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Karl R. Josker | all galleries >> Buffalo >> The Schools Of Buffalo > Seneca Vocational High School
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18-MAY-2005 Karl R. Josker

Seneca Vocational High School

666 E. Delevan Ave. Buffalo

Canon EOS 20D ,Canon EF 17-40mm f/4L USM
1/200s f/10.0 at 30.0mm iso400 hide exif
Full EXIF Info
Date/Time18-May-2005 11:33:21
MakeCanon
ModelCanon EOS 20D
Flash UsedNo
Focal Length30 mm
Exposure Time1/200 sec
Aperturef/10
ISO Equivalent400
Exposure Bias
White Balance (-1)
Metering Modematrix (5)
JPEG Quality (6)
Exposure Programshutter priority (2)
Focus Distance

other sizes: small medium original auto
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hal light 25-Nov-2016 20:55
i graduated from seneca in 1954 and went on to become an elect. engineer from ub---two great schools---wound up at niagara mohawk power company for 40 years--retired and now reside in hattiesburg miss.
Randy 20-Dec-2014 07:24
Graduation class of 1966. I was in the Industrial Electricity program. I still remember paralleling the generators on the big power panel. When the lights blinked together, you could connect them.
J.Carleton 07-Nov-2011 18:12
My dad graduated from Seneca in 1927, and when he passed away in 1999, he was still using tools he made in machine shop classes.
Guest 13-Feb-2011 02:42
I to went to this school and have persued my lifetime ambition of electronics electricity to this day 2011 Febuary 13. I graduated in 1972 and have ever thought of Seneca as the place that made me. Thanks to all the tough and honest teachers who wnadered the halls and rooms.
Mike Mantino 25-Feb-2008 01:49
My name is Mike Mantino (bigreb2@aol.com) and I graduated from this great vocational institution in 1948. Too small for sports, but I remember all my heroes. We had a great football team and our arch rival was Burgard (another great vocational institution). I am of the opinion that the decline of vocational schools in America is a sorry civic disaster. I loved electronics and electricity as a boy and pursued that endeavor (to my great satisfaction) for the entirety of my work life. The root foundation of my noble profession was acquired at Seneca Vocational High School. And I am proud of it. Pitifully, the blue collar worker seemingly was never held in high regard even though the economies of all countries are fully dependent on him. It would bring my aging heart to the brink of euphoria to see someone like Dick Cheney high up on a telephone pole in a raging, sub zero, snow storm working feverishly on a ruptured high voltage line in the undaunting effort to restore electricity to a threatened community. "Go Seneca,Go!"
Tashema Oates 23-Feb-2006 17:46
good School