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Exeter Township School District

Berks County | 610-779-0700

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Home » Archives for etsd » Page 42

etsd

Mary Field Schildt

June 14, 2022

Mary M. Schildt, 72, of Exeter Twp. passed away Monday, July 29, 2013 in her residence. She was the wife of Donald N. Schildt. Born in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, she was a daughter of the late Marshall W. and Gladys I. (Ray) Field.

Mary was a graduate of Exeter High School in 1959. She began her career working at Western Electric, where she met her loving husband. Later, she made a lifetime career working at Boscov’s East, as a well-known and recognized sales associate.

In addition to her husband, Mary is survived by a daughter, Denise R., wife of Dr. Martin Fried of Bear Creek, PA; sister, Marilyn, wife of Bill Trawitz of Reiffton; and a granddog, Nikka.

Filed Under: Alumni, Class Notes

Michael Chobot

June 14, 2022

Michael Thomas Chobot, 26, passed away August 6, 2013, surrounded by his loving family in his Exeter Township residence after a 22-month battle with Leukemia.

Born in Reading, he was a son of Thomas Michael and Gwyneth (Negley) Chobot, Exeter Township.

He was a 2005 graduate of Exeter High School, where he ran cross country and in 2009 he earned his BA in Film and Video from Penn State University.

Michael was a sound editor and mixer for DuArt Film and Video, Manhattan, NYC. He was nominated for a National Emmy Award in July 2013 for his work on “An Original DUCKumentary” in the category of Outstanding Music and Sound.

He loved composing music and reciting movie quotes. He also enjoyed the outdoors, hiking, kayaking and long-distance running.

In addition to his parents, he is survived by his siblings: Jayne (Chobot), wife of Gar Herring, Dallas, TX; Joseph P., husband of Megan M. Chobot, Durham, NC; and Sarah (Chobot), wife of Phillip G. Thomson, Boston, MA. Also surviving are his paternal grandfather, Joseph Chobot, Susquehanna; his niece, Inara Pazienza, Dallas TX; and his “brother,” Chez Pazienza, Los Angeles, CA. Many aunts, uncles, cousins and friends also survive him.

Filed Under: Alumni, Class Notes

David Oberlin

June 14, 2022

The class of 1960 is offering a $1,000.00 scholarship in Oberlin’s memory to an Exeter High School student who is overcoming an obstacle. The winner will be announced in May in a program before graduation. To contribute, checks should be made payable to Exeter High School Eagles Alumni Association, Oberlin Scholarship, 200 Elm St., Reading, PA 19606.

Everyone has a story about David Oberlin

John David Oberlin took a window seat and ordered a steak at Effie’s Charcoal Chef in ExeterTownship.  The waitresses looked forward to his arrival.  “Everyone liked David,” said Effie Clauser, restaurant owner. “He was so smart. He was so nice.”  David had cerebral palsy, a brain disorder that results in poor motor coordination. By 2010 the disease had gotten to the point where David could no longer drive.  That’s when his friends from the Exeter High School Class of 1960 began driving David to Charcoal Chef and other restaurants.  “He was such a joy, and he was so smart,” his friend, Ross Lloyd, 73, West Grove, Chester County, recalled of John, who passed away July 6.

Ross, Barbara Cregar, 74, and Barry Smith, 74, both of Exeter Township, met recently for breakfast at the Charcoal Chef, the same restaurant where the friends went in the 1950s for burgers, to share memories of David.  They shared a bond created by helping care for David when his cerebral palsy advanced to the point where he became wheelchair-bound.  They moved David from his home in Exeter Township to Hearthstone, Amity Township.  Ross took care of the financial work.  Another friend, Phil Hite, 74, of Wyomissing took care of the day-to-day living needs.  “We took him to his old haunts,” Phil said. “David was a big part of my life for the last six years.  I miss him so much.”

The friends admired David’s tenacity for life. “We grew up with a guy who had cerebral palsy, and he was just one of us,” Ross said. “We had so much admiration for him. He was beloved by all.”  As a young boy, David lived in a  school for the disabled provided by Wood Service in Langhorne, Bucks County, for several years.  “There he learned how to develop life skills,” Phil said.  He was raised by his grandparents, Oscar and Margaret Funke. He went to St. Lawrence Elementary School in second grade and continued in the Exeter district until he graduated.  The school friends recalled that David used a manual typewriter, which he carried around, to take notes.  “He would bang into people in the hallways with his typewriter,” Barry said. “We realized it was better to carry his typewriter for him than to be hit by the typewriter.”

Barbara said she sang in a church choir with David.  “I remember he was very intelligent,” she said.  After graduating from Exeter High School, David attended Albright College for a year.  He then worked in highway maintenance for PennDOT for 43 years.  The majority of the group retired when they were in their 60s.  “We started going on a trip once a month,” Phil said. “We went to a battery plant, we went to see a battleship in Camden, and Gettysburg. We always included David.” Ross said he and David often went to Philadelphia Phillies games.  During the breakfast gathering, the friends pulled out a binder dated 1954 to 2009.  It was David’s typedup weather statistics. “Ask David Oberlin what the weather was like on your birthday, and he will tell you,” Ross said.  The friends are planning to give the weather book to the Berks History Center, 940 Centre Ave. “Every day he wrote what the weather was and what was going to happen the next day,” Phil said. “He was like a junior meteorologist.  The book will preserve the weather of Berks County from a personal viewpoint.”  Once the friends got started talking about David, they had a hard time running out of stories to tell.  “Everyone who knows David has a David story,” Phil said.

Filed Under: Alumni, Class Notes

Kathleen Formiconi-Sola

June 14, 2022

Born: Feb. 9, 1951

Died: March 13, 2018

Quotable: She was the first coach of the Reading High School girls basketball team: “She always loved basketball,” said Cindy Jo Kohl, a sister, of Reading.

On Easter Sunday, the four young Formiconi sisters arrived at church in holiday finery — Easter dresses, hats, gloves and patent leather shoes — and when they came home, Kathleen Formiconi-Sola was the first to strip off her frilly duds and slip on her cowboy boots.

She liked to play basketball, softball, anything athletic, as a child in the 1960s, for “she was always the tomboy, the tomgirl,” said Cindy Jo Kohl, one of her sisters.

Society seemed to be following her lead: Congress passed Title IX, a civil rights amendment that sparked public schools to offer school-sponsored sports to girls, in 1972, a year before Kathleen graduated from East Stroudsburg University with a degree in physical education.

Upon her return to Berks County for a job as a physical education teacher at two Reading elementary schools, she found herself in a breakthrough moment: She was hired as the first coach of the newly formed Reading High School girls basketball team.

While other school districts quickly created basketball teams for girls after Title IX became law, Reading was the only high school in Berks without a team, so student government leaders circulated petitions demanding the school board to act.

The board approved a team, and in 1974, 20 young women became the first Reading High School Red Knights basketball squad, coached by Kathleen, fresh out of college.

She was eager and patient, teaching plays, teaching basketball strategy to girls who may never have received formal, organized coaching, recalled Marita Gehret of Sinking Spring, one of the players on that inaugural team. With Kathleen at courtside, the Red Knights won the first game in their history, a 35-33 victory over Exeter Township High School, Kathleen’s alma mater, in 1974 and won five of their eight games that first season.

Under Kathleen’s coaching, the Knights were even better in 1975. They joined the Berks County Conference and qualified for the PIAA district playoffs.

Kathleen eventually left teaching and worked in health care, retiring from St. Joseph Hospital, where she was a ward clerk. She died March 13 at the age of 67 in Colorado Springs, Colo., where she lived with her son, according to family.

Marita, a junior, joined the Red Knights that first season, even though she wasn’t very good at basketball and wasn’t familiar with Kathleen, who taught phys ed at Riverside and Millmont elementary schools.

Kathleen was eager but calm, not the type of coach who intensely barks orders from the sidelines, recalled Marita.

“She wasn’t a yeller,” said Marita. “She was quiet, but she was into it. She was genuinely nice, and she was young, not much older than us.”

When the Red Knights took the floor for the first time, Kathleen stood at courtside in a pants suit, which was her preferred fashion choice. The Geigle Complex, Reading High’s gym, had just opened, and “it was exciting, just exciting for us to have a team,” remembers Marita.

After Kathleen’s death, Marita has attempted to search for teammates from that inaugural team, for a private memorial service that is planned for Kathleen in the future. She’s using her high school yearbook as a reference, including a team picture featuring the squad in uniform, and standing with them, coach Kathleen in a plaid pants suit.

Contact Jim Lewis: 610-371-5059 or jlewis@readingeagle.com.

Filed Under: Alumni, Class Notes

Senior overcomes the odds to graduate

June 13, 2022

photo of austin wilinsky

Austin Wilinsky wasn’t recognized at graduation for being the brightest or the most athletic student in the Class of 2022. 

But he could have been recognized as the most determined.

While many seniors this past year were deciding where they wanted to go to college, Austin was deciding where he was going to spend the night. Homeless, Austin slept in shelters and on friends’ couches throughout his senior year, determined to finish school and graduate with his classmates–some of whom he remembers from kindergarten, or the year that his mom passed away from cancer. Since that fateful day in kindergarten, Austin’s journey throughout school was anything but predictable or traditional as his relationship with his remaining parent deteriorated as he was moved from home to home and dropped off regularly at friends and family members’ houses to sleep. 

By the time he started his senior year, Austin knew if he wanted to graduate, he had to drop into a homeless shelter to live or drop out of school to find a job. Austin reluctantly decided to move into the shelter: “I did it because I needed a diploma. I also want a family one day, and I need a diploma for them. That’s what kept me coming to school.”

At school, Austin says he was so grateful for the support he received from counselors, social workers and teachers, who helped him with everyday needs such as deodorant, to lifelong needs such as helping him stay on track with his schoolwork and complete the extra credits that he needed to graduate on time. “Mrs. Rinehart (the district’s social worker) heckled me to come to school,” he says with a laugh. “But she also helped me find the shelter and gave me clothes. She literally gave me everything I needed. She was there for me all of the time. I would have never gotten through school without people like her helping me. I know that for a fact. They made me see what I could do for myself.”

Austin says he’s also fortunate to be supported by close friends who are always willing to lend him a place to sleep or a ride to school–including a friend he’s had since second grade, who is now helping him find a job so that he can eventually move into his own home. Despite his childhood experiences, he says it’s the support that he received at Exeter and from his friends that allows him to have hope about his future. “I’m glad so many people believed in me and made me see what was possible for myself.”

Filed Under: News, Senior High

Students Build Sheds, Tables and Lifelong Skills

June 8, 2022

photo of students in residential systems
photo of students in residential systems

As he pulled out a tape measure to give a student reassurance he had marked the proper cut line, Mr. Jonathan Rugg, a senior high Technology teacher, reminded his student of the age-old adage, "Measure twice, cut once." If you thought that perfecting measuring and cutting were just skills taught in kindergarten, we'd like to take a moment to introduce you to Residential Systems, a class taught by Mr. Rugg usually every spring that he says is perfect for "anyone who wants to live in a home." During the semester-long block course, Mr. Rugg's students, who he says are usually academically-focused, learn how to do common household construction and repairs, such as electrical wiring, plumbing, framing, and how to measure and cut construction materials with tools. The semester is then capped off with the ground-up construction of a shed, which brings together many of the skills they've learned--while also helping save Exeter taxpayers money. "Our sheds are around the district," he says proudly, as he explains that the grounds crews and athletic teams eagerly snap up the shed his class constructs each year to store equipment conveniently near their fields. Now that his classes have satisfied most of the district's demand for outdoor storage over the years, if all goes well, Mr. Rugg hopes that eventually he can start selling the sheds to interested teachers, staff or community members at cost.

While his projects are usually well planned out for the semester, Mr. Rugg says that the secret of his students' skills and abilities are no longer a well-kept secret, and now it's not uncommon for a construction request to come in from elsewhere in the district. This week, Lorane Principal Mrs. Karen Hodge will take delivery of six handmade picnic benches that she requested for her school to allow elementary kids to sit and eat outside for special events and for the community to use outside of school hours. "It's so special to know they were made by our students and not just bought in a store," she says.

Students seem equally appreciative of the unique opportunity provided to them through the class. Jason Rodriguez, a sophomore who eventually wants to start his own construction company, said, "As soon as I heard about this class, I wanted to get into it," he says. "It's been so much fun, and it's going to help me in the future for sure."

Filed Under: News, Senior High

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Exeter Township School District

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Address & Contact Info

  • 200 Elm Street
    Reading, PA 19606

  • District Phone:
    610-779-0700

  • Fax:
    610-779-7104

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Our Schools

Exeter Township Senior High

Exeter Township Junior High

Reiffton School

Jacksonwald Elementary

Lorane Elementary

Owatin Creek Elementary