Page 42 - 1947
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    40 C. C. I. GLEANER
w
1ierew1tl1 g u 1 u a u u
THE NEW COLLINGWOOD COLL.J!.;l:tlA'l'E A THLET!C CHEST
lion Dique
our new AthletJc
Points will be awarded by the Phy- sical Education Instructor cqncerned, in co-operation with the Student Council, and the Awards will be presented by the Council at an Athletic Dinner some time this month. (For those presently in fourth and fifth form, special con- sideration will be given for outsta!ld- ing athletes who.have not had the time to aggregate the required sixty-one points.)
Two boys are to be presented with the Crest at an Athletic Dinner some- time this month; these two being Wal-· lace Cook and George Lawrence.
'.Lwenty-o11e yt::al·s ago, on ;:;eptem- 'ber tae twenLY-St::couu, a ten pound ba- u y o o y w a s u o r , 1 ; n t n e ~,.;oumgwood ueneral and 1uariue hospital. That young dUJrer, wno was named Wallace vook, was destmed to play an import- ant part m the History of the t..:.C.I. ;u an early age he was moved to Dun- troon, Am·ora and then to Toronto. ln l.::l'iV ne retul'nea to t..:ollingwood and a L t e n o e u t n e ~,.;.~,.;.1. : H e r e , W a l l y c a r - ueu au Junior runnmg events along WJLI1 mauy otlutr fh·sts in the school t1·ac1( meet. When seventeen and a ha11 years of age he joined the Cana- UJan Army lActive) and during his year and a hal£ stay in the Army, his athletic abililty came to the fore. In August 1~44 Wally won the Canadian Army 'l'rade School Championship in runmng and did the same with Niagara District Service Championship. The fall of 1945 found him returning to the t..:.l,.;.l. to complete his studies and to take top honours in Owen Sound's first Annuat '!'rack Meet. ln the spring of 1::145 he went to Waterloo and triumph- ed in the 220, 440 and 880 races.. Down in Hamilton for a few days during the summer, Wally placed second in the Dominion Championship being only a pace behind the winner in both the 220 and 440. In the fall, once again he was under the C.C.I. banner carrying o1f top honours in the Tudhope, Owen Sound and School meets. He holds five school records at the C.C.I. record time in the 220 at 22.3 and 440 at 50.0 which is two seconds better than he did in Hamilton. Also Wally is a fine asset to a basketball team, being a tower of strength and speed for the Senior Cag- ers. Last fall he was elected Presi-
dent of the Leader's Corps and of the Student Council. On March the first, Wally retired from school and became Manager of the Arcade Store in town. He now has been appointed Sub-Lieu- tenant in the Sea Cadet Corps as P.T. officer. As you see Wally is certainly
A ward JJta!.O"--tO oe awaru~ed t o •Hv::.t:: jJU!JJI;; WHO cOllect a l1l!JUIHUIU OI
:;,.• cy-u ue !Jullll.s ~out O.l a !JOSSI.Hle Ju cut::H' yea1· at (J,I,.;.l.
l U o )
.LH~e u p ! J e r J e n q u a d l · a n t o f
ct·est uas CJJe Ct·own 1·epresentmg tt1e .c.Juj)Jl'e, anu 1S surrounded by ~,.;auadJan 1ua1J''" ,eaves; tne tower le.Lt 4.uaarant uo1us ou1· v01Jeg1ate symPol ana luotto; wrale tue 1ower ngnt l'epresents tne ·.L·uwu o.L coumgwooa, and the upper l'l!;ht is the atnletic panel, w1th two uasKetoallers JUmping for the baU a15amst a backboard.
'l'hese tJgures will lbe in gold, on a blacK shiela edged m gold. Beneath tne shield, a gold ribbon bears in black tlle Collegiate initials, "C-C-1", and the year of the School's founding, 1874.
To qualify for these deluxe awards, each amPltious athlete must fulfill the ret1un·ements listed below:
a. tie at least in the Middle School.
b. Not have •been mo1·e than six yea1·s at C.C.l. in winning his points.
c. ln mdividual or team competi· tion, gain a minimum of twenty points in the following manner-
1. As a member of an interform team-1 point.
2. As a member of a winning in- terform team, or individual winner of a l:ichool event-2 points. ·
3. As a member of an interschool team-3 points.
4. As a member of a winning in- terschool team, or as an individual winner of an interschool event-5 points
Note 1: While any pupil may be on several interform and/or interschool teams in a year, he may be granted only a maximum of four interform points and ten interschool points in any one year.
Note 2: Some points must be gain- ed out of both sections in pa:rt "c" above: i.e. from both 1 or 2 and 3 or 4.
d. As an individual, he must be worthy further of a minimum of forty- one points, as listed below:
Possible Required Maximum Maximum
1. For good
sportsmanship 20 18
2. For gentlemanliness and sociability
3. For leadership
20 16 10 7
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