Tuesday, March 28, 2017

The 1971 Yearbook Committee

(Click on pic to make larger)

This is a continuation of the scans of the 1971 yearbook. There is damage to the pic in the upper right.

Back row (left to right): Carol McLaughlin, Margaret Walsh, Sally Howson, Linda McCabe, Liz Martenyk, Brenda McNeely, Cathy Broadbent, Cathy Coros, Tim McKenna

Middle row (left to right): Joan Yanch, Julie Price, Sue Meringer, Carol Nemeth, Peggi Levandoski, Anne Fegan, Mary McGeown.

Front row (left to right): Glenn McLaughlin, Stephen O'Shea, yours truly, Deidre Fegan, Mary Ellen Van de Valk, Lynn Fournier.

Monday, March 27, 2017

Winter of 1970-71 - Skating at Oshawa Civic Auditorium

(click for larger image)

This photo was part of the "Place in the Sun" trailer of the 1971 yearbook. (See the post a few down with Cindy Germanis' pic).

The only person that I can positively identify is Len MacAvoy in the front foreground. I think that I see Paul Coros, Kathy Andrews, George Dragota and Mary Tass in the line, but I can't be sure.

The Oshawa Civic Auditorium was a landmark. I saw Bobby Orr play there with the Oshawa Generals. I saw the Green Gaels play lacrosse there. Of course we went skating there, and to watch hocky games by such teams as the Flying Fathers and other local hockey teams. Our school hockey team played there on occasion as well. As a kid, I also saw the circus there.


The Civic was demolished in the 2010 timeframe.  Like everything, time waits for no man.  Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.

Sunday, March 26, 2017

The Remembrance Day Play


This was a dramatic Remembrance Day on the stage of the OCHS auditorium by senior students (at least senior to me -- meaning older than Grade 10). There are soldiers lying on makeshift straw beds  in a chapel during the world war. It was quite a production.

Friday, March 24, 2017

Sharon Benson Gets Her Diploma


The year is 1971. Sharon Benson gets her diploma at the graduation ceremony. Handing out the diplomas (face just barely visible far upper right) is Father Philip Wiley, parish priest at St. Gregory the Great. Monsignor Dwyer must have been busy, because he usually did the honours of handing out the diploma for years.

I am in awe of Sharon's hairstyle. Although it is more a 1960's style, it is truly a creation held together by hairspray.  Let us spray.

Thursday, March 23, 2017

Claude D'Allaire Accepts Diploma


The year is 1971. Claude D'Allaire (also known as Dallaire) accepts his diploma. I believe that the gentleman giving out the diplomas is an old time school inspector named Mr. Finan (possibly Mr. Ed Finan).  I remember him visiting the school at St. Joe's when I was a primary student there.

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

After The Hockey Game


I don't know what restaurant this was shot at, but I think this is a meal after a hockey game.  Left is Matt Masternak, center is Mike Noonan and Mike Murphy wears the hat on the right.  It looks like a meal of burgers and fries and the year is 1971.

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

New Scans From 1971 Yearbook - Cindy Germanis


When I first started this blog, I was based in Nassau, the Bahamas, and the content that I had with me, was a disk full of scanned negatives from my high school daze.  All of my stuff was in storage, including yearbooks.  Just lately I started going through my stuff, and came across the 1971 yearbook that appears in the frontispiece photo of this blog.

I had just joined the photo club in 1971, and Paul Gimpelj was the president.  He had taken a lot of the photos in the 1971 yearbook. However many were taken by John Marinzel, and strangely enough, I have pics gleaned from negatives which were 126 format. That is the format for an Instamatic film cartridge - a cheapie camera.  Gimpelj et al had Asahi Pentax Spotmatics, which I consider to be one of the nicest 35 mm SLR cameras designed.  It fit in to your hand. It had a smaller footprint than most, and the precision came through everywhere.

The 1971 yearbook had a trailer of sorts -- song lyrics with photographs.  The song was "A Place In The Sun" -- a hit first made famous by Stevie Wonder in 1963.  The lyrics are:

Like a long, lonely stream,
I keep runnin' towards a dream.
Movin' on, movin' on.
Like a branch on a tree,
I keep reachin' to be free.
Movin' on, movin' on.

There's a place in the sun,
Where there's hope for everyone,
Where my poor, restless heart's got to run.
There's a place in the sun,
And before my life is done,
Gotta find me a place in the sun.

Like an old dusty road,
I get weary from the load.
Movin' on, movin' on.
Like this tired, troubled Earth,
I been rollin' since my birth.
Movin' on, movin' on.

There's a place in the sun,
Where there's hope for everyone,
Where my poor, restless heart's gotta run.
There's a place in the sun,
And before my life is done,
Gotta find me a place in the sun.
Gotta find me a place in the sun.


The trailer in the 1971 yearbook was just the chorus -- "  There's a place in the sun,   " and the very first picture was of Cindy Germanis -- pictured above.  She is dressed up for the Sadie Hawkins Day dance.  Sadie Hawkins Day is a cultural icon that has passed into oblivion.  If you don't know what Sadie Hawkins Day means, here is a Wikipedia explainer:

The Sadie Hawkins dance is named after the very popular Li'l Abner comic strip character Sadie Hawkins, created by cartoonist Al Capp.  In the strip, Sadie Hawkins Day fell on a given day in November (Capp never specified an exact date). The unmarried women of Dogpatch got to chase the bachelors and "marry up" with the ones that they caught.  The event was introduced in a daily strip which ran on November 15, 1937. This is unlike traditional dances, where the men chase the women, this empowers women to chase after what they want and not just wait for it to walk their way.

In the U.S. and Canada, this concept was popularized by establishing dance events to which the woman invited a man of her choosing, instead of demurely waiting for a man to ask her. The first known such event was held on November 9, 1938.  Within a year, hundreds of similar events followed suit. By 1952, the event was reportedly celebrated at 40,000 known venues.  It became a woman-empowering rite at high school and college campuses, and the tradition continues in some regional cultures.

Wow - never thought that I would need a cultural explainer for a simple photograph.  If you click on the Sadie Hawkins tag below this entry, you will get pictures of Marrying Sam, another character from the cartoon strip -- who was played by Leo Barrett. This faux wedding ceremony at the dance, was to complete the Sadie Hawkins tradition of a woman catching a man for marriage.

Over the coming weeks, I will try and digitize the 1971 yearbook.  At last, more content for this blog.

Before his death, Joe Pender used to chide me for not including news about Dwyer in general.  I reminded him that this blog was named My OCHS, or the high school of my era, and not what it became after I left. So the concentration is of content of the time that I walked those halls.

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

More Found Negatives - Frank Sachetti - Physics Teacher



I'm really scraping the bottom of the barrel here, but I went to the discard pile of my negatives from my school year, and found some that didn't quite make the grade.  These were virtually unprintable with a darkroom on photographic paper, but with a negative scanner and digital manipulation, you can at least get some sort of primitive image.

Frank Sachetti was a very cool guy and a good physics teacher.