Upper Canada College - Toronto Private & Boarding School. Top- achieving students were recognized at Upper Canada College's annual Prize Day on Oct. Prizes, awards and medals for a variety of academic disciplines and extra- curricular accomplishments were presented to dozens of boys ranging from Year 1 to IB2 as the proud parents, staff and faculty members who filled Laidlaw Hall looked on. Principal Jim Power made opening remarks, UCC's wind ensemble performed Florentiner March op. Senator Linda Frum, a respected journalist, vice- chair of the College's board of governors and mother of UCC student Sam Frum. Here's the transcript of Frum's speech: Good morning and thank you. Let me begin by saying how excited I am to be here this morning. To the winners of prizes and awards, let me direct a first greeting to you. We are here today to acknowledge your hard work and special accomplishments. May I add my voice to all the others when I say: congratulations to you on your achievement today. Gold Price Intermediate Top Commodities / Gold and Silver 2016 Mar 21, 2016 - 01:52 PM GMT. All the technical evidence suggests that gold is building out an intermediate top area here, which fits. Continuing in my exploration of using vintage books for decor, I experimented with using an old book as the form for a monogram letter. Reader's Digest Condensed Versions seem to be plentiful in the free book market and they. Upper-intermediate German wordlist 2 New English File Upper-intermediate German Wordlist . It includes all the words in the Vocabulary Banks in the Student. Acknowledgement is due to the parents of today's winners as well. Your boys have earned their accolades, but they did not earn them alone. As the mother of a boy on the UCC crew, I know well the dedication, commitment and support of our UCC parents. You inspire these boys, you lead them, you shape them. Their success is your handiwork. On behalf of parents and boys, I say: thank you and thank you and thank you. I have to say that when I received the email from Dr. Power last month inviting me to be your Prize Day speaker this year I felt like a prizewinner myself. You see, for me, this invitation holds within it the opportunity for a second chance to get something right because returning to this podium actually involves returning to the scene of one of my greatest public speaking failures ever. Twenty- five years ago I was invited to speak at UCC. I can remember it vividly. I was in my early 2. Guidebook to Canadian Universities. The book led to many, many speaking engagements at universities and schools across the country, including one here at UCC. Indeed I believe it was Mr. Matthews who extended that invitation and it's reassuring to me that he and I are both still kicking around this place, looking just as youthful as we once did. Anyway, as a journalist, and now as a parliamentarian, I have faced all kinds of crowds. The social structure of the United Kingdom has historically been highly influenced by the concept of social class, with the concept still affecting British society in the early-21st century. British society, like its European. College Algebra Tutorial 39: Zeros of Polynomial Functions, Part II: Upper and Lower Bounds, Intermediate Value Theorem, Fundamental Theorem of Algebra, and the Linear Factorization Theorem. Solutions upper intermediate-tb 1. Caroline Krantz, Anita Omela. Solutions Upper-Intermediate Teacher’s Book Caroline Krantz, Anita Omela You can download the Drama from our Unit 11 downloads page or from our BBC Learning English Drama podcast page. Upper Shirley High School or USH is a Jefferys Education Trust Academy secondary school for boys and girls in Southampton, Hampshire. Not everyone recovers this much gold, but many of those who apply themselves to learning prospecting techniques have done this well and better. Some of our more serious intermediate dredging members have averaged well over an. Sometimes friendly, sometimes hostile, sometimes just confused. But in the case of the boys at UCC I encountered a completely different reaction. I'm not sure how to describe it exactly. But for the entire length of my speech I looked out at a sea of blank, disapproving faces. What was especially baffling was that I was using the same material that had worked perfectly well in other venues. But in this case, my words fell to the ground with a thud. The memory haunts me still. Studies show that the one thing North Americans fear most, more than death or spiders, is public speaking. And when people wake up in a cold sweat in the middle of the night because they are having a nightmare about being on a stage making a speech that's just tanking, well, what they are picturing in their minds is exactly what I lived through. Now, it is a little reassuring that no less of an orator than Dr. Power has confessed to me that he also finds you boys can be something of a tough audience. And my son Sam, who coached me for my appearance here today hypothesized that the most probable explanation for my bomb- out in 1. It was 8 am and boys don't pay attention to any speaker at that time day. I'm a girl and boys just aren't' that interested in what girls have to say. And/or 3) I may have underestimated the risk of agreeing to speak to an audience composed, as he put it, of such high caliber men and therefore, perhaps, my remarks missed their target because they weren't, I don't know, classy enough. Finally, as a friendly word of caution, my son advised me not to build up too many expectations about this speech today either, because, as he pointed out, nothing's changed. The caliber of the men in the audience, is still, obviously, extremely high. And it's still morning. So the dynamics here do not play in my favour. I'm giving this a second try. And I've learned a lesson from my previous failure - and from the accomplishments of the boys here today - which is that the key to success is: persistence. Which is why I feel it only fair to deliver this warning: If you don't clap like crazy at the end of this speech, I will return next year and do it all over again. The lapse of time between that first speech and this one underscores an important message for the boys here who will not receive a prize or award today. UCC is unusual among today's private schools in its public honoring of success. While many schools in North America have done away with prize day giving altogether out of sensitivity for the delicate psyches of their young students, UCC understands that competition drives boys to thrive and excel. So, to those of you who have won prizes today, let's get this straight: You worked hard. And you rule. But it's also true - and I can attest to this - that we are not all on the same timetable of success. Some of us were ready to deliver a whizzbang of a speech in 1. Others needed a quarter century of rehearsal. In the same way, you boys are unfolding and developing at your own pace. Some of you are sprinters. Some don't gain speed until the second mile. For those boys, the honors are all to come - and the prize days will be the class reunions of future years. Success comes in many forms. And at different times. At Harvard Business School they tell a local joke about two students. One excels at math, wins prizes, graduates at the top of his class, and is promptly hired by a major bank. The other is baffled even by basic arithmetic and eventually drops out. Years pass. The two students meet again, in the lounge of a private aviation terminal. Both are boarding their own planes. The former prizewinner notices the former drop- out. Frankly, he's stunned. He approaches him, reintroduces himself, and then says, ' you don't mind my asking - - but what happened to you?'The former dropout explains, . They put me in the mailroom. I was bored, so I started reading the catalogues of our suppliers. One day I saw an ad for a new kind of straw, it went sort of all curly. I had the thought you could attach little cartoon characters to it, and that fast food companies might buy them to attract kids. Maybe movie companies would pay you too for the commercial tie- in. I took the catalogue, quit my job, started my own company. The straws have been a huge success for us. I buy them for a dime, I sell them for a dollar - - and over time, those 1. But he had won his own prize. Now before I leave this stage, and given that I only get a chance to do this every 2. I want to take advantage of this moment to say a word of appreciation to Dr. I have been a mother at this school for twelve years. And I have had the honor to serve as a member of the Board of Governors for five. But by the time June comes around I will no longer belong to either group. This is very sad for me because I am deeply proud of my association with Upper Canada. And one of the chief reasons I am proud of this school is because of Dr. Now it's very bad form to repeat what gets said at a board meeting, boys, because they are held in the strictest of confidence, and when you swear to keep things secret you must. But I think I'm on safe ground when I share this with you at one of my very first ever board meetings, when I was just getting to know Dr. Power, and he himself had only been at the school for about one year, I can remember how upset he was because a fairly large sum of money that had been raised by you boys for charity had gone missing. Or put more plainly, it had been stolen. Power was absolutely devastated. What good was UCC's reputation as a school of leading scholarship, of high IB totals or impressive university placements, if such lapses of character could take place inside these walls? Power vowed to make this his mission. He vowed that he would dedicate as much of his energy to your intellectual development as to your moral development. And over the past 5 years, I've seen him, his administration and his teaching staff do precisely that. As they share today the triumph of your scholarly achievements, they most fundamentally believe that the truest triumphs are personal and moral. What this school - what true education - most upholds and should most recognize is character. The character of the boy that will become the character of the man. The character that earns a future place of leadership by integrity and by service. Character is honoured - not by a cup or a plaque - but by the recognition of those who know you. It's proven not in a 1. We'll be following all of you over the decades ahead to hail the honorable, upright men we hope - and expect - you will grow into. As we salute and congratulate today's prizewinners, the highest accolades - and the hardest struggles - still await. We're cheering for you! And hooray to all the winners here: today's and tomorrow's. What's Your K1. 2 Story? K1. 2 is calling all artists to step up to the drawing board and enter our 1. Annual Art Contest! What do you want to be when you grow up? Whether you dream of being a renowned brain surgeon, a flight engineer at NASA, an Oscar- winning actor, or something else entirely, we want to know. Show us in whatever artistic medium you prefer.
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