Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Jerry West’s East Bank connection is ill



Sue Williams Dodd, John Olesky
Sue Williams Dodd, daughter of Roy Williams, Jerry West’s East Bank High coach, is suffering from brain tumors and underdoing infusion therapy three times a week in The Villages, Florida, where she lives.

John Olesky, Class of 1950, ran into Sue a few years ago in The Villages, where John and Paula spend their winters at Paula’s home. In warmer weather, they share a Tallmadge, Ohio home.

Sue was born in McMilllan Hospital in Charleston. So was LaQuita, the daughter of John and the late Monnie Turkette Olesky of Cinderella, West Virginia, a Williamson suburb.

Sue and John get together each winter at the West Virginia Club meetings in The Villages, a retirement development for 19,000 age 55 and over home owners near Ocala, Orlando and Tampa.
John gave Sue the phone number of the late Mickey Furfari, legendary West Virginia sportswriter, and gave Mickey the phone number for Sue. Mickey called Sue and wrote a column about Jerry West's high school coach's daughter, who saw the NBA Logo before he even began his spectacular WVU career.
 

Prayers for Sue Williams Dodd, please. And her husband, who is at Sue’s side daily.


Martha Puffenbarger Nussear, Class of 1945, passed away Sunday, September 25.

Her parents were William Ralph Puffenbarger and Hazel Loges Puffenbarger. Her sister is Mary Ann Puffenbarger Moore, Class of 1950, widow of William Richard Moore. Mary Ann lives in Fairmont.

Martha’s obituary:

Obituary of Martha Nussear

Martha L. “Puffy” Nussear, 88, of Ohio Ave., Fairmont, WV, passed away Sunday, September 25, 2016, evening in her home. She was born November 29, 1927 in Clarksburg, WV, daughter of the late William Ralph and Hazel “Loges” Puffenbarger.

She was preceded in death by her husband of thirty years Henry Arthur Nussear, Jr.

Mrs. Nussear was a graduate of Monongah High School. She later graduated from Fairmont General Hospital School of Nursing in 1948.

She spent nearly 50 years as an OB Nurse at Fairmont General Hospital where she became affectionately known as “Puffy”. Mrs. Nussear loved family activities and gatherings. She very much enjoyed shopping with her grandchildren.

Survivors include her 3 daughters and their husbands; Valerie Nussear and husband Thomas Horacek of Arthurdale, WV, Pamela Nussear of Fairmont, WV, and Janet and her husband Karl Wean of Fairmont, WV, 7 grandchildren; Alison Nussear of Keyser, WV, Katie Horacek of Morgantown, WV, Stephen Horacek of Morgantown, WV, William Horacek of Arthurdale, WV, Emily Santy of Martinsburg, WV, Eleanor Santy of Charleston, SC, and Jennifer and her husband Michael Sandy of East Liverpool, Ohio, 2 great grandchildren, Lily Santy – Glendenning of Martinsburg, WV and Michael Sandy of East Liverpool, Ohio.

Also surviving is a sister, Mary Ann Moore of Fairmont, WV, and several nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by a brother-in-law, William Richard Moore, and a grandson-in-law, Steven Glendenning.

Mrs. Nussear has chosen cremation services. A private family memorial service will follow at a later date. The family would like to thank Linda Palmer and Terry McElroy for all their care and concern given their mother. The family also requests that memorial donations be made to the Marion County Humane Society, 2731 Locust Ave., Fairmont, WV, 26554. or Pet Helpers, 726 East Park Ave., PMB 311, Fairmont, WV, 26554. Online condolences may be made to the family at www.FORDFUNERALHOMES.com .
Debbie Puccio
Rehab again for Debbie Puccio

Deborah Puccio, Class of 1971, is in Health South in Morgantown again for rehab.

Debbie is in Room 206. She contracted a serious infection last week and spent several days at Ruby Memorial Hospital’s ICU unit before improving enough to transfer to Health South.

Kidney failure sent Debbie to Monongalia General Hospital in September.

Josie Puccio Dalton, Class of 1973, is Debbie’s sister. Josie is the widow of Larry Dalton, Class of 1968. Larry’s sister, Janice Marie Dalton Bayne, Class of 1965, lives in Georgia.



Susie & Greg: Let’s light up Monongah!

Susan Staron Sanders, Class of 1971, the angel of Thomas Street, and Monongah Mayor Greg Vandetta have unleashed a two-pronged attempt to get more Christmas street lights for Monongah.

His honor wrote:

“The Town of MONONGAH will install a plaque in the foyer of the water office with the name or names of individuals that purchase a Christmas light.
"Thank you to everyone that is working on this project.”

Susan has formed a committee for the lights fundraising, to go with the $2,300 she raised last year. She has her EIN (Employer Identification Number) and is working with an accountant to set up her group with the IRS as a legal, tax-exempt charity.
Susan, an administrative assistant at Personnel, added:
“Whitehall cannot give us lights this year. So we have to raise as much money as possible.
“I have designed T-shirts, hooded sweatshirts with Monongah Christmas Light Angels and for the guys elfs. I'm going to do everything I can to raise $2,900 for 8 new lights.”
That comes to $362.50 per light.
Not cheap. But a fantastic way to light up the place of my birth for Christmastime.
Susan and husband Ron Sanders live on Thomas Street, next door to Mayor Greg Vandetta and his wife, Janice Manzo Vandetta.
Thomas Street is where I spent 12 years of my life, after being sprung upon the coal mining town and the world in my grandparents’ home on Walnut Street, where I lived for 9 months.
After Thomas Street, my parents – John W. Olesky, Sr. and Lena Futten Olesky – bought the Consolidation Coal Company home rented on Church Street by Angela and Mary Dudash Raymond, and we left our rental with a two-hole outhouse that got tipped over every Halloween by pranksters.
Other Starons and Sanders at Monongah High and near Monongah include Diane Minardi Staron, Class of 1967; Dorothy Staron Saunders, Class of 1971; Thomas Staron, Class of 1965; Timothy “Tim” Sanders and wife Janet, who live on Plum Run; Shirley Sanders, who lives in Number Nine; and the late Harold Eugene “Gene” Sanders, Sr., Ann Christie “Chris” Harley Sanders, Elva Ann Sanders Cox and Harold Eugene “Skip” Sanders, Jr.
Perfect doubleheader:

1971 Class dinner, then Morgantown MHS reunion

Jay Holman, keeper of the flame for his Class of 1971, has called for a meeting of the 1971 fun folks at Denny’s restaurant in Clarksburg at 10 a.m. Friday, September 30.

They can discuss ways for WVU to beat Kansas State coach Bill Snyder for the first time on Saturday, Oct. 1 in Mountaineer Field.

They also should consider joining Bob Kasper, Class of 1950; Jackie Olesky Straight, Class of 1955; and John Olesky, Class of 1950, at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Cracker Barrel on University Town Centre Hill, just off the I-79 Star City Bridge exit.
We’ll be having lunch before the 3:30 p.m. kickoff in Mountaineer Field.
This is Bob’s annual visit to a WVU football game with John, a tradition that’s been alive for a long time.

Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Paul Korsh of Holy Spirit parish passes away

Paul Korsh of Farmington, who attended Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Monongah, passed away Sunday, September 25.

Paul Korsh

June 06, 1929 - September 25, 2016

Paul Korsh, 87, of Farmington, passed away Sunday, September 25, 2016 at his residence. He was born June 6, 1929 at No. 9, a son of the late Charles and Justina Yakovich Korsh.

Paul was a 1950 graduate of Farmington High School. He was a coal miner, having retired from Consolidated Coal Co.’s Loveridge Mine with 41 years in the mining industry. He was a veteran of the United States Air Force and a member of the Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Monongah

Survivors include his wife, Barbara Brooks Korsh, whom he married July 1, 1953; a son: Paul Joseph Korsh and wife Mindy, of Farmington; a grandson: Cooper Joseph Korsh; several nieces, nephews and extended family members. Paul was the last surviving member of his immediate family, having also been preceded in death by 9 siblings.

Friends may call at the Hutson Funeral Home in Farmington on Wednesday, September 28, from 2-8 p.m. where funeral services will be held at 10:00 a.m. Thursday with Rev. Father S.A. Arokiadass officiating. Cremation will follow and inurnment will be at a later date in the Grandview Memorial Gardens. Memorial Donations may be made to Hospice Care, 1406 Country Club Road, Fairmont, WV 26554.
Tom Dean moving back to Goldsboro

Tom Dean, Class of 1949, will be moving from Lynch Station, Virginia to Goldsboro, North Carolina so he can be nearer to more children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Tom Dean
Tom and his late wife, Rosemarie Dean, a 1950 Uniontown (Pennsylvania) High grad, have lived in Lynch Station for 11 years because it is near his daughter, retired Colonel Pam Dean Mitchell, who lives in Arlington, Virginia.

Rosemarie passed away in 2012.

And Tom has three sons in Goldsboro and brother Jim, Class of 1945, not that far away in LePlace, Louisiana. The sons work in Raleigh, Pine Level and Fayetteville.

Tom and Rosemarie lived in Goldsboro, North Carolina for 35 years before moving to Lynch Station.

Tom will still send and receive emails till Sunday, Oct. 2. Then the moving van will get his stuff on Monday, Oct. 3 and have it at his Goldsboro residence Tuesday, Oct. 4.  

Tom adds: “I will get back in touch when I get situated again.  Take care and stay safe.”
 
When Tom tells me, I’ll tell you on this Monongah High Alumni blog.
 
Tom’s brother, Charlest Robert “Chub” Dean, Class of 1954, and Chub’s wife, Shirley Salisbury Dean, Class of 1957, have passed away.

Margie Dean is Class of 1948.

Tom’s Air Force career took him to such places as Spain, Iceland and Germany. Since Rosemarie’s passing Tom has taken trips throughout America with his long-distance truck-driving son.

He also has been a regular at Monongah High Alumni Reunions in Fairmont, which include visits to Monie – Ramona Fullen Michalski, Class of 1951 – who lives in Monongah.


USS Indianapolis survivor Sam Lopez is 92 years old today.

With the September 29 passing of Adelore “Pean” Palmiter in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Sam is among 22 men still alive who faced one of the most harrowing events in America’s World War II history. D-Day at Normany was the #1 of them all in that category, of course.
 
The USS Indianapolis was returning from delivering components for the atomic bomb that later struck Hiroshima when it was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine on July 30, 1945. The ship sank in 12 minutes. In America’s worst naval tragedy of World War II, 880 died.

A month later, Japan surrendered after the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Because no one else knew about it, 900 men floated in the ocean for four days until they were discovered by accident when a Navy PBY search and rescue plane piloted by Hoosier Adrian Marks discovered them floating in the ocean.  

By then, only 317 men still were alive.

Sharks feasted on the dead and attacked and killed some of the living.

Sam Lopez, Sr., father of Linda Lopez Gandy, Monongah High Alumni Association president, didn't graduate from Monongah High but had the good sense to marry a Monongah girl, Joanne, in 1946 and has lived in Monongah for 63 years, about the length of a football field from where I spent my childhood on Thomas and Church streets.

Sam’s wife, Joanne Vandetta Lopez, daughter of Frank and Olga Grandoni Vandetta, passed away in 2012. Linda’s brother,  Sam Lopez Jr., lives in Fairmont.

USS Indianapolis survivors still alive may see a movie about their traumatic experiences if they can hang on a little longer.  Nicolas Cage is filming “USS Indianapolis: Men of Courage.”

Kudos, Sam. You are an extraordinary American hero! Happy birthday! And MANY more, too!

Friday, September 23, 2016

Not what Yanero family intended

Elwood Toll, ever alert even though he is Class of 1951 and will be 85 in November, 1 year older than me on my Nov. 5 84th birthday, corrects my story on the Country Club Motor Lodge’s heritage.


Elwood’s email:


“John, the Mazza family didn't build Country Club Motor Lodge. Mike Yanero did.
Dominc Mazza built Avenue Motor Court on Fairmont Avenue.”

Thanks, Elwood. Stay sharp, just like Gillette Blue Blades. (Remember that slogan?)
Here's the corrected version, thanks to Elwood.

Country Club Motel in Fairmont, which was built originally by the Yanero family, became the site of a disreputable situation Thursday.

Two women from Pittsburgh had FOUR HUNDRED AND FIFTY BAGS OF HEROIN stashed in their room, police said.

Bridgeport Police and members of the Greater Harrison County and Violent Crimes Task Force said they watched Jalisa “Ashley” Hawkins and Breona Williams engage in a transaction with a known drug dealer at the Clarksburg Walmart.

Police confronted the trio and recovered five stamps of heroin sold in the transaction, they said.

So the cops got a search warrant and the Three Rivers Drug Task Force (out of Pittsburgh, of course) went into the two women’s Country Club Motel room and found nine bricks of heroin (which can create 450 bags of the drug that is killing thousands of Americans).
Hawkins and Williams were charged with distribution of heroin and conspiracy for the incident at Walmart and will be charged in Marion County for possession with intent to deliver. 
According to Bridgeport Police, Hawkins already is on bond involving a drug investigation by the Harrison County SCAD unit. 
Diana Pisner Walker ends teaching career

Author Diana Pishner Walker is ending one of her other talents, teaching.
She wrote:
I am resigning from the Marion County Board of Education as of October 2nd. Funny how life takes you down so many different paths and, when you get on the right one, you know it in your heart. I hate the fact that I will be leaving my East Dale family and those little faces of students that I've grown so fond of.
Diane Pishner Walker
“I have been a MCBOE employee for 25 years, but with 11 of those years being a substitute, I don't have enough years to retire. However, I will be visiting many schools and sharing stories and signing books https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/images/emoji.php/v5/u6c/1/16/2764.png Follow your heart.”
When I asked Diane for more details about her years in Marion County’s schools, she told me that she began where I began my education, at Sts. Peter and Paul School in Monongah, where the nuns whacked me with the one- and two-hole paddles and gave me a foundation that helped me through a 43-year newspaper career.
I will always be grateful to those nuns, in particular Sister Agnes, who – when she wasn’t speeding past our home on Church Street in her brother’s Jeep – whetted my appetite for writing.
Diane wrote:
“I was a kindergarten aide at Saints Peter and Paul in Monongah and taught Religion to K, 1st and 2nd there. When Saints Peter and Paul closed, I was hired as an aide in Marion County where I subbed for 11 years. My first job was at North Marion and then East Dale where I have been for 11 years.”
Diana was born and reared in Clarksburg. She is a 1977 graduate of Clarksburg Notre Dame High School and Fairmont State.
Diana and her husband’s children are Curt, Chris and Courtney. Her siblings are Anna Pishner Harsh and Stephano Pishner.
Her books include “I Don’t Want to Sit in the Front Row Any More,” was a memoir based on the loss of her parents, Anna and Louis Pishner; and “Spaghetti and Meatballs! My family is Italian!” The latter received honorable mention in the Hollywood Book Festival.
Another Diane book, “Hopping to America: A Rabbit’s Tale of Immigration,” was turned into a play by the Vintage Theatre Company in Clarksburg.
Three Monongah and North Marion high schools’ graduates also are authors: Linda Tomlinson Stevenski, Class of 1955; Annette Rose (Bonasso), North Marion Class of 1980; and Lisa Myers McCombs, Class of 1947.


My sister, Jackie Olesky Straight, Class of 1955, the widow of David Straight who lives in Rivesville, has her story about Monongah’s Flying Nun (on a Jeep), Sister Agnes:

"When Dave & I went to Monongah to visit Mom & Dad, we usually met Sister Agnes on the White Rock Road (U.S. 19) driving the Jeep.  Once Winter started, she had chains put on the Jeep.  She never took them off until Spring. 

“So on a pretty day we would see her bouncing along & the clanking of the chains as they hit the road!  We always got a big laugh that she didn't seem to mind the noise & the rough ride. 

“Jackie”
 
Sister Agnes was an original in so many ways. God bless her. And hopefully she'll bless me and forgive all my transgressions that made impressions on the punishment paddles and on my behind.
 

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Debby Puccio ‘doing well’ in rehab

Jay Holman, who spearheads the amalgamation of fellow Class of 1971 members, provided an update on Deborah Puccio, recovering from kidney failure.

Debbie Puccio
Jay wrote:

“Spoke with Josie today, got this update on Deborah Puccio:

“I saw her today and she is doing well. She is in Health South in Morgantown for rehab. Hopefully she will get to come home in a couple of weeks. She is in room 318 and is allowed to have visitors. Thanks for asking about her.”


Josie Puccio Dalton, Class of 1973, is Debby’s sister. She is the widow of Larry Dalton, Class of 1968.

Larry’s sister, Janice Marie Dalton Bayne, Class of 1965, lives in Georgia.
Monongah’s Chad Puccio is the widower of Terry Ann Moore-Puccio.
Debby suffered kidney failure.

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Mama Manchin pushed state schools to buy daughter’s EpiPens

After Papa Manchin put his wife on State Board of Education

Let’s see if I understand this correctly, based on a Tuesday story in USA Today by Ryan Quinn.

West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin appoints State First Lady Gayle Manchin to the West Virginia Board of Education in 2007.

As such, she advised West Virginia schools to stock EpiPens, a life-saving device for those who have an anaphylactic reaction.

Only Milan Pharmaceuticals, whose CEO is Gayle and Joe Manchin’s daughter, Heather Bresch, has a patent on EpiPens, even though the U.S. government paid for the research and development.

That gave Gayle and Joe’s daughter’s company  a monopoly in selling EpiPens to the state’s schools.

The same daughter who got a $16.5 million bump in her compensation after jacking up the price of the EpiPens from $100 to $600.

Mama Manchin did not respond to USA Today’s request for comments and did not answer the Charleston Gazette-Mail’s phone call seeking comment.

Ft. Hamilton Hospital Chief Medical Officer Dr. Marcus Romanello in Hamilton, which is in southwest Ohio, has an anti-dote to the Heather/Milan’s price-gouging -- and it costs less than $10.
He bought a bottle of epinephrine for $5.89 (no insurance required), put it in an Altoid tin with a syringe and – voila! – you have an epinephrine injector kit.

"Attach the needle. Pop the top and draw up the prescribed amount," said Dr. Romanello. When your doctor gives you the prescription, he or she can show you how to give the shot.

You have to overcome your squeamishness, but even too much epinephrine “in a setting of anaphylactic reaction is not going to hurt," Dr. Romanello said.

Just think of the $590 you’re saving. It will inspire you to save your child’s life without impoverishing your family.

Today, he’s U.S. Senator Joe Manchin from West Virginia, and his daughter Heather was grilled by the House Oversight Committee on Tuesday. When daughter Heather told the Congressional committee that she is coming out with a generic for half the price of $300, Utah Republican Jason Chaffetz countered that Milan would make even more of a profit because it could sell it directly to its customers.

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Those were the days, eh?

I don’t where I first heard the collection of homes south of the UMW Hall and to the left of U.S. 19 on your way to Swisher Hill called Frogtown, but Leo Kubiet, Class of 1942, and Bob Kasper, Class of 1950, said they never heard the term used to refer to their neighborhood.

Leo Kubiet, Evelyn Kasper Boggess, Bob Kasper
Grandma Ursula Shipco had a major role in it. She had six lots which she gave or sold to others.

Her children were John, Joe, George, Walter, Blanche and Mrs. Lawrence Kasper, whose daughter, Evelyn Kasper Boggess, still lives in the Willow Road home of her childhood with husband Okey Boggess.

Blanche, Walter (who married Helen) and Evelyn’s mom, plus Grandma Ursula, lived there even as adults. They all lived on Willow Road as children, although it didn’t have a name when they were growing up. That came later.

I asked Leo, who retired 27 years ago as St. Petersburg Times senior vice president in Florida, to help me picture which families lived where on Willow. His reply:

“John, I'll try to answer your question about the so called Frog Town neighborhood.  We did not call it Frog Town when I lived there.
 
“In order, from the top of the hill of Willow Road as it was known then and now, there were the Joe Greco, Tony Domico, Lawrence Kasper, Walter and Helen Shipco families. 
 
“The Joe and Laura Kubiet and Layne families on the West side. On the East side were 
another Shipco family (Blanche, I believe, and her mother). Then down at the 
end, across the road from our home, was the Walter and Ivy Nichols family. 
 
“Their daughters were Geraldine and Pauline. Pauline married Walter Gracy (of Fairmont 
Wall Plaster). Geraldine married and subsequently moved to Clearwater, Florida. 
I talked with her by phone a time or two several years ago.
 
“As you already know, my family was composed of brothers Joseph, Jr., William 
"Buddy" and Francis Eugene “Sonny.” My sister, the middle one of the family, is 
Marjorie Kubiet Whitehair. She and I are the only two surviving. She lives in 
Dayton, Ohio, with her children living in that area. 
 
“On a personal note, my wife, Mary Jean Metz Kubiet celebrated her 90th 
birthday on September 12. We celebrated our 70th wedding anniversary on 
Wednesday, September 14 last week. (Was not much of a celebration, though, since 
she had just been discharged from the Largo Medical Center on Monday morning.)
 
“(Mary) Jean has been in the Memory Care Section at Brookdale Pincrest adult 
living facility for 14 months with advancing Alzheimer's. Physically, she is well 
but has a serious short-term memory condition. 
 
“It is now 27 years since I retired as senior vice president of the St. 
Petersburg Times (now the Tampa Bay Times after purchasing the Tampa Tribune 
earlier this year).
 
“My residence is on the 8th floor of a 9-story building with an excellent view of the Pinecrest Golf Course, where I can watch many golfers make the same mistakes that I made for many years.”

Pinecrest is in Largo, Florida near St. Petersburg. Leo’s wife, Jean, is a Fairmont East graduate.

I remember when Leo began his journalism career after graduation from Fairmont State and went to the Detroit Free Press. My dad heard about Leo’s salary and use of the company car and was happy when I chose journalism for a career, seeing dollar signs in his eyes.
 
Alas, my first job after my graduation from the WVU School of Journalism was for $55 a week as sports editor of the Williamson Daily News. Things did improve enough in my 43-year newspaper career to let me afford traveling to 55 countries, 44 states and take 13 cruises after my 1996 retirement from the Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal.

Larry and Jean’s son, Larry, passed away in 2009. He lived in Wesley Chapel, Florida.

When I read Leo’s explanation of the families on Willow Road to Bob Kasper, Class of 1950, Evelyn Boggess’ brother who lives in South Lyon and Presque Isle (Grand Lake), Michigan, he confirmed most of Leo’s recalls but added that the Jessie and Susie Sickles family also lived there, with a passel of children, during the 1940s.

Charles and Mary Jackson Layne also lived in that neighborhood with 12 children. One was daughter Judy Layne Alkire, widow of Charles Alkire. Another daughter, Doris, married the guy next door, Joe Kubiet, Jr. and they live in Monongah.
 
And they grew up playing with Evelyn Kasper Boggess, who still lives in the Kasper home of her childhood with husband Otis Boggess, and Bob Kasper, who has homes in South Lyon and Presque Isle (Grand Lake), Michigan.

Other siblings are Carol Layne Elliott of Mill Fall, married to Ronald Elliott; Shirley Layne Russell of Fairmont, married to Charles Russell; and JoAnne Layne Snider of Monongah, married to William Snider; and, all deceased, Bradley, Charles, David, Johnny and Robert Layne and Betty Layne Bowyer and Margaret Layne Faber.

The sister of Evelyn Boggess and Bob Kasper was the late Helen Kasper.

Leo’s phone number is (727) 400-4249 and his email address is leokubiet@tampabay.rr.com  

His address is

1159 8th Avenue S.W.

Pinecrest Place

Unit #2817

Largo, FL 33770
One of my favorite Monongah High graduates, Goldie Basagic Huffman, Class of 1974, and one of my favorite retirees, a coal miner, John Huffman, are celebrating their 41st wedding anniversary today.

Goldie wrote:
“I can't believe it has been 41 yrs. Time has been going too fast.

“But what great things that have happened in those 41 yrs. Two great children (Erik and Brooke) and 7 beautiful grandbabies (Avery, Winnie, Jackson, Maggie, Riley, John and Brynlynn.
“Couldn't ask for anything better. Love you, John. Couldn't have made it without you.”
John retired in 2014 after 38 years of putting his life on the line every day to support his family.
Since my father, John W. Olesky, Sr., survived TWO cave-ins that covered his body with at least 4 feet of coal, I have tremendous respect for anyone with the guts to go into the mines.
Before marrying John, Goldie grew up in the coal-mining Basagic family so she has waited at home prayerfully and fearfully for nearly all of her life.
Goldie once worked for the federal government
Since I also have seven grandchildren, I know the joy that Goldie shares in that situation. I also have two great-grandchildren. Still have to catch me in that category, Goldie.
Brooke Pethel, Goldie Huffman’s daughter, wrote:
“I am so proud of my father! For 38 years he provided for his family, put two children through college and supported us in our decisions throughout our lives. We love you, dad!”
Brooke is married to Adam Pethtel.
Goldie and John’s son, Erik Huffman, is married to Katie, who provided Goldie & John with 5 grandchildren.
Goldie once was a Monongah High cheerleader alongside Barbra Eller Aldridge Hanning, Class of 1974; Patty DeMary Evans, Class of 1972; Debbie Manzo Vandetta, Class of 1973, Monongahfest president married to Monongah Mayor Greg Vandetta, Class of 1975; and Debbie Basagic Bragg, Class of 1972.
Brenda Manzo, a Fairmont East High grad who is married to Danny Manzo, Class of 1957, wrote:
“Happy Anniversary, Goldie and John. You are two very special people. Enjoy your year and all the many more years to come. I hope we are here to celebrate your 50th.”
Julius Basagic is Class of 1945.
Goldie Basagic Myers is Class of 1943.
Hassan Basagic, Class of 1963, attended the 2013 Monongah High Alumni Reunion with Marlene Sandy.
Hassan Basagic, Jr., Class of 1941, passed away in 1980.
John Basagic is Class of 1966.
Bruce Basagic is Class of 1969.
Debra Basagic Berry is Class of 1970.
Pete Basagic is Class of 1972.
Sandra Basagic, after Parkersburg High, Fairmont State and West Virginia University, works for the Marion County Board of Education, is married and lives in Fairmont.
Cathy Basagic, Fairmont State catering programs coordinator, is from Rachel and lives in Monongah.