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                <text>Bronx Schools Newspaper Collection, 1933–1969</text>
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                <text>Newspapers (The Bronx, New York)</text>
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                <text>The New Deal (Walton High School)</text>
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                <text>The provenance of this collection is varied. Lewis Stone donated the publications from Walton High School in 2020. Dr. Steven Payne found the publications from Bronx High School of Science on a shelf in the library in 2020.</text>
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            <text>Vol. 55, No. 4</text>
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            <text> The End See Page 4&#13;
scuence THE BRONX HIGH SCHOOL OF SCIENCE&#13;
Flower Power&#13;
s&#13;
urvey&#13;
at Science&#13;
See Selence Scene, P. 2&#13;
Vol. LV - No. 4&#13;
June 28, 1967&#13;
Gold Takes Pres&#13;
idency; SO. Voices Plans o&#13;
P s athologist Rene J. Dubo&#13;
Intends to Find Solution To Replace System&#13;
Of Representation&#13;
To Student-Faculty Gap The Student Organization has&#13;
Speaks a t C&#13;
mmencemen&#13;
t&#13;
announced palns ot eliminate rep-&#13;
By Richard Schwarz&#13;
Vice-President Marilyn MenI-&#13;
resentofatiao&#13;
ln official classes an life. In hsi speech, D.r&#13;
By Charles Bernstein&#13;
on hum&#13;
otsch,&#13;
i n the S.OC,ouncil; instead there&#13;
Science's 850 seniors were grad-&#13;
Dubos said that although many&#13;
those created by scientific tec&#13;
Responding to her&#13;
promise of&#13;
defeated Linda ,sFsa&#13;
uated&#13;
June 25 at the commence.&#13;
feel that scientific tech ded that science&#13;
nol&#13;
nology." He conclu h-&#13;
increased&#13;
communication between&#13;
and&#13;
How&#13;
dar Adler,&#13;
3-151&#13;
will beaboard&#13;
fo class and school&#13;
mn ex&#13;
e&#13;
t ercises held a&#13;
t the Loew&#13;
b&#13;
e c o m e&#13;
ogy has&#13;
"can&#13;
not,&#13;
and&#13;
should&#13;
n&#13;
promised to "back&#13;
uphte&#13;
presi&#13;
executives.&#13;
Paradise&#13;
's&#13;
T&#13;
independent&#13;
heater. René .J&#13;
numar&#13;
Du&#13;
bos&#13;
goals, more are beginning to re-&#13;
rooted.&#13;
W&#13;
e need&#13;
ot&#13;
be&#13;
and&#13;
faculty,&#13;
Scienceites&#13;
only&#13;
whatever&#13;
remember elected Marthe Gold, 3-17, sa O..S&#13;
she&#13;
may undertake for the benefit of&#13;
The new governing body wil&#13;
of het Rockefeller University made&#13;
a&#13;
lize tha&#13;
t&#13;
"on&#13;
ly&#13;
that the fron&#13;
science can solve&#13;
tiers&#13;
must be determined&#13;
o&#13;
ft&#13;
ech&#13;
n&#13;
the principal address&#13;
ol&#13;
ogy&#13;
crescen&#13;
t e m&#13;
embers of the s.O." She also&#13;
consist ofthree popularly elected&#13;
world's problems,&#13;
tions of man's na&#13;
by the limita-&#13;
Jessica Edwards, 3-8, Sharyn Sa-&#13;
executives from each grade as well&#13;
Professor Dubos, hte winer of&#13;
to the science&#13;
ture. In&#13;
add&#13;
expressed a&#13;
desire for inter-school&#13;
ition&#13;
and allen Reiter. dances.&#13;
a s t h e&#13;
5.0,&#13;
we must d material things&#13;
of&#13;
pres&#13;
ident,&#13;
the Arches of Science award, is&#13;
evelop a science of hu-&#13;
dna&#13;
Marilyn MeIntosch,&#13;
den,t&#13;
se&#13;
creta&#13;
ry.&#13;
microbiologist a n d&#13;
e x&#13;
Offi&#13;
cia&#13;
l class&#13;
perimental pathologist. His recent&#13;
manity that wil&#13;
l&#13;
b&#13;
e&#13;
th&#13;
e&#13;
humanism&#13;
Susan Baer. 2-2, also won posts in&#13;
representatives will continue to&#13;
studies&#13;
evah dealt with the effects&#13;
of the future."&#13;
the schoolwide election, those of&#13;
s e r v eon the&#13;
four class c&#13;
ouncil.&#13;
That&#13;
env&#13;
ironm&#13;
ental force&#13;
s&#13;
exert&#13;
The 196% g&#13;
rad&#13;
uati&#13;
o&#13;
n&#13;
8:30 am with&#13;
st&#13;
arted a&#13;
Vice-president and secretary re-&#13;
and wli be&#13;
kept informed of al&#13;
the t&#13;
decisions of the new school coun&#13;
cessional of raditional pro-&#13;
hte seniors. After the&#13;
in ner campaign speech, deliv-&#13;
salute ot the flag and the National&#13;
ered at the June 7 S.O. Assem-&#13;
Details ot be Worked Out&#13;
Dr Alexander Taffel b l y . M i s s G o l d p r o t e s t e d t h a t t h e&#13;
assembled students, n g i s u Dc s s i t h e p l a n ,&#13;
a d -&#13;
a n d&#13;
S.O. "has divorced itself orfm the&#13;
f a c u l t y.&#13;
viserMr. Kenn&#13;
eth Allen explained&#13;
duced the&#13;
and intro- position as spokesman for the stu-&#13;
guests. In his&#13;
t h a t&#13;
severoarlganizational d&#13;
remarks,&#13;
etails&#13;
Taffel cautioned&#13;
dents, and remains a solely social&#13;
worked out,&#13;
uates not&#13;
it&#13;
ot permit the&#13;
organization." She claimed that&#13;
discourag-&#13;
a m o n g&#13;
which a r e the procedures&#13;
ing and frustrating events of the was her intention ot bridge hte&#13;
for amending&#13;
the constitution and&#13;
world ot make them&#13;
gap between the students and the&#13;
htedegere towhichgradeexecu-&#13;
alienating them pessimistic —&#13;
m u s e b r e s e n t h e VICWS 01&#13;
from the fight for&#13;
a better He&#13;
their&#13;
acsl councils. The S.O. si&#13;
that "the goo&#13;
d, kind,cooperative,&#13;
now&#13;
studying structures of student&#13;
well-meaning people of the world ni other schools ni&#13;
far outnumber those who are evil.&#13;
order ot lind wavs to deal with&#13;
They need the leadership and op- the organizational problems&#13;
timism of a young, dynamic,&#13;
new sostem creates&#13;
creative generation to make rea&#13;
Justifying the elimination of the&#13;
Martin Flumenbaum, 4-18, si the son and worthy ideals prevail ni council of official class&#13;
1967 Salutatorian. human affairs. You, the class Vice-President Marilyn MeIntosch tatives, M.r Alen pointed out that&#13;
Albert He si Editor-in-Chief of Observ- 1967," Dr. Taffel concluded, "can the current council. because of its&#13;
Michael Felson, 4-19, delivered alory — the senior year book, a have asignificant role in provid- Susan Baer, new is "grossly inefficient&#13;
large size,&#13;
t h e&#13;
valedctory&#13;
address at&#13;
the&#13;
member of the&#13;
chess club, a par-&#13;
ing that leadership."&#13;
tary, told students that she want- and unwieldy" and that there wa.&#13;
ed "lunch on the mall, and a con-&#13;
graduation exercises this year&#13;
ticipant in the Socia, Studies as&#13;
Salutatorian Follows Taffel insufficient coordination&#13;
cert by a popular recording art-&#13;
g r a G e a c t i v i t i e s&#13;
" member of the Senior Math sembly andpresidentofaJewish D.rTaffel'scommentswerefol-&#13;
a smaller as wellas sKeronts&#13;
Team, Dynamo literary&#13;
staff, sen-&#13;
youth group,&#13;
ist." Her opponents were Barbara council, ne argued, I would be lor year book staff and winner of scholarship recinient&#13;
lowed yb a brief address by this Villamia, 3-18, and Carol Lipton,&#13;
0433&#13;
a o&#13;
thetall.&#13;
year's salutatorian. M a r t i n&#13;
will enroll&#13;
Flu- 3-14.&#13;
a Regents scholarship and a scho-l&#13;
for quick action.&#13;
Tench&#13;
drama Columbia&#13;
U n i v e r si t y&#13;
menbaum, after which the Chorus, yet been&#13;
gorup, Felson is undecided about&#13;
under the direction of Mrs.&#13;
made no when the plan wix og&#13;
h i s&#13;
C a r e e r p l a n s . N e x t t e r m , h e&#13;
plans to major in either chemistry L a w n e r . "Dona Nobis Pa- intoeffect.&#13;
or political science, hoping event- cem" from the Mas ni C by the wilenterHarvardUniversity.&#13;
ually to becomo a lawver&#13;
German composer, Carl Maria von Weber.&#13;
S.O. President Marthe Gold&#13;
the Parents' Association, then pre- administration, as well as the even&#13;
Geshwind Speaks to Bio Club Mr. Oto Rosahn, president of sented awards and honors on be- larger gap between the students&#13;
half of the parents, and Mr. Ber- and the Board o1 Education. Whe&#13;
nard Manson presented them for new president also said that sha&#13;
By Kay Ye&#13;
fare,&#13;
a puppy. In this operation, the the faculty.&#13;
hopes to improve S.O. social fune-&#13;
he felt that it was immoral, he dog's body temperature was low.&#13;
tions, to reinstate Field Day. and&#13;
AformerU.S.Armyresearcher&#13;
Handel's Concerto Grosso ni C did not lind it moreimmoral than eredto16degreesCelsiusinorder&#13;
to make entering freshmen and&#13;
in biological warfare discussed his other types of warfare. Many of to stop its&#13;
Major,Opus6,$9,wasnextper-&#13;
s o p h o m o r e s m o r e c o m f o r t a b l e a s&#13;
w o r k a t t h e M a y 1 9 m e e t i n g o f&#13;
f o r m e d yb t h e c h a m b e r m u s i c e n -&#13;
d o w n i t s c i r c u l a t i o n . A f t e r t h e m a -&#13;
they become adjusted to their new&#13;
the Biology Club.&#13;
Mr. Lance Geshwind. a teacher&#13;
terested only in pure research and Tor blood vessels had hoon sewr&#13;
n o t&#13;
h&#13;
e&#13;
m o r a l&#13;
r i s o r e s&#13;
o&#13;
t&#13;
h&#13;
e&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
Chairman, M.r Hy Rensin.&#13;
together, the heartbeat was str&#13;
eng-&#13;
ni t h e P h y s i c a l S c i e n c e D e p a r t -&#13;
D o l o m a s M i s t r n u t e ?&#13;
ment here. anp that&#13;
t h e n e d b y a n n i e c t i o n o f c a l c i u m&#13;
chloride and brought into regular&#13;
Throughout t h e m u s i c , excite Students Consider&#13;
work dealt&#13;
with preventing in-&#13;
r e c d o n t o m&#13;
botulinus.&#13;
rhythm b v&#13;
of aNobel Prize for his work on Stressing that the transplants were torium, for alter the Concerto the Math-Science Club&#13;
tremely poisonous bacterium which&#13;
the artificial heart, discussed his still the chiplomas—&#13;
Students with special interests&#13;
may be denatured by being iarred research on the fiber glass heart Kantrowitz pointed out that the seniors of their three or four&#13;
in mathematics and the sciences&#13;
or exposed to sunlight. Mr. Gesh- and heart transplants, as well as although&#13;
a s s e m b l e d o n J a y 22 t o d i s c u s s&#13;
Albert wind left the project before con- telling of the auxiliary valve tech. grew normally after receiving the buted to the expectant students Secretary Susan Baer&#13;
crete results of the work could niques used to strengthen weak transolants. they eventually died&#13;
by Mr. Emmanuel Bloom, college the establishment&#13;
of a "Frontiers&#13;
c o o r d i n a t o r.&#13;
a n d&#13;
M a t h o r g a n i z a .&#13;
M a k i n g n i s f a r e w e l l s p e e c h&#13;
a s&#13;
hearts. from either rejection of foreign&#13;
Turning ot the uses of biologi-&#13;
r o t e i n s i n t r a n c e d o w t h e t r a n&#13;
s.&#13;
After all the seniors had been president of the S.O., Neil Clen- cal warfare, the speaker pointed&#13;
Speaking at the June 2 meeting planted hearts or from various&#13;
Dr.&#13;
4 - 1 0 c h a r a c t e r i z e d his&#13;
o u t t h a t&#13;
b i o l o g i c a l w e a p o n s m a y&#13;
of the Biology Club, Dr. Kantro-&#13;
Alexande&#13;
r&#13;
Taf&#13;
fel explain&#13;
ed that&#13;
administration as&#13;
one of Science's&#13;
oved in mencetime to kill&#13;
witz explained that an artificial&#13;
types of infection. It is hoped that&#13;
livered the Valedictory Address ni be empl&#13;
the problem of foreign proteins&#13;
t h e c l u b .&#13;
w h i c h&#13;
w i l l&#13;
b e x i n&#13;
m e e t -&#13;
m o s t s u c c e s s f u l .&#13;
H o w e v e r , d e s p i t e&#13;
harmful&#13;
a m m a l s addition&#13;
h e a r t m a d e o f l i b e r g l a s s w o u l d&#13;
has been solved, the speaker noted,&#13;
mates that they should not only&#13;
i n g i n September,&#13;
the various innovations and sue. beingused ni war ot kill soldiers be light and strong. and would by the recent development of tis- "preach the idle words of love pioneers in&#13;
cesses, including the Battle of the or defoliate plants. Mr. Goshwind not interfere with normal func- sue typing, a process similar to and peace but rather should at- lecture on their work and to ad- Bands, three S.O. movie trips. the claimed that biological warfare is tioning of the body tissues. He blood typing, puarantees tempt to make them reality in a students&#13;
wmat&#13;
spring trip to Washington, and the&#13;
more caceive thin other Kimos&#13;
added. however, that in 150 ex-&#13;
world which a&#13;
t times seems to theycandoinschoolor athome.&#13;
extended termsofS.O. office. ho&#13;
becauseitsicheapandefficient. perimentswiththedevice,nosub-&#13;
the acceptance of the new heart&#13;
bythesubject'sbody.&#13;
have forgottentheirmeaning." Dr. Taffel pointed out that many recognized disappointment&#13;
w o n t the Student Committee for&#13;
During the question period that jeet has lived more than 27 hours&#13;
Richard Merkler,&#13;
after its installation,&#13;
Auxiliary Pump Considered&#13;
playingthe"Revolutionary"Etude mathematicians and scientists do dent Affairs,&#13;
followed his talk, M.r Geshwind To demonstrate the transplant&#13;
by Chopin.&#13;
e l m n ailure to imblement the pronosed touched briefly on the question technique, the speaker showed a The final method Dr. Kantro- Tha 1967 Graduation came to a would be helpful ni acquainting dual study hall arrangement.&#13;
of the morality of biological war- film of the method being used on&#13;
witz discussed was the auxiliary&#13;
pump, a mechanism designed to&#13;
close with&#13;
seatatearendition the relieve the left ventricle of the&#13;
m a z e n ,&#13;
Acting&#13;
hairman&#13;
of the&#13;
Mathi&#13;
Depart-&#13;
Four Triumph in Arista Elections major part of its pumping func-&#13;
moving part, a collapsible bladder,&#13;
Teachers Arrange&#13;
club ought to be "very stimulating,&#13;
Eli&#13;
Szkla&#13;
nka,&#13;
3-4.&#13;
Barbara&#13;
whieh is timed o r two @lectodd&#13;
Collection&#13;
for Israel&#13;
e Xc ut in g ，&#13;
3-13, Anthony Rostain,&#13;
attached to the heart. When the&#13;
Mazen cited Professor I. I. Rabi,&#13;
3-25, and Alexander To, 3-12, were&#13;
t o u s e s a r e&#13;
Science's&#13;
teachers,&#13;
w i n n e r&#13;
a s a&#13;
elected president, vice-president,&#13;
sent to an electronic unit outside chairmanship&#13;
of M.r Joseph Kel- secretary, and treasurer of Arista&#13;
t h e&#13;
m o d y w h i c h .&#13;
contraCon&#13;
man of the Industrial Arts D e prospective guest speaker,&#13;
at the honor society's June 6 meet-&#13;
and&#13;
expanding&#13;
quickly, partment, have started an "Israel faculty advisers, one each from ing.&#13;
makes the bladder pump the blood EmergencyFund"niorderotgive&#13;
T h e election treasurer&#13;
at a faster rate. Dr. Kantrowitz&#13;
monetary and moral support to the Math Departments.&#13;
addition, marked a break with tradition-&#13;
chameterized thesystemasT e l&#13;
previously there had been only&#13;
s onabl» r eliablo" s ince 8 0&#13;
three officers of the organizations,&#13;
cont orthe dous&#13;
auxiliary&#13;
In a notice distributed to all Columbia&#13;
valves lived for a year o r more&#13;
teachers, aspecial committee, com- Praduate.&#13;
guide&#13;
which honors academic excellence&#13;
after their operations.&#13;
posed of a member of each of Sci-&#13;
In the question period, D.r Kant-&#13;
d e n&#13;
h r&#13;
t m&#13;
e n t s&#13;
asked that Although&#13;
activities, however, Arista found&#13;
tails will not be worked out until&#13;
t h a t&#13;
t h e&#13;
a d d i t i o n a l&#13;
help was&#13;
rowitz expressed the hove&#13;
that&#13;
each&#13;
contribute at Allthefunds wil be next term,&#13;
needed.&#13;
someofthestudentsintheau- c o l l a r s&#13;
dience would continue the work&#13;
given to the United Jewish Ap- variousclubcommitteeshavebeen Opposing Szklanka were Jack&#13;
distributed t o h o s e students w h o Staub. 2.8 and Tack Nunberg,&#13;
Albert that he and his fellow scientists b e a l As ofJune 16 more than eitonded the mectint&#13;
NewAristaofficersRostain(left),Szklanka,To,andWeschler. havebegun. 1500Anllarehad been collected.&#13;
 Page Two&#13;
S C I E N C ES U RV E Y&#13;
Wednesday, June 28,1967 salenge&#13;
Some Thoughts on the S.O. New Yorkers Await&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Science.&#13;
published &amp;times a y&#13;
ear&#13;
by&#13;
the&#13;
students of&#13;
T h e t h o u g h t t h a t ents, and the mo&#13;
After having served the stu-&#13;
order to be a good student leader&#13;
of the stud&#13;
st&#13;
po&#13;
w&#13;
-&#13;
R&#13;
ichCu&#13;
ltural Sea&#13;
dent organization during my three&#13;
one must have&#13;
erful organ of the school. fI this&#13;
son&#13;
THE BRONX HIG&#13;
HS&#13;
CHO&#13;
OL&#13;
original idea&#13;
shas l&#13;
wil&#13;
years at Science Ithink that it&#13;
grown unimportant&#13;
e&#13;
ver happen, ti will happen&#13;
b y M a r k G a n t t&#13;
OF SCIENCE&#13;
imperative&#13;
for&#13;
the student at Se-i&#13;
Science, as&#13;
rext year, for the new S.O. presi- Among the many&#13;
d e n t h a s a l l of ht e f r e s h i d e a s t o&#13;
cultur&#13;
al eve&#13;
nts occuring ni New&#13;
57 West 205 Street Bronx, N.Y. 10468 ence to know why the 5.0, is not bly, where neither secretarial nor make her&#13;
York this summer, what promises ot be&#13;
DR. ALEXANDE&#13;
R TAFFEL, Principal&#13;
functioning p r o p e r l y. candidates The possibility State Opera to Lincoln&#13;
From the vice-presidential&#13;
unhappy girl.&#13;
fascinating and enjoyable is the fir&#13;
of a real Hamburg&#13;
st visit of the&#13;
m a o r t y or specches Riven m e t h e given student Center,theonly Assembly, I am forced school, reducing the whole&#13;
organization at Science is almost&#13;
foreign opera group so far inv&#13;
ited ot appear ni the newtone&#13;
Vol. LV - No. 4&#13;
June 28, 1967&#13;
admit that even the most informedi&#13;
democratie process of an election&#13;
non-existent, but that (possib&#13;
students do not know.&#13;
ot a popularity contest.&#13;
almost is&#13;
ility)&#13;
Metropolitan&#13;
Opera Company's&#13;
worth al of the unhap-&#13;
Not only&#13;
piness and frustration that comes&#13;
will New Yorkers be able ot witness the performances of a company that si supposed to be&#13;
Dantel&#13;
Bernstein&#13;
The main ojb ofhte SO., presi- eTh S.Osh.ould get away orfm&#13;
with&#13;
Mark&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Nissenbaum dent&#13;
is to co-ordinate&#13;
the eforts&#13;
just being&#13;
fighting for it&#13;
e n t e r t a i n m e n t or&#13;
"themostexcitingoperagroupin the&#13;
world," but of his subordinates&#13;
nI&#13;
a maogrpr&#13;
ganization. It should be&#13;
the vocie&#13;
Doree Barton&#13;
they wil be given hte opportunity ot hear the Amer- Jeffrey Berg&#13;
own initiation.&#13;
oT acheive&#13;
5.0.Exec. Bd. Member ican premiere of one of the major operatic works this, the&#13;
council&#13;
of the century •Alban Berg's Lulu,&#13;
Faculty Corner&#13;
The company&#13;
gatherings,&#13;
will also present newly commis. Editorial Board&#13;
where&#13;
usesi aer&#13;
discused yb n-i&#13;
sioned works by Klebe and Schuller and a special&#13;
concert performance of Weber's Der Freischütz. Per. News&#13;
Editors&#13;
formed sutdenst,&#13;
Joseph Schuldenrein,&#13;
Irene&#13;
not haggled over.&#13;
haps the Hamburg State's first visit will be merely&#13;
Feature Editors&#13;
Stern sAthe school grows, increasinhegt&#13;
Stephen Hyslop, Vita Miccio size of the c o u n c i l .i t becomes i n&#13;
a prelude ot further delights and fascinating opera- Dr. Brody&#13;
Sports Editor Robert Weisberger creasingly difficutlto accomplish&#13;
Business Managers. Daniel Czitrom, Anthony Mauor anything a ta l l . ehT revision of&#13;
By Charles Bernstein&#13;
Lincoln Center's Festival 6'7, of which the Ham- Circulation&#13;
Manager&#13;
Toshi Taketomo&#13;
t h e&#13;
councli&#13;
systemi n&#13;
whichthe&#13;
In 1940 a young journalist and P&#13;
burg State Opera si just a pa&#13;
rt, will also be pre-&#13;
yb&#13;
h.D, student&#13;
was&#13;
ar-&#13;
senting&#13;
an extensive&#13;
Exchange Editor&#13;
Donna Brent&#13;
mruneb&#13;
ofreps wouldbegreatly&#13;
edetsr&#13;
the H u n g a r i a n&#13;
nbgiuirt&#13;
and German Secret Police for dis-&#13;
poetry&#13;
of operas concerts, a sdemo-&#13;
anti-Nazi leaflets in Budap&#13;
and dramas. This wiL! cracit&#13;
as the process we nowhave,&#13;
est. Because of this "sub- also be the first time that al of the theaters of Associate Board&#13;
certain.y increase&#13;
activity&#13;
he was&#13;
to&#13;
butit&#13;
Lincoln&#13;
Center&#13;
participating ni a summer William Neake&#13;
greatly t h e effiocfieoncuyror-&#13;
dnepsthe next four years ni&#13;
het laborcamps of German-&#13;
City Gets Path&#13;
onig.zanti&#13;
bert. Martha Hershman, Michael Kubin,&#13;
occupied Poland and Russia.&#13;
d a&#13;
t e r&#13;
r e n&#13;
S o l o m a r&#13;
On the program will be special performances by&#13;
More Work&#13;
t h a tm a n wsa Dr.&#13;
Erwin C. Bro-&#13;
the New York Philharmonic and the Metropolitar dy,whocame to Science's&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Advisers&#13;
Another&#13;
job oftheS.O presi-&#13;
Moderr&#13;
Opera Company, as wel sa New&#13;
5 . 0 . 1 a c . Language Department last fal. eHown&#13;
01 the B a t h e s t i v a l&#13;
York debuts Literary Adviser&#13;
dent&#13;
is ot deal&#13;
M.r Richard dngFolie&#13;
w i t h the&#13;
Orchestra and L/Orchestre de Photography&#13;
Adviser&#13;
Mr.Charles Hellman&#13;
ulty adviser and the&#13;
administra&#13;
wasbornin thesmall farming t&#13;
al Suisse Romande,&#13;
the latter under the direction Kiralyhelmec and lived there&#13;
of its lifetime&#13;
Ernest Ansermet&#13;
Business Adviser&#13;
D.r&#13;
Benjamin&#13;
Silver&#13;
until his admission ot hte Univer-&#13;
Special solo recitals at Philharmonie Hal, wil wsihes. Wneh faced htwi a con- sityof Budapest. While wnkogir&#13;
s e r v a u v e deviser. a n e com-&#13;
include violinist Isaac&#13;
s t e r n superlative and the&#13;
Apprentices&#13;
palcent administration, a n y stu-&#13;
Indian sitarist Ravi Shankar. The festival, Which Schwarz, Mehael Kairys, Deborah dent leader who takes S.Oof,fice and summer-time foreion&#13;
began June 12 and will run for the tive following&#13;
coer-&#13;
weeks, has been characterized by the president ot&#13;
• Marilyr&#13;
555 under the assumption that "the&#13;
ndict. Kobert Nel. onntha&#13;
Herbert Frenkel, Rob&#13;
pasword o f the S.O.&#13;
pontdes orf Pesti Napoli, the alrg-&#13;
Lincoln Center, William Schuman, as "our boldest est daily newspaper ni Hungary.&#13;
venture ni new programming."&#13;
Rubin, Elen Rubin, Joel dent power" is sadyl mistaken and&#13;
Makr Sofer,&#13;
Jeanne&#13;
18 1n for a big shock, for the S.O&#13;
hadl time aiso to play&#13;
for&#13;
Also ni New York this summer, the New York Ris Weinreb, yKa Sole, Rehand&#13;
Hungary i n the&#13;
has yrev little&#13;
Philharmonic will begin its annu&#13;
al outdoor concerts&#13;
powo errinfluence Davis Cup tennis competition and&#13;
on July 18, with a performance on the Mal ni Cen-&#13;
to direct a small private school ni&#13;
Budapest,&#13;
Dr. Brody&#13;
tral Park. Other concerts will be held ni the Bronx. Brookiyn, Queens, and Staten Island&#13;
I n&#13;
1 9 3 8 ,&#13;
w h e n&#13;
w a r&#13;
s e e m e d&#13;
i m •&#13;
n i m&#13;
a&#13;
l&#13;
o v e r&#13;
L a t i n A m e r i c a&#13;
Tr&#13;
F o r opera buffs who seek more conventional opera Science Scene&#13;
m&#13;
inent&#13;
for Hu&#13;
ngary&#13;
, Brody, work-&#13;
1954 he again became a full-time&#13;
than the Hamburg State will&#13;
pr&#13;
ovide,&#13;
the Metropoli-&#13;
ins o n&#13;
his dissertation was ex-&#13;
teacher and entered Columbia Uni-&#13;
Company willbe playing ni the same P&#13;
o&#13;
werless S.O.&#13;
pelled from his university for "un-&#13;
versity so that he might complete&#13;
parks as the New York Philharmonic, giving tree patrone acurites. He continued the doctorate he had started thirty pertormances of the works of Puccini&#13;
It is becoming more and more apparent that&#13;
ot work on the newspaper, how-&#13;
Care&#13;
accomplish-&#13;
Such established successes as the Goldman-Guggen- most of Science is disillusioned with the Stu-&#13;
ever, Civil&#13;
ment he achieved last February.&#13;
heim Band Concerts and the Rheingold Festival wil dent Organization because it has so little pow-&#13;
War, Soon after returning from&#13;
Brody, who speaks Hungarian&#13;
also returnto New York this summer, along with the this assignment, he was arrested.&#13;
English, French, Russian, German,&#13;
er; this view si supported by the letter on&#13;
DelacorteTheater's presentations of Shakespeare ni Spanish. Portuguese, and Italian,&#13;
C e n t r a l P a r k .&#13;
The group opened on June ? with&#13;
this month's feature page, which bemoansthat&#13;
Brody Fights Nazis&#13;
t e a c h e s R u s s i a n at Science. N e x t&#13;
very fact.&#13;
performances of The Comedy of Errors, and per- Wnhe the Eastern Front began&#13;
term, he will leave Science to teach&#13;
formances of King John and Titus Andronicus wil Science was warned by Survey's last editor-&#13;
to collapse in 1943, Dr. Brody was c o m p a r a t i v e l i t e r a t u r e&#13;
follow. In addition, the Mobile Shakespeare Theater in-chief that "the Student Organization, above&#13;
sent to a Yugoslavian work camp.&#13;
sian at Farleigh Dickenson Uni-&#13;
wil tour the city, and will present some of its neigh- its duties as a recreational and sort of 'eul-&#13;
Escaping from it the next year, he&#13;
versity.&#13;
borhood periormances in Spanish&#13;
tural organization can only advise or make&#13;
Tito's anti-Nazi&#13;
partisan&#13;
suggestions to the faculty and administration,&#13;
army, but was soon "volunteered"&#13;
which have perfect right to ignore those sug-&#13;
translator for the Russian&#13;
Senior Show Satirizes School gestions. High school," he concluded, "is still&#13;
army.&#13;
a well-ordered, centralized system and will&#13;
Alter the war, Brody found him-&#13;
self in t h e Russian sector of Vien.&#13;
By Ellen Rubin&#13;
remain so regardless of Survey editorials or&#13;
na. Wishing to go to the United&#13;
The Senior Follies of '67, a light-&#13;
witoscheround orcharleston S.O. Presidents."&#13;
S t a t e s . h e&#13;
hearted look at the Science scene.&#13;
dancers. April Smith captivated the assemoleesentors asche&#13;
These comments give a very clear account&#13;
divided city and&#13;
of the problem S.O. officials o r t e n face.&#13;
ers. students, and even the bullding.&#13;
to the tune of "Adelaide's Lament," They suggest something to the administra-&#13;
the U.S. Army until coming to New&#13;
wander. orthenestorers&#13;
Y o r k i n 1 9 4 8&#13;
show, and its spirit was that of ori-&#13;
Mat Alexander's original song.&#13;
tion, which replies that it can do nothing.&#13;
In Manhattan, Dr. Brody started&#13;
What they fail to realize is that it is not al-&#13;
a small language school,&#13;
The show, which started eighth per-&#13;
followed, making an enormous hit. One ways the administration, but the Board of&#13;
gave this u n in order to become&#13;
iod, June 2, opened with a burst of&#13;
funny&#13;
Education that makes the implementation of&#13;
Lefler&#13;
song, written and performed by Harry&#13;
"Nobody Awards." owed its success Senior wilts as graduation nears.&#13;
c h i n e c o m p a n s&#13;
Deromet these ideas impossible. If it is the goal of the&#13;
S.O., as the newly-elected presidentstated it&#13;
t h e "Teacher's Hideaway," followed&#13;
of&#13;
Steve&#13;
Radosh&#13;
as he&#13;
expressed his was in her campaign speech, to make the Stu-&#13;
by Ellen Blecher playing her harmoni-&#13;
Show is Repetitious&#13;
dent Organization something more than just&#13;
Despite the enthusiasm of the per- a 'social organization,' then its officials might&#13;
Department Journals Show&#13;
very well have to&#13;
of the audience began ot tire of the Talent, Integrity, and Taste&#13;
repeated themes of Mr. t h e s w e e d An example of how the Board of Education&#13;
tion Room, Science's apathy, and our By Marilyn Campbell&#13;
can restrict the administration might make Early this month one of Sei- Journal editors are chosen by&#13;
was a major drawback of&#13;
the situation more understandable. For quite ence's most prestigious items - the faculty adviser on the basis&#13;
o t h e s e n t o . Pre- some time now the Social Studies Department the departmental journals of biolo- or&#13;
merit. seniority. and the a d&#13;
viously the performance had been a has been requesting the use of Thomas A. mathematics, social studies, vice of the out-going editors. With&#13;
sauries of life at Science,&#13;
p a r o d y Bailey'sDiplomaticHistory of the American physical science, and Spanish&#13;
thecuttorchasonsimost&#13;
allorthe&#13;
written as one continuous play. This People for its regular senior classes, and the work si then the responsibility of&#13;
vear. however. "though the committec replacementofthePlattandDrummondtext were published. Yet, few Sei- thestudentsthemselves,whocom-&#13;
hadbeguntheirpreparationsniNo- by something on a higher level. To our knowl- enceites were aware of the hard monly observe that the experience&#13;
vember. no worthwhile scrint - per- ason. edge, the Board of Education has still declined possible.&#13;
w o&#13;
rk&#13;
a n&#13;
d talent that made them&#13;
tinent and entertaining&#13;
W&#13;
ly may be more worthwhile than&#13;
duced," s a i d Mr. J o s e p h Cotter. togiveSciencethesetexts. Why,thestudent The most sophistiented tand ex. the finished publication itselt. The&#13;
event'sfacultyadviser.Mr.Cotterde would like to know, aren't more than three pensive) of the journals are the Social Studies Journal, the Jour-&#13;
cided, just before the Easter vacation college applications permitted? It is precisely Journal of Biology and the Math nal of Biology and the Physica&#13;
to cancel the show when rallies, meet- because the Board of Education won't supply Bulletin, which are the only pub- Science Journal each have one&#13;
ings, and sincere efforts on the part Sciencewiththeadditionalpersonneltohandle lications printed rather than mim. Editor-in-Chief B a r b a r a H o c h&#13;
of all concerned failed to be effective. the extra volume of work this policy would cographed. The S.O. finances most 4-7, Paul Fishman, 4-6, and Alan&#13;
But because the seniors were deprived entail.&#13;
o k t h e t o u r n a i s o u m e a n s o r a l o n n&#13;
Ganz, 4-18. The Math Bulletin ha:&#13;
of both their Senior Day and Field All of which is certainly not to suggest that&#13;
which is repaid at the end of the&#13;
three Housman, 4-18,&#13;
Day, M.r Cotter "felt sorry for them,' theadministrationcannowsitbackandrefer&#13;
t r o m the m o n e y callerted&#13;
Jankowski. a n d&#13;
and substituted a variety show, which all S.O. complaints to the Board of Education.&#13;
from the students.&#13;
exception&#13;
Mark Seiden, 4-10. La Ensayista,&#13;
to this is the&#13;
M a t h&#13;
K u l l e t i n .&#13;
w h i c h&#13;
the Spanish nublication, has two&#13;
rehearsale. The five minute acts coulc requires less time for preparation and&#13;
It is only meant to make students aware of is operated completely&#13;
- Amalia Frieder, 3-9, and Paula&#13;
consist of dances, imitations, musical the other administrative channel that is caus.&#13;
Gently or the schnol&#13;
Lyman, 3-9.&#13;
were all ing some of the difficulty. Each of these chan-&#13;
Student-written and edited, the&#13;
The major problem of the de-&#13;
separately written and produced, which nels, as we have said before, is obligated to&#13;
partmental journals&#13;
Whether very seriously consider responsible student cartoons, diagrams, and sketches,&#13;
one —limited funds. Since print-&#13;
or not next year's Senior S h o w fol. suggestions. s o v e r n lovels o r i n .&#13;
ing costs, standards. and competi-&#13;
lows this format or the traditional one Though each publication tion for each S.O. dollar have in-&#13;
is undecided.&#13;
B u t , t h e s t u d e n t a s k s , w h a t h a p p e n e d t o i n e l u d e d s o v e r n i t h e e r o a s o d t r a m o n d o u s l » i n t h e l a s t&#13;
S p e c i a l c r e d i t s h o u l d go t o M a r s h a those'responsiblesuggestions'thatwerepre- sophisticated, ifsomewhat unin- fewyears,the excellence of the&#13;
Storper and Bob Holzman themusic sented by the S.O. and Survey this year? We&#13;
W o g t i n g h o u s e n r o l o e t s . journals in the future is in doubt.&#13;
coordinators, and to JoeScotti and don't know. That's the big question facing each made a conscious effort to In order to insure their continued&#13;
Sandy Derevnul the dirostors, without Marthe Gold when she returns in September, quality, their editors,&#13;
whom the Senior Follies would never and tries to find out. more money wil have ot be found.&#13;
AprilSmithentertainsattheSeniorShow. nave matenalized at all&#13;
&#13;
 Wednesday, June28, 1967&#13;
SCIENCESURVEY&#13;
Page Thre&#13;
e&#13;
Letter from&#13;
the Princi&#13;
pal S.O. Reports&#13;
Dear Students,&#13;
Students Give Graduation Award&#13;
As the academic year comes to&#13;
Rise in Dues&#13;
s&#13;
a close, we find ourselves again&#13;
The&#13;
S.O. has decided to raise i t&#13;
$142 to Fund&#13;
The following awards were prese&#13;
in a world in strife.&#13;
dues to three dollars for the com- For Children Alumni Award&#13;
Phi Beta Kappa nted at the 1967 Commencement:&#13;
nand, brush tires of hatred,&#13;
Phi Beta Карра Alumnae Award&#13;
Michael Felsen&#13;
and rebellion shake our confidence&#13;
Parents&#13;
P e r inthea&#13;
bili&#13;
ty of human society to&#13;
Speaking at the S.O. Council&#13;
Freshmen and&#13;
Herman&#13;
Beller June 9, Mr. Kenneth Alen, the&#13;
c&#13;
sophomores Mantel Fa&#13;
create a better world. It is there-&#13;
ontribut&#13;
ed atotal of&#13;
have culty Award&#13;
142 dollars Mantel Alumni Awards&#13;
Herman&#13;
Erie&#13;
t o r e&#13;
n o t h a r d&#13;
to understand why&#13;
adviser, t h a t&#13;
to help&#13;
children ni underdeveloped Charles Hodes Memorial Award&#13;
Laurence Koplik 50man)&#13;
younk people are to das&#13;
rising printing&#13;
stosc increasing&#13;
countries at the r&#13;
equ&#13;
es&#13;
t&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
for-&#13;
Es al Excellence in Scholarship&#13;
for&#13;
G&#13;
e&#13;
n&#13;
e&#13;
r&#13;
c a p i c o s i s t h e n dissatistaction s&#13;
t e c o s t o r&#13;
lo ohcs&#13;
p u b l i c a t i o n&#13;
Science&#13;
st&#13;
ud&#13;
e&#13;
nt&#13;
William&#13;
th&#13;
er G.&#13;
Dichter Me&#13;
morial Awa&#13;
rd&#13;
s&#13;
RichardJankowski were the maojr causeof thoene Grimm 6'6.&#13;
Ronald Wilkinson loudly openly. Some ex-&#13;
press it in public demonstrations&#13;
dollar rasie. He aded, howeve,r Gmirm, owh isstudying for hte Generoso Pope&#13;
Memorial Award&#13;
Finkelman and slogans, in scorn for authority.&#13;
that basketball — theonly sport priesthood, wrote Mr. Bronx Kiwanis Certificate&#13;
-Judith Rado&#13;
in bizarre appearance and dress&#13;
wchi yieldsa opfirt —had failed kenstein about hte plight of or RichardWelling GO.. Conference&#13;
Gideon Ferebee&#13;
t o y ei dl t h e r e v e n u e s&#13;
e x p e c t e d t h i s p h a n s i n a p o v e r t y - s t r i c k e n S o u t h G r a n d S t r e e t B o v s A w a r d&#13;
A r t h u r B u d i c k&#13;
in embracing psychedelics,&#13;
all things. Others simply resign&#13;
and ni demanding unfettered fredom in year.&#13;
Veintamese&#13;
Ira Sternstein Award&#13;
Michael Hough from society&#13;
Dy&#13;
"copping o u t . "&#13;
i n eicaantyo r&#13;
vouonyg proxy&#13;
valige. He also told&#13;
M&#13;
.r&#13;
Beckenstein&#13;
that a n Ethiopian&#13;
Edgar M. C&#13;
igelm&#13;
an M&#13;
emorial Awar&#13;
DoreeBarton However, protests, on meatrt how valid, are not inhemtvesels solu- o nS.O.&#13;
tionsbutmerelyreactionstotheproblems. Nornac themeredestruc cussedatthis&#13;
mecting.&#13;
Pecae&#13;
Corpsvolunteerneeded30&#13;
-Neil Clendeninn tion of the existing society bring instant remedies forall NeilClendeninn,4-10, arguedfor&#13;
dollars t o help&#13;
send&#13;
a child t o&#13;
a&#13;
Walter&#13;
Vogel&#13;
Memorial&#13;
Award&#13;
AlfredRichter Peac eCorps&#13;
Sachs' John F.&#13;
KennedyMemorial&#13;
Award&#13;
Sylvia Israel Progress to a better future can come only htrough constructiveideas thelegalityofthe proxies. Celn-&#13;
and ideals, coupled with the responsibility and t h ew i ln e e d e d to&#13;
Ruth Kirzon Award&#13;
Michael Hough&#13;
sndnen'i fullyeartenurein office&#13;
carry t h e m out.&#13;
S p e a r h e a d i n g&#13;
the&#13;
vdier&#13;
t o .oc&#13;
B&#13;
n'ai&#13;
B'rith Municipal&#13;
Reichenthal wasupheldcarlierinhte raeyby&#13;
Lodge Service Award&#13;
lectmoneyrof&#13;
the&#13;
agellvi in&#13;
htuoS&#13;
National&#13;
Achievement&#13;
Scholar&#13;
-JoséDeJesus Wtah does this mnae ot you, the sutden?t&#13;
a votei nwhichproxies were used.&#13;
Vietnam, Peter&#13;
5,2-&#13;
Ronald Wilkinson First, itmeans that uoy mtus continue toeducateyourseslofthat TheCouncilalso consdiered the&#13;
bernard Kelkin w a r r&#13;
BIll Le&#13;
y o u&#13;
w i l l u n d e r s t a n d fully the n a t u r e o f our problems. nI&#13;
d e v e l o p i n g o&#13;
r m&#13;
a t i o&#13;
n o&#13;
n&#13;
comemtti to&#13;
k o e r&#13;
emohporos presdien,t&#13;
raised 211&#13;
dollars&#13;
from hsi clasmates&#13;
undre&#13;
James K. Hackett&#13;
Medal for Excellence ni&#13;
Judith Rosenthal your talents and ability you will be able ot make thebest&#13;
contribution&#13;
theguidance ofStudent Organiza&#13;
Public Speaking&#13;
to&#13;
their&#13;
solution.&#13;
f o r m e d&#13;
a b o u t&#13;
school&#13;
t i o n A d v i s e r M. r K e n n e h t&#13;
A e l n l&#13;
Commen&#13;
cement Committee Award&#13;
Michael Hough Second,&#13;
you must&#13;
remain&#13;
oven-minded&#13;
in seeking&#13;
w o r t h ys o l u -&#13;
T o l s&#13;
Somediscussionwas devotedot&#13;
Thefreshmanclass qucikyl&#13;
raised&#13;
Citations&#13;
•Joseph Markowitz Governor's Committee on&#13;
not accepting&#13;
a l lthat is new simply because&#13;
i ti sn e won t h econcepto fa b"udy Match&#13;
fo the&#13;
funds neded ot&#13;
send&#13;
Frances&#13;
Scholastic Achievement:&#13;
rejecting&#13;
altlhat isold msipyl b&#13;
ecause ti i s odl&#13;
— b u t judgingall&#13;
nweteb&#13;
sophomores and seniors.&#13;
Eohanpiti&#13;
y&#13;
outho camp.&#13;
Martin F&#13;
Eric Beller, Michael Borowitz, Michael Pelsen Ideas a n d&#13;
institutions&#13;
o nt h e i r meritsi&#13;
lumenbaum, Michael Hough, Judith Housman,&#13;
Jankowski, Jonathan Katz, Elliot Klein, S&#13;
Richard kers&#13;
heila Krilov, Barry Pell,&#13;
Third, yourself to become yveliact involved Morihisa, Vega, tMi orse Jessica Toby Proschansky, Judith Rado,&#13;
a s a c i t i z e n&#13;
i n b r n i g n i g&#13;
a b o u t t h e o r d e r l y m i o v mp e r n e t&#13;
o f o u r s o c i e t y .&#13;
G o r d o n T u c k e r .&#13;
s t a n t o n . Only through hte active&#13;
conipaetr fo hte vmasatjority of the people&#13;
who, Uke yoursell, are m e n and women of g o o d wilcl, a nsuccessbel&#13;
assured, The road ancad h a smany perils but none forwhichyou Win SeniorElec ons DRIVER EDUCATION&#13;
wil be unprepared if yohau&#13;
ve the determination t o hepl i n t h e c r e a -&#13;
FORDHAM BOYS and&#13;
Fall 1967&#13;
tion of a better future.&#13;
MEN'S SHOP&#13;
b e s t&#13;
wishes for a happy summer.&#13;
Yours&#13;
snicereyl,&#13;
HigtSctoliaYourConmaaty COMPLETE K DEFALTEN Students Picked Up for Driving&#13;
Corner 184 Se Aelxander Tafe&#13;
Limited Registration&#13;
Program approved bv&#13;
Principal&#13;
CYpress 5-4320&#13;
Student Discount&#13;
• NYS Dept. of Education&#13;
• 1⁄2 Unit of Credit&#13;
• Insurance Reductions&#13;
Jodoe's Art Shop Science Surveyings&#13;
applic&#13;
For further information or&#13;
OIL PAINTINGS&#13;
UKIYEK EUUCATION DEPT&#13;
PAINTINGS RESTORED&#13;
ART SUPPLIES&#13;
Trip to Washington&#13;
MAA Contest&#13;
Results&#13;
Mother Cabrini High School&#13;
Fort Washinaton Aven&#13;
u e&#13;
PICTURE FRAMING One-hundred-eighty Scienceites&#13;
Five Scienceites&#13;
m a v e&#13;
New York, N. Y.&#13;
toured Washinaton. DC.. May 27.&#13;
of call a t t e r&#13;
54A W. Kingsbridge Rd.&#13;
on the annual S.O. trip. The Sei.&#13;
891-0091 or 375-3180&#13;
Bronx, N. Y.&#13;
Kenneth&#13;
Allen, left N e w&#13;
ex-&#13;
York&#13;
Roma&#13;
a n d returned amination.&#13;
at 2:00 am.&#13;
Kichard Janko Ws ki, 4- 16, placed&#13;
The sightseers,&#13;
who payed thir-&#13;
second in the city w i t h a score&#13;
teen dollars each for the excursion,&#13;
M o r s e , M o r i h i s a , V e z a - the newly elected senior class officials. started their tour t h e White&#13;
of 132.50. The maximum score si&#13;
M o u s e . and then visited the Su 150. For his achievement, Jankow- John Morihisa, 3-4, was elected Vega called for an end ot stu- preme court bulains, the bincon ski received a 75 dollar bond. S e n o r c a s s president&#13;
and Jetterson Memoris.&#13;
Tucker, 4-19, third in the&#13;
dent apathy, while Miss Morse Gordon&#13;
Washington Monument. nI Arling- city, received a 50 dollar bond.&#13;
"recieshewantedtowork National Cemetery. t h o r&#13;
3-2, and Ellen Morse, 3 - 1 8 .&#13;
watched the ceremonious chang-&#13;
Other winners were Jay miller,&#13;
vice-president and secretary.&#13;
with her co-officers in order to plansfor the&#13;
enable her classmates to "get the ing of the guard at the Tomb of the&#13;
9-18,00matanbi z.9 i and1om&#13;
4-21, who placed fifth,&#13;
coming year, Morihisa, who de-&#13;
mostoutoftheirlastyear." sixth, and seventh, respectively.&#13;
feated Vickie Charlton, 3-11, and Gary Oppenheimer, 3-23. and one student was&#13;
Robin Laskey, 3-19, Carl Vinier, 2-23, lost in their bids Each received a 50 dollar bond.&#13;
"more and better activities" and for the vice-presidency while American, modern, and imperson-&#13;
Zucker, 3-13. and Sue al."Before leaving, the Scienceites&#13;
Teen Government&#13;
privileges, such as the class field Rovet, 3-23, who ran for secretary, dinedniacafeteriainthenew&#13;
day.&#13;
Howard Adler, 3-15, is now rep-&#13;
resenting bronx science at a pro&#13;
stitute, a cultural center for the gram for the development of cit- Scienceites Total&#13;
arte and setonces.&#13;
izenship. sponsored by the A m e r&#13;
T.A. Protests&#13;
ican Legion,&#13;
34 Contest Prizes&#13;
French Conference&#13;
The 1047 high school juniors ni&#13;
Rowdy Actions Richard Merkler, 4-17, was Sei-&#13;
the program, Boy's State, form a&#13;
In FSA Program&#13;
ence's representative at the Award&#13;
overnmentstuaro throNes&#13;
Eleven Scienceites won regional&#13;
O f Scienceites Ceremony of the French Alliances&#13;
York ni an effort ot better under-&#13;
T i n a&#13;
The Transit Authority has ac- insmeriessumerenchinstrue&#13;
othe state&#13;
May 16, which the highost&#13;
Honorable Mention ni this year's cused a group of Scienceites students are&#13;
Future Scientists o1 America com- creating hazardous conditions on soniovors in French in the crys&#13;
onnortunitytorunor&#13;
petition.&#13;
the Q-44 bus to Queens, June .1 public private, and&#13;
elective office, take the Bar Ex-&#13;
The eleven regional awards were An Authority inspector, respond- schools w e r e honored.&#13;
amination, practice law, write for&#13;
the newspaper. o r s e r v e o n the&#13;
won by Todd Swick, 4-16, Andrew ing to a complaint from a pas. Aleaxnder To, 3-12, and Mag-&#13;
i e Rocow. 3-15. won second and&#13;
Boy's State Police force.&#13;
Chao, 2-9, Carol Latterman, 2-14, senser on the bus, threatened the their bus third prizes respectively for their&#13;
Supervised by high school teach.&#13;
gian.2-21 Barbara Rosenbere.2-2&#13;
IsabelSimons,2-19,GregoryOuli- pascos and prosecution if the in- articles in the French American&#13;
ers and law students, the Boy's&#13;
Auden MissXotow wholeon&#13;
State program is being held at the&#13;
Dorothy Wilkenson, 2-3, Eric Bel- cidents were repeated. D.r Taffel ler, Merkler, 4-17,&#13;
"La Vie à Paris" (Life ni Paris)&#13;
New York State Agricultural and&#13;
and To's subiect was «Les Buts&#13;
Technolocical Collere a t M o r r i s&#13;
Steven Goldfisher, 2-23, and Janet address to the school on the morn- Mert2. 4-0&#13;
ins tollowing the disturornce Politiques d e De Gaulle"&#13;
v i l l e , J u n e 2 5 —J u l y 1 .&#13;
Political Aims o1 De Gaulle).&#13;
The twenty-three honorable&#13;
According to students on the bus, mention winners were k o b e r&#13;
French Contest&#13;
Flushing, College and Sophomore Elections&#13;
Murciano, 1-3, Roger&#13;
In a closely contested race, Rob-&#13;
Richard Merkler,&#13;
27,YongYongTam,2-11,George "panic box" made ln o l，ap- Simian, 2-29, Scott Shapiro,&#13;
parently provoking others to rock ert Macris, 2-20, was elected next&#13;
first in a contest sponsored by the&#13;
Mitchell Nesse, 2-9, Ralph Kahn, the bus. Some students who take year'sJuniorclasspresident.Mark&#13;
UnitedStates.Hisprizewas100&#13;
2-24, Ronald Hirschhorn,&#13;
the 0-44 regularly attributed the Riff, 2-11, was chosen vice-presi-&#13;
collars&#13;
Jonathan Grell,&#13;
2-13,&#13;
Martin&#13;
rowdy behavior in part to the bus dent and Rosemarie La Pila, 2-3,&#13;
Gdanski, 2-11, Stan Diamond, 2-29,&#13;
secretary&#13;
in the June 4&#13;
election.&#13;
Winning eighth prize, Margaret&#13;
Rosow.. rneivedcollars&#13;
Frances Collins, 2-29, Mark Brat- sideration" for the students.&#13;
H a r r i e t&#13;
from the&#13;
society,&#13;
whose&#13;
members&#13;
nick, 2-13,&#13;
Senior Class Prom&#13;
are French-born teachers in Amer-&#13;
2-11, Robert Menschel, 2-6, An-&#13;
gelo Garcia, 2-1. Albert Shpun-&#13;
Over one hundred couples dined&#13;
ican schools.&#13;
The contest, open to all public&#13;
toff, 4-17, Lawrence Drooks, 4-1,&#13;
JOE'S&#13;
and danced at the annual Senior&#13;
John Babson, 4-16, William Cohen,&#13;
Prom, held at the Penn-Top Room&#13;
high school French students, con-&#13;
4-4, Mark Seiden, 4-10, and Jona-&#13;
FORDHAM Inc.&#13;
of the Statler-Hilton Hotel, June 3.&#13;
cictordt writton oxaminatione %&#13;
ministered at Columbia Univer-&#13;
than Katz, 4-7.&#13;
The affair, which began at nine&#13;
Army and Navy Store o'clock and lasted until one, was&#13;
sity's&#13;
Teachers' College a n d&#13;
12.14 E. FORDHAM ROAD&#13;
the first p r o m to consider student&#13;
given the Lycée&#13;
UN 3-0671&#13;
in seating&#13;
Française de New-York on May 13.&#13;
Roskethall Baseball&#13;
ments. All students were asked to&#13;
Also winning awards w e r e&#13;
PENROD'S&#13;
G o l&#13;
Tennis&#13;
request in advance a few people&#13;
David Behar, 4-5, Anthony Rostain,&#13;
CARDS - TOYS - PARTY FAVORS&#13;
3-25, Rita Goldwasser, 2-7, John&#13;
STATIONERY -REVIEW BOOKS&#13;
CAMP&#13;
SUPPLIERS&#13;
More than 90 percent of the re&#13;
with whom they&#13;
Arcos,&#13;
1-2, Arlene&#13;
Fradkin. 2-27&#13;
S.&#13;
O.&#13;
D&#13;
ISCOUNT&#13;
quests were granted,&#13;
and Avi Hettena, 3-15.&#13;
706 Lydig Avenue, Bronx, N. .Y&#13;
Study is fun at&#13;
SUMMER HIGH SCHOOL ... where Scholarship is a Tradition&#13;
Tork's most popular, privall&#13;
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294 EAST KINGSBRIDGE ROAD&#13;
BRONX, N. Y.&#13;
Catch all the action this year&#13;
with RCAbatteries&#13;
Don't miss any of the action this year because&#13;
of dea&#13;
d bat&#13;
teries. For transistor radios,moviecameras, photoflas&#13;
h ser&#13;
vice, portable tape recorders,&#13;
slide ers.&#13;
view&#13;
be sure&#13;
to install fresh, dependable RCA BATTERIES. Available at radio&#13;
dealers, camera, drug, and department stores.&#13;
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Electronio Composents and Devices, H&#13;
arrison, N. J. THE MOST TRUSTED NAMENI ELECTRONCIS&#13;
Look for this RCA Battery display&#13;
&#13;
 PageFour SCIENCE SURVEY&#13;
Wednesday, June 28, 1967&#13;
Tennis Team Bows to Stuyvesant 3-2;&#13;
THE SIDELINE SURVEY&#13;
Finishes&#13;
2 d&#13;
in&#13;
Division&#13;
with 8-2 Mark&#13;
By Barry Shapiro&#13;
The End&#13;
and Stephen Klaber&#13;
1 e s a n&#13;
t w o&#13;
l a&#13;
n e a r t a b r e a k e r&#13;
In their last match of the sea.&#13;
3-2.&#13;
Held on Stuyvesant's home court&#13;
son, May 26, the Science tennis&#13;
t e a m よ し いじ い 5 - 0 ,&#13;
Williamsburg&#13;
Bridge,&#13;
ROBERT WEISB&#13;
ERGER&#13;
DringIng their final&#13;
the match was marred yb&#13;
force winds&#13;
wire fences, a mere&#13;
After four years in Science it's ha&#13;
and only one Joss&#13;
many things passed with such little&#13;
rd to say goodbye.&#13;
So&#13;
the&#13;
10 feet past the endlines, cut down&#13;
notice and such little ap-&#13;
who captured the Bronx-Manhat-&#13;
volleying, definite&#13;
"antare Tor the "urks&#13;
their worth under me rushing back with preciation, and now, too&#13;
late, they al co&#13;
tan tennis championshin&#13;
w i t h&#13;
a&#13;
bewildering bu of an occasionally&#13;
stood. There are memories&#13;
perfect 9-0 record.&#13;
Silfin Triumphs&#13;
t carefree fresh&#13;
Sciences two victories came in&#13;
man year, the last year when&#13;
Eric&#13;
Siltin,&#13;
the&#13;
everything still seemed an en&#13;
matches.&#13;
There are mem&#13;
joyable, happy-go-luc&#13;
6-0, brought his per-&#13;
quickly vanquis&#13;
hed his opponent&#13;
Eric Silfin ories of shaky finals which always turned&#13;
ky game.&#13;
sonal&#13;
mark&#13;
for th&#13;
e season ot 8-1.&#13;
wel enough, of fifth period out&#13;
lunch spen&#13;
t&#13;
In the second singles André Ber-&#13;
6-1, 6-1.&#13;
In the second singles André&#13;
of quiet conversations held in the chaotic halls. riend,&#13;
with atrue f&#13;
nard made a greatcomeback ot&#13;
There are so&#13;
B&#13;
ernard&#13;
displayed great courage&#13;
many things which seemed so&#13;
small&#13;
Columbus'&#13;
stuar&#13;
but which taugh&#13;
Mike&#13;
W&#13;
Bernard&#13;
e&#13;
s&#13;
te&#13;
rman.&#13;
and it would take more than t t so much,&#13;
his colum&#13;
n,&#13;
m&#13;
o&#13;
B&#13;
er&#13;
re than this issue&#13;
nard&#13;
,&#13;
weakened about&#13;
after&#13;
of Survey to put th&#13;
em&#13;
all down.&#13;
match&#13;
out of the&#13;
eight he&#13;
played&#13;
thisyearore&#13;
virus, nunk on&#13;
f o r a&#13;
7 5&#13;
But as&#13;
Turks.&#13;
sports editor, not memoir-manager, I sup&#13;
4-6, 6-3 victory.&#13;
not expecte&#13;
d to&#13;
pose I'm&#13;
Turks Rout Evander&#13;
cuickand&#13;
W i t h hsi&#13;
u s u a l l y p o t e n t l o b s h o t&#13;
put them all down. I'm expected to limit my-&#13;
With overwhelming&#13;
s e l l t o s c o r e s , s t a n d i n g s , a n d s c r e a m i n g b a n n e r h e a d l i n e s . Science's won&#13;
ineffective no hte smal court, Ju-&#13;
And yet, even after lim&#13;
iting myself to that, there would still&#13;
ever match in straight s e s o&#13;
lian Fifer succumbed to his Pegleg be so much untouched, so much which is really more impor-&#13;
rout Evander 5-0 on May 17.&#13;
Peglegs Sweep Doubles&#13;
tant than a high school batting average or 100-yard&#13;
In the first singles match Ericl&#13;
clocking,&#13;
but which never manages to receive the same attention.&#13;
Siltin put&#13;
Evander's best player&#13;
Stuyvesant wentno to take both&#13;
d o u b l e s&#13;
For the athlete there are mem&#13;
ories of those fir&#13;
pocket, 6-1,&#13;
warnin O-U&#13;
insuring&#13;
a win&#13;
st nervous&#13;
Andre Bernard, taking advantage&#13;
in the macth&#13;
anda first place his choice - awkward, some-&#13;
days trying out for the team of&#13;
Kinish ni&#13;
the division&#13;
times embarrassing hours when every move seemed so crucial&#13;
of his opponent's weak backhand,&#13;
with 6-2. 6-2 sween&#13;
In het first mhcta&#13;
of an unusual&#13;
and every play so decisive. If he was too aw&#13;
doub.cheader. May 24. the Sciened&#13;
kward or too em-&#13;
in the thira singles Julian Fifer.&#13;
barrassed, i f he did not end up with a uniform, he would&#13;
s e c o n d set,&#13;
h e l d&#13;
on&#13;
tennis maet encountered little op- fle home, muttering to himself about the coach's slowly shuf&#13;
to win 6-2, 6-4.&#13;
WINNING STYLE: Eric Silfin executes the serve that wno this match position while benaitg a weak Mu- obvious ignorance when it came to judging true talent. But Eric Saslow's three service aces&#13;
sie &amp; Art squad 5-0.&#13;
and seven others for the Science tennis team this yea.r Eric Siltin, hampered by na in-&#13;
fi he made the team, fi he&#13;
found himself with a spot&#13;
enabled&#13;
h&#13;
im and his playing part-&#13;
Science bench, t h e n&#13;
on some visions of great,&#13;
rec&#13;
ord breaking,&#13;
t o s w a m p t h e Ira Bras&#13;
Alan Friedman their winning streak to five by with a 0,6- 6-3 win. André Ber- ly race through&#13;
jury tohis left leg, limped away&#13;
cedent-smashing performances would immediate&#13;
pre-&#13;
Evan&#13;
de i&#13;
r players 6-1, 6-1 n the&#13;
trouncing Monroe 4-1, M&#13;
ya 18.&#13;
nard and Julian Fifer also easily&#13;
his mind. Usually, thou&#13;
gh,&#13;
he&#13;
wouldn't set a&#13;
first doubles. In the second doubles&#13;
ny new Science&#13;
The Science&#13;
tennis&#13;
team ran&#13;
The nelende&#13;
r a c k e t m e n&#13;
m e t&#13;
won in their singles matches,&#13;
standards -&#13;
sometim&#13;
es he&#13;
wouldn't even get o&#13;
In the second half of the double-&#13;
the bench. And so he lea&#13;
ff his spot on Stuyvesant Mya 19to determine&#13;
rned to relish anything which ap-&#13;
n who would eb t h e winner of the&#13;
header, the Science a scratch single, a long jump- netmen topped proached his great dream&#13;
Batmen ConcludeSeaso&#13;
Bronx-Manhattan division. Stuy-&#13;
Ta f t 4-1.&#13;
shot, a good volley, anything.&#13;
There are memories for the fan also. Victories and defeats&#13;
soon become jumbled, and&#13;
scores eventually are forgotten, On the Field&#13;
In a Meeting&#13;
but something always remains.Perhaps it is the feeling of By Mel Cherney&#13;
By Charles Silkowitz&#13;
Students Triumph Over&#13;
tru lett&#13;
ly ing go, of yelling him&#13;
self into a minor&#13;
case of laryn-&#13;
Ed Klein and Phil Clendennin&#13;
With the 1967&#13;
gitis as a swimmer approached the wall or a rope climber stroked home runs&#13;
them and a brighter 1968 sea-&#13;
reached for the final touch. Or maybe it is the emptiness&#13;
any Turk players this season, as&#13;
Teachers in Volleyball&#13;
of feeling alone in a milling crowd during&#13;
them, the members of the Science&#13;
the half-time of their1967seasonwithan8-6vic- Odseball team met May 2o to name&#13;
"Good grief, they&#13;
have knees!"&#13;
a basketball game, or the happi&#13;
ness of walking ho&#13;
me from&#13;
o v e r Morris, M a y 22 at H a r -&#13;
Thisremarkmadebyastudentviewinghisteacherni thegamewithsomeonewhomheenjoyedwalkinghomewith. a Most Valuable Player a n d to&#13;
ris Field.&#13;
erect &amp; captath for&#13;
next year.&#13;
dungaree-type shorts reflected the atmosphere of the June Things such as these are never found in headlines or Klein and Clendennin each con-&#13;
When Coach Abend walked into&#13;
boxscores, though they are as significant a&#13;
s any statistic. For, nected in a 4-run Science first in- R o o m 015 after the ninth peorid.&#13;
ing Game. Two hundred student&#13;
Faculty-Senior Volleyball unfortunately, s p o r t f o l l o w s same pattern as al else. the&#13;
ning. Setting up Clendennin's blast, t o s t a r t t h e m e e t i n g , m o s t of the&#13;
Wallmen Br spectators alternately cheered Only after the action is ended and nearly forgotten is its GlenBockandLouMazelstarted w e r e n o n o o n&#13;
meaning fully realized. Only when everything has passed does thin&#13;
gs&#13;
with a single and&#13;
ado l&#13;
ub e,&#13;
activity&#13;
that si usually limite&#13;
d ot&#13;
andcatcalledtheteachersas&#13;
their fellow-students downed And, similarly&#13;
the actual worth of everyth&#13;
ing&#13;
become vey clear.&#13;
r&#13;
putting men on second and third&#13;
Major League athletes&#13;
Recordto6-4 , thankyousomehowseemsalwaystocome The right fielder then proceeded graphing baseballs. The balls were&#13;
to clear the bases with a shot over later presented to the&#13;
Bringing their season record ot onein the best-of-three series.&#13;
the instructors two games to long after it would have meant most. But nonetheless,as outgoing b e r . t h e Science wallmen white- The students took the first game those people whose help and concern buoyed me through what late as it may be, I'd like to thank those people who mattered, the Morris left fielder's head. With&#13;
sull buzzing&#13;
Bu&#13;
t several seniors were&#13;
washed 5-0 in&#13;
sit-&#13;
Washing&#13;
ton&#13;
the by a misleadingly large&#13;
over the previous homer, Klein&#13;
reflecting o n their&#13;
campaign's final match, May 19. Drawing away to a 10-1 lead, the often appeared desperate times both on this column and droveaslowcurveballdeepintoyearsonthelield.Bachwasre-&#13;
Displaying winning&#13;
L o t t students were forced to fight hard off it. I hope those people know who they are and how im- left-center for his four-bagger. n i s that spectacular caten he&#13;
match21-3.Bernstein'sTor theremainingpointsastheirportanttheywere.AndwiththatsaidIsupposetheresi Mazel Also Stars&#13;
h a d m a d e o r t h a t c l u t c h h i t h e&#13;
2 1 - 2&#13;
t r i u m p h a n d G o l o v i n ' s&#13;
defense relaxed. But their early&#13;
win continued the romp. Round-&#13;
lead was&#13;
nothing left to say, except ...goodbye.&#13;
toomuchtobeover&#13;
Collecting 3hits in three trips nad come through with or that&#13;
and the Seniors&#13;
to the plate. Mazel made a sieni- Abend returned t h e m all&#13;
slippery ball that had gotten away.&#13;
lias-Price doubles team&#13;
won 21-8 game 21-11.&#13;
ficant contribution to the Turk reality by signing vellow extra-&#13;
while avorists-kosenberg&#13;
Determined to avenge their de-&#13;
Runners Top Morris, Smith offense,&#13;
c r u s h e d Morris&#13;
curricular d i s c u s s i n g&#13;
bined for a 21-14 victory,&#13;
feat, the faculty briskly opened a&#13;
In its last two meets the Science track team beat Morris with a10-hit attack. Ed Lubert report card marks which he will&#13;
a l s o h a d a p e r t e c t d a y . b a t t i n g 2 give to each player.&#13;
Taft by a 3-2 score for the second contest was a see-saw battle from and Smith to even the team's season record at 2-2.&#13;
The Science wallmen lost ot&#13;
for.2 Getting back to baseball Ahendi&#13;
timethisyear,May.9&#13;
Placingfirstniallong-distanceraces,theHarrierseasily After the Turks picked up a reminisced about the year, recall-&#13;
Delivering their usual fine per-&#13;
topped Morris 70-30. Carl Blomgren handily won the mile run run in the second inning, Morris ing amusing incidents of the re- f o r m a n c e s . singlesmen Lott and&#13;
in 4:49.5 while Barry Mariash&#13;
third, However in the courth in&#13;
tightened the score with a 2-run cently concluded season, The ball- Bernstein gained 21-5 and 21-3&#13;
players laughed as they remem. victories. However, Zvorists, sub-&#13;
just managed to edge his Mor-&#13;
ning Science put bered some of the wild things that stituting for the absent Golovin.&#13;
ris opponent at the tape ni the&#13;
s i n g l e s . a n d a s a c r i t i c e b u n t a n t&#13;
L&#13;
inksmen Top capitalized on a Morris error to had taken place and which they dropped his game 21-6.&#13;
2-mile run.&#13;
Three Teams, tally 3 times, insuring the victory.&#13;
had forgotten.&#13;
W i t h&#13;
t h e a t m o s p h e r e b e c o m i n g&#13;
The Presidents went on ot sweep&#13;
The Science baseball team won&#13;
t h e t w o d o u b l e s g a m e s 2 1 - 1 6&#13;
a n d&#13;
Long Distances Decisive&#13;
its third game of the season May&#13;
m o r e&#13;
thoughtful, the meeting&#13;
21-19 ot clinch the victory.&#13;
In the final dual meet of the&#13;
Fall to Clinton 18, downing Roosevelt 7-5 turned to the of Barely pulling out the win, the&#13;
choosing&#13;
last&#13;
outdoor season, Trackmen The Science solf team lost their Science&#13;
Tenth edged&#13;
scored 52 points ot Smith's 36 ot final match ot&#13;
31⁄2-1% Mediocre&#13;
pitching and&#13;
year's captain, Ed Lubert, given&#13;
thehonorofoncingthetiretname&#13;
capture the victory. Again the&#13;
Moshuln&#13;
Golf specaculan ninomination,namedjuniorPhil&#13;
fielding&#13;
errors&#13;
than&#13;
Dodge Fights Back&#13;
Turks racked&#13;
up points in the Course. Lance Gordon&#13;
wn s? even the Turks are familiar with,&#13;
Cendennin The other&#13;
players&#13;
With little difficulty, Lott&#13;
long-distance races, but this time only victor for the Turks as the highlighted the However, agreed on his choice, voting for (21-3), Bernstein (21-6), and Go.&#13;
the Science nitters eame to&#13;
thedepthdisplayedagainstMorris Governors dominated the play. rescue for a change, knocking out Clendennin in a swift election pro.&#13;
Winnine tour of the tive same lovin (21-5), made short work of&#13;
nine hits&#13;
cess.&#13;
their opponents, However, Dodge&#13;
in the shorter races was lacking. played, the Science linksmenbeat&#13;
r u n s ,&#13;
Next came the selection of Fo&#13;
With the regular season behind Evander 4.1 on the Van Cortland up a fierce fight with the&#13;
Lubert as the team's Most Valu-&#13;
T a l e n&#13;
them, the track team went to the course May 18.&#13;
The Roughriders&#13;
n o n e l o s s y beyond reach,&#13;
a l e&#13;
blood, scoring two unearned runs with&#13;
Player. Lubert, presented&#13;
doubles teams&#13;
Bronx Championships held at Van On May 19 at Moshulu Park, autographed base.&#13;
Stadium, K u n m i n t the Green and Gold shut out Taft in t h e tirst opening balls,&#13;
SPIKE!&#13;
spikes&#13;
his captainey, the Price 21-15 and 21-13.&#13;
volleyball as Dotty Cuff looks on&#13;
the best in the Bronx 5-0&#13;
inning. But Turks broke the other for the M.V.P. their Washington op-&#13;
three Turks managed to finish in&#13;
Each Science starter&#13;
C h e n o&#13;
# W a r d T a v e m h o w i n t&#13;
t h e fi r s t fi v e p l a c e s i n v a r i o u&#13;
the third, fifth, and sixth innings.&#13;
one of the balls pitcher Bob ponents championship form,&#13;
T h e&#13;
there on, but finally the teachers&#13;
Comerford, Jeff Sarfati, Ed Ro- Friedman, runner-up ni the M.V.P.&#13;
d i s h e d o u t n 4 - 1&#13;
s h e l .&#13;
p r e v a i l e d .&#13;
breaking a 20-all tie&#13;
John Latella, Science Crushed&#13;
balloting. Friedman&#13;
lacking May 17.&#13;
to Win 22-20&#13;
Lance Gordon - defeated his Taft A very Monroe squad voted the team's Rookie of the&#13;
Turks Run in Finals opponent. Rosenwasser succeeded strony Clinton team handed&#13;
Senior Rally&#13;
crushed Science's&#13;
Year,&#13;
Hitting a time of 54.3 captain in downing his playing partner in wallmen a 4-1 drub-&#13;
The third game began as the Steve Strauss took fourth in the&#13;
9-0 at Monroe Field, May 9.&#13;
Concluding t h e&#13;
D o s t e r c i s o n&#13;
19 in an unusually ex-&#13;
reverse of the first. After having&#13;
the minimal 5 holes,&#13;
Turks picked up&#13;
440-yard da&#13;
sh. Afterqualifying for&#13;
Capturing 4% of a possible total meeting, Coach Abend presented&#13;
while fanning ten times.&#13;
the players w i t h c e r t i fi c a t e s i n -&#13;
watched in amazement as the Sen-&#13;
the 220-yard dash&#13;
of o points, t h e Science linksmen schwenn Tinished&#13;
M&#13;
a&#13;
nag&#13;
fifth with&#13;
in&#13;
g&#13;
hit&#13;
the varsi&#13;
ty letters which&#13;
Lott Battles Yee&#13;
lors&#13;
r&#13;
allied&#13;
to&#13;
tie&#13;
the&#13;
score at 14.&#13;
topped Theodore Roosevelt on the Van&#13;
Cortlandt course May 24. By singles, the Science&#13;
batmen lost to&#13;
will&#13;
pick&#13;
to&#13;
some&#13;
A&#13;
ba&#13;
ttle between S&#13;
clockingof23.7.Placingsecondot&#13;
cience's Steve&#13;
Ami&#13;
dst t&#13;
he cheers of their com.&#13;
t h e Tastest m i l e r i n&#13;
Columbus May 1 5 Allerton&#13;
Tantants&#13;
seems that&#13;
Lott and&#13;
oosevelt competitor, Clinton's Yee, lasting&#13;
rades, the Seniors went on to cap-&#13;
New York,&#13;
tying h i s R t i t t h Field by a 10-0 score. the big green and gold Ss' were into the late afternoon, provided ture the game by a21-14 score. CarlBlomgren crossed the finish&#13;
point, spoiling the shutout.&#13;
Scoring all that was needed, the delayed in arriving at the school. When the long Fighting for the honor of the line for the mile run in 4:48.0,&#13;
Explorers tallied once in the sec- The meeting then broke g a m e w a s linally concluded. Lott&#13;
w e r e&#13;
Mr.&#13;
players w e n t home, look- emerged with a 21-18 victory.&#13;
Bell,&#13;
Miss Engel,&#13;
Not one Turk could advance be- ing forward to a better season&#13;
The&#13;
r e m a i n i n e&#13;
v a m o s&#13;
o f t h e&#13;
Miss Feurstein, Mrs. Gelfand, Mr.&#13;
bullding, their varsity careers, be.&#13;
match, however,&#13;
Clinton's&#13;
Goldman, Mr. Horowitz, Mr. Klin-&#13;
F. E. S.&#13;
fered its second straight shutout.&#13;
allthewav&#13;
ger, Mr. Radoff, and Mr, Strom</text>
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              <text>Science Survey, Vol. 55, No. 4. Containing the following articles: Gold Takes Presidency; Intends to Find Solution To Student-Faculty Gap, S.O. Voices Plans To Replace System Of Representation, Pathologist Rene J. Dubos Speaks at Commencement, Geshwind Speaks to Bio Club, Students Consider Math-Science Club, Four Triumph in Arista Elections, Teachers Arrange Collection for Israel, Some Thoughts on the S.O., New Yorkers Await Rich Cultural Season, Powerless S.O., Senior Show Satirizes School, Department Journals Show Talent, Integrity, and Taste, Letter from the Principal, S.O. Reports Rise in Dues, Students Give $142 to Fund For Children, Graduation Awards, Morihisa, Vega, Morse Win Senior Elections, Science Surveyings, Scienceites Total 34 Contest Prizes In FSA Program, T.A. Protests Rowdy Actions of Scienceites, Tennis Team Bows to Stuyvesant 3-2; Finishes 2d in Division with 8-2 Mark, Batmen Conclude Season On the Field In a Meeting, Students Triumph Over Teachers in Volleyball, Wallmen Bring Record to 6-4, Runners Top Morris, Smith, Linksmen Top Three Teams, Fall to Clinton. </text>
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