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Kay Thunder, St. Paul's Lutheran School Teacher, Discusses Bible Study With Students, March 1965 Photographer: Duane Scheel

Kay Thunder, St. Paul's Lutheran School Teacher, Discusses Bible Study With Students, March 1965 image
Year:
1965
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, March 23, 1965
Caption:
Miss Kay Thunder, teacher of a combination first-second grade room at St. Paul's Lutheran Church Day School, points out the relation between a bulletin board display and their Bible study text to Sarah Firnhaber and Jessie Crosmer, two first graders. Religion is one of the regular subjects taught at the school.

St. Paul's School Opening Sept. 8

St. Paul's School Opening Sept. 8 image
Parent Issue
Day
31
Month
August
Year
1965
Copyright
Copyright Protected

St. Paul's School To Grow

St. Paul's School To Grow image
Parent Issue
Day
11
Month
February
Year
1966
Copyright
Copyright Protected

New Teachers To Be Inducted

New Teachers To Be Inducted image
Parent Issue
Day
22
Month
September
Year
1967
Copyright
Copyright Protected

St. Paul's Lutheran Adds Second Grade

St. Paul's Lutheran Adds Second Grade image
Parent Issue
Day
22
Month
August
Year
1968
Copyright
Copyright Protected

St. Paul's Lutheran School Students Take A Makeup Test In The Listening Center, March 1969 Photographer: Cecil Lockard

St. Paul's Lutheran School Students Take A Makeup Test In The Listening Center, March 1969 image
Year:
1969
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, March 21, 1969
Caption:
Taking a makeup test in the "listening center" at St. Paul's Lutheran School were four first graders. They are (top, from left) Hilary Kapfer, Jill Van Heyningen, Lisa Gail Schock and Andy Crosmer. The listening center is a portable appliance, which can be used by eight students at once. It plugs into record players, tape recorders or sound projectors and permits individual listening. The equipment, donated in 1968 by the school's Parent-Teacher League, has been "heavily used" during this school year, according to one teacher. The portable equipment can be taken to any classroom, and can be used to hear French stories and songs, religious readings, speeches, math drills or a number of other subjects. It is also used to make up tests by students absent because of illness or absence. (Ann Arbor News Photo by Cecil Lockard.)