1I1lIIIIIIIIIIIIIlI IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII11IIIIIUIIlllIIIIll!iIII'lIIIlllIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIl!1llIII'I.I.1IIIIII1 ,LIIIIIIIII1III!11III1I'IlI1'III'Il11IIll1111I1111111111111111111IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII11111111111111111111l111lllIl11Illllll IQIIIIIIIII L. W. LOBSINGER, V.S., B.V.Sc. VETERINARY SURGEON Dog and Cat Hospital and Boarding Kennels Clipping and Plucking of Dogs 291 Davis Street Phone Res. 612 1I1I11I1111IIllllIIIlIIIlIIIIIIlI1IIIl11III111111III1IIIII1IIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIl1l1I11I11l111lI11Il1llIIIIi1lIIII1111111111111111111111I1I1IIII1IIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIl111I1111I1I1I1l1I1lI CHIVERS AND PHILLIPS REAL ESTATE GENERAL INSURANCE HOSPITALIZATION Phone 2756 Sarnia, Ont. A WORD FROM THE BUSINESS MANAGER On behalf f th taf t Coll guat I ld lik t tak th WE ASK OUR READERS T0 PATRONIZ E ADVERTISERS THESE o e entire s f of he e ' e, wou ' e o e is opportunity to thank all those who have placed advertisements in this yean-'s issue. EVERYTHING IN SALT DOMINION S THE A L THE FAMOUS SIFTO SA s T LT Ontan ...Makcrsof... , arnia - ' 'o un. ounm 1 ' ...OF... 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' -''HQL:3.--j,,'..4lic2,g1.4 , gym..- Q f L x n :Z THE COLLEGIATE C H E S T E R , S Complimenis of G A R A G E NEW SARNIA C. G. Sandercock, Prop. Expert Repars on All Makes 104 5' Christina Street gf Ca1'5 Phone 422 Compliments of COFFEE SHOP Home Cooked Meals 156 N. Christina Street E.. M. Dalziel, Mgr. A 8: H BAR-B-Q P 103 N. Christina St. Ilobz Gosh, Iylll sure I failed in that History test to-day. I1:11'to1'd: I thought you had the z111swe1's on your cuff? Nicholson: I have, but this is my Chccistry shirt. All the Latest RCA VICTOR RECORDS y J . Come In and Hear Your Q Favourite Number ir UNITED SERVI E THE COLLEGIATE Compliments of , . E S UNION GAS CO - CLEANERS - or CANADA 3 Lines to Cenb-az LTD- PHONE 2500 SARNIA T Phone 1705 George W. D. Barge XVaIt Murray: 1've never eeII such dI'CZl111y eyes before. Marjorie Anderson: You never stayed so late before. Compliments of DISTRIBUTED IN SARNIA BY I HAMBLY'S BEVERAGES THE COLLEGIATE Compliments ' of Fl 1 S A M U E L l.. A M P E L 0 sl s 0 N s CPengum.., Arctic Fish Fry Chicken on a Bun 241 S. Christina l- Samia ZM, Miles on Blue Water Highway to Penquin Club X ma ll.: l Qllbllli see lmw fimllmll players ever get clean. with Stoner: Do11't Ive silly. What do ymi think the scrub team is for? F. N. PRENTICE Fine Foods - Low Prices GROCERIES, MEATS FRUITS 8: VEGETABLES TAYLOR'S Furniture Store Furnilure - Rugs - Radios. Lamps - House Furnishings 296 S. Milton St. Phone 1626 140 N. Christina St. Phone 1511 AUTHENTIC 9 S SCHOOL INSIGNIA CLOTHES SHOP RINGS AND PINS Home of Mail Orders Promplly Filled Kenwood Overcoats Birks - Ellis - Ryrie George at Temperance Toronto T C I5 COMPLIMENTS OF H 0 LM ES FOUNDRY Company, Limited Gi, SARNIA ONTARIO n THE COLLEGIATE Getting Back to Normal. . Our POSt-XYHI' Catalogue is now in procluctiou. Place Your Name on ur mailing list now. 1 MEDALS - TROPHIES - CRESTS INSIGNIA JEWELRY, Etc. 7fzapJu7 Gwfif .fimilecl 102 LOMBARD ST. TORONTO, ONT ll L1l1lCli5llZ1llliS fin storey: C2111 l stick this wallpaper on myself? 111 X1 miss, but it will look better O11 the wall. CUR DUTY . . Canada played a most important part in the war. The exploits of our soldiers, sailors and airmen will not soon be forgotten. No country need be prouder of its war record than ours. However, we must not rest on our laurelsg the problems of peace are at least as press- ing as those of the war. lt is the duty of every citizen to vote intelligently and take a keen interest in his country's affairs. By so doing, we will construct a capable, efficient government which will play its part in promoting world peace. THE R. STIRRETT COMPANY THE COLLEGIATE X WILSON'S PAPER SUPPLIES 506 North Christina St. Phone 1521 Papa Gnu: XVQII, mama, how did the children behave to-day? 1 W. H. TRICKER QUALITY GROCERIES PROVISIONS FRUITS FRESH AND CURED MEATS MODERN CLEANERS Hygienic Cleaning - 2-Day Service - PHONE 2448 115 N. Christina St. Mama Ditto: Pve got good guns for you to-night. 242 Wellington St. Phone 978 18 THE Coi.1.Ec1A'rE intnria allege in the UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO Founded by Royal Charter in 1836 for the general education of youth in the various branches of Literaturel and Science on Christian Principles. ,Xs one of the Federated Colleges in the Faculty of Arts of the University uf 'l'ornnto, Yictoria College cnrols students in all courses leading to the degrees of llachelor of .Xrts and liachelor of Commerce and preparatory to admission to the schools of Graduate Studies, Divinity, Education, Law and Social llarrk. ln the Anneslcy Hall lYoinen's Residences and XYj'I1'1ilNVOOd, accommo- dation is available for women students of Victoria College. In the Vic- toria College Residences, accommodation is available for men students of the College. For full information, including calendars and bulletins, apply to the Registrar, Victoria College, Toronto. Loony: Gonna be busy to-night? llarh Gray: I don't know--it's my first date with him. YVIIAT D0 YOU PLAN T0 BE Scientist? gif 9 It pays to experiment-when you know QL in what you are do-ing If you clon't, you are 'E' Q due for unpleasant surprises. Of one thing Q- X , ' you can be certain. No matter what your ' ' A I future calling may be, careful money X Q - I , management can mean much to your ' 7 7 peace of mind, enabling you to concen- s U trate on making a success of your calling. A good way to acquire the habit of thrift SQ CN V3 is to open a savings account now, even though Ycleposits may be modest at first. We welcome your account. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA H. T. ROSS jr., Manager THE COLLEGIATE jllllcjllilaster Zllinihersitp HAMILTON, ONTARIO Students in High Schools and Collegiates to-clay realize that entrance into University during the next two or three years is a privilege to be granted only to those whose present achievements give promise of continued application to the pursuit of knowledge. It is therefore to be expected that the usual keen competition for the valuable entrance scholarships to McMaster will he keener than ever this year. Plan Work Apply ' For one of the Twelve Entrance Scholarships Six each of 5700.00 value Six each of 8650.00 value Heggar: How about a dime for a cup of coffee? Hank Henry: Gee, thanks, I sure could use it. I'1n broke. Compliments X . . of . . Compliments on A.. KENNEDY n U of 3 , Dry Goods C A N A D A B R E A D Co. LTD. 173 N. Front Street PHONE 240 X 20 THE COLLEGIAFFE C. E. Mac!-Jeanfs Phone 737 255 Davis St. Music and Electric SARNIA SASH Store AND DOOR 182 N. Victoria St. CO. Phone 808 PIANOS - RADIOS AND ALL APPLIANCES Expert Service Manufactu1'er's of and Dealers in ALL KINDS OF DOORS SASH, FRAMES, TRIM MASONITE A and BUILT-IN APPLIANCES lplmc N.: Sweetheart, if I'd ku given you ll kiss. I b.: fz1'llClOU5l Hzmsnt that you? own that tunnel was that long I'd hun YOU ARE ALWAYS WELCOME . . at . . Parsons' Gift Shoppe Direct Importers 179 N. Front Sarnia, Ont. For Over Forty Years Dependable Quality and Service CLEMENT DRUGS 189 FRONT ST. Films - Developing - Printing Quality Work Let Us Fill Your Prescription MEYERS STUDIOS Largest Pholographc Organ- ization in the British Empire COAST TO COAST 133 iN. Front St. Tel. 3422 J E. Sullivan C I'I A M B E R S E L E C T R I C C O . Westinghouse Appliance Dealer Phone 263 221 N. Front St. THE COLLEGIATE COMPLIMENTS ...OF... SADNIA BRIDGE 1:00, l.ll5ll'l'ElJ SARNIA O CANADA 22 THE COLLEGIATE HOTEL VENDOME Overlooking the Beaullful Si. Clair River FEA TURINC FINE .FOOD PHONE 3200 C. B. Macfarlane, Prop. Compliments . . of . . THE SARNIA ELEVATOR COMPANY LIMITED E Sarnia, Ontario l eg. S.: livery time I kiss you it makes me a better man. nnrm S.: XYGII, drr11't try to XYil'1 21 halo in one night. WILSON'S SERVICE MARKETQ BRIGHT'S GROVE Fresh and Cured Meats Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables A Complete Shopping Centre for Your Vacalion Days Visit Our New and Well-Equipped LUNCH ROOM Two Blocks North of Petrolia Water Works BRIGHT'S GROVE . ..TRY.. CHAPMAN'S Loose Leaf Note Books ' Designed FOR BETTER WORK By... , THE CHAS. CHAPMAN CO. London, Canada THE Co1.LEc1ATE We Lilcz to Know what YCDU are doing This is YGUR daily' newspaper . . . tell us about your sports, your parties, your studies. lYe're interested in you and so is all Sarnia. ANYTHING which happens in S.C.l. 81 'll.S. is live NEXVS. lVe'll print it! And, congratulations on your splendid record of scholastic and athletic achievements. Indeed, we are proud of you and the staff. anahian QE'h5erhe1f 24 THE CoLLEc1ATE glee WATCHES HIVIODERNE Ultra modern styling' X T I fre d d'stin t' . :-4 ' ' ' ' an 12 Q ion g g ,- TXT - ' 1 ff ' 75 Q sf' f F 6 .gf H RT ELCO GLANFORD I .- I I A t ' ' with expansion bracelet. ' 2 ' - Very smart. Guaranteed. ' 36.75 .. J. MILLER l54 N. FRONT ST. PHONE 236 Comment heard in passing a group of boys: I like a girl with a good figure heither physical or financial. J Compliments of Sarnia Automobile Dealers Association F. G. GALBRAITH IV. J. KOEHLER Dodge and DeSoto Plymouth and Chrysler Dodge Trucks Fargo Trucks ST. CLAIR MOTORS OF SARNIA, LTD. Chevrolet, Oldsmobile Maple Leaf Trucks LAMBTON MOTORS LTD. IMPERIAL CITY MOTORS Ford and Mercury Packard and Hudson Ford Trucks International Trucks GENUINE PARTS AND APPROVED CAR AND TRUCK SERVICE T C 25 MUELLER LIMITED Craftsmen in Brass SARNIA - CANADA I l THE COLLEGIATE Compliments of C. KEITH WHITE PLUMBING, HEATING, SHEET METAL WORK IRON FIREMAN STOKERS COMPLIMENTS . . OF . . Canada's 7 -out-of-10 Typewriter Choice UNDERWOOD Built in Canada by fjilgf, 1 Underwood Limited jf. 4-'eve-A P . QS ,'. 'I '3'i'?:g.X xl W Y' I ' Jw-+' :rw ,f ' : X f, A 'vw wr Joseph L. Seitz, President Branches in all Canadian Cities NEW and USED TYPEWRITERS - REBUILTS - RENTALS - SERVICE - SUPPLIES THE COLLECIA-TE 'S IN NORTHERN ONTARIO WINTER SCENE IN ONE OUR LOGGING CAMPS ITED IM CO. L ER B M LU N O ELT LAW, B ID LA SARNIA PHONE 900 28 T1-11-1 COLLEGIATE Complimenis of THE CRgselafwn 'Tourist 7-fome 245 Lonclon Road SARNIA - ONTARIO PHONE 210 Wm. Short Jean H. Short l92O - I946 First Fl.iI'1llC1Af If I kiss yon, will anyone be the wiser? iiCl'lTlL'C Mott: That depends on how 11111011 yon know about kissing. Compliments of MACKENZIE, MILNE 8: CO., LIMITED FRONT STREET SARNIA 142 Cromwell Street Plmone 2835 WILSON'S MUSIC .STORE WILSON We specialize in Music and Musical Instruments MODEL BICYCLES For Teachers and Professional Musicians AEROPLANES SARNTIA TIRE AND BATTERY SERVICE Your B. F. COODRICH Dealer BILL GRAHAM, Prop. Retreading - Vulcanizing - Repairs - Road Service 126 S. Mitton Street Phone 1219 T C 29 COMPLIMENT .. OF . . The Moto Meter Company of Canada Limited Ci, 30 THE COLLEGIATE Dresses - Coats - Suits IF YOU WEAR 16W to 52W Compliments of RICHMOND SHOPPE IN LONDON IN SARNIA 396-398 Richmond Street 143 Lochiel Street A chip on the shoulder is a good IIIKIICHIIOII of wood higher up. Compliments of TI-IE CANADA STEAMSI-IIP LINES Compliments of TOM McRAE'S BARBER .SHOP 191 N. MITTON STREET ANDY'S COFFEE SI-IOPPE f Excelleni Service and ille Besl of Food - Q 116 N. CHRISTINA STREET l PHONE 230 H For lhe Best in Refrigeralion . . . BUY UNIVERSAL COOLER - HQUSEHOLD AND COMMERCIAL McKAY ELECTRIC SERVICE Phone 5lZWl2 I Lake Road THE COLLEGIATE I the ACCENT is 011 YOUTH T .-.. 2 f1,g,' Glamour Pins izz 'IJ I ' for the Younger Set . ' T sf . ' a-:tear -53 H as T M 2 1 Dependable Watches for the Sportsman's Needs ill ,ag-4 I' f e ' lo auwu 2 I 5 T 9 :Q 5 R 8 ,5 A T ..... .... .': ' E. ,,v' Z ' 12--f-:-'- -'---- - .V ' A ah? - 'S3'5,i- - u 4' fx' were ' M DIAMOND MERCHANTS Imperial Theatre Bldg. STORES IN LONDON, KITCHENER, TORONTO 32 THE COLLEGIATE The history of pharmacy I -I ' N f reaches back into anti- 1-f ' quity. It is our aim and pride to follow the honoured traditions of this noble profession with up-to- date- knowledge, accur- acy and the purest of drugs. This group of l6th and l7thf century Flemish and Dutch drug jars, xnortars, weights, etc., is part of a collection on display in our pharmacy. Williams' Pharmacy LLOYD T. WILLIAMS, Phm.B. Mitton at Essex Sarnia Boring Speaker in Asscinhlyz lYhcn l was born over in the Balkans the shot off a cannon. Student in the back row: Too had they missed. SHOPPE Ice Cream Sodas, Sundaes and Milk Shakes Tobaccos, School Supplies CLARKE'S CHINA SHOPPE 0 FINE CHINA 0 CRYSTAL Greeting Cards and Magazines . S I L V E R 9 G I F T G 0 O D S PHONE 2916 OPP. HOSPITAL 144 N. Front St. Sarnia THE DOMINIUN BANK Established 1871 Total Assets Exceed S300,000,000 Branches Throughout Canada Donald S. Hunter, Manager Sarnia Branch Ghe COLLEGI TE 3151: Qflnnual dition ,. PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF PRESENT STUDENTS AND FORMER STUDENTS OF THE SARNIA COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE AND TECHNICAL SCHOOL.. OUR MOTTO: OUR COLORS: SIC ITER AD ASTRA BLUE AN'D XVI-IITE THE COLLEGIATE In recognition of his outstanding services during his many years at the school and in appreciation of his constant and un- faling support of every activity. whether academic, literary or athletic, we respectfully dedicate this publication of the Col- legiate to MR. W. J. SOUTHCOMBE Head of the Department of Classics Valuable WOSSA Executive Sincere Friend T1-113 CoLLEc1'ATE 35 T LAST WORDS OF THE EDITOR This year we have succeeded in producing the Collegiate later than intended. XYhatever the cause, we will not assume full responsibility for we feel that the pupils have themselves to blame as well. The fact should be kept in mind that this is a school magazine, made possible by co-operation and contributions. Do not expect the staff to write all the material or you will hnd the magazine sadly lacking in originality. XYe must confess, how- ever, that a certain amount of delay was caused by the loss of all of our photographic plates in a tire which completely destroyed a Toronto En- graving Company. The present day congestion in printing companies also makes it very difficult to have a publication of this sort printed. There is one thing I should like to suggest as a means of avoiding the last minute rush which has been characteristic of this publication since its inauguration. It is that the organization of the staff for the magazine should be made earlier in the school year. By doing this a record of school activ- ites could be more easily kept and the students unhampered by examinations would be able to make a better effort in contributing. Details lcould be more efficiently dealt with and the work, begun at an early date, would be gradually accomplished without that disorganized attempt of, the last week. lf this wereldone the material could be organized and completed. ready for printing, without throwing too much work on the few in the last days of the term. Nevertheless. we feel that the 1046 Collegiate will maintain, if not excell, the high standard set by previous publications. -JIM BRUNTON 36 THE CoLL1-:GIATE THANK YOU The success of this year book reflects the diligence and splendid co- operation of the Collegiate Editorial Staff, and of the Staff Advisors. To credit them individually would be impractical. Therefore, as the Editors, ive thank you collectively for the many hours of work that you have de- voted to the production of this magazine. STAFF CHANGES In this, our hrst post war year, we welcome back many of those who left us several years ago to serve in the armed forces. XVe welcome them and hope that their futures may be prosperous. In this group are Mr. Durnford and Mr. Fielding, who left us several years ago. lYe also welcome Miss XYilton, who had been on leave of absence be- cause of illness. Miss XYilson joined the Staff in January, assisting Miss Ramsden n the gymnasium. I Mr. Little and Mr. ll'ickett have completed their first year here, Mr. Little assisting in the Grade Nines, while Mr. Wlickett opened our new Guidance Department. ' GK, Miss XVALKER MR. TREITZ Advisor Advisor THE Co1.LEc1-ATE N w K SHIRLEY SMITH ALEX. GRAY Business Manager QY? f R R -S E32 EDWARD BAGLEY HELEN PASSMORE F-V 38 L. THE CoLLEc1ATE MARY JEAN ARMSTRONG RALSTON ANNAND MIKE TURNER MAXINE PALMER THE COLLEGI-ATE 39 EDITORIAL STAFF LITERARY ACTIVITIES ,,,.,,,...,....A,,...,.,,,..,,,,,,A, Ralston Annand GIRLS' SPORTS Y...,.......,,,,,,, ..,............YY,,.,,,,,,,....,,,, . loan Cowan ART ...................,.A,,, ,.,.. h Ioycc Barton, Betty Byrns SCIENCE ....,, ,.,,,,,..,,.Y,.,,,.,Y,.,,..,,,........,.Av I fclward Bagley HLIMQUR ,.... ,,,, l Iernlce Freiclman, Nornia Ferguson, Mary hlaniieson, blim lflrunton ALUMNI .,,I ,,.,,, 3 Iargaret Heaton, Doris XYilkins TRAYEL ,,YYI,,,,I,,I ,,,,,. I -Zcrnice Freiclman, Margot Lusby EXCHANGES ,,v,,, ,..Y,,,,,,,,,,..,,..,,,,,,,,.w A It-an Macpherson POETRY ,,.,,,,.,..., ,...., I Tat Norswortliy LITERATI,'RE ,,,,,r,,,,,,,,,, .,... S liirley Smith SQCIAL ACTIVITIES ..,.. ,,,,, I Qvelyn Aiken BOYS' SPORTS ,r,,,,rr,r Mike Turner EDITORIAL STAFF Baclq Row ileft to riglitl-Ev. Aiken, joan Cowan, Bet Byrns, Norma Ferguson. Middle Row fleft to riglitb-Bill XYilkinson, Doris XVilkins, Pat Hartley, Mary Jamieson Pauline XVray, Doug. Shank. Front Row lleft to right!-Pat Norswortliy, Marguerite Cruiksliiank, Bernice Freidmzm Fran VVhitne11, joy Barton. ww 40 THE COLLEG IATE EDITORIAL BOARD LITERARY ACTIVITIES ..,,,,AA,,,,,,,,,,,,,,A,,,,,,,,A,,A, GIRLS' SPORTS, ART ..,.,,.w . ..., ..,,A, R Iary fx 1714 SLIILNCP, .,.....,...,w......,.,..w..,.RRR.....,... ,..,.,..ARRRRRR HUMOUR. PHOTQGRAPIIY ., Ralston Annand ,lean Armstrong Edward Bagley .lim Brunton ALUMNI, TR.-XYEL ,.,.,.,,.......,A7,,,,,,....,,,v,,, ,,,, B laxine Palmer lfXL'll.'XNCES, POETRY ..,.,,,,Y,Y,,,,,YY,,,,,...,........ll. Helen Passmnre l,l'l'lfR.-X'l'l,lRlf, SOCIAL .'XC'l'lYl'llllfS ,,,,ll ,l.Y,l, S hirley Smith BUYS' SPORTS .....,.,,,,,...l...,..,....,.,,,l ,.,,,..,l .,,,, I l ike Turner BUSINESS MANAGER ,-Xlex. Gray ADYERTI SING S'l'.'XFF l,vall Smith, lYillfs -lacques, black lY1'ight. Melvin Cohen, -lanet llclliwell, Ralph llarfmwl, Hugh llelliwell, llnng. Shanks, Carol .Xlcln1x're, luhn l-irzldlev, Pauline Slater, Marv .lane l,C1lllDlCIlJll, Alex. Gray, Ann Cowzni, Mary Lucas, llfmg. Marriott. ISUSINIQSS STAFF BHCR ROW llcft to right?-Lyall Smith, XYillis Jacques, jack XVright, Middle Row lleft to rightb-Melvin Cohen, Janet Helliwell, Ralph B:1rford,,Hugl1 Helli- well, Doug. Shanks, Carol Mclntyre, jwlin Bradley. Front Row lleft to rightl-Pauline Slater, Mary Jane Pembleton, Alex. Gray. Arm Cowan, Mary Lucag. 'PHE CoLLEci'ATE - 41 The Principal Speaks On coming to Sarnia I received a warm welcome from the Board of Ed- ucation, the Staff, and the students. Such a welcome is inspiring and highly appreciated. Mr. Asbury, your former Principal, left a well-organized school. He will be missed by many. Your one consolation is that he has heen honoured by a promotion to High School Inspector so that his talents serve the stu- dents of the whole province rather than a coniiparatively smaller group in the City of Sarnia. Vilorld XYar H is over. lt was a triumph of the spirit of man over hrute force. Many of our boys have gone overseas to tight for what we lwelieve to be right. Most of them have returned, but some have been laid to rest in foreign lands. There will be vacant chairs around the family fire-side, and our hearts go out to bereaved relatives and friends. llc must cherish the memory of our dead and make sure that such a sacrilice shall never he demanded again. Wie live in a wonderful country with an abundance of natural resources which is the envy of less fortunate nations. XYe are an industrious people. Our country has a great future. It will be the centre of air travel between the three great countries: United States, Great Britain and Russia. It has had a great war record. Many scientific discoveries have heen made during the war and will be made in the days that lie ahead. lt is your country Io use and develop as you choose. Are you prepared for the great heritage that is yours? Are you worthy to he a citizen of this great country? You have a well equipped school. You have a stalf of highly skilled teachers who not only present their lessons in an interesting fashion but who, by their kindly understanding, give you an appreciation of the liner things of life. Are you making the most of your opportunities? THE COLLEGIATE ND TECHN CAL SCHOOL, 19-15-46 v-4 LIiGIA'1'1i A I, HING STAFF OF SARNIA CO T EAC and 5-4 Z2 if S 9514 TIQ1 Q4 -2 P14 25 Ella . gl.. 22 Oi Q5 MTE Eu 15.4 4:2 2, ... ,, 04,2 ui 233 .Jai 22 cd - NL- ,W Eff WE ,QL Ea :UE O W5 .. cuZ 3.4 Eel I: CE ,. 1,15 'Em . 0:1 5' ,. H U1 :Am mu'-E :gr QEDJ 'ua CEE' 42.2 4: 3 QQ -ww .. fi :CJ 2: ,fi E, Q..-. D332 IJ gm 4 -3 C.- 9,2 .,. H, Br, 5,20 ,.. 23 all '-'fe .r . .- 'CJ Sv ,gf 6 5213 .4 'V7 mm 'Pw- PE V' .. .lficz gi' gs :LI-4 H 75.5 EA :J . 20? IE Q76 QE s-.L,,,C5 lllv-1 age .J o Eb-Q V255 332 O4 U1 MP2 1122 'CJ 'U South- I'. I e, L Mr. O'Donohu kett Welllman, Mr. Wic SS n,M to rightD-Miss Heasma fleft Front Row ln 2 U U LJ Q4 4 sf f.. Q.: J.. F' si ?4 4 nf o P1 'FI F4 U7 un ..- I.. GJ ,id CJ Q r' U7 .22 E L- P1 '77 W xi .... A ,- -o I- ci rf- 4 rn ua -4 A 1 ff? L. I- C. CE cn W.-. LSE GJ ,Q ,-. 51' O Q 2 Q. 2 CELLVICJE-I'IhIOO VINHVS HHJ, TLLLLSNI CELL .L CINV DH OHDS 'IVDINI-I TO OllQl11lUN lHOMlQWIl OI 44 THE CoI.LEcIATE Staff of the Sarnia Collegiate Institute and Technical School 1946 - 1947 ALEX. SINCLAIR, MA., PRINCIPAL Earl G. Asker, BSC. in E.E. A. Donald Billingsley, B.A. Russell A. Bond, B.A. Kenneth Burns Mae N. Burris, B.A. William G. Coles, B.A., Ed.lVI., Asst. Principal Ora C. Dennis, B.A. Robert Dobbins Langston E. Durnford, B.A. E. Lloyd Fielding, B.A. Verner Fullerton, B.A. Reginald H. Garbett Herbert W. Graham, B.A. J. Maude Halliday, B.A. Mary A. Harris, B.A, J. George Hawley Mary C. Heasman, M.A. George A. Helson Sarah E. Howden, BA. J. Earl Johnston, B.A. Ruth l... Kitching, B.H.SC. Leo V. Langan, B.A. Marie E. l..aPiere, B.A. Bruce K. Little, B.A. Eileen E. McDonald, B.Com. Janet E. McLaughlin, B.A. Rhea D. MCRoberts, B.A. Earl G. Marcy, B.A. Jean E. Martin, B.A. A. Ranulfo Mendizabal, B.A. Leonard G. Newell, BA. Frank E. O'Donohue, B.A. Fred Passmore William S. Pringle, Shops Director Jessie H. Ramsden, B.A. W. Douglas Ritchie, B.A. William Southcombe, B.A. Herman M. Sperling, B.Mus. May Taylor, B.A. Ernest l... Treitz, B.A. Jane W. Walker, B.A. Norman M. Watson, B.A. lVl. Frances Weir, B.A. Phyllis M. Welman Ralph B. WiCket't, B.A., Director of Guidance Catherine C. Wilson, B.A. Jean B. Wilton, BA. MEMBERS or THE STAFF ON LEAVE OF ABSENCE Hazel M. Brown Frank Payne BAND AND ORCHESTRA DIRECTOR William E. Brush SCHOOL. SECRETARY Mary B. Beasley ASSISTANT SECRETARIES Rhoda Middleton Helen Rocley Anna Mae Brain Noreen Clysdale THE COLLEGMTE 45 -f rj 3? Q N - Q 1 'Q w x ll 5 EDITOR-jean Macpherson VVATSONIAN-VX'atson College, lfdinburgh, Scotland. It was very teresting to receive a magazine from a Scotch prep school. ACADIA ANTHEN.-XELTM-XYolfville, XS. NYe especially liked your Free Speech section. SILHOUETTE-Published weekly by the student body of McMaster University. THE ARCHER-Galt Collegiate. Your Hot Nooz' was very orig- inal. THE BUGLE-Calgary, Alberta. Your magazine was among the best we received, and your humour section- If little Red Ridinghood lived today, The modern girl would scorn her, She only had to meet one wolf, Not one on every corner. LAMPADION-Delta Collegiate, Hamilton. An all round good magazine. TNVIG-University of Toronto Schools, Toronto. Again this year an excellent magazine. - wr ice er ' o effa , Toronto. Very Good magazine ROBUR La C1 Pa k C ll gi te ' g g withg a number of line pictorial sections. NORTHLAND-North Bay, Ontario. General make-up of magazine Splendid, but would suggest you enlarge your humour section. TRUMPETEER-Hamilton, Ontario. Your public school magazine puts many high school publications to shame. Keep up the good work! The tragedy of the flea is that he knows for certainty that all his children are going to the dogs. 46 THE COLLEGIATE amedfzanfefzw Brantford, February 28, 1946 Dear Maxine: It was very nice of you to ask me to write something for your maga- zine about our school, better known as the lei. C. l. 8 V. S. This school, is much older than the S. C. I. and has approximately 1.300 students. There are several active clubs between its walls. XYe have a Czlee Club of over oo, Badminton Club, French Club for Seniorsg Rifle Club, Cur- rent History and International Lhristian Club just to mention a few. The main organization is Tesa. Tcsa looks after all school expenses and activities, including athletics, lost articles, etc. so you can understand how work club members do. l suppose your Student Council is about the same. B. C. I. also boasts of two Hi-Y Clubs-one for senior girls and one for senior boys. There are about 35 members in each club. IYe hold a meeting every week on XYednesday nights from 6 to S at the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. IV. C. A. respectively. These meetings are very interesting: as well'-as educational. XYe have had discussions, speakers and movies. About once a month the two clubs meet for a banquet, discussion, or a dance. . ' Friday nights the Collegiate Club has a gala time at the Y. M. C. A. where dancing, swimming, bowling, pingfpong and a coke bar are enjoyed by more than .too members. The Century Club holds a dance every Saturday night in the Y. XY. C. A. to the tune of local orchestras. This Club is not for students only but there is an age limit. llembers only are admitted to both of these clubs. A bulletin has been published recently and will be sent to members of both clubs every week. It will tell about the past and future doings of both clubs and also some Hi-Gossip. Ite all had a gay time at the only formal of the year, held on Christ- mas night. Tea Dances are about the only Hops ever' held in the school. Ifvery few weeks Tesa puts on a Tea Dance on a Ytcdnesday afternoon. Juniors and Seniors Hock to one of the gyms and dance to melodious strains of the latest records. I can say we dazace hungrily and mean it because while we are enjoying ourselves dancing, the teachers also are enjoying themselves drinking tea and eating luscious food which we can't touch. Every Tuesday morning we have an Assembly. but since our auditor- ium isn't large enough to hold all the students. our class only has Assembly once every three weeks. Our newest and latest activity in the school is I-Ii-Spots, a radio pro- gramme which started on February IO and will be broadcast every week until the end of the school year. If you can get CKBC Brantford on your radio, listen in some Monday night at 8.50. IYe too have a magazine, known as L'Hello, and are busy working on it now. I wish you every success with yours this year and hope I shall be able to get a copy. Sincerely, Helen Carmichael, former S.C.I., Pupil. THE COLLEGl'A'TE 47 HIDE : Q h h l -J U l KE ,-,'-' ei'.w!.,'l ii? G my Q 'gif 0 99' J 'f1LiD Zi Diiwss QI-E ,-l- G3 was .. -...gl :gl X I :: A I u 1314 EDITOR-Pat N ors worfliy i Prizc- HAVE YOU? by Deirdre Dunseith HAVE YGU ? Have you seen a sunset Over a sweet curved bough, Clothed in spring's blossoms? Have you? Have you seen a rose In the morning, pearly with dew, Clinging close to a stone wall? Have you? Have you seen a quiet twilight, ltith night silently ereeping through the trees .Xzxd echoing with the last bird call? Have you? llaye you seen a ehild Playing in the sun, laughing happily. Pielqing buttereups. where buttereups are weeds? Have you? If you have seen these things And thought of God, vaguely perhaps, No matter how, then you have glimpsed heaven Even before death. -Deirdre Dunseith, IIA E9 INFORMATION PLEASE! 'Most every other ibook you read And every other verse Holds forth upon some theme of love, A blessing, or a curse. VVQ read of joy and broken hearts, Of, agony and bliss. Oh! how the author strains his pen In description of a kiss! 41 l've rerd uneounted books and poems, llut still I never know lfxaetly what this state is like. llow do you tind a beau? If it is all the writers say, 6,fXnd who am I to doubt it?iJ l'll join another Readers' Guild And read some more about it! Ruth Hawley, I2,A 48 THE CoLLEc1'ATE NIGHTFALL Night comes when the sun goes down f And all the earth is at rights. lX'hile darkness falls like a murky gown ffl And covers the earth's bright sights. lYhen darkness comes, it brings a peace And a quiet solemn space, lYhen turning wheels their noises cease, And silence rules with grace. XYhen families gather 'fore the hearth To talk and reminisce, .-Xnd lovers strilling o'er the turf Stop now and then to kiss. And then no sound, no stirring: rx - ' lhe whole world now is still. The wind sends leaves a-scurryingg The fairies dance on the hill. -Virginia Miller, I I -A. A POEM??? SECURITY lint-I1 afternotm in period eight, The logs blaze up, a cheery glow You read a poem to appreciate Lights every face about the room: ,X sonnet, lyric. carol, ballad, Outside the wind is raging now, .Xll mixed up like a cabbage salad. lint here our fire dispels the gloom. ul,4il'll,lll'1l3lllQLS said a word in jest - The solid house protects us well .X guy like him is just a pest! From biting cold and swirling snowg You read and write of what he did- The walls are strong. Inside we That poem was written by a kid. dW6ll Quite safe to feel we need not go ' wut ll lui dv not 1 l'l'5 ll mqlxe Away from our sequestered home. This lyric really takes the cake. To read this junk hurts to the core lYithout, the storm can still be 'Til you quote the Raven Never- lleilfdl inoref' XYithin, the shadows drift and swayg And now, the fire dies down againg The embers glow, then fade away. -Mary Mclsarren, 11-A. To read the peoetry's not so bad. Il's writing the story that makes you sad. You write its history, setting, theme. Diction, languages-what a dream! lfut why discuss another guy? There's really none so bad as I! So before I get to be a bore I'll close my book and write no more. T -Don Guthrie, 13-A. 'THE COL'LiEG'I'ATE 49 C. C. C. C. I used to be a normal girl, Though here and thgre I have a flaw, But Iyve reached inibecility IYith Chickery Chick Lhallah Challah! I led a fairly merry life lVith brother, sister, maw. and paw, 'Til suddenly the air was rent XYith Chickery Chick Challah Challah! I used to sing around the house The latest songs-trala, trala, But now my lips are sealed because Of Chickery' Chick Challah Challah! I used to greet the morn with gleeg l'd leap from bed and shout hurrah! But now I groan at the thought of day - And Chickery Chick Lhallah Challah! I never kicked or barked before, Nor was I known to show a claw, But IIOXX' I snarl and bite when I Hear Chickery Chick Lhallah Challah! I was an average student then In English, typing, French, and law. My marks-now low-are all results Of Chickery Chick Challah Challahl Far worse than Pistol Packin' Mama Or Mairzy Doats. Is there no law Against such fiendish. raucous songs As Chiekery Chick Challah Challah! -Mary Jamieson, Sp. Com. We, They were only quoting cigarette ads- Daphne Nisbet: Light an o.g. Ailen Gordon: I'd rather have a Raleigh. 4 Fran Xfvhitnellt IVith men who know tobacco best. it,s I.uckies two to one Lloyd Dennis: Can I oifer you a Chesterfield? Hkvkrkrk Mr. Dennis: Ihave a sure sign that all of my pupils think of me a lot. Mr, Trietz: I-Iow's that. 4 'Mrg 'D.: You should see the tacks I lind on my chair. 50 THE COLLEGIATE ,...J EDITOR-Shirley Smith Prize Wil1HCl'SfiiTHE LETTER by Dan Brown, l3B THE SECRETW by Barbara Parker, I3B W THE LETTER lelli MORNING was dark and cold as Don Saunders rolled sleep- ily out of his bunk at four a.m. on the morning of March twenty- iifth, nineteen forty-five. As had been his habit for the last three or four years, Don began to violently shake the bunk in an effort to awaken his good-natured brother-in-arms. liill. Hill was the younger of the two. and always slept in later as if it was the privilege of youth. This mornng how- ever. mueh to Don's surprise, lflill was already up so Don hurried off to the wash room in an el-fort to make up for his laxness. The dawn they had all been warned, was to usher in no ordinary day for the Canadian paratroopers stationed in llreat llritain. The red-bereted paratroopers were already assembled in the briefing hut as lion hurried in and shouldered his way toward Bill's tall figure. The colonel entered the rt-om and began giving last minute instructions to his young men. lle suggested that they write any letters they mught wish to as their task was to he a momentous and therefore dangerous one. VVe, the officer S1llll,UllI'C to spearhead the long awaited push into the Nazi Rhine- land by jumping across the Rhine this morning. That will be all for now men. he concluded with traditional abruptness. , Hill and Don talked quietly as they slowly walked to their huts. They were typieal uf the other young men around them. They all had a job to do and they knew they could do it. There was a tense strained atmosphere in the huts as the men went about their last minute business. Don and Bill had identical pietures of a beautiful young girl propped up in front of them as they wrote their letters. lioth pictures were autographed in flowing script Love Margaretf' .-Xs Don tinished his letter he remarked to Bill, I'll send mine first as 1 know she ean't wait to hear from ine. Never mind, Don countered, It,s my letters she sits up at night waiting for. An hour later the airborne force is aloft and Bill and Don are sitting shoulder to shoulder in one of the leading Dakotas as she wings her way re- lentlessly over the English countryside and noses out over the inky channel, The two buddies begin to talk above the roar of the pounding engines as they knew that talking relieved tension before a jump, especially such a jump as THE COLLEGPATE Sl they were undertaking. The talk at last, as was always the case, drifted around to the subject of home, and then ended up with a finale as to whom was the better shot. XfVhy, Don boasted, HI remember the time I shot rings around you when we hunted partridge last-U but the rest of Don's claim was cut short by the jump master's warning, four minutes. The troops in the plane could feel their stomachs rising and knew that the big Dakota was fast losing.altitude to prepare for the low level run and the ultimate jump. Don mechanically checked his chest and leg straps and experimentally worked the siiap fastener of his static line. He then hunched his shoulders in order to bring his parachute pack to a more comfortable position on his lbaek. As a final check he felt for the rope that held his ritie strapped to his right leg and tested the knot'to make sure he could release the rifle just before he lnt the ground. His task completed, Don straightened to find Bill peering at him and remarking, I don't see why you want your rifle, you couldn't hit anyone anyway umess you used it as a club. Once again Don's inevitable answer was cut off by the jump master's .eommand, stand up and hook upf' The paratroopers sprang to their feet, all laughter was gone and all thoughts were only for the grim task ahead. All that could be heard in the huge plane now was the steady drone of her engines, slower now, and the swish of the wind as it rushed by the open door. The monoto- nous sounds were only broken by the metallic clicks as the jumpersl hooked their static lines on the anchor cable in the big plane. Out of the window Don could see the other transports and gliders. Away off and above sleek R.A.F. fighters were covering them. They were over the D.Z. now as the plane bobbed around on the prewarned sea of flak and Don wished they would hurry and jump. He didn't have long to wait. The red light Hashecl on and a parachute of ammunition was toppled out,gits red and white checks show- ing up bright against the grayness of the dawn. Then they jumped and Don remembered he was glad. The dropping zone reminded Don of a field of bees when the hive has been raided. Bullets were buzzing their song of death as in a daze he made for the protection of a nearby ditch. They had apparently been spotted coming in and the Nazi had been ready. Don's buddies were lying all around him,.the silk of their parachutes swishing back and forth as the breeze kept the canopies inflated. It seemed as if they were trying to shut out the awful scene before them, from the rest of the world. Many of the chutes were 'bringing their cargos to the earth unaided as the silent forms hung limply in their harness. Then Don saw him! He was lying partly covered 'by the folds of, his chute and even as Don raced unheedingly to his side 'he could see it was no use. Bill slowly rolled toward him and laying his hand on his arm managed to mumble, the Nazis are good shots anyway, take good care of her Don. At that time Don's grief was overwhelming, but it was not half so great as the grief of the girl Margaret, who.two weeks later, tremblin,gly opened a letter from the Vtfar Ministry and read, Regret to inform you that your brothers Bill and Don Saunders-1 She read no further. -Dan Brown, 13-B. fa!! First Student-Let's do something unusual, extraordinary, startling. Some- thing that will shock everyone. Second Student: Okay, but you have to help me with the algebra. 52 THE CoL1.Ec1A'rE THE SECRET ' ULIA Northfolk folded her napkin with her long delicate fingers, while Elizabeth cleared away the tea things. The little remain- ing shafts of sunlight danced with melancholy on the blue willow china and intimately mingled with the red glow of the fireplace. Julia picked up her small volume of poetry and tried to concentrate. Suddenly. an ugly frown creased her seemingly virtuous brow. Elizabeth, do be carefuly with the china! You always make such a hub-bub l Elizabeth stopped with a hopeful understanding, as she turned her anxious eyes toward the fragile shadow of her sister. Iulials nerves were bad to-day. The owlish eyes rested once more on the slim silhouette, then she scurried out to the corridor. The autumn shadows of the day melted into the dusky corners of the old house, and their summer garden was strewn haphazardly by the fall winds. There had always been an atmosphere of age about this home-ob- stinate and final. Elizabeth stared knowingly at her own lined face in the Victorian mirror for she too, was becoming a mere fragment of this past. .lulia wasn't. She was very clever, and wise, and amazingly youthful, despite her apparent age. .PX shrill bell sped through the rugged silence. Elizabeth sighed, half in desperation, half in weariness. ' Speak of the devil and- Her lips quivered, as she hesitated. No, let the cook answer to Julia's demands for once. She felt a strong desire for a walkabesidcs someone had to pick up the mail at the fence. The bell shrieked with impatience, then she pushed against the heavy door. lt was a light frolicking wind that jostled her white waved hair, and turned her thoughts reluctantly to julia again. Julia hardly ever came out into the garden at this season of the year. She bitterly denounced autumn as the weather for old women. lt was too full of truth. XYarm, sunny, and then cantankerous and gruff as the rain-drowned sky. Elizabeth shivered. because she liked it although she hated to be considered old or even elderly. julia was strong and clever-she had to look up to her, because she truly feared her. Elizabeth nodded her head silently. She had always been a coward, playing into ,lulia's pocket, always retreating. Her thoughts began to romance with time. Once she had been twenty- two and there had been a George Barton. Elizabeth always found her pudgy hand tighteninground the lilac-scented handkerchief, when this occurred. She had been rather frivolous to his attentions, yet for once she had been blissfully happy. -Julia knew nothing about him, until she came home from Europe, and then the magic stopped. Her sharp sarcastic tongue drove Eliz- abeth into reticence, while her resplendent manner made her the centre of attraction. Then the gentleman in question dis-appeared, quite suddenly, and the two sisters lived together in the home, where Elizabeth always took second place, even to employing the help. She had walked a long way from the house, past the tangled heaps of marigold and crimson zinnia, through the ferny lane spotted with wild roses and weeds. She had almost forgotten to pick up the mail at the sedate white box. julia would be irritated if she didnyt get her mail before supper. Their box was filled with circulars, lauding the ability of a certain new chemical discovery, and the odd bill. Elizabeth turned them over in her hands, then she pocked around in the inside of the box. It was empty-No! Something was stuck at the back, as if it had been jammed down the side. IHE COLLEGMTE 53 She drew out a long, musty envelope, dirtied by a long stay, and ragged along the edges. It was addressed to her in a firm masculine hand. Eliza- beth rub-bed her eyes, and re-read the name. Yes, it was her own name on the envelope. and it was, she was sure of it, it was his writing! George Har- ton's! She pulled out a. piece of cream notepaper, fully aware of the little lines of dirt, worn in the folds. Wfhen she had folded it back into the last crease. Elizabeth's mouth had formed a bitter thin line. She picked her way slowly back to the gar- den, vacillating between surprise and disappointment. To think that he had asked, in spite of julia's interference, and to think it had lain there for such an interminable time, She had discovered it. yet it was too late. Elizabeth stared miserably at the deranged garden. She would have to unburden her unhappiness to julia-Julia would understand: she was so clever. Elizabeth quickened her pace as she approached the house. julia might be in the parlour now. The shadows grew like thin fingers in the cor- ridor, and the parlour was empty. Elizabeth stopped outside 'the library. Someone was fixing the fire. It was Maggie, poking the ashes in quick short snorts. Is Miss Iulia here, Maggie? f No, mum. She took the car into the village. She seemed quite an- noyedf' Elizabeth replied faintly. She could see a tip of the envelope over the circulars, and a thought sprang into her head. No one must know about this, only Julia!-only julia could share her unhappiness. Maggieis back was turned, and Elizabeth's hand ran along the edge of the desk. It was their grandfather's desk, which contained a secret compartment. She would slip the letter in there. E Maggie tood up with her red puffed face. She brushed her apron and sighed. That will be burning hne, when your sister comes back. l'm going !Y to see about supper now. Thank you, Maggie. Elizabeth peered through the library window. It was beginning to rain, in soft, silver slivers. Julia was right. It was old woman's weather, and now she felt quite broken. She drew her hand along the edge of the desk again. Even if she did re-read it, would it satisfy her? The compartment Flew obligingly open, and she reached in for the letter. However, it was a different piece of paper that she withdrew. Her eyes picked up the words and followed the sentences in a horrible fascina- tion, like a moment before the plunge into an abyss. Dear Julia, I am sorry that Elizabeth was too ill to answer my letter, and I'm glad that you wrote her reply, since you have softened the bitterness of a refusal. Do not tell her that' I have answered, I only wanted to thank you for doing the best you could.-George. Elizabeth's face was a complete mask of white rage. It had been Julia, the clever Julia, who had found out about it before she did and had settled her fate by a deft trick. Elizabeth had never felt such hatred for a human being in her life. For all these years, she had cowered under Julia's remonstrances and sarcastic criticism. She had actually feared her, who had so selfishly prevented their separation. For once in her life she would speak up to Julia, and her delicate, cultured living. She heard the motor of the car, humming up the gravelled lane. She heard the slam of its door, and the quick precise footsteps of julia in the 0 An All Important Factor for Health and Energy SIIVCFWOOCI Dames Limited Phone 2400 LK 0 0 Drink a Quart Every Day I I I I I SUPERIOR PRODUCTS LIMITED SARNIA - ONTARIO Sheet Metal Fabricators and Jobhers ASPHALT SI-IINGLES . BUILT-UP ROOFING STEEL ROOFING . GRANARY LINING INSULATING WOOL 6: PNSULATING BATTS GATES . FENCING . FENCE PosTs SHEET METAL . SHEET METAL STAMPINGS 500 N. Front Street. - Phone 1600 - 1601 54 THE COLLEGIATE front hall. The library door opened quickly. Julia approached the fireplace, totally unaware ofgher sister's presence. Then Elizabeth struggled to her feet, with angry words clouding over one another. julia turned at the sound, and her brown eyes probed the shadows in brisk annoyance. For goodness sakes, Elizabeth! Don't huddle yourself up in the shadows! Xou look like a stray kitten. Go and see if 'Maggie is burning the potatoes. There's a dreadful smell in the air! Elizabetlfs hands were clenched around the arm of her chair. Some- thing was happening to her. She found herself powerless, and the accusing words remained voiceless. julia was warming her hands near the bright names, completely indifferent to her own dying turbulence. XYhat's the matter with you, Elizabeth? Are you ever going? It was no use, she was trembling, almost on the verge of tears. She could never speak up to julia. Julia was right-she was a coward, and Julia should know-she was so clever! -Barbara Parker, I3-B. AN AFTERNOGN IN AN INSANE ASYLUM RANKLY, I was scared stiff, but I was assured I was perfectly safe. My fright was not lessened as I saw the barred windows and the inscription over the door announcing that I was entering the On- tario I-Iospital for the Criminally Insane. My cousin jerry, and my so-called friend, the doctor in charge of the hospital's patients were responsible for my visit. The doctor lived in the cottage beside our-s at the beach and had invited us to see the Annual Field Day celebration and to inspect the hospital. Jerry and I, bored by the quiet- ness of the days, had accepted, but had had misgivings. It was a beautiful day and I remember wondering, as we entered the hospital, if I would ever see the sunlight again. My fears were somewhat allayed by the room, into which we entered. It resembled a hotel lobby, spacious and well furnished. A great many men and a few women were reading, writing or listening to the radio. In one corner a card game was in progress. just then a small wiry man came up to us, spoke to the doctor, and as she nodded her head in assent, turned to us. I held myy breath and twisted a button off Ierry's sleeve as he started to speak. VVould we like a shoe shine? I sank into the nearest chair in relief, getting up again as the doctor announced that she must leave us for a moment. I immediately an- nounced I was not going to be left, even for a moment. Meanwhile, the man was just about in tears, so I took off my hauraches and gave them to him. His face literally shone. Wiggling my bare toes I scooted after the doctor, followed by a diggusted jerry and the amused glances of the room's other occupants. As it happened, we were led out to the grounds where we were met by a man I took as an attendant. We walked all aroundl the main building, while our new companion outlined the events of the coming celebration. I was fascinated by a huge building some distance from the main hospital and questioned the doctor. It had been erected lately to house the more violent cases and Joe was asked to show it to us. THE CQLLEGIATE 55 As we walked across the lawn I began to get the creeps again. Inside the building I felt no better. Long lines of jail-like cells confronted us. Some weren't too bad, just tiny bleak-looking rooms with the beds cemented to the floor and the utensils of a material I took to be plastic chained to the walls. No decoration whatsoever. Then joe took us up to where the really violent cases were housed. Unlike downstairs, there were guards here and a few of the cells were occupied. A guard relieved ,loe of his duties and showed us into a vacant padded cell. Again'the bed was cemented to the floor. There were no springs, in fact there was very little metal of any sort to it. There were no utensils. The guard told us they could not be left in the cell but were counted on entering and leaving. In any case, there were no knives or sharp-edged utensils allowed. There was one window which was ordinary enough except that the casings were of metal and outside were very strong' looking bars. The walls looked sinister. I was very happy to get out into the corridor again. As we were leaving we passed a cell and who should we see in it but Joe. The guard told us he was one ofl their strangest cases. He had been released several times but always came back. In the guard's opinion he was just too lazy to find work and' rather liked his home in the new building. Sometimes the ways of the san-e are crazier than the- ways of the insane, and I was inclined to agree. - Outside once more, the little man who had taken my hauraches came scampering up. They shone like new and sported new heels in place of the run-down ones they had formerly had. The doctor rejoined us in time to prevent my offering him any money for the job. She explained that he was allowed to do the work he seemed to love on condition that he receive no money for it, because the possession of money seemed to turn him into a raving madness. Therefore, I simply thanked him and admired his handi- work and he went off as happy as a child. The doctor also remarked that if he had been refused the shoes, his tantrums would have rivalled the best five-year-old's. Strange, isn't it, the twists and turns of a deranged mind. The Field Day events were ready to start. Along one , side of the grounds, spectators from miles around were gathering, along the other sides, the patients were milling about. Like small children, the patients en- joyed the games. A minor fight occurred during the shoe race when a lady accused a gentleman of having her shoe. A guard quickly broke it up before the contestants could become violent. Races were run by the old and young, fat and thin patients, much to the amusement of both the patients and their guests, as they seemed to like to regard us. On the more serious side, flowers and vegetables were displayed for judging. After much debating, the judges had placed a silk ribbon inscribed with the words First Prize on every item. The faces of the winners, and everyone was a winner, were radiant with triumph. At dinner that night, safely back at our cottage, we discussed the events of the day. I admitted that I had laughed at these people before, but now that I had seen them, I realized that it is a very terrible thing for a mind not to develop beyond the limits of a five-yearfold or at a time to snap and all reason slip from the grasp of that unfortunate person. My friend, the doctor, also reminded me that I had not visited an ordinary mental hos- pital, but one where the courts had pronounced the patients, who in some case: seemed' like bewildered children, as criminally insane. They are enemies of society, ibut not of their own choice. It Gave me something to think about. b -Jacqueline jackson, II-A. 56 THE COLLEGIATE WILFRED THE WQTCHMAN I, IS NAME isn't really XYilfred, brit' he is shy and quiet and does not ' like to talk about himself, or have people talk about him. lVVil- fred is a night watchman and a mechanic combined. From twelve to fifteen' hours every night, six nights a week, he works by himself in a plant Where fifty men usually work during the day. I have watched him many times, and he is a man any employer could be proud of, truthful, honest, industrious, but-stubbornly independent. He' doesn't mind being made to do a thing, but he becomes veryi angry when he is told how to do it. Fort example, one night just before closing time, the foreman informed him that an electric drill in the machine shop was,iout of' order. I-le wanted to show lYilfred what was wrong with iti, but vwilfredy said that he could hx it without being shown how. ' 1 - lYell, be careful: it's expensive, warned the foreman. Look, stormed lYilfred, you go to bed and don't worry. It will be ready for work to-morrow. The foreman apparently knew Wilfred quite well for he just smiled slightly, and left without another word. Later that night I found lYilfred in the shop, the drill, or I suppose that's what it was, was arranged on the floor, in about twenty different parts. XYilfred would pick up each piece carefully, look at it, and go on to the next.- Then, after looking at a small tube intently, he slowly got up from the Hoor. I've got it. he spoke aloud to himself. He sounded more like a scien- tist, who had just split an atom, than a workman who was doing his job. But that was XYilfred. Even when cleaning pipes, or tiring a furnace, he went about it in a very serious, dignified manner. , The one peculiar thing about lYilfred, to me' anyway. is that he likes to work hard, XYhen working nights, he could catch up on a few hours sleep if he wished, but he would rather have a wrench in his hand and a job 'to do, than sleep all night. There are not many men like that. i - He had had a very good job before his present position, as a guard at a war plant. He walked around the plant in a cleanly pressed uniform, did very little work, and received extremely high wages. But walking around a plant with a shiny badge on his chest, and, a gun in hishand wasn t' Wils frerfs idea of earning a living. If only he could have captured a spy or sabo- teur, he might have felt useful, but as nothing eventful 'happenedpancl be- cause he was very sensitive, he began to think of himself as a slacker. I Anyone can look and act important, he told me, but tI'd rather work at something that I like and that is doing someone some good. lYilfred has n-ever had any schooling, except a few years at public school. He ran away from home when he was fourteen. At sixteeiiihe was working on an oil tanker as a deckhand. It was then tha-t 'he first became interested in mechanics. He spent all of his spare time wabtching1and'Jrelp2 ing the ship's engineer. XYhen he was eighteen he left the boats and went home. In his home town he got a job in a small repair shop and again leafrnled many new and interesting things. But this job only lasted a year. For four or five years after that he went from one position to another and- at each place he learned something new. 4 , 111 lYilfred isn't a specialist at any one occupation. He is a goodfwelder, a fair pipe-fitter, an average stoker-but he does not excel at anything.: Little by little, he has picked up enough practical education in ten years, so that now he can fix anything from patching a boiler to repairing a watch. Even at his present position he is learning new ideas. THE COLLEGIATE 57 He isn't afraid to try anything once. One night he operated on an ex- tremely expensive automatic air compressor, which wasn't running to suit him. - He took it apart very carefully and examined each part' whilef he -was cleaning it. After some questioning, I found to my surprise that he had never seen a' machine like this before. I told him I thought he might get into trouble if he couldn't get it back together again. He just shrugged his shoulders. A It came apart, he explained, so it has got to go' back together again. That's just common sense. He put it together again too. It took him six hours to do it, but he did. And it works better than ever before. 'V W'ilfredV never gets any thanks for what he does. He gets paid for being a watchman. He fixed the compressor not because he had to, but be- cause he wanted to, because he was curious to see what made it tick. Probably noone will ever notice that the machine is working better or that a leak in a radiator pipel stopped one night as if by. niagicigior thati the fur- nace pipes never seem to get dirtyg but that does'n't bother NVilfrecl'. 'W'hen he is dressed in old clothes, holding a screwdriver iffflone hand, 'and studying some new mechanism, he is happy and oblivious to the worl-d around him. - -Bert Baldwin, II-C. QQ come. HOME HE TRAIN rolled speedily along, and many people had come and gone from the car. I noticed a well-decorated, young soldier near the end of. the car, who sat alone for many weary miles. He! sat there staring blankly into the dark night and yet it seemed he saw nothing. The corductor came through loudly calling the next station. The soldier didn't move a muscle, but as the conductor passed him he caught his algm and earnestly questioned him. The conductorpanswered and walked quickly on but the soldier only seemed disappointed in his reply. y I A half ,hour had passed and the train roared on? whistling late into the damp, coldnight but in the car all was quiet anddstill. The lonely' soldier still sat in his seat,,his face almost pressed against the window.. The conductor came through again, this time punching tickets. XVhen the soldier was asked for his ticket he fumbled clumsily in his pocket for the precious piece of pa- per. The conductor spoke to the forlorn youth and for the first time during the long journey I saw a smile on the solclier's thin set lips and I knew the 11ext stop was his. Q For the next few moments he seemed happy and then ia little impa- tient. Then the train stopped and only then did Itknow, as he was slowly led down the aisle by the conductor, that he was blindg-and that herwas going home. 1 1 . A -D. Claryk, II-A. ' .wif ' I janet: Did you ever hear a rabbit bark, sir? Mr. Trietz: Rabbits don't1bark, Janet. U J. Helliwell: That's funny. Here in my biology book it says that rabbits eat cabbage and bark. i -1 f 58 'THE CoLLEciATE 'PUPPY LOVE ND STILL the telephone did not ring. It seemed to Elsa that she had been waiting hours for the call she was sure would come. Remember when you were fifteen? You used to get so enthusiastic over the possibility of something or someone new. That is just how Elsa felt. She was fifteen and definitely enthusiastic over a certain individual. After all, big brown eyes and an appealing look are two things not to be ignored. The sight of them just one-e is enough to quicken the hcartfbeat of any healthy-blooded young girl. Elsa did not even know his name, but did this stop her? Not Elsa. She kept right on waiting and hoping. Whenever she closed her own grey eyes the vision'of him rose before her and she smiled secretly. How wonder- ful to have him beside her all the time! They would go to school together and he would meet her when school was over. Elsa could see the two of them going for long walks in the spring. She could see again the waves in his redebrown hair. If only . . . The telephone! It was ringing. Keep calm, be very quiet-excited. Hello-yes, this is Elsa Forest . . . To-morrow night? That would be wonderful . . . Yes, I'll be waiting. Good-bye. She slowly put the receiver back in place and her lips parted in a smile, at last! '1 o-morrow night he would come. She had seen him but once and he was hers. Did you say who? XYhy, the cocker spaniel puppy in the pet shop window, of course. -Helen Passmore, 13-B. Q, Two cavalry rookies were given a horse apiece. They wondered how they could tell them apart. The first one tried cutting the man off of his but it soon grew in again. Then the second one tried clipping the tail of his but it soon gre win again, too. Finally, the first one suggested measuring the horses. Sure enough, the black horse was a full three inches higher than the white horse. 1: Pk Jr wk The dawn . . . Qstruggled Mary june Matthews in a shorthand classj. Go on, said Mr. Graham. The dawn was . . . XYell, go on. The dawn was . . .beginning . . . to . .. . break . . Heavens! exclaimed Mr. Graham, sit down until you see the daylight. ar wr wk Pk VYatcha doin'? Writin' a joke. Tell her hello for me. THE COLLEGIATE 59 'EQYBB r vu EDITORS-Bernece Freidman, Mar'got Lusby While we through this life do pass, We travel day by day. To augmenttour intelligence We travel far way. Although the pleasures we may find In travelling land or sea Arc great and good, none is so fair As travelling home can be. BERNECE FREIDMAN. CANADA'S CAPITAL HE FIRST thing that catches the attention of a visitor, as he comes out of Union Station is the Rideau Canal. This canal is very interesting in the fact that it was built originally as a military structure. T'he XVar of 1812 left strained relations between Canada and the United States, and the canal was constructed as Z1 means of defence in 1826. This waterway was intended to be used as a means of getting gunboats from the St. Law- rence into Lake Ontario, without having to travel through the international section of the St. Lawrence. XV4hen it was completed, it was never used for war purposes 'and thas been of very little commercial importance. During the years it took to complete the Rideau Canal, a town grew up called Bytowni, named for Colonel By, the builder of the canail. Later the name was changed to Ottawa, and in 1858 was selected by Queen Victoria as the seat of government. In 1867 it' was made the capital' of the Dominion. Ottawa is dominated by the beautiful Gothic arohitecture of the Par- liament buildings, on the summit of Parliament Hill. The famous carillon of 53 bells hangs in the Peace Tower here. Here also is the Memorial Chamber of the Dominion--its tribute to the dead, with its Altar of Remembrance. 60 THE COLLEGIATE XVi'ohin the altar is a book contain-ing' all tlhe names of the men and women who gave their lives for their country during NYorld XYar I. Stone for the Hoor of the Chamber was brought from the parts of France and Belgium where Canadian soldiers fought and died. The marble border was the gift of the Belgian Government, and the white stone of Cha- teau Gillard was presented by France. Great Britain supplied the huge block from which the altar was carved. Years of expert craftsmanship have gone into the relief work and carving which tell the story of Canadian valour and sacrifice. Among the public institutions are the Archives and the Royal Mint. In the latter, Canadian gold, silver and copper are transformed into Canadian currency, w'hile in the former are the priceless collections of documents and pictures relating to the history of Canada Here are the documents of early French explorers and generals, oft Canadian statesmen and military leaders, and of pioneers-all w'ho helped to develop this country of ours-CANADA. -Leonard Saine, 13.5. TEN WEEKS ON THE HIGH SEAS E LEFT Yenang Yaung, Burma, on the Irrawaddy ferry early one morning in 1936. Standing on the dock were all of Dad's coolies who had come down to say good-bye to us and help us load our 'baggage aboard the ferry. The trip down the Irrawaddy to Prome was beautiful. One of the most gorgeous sights was the defile which is enclosed by high rocks on each side of the river, and on the flat face of the rocks are beautiful hand-carved pictures of Buddhas, snakes and other oriental tiguresg and topping each peak is a pagoda. At Prome we cihanged from the ferry to the train, and our journey to Rangoon began again. The white people travel first class on the trains, which entitles them to a private compartment. This lap of the journey took only one night, and we arrived in Rangoon at morning. At Rangoon we stayed at the famous Strand Hotel on the waterfront, which had an extensive view of the river and all shipping. XVe had to stay in Rangoon for several days as our ship the Mapia, a large Dutch vessel, was beingbfumigated and we had to wait for the fumes to abate. Rangoon is a plague spot, and fumigating is one of the Maritime laws. The Mapia was too large to come into the harbour, so we had to go out to the ship in a tender. , Now we were starting our ten-week trip home to Canada. Our first stop was in the Federated Malay States at Penang: this too was a very beau- tiful city, and we stayed at. the largest hotel in the Far East, the Eastern Oriental. From here we went to Singapore, where we visited a park in which monkeys ran about freely and unattended. XYe also, saw the largest orchid house in the world, siftuated in the famous Botanical Gardens, but one of my greatest thrills was riding in a rickshaw. lYe remained in Singapore for sev- eral days and stayed :at the Raffles Hotel. Our next stop was in java at Batavia, and there we had Rice Tafle at the famous hotel Dies Indesf' Tthen we visited Samacang, Surabaya, and the Dutch island of Billiton, where tin is mined, and we bought some sou- THE COLLEGIATE 61 venirs of blocked tin. Our next stop was at Sumatra, and we purchased pieces of delicate silver work. Wie doubled back to Singapore and then to Makassar on the island of Celebesg where we picked up some beautiful rugs and Batik. Manila in the Phillipines came next, and we stayed there for five days with some friends. After that came llo-llo,jwhere mother bought some enchanting perfume called Elang-Elangf' Our last .stops before crossing the Pacific were the island of Cebu and then another island at which the ship took on a cargo of mahogany Y , Crossing the Pacific took three weeks. Our hrst port of call in the United States was Los Angeles. From there uje stopped at various ports until we reached Vancouver, our destination. This concluded our ten-week journey, which now seems to me like a dream. .- l Marilyn. Flett, IIC. A VISIT T0 COLOMBIA HE BOAT docked at Baranquilla in the pitch 'black of a tropical night. XYe found the city crowded. and there was a sharp con- trast between tfhe beautiful, modernistic hotel and the dirty one-roomed homes of the natives. The hotel was built in a U-shape with all outside rooms leading onto wide balconies, and in the centre was a very elaborate swim- ming pool. s ' lYe left by river plane the next day for Barranca Bermeja. The one hundred and fifty odd miles provided much interesting, if not particularly .beautiful scenery. The thick green jungle was so tightly interwoven that we very rarely could catch a glimpse of the ground. The muddy, dried-up river did not look very attractive. The only beauty was in the mountains. The high snow-capped peaks stand as a symbol of freedom and aspiration in the midst of the backwoods country. Our first impression of the natives came when we saw a very brown. barefooted, large-boned woman with black hair and eyes, walking along the side of the road carrying a huge bundle on 'her head and smoking a big black cigar. 1 The native village is an amazing spectacle. There is no middle class of people. The wealthy have beautiful modern homes and gardens. Their automobiles would make any Canadian envious. The majority of the natives however, live in one-roomed 'huts without windows. Since their homes' are all joined together and open onto the sidewalk, they have no .lawns or flower beds. - ' Their market is another amazing sight. You can buy almost any kind of tropical fruit for a few cents-mangoes, guavas, lemons, limes, papayas, melons, pomegranates, oranges and tangerines. Large tree-ripened bananas are two for a centiavo ffour-fifths of a centj. The Colombian money system is not very complicated, but there are a great many counterfeit coins, and a Colombian will never accept a fifty cent piece without testing it to see if it will ring. The whole market is a riot of colour and confusion, especially con- fusion, with donkeys and goats wandering at will. The stores which are much the same, offer all sorts of so-uvenirs and useful articles. Shoes can be ordered to measure and are made of the finest leather. Many of the purchases are made by bargaining or even haggling. To a 'Colombian that is an essential to business. ' 62 Ti-IE COLLEGIATE VVe lived in a,camp separate from the natives, surrounded by a high fence. The 'houses were well ventilated and had many modern improvements. Each' family had a native maid and also a girl to do the washing and ironing. At first because the food was so dehnitely Colombian we did not enjoy the meals but we soon overcame our dislike. Fruit was always served, either at the beginning or at the end of the meal. Fish were seldom eaten because they were caught in warm waters and their flesh was not firm. In this part of the world there is no twilight. From the brilliance of a tropical day to the darkest niglht is but a momentary lapse., This was but one of the many attractions which made our visit to Lolombia memorable. g W -Marjorie Lethbridge, II-C. ITRAVEL - IT BROADENS THE MIND NVEEK before Christmas on the Empire State express flashing to- wards tremendous New York State, a cross-section of humanity travelled with one common goal-New York City. Ordinarily these people, representing all creeds, religions and nations, make the trip solely a personal venture. The extent of friendliness shown is, perhaps, a casual conversation with the occupant of the other half' of the seat. Yet unusual circumstances may alter the traveller's aloofness, and unite these people into a firm, though temporary link of friendship. VVlhen I boarded this luxurious silver train in St. Thomas, I worked my way through several plush-chaired coaches beautified by oils and chrome Hnishings, to my coach E-25. There my reservation directed me to a seat beside a friendly teen-age girl from Detroit. Dropping into my seat, I sighed with relief, for once I was on the Empire State what could happen? Plenty! Our greatest worry was the threat of possible stoppage or delay at snow-'bound Buffalo. All newspapers blared the news of tremen- dous snow piles there, with train traffic literally at a standstill. Much as I should some day like to visit that city, I had no desire to be marooned there for a few days. However Buffalo was reached and passed, with the customs barely disturbing the few Canadians in the coach. Lunch in t-he diner, and I had returned to the coach, having enlarged the number of my acquaintances by two-a boy from Detroit and a Canadian veteran who 'had shared tihe 'table with my girl friend and me. T-he train dew rapidly on, keeping excellent time. We noticed that the snow drifts grew greater as we drew farther away from Canada C-and they speak of the snowy northlj. Hour followed hour and again we were standing in line at the diner. I Back to E-25 again. VVe had just passed theplarige city of Albany, when we stopped, simply stopped, and remained as motionless as a stubborn mule. Even the mule 'had an advantage over us, he knew why he remained stationary, we didn't. There. outside Albany, we remained from seven till nine P.M. All calculations had it that we would arrive at our destination at midnight-two hours late. Why was on every lip. The reason quickly became obvious. There had been a wreck on the tracks ahead of us. Flaming cars lined the track. blood-bathed victims reclined on the snowy white sidings. Immediately a contagious, hysteri-cal supposition started. THE COLLEGIATE 63 ' What if my father faunt, uncle, husband, etc.j hears about the wreck? He's sure to think it was the Empire. VVell, there's nothing I can do about it, but poor father. The train was again in motion and we were all secretly- thankful that ours had not lbeen the wrecked train. Already the atmosphere of the coach was different. The two blonde children that had played in the aisles all day, became the pets of all the passengers. Conversations sprouted on topics ranging from overseas to the vacations to be spent in New York. Gin rummy games were played across the aisles. Friendship was slow'ly seeping in. Calamity had only begun to stir us into iher great human stew. After forty minutes of travel, the best train in the continent according to all the advertisements, creaked to a second stop. Exasperation was the general sentiment. Never again. I'll Hy wherever I'm going. Fly? I'd walk before I'd put a foot in an N.Y:C. train. Q Such remarks were targeted at the coach porter, a genial carefree character, who sarcastically informed us that I deeply regrets the tardiness of this here train apd coffee will be served immejutlyf' The coffee supply was soon exhausted-the diner was stocked for only a twelve-hour run, so was our patience. The passengers took to promenading through the other cars to stretch their weary limbs and aching backs. Several cars forward I encountered a group of girls going home from Rochester University for the vacations. They were freshmen and soon we were engrossed in conversation about their school. More friendships had bloomed. It was now ten-thirty and to avoid boredom, we determined to organ- ize the car for enjoyipent. Thus the regular passengers and seven of us from E-25 began singing, 11rst popular tunes and then Christmas Carols. How ap- propriate they seemed as we looked out into the snowy night. Charades, al- ways an amusing pastime, was started at one end of the coach. Fifty-year- old- businessmen joined, as eager as high school boys. The decks of cards were pooled for the enjoyment of everyone. Here was a broadened and enlightened spirit of humanity's need for companionship. Here there was friendship for necessity's sake, tolerant and ignorant of class distinction. Hurled together by coincidence in one stream- lined enclosure were rich men and poor, Protestants, Jews and Catholics, white women and brown, fur-lbedecked and tweed-clothed alike-all were friends in the truest meaning of the ambiguous term. Travel may be tiring fwe were six hours latej, it may be expensive, but yes, it does broaden the mind. -Bernice Friedman, 13-B. 3565: They had just kissed a long time. He was still breathing the subtle, flower- like perfume with which she had dabbed the lobes of her ears. Crocus? h murmured. No, darling, she sighed, but for a minute I thought I was going to. :sf Pk :ic wk Hick Town CCorunna, perhaps?j: One where if you see a girl dining with a man old enough to be when father-he iS. THE COLLEGIATE The Sarnia Botdrdifofwtifducation and its ,- i Advisory Voeotional Committee Are glad to avail themselves of this opportunity of greeting the 1946 Collegiate Magazine Staff and also all the readers of this publication. TO THE EDITORIAL AND BUSINESS STAFF M I they -extend hearty congratulations on the successful issue of this excellent school magazine. f ' TO THE STUDENTS OF THE S. C. I. 8: T. S. ' they express sincere'interest in their welfare and best wishes for success in the year's work. TO THE TEACHING STAFF they desire to extend an expression of confidence and appreciation. T0 THE GENERAL PUBLIC they wish to point out the facilities for day and evening class instruction provided by the Collegiate and Teichnical-,School Day classes in academic. commercial, and technical courses are open to all girls and boys of Sarnia and vicinity who are able and willing to undertake the work. livening classes at nominal cost are available in many vocational subjects. An- nouncement of these is made in the local press early 1lllOClOlJCl'. . t i ' SARNIA BOARD OF EDUCATION, 18946 J VV. Simpson-Chairman H.. D. Van Horne-Vice-Clrairman YV. A. Hartley, H G. Macliinlay, F. XValker, H. E. Corey. XV. E. Jennings XV. H. Kenny, Mrs. A. XV. Mills, XY. A. Donohue. ADVISORY-VOCATIONALUCOMMQITTEE Chairman-R. L. Sands Vice-Chairman-J. XYalterhouse Appointed Members-T C. Clark, H. M. English, E. XV. Geddes, A. M. XVelsh. Representatives of the Board-J. XV. Simpson. XV. A. Hartley, H. G. Macliinlay, F. XValker, Mrs. A. XV. Mills, XV-. A. Donohue. OFFICERS OF THE BOARD Mrs. M B. Beasley-Secretary-Treasurer W. G. Coles-Asst. Principal, Coll. Inst. and Tech. School Roy McAllister-Attendance Officer Robert O'Neil-Superintendent of Schools VV. S. Pringle-Shops' Director Wfilliam Rogers-Inspector of Public Schools Alex. Sinclair-Principal, Coll..Inst. and Tech. School R. B Wickett-Director of Guidance 64 THE CoLLEc1ArE , 'THE MEMORIAL CHAMBER, OTTAWA i ' , L HE ENTRANCE to the chamber is guarded by two sets of wrought ' .. 1 iron gates. flanked on each side by two lions, one carrying on its shield the 'dragon 'of avar, the other, the dove of peace., Carved abovefon the Gothic a-rc-l1..arefth.e mule, the horse, thereindeer, the dog and the pigeon, -who also servedw' i . . ,Ar H Having' passed through the second set of gates, one enters the' Chapel itself and is suddenly stunned with the grandeur, the height and the all-round magnificence: ,fltris only twenty-four feet square but rises majestically for forty-seven feet, witlivunequalled grace and beauty, to its white dome of line stone tracery. The Chamber is built of Chateau Gailladr stone, and the columns are of St. Anne marble, imported from France. The rich purples and the reds of the great windows cast their flickering reflection across the top and into the depth of t-he altars. Beneath' the windows are tablets containing the' memorable words of the world's 'greatest writers. About the walls beginning at the left of the entrance the wall is broken into seventeen niches, each enclosing a marble tablet upon which is engraved the history of the war. . Carved into the arches above are the devices of the lighting battalions 'and war decorations. The imposts between the niches are surmounted 'by the insignia of all the branches of the Canadian Corps.- ' The floor is laid in stone from those battlelieflds in France whefe so many Canadians gave their lives. The inner stones form a Greek cross be- low the Altar. The names of the battlefields beaten in brass are sunken into the flooring. ' , The base of the Altar is of black marble, the gift from Belgium. In the centre rests the Altar of Remembrance, carved from Yorkshire limestone, Great Britrfins gift to Canada. About it the Royal Arms, the Arms of Can- ada and of the provinces are carved. In the tomb rests the Golclleiifliook of Remembrancd. containing the names and ranks of all the dead. 'At eleven o'clock each day the pages are turned,-so that 'each name is visible once in every twelve months. A Upon the frame are aflixed small devices in Lating and at the corners small figures of kneeling angels keep eternal vigil. I. A V, 1 -Arthur Storey, I2-A. '1 HIGHER EDUCATION . A tBased on a trip over the Andesb i O BEGIN XVITH, ah automobile trip over the Andes can be very V educational and enjoyable. Since it takes about five days to go over the Andes, from 'Pa-lara. Peru, and return, preparations must be made a few days in advance. As therevare no service stations, hotels, or restaur- ants, the traveller must take his own gasoline, food, water, bedding and other supplies ,for the trip, i.I IC-1I11L1Stv3.l-SO',fl'1Z1VC his trusty old road map because, al- though there are few roads, arperson can still get lost. if ' , -T ,,. T1-IE Coi.LEGiA'rE H 65 The west side of the Andes is very rocky and steep. There are many spots where the face of a thousand or two thousand foot cliff is nothing but barren rock, glistening in the brilliant sunlight. Qther parts are covered uith balsam trees which are huge, green and bottle-shaped. These trees, in blossom time, have small puffs of down, which are used as stuffing in pillows. The road on the west side twists' and turns in order to gain an altitude of about twelve thousand feet, before descending the east side. Some parts of the road are very narrow and nerve-wracking at times, but are still enjoy- able. One incident stands out in my mind when there was a thousand foot cliff below the road and another elitt above. The road at this spot was wide enough for just one car and no more. The east side is just the opposite to the west in practically every way possible, except that it is still a part of the Andes. lt is not as steep, and it is much more beautiful. 'l here are very few trees or rocks, but most of the soil is a sort of red clay. The people living on this side have fields of wheat and corn divided off with a certain species of cactus which spreads out and makes quite a protective hedge. There are many species of orchids growing wild, which can be picked from trees. This is a great contrast from North America, w-here people pay large sums of money for just' one of these preci- ous llowers. The difference in vegetation between the east and west sides is due to the fact that the South-East Trade XYin'ds lose their moisture on the east side before crossing the mountains. Many people think that the farther south you travel the warmer it gets, but this is not true. The section of the Andes that we were in was about .th degrees South Latitude, which is approximately three hundred miles south of the equator, but the 'temperature was about .to to 45 degrees. The air is very damp in the Andes. The clouds roll up the side of the 20,000 ft. mountains continuously. Sometimes while driving along the road a person has to stop the car as the lights are of, no avail in seeing the road. There was one time like this on our trip when we came within one foot of the edge of the cliff and were forced to stop the car. The people of the Andes are distant relatives of the Incas. These na- tives wear ordinary clothes with poncho thrown over as a coat. A poncho is a large, home-made, llama-wool blanket with a hole left in the middle to pull down over the head. The natives live, sleep, and eat in these. The homes that we saw have one room, about 1.2, x 1.2, with no chimney and are made of adobe which is a mixture of mud and small sticks. The smoke escapes through a hole in the thatched roof. The floor is hard mud and there is about one table and a few chairs. The beds are made of a num- ber of sticks laid side by side on two cross pieces, which are supported about IS above the ground. XYhile they travel on foot, the women always spin llama wool, in a crude fashion for ponchos. An ancient method of threshing grain is used in t-he Andes. The farmer selects a section of hard clay or rock. He spreads the grain over the plot and allows his horses to walk over it, as was done in Egyptian times. A Sometimes my journey over the Andes seems as far away and as long ago as Egyptian times. but there are moments when I live it all over again as a pleasure trip, and as an educational experience also. -Douglas Ross, T-Io-B. GNMVD Such is Life: Every woman is wrong until. she cries and then she is right instantly. 3 66 THE COLLEGIATE . SAINT JOHN, NB. AINT JOHN must never be written or spoken of as St. John or St. .lohn's for it immediately reveals that one is from Upper Canada, as XYestern Ontario is called by Saint johnians. This busy seaport city is situated at the mouth of the Saintjohn River. It is divided into three parts: XYest Saint john, East Saint john and the main part fthat is known simply as Saint john. Each part of the city juts into the harbor as a small peninsula, giving the port a very long shoreline along which are the many docks. Ships from all lands call at this ice-free port the year round. Leading to the docks are countless railway tracks which work in conjunction with the ships. There are the spotlessly-white Red Cross ships from Sweden. the Irish ships with Eire painted on their sides and countless other ships of many nationalities. Ships can be seen each morning waiting in the harbor for the fog to lift so that they might be towed into port. Added to this is the mourn- ful cry of the foghorn, which is heard almost every night. V ' Saint -lohn has the honor of presenting the famous Reverse Falls. This freak of nature is caused by the incoming tide meeting the outcoming How of the river. :Xt one particular spot where there are many rocks the water ap- pears to be rushing back into the river. giving us the Reverse Falls. The tide reaches a height of twenty feet. At times, the little ferry that crosses the 'harbor appears to be hidden beneath the docks, while at other times it is level with the docks. It possesses two wheelhouses and the captain on his return trip instead of turning the little crafd around uses the wheel- house at the other end of the boat. The city is hilly and one is constantly walking up or down hill. All the streets from the docks take a sharp incline to reach the main part of town. One may enter the front door of the Post Qffice, go up a flight of stairs, and come out onto another street. The same may be done in many other public buildings and stores. Saint .john is an old city. ln the very early days, settlers were given tracts of land without definite boundaries. As years went by deeds could not be obtained for these properties. Consequently, today- the people rent land for a long period and pay taxes on the building that is constructed thereon. Years ago, when a house was painted on the outside, the taxes were raised. This belief still holds and in many instances one can see row after row of un- painted, tall, square, fiat-roofcd buildings that have never received a coat of paint. The majority of the homes are built side by side with their front doors on the sidewalk. There is on need for a lawn mower or hose, for they have neither a lawn nor a garden. Although the city is not blessed with many tree-lined streets, there are many pretty woods and parks along the outskirts of the city to which the people flock. Swimming is enjoyed only by the hardiest in the Bay of Fundy, the more timid seeking the warmer spots along the inland rivers and lakes. The summers are cool in town and it is unwise to satunter out at any time without a topcoat as protction against sudden showers or cold breezes from the ocean. These same fresh-water lakes and rivers provide naturil spots for skating in the winter. Skiing and tobogganinlg are popular along the many natural tracts and slides throughout the hills. Friday night is to the Saint johnians as Saturday night is to the youth of Sarnia. The stores remain open late on Friday evenings and close at noon on Saturday. The restless are seen walking along the streets, entering thea- THE COLLEGIATE A- 67 tres or waiting in line at restaurants. The three bowling alleys provide only ten-pins for bowling enthusiasts. The theatres have greatly improved seat- ing plans. In some theatres the seats are in definite elevated rows while in others the rows of seats are in zig-zag formation so that one seat comes be-- tween two in front. There are a High School and a Vocational School. Students are re- quired only to have Grade XII for their matriculation. The High School is perched on top of a hill to which there is an approach of at least fifty steps. This city, inhabited by the descendants of the Loyalists, are gracious hosts to the visitors of their home town. Its conservative citizens are proud of its ancient landmarks, statues of its founders and their family trees. -L. Guise. 41 AN EXCURSION TO GREENE-'IELID VILLAGE Y ERI-IAPS many of you have never visited Greenfield Village, and, perhaps many of you have never even heafd of it. In that case. let's take a little jaunt over the river, then down to Detroit to tour the city. The Edison Institute was founded by Henry Ford and named for his friend, the late world-famous Thomas Edison. The drive over the two hun- dred acres of Edison grounds to the Yillage is a most enjoyable one. The scenery is magnificent. The countryside is so neat, immaculate, and pleasant. The Village road is bordered with stately shady elms and oaks, and clean white picket fences. Green fields are enclosed in straight shining wire fences. The whole countryside has a neat, well cared for appearance, complete with cozy painted farm buildings here and there, The hominess of these farms is most inviting to the weary traveller! Only too soon, the Yillage Road seems to come to an end, and Greenfield Village is before us. Here, the relics and handicraft of the past are preserved as they were in their original environment. Immediately upon entering the Village-and after passing the large floral clock-Main Street offers its cluster of various ships and mills where hand-woven textiles and stone-ground flour and meal are still made. Michigan Avenue features such places of renown as the old Clinton Inn and Stables, the beautiful Martha Mary Chapel, the XYaterford General Store with shelves still stocked with precious pre-war and old-time luxuries, and the still sturdy brick jewelry shop topped with its famous Bell Ringers who strike the hour by gonging three huge steel bells. This struc- ture is rare, being the only such Bell Ringers in the nworld. On Middlesex Avenue is the Logan County Courthouse where a fire lit by Edison some forty years ago is still burning, and on the same grounds are the log cabins and confinement huts used by the negro slaves. On the other side of the street is the Town Hall School where lessons are still taught to the village children. Dearborn Road is the site of the Stephen Foster Cottage, the Noah VVebster house, the Luther Burbank birthplace, and the old Edison Home- stead. In the historis Edison building in the Village is the restored laboratory and -the Fort Myers laboratory, both filled with Edison's inventions. The many industrial and craft shops which dot the spreading west section of the Village include the 'Wright Cycle Co. shop-birthplace of the airplane, the Baglevy Avenue shop-birthplace of the Ford car, the Sir john Bennet Jewelry Shop from London, England, as well as the shops of the village blacksmith, weaver, glassblower, shoemaker, and silk, cotton, and sugar mills. 68 THE COLLEGIATE Thomas Edison, whose lifetime of constant service to humanity has been an inspiration to Mr. Ford and many others, is remembered in the Greenfield Village museum, home of a thousand and one relics and inventions. lt occupies approximately eight acres, all under one roof, and the mammoth floor is a masterpiece in itself, being laid with rare teakwood in a herringbone design. Exhibits in the agriculture section are arranged in order of evolution and trace the growth of crops and a century's development in implements. ln the Manufactural section we witness the development of steam power to the present most modern electrical devices. The Transportation exhibit in- cludes chariots, primitive ox sledges and carts, carriages, the first and most recent Ford automobiles. aeroplanes, motorcycles, boats and bicycles. Of course, foremost in these exhibits are Edison's inventions. It would take days to really study everything in Greenfield Village and the Edison Museum and realize the value, historic importance and hard la- bour behind each, and to remember that without men like Edison and Ford we would not have the numerous utilities and luxuries so available today. -Marian R. Young, I3-B, YOKOHAMA BEFORE THE B-29's E REACHED the landing pier of Yokohama. A slight examina- tion of our trunks was made by officers polite enough to beg our pardon, as do most japanese in defeat or when a superior passes, for the trifiing delay. ln Japan, there is a duty on cameras, one can readily see why. On leaving the custom-house l laughed aloud to see awaiting us the universal means of transportation in the Orient, the jlinrikisha. These tiny vehicles looked as though a heavy man could crush them to earth, or a strong wind might blow them against the wall. After much foolislmess on our part, we finally left for the city of Yokohama. Delighted with our first experiences in these little vehicles, we left the custom house for the Grand Hotel. This is one of the best hotels in the entire East. lt fronts directly on the sea, and one can sit for many hours on its vcrandahs and watch the animated scenes of street-life in the foreground. Yokohama is divided into three sections. The first is the original busi- ness settlement, where the hotels are located: the second is the strictly ja- panese quarter: the third lies on an eminence called The Bluff. The sum- mit of this hill is reached, not merely by a winding road, but also by a stair- way known as The Hundred Steps, Upon this height most of the foreign- ers reside: here also are the hospitals of different nations, the foreign ceme- tery, and several consulates. On this hill, one does not go by name, but by number. For instance you might be taking one to Gentleman 35. These names are used because the rickshaw drivers do not understand foreign names. Some of the houses on the Bluff are quite attractive: and life in them must be in many respects delightful. Here we met several women who said that they enjoyed keeping house in japan. The markets of Yokohama abound- ed in meat, fish, fruit, and vegetables, all at reasonable prices. The summer had been hot and varied by an occasional earthquake, but on the Bluff the air was pure and cool and they had at least been exempt from thunder storms. THE COLLEGIATE j 69 Yokohama's climate is not always tropical or even mild. Xkiinter also can assert itself here and boats and buildinjgs sometimes are covered with snow. The japanese have only charcoal braziers to warm their houses, and these dwellings are mere paper screens. They themselves rarely wear woolen garments, much less flannel ones. Yet the people are hardy. The foreign cemetery of Yokohama is beautifully situated on the Bluif, above the tumult of the town. It is well kept,, and many of its monuments are elaborate. Numerous epitaphs in English, French, German and Italian attest the cosmopolitan character of the place. The day after our arrival in Yokohama we drove out into the sur- rounding country. It was historically very interesting. Upon the plain where we saw labourers harvesting their crops, once stood the ancient capital of -the empire, Kamakura. At liamakura is the world-renowned statue of Buddha, one of the largest works in bronze that man has ever made. Upon a huge portion of monstrous magnitude, he has been seated here in solemn contemplation for several hundered years. From here we went to Tokyo. But later, as I have heard, in the nights of the terrible war which has just ended, tons upon tons of bombs rained like hailstones above this entrance to the heart of Japan. The cemetery, the fields, the houses on the Bluff are now pocked like a victim of smallpox. On an August morning in the harbour of Yokohama I saw Yokohama again, only now as the commander of a cruise. Once again I saw some of my old friends, but their emaciated bodies showed that their life had changed. The japanese were still respectful, but my golden stripes and my chest full of medals and ribbons had placed me above them. Now the Bluit is bare but covered by rubble, no jinrickishas ask to take you through the streets. Yes, Yokohama was beautiful before the B-29's. -james Xkfhitfield, 1 1-A. CALIFORNIA - AN AUTOMOTIVE FAIRYLAND ALIFORNIA is really a place out of a fairy book, that is, some parts of the state. The southern coast of California back to the mountains is a region of eternal sunshine. In the thickly populated areas, many conveniences have een developed that are seen nowhere else. With the growth of the automotive industry in the east, 'came the growth of the drive-in in California. Drive-ins were at lirst just a place where occupants of automobiles were served at the curbs. But then a man named johnson decided to capitalize on the idea. He built four of these drive-ins on a circular plan. They were comparatively small to the huge drive-ins of today, but just the same they were an advancement. I-Ie called each of these the Rite-Spot. To-day he has a huge business. Another famous chain of these is The Brown Derbiesf' The movies were the next to be influenced with this healthful idea. A huge screen was set up with many rows of parking spaces in front of it. Thus people could sit in their cars and enjoy the latest released movies. Still more modern are several drive-ins now in construction. A large bank is building an annex where the teller's window is to be so situated that you do not have to leave the car. Also under construction is a huge Super Market. At the entrance the customer leaves a list of the groceries he wishs to purchase. Then he parks the car on a parking lot. Here can be 7G THE COLLEGIATE heard music or a meal can be purchased at an adjacent restaurant. Ten min- utes later, the largest order is ready at the exit of the store. YYith the youth of the district, speed is the watchword. All, or near- ly all boys over sixteen own their own cars. Many of them having hot rods or Usoupcd up huggies. On these cars are put canons, ripples, super- cnargers, douhlc caihuretors and restyled hodies. Canons are an extention on the exhaust pipe that makes the car sound like an aeroplane. Ripples are large chrome huh-caps that have steel bars on them and they hum when me car is in motion, and whistle when it travels at a high speed. These souped :up cars may be seen by the scores at these local drive-ins. French cars of a recent model are easily adaptible to this souping. Small cars such as Croslcy's and lglantams are popular and are common among the youths. Parking spaces are made on the tops of most mountains and give an excellent View of unexcelled splendour. The most vivid of these is from Mount llflson. So hoys. if you intcitd to he modern, there is only one place for you- Cfaiiiornia. -John Battram, 1 1-A. fx ovg 'lllfI.lil'l'lONli CONYICRSATION Ile: I-Icllo. lilainez llello. lle: Do you stil love me? If. Gray: Sure, who is it? 11 as X1 After the lights went on again- Elhirl Smith: You really shouldn't have kissed me like that with all these peo- ple around so close-even if it was dark. Don: I didn't kiss you. I only wish I knew who it was-I'd teach him. Snuff: Oh Guth, you couldn't teach hi1n anything. ' il wk ii Mr. Marcy: XYhy are you scratching your head? Lantz: I've got arithmetic hugs in my head. Mr. M.: XYhat are arithmetic bugs? Dont CootieS. Mr. BI.: XYhy do you call them arithmetic hugs? Don: Because they add to my misery, subtract from my pleasure, divide my attention. and hoy! do they multiply!! Mr. Kilbreath: Do you suppose our son gets his intelligence from me? Mrs. K.: He must, I've still got mine. 1-'HE COLLEGIATE A MATETQR P H OTO G RAP H Y F' Jia Candid Camera Shots by Students of S.C.I. and T.S 72 THE COLLEGIATE Qlumnae 7 , Alan Milner, Sarnia Bridge Co. Alice lsbisetr, home Alice Free, Logan and Logan. Alvin Park, lients' Shoe Store. Aniy lflayes, St. Clair Processing Corp. .Xnrlrcw liiil-lflHS. home. Ann l'lummcr. Ti :ri into. .Xnrlrcy Pearce, XY. L. Smith, Credit llurcau. Aurlrcy Scarrow, Port Huron. llaibarzt Moore. Toronto University. licrtram Street, Imperial Oil Ltd. licssic XYatson. home lieatricc Brain, XYindsor Nursing Schlbtll. lletty .-Xllingham. Western Univer- sity. Betty Cook, Gas Office. Betty Gallie. Sarnia Business Col- lege. Iictty Gene Shanks. home. llf-'ty 'lean Smith, Rural Hydro Of- fice. l-leverly Stone, Toronto University. Bill lilrims, Toronto University. llill Carruthers. C.N.R. Bill Cliarlick, St. Clair Tobacco Co Bill jones. Peterboro. Bill Pedlar, Goodison's. Bill Osborne, Japan tL'.S. Navyj. Blake XYillock, Gas Company. Bruce Barry, home. Bruce Moore, Sarnia Business Col- lege. Bruce Selnian, Queens University. Bruce XYhitcombe, Clark's Garage. Clare McDonald, Hamilton. Clare Oliver. Business College Colleen Harkins, Business College. Dick Park, Port Huron College. Dick Stewart, Imperial Oil Ltd. Don MacFarlane, London. Don Shanks. Toronto 'L'niversity. Don XYiles, Tyre Construction Co. Donna Dobson, C.lY.A.C. Donna Gale, XY. L. Smith, Credit Bureau Donna Maclntyre, London. Dora Bright, Dow Chemical. Doris hlohnston Law Office, Lock- hart. Dorothy Dorothy pital. Dorothy Dora ntlty Dorothy Dorothy Tjcnrcmlltj' tric. D4 Jrotlty .-Xbel, Bell Telephone. Carr, Sarnia General Hos- Chappel, Polymer. Kelly, XYoolworth's. Pippard, Imperial Oil Ltd. Scott. Bank of Commerce. Skerratt, Chambers Elec- Teasell, Auto-Lite. Doug Gray, Ridley College. Doug -leffrey, Laidlaw Belton Lum- ber Co liclra XYooley. Toronto University. lidward, Dennis, Sherdan, Man. Eileen Iden. Iamieson's Grocery. Ellen Robbins, London Central Col- legiate. Elmer Brock, St. Clair Tobacco Co. Elsie Pullman, Grocery Store. Evelyn Bush, Capitol Theatre. Evelyn Heal, Auto-Lite. livelyn Whitfield, home. Faye XYilson. National Grocers. Florence Carter, Bell Telephone Florence McGugan, married. Frances Sayers, Polymer Corpora- tion. THE Co1.L1-:GIATE 73 Frances Elder, Toronto University. Freda Holmes, England. George Milne, Toronto University. Gordon Milne, Toronto University. Gordon Laird, Business College. Grace Smith, Laidlaw Belton. Harold Zeiler, Business College. Hazel Stewart, married. Helen Carmichael, Brantford. Helen Carruthers, Business College Herman 'XVieringa, U.S. Navy. Hugh Iiilfbreath, Sarnia Bridge Co. Ian Bell, St. Andrew's College. Iris lYhite, Canadian Synthetic Rub- ber Co. Irvin Tremain, Canadian Observer. Isobel Henderson, Business College. Isobel McIntosh, Glasgow, Soctland. Jack Armstrong, Imperial Oil Ltd. Jack Blake, St Clair Processing Corp. Jack Brennan, Polymer Corpora- tion. Jack Dorsay, Ajax Division U. of T. Jack Godley, Gas Co. Jack Scarrow, working in Port Hu- ron. Janet Hawkins, Treasurer's Office. J. D. Murray, Army, London, Ont. Jean Deyo, Toronto University. Jean Gilbert, London. Jean Dixon, lVoolwortl1's Jean Marshall, Polymer. Jean McDonald, University Halifax. Jean McKinley, Toronto University. Jennie Brain, XValkers Stores. Joanna Dougherty, Imperial Oil Ltd. Joanne Brown, Polymer. Joyce Addison, C.N.R. Office. Joyce Fisher, Bank of Montreal. Joyce Johnston, Havergal College, Toronto. Joyce Lusk, Spier's Sheet Metal. Judith Payne, Alma College, St. Thomas. June Johnson, Bell Telephone. Ken Heath, City Engineer, City Hall. Ken Smith, Auto-Lite. Lois Marshall, Polymer. Lois Phillips, Bank of Toronto. Lois Morphew, working Port Hu- ron. Mac Evans, Canadian Synthetic Rubber Co. Margaret Anderson, Business Col- lege. Margaret Parker, Toronto Univer- SIIY. Margaret Sinclair, Toronto Univer- sity. Marie Murry, Bell Telephone. Marjorie Abel, Canadian Synthetic Rubber Co Marjorie Babcock, Apprenticing at Hairdressing. Marjorie Isom, Port Huron. Marjorie Shannon, Sarnia General Hospital. Mary Colotelo, Toronto lVestern Hospital. Mike Kuz, home. Molly Murphy, Ontario Ladies' Col- lege. Muriel Ambroise, Bell Telephone. Myrtle Sands, Young's Jewelry Store. Nancy Ahern, Canadian Synthetic Rubber CO. Nancy Le Sueur, Toronto Univer- S1tV. Nancy Rose, lYestern University. Neil Craig, London Rehabilitation School. Nellie Thompson, St Clair Process- ing Corp. Nola Scimmi, Cullis Law Office. Nona Horner, Shawville, Quebec. Noreen Clysdale, Mr. XVickett's of- fice. Norma Bentley, lVoolwOrth's. Norris McDonald, Imperial Oil Ltd. Pat Bruner, C.N.R. Office. Pat Street, Sarnia Bridge Co. Peggy Christien, Civic Hospital, Ot- tawa Peggy Milne, Toronto lYestern Hospital. Phyllis Ambler, home. Phyllis Pearce, Muellers Ltd. THE COLLEGIATE Are You Interested in Your Community? If so, give three suggestions as to how it can be improved and forward them to Sarnia Chamber of Commerce. l. ,,,, . 2. .,,. . 3. ...,.....................................................,....,.....,...,.................... . SARNIA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE in-'X 'f , - LV ., The Imperial City lvG'.'5l'G'N1 You are the citizens of to-morrow and the future of this city will be in your hands. It is your duty to maintain a youthful and lively interest in civic affairs. INQLQMI MAYOR VV. C. Nelson ALDERMEN Geo. Brydon, Paul Bradley, Jack Church, Wm. Crompton Frank Dyer, Maurice Ieilfries, Doug. Macklin, Sam Welch 74 THE COLLEGIATE Ralph Dailey. Neal's Bread Co. Ralph McClean, Royal Roads Mili- tary College. Ralph Fulkerson, Polymer. Ray Dodds, U.S. Navy. Reid Ellenor, Polymer. Rene Stoner, St. Clair Processing Corp. Robert lrlrown, St Clair Processing Corp. Robert Cole, Imperial Oil Ltd. Robert Graham, Canadian Steam- ship Lines. Robert Hitchcock, Imperial Oil Ltd. Robert Johnston, home. Robert jones, Paris, Ontario. Robert Mcllean, Starkman's Jewel- ry Store. Ross McCrie, C.N.R. Roy Lumby, Sarnia Bridge Co. Robert Thorn, .-Xrmy Trade School. Roy XYelsh. .-Xrmy Ruth Gifford. London. Ruth McCracken, College of Art, -Toronto. Ruth Reynolds, home. Sarah Chappell, Clayton Studio. Sarah Saunders, C.XY.A.C. Shirley Shirley fice Fyfe, St. Clair Processing. Hastings, XY. L. Smith of- Shirley Humphries, Laidlaw, Belton Lumber Co. Shirley Shirley Shirley Shirley Stanley sity. Pass, Bell Telephone. Price, South America. Storey, Gas Office. Iivilson, Gas Office. XYalter, IYestern Univer- Ted Millard, l3arge's Dry Cleaners. Terrence Haney, Army, London, Clntario. Vida Ayrheart, Mueller's. Yirginia Garvin, Bell Telephone. Xlvalter IYren, Toronto University. Iles Moore, Toronto University. ' DESTINATION UNKNDXYN Bill Brown, Carson Thompson, Charles Hoynt, Delores Millar, Doris Spencer, Elizabeth Dew, Frances Scarrow, Frank Hillier, Harold Grass, Helen Moran, -lack Rond, James Durance, John Campbell, john Phair, Kath- leen Fisher, Lois Dove, Marguerite Campbell. Marjorie Long, Murry John- son, Reginald Conant, Ross Stokes, Stella Bolf, Velmajoyce, XVayne Fisher. NNN Shirl: XYas your sailor friend broken-hearted when you jiltedhim? Barb: No, he was perfectly horrid. XYhen I gave him his ring back he cut a notch on the inside. Snuff: XYhat's so bad about that? Smitty: There were five other notches there already. is als Pls if Mary: Is he unusual? Pauline: Is he unusual? NYhy, last night we ran out of gas when he took me for a drive. Jamie: I thought you said he was unusual? Slate: I-Ie walked two miles to get some more! THE COLLEGIATE 75 Ala, '5 47' i y 076 PP-OTDN 50LlD GHS 0 I LJGORHT frlnauis i . l i9 5 -ru fan ,Nu P64141 fi 9.06 cofok aN HCL Elfdn u Rssg PE 00 9. q.aa'f'o 'M HRC.-1 Rfvofc ffl. ERATD 'Doll pm f-1AGNET'i 'saw 3 f 4' OXYGEN ABLE MPP Gitw C 5 5 Tu 11 ce-44 'V 5 1 G7 CHEMISTRY B I3 BHNSEAI auafvrf-2 X GQHV' wave -xenon, .Loaf-9 PH ysfcs 'fI.v,, MLC' L EDITOR-.Edward Bagley HOW RECORDS ARE MADE HEN you are in a booth, playing records at a record shop, or at home with your own, do you ever wonder how the records are made? Here is a brief outline of record manufacture. . The orchestra plays before a microphone, in a room where the sound will not be denected from the walls and cause an echo. The output from the microphone passes through a series of amplifying stages direct to the record- er, which is equipped with a V-shaped cutting tool. The record blank is a circular discxof wax, carried on a turntable which is rotated at a constant speed by a weightgdrivenz motor. As the table rotates, it also traivels hor- izontally at a uniform speed, being carried on a revolving threaded shaft. The cutting point is adjusted to take a cut of a few thousands of an inch in the blank's surface, and as the machine runs it cuts a fine spiral groove of uni- form depth, running from the circumference to within two or three inches of its centre. There are about one hundred grooves per inch on a record's Surface. The record is then dusted with graphite to make it an electrical con negativeg a whole series of these negatives are made. ductor and then slowly rotated in a copperplating bath. NVhen the copper coating is thick enough it is removed from the wax blank and is called a Two kinds of materials are used in the manufacture of the breakable heated hydraulic presses. type of record, resins and gums tshellacj and various mineral fillers, which are used to lower the cost of production and to'give increased resistance to wear. From this material records are pressed from the negatives in steam Victor and Decca use these materials to make, a solid record, but the manufacturers of Columbia records start out with a piece of paper and build up on both sides of it with resins and mineral fillers. From my own experience with records, I find that Victor and Decca wear much better than Columbia, but that they also break easier than Col- umbia records do. I have also found that orchestras or bands with much brass or deep bass instruments, do not make good recordings because the recorder cannot pick up all the notes clearly and it comes out a mass of jumb- led tones. The blast of notes makes excess wear on the record, needle, and pick-up which are as sensitive to mechanical vibrations as your ear drum. By observing the record when it is revolving, you can tell whether it will give you satisfaction, by noting how some parts of, the record reflect light better than others. On the portion that is shiny there are no extremely loud or harsh notes and where it looks dull there is a sudden blast of notes which will not reproduce clearly. If the entire surface of the record looks dull, don't buy it. Get the recording by another orchestra. -Don Godley, T-12. 76 FFHE COLLEGIATE DIESEL-THE MODERN POWER HE FIRST successful Diesel engine was completed in 1897 when Dr. Diesel was thirty-nine years old. It was a single cylinder twenty-five horsepower unit. At that time it was 21. heavy, slow enwgine, rfeighing 250 pounds for each horsepower developed. The Diesel's weight made it too expensive for many uses although its high efficiency partially made up for its cost and weight. At present, a small six-cylinder Diesel en- gine weighs only about ten pounds per horsepower. Railroad Diesels weigh seventeen pounds per horsepower. The Diesel is no doubt the most efficient type of engine built todayg that is, it converts much more of the energy in a fuel into work. The more useful work obtained from a given quantity of fuel, the higher is the effici- ency. High efficiency means low fuel consumption. The Diesel also has a higher loafing efficiency. In af gasoline engine, air and fuel are always in the ratio of about fifteen parts of air by weight to one part of fuel. This means that one part of fuel always has to heat fifteen parts of air, giving the same temperature at half or no load as at full load. In the Diesel, however, the quantity of air always remains the same, which is more than enough tot burn the fuel injected into it, no matter how large or small the injection. This means that one part of fuel always has to heat more than fifteen parts of air. The temperature,therefore, is not as high in the Diesel as in the gasoline engine with its higher temperature in the cyl- inder which will transfer heat more qickly into the cooling system than the Diesel will. Since the heat which goes into the cooling system is wast- ed, the Diesel engine will waste less of the heat in the fuel and more of the heat is usefully employed to move the piston. No matter what the speed or load on the gasoline engine, the temperatures in the cylinder are always the same. The temperature in the Diesel engine decreases with the speed and load qless fuel to heat the same amount of airy and the heat loss is less as the power output decreases. Both the Diesel and the gasoline engine are internal combustion en- gines which convert the heat of natural fue-ls into work in the cylinder of the engine itself. The Diesel and the gasoline engine are almost identical in ex- ternal appearance. Both engines have cylinders, connecting rods, pistons and a crankshaft, and use a liquid fuel to burn inside the cylinder. Nevertheless, there are fundamental differences. In the gasoline engine, the fuel and air are mixed before they enter the cylinder. In the Diesel, the fuel and air are mixed inside the cylinder. The gasoline engine compresses a mixture of gas- line and air, and is ignited by an electric spark. The Diesel compresses only a charge ofiair and ignition is accomplished by heat of compression when the fuel is injected. In an internal combustion engine, the higher the compression ratio, the greater is the efficiency. The compression ratio of an engine is the ratio of the volume of the cylinder when the piston is at the bottom of its stroke, to the volume of the cylinder when the piston is at- the top of its stroke. ln a gasoline engine, the ratio is aproximately six to one and in a Diesel engine sixteen to one. This means that in a gasoline engine the full charge of gas is compressed to its volume and in a Diesel to a 16th of its volume. ,This high ratio is possible since no ignition can occur by heat of compression since there is no fuel in the cylinder. If a gasoline engine had this compression ratio, the heat of such high compression would pre-ignite the gasoline air mixture resulting in a sharp knock or even force the piston down before it reached the top of its stroke, causing the engine to run backwards. TH1-: COLLEGIATE T77 Since the fuel and the air are mixed inside the cylinder, thereis no need for a carburetor in a Diesel. Instead, a fuel injection system is the device used to force fuel into the super-heated air just before the piston reaches the top of its stroke. Compressing the air until its temperature reaches 1000 degrees, means that the fuel of which the ignition point is 4.50 degrees, will ignite the complete mixture at the instant it is injected into the cylinder. In a Diesel, the throttle is used to control the amount of fuel only, which is in- jected into the cylinder. Although there are two and four stroke cycle engines, and various ways of injecting the fuel and supplying sufficient air, these are the under- lyinug principles of the operation of the Diesel. lYierenga, T-I2. W PLASTICS HAT are plastics? The chemist calls them synthetic resins. A ' resin is a natural source such as asphalt. They are a new series of working materials, which under proper conditions can be coloured, and molded with heat and pressure. They are made of coal, wood, milk, air, tar and cotton, and many other materials. They are all light in weight, smooth textured, resistant to water and corrosion, and have colour variety. i There are twenty main different manufactured plastics, which can be divided into two groups: 'thermosettingsl and 'thermoplasticsf Thermoset- ting plastics undergo a chemical change when heated, and therefore cannot be used again. Thermoplastics don't undergo a chemical change on heating so they can be reheated, and remolded. indefinitely. Plastics are molded by a great variety of methods, the two most impor- tant being 'injection' and 'compressionf XVith the injection method, the plas- tics ,.e forced into cool cavities, after being softened by heat. XYith the conf- pression method, the plastic is placed between two iron jaws, with some shape molded in them. These jaws are heated, then pressed into pastic- forming heat and plastics. Styron, Ethocel, and Saran are three most important plastics. Styron is a thermoplastic plastic, made from styrene, and sold at twenty-five cents per pound. lt is the clearest and lightest plastic: it resists acids and water, it is an extremely good insulator. lts most important use in the war was for radar equipment. Because of its insulating value, it was used in the electric tubes. It was also used for unbreakable laboratory glassware, refrigerator doors, surgical instruments, transmitters, acid bottle tops, and iron combs. Ethocel is extremely tough and strong, and resists an amazing variety of temperatures. It is free from odour, light in weight and molded by either of previous methods. It is very important for aircraft communication, be- cause of strong stalbilityg also for watings on ignition cables for airplanes in sub-zero weather. Fabrics are treated with it against gas, mildew and fire. Ice cube trays are made of it because ice does not stick. It is made into small window panes two inches square, which let light in, but cannot be seen through. These are used in the stair window of Our Lady of Mercy SchOOl on Christina street. ' Saran is made in forms from fine fibres to tremendous pipes. From this great variation, you can see why it is called plastics of many trades. It' has low absorption rate, and is unaffected by age. lt is not flammable, and be- 78 THE COLLEGIATE sides being molded, it can be forged, blown, rolled, stamped and welded. It is used for oil' pipes, carrying away corrosive acids, whioh would eat away metal pipes. It can be stretched into very fine fibres, and woven into cloth. This cloth is used for upholstery in street cars. The ear can be filled with steam, and ready: for use in ten minutes. Similarly it can be used for uphol- stery in cars, and movie-seats, which can be scrubbed with soap and water. You will be pleased that when it starts to rain, you won't have to run out for your lawn furniture, when this new material is used. Screening is the most important new use. It is light, flexible, colourless, will not rust and corrode and lasts forever. -Anne Cowan, It-A. W PLASTICS HILE wood is composed of cellulose fibre held in compression by natural resins, plastic is composed of cellulose fibres held in com- pression by a synthetic resin. XYood is converted into wood alcohol in a re- tort. This alcohol is passed through a heated metal screen which acts as a catalyst and turns the alcohol into formaldehyde. Coal is distilled for coke and illuminating gas. The coal tar which re- mains contains phenol which is relined and put back in the retort and cooked with formaldehyde. This, commonly called a witches' brew, becomes a chem- ical resin. This resin is not unlike the resin which 'holds the natural wood fibres in compression. ' The reaction of the phenol with the formaldehyde may be stopped be- fore the union is complete. This partially cured resin is mixed with powdered woody this mixture is pressed in a heated die so that the powdered, wood fibres are compressed even more than tlhey are in the hardest of woods. This reaction permanently cements the powdered wood fibres into the shape formed by the die. Thus a new substance has been born and it is stronger than its equiva- lent weight in steel. Fire cannot melt it nor will chemical reactions by man or by nature can change it again. This is the miracle which is plastic. -Dorothy McCracken, I2-.-lx. 939 WHEEL or v1sloN AVE YOU ever noticed that when a wheel turns very rapidly, the 1 spokes seem to disappear? This illusion was the basis for the first television machine. A German, Paul Nipkow, discovered that if a disk is pierced witah holes in a spiral design and rotated at a great speed, it produced a zone in the disk through which oibjects can be viewed. This is the same as the disappearing spokes on a rotating wheel. The pierced disk is called a spanning disk. The object viewed through the spanning disk is broken up into many tiny parts by the holes which are spinning by. All we notice is al slight flicker- ing, and the object appears a little darker. ' When the disk is used in a television ma-chine, it spins at the rate of 1,200 revolutions per minute. A subject sits before the disk with a bright light-shining on him. Behind the disk is a photo-electric cell. XYhen one of THE COLLEGIATE 79 the holes in the disk moves by the cell, ligiht reflected from the subject goes through it and strikes the photo-electric cell. This cell generates an impulse of electricity. There is an impulse for every part of the subject which is broken up by the spinning disk. So now we have a picture broken up into many little parts and each part is an electric impulse. These impulses are sent to an aerial and thus to a receiver. where there is another photo-electric cell, and another spinning disk synchronized with the first one. This cell glows as the impulses pass through it. ,The scanning disk's holes pick up the flashes and reassemble them into a picture. - This method has many drawbacks, the main one being that reception is very poor because it Hickers.. As soon as the electron tube was developed scientists started to work, adapting it to television. Xyith the electron tube, a beam of electrons takes the place of the whirling disk of the old machine. -john Macgillivary, 13-A. THE ATOMIC BOMB , HE :XNNOLYNCEMENT that uranium is the basic atomic material gives one a clue to the composition of the atomic bomb and how it operates. XVhen a single atom of uranium is split it releases 2Oo,OoO,ooo-elec- tron volts while one molecule oft T.N.T. releases 5 electron volts and there are many atoms in one molecule. Thus we catch the idea of the comparative feebleness of T.N.T. The tremendous energy generated by the breaking up of an atom and the liberation of the electrons may be compiled by the mathematical formula -the quantity of energy equals the quantity of mass multiplied by the square of the velocity of light. Since light travels at about 186.300 miles per second, the square of speed of light is a stupendous figure and multiplied by a very moderate mass would still give a terrific amount of energy. The terrific im- the U.S.i-X., in the British Isles and Switzerland. All material is composed of-atoms and now we learn that the atom is put together of various parts. It can be compared to a miniature solar sys- tem. The core or nucleus is like the sun and is composed chiefly of protons, which are minute particles with a positive electron charge and neutrons which carry no electric charge. The atom also has negatively charged elec- trons, somelof which like the planets of our solar system revolve about the nucleus at a speed of 174 thousand miles per second. The positive and nega- tive electrical charges cancel out. The proportion of solid matter-protons, neutrons and electrons-to the empty space in an atom is as one to a billion. For example, if we could get rid of the vacant space in the atoms in a human body, the resulting amount of material would be a tiny speck just about visible to the human eye. To put it another way, if the nucleus of an atom were enlarged until it was barely visible, the electrons would be revolv- ing at a distance of six feet or more. I ' The release of atomic energy rests upon three ftmdamental principles as enunciated by Professor Hg D. Smyth of Princeton University. The first of these is that matter can neither be created nor destroyed but only altered in form. The second is that energy also can neither be created nor destroyed The third was enunciated by the famous German-jewish scientist, Dr. Albert Einstein, father of the principle of relativity. In IQO5 Einstein pointed-out that mass and energy are really alternative forms of the same thing. , The events leading up'to the atomic bomb began in 1895, when Antoine , . . . . . . heequerel, a French scientist, discovered the invisible radiation of uranium. 80 THE COLLEGIATE He found that salts of uranium would fog an unexposed photographic plate. Two years later Pierre and Marie Currie discovered polonium and radium. Then in 1919, the British physicist Baron Ernest Rutherford developed the theory that the atom has a nucleus. By shooting helium particles against nitrogen he produced oxygen and hydrogen. In IQ32 Sir James Chadwick discovered the neutron, tlhe unelectrified particle in the nucleus of the atom. Because it is unchanged it can be used in the bombardment of the atoms without being repelled or attracted by the plus or negative electric charge of the protons or electrons. It is this bombardment by neutrons which re- leased the atomic energy. Also in the IQSOYS came the invention of the cyclotron which contributed basically to the atomic bomb. lt is a machine for bombarding atoms with subatomic bullets of high speed and energy. These bullets fired into tlhe atoms may knock off some of the planetary', electrons, they may disarrange the nucleus making tuhe atom radioactive or they may actually split the atoms transforming them into other substances and releasing a certain amount of energy. In 1939 two German scientists were bombarding uranium atoms with neutrons. They discovered in the resulting debris, small quantities of another element, barium, and they believed that an uranium atom had been split into two parts, less in combined weight than the original atom. Hliobert Thompson, 12-C. 919 CHEMISTRY LECTURES A l-IIS YEAR. again, the upper school ohemistry students are very fortunate. They are having the privilege of hearing a series of lectures, made possible by the Chemical Institute of Canada, through the co- operation of Mr. Treitz, and Mr. Holland of the Imperial Oil. Tlhese lectures are all on topics relating to Chemistry and have proven very interesting and educational. Our first speaker was Dr. XY. XY. Stewart of the Imperial Oil, who spoke on The Chemical Industry in Canada. Industrial Chemical Control as a Career was the topic of Mr. B. Goulston, also of the local refinery. The following Tuesday, Mr. C. F. Davison of the Dominion Salt Company told us about Salt Production and Uses. Fundamentals of Petroleum Refining was an extremely interesting lecture by Mr. E. B. Lusby, who brought many samples of oils, gasolines, and greases for demonstration. Dr. E. I. Buckler, of St. Clair Processing Company, brought us up to date with The Prepara- tion of Pure Isobutylene and Butadieneu Dr. Buckler's lecture included a demonstration with a small still and several other pieces of equipment. Topics to follow soon are on such subjects ethylbenzene, styrene, rub- ber and plastics. I'm certain that these will be as helpful as those above. Also, in this connection, there is being arranged a tour of Holmes Foundry, to be taken in May. These lectures have been greatly appreciated by the students as shown by their attendance and excellent attention. They are very helpful to every- one and I hope that they may be, continued from year to year. 9 -Doug. Shanks, 13A J L F atural if 7 f an Sclencc THE COLLEGIATE 81 Z I Kyo x BIRD MIGRATION S SPRING draws nearer and all the snow and cold weather disap- pears, everyone looks forward to the arrival of the first Robins. Their cheery song and their bright red breast give everyone a happy feeling and they know that spring is around the corner. To most people this is as far as the story goes. They know that there are other birds living in their locality during the summer and leave during the winter, but how many know why they leave or where they go? v There are many theories about this question but the most accepted one is that the migrating instinct of birds dates back to the glacial period. Ac- cording to this theory, North America was inhabited by non-migrating birds, but as the Arctic ice-cap began moving south, the birds were forced to Hee before it or starve. Now and then the ice receded and the birds returned, only to be driven back with the next onrush of ice. Thus, during these cen- turies of the advance and retreat of the glaciers. which became our present changing season, the birds acquired a habit, later becoming an instinct, of re- treating south as cold weather approached and coming back again as the snow began to pass away. Generally speaking, most birds migrate a considerable distance. Birds in Canada migrate to the southern part of United States and many cross the Gulf of Mexico to the South American shores and to the interior of this coun- try. They usually spend their winters where food is abundant and where they are protected from birds of prey and hunters who kill them. There are a few species that only go south a few hundred miles to spend the winter. Robins and Meadowlarks are of this type. As soon as the young birds are reared and able to shift for themselves, the families Hock together and begin the long flight southward, around the first of September. The routes taken are as numerous as the species them- selvesi but most of them are well planned so as to afford adequate food while on the wing. Many birds fly at night, among these are the ducks, the geese, and the warblers. Others, including the swallows, and the hawks, travel by day. Those that travel by night have an advantage over those that travel by day because they can rest and eat in the daytime when it is easy to see, while the others have to feed at night or on the wing. On the average the speed of birds while migrating is from twenty to thirty miles an hour, with fifty miles an hour being the greatest ever at- tained. A flight is about one hundred and twenty miles a day, except when they have to cross over larger bodies of water such as the Gulf of Mexico. Often lonfg rest periods are taken between flights, so that it often takes a month or more for a species to complete its trip. Birds encounter many perils while flying. Thousands are killed an- nually by strikiing against lighthouse towers, which have attracted them in thick foggy weather. Others strike monuments such as the Statue of Liberty in New York harbour. Headlights of trains attract birds in a fog and often 82 THE COLLEGIATE they hurl themselves against the light with fatal results. Storms of wind and sleet often blow birds off shore where they struggle hard untill they be- eonie exhausted and drop into the water and flroxvn. lt is easy to see that our feathered friencls enclure great hardships and travel great distances yearly, to rear their young. Some travel thousands of miles to accomplish this one objective and often! times this fails because of some proxvling cat. More people are beginning to realize this through the country, and are cloing a great deal to assist in the preservation and the study of birds and their habits such as tlescribecl here. -Ray Geere, 13A Vo BS . x Q, b z PUBLIC SPEAKING Standing tleft to right!-'llefl XYest, John Macgillivray. Sitting cleft to right!-Elaine MacDonald. Helen Macliinley. THE COLLEGIATE 83 l v tt I ,Q 3 l llfl Q' .9 . .Q i l l ll T .T tt UITDEELL 1 . -- Y- --i-'F EDITOR-Ralston Armand T WOSSA PUBLIC SPEAKING . Uve are fortunate in being able to resume XYossa activities, which dur- ing the war had to be discontinued. The S.C.l. and T.S. made a very good start this year in public speaking, with keen participation by every form in the school. The speakers were chosen by a system of elimination. First, the outstanding girl and boy contestants of each form were chosen. These junior form representatives fgrades 9 and IOj gave their speeches in the assembly hall before an audience of their classmates in order to select the best junior winner, boy and girl. After a fair amount of careful deliberation by the teachers, it was decided that Helen Macliinlay of QYIZ, whose topic was Fifty Fathoms Under, won the junior girls' competition, and for the junior boys, Ted XYest of IO-C, with the subject Ludwig von Beethoven. The senior winners were picked in the same way. Elaine MacDonald of I2-B with the subject XYomen's Part In The XYar.', won for the senior girls, and Jack Macgillivray, of 13-A, whose topic was Television,', was the senior boys' winner. The district contest followed. In the girls' public speaking, the S.C.l. and T.S. and Forest High School were the only schools represented. This contest was held in Forest, and our own girls, Helen Macliinlay and Elaine MacDonald carried off the honours. The boys' contest between the S.C.I. and T.S. and St. Patrickls High School was held in Our Lady of Mercy School. Ted XYest and 'lack Macgillivray were excelled by Bruce Boa of Forest and Lawrence Power of St. Patrickls. W ROTARY SPEAKERS gain this year senior assembly students were fortunate in hear- ing the four speakers brought here 'by the Sarnia Rotary Club for the people of the city. Miss Cleo Dawson of Lexington. Kentucky, entertained us with lively accounts of her experiences in southern Texas, and her acquaintance with a German spy. 'I HE COLLEGIATE FERRY DUCK TAXI Phone 3800 For Safe, Reliable and Courteous Transportation Compliments of . SPIERS SHEET METALS AIR CONDITIONING ' PLUMBING, HEATING and VENTILATING 157 Vidal Street S. Phone 3555.1 geese?-l Whether you plan to be an artist or architect, doctor or dietitian, physicist or physiologist . . . money zfmzmgezzzelzl will play a big part in the achievement of your ambition. Add Practical Eco- xr! nomics to your knowledge by handling a bank account of your own. Even though you deal in only small amounts, the experience of handling your own account, of learning the funda- mentals of banking procedure, will pay dividends in later years. You can open an account with a dollar at your nearest B of M branch. K! V BANK OF MONTREAL MY HANH working with Cazzadiiizzr in every walk of life .rizzce 1817 mmuomwlm Sarnia Branch: J. H MATSON, Manager 200 North Front Street 84 THE QOLLEGIATE Mr. Landrum Bolling of Beloit, Xlisconsin, who was during the war a war correspondent in the Mediterranean theatre, told us about post-war conditions in Central Europe and the need for understanding and coopera- tion between these people and us. Mr. Gordon Powell of Melbourne. Australia, author of Two Steps to Tokyo, spoke to us about his own country, Australia, and the great help rendered to the Australian and American forces by the Fuzzy XVuzzies of New Guinea. Don Bolt. lecturer and writer of Brazil, Indiana, impressed upon us the great need for all to understand the ways of the peoples in other parts of the world as a means to foster peace. He gave us several examples how helpful certain of the South Amercan republics were to the Allies during the war, facts with which many of us were not familiar. Among the interesting speakers of the year was Miss Margaret Bab- ington, C.B.E.. honorary steward of the Friends of Canterbury Cathederal, who by means of her excellent slides took the senior assembly on a tour of that world famous edifice, Canterbury Cathedral. Each slide was a whole story in itself, as every scene portrayed had some connecton with the media- evil history of England and the murder of Archbishop Thomas Beckett. On December oth, Mr. Long of the Bell Telephone Company, spoke to the senior assembly on the advances made in telephone communication and the part it played in the war. Mr. Long enthralled his audience with the mysteries of Alexander Graham Bell's marvellous invention and some of his life as a young boy. By means of demonstration he told us about the means of communication used by the German, laps, and Allied fOrCeS at the beginning of the war. These instruments were defective in various ways, and improved upon from time to time during the war. The telephone com- munication in Germany after the Allied occupaton was found to be a great improvement over the earlier model. Similarly Mr. Long demonstrated each instrument which contributed to gradual improvement in telephone Com- munication in the Allied forces. Later Mr. Long demonstrated the cathode ray tube by which streams of electrons were made to vary according to sound put into the microphone, and these traced variable patterns on the screeng thus we saw sound! Then the audience was amazed as it heard Mr. Long's heartbeat, pounding away as if workmen nearby were hammering at a giant stake with sledgehammers. Soon a new noise suggested the sound of the whole assembly hall being consumed by crackling flames, but in reality was noth- ing more than Mr. Long's arm and hand muscles contracting. These wonders were made possible by a minute disc-shaped amplifier. Mr. Long, in conclusion, said that we, likely to live during the next seventy years, are a most fortunate generation, for there will be more discoveries made in this time than in any other seventy year period. He compared the discoveries' of the past few years with keys to doors of new discovery. These keys are waiting to be turned by people who have the nerve to open the doors and venture over the paths to which they lead. The opportunity is ours, of which to take advantage. In January Mr. Hunter of the National Film Board visited the school and brought with him two films, which he showed to the senior assembly. The first one, Target T.B., was a very interesting film on the detection and cure of tuberculosis. The other, Meet McGor1egal, showed how Mc- Gonegal, who had lost both hands in the last war, could live like any other normal person. THE COLLEGIATE SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS EDRA XVOOLEY BRUCE SELMAN STANLEY XY,'XL'1'ERS BEVERLY STONE THE COLLEGIATE SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS I Q , 3, xx. FRANCES FLDPIR W EDWARD BAGLEY RUSS CUNXINGHAM NX'1nncr wi Stxzxtlmccnzl Medal ll!-1-45 RUTH MCCRACKEN THE COLLEGIATE 87 ARENA ESSAY AND POSTER CONTEST In order to stimulate interest in Sarnials coming arena project, the five service clulbs of the city asked every public and secondary school student to write an essay on XYhy XYe Neeed An Arena In Sarnia, and oltered prizes for the best essays turned in. Here in S.C.I. and T.S., Pat Hartley of I3-B, came first, and Pat Norsxvorthy, of 12-git. second. A number of other students won smaller prizes. To obtain good advertising for the arena, the service clubs at the same time Sponsored a poster contest with suhstantial prizes for the winners. ,lack Macgillivray, of 13-A, came first, Art Mustard. of I.2'C, second, and Mary Mclsarren, of ll-.'X, third. Other students received smaller prizes. ff! Cletus: I have decided to reforin, but there is one thing that worries me- one thing I can't resist. McClymont: And what is that thing? Sloane : Teni Jtationl l ws: X wk Pk Lois Finan: I had a good day in lfnglish today. I got a R in Comp. and a date for Friday. STUDENTS' CDUNCIL Back row Cleft to rightl-A. Storey, L. Dennis, D. Lantz, B. Bradley, D. Goclley, T. Hardy. Middle row tleft to rightl-R. Dagg, T. Running, T. Kenny, D. Chate. Mr. Langan tadvisorl, D. Shanks, D. Palmer tpresidentl. G. Tithecott, B. Nelson. Front row tleft to ritrhtl-G. Corclev, D. Holmes, L. Durd, M. Jamieson, B. Atchison, S. Smith, F. VVhtitrlell. 88 THE COLLEGIATE Incidental Announcements STUDENTS GIVING ANNOUNCEMENTS For the first time in several years the practice of students giving an- nouncements in Assembly has again been resumed. Students'are picked in alphabetical order, starting with the Lipper School and continuing down through the various grades. During every assembly at Mr. Sinclair's beckon- ing, some shaky lad or damsel may be seen walking toward the front of the stage with the day's announcements clutched tightly in his hand. VISUAL EDUCATION Last period every Monday afternoon the grade niners go to the assem- bly for a period of visual education. This is a new project started this term consisting of movies, designed to help each student choose a vocation suited to his own aptitudes. The Geography Club has been discontinued this year because many of the films shown during Yisual lfducation periods would be the same. THANKS TO ORCHESTRA AND BAND For their never failing efforts during the past year to make our assemblies more interesting, the school wishes to thank Mr. llrush, the Or- chestra, and Band. ASSEMBLY SING SONG A special feature of this year much enjoyed by the student body and teachers, tjudging by responsel, is the sing song once a week in Assembly. Much credit is due to Mr. Sperling for his direction, to Pauline XVray for ac- companiment on the piano. and.to Russ hlohirson for his operation of the slides. CHEER LEADERS To boost the morale of our school football and basketball teams, a number of husky-lunged students got together under the sponsorship of Mr. Durnford and formed the Cheer Leader Squad. During the football and bas- ketball seasons this group, clad alike in sweaters of the school colcurs, faith- fully followed our players around on their XYossa game trips. Severalnew yells have been contributed this year to add to the team's already quite wide repertoire. This year's yellers were: Dereck Chate. il. D. Maclntyre, .loan Cowan, -loan Dauphinee, Marjorie Burgess, Maxine PalE1er,r Dorothy XYells and Ray McDermid. MRM Duncan: Do you refuse to kiss me good-night? Janet Helliwell: lYell, I've never done it before. Stew: XVhat! Never been kissed? Janet: No, never refused. THE COLLEGIATE Hi 'it B Y 1, 1 6 ' -1 R I s g fl EDITOR-Evelyn Aiken COMMENCEMENT Commencement held on XYednesday evening, December 26th, at 8.00 o'clock was a particularly happy occasion for two reasons. ln the first place, peace is with us and we welcomed back a great number of our former students who were in the armed forces, and secondly, it is also the nrst com- mencement officiated by our very popular principal Mr. Sinclair. The programme commenced with musical selections by our School Qrchestra, under Mr. Brush. During this period, the guests, Board members and teachers, were escorted to their seats on the platform. The girl gradu- ates, dressed in colourful evening gowns were seated on one side of the auditorium and the boys on the other. The meeting was called to order by Mr. H. H. Eyre, Chairman of the Board of Education, followed 'by remarks from Mr. Sinclair. Mr. Sinclair gave a resume of some innovations which were introduced into the school this year. also congratulated the graduates and wished them every success in their future endeavours. Following Mr. Sinclair's re- marks, a poem, For the Fallen by Binyon was recited by Isabel MacTag- gart in memory of our former students who gave their lives in this war and two minutes silence was observed as a tribute. XYe were then entertained by our Glee Club and we do wish to congratulate this, splendid musical or- ganization under the able leadership of Mr. Sperling. Their selections were very much appreciated by the audience. XYe were also favoured by a very line selection by another talented artist, Douglas Shanks. Doug's Euphon- ium solos are always greatly appreciated. At this time, the various scholarship awards, diplomas and honour certificates were presented. These awards were presented by various mem- bers of the Board, accompanied by appropriate remarks. To the recipients of these honours, we would like to add our own personal congratulations and the very best wishes for the future. i1l... 90 THE COLLEGIATE XVe now turn to the more serious part of the commencement. This is the valedictory address-the farewell of the graduating class, and the passing on of their traditions to the incoming students. The pupil honoured to give the valedictory address this year was M. Bruce Selman. Bruce was winner of the Queen's University Gordon Scholarship, the Dominion-Provincial Stu- dent-Aid Scholarship, the Carter Scholarship, and the Ramsay Memorial Scholarship. In addition to being a very attentive student, Bruce found sufficient time to be interested in other school activities. Bruce's message to the teachers, the pupils, and the audience was highly instructive and very much appreciated. Congratulations to you Bruce! As in the previous year, the Commencement was arranged by the Students' Council and our thanks and praise must go to them for their very successful efforts. To make the evening a complete success, the annual At Home was held in the girls' gymnasium afterwards, where dancing to Ken XYilliamson's splendid orchestra was enjoyed by all. P. H. Q F RESHETTES' RECEPTION Q11 the day of September the 28th there wasgreat . . . excitement Qshall I sayl when the youthful girls of grade nine were made ready! Yes, it was the day of the Freshettes' Initiation! ' XYhile the Seniors rubbed their hands together fiendishly, the juniors carried on bravely, yet with great wonder. School that day was very much like a jam session of topsies, for each Junior was decked out with her crowning glory, a mass of pig-tails. These were gaily tied with gaudily coloured bows of all imaginable sizes. As seven o'clock rolled around these quaking children took up their positions, ready for the fray! XYhen the worst was over, and the storm became calm the Juniors were led in a solemn pledge and then everyone en- joyed themselves in a sing song led by Mary Jamison. To end the amusing evening, doughnuts and chocolate milk were served, and in conclusion, the Naaz March again brought to a close a most memorable day in the lives of both juniors and Senios. P.S. - By the way boys, what happened to your initiation? ? ? ? MASQUERADE BALL An unusual and interesting event of last Fall was the Masquerade Ball, which was held in the boys' gym on Oct. 26, under the sponsorship of the So-Ed Club. The gym was gaily decorated with black and orange streamers. There was much excitement and laughter as people went around try- ing to recognize their friends in unusual garb. Two bunnies hopping around the room kept everyone guessing most of the evening. A very unusual idea which caught the eye of everyone, was a ration book made of card- board. Prizes were given, for the best costumes and everyone then took off their masks to reveal their identity. It was a very successful dance, and we are all looking forward to next year at the same time when we will be able to have another one. There will be new costumes and new ideas for everyone to laugh at. THE COLLECIATE 9l CLUB EL COLEGIO-DECEMBER 13, 1945 On the fourteenth of December, 1945, the So-Ed Club presented Club El Colegio. The show was held in the auditoriumg there was dancing in the girl's gym andgrefreshments in the boys' gym. Before an audience of over 350, many members of the club displayed their various talents. The numbers ranged all the way from a barroom scene, in which everyone was killed by one of the newest members of the S.C.I.-Ralph Barford, to lYhite Christmas as sung by Norman Ferguson- and very nice too. A chorus of six handsome fellows and half a dozen glamorous gals sang the opening and the finale and a Moonlight Medley. The moon in the medley was a little peculiar! Sarta was a little early last year and he left three lovely packages- Donna Luckins, joy Barton, and Dora Mackenzie. Each package was fur- ther equipped with a beautiful voice. Also infested with the Christmas spirit were Barry Bell and Tom Sinclair, who warned everyone of the 'imminent approach of Santa Claus. We still wonder where Tom got that wig! In a touching little epic called Sequel to Melodrama a new star was born. Al Pickering's vivid portrayal of Junior will live forever. Freddie Dagg and D. Maclntyre surpassed their former effortsg need we say more? ' Many more numbers were fully enjoyed by all and we look forward to this organization's future productions. 'Nuff said! COMTECOLL i An innovation in the annals of school history this year was Comtecoll Qucome to call j. In addition to the dexterity of hidden meaning in this word, it also possesses an ingenious origin. The name Comtecoll tCOM1nercial, TEchnical, and COLLegiatej brings together all the different courses in our school. It is an evening of recreation and entertainment held at the Collegiate every other week if possible. This evening is sponsored by the So-Ed Club, which designates certain leaders to be in charge of the entertainment for that evening. These leaders choose some twenty assistants to help them. The programme is varied, with a great number of activities progress- ing at one time. Cne gym is usually given over to dancing, while active sports such as volleyball and box-hockey are taking place in the other. The ping pong tables are always popular on these nights and many a ping pong champ will receive his preliminary training here! For those who have possibly exhausted themselves through the week tperhaps dancing to Name Bands at Kenwickj, there are the games of chess, checkers, poker, cribbage, and even bridge being held in several classrooms. Also a very popular spot is the restaurant which is open all evening. One has only to proceed Clown to the XVest corridor to receive nourishment or to quench his thirst. The admission to this gala affair is merely ten cents of which the proceeds go to the Students' Council. I am sure the whole school will agree with me that the Comtecoll evening is a great success and we wish to thank the So-Ed Club for their efforts in sponsoring this very enjoyable pastime. XYe would also like to thank the teachers who so kindly lent their patronage. Their kindness was greatly appreciated. Congratulations to Comtecoll! b L 92 THE COLLEGIATE AT HOME To terminate very successful graduation exercises, the annual At Home was held in the girls' gymnasium. There was a definite Upost-warl' air to the dance, as many beautiful, once prohibited corsages were viewed. The gym was aptly decorated with blue and white streamers and the or- chestra was well framed inside a so-called window hung with blue and white crepe paper curtains. The friendly atmosphere was also enhanced by the low false ceiling of many streamers. Graciously receiving the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair, Dr. and Mrs. Hartley, Mr. and Mrs. VanHorne, and Mr. and Mrs. Eyre. The gay and tuneful strains of Ken lVilliamson's orchestra well entertained us and made us wish that the evening would last far into the morning. The Grand March was held after intermission. Refreshments were served, and dancing continued until I o'clock, at which time everyone retired to their homes to have very pleasant dreams! tl3lll.ollllllEnS CHESS CLUB Shortly after the Christmas vacation, the School Chess Club was formed under the keen sponsorship of Mr. Marcy. About twenty-five mem- bers, both boys and girls. attend the meetings held each Monday after school in room 3lI. 'llo help this club get started. the Sarnia Chess kindly lent three chess sets and boards. These are supplemented by sets belonging to the members. Many students who knew nothing of chess have gone to the club to see just what it is. and have become very much interested in this entertaining game. Any who do not know the game are expressly invited to come to 311 on Monday afternoons, where members, already learned in the game, will soon teach you, STAMP AND COIN CLUB The Stamp and Coin Club was organized by Major EJ. E. Fielding in October in room 306. Don Hunt was elected president and Robert Thomp- son secretary-treasurer. The club has an average attendance of ten each week. During the weekly meetings Major Fielding gives the club a short talk on stamps after which the members busy themselves in consulting the catalogues and swapping stamps. Several of the members who collect coins carry on their business transactions here, trading stamps for coins. INTER-SCHOOL FELLOWSHIP A branch of the Inter-School Christian Fellowship was organized in Sarnia in October, 1945. Miss Taylor is the staH representative and Rev'- erend James Pequenat of Courtright is the sponsor. The following are the members of the executive: President, Dorothy McCracken: vice-president, Shirley Munday: treasurer, Betty Abbott, secretary, Annabelle Marwickg social convener, Faye Palmer. The purpose of the group is to develop Christian fellowship through prayer and Bible study. Meetings are held once a week, and the programs are varied by music. Bible quizzes and an occasional special speaker. In ad- dition to the regular weekly meetings, the groups holds a social evening, known as squash, about once every two months. Both boys and girls are welcome to all meetings which are interde- nominational in character. On the main 'bulletin board a notice is posted each week giving the time and place of the meeting. -
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