I exited the high school, crossed Rossland Road and started walking. Somewhere around the school, I took this picture with my new Zenit camera.
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Building Near OCHS
I got a new camera. It was a Russian made single lens reflex called a Zenit. It took Pentax lenses. It was incredibly cheap and inexpensive. I had to try it out.
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Fine Young Cannibal
Friday, January 29, 2010
New Teacher Lineup
At kangaroo court and student initiation, the new teachers were singled out and told to stand and line up. This photo was snapped in September of 1970 I believe. From left to right is Sister Mary Jane Trimble, unknown and Father Gary Harrison. At the far left in the background, teacher Joe Pender can be seen.
Comments are invited to fill in the blanks about how these teachers fit into the grand scheme of OCHS staffing. I know that Father Gary Harrison taught religious studies, but I don't know much about the other two teachers featured here.
Update: Thank you for the comment. The teacher in the middle is Miss D'Angelo who taught English.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Urban Studies and Other Locale Photos
Below is a series of photos that appear on my negative collection interspersed with student pictures of OCHS. They are images that I snapped of the locale -- Oshawa and environs during the 1970's. Some were done for my Urban Studies assignment on the coming of regional government (yes when I started high school, there was no region of Durham). Others are random shots that just grabbed my eye.
Stevenson Road and Eastdale (Doh !!!) R.S. McLaughlin Collegiate:
The above image came from Urban Studies Fly Day, where geography and Urban Studies teacher Blair Morris arranged for us to fly over Oshawa to look at city patterns. This shot is of Stevenson Road near the high school. You can see RS. McLaughlin Collegiate (thanks for the correction), and the Durham School Board building. The high school is just out of the picture in the upper left. Notice all of the empty fields around the school.On the 401, going towards Toronto:
Strangely enough, I remember quite vividly taking this picture. We were on a school trip to Stratford, and I was sitting at the back of the bus with Mike Bukoski, and snapped this from the back window of the bus with my Yashica twin lens reflex camera.
The air traffic control tower at the Oshawa Airport:
Aerial shot of the 401 near Ajax:
Something that no longer exists:
With the coming of regional government, we would lose our counties. Oshawa was partly in Ontario County. For my Urban Studies assignments, I decided to snap pictures of the signs that would disappear. This one was taken on Bloor Street on a snowy winter day. Note the "Chargex" sign in the background. Chargex was the name of the Visa card before it was Visa.Cherney's Furniture World:
While I was on Bloor Street on that winter day, I idly snapped this picture. The building was quite new, and now I believe that it is quite run down. In a lot of ways, I believe that Oshawa was more vibrant during the 1970's than it is now.Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Andre Grotenhuis On the Sidelines
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Observers at Kangaroo Court
Monday, January 25, 2010
Bowmanville High School Cheerleaders
Friday, January 22, 2010
Student Assembly on Stage
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Sister Conrad Lauber -- A Few Years Later
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Flag Football
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Monday, January 18, 2010
Entrance Way To School
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Ernie Kaleny
Thursday, January 7, 2010
On Hiatus -- Image Shortage.
I am back in the tropics, and horror of horrors, I left the external hard disk with all of my images back in Canada. I have nothing. Nada. I am going through the terrabyte drive to see if there are any remaining scans that I have here. It doesn't look good. If not, there will be no further additions for a month until I can get someone to get my images to me, or I go back myself. Sorry for the inconvenience. I leave you these 1970's archive pics.
Man, the Mother's Pizza on Ritson Road at King Street still looms large in my memory as the best pizza that I have ever had. I used to have a coke glass from Mother's Pizza as pictured above. I rarely used it, but one day I did. It survived some thirty years and countless moves. My daughter and her boyfriend decided to be nice and do the dishes. The boyfriend broke it while washing dishes. C'est la vie.
Man, the Mother's Pizza on Ritson Road at King Street still looms large in my memory as the best pizza that I have ever had. I used to have a coke glass from Mother's Pizza as pictured above. I rarely used it, but one day I did. It survived some thirty years and countless moves. My daughter and her boyfriend decided to be nice and do the dishes. The boyfriend broke it while washing dishes. C'est la vie.
Monday, January 4, 2010
Miss Ritchie
Saturday, January 2, 2010
Heh! Heh! Heh! Joe Pender
Friday, January 1, 2010
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