Lorne Akins Junior High School Explained

Lorne Akins Junior High is a school in St. Albert, Alberta that teaches students in grades seven through nine. The school is named for the farmer that owned the property on which the school is currently built, first opening in 1963 as Paul Kane High School. However, in 1973 Paul Kane moved to another building, and the Lorne Akins building opened in April 1973 as a junior high, replacing the previous junior high Sir Alexander Mackenzie, which turned into an elementary school.[1] The current principal of the school is Derek Herman, and Jennifer Suriano is the assistant principal.[2] who took over from principal Graham Jackson.[3] Notable alumni from the school include NHL star Jarome Iginla.[4] The school is well known for its wrestling team the Crush, which produced nine different national champions under the 34 year coaching tenure of teacher Barrie Schulha, who retired in 2012. His wrestling program was the longest running continuous sports program at a junior high in St. Albert.[5]

The school made national news when in 2009 Lt.-Col. Gary Blenkinsop, Canada's top soldier, reacted to American media slights against the Canadian presence in Afghanistan as a part of a Lorne Akins event supporting former Lorne Akins student Cpl. Scott Alm upon his return from the war.[6] [7]

References

53.6342°N -113.6077°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About Lorne Akins . October 24, 2012.
  2. News: Students ganging up in cyberspace . Lauren Den Hartog . October 23, 2010 . August 24, 2012 . St. Albert Gazette.
  3. News: St. Albert teen charged in explosion near school . January 27, 2003 . October 24, 2012 . Edmonton Journal.
  4. News: Iginla joins 500-goal club . Jeff Hansen . January 18, 2012 . August 24, 2012 . St. Albert Gazette.
  5. News: Crush founder retires from coaching . Jeff Hansen . June 23, 2012 . October 24, 2012 . St. Albert Gazette.
  6. News: Top soldier says insult 'immature'. https://archive.today/20130115060057/http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Politics/2009/03/24/8862706-sun.html . usurped . January 15, 2013 . . RICHARD LIEBRECHT . October 24, 2012 . March 24, 2009 .
  7. News: St. Albert salutes soldiers . RICHARD LIEBRECHT . October 24, 2012 . March 24, 2009 . Edmonton Sun.