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Showing posts with label Teachers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teachers. Show all posts

Sunday, January 07, 2018

Butler High School Teachers ~


In Memory of
Butler High School Teachers

Please suggest living and past teachers I should add to the list.  Contact me.
  • Barkley Roy
  • Burnheart Sarah
  • Butler Betty
  • Capezutti Gerald A.
  • Cavalero James
  • Cingolani, Charles
  • Clements James C.
  • Corona Rudy
  • Crane Thomas
  • Cunningham Miss
  • Doerr Dorothy
  • DeFurio Anthony
  • Dr. Drydan
  • Elias Herb
  • Ellis William
  • Fusco Mr.
  • Greenawalt Mr.
  • Helms Ruth
  • Hovis Robert E.
  • Hutchison Virginia
  • Ifft John T.
  • Ifft Edith
  • Klein Ellen
  • Klein Elmer
  • Kovacik, Geoffrey
  • Lehnard William
  • Logan Clifford R.
  • Love Ellis
  • McDowell James
  • Miller Clarence Wray
  • Miller Ray W. 
  • Nitowski Mr.
  • Palmer Nelson
  • Palmer Walter
  • Polanec Koula
  • Reed Gertrude
  • Reimold Mr.
  • Rogner Chuck
  • Rosenzweig Emil
  • Schweinberg Raymond
  • Shewalter Mary Ellen
  • Stewart Al
  • Trypinski William

Friday, March 17, 2017

Lyndora School ~

First Grade 1955, Miss Duffy
Thanks: John Pichler
Click on picture to enlarge.

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Friday, July 03, 2015

Lyndora School ~ 8th Grade ~ 1952


Click on picture to enlarge

First row: R-L
Patty Suchy, Carole Roe, Virginia Schnitzki,
Mr Shricker, Miss Shanor, Mr Kerr, Diane Turner, Mary Lou Klowak

Second row R-L
Unknown, Mary Ann Derkics, Alice Diehl, Jeanne Davis, Mabel Cress, Andrea Gyongosi, Joyce Flack, Yvonne Betres,

Third Row R-L
Margaret White, Nancy Herman, Donna Rausch, Dorthy Ballon, Nancy Cubbison, Nancy Longdon, Unknown, Donna Sobkowz

Fourth row R-L
Lee Hoovler, Leonard Pruckner, Jackie Povlick, Alan Cubbison, John Kosar, Tony Grenek, Fred Polanec

Top row R-L
David Hindman, Frank Komitsky Jr., Tim O'Hara, Russel Crouse, Ronnie Hemphill, Mike Pawk, Phillip Mudrick

Photo: Frank Komitsky Jr.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Broad Street School ~

Photo: Barbara Bloom
This picture was taken in Aug. 1973. I attended first through fourth grade at Broad St. school. My teachers were: Mrs. Helen McCandless (first), Ruth Goldblum (second), Miss Lilian Adami (third), and Mrs. Virginia Welton (not sure about that name) (fourth). I can still remember that each room had its own "cloak room" where we would hang our coats and keep our boots during the winter. The gym class was in the basement as were the bathrooms. B.Blum

Thursday, November 05, 2009

Silent Heroes Among Us ~

 by
the Senior English Students of Butler High School
Edited by James Clements
1996


From the Butler Eagle: James Clements was an English teacher who assigned students to write stories of Butler and its heroes Sunday, August 28, 2005 By Alisha Hipwell After nearly 30 years as an English teacher, James C. Clements grew bored with the traditional term paper assignment. So the Butler Area High School teacher devised a more meaningful way to challenge students in his advanced placement English class: He had them write a book. "He decided to have the students research stories he had heard about the Butler area," said his wife, Charlotte Clements. Under his direction, Mr. Clements' students researched, wrote and published "Builders Dreamers Scandals Schemers" and "Favorite Sons and Sons of Guns," two books about historical incidents in Butler County. Mr. Clements also initiated and edited a third book written by his senior students at Butler Area High School, "Silent Heroes Among Us," which won a National Freedom Foundation Award in 1997. Mr. Clements, of Slippery Rock Township, died of a heart attack Aug. 19 in Butler Memorial Hospital. He was 61. The inspiration for the third book came from Mr. Clements' neighbor, World War II veteran Ralph "Hap" Nicholas. Nicholas recalled that as he and Mr. Clements sat and chatted one afternoon, the conversation turned to Nicholas' experiences as a B-24 navigator. Nicholas flew 20 missions over Germany. "When I finished, Jim said, 'Well, there you have it. You became 20 years old again while you talked. My students can write your story,'" Nicholas said. And they did. Mr. Clements dispatched his students to interview local veterans of the Eighth Air Force and record their exploits. "The veterans told the students things they hadn't told their wives and children," Mr. Clements' wife recalled. The stories became the book, "Silent Heroes Among Us." "I think it's an extraordinary series of dissertations on what we did during World War II," Nicholas said. Mr. Clements received a grant from the Golden Tornado Foundation to fund his students' book projects. Proceeds from the sale of the books went back into the foundation. Mr. Clements retired from teaching shortly after "Silent Heroes Among Us" was published, but he promptly took on another book project with his father-in-law, the late William Robert Brandberg. Using Brandberg's collection of vintage postcards, Mr. Clements wrote "Lost Butler," a book that told the story of the area's vanishing past. Mr. Clements was a graduate of Butler Area High School and received a bachelor's degree in English from Thiel College and a master's degree from the University of Pittsburgh. He taught briefly at Brentwood High School, then taught English for 32 years at Butler Area High School. Mr. Clements was a movie buff who worked for 10 years as a projectionist and manager at the now defunct Plaza Theatre in Butler. "If anyone wanted to know a piece of movie trivia, Jim was the one to ask," his wife said. He also was a talented speaker and storyteller who had engagements with a number of community organizations. He particularly enjoyed telling ghost stories and was scheduled to tell Halloween tales for the city of Butler this year. In recent years, Mr. Clements was active in Sigma Phi Epsilon Alumni Association at Thiel College. He served in numerous positions in the organization and had recently received its Outstanding Alumni Award.

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

William Lehnerd ~ "Uncle Bill" ~ Teacher ~ BHS '48

+ May 27, 2009
We have lost a beloved dramatics teacher and friend.