The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 104

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 104
102 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Summer 1967 Posthumously Honored Dr. Thorbergur Thorvaldson, Can- ada’s foremost concrete chemist and world leader in this field who died in October, 1965, was posthumously honored at two significant events in April. The first was a symposium in his honor at the Royal York Hotel in Tor- onto under the auspices of the division of building research of the National Research Council, held in conjunction with the annual meeting of the Amer- ican Concrete Institute. Specialists in the field of concrete from Canada, United States and England presented papers. Among guests at the symposium was Mrs. Thorvaldson, who was honor- ed at a noon luncheon presided over by Dr. R. F. Leggett, chairman of the building research division of the Na- tional Research Council. Dr. J. W. T. Spinks, president of the University of Saskatchewan and longtime colleague of Dr. Thorvaldson, spoke about him and Mrs. Thorvaldson. The second event took place three days later in the Thorvaldson Building at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon, named after him, where a large oil painting of him was unveiled. The oil portrait was commissioned by former research students and col- leagues in the department of chemistry and chemical engineering at the uni- versity. At the same ceremony, Saskatchewan Minister of Education G. J. Trapp presented identical plaques from the Saskatchewan government to the uni- versity and to Mrs. Thorvaldson. The Dr. Thorbergur Thorvaldson plaques commemorate the naming of a lake in northern Saskatchewan in honor of Dr. Thorvaldson, Thorvald- son Lake, two miles long, is in the La Ronge Pre-Cambrian area 50 miles northeast of La Ronge village. The plaques, each showing an aerial photogrpah of Thorvaldson Lake and a photograph of Dr. Thorvaldson, give principal dates in the late scientist’s life and mention some of the honors he received. The inscription says the lake was named after Dr. Thorvaldson “to honor his brilliant career as a re- searcher, particularly his studies on the chemistry of cement, and his inspir- ation and leadership as a teacher of chemistry.”
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