The Bagpiper - Howell Alumni News

Communications & Connections for Howell Public Schools Alumni & Friends

As president of the alumni association I've been asked to pass this along to as many HPS alums as possible for your consideration. If you have any comments or suggestions, I would encourage you to write the president of the HPS school board, Philip W. Westmoreland westmorp@howellschools.com that you might have to share. Please feel free to pass this along to your classmates and/or other friends of the Howell Public Schools.

Jeff Salisbury
President, HPS Alumni Association 

 

May 7, 2008 

Dear Citizens:

As you are aware, the Howell Public Schools is in the process of selecting a new Superintendent.  As a part of the plan to select our next Superintendent, your School Board has solicited the professional expertise of TD and Associates to assist with this critical decision-making process.  An important element in the overall plan is to receive valuable input from community members.  Therefore, we are seeking ideas as to the characteristics you would like our new Superintendent to possess.

Although there may be a wide range of opinions regarding needed superintendent characteristics, Dr. Terre Davis, of TD and Associates, will submit your list of potential attributes to the Board of Education for assistance in finalizing the needed characteristics in our next Superintendent.  She will meet with community citizens at various times (see below) on Tuesday, May 13, 2008.

10:00 - 11:00 a.m. at the Howell High School Freshman Campus Auditorium

4:00 – 5:00 p.m. at the Howell High School Freshman Campus Media Center

          7:00 – 8:00 p.m. at the Howell High School Freshman Campus Media Center

 If you would prefer, you may give your comments in writing.  Any written suggestions / comments should be sent to:  Dr. Terre Davis, TD and Associates, c/o Superintendent’s Office, Howell Public Schools at 411 N. Highlander Way, Howell, MI 48843.  Written response needs to be received no later than noon, May 19, 2008.

On behalf of our entire Board of Education, thank you for your interest and contribution to the education of Howell Public Schools’ students. 

Sincerely,

Philip W. Westmoreland westmorp@howellschools.com

President, Howell Public School Board of Education

Len Zubris Memorial & Scholarship Fund Raiser

Len Zubris Memorial & Scholarship Fund Raiser

 

Dear HHS Alums,

It is with sadness that I recently learned that Len Zubris, 64, of N. Fort Myers, FL., longtime auto shop teacher at Howell High had passed away of a massive heart attack. An informal memorial and scholarship fund raiser for “Zube” will be conducted May 10, 2008 at 10 a.m. at the auto shop parking lot at Howell High School, on Grand River not the Parker Campus.

 Chris Radloff (class of 1980) has arranged this memorial get together and participants are encourage to bring any hotrod or classic car to display in remembrance of Mr. Zubris.

 He has arranged to have about 100 folding chairs, coffee and cinnamon donuts (Zube’s favorite).

Funds raised during this memorial or donated afterwards would go into an account, and depending on what is raised would determine the awards. Please pass this information on to anyone you know that may have been a students of Zube’s to see if people would be willing to donate to this scholarship. I think it would be a great way to honor Zube and go to a worthy cause.

 An award would go to a senior at Howell High in 2009 that is pursuing college or vocational school in the automotive field and who shows promise and enthusiasm and a noteworthy grade point. The life of the scholarship will depend on how much is raised.

Zube touched a lot of people over his 25-year tenure and the attendance of this memorial will show what kind of response we get and what is possible for donations. Jeff Salisbury with the Howell Public Schools Alumni Association and the Howell Education Foundation has offered to assist me in this effort. 

Pass this information on to anyone you may know because all are invited to attend.  Chris is going to get the county paper and WHMI to advertise the memorial too.

If you have any questions Chris can be contacted by email at: discount714@yahoo.com, or I can be contacted at rhoward_3962@yahoo.com or  ron@vividperspectivellc.com . 

- Ron Howard HHS 1984

Alumni Scholarship Winners Named

The Howell High School Scholarship Committee selected the following students to receive HPSAA scholarships this year.

  1. Nicole Ceccacci $500
  2. Benjamin Dennis $500
  3. Melanie Garr $500
  4. Michelle Garrett $500
  5. Stephanie Grajek $500
  6. Ryan Root $500

Congratulations to these soon-to-be HPS Alumni!

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“Hail, hail the gang’s all here!”

  The Bagpiper 

Communications & Connections to Howell Public Schools Alumni & Friends

Jeff Salisbury (HHS 1967) & Penny Bain-Salisbury (HHS 1968) jeffsalisburyhhs1967@yahoo.com

“The Bagpiper” is not an official publication of the Howell Public Schools or its Alumni Association.

Submissions always accepted

Got an old or new photo you'd like to share?

Know a grad whose life story or recent accomplishments in life ought to be told? 

Email your submissions or suggestions to jeffsalisburyhhs1967@yahoo.com

Alumni News

Howell Public Schools Alumni Association

“Dollars for Scholars”

Thank you to one and all for making the 8th annual Dollars for Scholars alumni dinner & fund raiser another big success… from the event committee headed up by my wife Penny Bain-Salisbury (1968) and which included Becky Dean O’Neal (1967), Carie Luce and Don Rose (1987) and Ray Lemmen (1967), to all the members of the HPSAA and HEF boards of directors for all their assistance, to our photographer Colin Macgregor and our auctioneer Dave Mack to Jessica Clum and the staff at Crystal Gardens...to the “10-top table captains” (please pass along my sincere appreciation to your guests) including Barbara Macdonald-Nelson, Mike Hall, Carie Luce, Don Rose. Judy Pennell-Arnold, and of course everyone who attended, as well as all of our corporate, business and personal sponsors and patrons including:

 

Highlander - $300 Donations

Abraham & Gaffney - Mr. Raymond Lemmen-CPA, 1967

Allstate Insurance - Mr. Bill Hochreiter, 1967

Cobb-Hall, Insurance - Mr. Mike Hall, 1971

May & Scofield, Inc. - Mr. Rick Scofield, 1970

Gold - $200 Donations

Akin-Akin Insurance - Mr. Ed Akin, 1962

Dr. & Mrs. John & Barbara Polack-Thiel, 1967

Falcon Stamping, Inc.

Precision Stamping / Mr. John Parke Jr., 1969 / Mr. Chuck Pennell, 1967

Green - $100 Donations

Alpha Technologies

Mr. & Mrs. Don & Debbie Rose, 1987

Dr. Gary Distefano, DDS

Mr. & Mrs. Jeff & Penny Bain-Salisbury, 1967 & 1968

Mr. John Latson, 1968

Krug Ford - Lincoln - Mercury/ Mr. Doug Bies, Gen. Mgr.

Mrs. Mary Jo Dymond, 1969 & Family

Morgan-Stanley/Ms. Charlotte Swann, 1969

Mr. & Mrs. Roger & Sandy Luce

Mr. & Mrs. Terry & Luann Haskins - Haskins Homebuilders & Remodelers

Tri-State Hospital Supply - Mr. John Welter

Jane & Martin Brennan-$50 donation

Colin MacGregor Photography - 810-227-5781-Free Portrait for all Dinner Guests

David M. Mack Auctions - 517-294-3297-Complimentary auctioneering services

The board of the HPSAA would also like to express its gratitude to the Howell Education Foundation, Mari Docusen & Debbie Fondriest & the Howell Public Schools,

Cobb - Hall Insurance,  Don Cortez & First Impressions Printing and...YOU for attending, showing your generosity & supporting the HOWELL PUBLIC SCHOOLS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION SCHOLARSHIP FUND.

 

Auction Item - Compliments - Value $

1. Bay Harbor fall weekend golf package, Clark Construction c/o Rick Terres, Howell Public Schools = $1,200

2. Liftmaster Remote  Garage Door Opener, Firehouse Doors, Kim & Mike Witt = $350.00

3.  Set of 4 tires, Belle Tires Laura Lilac-Tate - $300.00

4. Hot Air Balloon Ride-1 person, Zephyr Balloon Co.Jerry/Daria Stephan of Howell = $250.00

 

Raffle Gifts - Compliments - Value $

1. One night/whirlpool suite @Baymont Inn, Molly Burk, General Mgr. = $130

2. Gourmet Wine basket - Howell’s Mainstreet Winery, Sandy Vyletel = $90

3. Day-at-the-Spa for Your Vehicle - Detailing, Lube, Oil & Air Filter Change, & a Written Appraisal - Backhuus Auto Sales, John Backhuus = $215

4. Evening out @Crystal Gardens-4 people, Jessica Clum = $200

5. Legal services  for 2 wills, Heikkinen Law Firm, Rick Heikkinen = $250

6. $25(2)dinner certificates @Bennigan’s Restaurant, Eric White

7. 1-black leather business/laptop case-State Farm Insurance, Dan Eskola = $50

8. Towable boat tube & 2 tee-shirts, Wilson Marine, Linda Wilson = $75

9. $100 gift card, Wal-Mart, Mary Jo Bell

10. 1 - Private, Professional Golf Lesson, Ken Niblock = $75

11. $40 gift card - Gold Depot, Kevin Kramarczyk

12. $50 gift card, Elder Beerman-Bon Ton Foundation, Christine Dejewlia

13. Document Shredder, Master Media Supply,  Chris &Tammy O’Doherty = $50

14. 1957 Chevrolet miniature collectible car, Carquest, “Sandy” Roberts = $25 

15. Stadium blanket, duffle bag, folding chair, TCF Bank, Nellie Hedgecough = $60

16.  2/ $20 gift certificates, Diamonds Grill, Steve Kressee

17. $50.00 gift card, Target, Sharon Maga 

18. $50.00 gift card, Meijers, Steve  Shubert 

19. 18 holes golf w/cart, for two, Hunter’s Ridge Golf Course, Janet Miesle = $45

20.  4 - 2007 HPS Alumni Directories - $75 each

21. Matching pillow & throw, Down Home Interiors, Denise Down = $200

22.  Tool Box, Flagstar Bank, Lois Todd = $30

23. Wireless cell phone earpiece, Basic Communications, Christian Bugeja = $100

24. $25 gift card, VG’s Food Center

25. $25 gift certificate, Swann’s, Pam Shaw

26.  Block Crystal art glass purse, Judy Pennell-Arnold = $40

27. 10 (5) gift certificates, Applebee’s Restaurants, Jason Sheffer = $50 

28. $35 gift card, Lowe’s Home Improvement, Inc., Brandon Bell

29. $25.00 gift certificate, Tomato Brothers, Gus Nicholas

30. 1 hour massage, Simplicity Salon & Spa, Trina Stamper = $60

31. $25 (2) gift cards, Staples, Lance Purkey

32. White Chanel Purse (collectible), LeBoutique, Mary Ann McCray = $30+

Door Prizes

1. T shirt & Sweatshirt - Cleary’s Restaurant, Kevin/Mike Cleary

2. HPSAA Private label wine by Howell s Mainstreet Winery

3. Alumni Sweatshirt

4. CD “Everything’s Rosie”/Elvis Tribute - Rosie Clark/Tony Poma Jr.

 

As you know  who were there, we were, for the second year in a row, able to present a check to the Howell Public Schools for $3000.

 

Finally, congratulations are also in order for:

 

  1. HPSAA Class Representatives Barbara Macdonald-Nelson Class of 1963 (14 new members) and Penny Bain-Salisbury Class of 1968 (11 new members) for finishing 1-2 in this year’s Membership Drive and earning $70 and $44 respectively for their class reunion treasuries.
  2. Mike Nichols Class of 1962 and Abby Lessnau Class of 2004 for being the oldest and youngest alums in attendance at this year’s event!

 

Thanks again and we hope to see you all AND MORE on Saturday March 28, 2009 at the 9th annual Dollars for Scholars Alumni Dinner & Scholarship Fund Raiser!

 

Jeff Salisbury, president

Howell Public Schools Alumni Association

Email jeffsalisburyhhs1967@yahoo.com

Hail, hail, the gang's all here: Read "The Bagpiper" http://www.freewebs.com/thebagpiper/ 


Positive People for Howell Public Schools

Please visit our web site!
We hope that our web site will provide important fact based information about our school district and highlight the opportunities available to our children. 

Our Mission Statement:
"We Are Committed to Action that provides
a Community Voice of Support for Howell Public Schools
as an Inclusive, Progressive and Effective educational institution."

What year? Who's here?

 

Have a favorite old photo you'd like to share? Think you can stump your fellow alums? How about a photo that you aren't able to identify "What year? Who's here?"

Email it to jeffsalisburyhhs1967@yahoo.com and we'll post it here.

 

Howell Schools Highlights & Happenings

Howell Public Schools would like to share with you the highlights and happenings within the school district.  If you would like to receive weekly email updates and press releases on school highlights and happenings, please contact Debbie Fondriest FondrieD@howellschools.com  at Howell Community Education.  To join the Alumni Association visit http://www.howellschools.com/C1/Alumni/default.aspx 

 

 

 HHS CLASS RINGS FOUND

  • 1982 silver ring, emerald starburst smooth surface stone - Howell Highlanders around the stone, smaller size possibly female...could be male, one side of ring says 19 with a Highlander logo, the other side has a 82 with a banner with the name "jewels" and a torch between the banner and 82, initials JAD on the inside. The ring was found numerous years ago in the Woodhaven, MI area. CONTACT: Joan Blair BlairJ@howellschools.com

  • Graduation Year on Ring – 1982; Name – Sheila; Initials – SKGW; Howell High; Green stone
    CONTACT jeffsalisburyhhs1967@yahoo.com

     


     BRAND NEW YEARBOOKS – various years from the 1960s to the present 2000s.

    We would be happy to make them available for a donation of $25?… which just happens to be equal to a LIFETIME MEMBERSHIP in the Alumni Association. Join the HPSAA and get a FREE yearbook! How about that for a deal? If you or someone you know might be interested in one or more of these yearbooks, please contact jeffsalisburyhhs1967@yahoo.com for more information. Obviously, supplies are limited and we do not have all years, but if you have lost or misplaced or never purchased a yearbook, we MAY be able to assist you. Please write with the year you are looking for and we'll see if it just happens to be one we have in stock.

  • Sponsors

    A 2008 New Year's Resolution...

    'Simplify, simplify' message still moves us

     

    In 'Walden,' Thoreau encouraged people to reflect on how they live and what they value. Over one hundred and fifty years ago Henry David Thoreau published "Walden; Or, Life in the Woods," a textured account of his now fabled 26-month bivouac beside Walden Pond outside his native village of Concord, Mass. The book, however, was far from an immediate best seller. In fact, it took five years to sell the 2,000 copies initially printed by the publisher, and "Walden" slipped out of print in 1859.

     

    Yet three years later, soon after Thoreau's death from tuberculosis, the publisher reprinted the book, and it has since become an American classic, translated into dozens of languages and often assigned as required reading in schools and colleges. Thoreau spoke for many readers of "Walden" when he observed that "many a man has dated a new era in his life from the reading of a book."

     

    "Walden" is a peculiar masterpiece in that its author was not an appealing figure — in person or in print. Born in Concord in 1817, the son of a pencil maker, Henry David Thoreau was a slight, wiry man with a droopy nose, rebellious spirit, tart personality and keen mind. He was a prickly character who wrote with passionate conviction and bruising candor.

     

    "Walden" is punctuated by his cocksure pronouncements and eccentric conceits. Thoreau scolds and preaches, calling his readers and neighbors drones, dunces, robots and slaves. His irreverent outlook harbored no doubts; he took great pride in his superior system of values — and his contrariness.

     

    As he declared, "The greater part of what my neighbors call good I believe in my soul to be bad." When he compared himself to other men, he wrote, "it seems as if I were more favored by the gods than they."

    Thoreau relished the solitude of his rough-hewn lakeside cabin because he was so sure of the value and virtue of rustic simplicity and deliberative living. "I should not talk so much about myself," he explained, "if there were anybody else whom I knew so well." He often displayed more contempt than compassion for the "mass of men (who) lead lives of quiet desperation." Most people, he declared, "live meanly, like ants."

     

    Yet for all of his crabby and cranky bravado, Thoreau was a sincere reformer uncorrupted by materialism. "I brag for humanity," the Harvard graduate wrote in "Walden." He once confessed his weakness for using exaggerated language. "You must," he said, "speak loudly to those who will not listen."

     

    For all of his trumpeted solitariness, he harbored a deep desire for communication and community. He wanted to awaken and excite people to the wonders of their natural surroundings. "We can never have enough of Nature," he proclaimed.

     

    "Walden" also endures because it sings with originality. It is stippled with striking observations, provocative insights and pungent prose. Perhaps it was Thoreau's solitary nature that made him so scrupulously observant — he had a falcon's eye for detail and took a scientist's delight in the operations and wonders of nature. His sinewy descriptions of his natural surroundings and rustic routine (hoeing beans, chopping wood, catching fish, reading, writing and sauntering the countryside) are alluring. He often would sit in the dooryard of his cozy cabin "from sunrise till noon, rapt in a revery, amidst the pines and hickories and sumachs, in undisturbed solitude and stillness, while the birds sang around or flitted noiseless through the house."

     

    His dramatic effort at Walden Pond to practice plain living and high thinking still resonates with people of every country and every era. "I went to the woods," he explained, "because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived."

     

    What has most captivated readers of "Walden" is its recurring emphasis on fundamentals: how much is enough? what really matters? "Simplify, simplify," "Walden" repeatedly urges us.

     

    Thoreau did not expect readers to abandon their labors and go live in the woods, but he did encourage people to slow down and take time to reflect on who they are, how they live and what they value. Such an ideal of self-aware self-reliance buoyed by the "tonic of wilderness" is as seductive as it is elusive.

     

    We all can afford to free ourselves from the lure of conformity and the corruption of materialism. And we all wish — in theory at least — to lead more reflective and deliberate lives. But it is devilishly hard to say no to the barrage of enticing activities and seductive desires that complicate our lives and derail our best intentions.

     

    "Tis a gift to be simple," says the Shaker hymn, and it indeed requires a special gift of fortitude and imagination to sustain a regimen of enlightened restraint. Thoreau appreciated the challenges and difficulties of transcendental simplicity, but he closed "Walden" with words of timeless reassurance: "I learned this, at least, by my experiment; that if one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours."

     

    Simplify, simplify.

     

    Originally posted Saturday, August 28, 2004 - 11:35 pm – The Greenville News – www.GreenvilleOnline.com

     

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