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7 Entries
Sandra Burk
November 19, 2017
Mr. Dunlevie was a quiet and kind vice-principal and man. His wife Lucile was my English teacher for three years at Malvern and was truly an inspiration. I will always remember this lovely couple. May they rest in peace.
November 10, 2017
All teachers hope to have some influence on the lives of their students. Mr Dunlevie was my teacher of both Latin and Greek at Oakwood Collegiate six decades ago, and his influence was deep and durable. Whether he was reading aloud to his class from the Latin translation of Winnie The Pooh (Winnie Ille Pooh), or was intoning (in Greek) famous lines of Homer (as are the generations of leaves, so are those of men), or sitting at his desk with his long legs stretched out in front of him as he read Proust (in French) or Lucretius (in Latin), or going over a passage from the Vulgate Latin translation of the Bible with a Jewish student, he always embodied the connection between learning and living. For me Mr Dunlevie transformed an aggregate of ablatives, subjunctives, and pluperfects into a key for trying to understand the world through its great cultures.
Soi charin fero. Ave atque vale!
Ernie Weinrib
james bawden
November 9, 2017
I remember him reading Winnie The pooh ion Latin and lasughing totall.A gt teacher-Jim Bawden.
Leslie Listro (nee Boyd)
November 8, 2017
As his only student of Greek in 1973 I remember Mr. Dunlevie with respect and admiration. To this day I benefit from the studies and skills that he shared.
Deborah Sutton
November 8, 2017
Sorry to hear of his passing. Was a great VP when I attended Malvern
Roger Mesley
November 8, 2017
A very civilized colleague when I tsught at Malvern c.1970. Quite patrician.
nicholas Colapinto
November 7, 2017
Great teacher. Witty guy. So many good memories.
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