OCR Text |
Show Open house Wednesday will honor seven Bountiful High School Staffers Bountiful High School will host an open house on Wednesday, May 27 from 5-6:30 p.m. to honor seven staff members retiring at the end of the 1987 school year. Parents and former students are invited to attend the social in the school foyer. Those retiring include Orlin Ford, Dr. Max Harward, Carl McDaniel, Jerry Sanders, Dar-rell Dar-rell Schilowsky, Mel Bryson and Bennie Mangus. Mangus, an administrator at the school since 1971, taught several years in Nevada before joining the BHS staff.during the school's first senior class year. In that 31 -year period from 1956, he has taught physical education, physiology, phy-siology, sociology and health, and has coached a variety of sports, most notably as head basketball bas-ketball coach from 1964-69 and track coach from 1956-64. He was appointed vice principal 16 years ago. Ford is completing 30 years in education including in-cluding 29 years at Bountiful High. He has taught every mathematics course offered, from remedial math to calculus, and has taught a variety of physics course levels while winning teaching awards from state organizations. Schilowsky has taught auto mechanics and driver's training courses since arriving at BHS in 1962. The most memorable part of teaching, he says, is seeing once-struggling students "squaring away" their lives with productive jobs. Bryson began teaching in Davis County in 1961 and has instructed students in auto mechanics, marketing and history. This past year he served as the school's vocational coordinator. coor-dinator. Quoting a teaching association leader, he said, "All education is vocational education, educa-tion, because life is the real vocation." McDaniel is finishing 30 years of education, 25 years of which were spent at Bountiful High in the areas of chemistry and mathematics. He said he has enjoyed his many years at BHS and will sincerely miss the many friendships of students stu-dents and colleagues. Dr. Harward has taught at BHS for 29 years with courses in various levels of biology. He has also taught continuing education and special spe-cial courses for the University of Utah, Brigham Young University, Weber State College Col-lege and Utah State University. The teaching experience has been enjoyable, he says, "through my association with dedicated professionals pro-fessionals and the cherished association with students I had the privilege of teaching." Sanders has taught business courses since . the mid-1960's and served as an assistant athletic athle-tic coach. In those years he has seen business course enrollment at the school increase dramatically, dra-matically, with almost 50 percent of this year's students enrolled in one of the 13 course offerings offer-ings in business and computer science. All of the staff members said they would enjoy traveling during their retirement, with several indicating they would seek part-time research or consulting employment. |