Mr Zolly was one of my favourite teachers when I was at Zama High School. He was my 7th grade English teacher. I have never fortotten the Think and Do books.
When Hand to Mouth - The Food is Lost.
I know the answer and was to shy to raise my hand to tell him what it was.
I wonder if his wife Betty is still alive. I remember when they were courting - and then they got married.
I am so saddened that you passed. After I moved here to Washington State I wrote but of course I never got an answer back because you had already passed.
Blessings to you Mr. Zolly - a spectacular man you were.
I remember staying after school to visit with Mr. Zolly. He'd dictate sentences for me to diagram on the board. I was a lit nerd I guess. He was a great teacher.
I took Mr. Zolly's American History class in 1962-1963. He was quite a serious, precise, and sometimes cynical teacher who treated his students with considerable respect, as if we were college freshmen. He had a deep skepicism about the world (and about history) that had a profound influence on my thinking about world events. The name Gavrilo Princip remains seared in my memory to this day because Mr. Zolly talked about him in our history class (Princip was the Bosnian Serb student who assassinated Archduke Ferdinand in Sarjevo on June 28, 1914, which precipated the outbreak of World War I). Mr. Zolly was one of the best history teachers I ever had, and I appreciate him even now, over 60 years since I took his class.
Ann Cuccia (Flanders) (1966)
Mr Zolly was one of my favourite teachers when I was at Zama High School. He was my 7th grade English teacher. I have never fortotten the Think and Do books.
When Hand to Mouth - The Food is Lost.
I know the answer and was to shy to raise my hand to tell him what it was.
I wonder if his wife Betty is still alive. I remember when they were courting - and then they got married.
I am so saddened that you passed. After I moved here to Washington State I wrote but of course I never got an answer back because you had already passed.
Blessings to you Mr. Zolly - a spectacular man you were.
Walter Foery (1966)
I remember staying after school to visit with Mr. Zolly. He'd dictate sentences for me to diagram on the board. I was a lit nerd I guess. He was a great teacher.
Glen Fukushima (1967)
I took Mr. Zolly's American History class in 1962-1963. He was quite a serious, precise, and sometimes cynical teacher who treated his students with considerable respect, as if we were college freshmen. He had a deep skepicism about the world (and about history) that had a profound influence on my thinking about world events. The name Gavrilo Princip remains seared in my memory to this day because Mr. Zolly talked about him in our history class (Princip was the Bosnian Serb student who assassinated Archduke Ferdinand in Sarjevo on June 28, 1914, which precipated the outbreak of World War I). Mr. Zolly was one of the best history teachers I ever had, and I appreciate him even now, over 60 years since I took his class.