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Full Text:
Another Rudolph On The Road
(with photo)
BY STEVE BIGHAM
To hundreds of Newtown kids, he was known as "Uncle Charlie," but to his
daughter, he was simply known as Dad.
So Beth Rudolph-Koschel couldn't help but feel a little strange last September
when she sat down in the driver's seat of school bus number 16 that first
morning.
Afterall, it was the same bus number 16 that her father, Charlie Rudolph, had
been driving for nearly 30 years. She would been filling some pretty big
shoes; the shoes of a man who had made friends with so many youngsters over
the years, but who had died unexpectedly a year ago this week at age 70.
"My father had always wanted me to take over his route someday," Mrs Rudolph
Koschel explained Tuesday. "It was a little sad that first day, but it was
nice just the same."
Ever since, bus number 16's new driver has been carrying on her father's
tradition of safe driving and love of people.
"My dad always tried to help out others when he could. He taught me to work
hard and be good to people," Mrs Rudolph-Koschel said.
The passing-down-of-the-bus has worked out great, according to Schools
Transportation Director Mary Kelley, who called it a testimony to Newtown's
owner-operator system, one of only two in Connecticut.
"Beth has become an asset, distinguishing herself with her kind and caring
ways," Mrs Kelley said.
The Evergreen Road resident has had her bus driving license for three years
now and had already been doing her share of driving prior to her father's
death. She filled in for Charlie on Fridays and occasionally substituted for
Tom Adams. Driving bus number 16, she has many of the same routes that her
father had and many of the same students who had been riding with him for
years.
Her first year of driving was filled with children telling fond stories about
"Uncle Charlie," well-known for his outgoing, boisterous style. The heartfelt
comments were especially gratifying to Mrs Rudolph-Koschel, 37, who was very
close to her father. Afterall, she was the only girl and the youngest of
three.
"He developed a special friendship with a lot of the kids. I remember one
eight-year-old boy said to me, `Your father was such a wonderful man.'"
A longtime Newtown resident, Mrs Rudolph-Koschel graduated from Newtown High
School in 1979 and married Kevin Koschel of Danbury a few years later. Since
being married, she was always known as Beth Koschel, but opted to hyphenate
her name last year to show both children and parents that she was indeed...the
daughter of the late Charlie Rudolph.
In addition to her bus-driving duties, Mrs Rudolph-Koschel runs a bakery
called "Special Occasions" out of her basement with Irene Cappellini, her
godmother. She is also the proud mother of two daughters, Kayla, 10, and
Marley, 7.