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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>Science Survey (Bronx High School of Science)</text>
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                <text>The Walton Log (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>  SCIENCE THE BRONX HIGH SCHOOL OF SCIENCE&#13;
SURVEY Vol. LXII - No. 4&#13;
May 31, 1968&#13;
English Department to Initiate 1500 Boycott School in Peace Dem l&#13;
New Curriculum for Seniors;&#13;
onstration; Protestors a n d Counter-Demonstrators C ash Changes Allow Specialization By ARTHUR LUBOW&#13;
The senior English curriculum A c c o r d i n g t o Mr. Nadel, science Almost half ofSciences' student&#13;
student ni the world were ot stay&#13;
wil undergo major changes next si the first public high school ni body and one quarter fo het fac-&#13;
department&#13;
26,&#13;
peaceue woudl eb on colver ot man M.r Max Nadel announced.&#13;
The system si in effect ni several&#13;
L a c h S e n i o r E n o l i s h t e a c h e r w i l l i&#13;
supporting a n&#13;
international&#13;
high schools and private schools&#13;
dent strike&#13;
The general feeling of the strik&#13;
specialize in one of six fields. Each&#13;
in the country.&#13;
war and American racism.&#13;
ing teachers was expressed by Mr. student in the normal Senior Eng-&#13;
Donald Schwartz, a history teach. "This plan," M.r Nadel said, Approximately 700 Scienceites&#13;
lish program will be programmed&#13;
students to nave mor&#13;
etachers&#13;
picketed&#13;
het&#13;
er and an organizer of Science's&#13;
f a c u l t y Steering&#13;
for four of the six courses and&#13;
chs&#13;
o.ol&#13;
T h e y&#13;
we er&#13;
j o i n e d&#13;
by dele&#13;
Committee odence t anows for brodaer com&#13;
Peace, "The very fact that&#13;
astrike&#13;
will change his subject and&#13;
was called," Schwartz said, "made teacher every quarter. Seniors will tact with different kinds of litera-&#13;
250 students&#13;
antedachers,&#13;
from&#13;
it incumbent o n m e t o s t a y o u t ture and diferent personalities,"&#13;
neighboring&#13;
Walton and Roosevelt&#13;
The schools," he continued, "are a&#13;
The six courses are the novel he continued. "Teachers will&#13;
reayl&#13;
Hgih&#13;
Scho.sol&#13;
particulary vulnerable instrument&#13;
a n d short story, satire a n d c o m e d y become experts and specialists."&#13;
Stoned&#13;
of the establishment."&#13;
Shakespeare, modern drama, con- " h e o n e d r a w o i c k . M r w i d e&#13;
Counter-demonstrators, number-&#13;
"menta classies, and k u s h boe&#13;
Mr. Louis Heitner, Mr. Herman said, "si&#13;
student and&#13;
ingabout 571 students, gathered&#13;
nearthe&#13;
efnce o f Harris Fleid,&#13;
Levy, Mrs, Henrieta Mazen, Msis know each other."&#13;
Roda Neugebauer, and M,r Ernest&#13;
o n&#13;
occhausrlinigon stones, eggs,&#13;
"nethevear&#13;
Strom a r e t h e o t h e r members of exam will&#13;
consist&#13;
a n d ep&#13;
thets&#13;
ta t h e peace&#13;
marchers&#13;
Arista&#13;
Enrolls&#13;
182&#13;
of a critical essay.&#13;
In dition,&#13;
ad&#13;
J acqurline&#13;
the Faculty Steering Commite.&#13;
nBbraumi,&#13;
3-21,&#13;
seniors will be required&#13;
to&#13;
write&#13;
p e a c e demonstrator.&#13;
Mrs. Mazen, Acting&#13;
Was&#13;
s h r u c k&#13;
on&#13;
of&#13;
the Mathematics department, During Assembly; a paper fo about 50 wocrsi&#13;
eachhte head hwti a stothnreown by&#13;
said she stayed out "asa matter 3 Teachers Speak quarter. The students wil be wel&#13;
Scienceitespicketthe school, Joining 200,000students who boycoted of conscience.""Thisis avigil, not pr&#13;
epared for the Regents exam, amontghe co&#13;
untar-dem&#13;
onstrators&#13;
classes ni the New York City area,&#13;
in s&#13;
u&#13;
p&#13;
port of the strike fo&#13;
o n Harris Wield. S h e was a k e n to&#13;
r peace.&#13;
apicket line," she observed. "We Arista inducted 182 new mem• Mr. Nadel promised.&#13;
ni the committee feel that no coer bers at its semi-annual assembly. In another change, the&#13;
Fordham Hospital. Two students&#13;
dent whom he had insulted with&#13;
M.r Alexander Breinan, Admi- cionshould be put on people who May 16. Six seniors and one hun- Literature elective course will be&#13;
racial slurs. However. it ei still nistrative Assistant, told Survey want to come into school.' sX&#13;
discontinued. Other English hon-&#13;
jured near&#13;
Sencel.&#13;
mitted ot hte honor society.&#13;
programs will eb unattected&#13;
unclear whether the assailant was&#13;
C h a n i m&#13;
"Peace Now" and&#13;
an anti-war or counter-demonstra- Steer Right&#13;
that 1,681 of Science's 3,222 stu-&#13;
A l i s t o f t h e n e w m e m b e r s ap- by these curriculum changes. other anti-war sloganst,he demon.&#13;
dents attended school. Survey esti-&#13;
pears on page 3.]&#13;
marched&#13;
t o&#13;
Hunter C o l&#13;
mates 1,725 students entered the Mr. Emanuel Harrison, of the M.r Louis Heitner, of the Social&#13;
Social Studies department, a sup- Addressing the Aassembly, M.r&#13;
lege in the Bronx&#13;
where students&#13;
Studies department, said that eh building. The discrepancy may be&#13;
a result of some student's attend- American involvement Herman Levy of the English de- Dr. Taffel Cancels&#13;
had twice ing classes but not reporting ot of- ni the Vietnam war,&#13;
partment said t h a t " t h e h u m a n Field Day Despite&#13;
borough gathered tohear anti-war gorio for egg-throwing at Science. ficial class for&#13;
attendance-taking&#13;
goals and the methods condition can flower only so far&#13;
speeches and to watch peace skits. "Louisjustlaughed,"saidHeitner.&#13;
purposes.&#13;
of the "My main com as our humanity will allow it to Protest by Students&#13;
violent confrontations Dr. Alexander Taffel, principal, Inside the school, most of the&#13;
plaint," he&#13;
against the do s o .&#13;
were reported at Hunter. Several requested and&#13;
eceived bolted&#13;
teachers present continued with&#13;
teachers who are imposing their We are witnessing, Levy said,&#13;
Moldanynsoconcancoledor&#13;
counter-demonstrators, shouting ra- supervision of the demonstration their current lessons, " T h i s b o y .&#13;
political stu- the destruction of America as a this year, Dr. Alexander Taffel&#13;
charged, with fists ta Science.&#13;
cotting classes] should be a sacri- dents. By combining racism and place where "ideals and freedoms announced May 16, W i t h o u t&#13;
flying, into a line fo black peace&#13;
The police, Heitner complained,&#13;
fice for those students who chose the draft with Vietnam, aminority are maintained." Every American&#13;
c e s s , m o r e t h a n o n e - t h i r d or t h e&#13;
did not treat the t w o o p p o s i n g&#13;
t o b r o y o u t , s a i d o n e t e a c h e r , M r was able to impose itself upon the must work so that "we can ex.&#13;
student body had signed apetition peace demonstrator snatched ared,&#13;
The peace demon. Alan Bel, of the Mathematics de- majority. The march," he added, triente ourselves from the morass&#13;
demanding a field day this spring.&#13;
strators were compelled to main&#13;
into which we are dally sinking."&#13;
Dr. a r e s n i d h a n s h o r t o n e d&#13;
nearby boy.&#13;
tain a constantly&#13;
moving,&#13;
circular&#13;
K e n n e t h&#13;
Appelbaum, 4-7,&#13;
"IsStudent&#13;
no continued&#13;
Louis DeGregorio, 2-21, a count-&#13;
marchs&#13;
counter.&#13;
cused, requiringa from Whenyouentera university,&#13;
l o r e d o n y ' s c a n c e r t i o n&#13;
er-demonstrator, was struck&#13;
wasnot&#13;
preparedstandarized notesfor Levy advised, "do not let a gate&#13;
Yielding to student pressure, Dr. the face with abat wielded by an restricted ni this manner. The po- PA), termed the demonstration students who participatedinthe close behind you, cutting you off&#13;
unknown assailant at Hunter Col-&#13;
lice, Heitner claimed, acted slowly "highly successful" and considered&#13;
strike.&#13;
f r o m r e a l i t y l e s t y o u g r a d u a t e&#13;
izers that the signatures of 90 per-&#13;
DeGregorio was taken&#13;
cosstully sonarate the obbosing de.&#13;
and indecisively. They did not sue- it "indicative of the views held&#13;
into a society&#13;
c o n t o r t h e s t u d o n t p o d y w e&#13;
r&#13;
Fordham Hospital.&#13;
may be irrevocably moving toward quired before he could&#13;
According to one witness. De. monstrators nor did they succeed Marilyn McIntosh, 4-16，prest-&#13;
disintegration." ino told day manosts&#13;
Gregorio was hit by a black stu. in preventing violence.&#13;
dent of the Binek Culturn! Society&#13;
Quoting excerpts from essays by dents were unable to obtain the&#13;
and vice-president of the S.O., ex-&#13;
scientist Robert Oppenheimerand required number of signatures.&#13;
M r s . "Next year," Taffel said, "I am&#13;
Weiss Sees 'Surprises'&#13;
"This [strike) isn't for the end of&#13;
racism at all.&#13;
Henrietta Mazen, acting chairman hoping that we will set up a fac- On the Way in Polities Martin Malin, 2-6, a leader&#13;
of the Math department, discussed u t ystudent advisory committee the Bronx Science chapter of the&#13;
the responsibilities of the scientist that will discuss student problems&#13;
National Student Committee for&#13;
in modern society, She spoke at a n d s t u d e n a s . so that plans&#13;
the B assembly. can be made well in advance."&#13;
Reform Democratic Councilman "Politically, it promises to be a Vietnam defended&#13;
At the C assembly, Mr. Lance In March. the a c u l t y vetoed n&#13;
Theodore Weiss predicted more very surprising year," Weiss said. America's Vietnam policy, "In ad-&#13;
"I would not be surprised if, dur-&#13;
commented&#13;
"a high&#13;
Geshwind, of the Physical Science field day to Bear Mountain for surprises in the election campaign ing the Democratic National Con-&#13;
department, explored man's rela-&#13;
the seniors and to Rye Beach for&#13;
atthefinalmeetingoftheForum,&#13;
vention. a candidate who has re&#13;
schoolisnotanappropriatetarget&#13;
for political activists.&#13;
tionship to nature&#13;
the other students.&#13;
moved himselt from the e l e c t o r&#13;
r eemerged."&#13;
Several students and teachers&#13;
opposed to the war also considered&#13;
h o w e v e r Weiss said, the like-&#13;
lihood is that President Johnson&#13;
form of protest. Mr. Irwin Dubno,&#13;
Police Join in Conduct Talks&#13;
will not re-enter the race, adding, of the Social Studies department,&#13;
Counter - demonstrators c h a r g e "I se some of you are as pleased&#13;
t that prospect.&#13;
termed&#13;
"irrelevant,"&#13;
down the Harris Field hill, toward A meeting between police rep-&#13;
school asked the police to dror&#13;
asama&#13;
commenting that "even if every peace marchers across&#13;
the sircer resentatives, the senool adminis&#13;
charges against Fleming, the re-&#13;
Evaluating the aspirants for the&#13;
Democratic nomination. Weiss es&#13;
tration, student political leaders,&#13;
and faculty members was held&#13;
f o r A u g u s t 2,&#13;
timated that the present strength&#13;
Erezumasaidhehadfoundthe of Hubert Humphrey exceeds the&#13;
24 Students Win&#13;
Honors May 9 in Dr. Taffel's office.&#13;
distributed&#13;
leaflet&#13;
combined forces of Senators Bu-&#13;
sene Mechrthy and Kobert Ken&#13;
Responding to charges of slow-&#13;
thousands of people who had been&#13;
In Annual FSA Co ntest ness of action and of partisanship&#13;
"butchered" by Fidel Castro under&#13;
nedy.&#13;
Weiss said t h a t n t i r s t M e&#13;
at the April 26 student strike, the&#13;
"Venceremos"&#13;
George Arnold, 4-19, is the win- Adrenal and Testicular&#13;
Cortisone and Testosterone on the p o l i c e representatives&#13;
g a i n&#13;
sh&#13;
all defeat the&#13;
enemy]&#13;
.&#13;
Carthy was "not really interested&#13;
i n r u n n i n g f o r P r e s i d e n t s o m u c h ner of a nat&#13;
i&#13;
o&#13;
nal&#13;
award in this&#13;
issuew "rock throwing si definitely out."&#13;
leaflet had concluded with that&#13;
as ni raising the issue of the Viet- year's Future Scientists of Ameri M i c e " ; Mitchell Kaplan, 3-11, Herea&#13;
fter, they indicated&#13;
, police&#13;
He added, however,&#13;
n a m W a r . " B u t M c C a r t h y d r o p p e d&#13;
en&#13;
ty-t&#13;
h&#13;
ree other&#13;
"Polycythemic Mice Produced by would be placed on Harris Field&#13;
w a s n e v e r right.&#13;
Scienceites received recognition in Hyp&#13;
ca competition, Tw oxia in Silicone Rubber Mem- a n y dangerous situation&#13;
n o s e D r e s e n t a&#13;
the "protest image" after Kennedy&#13;
the contest.&#13;
brane Enclosures"; Stuart Levitz, agreed that everyone had the right&#13;
entered the race.&#13;
Effects Intra- literature&#13;
Looking outside the sphere of&#13;
Six students won regiona&#13;
l awards&#13;
Violence Deplored&#13;
presidential politics, Weiss wards are based&#13;
while sev&#13;
enteen others earned hon-&#13;
muscular Injection of Mednoxy- Members of the Student Com-&#13;
building unharassed.&#13;
progesterone Acetate on the Preg- Albert&#13;
Victory Vietnam&#13;
In the future, if h&#13;
arassment should&#13;
pressed his hope that the nation orable mentions. A&#13;
w i l l n o t b e t o r n b y r a c i a l u n r e s t&#13;
on writte&#13;
n reports&#13;
d&#13;
escribing inde-&#13;
nant and Non-pregnant Mouse"; said at the meeting that they had&#13;
Police&#13;
cars arrive while students&#13;
o c c u r , representatives&#13;
this coming summer.&#13;
pendent work&#13;
in math&#13;
or science.&#13;
Barbara Rosenberg, 3-24, w h e n tative Determination of the Causes urded their followers to attend&#13;
agreed to inform Dr.Taffel,who "Rut the likelihood is that we Arnold,whoexploredthe"Ap-&#13;
would set as unofficial mediator&#13;
willhaveriotsthissummer,"he&#13;
plication of the Snobo&#13;
l Language&#13;
of the Cold Inactivation of the 29 schoolonthedayofthestrikeand&#13;
that they deplored any violent i n&#13;
the ensuing events, Tepper com-&#13;
Composition," received&#13;
Rosterionhare": andAllenSam- plained to the police, who refused&#13;
It school officials could not&#13;
, the police would try to&#13;
said,"andwewilcontinueot have 250 dollars. Hisawardwas&#13;
to Musical&#13;
O n e&#13;
arC., 9어, "TheEtfectofPlasmin cidents&#13;
that developed,&#13;
rea&#13;
c h e d&#13;
to arrest Erezuma a&#13;
nd ordered the&#13;
riots as long as America&#13;
nscanbe&#13;
effect a compromise. In any case,&#13;
nted throu&#13;
g&#13;
hout the&#13;
t h o&#13;
Inhibitoro fC'I Allpresentagreedtoimprove crowd ot shout 15 etudents stande&#13;
twenty gra&#13;
Serum&#13;
w&#13;
o u l d&#13;
b e&#13;
m a d&#13;
eto&#13;
persuaded&#13;
millions&#13;
n ation,&#13;
of&#13;
Esterase."&#13;
communications. Before any future&#13;
ing outside the school to disp&#13;
erse.&#13;
avoid any arrests.&#13;
dollars ni Vietnam, but not on the&#13;
Amold pro&#13;
srammed the&#13;
c&#13;
o m&#13;
The studen&#13;
ts who gained honor demonstrations, the groups agreed&#13;
Robert 2-11.&#13;
Fleming,&#13;
waronWavery ablementioninthe&#13;
competition to compose mus&#13;
ic, correlat-&#13;
S U S S&#13;
their logistical plans&#13;
rested.&#13;
Speaking&#13;
of the&#13;
"ditficult and puter&#13;
95・PrtBer&#13;
i n o c e r t a i n&#13;
"frequency of occur-&#13;
were&#13;
Gary Alevy,&#13;
with the police and the adminis-&#13;
I n a n&#13;
i n t e r v i e w .&#13;
F l e m i n g&#13;
s a i d&#13;
tension-filled times ahead of us,"&#13;
musical&#13;
ner, 3-10; Michael Fifer, 2-30; Ted t r a t i o n .&#13;
a s&#13;
w e l l&#13;
a s&#13;
w i t h&#13;
o p p o s i n g&#13;
he had been distributing literature&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Weiss said there were some signs rence W i t h w i t h&#13;
of hope. A willingness on the part&#13;
notes&#13;
when arrogting nolicoman&#13;
" I was disappointed&#13;
Goodman, 4-24; Sammy Gutmann, JUNE&#13;
Arnold said.&#13;
3-16; Esther Hu, 2-5; Lois Jackson, Another incident which resulted&#13;
ordered him to move. The officer&#13;
6-13,&#13;
17-19-Regular school days.&#13;
ofblackandwhiteAmericansto myfinal&#13;
"he&#13;
musica compositions&#13;
w&#13;
ene&#13;
3-3;Linda&#13;
3-11;Eric&#13;
i n charges against the police o c&#13;
thenstarteDushhim.tem.&#13;
work together, following the assas-&#13;
3-13; Robert&#13;
Rosenbert -Senior Show&#13;
Luther&#13;
lure than a success."&#13;
Salt- curred May 6. At about 2:35 pm&#13;
ing said, and co&#13;
ntinued,&#13;
"'I&#13;
guess&#13;
20- Graduation Rehearsal&#13;
sination Dr.&#13;
more a fai Rubin,4-16;David&#13;
The six regional w&#13;
inners&#13;
were&#13;
3-14; Joel&#13;
King, is one reason for this hope.&#13;
om-&#13;
3-20; Robert&#13;
Nacks&#13;
4 - 2 4 : thatday,GlennTepper,4-10,was I didn't move fast enough."&#13;
Timothy Buchman, 4-25, "A C&#13;
distributing&#13;
a&#13;
leaflet outsid&#13;
e the&#13;
Fleming&#13;
24-No student attendance&#13;
Weissconcludedbysayingthat&#13;
4-16;Gregory was charged with dis-&#13;
Adina&#13;
26-Report cardsand diplomas&#13;
"onlyby working togetherdowe tiee o fMinite Number Systems"; Tarle,4 . 2 4 :G o r d o n&#13;
pu&#13;
ter&#13;
Investig&#13;
ation&#13;
of&#13;
the Pr&#13;
oper&#13;
Woulft, 3-5, school protesting police&#13;
orderly conduct b u t this w a s later&#13;
the&#13;
April 26 s t r i k e . Angered,&#13;
changed to a summons, allowing&#13;
27-Summer school registration&#13;
have a chance of solving our prob.&#13;
and Benjamin Yalow, 4-18.&#13;
h i m&#13;
N o o&#13;
n e .&#13;
Although&#13;
28-No student attendance&#13;
lems."&#13;
John Grippo, "The Effect o f&#13;
JostErezuma, 4-3, struckhim. In&#13;
 PageTwo SCIENCESURVEY Friday,May 21,1968&#13;
SGIENGE SURVEY T.P.D. Course Offers&#13;
*2001' Views Space Exploration published 8 times a year by the students of&#13;
Public Speaking Tips&#13;
BY JANET OBERTS&#13;
THE BRONX HIGH&#13;
SCHOOL&#13;
Science future oriented&#13;
Rare indeed is the Scienceite who admits that he s c h o o l a n d many of its students&#13;
OF SCIENCE&#13;
can't hold hsi own i n na argument about Vietnam,&#13;
genetics, k o n swoboda's tielding, or any other topic nig the future.&#13;
wil have na integral part ni shap.&#13;
Yol.Theo.&#13;
May 31, 1968&#13;
of importance, Nevertheless, every day 81 juniors If only for the wonder of seeing&#13;
and seniors devote their first period to a course in&#13;
rick's&#13;
five-year&#13;
project,&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Board&#13;
Taught by SO. . resAivd MrK.enneth Alen, TPD&#13;
Charles Bernstein, Richard&#13;
Schwarz,&#13;
Michael Kairys,&#13;
stresses methods of p u b l i c speaking w h i c h Mr. A l l e n Though the film&#13;
has other&#13;
inter.&#13;
Robert Bel, Marilyn Campbel, Mark Gant, Charles considers "essential to developing the student's self- esting aspects, het staggering sgiht&#13;
Silkowitz, Jeanne&#13;
Thelwell.&#13;
confidence and personayt"i.l Students participate in&#13;
orouter sonce avishly nhabited&#13;
Faculty Adviser&#13;
.Ms.r Linda Feingold debates. Dane d i s c u s s i o n s&#13;
such yb man, wihsith spacecraft, space&#13;
4 D cocci: PRESU&#13;
topics as civil disorder,hte election campaign and stations, dna Hilton hotels is an&#13;
lowering the nvgiot ga.e e x p e r i e n c e&#13;
Scene from&#13;
201:&#13;
A Speca&#13;
yeOsyd&#13;
exhibits Kubrick's technical skil. encourages students ot take an The film starts&#13;
no a&#13;
ylulasvi&#13;
extracurricular interest ni hte oeptsi that they beautiful, though&#13;
extremely&#13;
cus ni class. Recently, several T P D students volun. c a l l e d "The&#13;
D a w i&#13;
He,r&#13;
as a etchnciain,&#13;
Kubrcik&#13;
ex-&#13;
gateD. ullea&#13;
enters Jupiter v i a A First Step&#13;
cels.&#13;
Throughout the film, Kubrick&#13;
magnificent,&#13;
multi-variegated, Cir teered to atbualet responses to a questionnaire that fO "M.na nI this segm&#13;
ent,&#13;
apes&#13;
unbelievnole&#13;
CongresJsonmathanan&#13;
Bnigham&#13;
setnot residents&#13;
eramadescent ot find himself ni a By alowing the S.O. to sanction acollection&#13;
Louis&#13;
of&#13;
his&#13;
district&#13;
present a n&#13;
unswervinglayccurate&#13;
suite&#13;
of money for the Poor People's Campaign, the&#13;
Freedom&#13;
and Picnics&#13;
Richard'ausrSt delightfuly&#13;
pom-&#13;
othel arb&#13;
s&#13;
appears&#13;
eh ages osA"l hcaSrp Zarathustra."&#13;
w h e n&#13;
h e&#13;
Science administration has s i v e n tacit ap-&#13;
course, several m e m b e r s The apes lind a huge black sat&#13;
Sick, Sick, Sick&#13;
he shnriks into anembryo, Perhaps pr&#13;
ov&#13;
a&#13;
l to political activity within the school.&#13;
of the&#13;
TPD&#13;
sascl&#13;
saidhtat&#13;
hettim&#13;
e devoted&#13;
tofree&#13;
and not knownig twah itis, wor- But the increasingly banal story shit represents man's intellectual We applaud this progressive first step.&#13;
dscuoisin&#13;
crea"tead ceratni&#13;
communication&#13;
between&#13;
ship it. The fi l m then csut to o u t e r&#13;
line,&#13;
niculdnig&#13;
a totally&#13;
irrelevant&#13;
infancy compared to other life ni Considering the deep involvement fo today's 18 people&#13;
of the same a g o . "&#13;
Allen was space anhedt matured ape, man.&#13;
the universe.&#13;
students in worldly sa well as academie af- absent for wot days, the students held peniesi on Swimming in thevast emptines,&#13;
o u r a w e&#13;
However, snice the story si really fairs, a school realistically insulate Senoo)&#13;
a i m m i n e s&#13;
itself f r o m contemporary political activity. sMrmeb ofhte TPD classear selected nothe waltz,isa spaceship about todock The black salb is discovered to breath-takingly fantastic voyage ot onlyna adorment ni this film, the True education is impossible when students&#13;
ORSIS achevemen a n d s o c i a l be the instrument of intelligent&#13;
Studies.&#13;
T h e y take&#13;
TPorfD&#13;
one t e r m in&#13;
either&#13;
their&#13;
are kept unaware of the ideas shaping the&#13;
eW are&#13;
umoor&#13;
showthneinterior&#13;
oheft&#13;
fiel no Jupiter. A mosini,&#13;
headed&#13;
the future&#13;
i s wlel worth the bore senior&#13;
e a t&#13;
s t a t i o n&#13;
m i n u t e s t&#13;
Dy K e r Dulles, si sent to&#13;
v e s t i&#13;
world around them.&#13;
It is clear ot us, although the S.O. claims&#13;
collection for political purposes. Surely,&#13;
coletirinapolithisni pose, aprove,a&#13;
the Poor People's Campaign is a solely hu- Senior Describes Search for College Acceptance seeks the passage of legislation and that nietrveiw I began tohave some self-doubts. A&#13;
would be hard to argue that a movement that By MARTIN GRINGER the leter aside to, slit waiting for Cornell's answer, arouses the leading Republican presidential sA a sophomore, I couldnever imagine myself delimma developed that might seem ylsi now, but dueno April 15.&#13;
candidate to criticize sti aims, programs, and&#13;
wanting togotoa pgeriste colPlregveio.usly, hte was h e n c u e s t i o n o r e o r d e a t h , w o n d e r e d Aplri 15 eventually came. (I bet that's a big sur- D c u r e ro somcond&#13;
eyagler awaiting het mailman&#13;
whether after I sat down&#13;
I should&#13;
cros&#13;
ym legs.&#13;
methodsissolelyhumanitarianinnature. foreither a"thick" or"thin" enveolpe wouldbring&#13;
realized that if I did cros&#13;
ym legs.&#13;
I might ap-&#13;
prise orf you.) The&#13;
letter I received wasn't really athickorthinletter, Itmusthavebeeneithera Now is the time for Science's "underground" a smeli of superiority t o my lips. You see. T h a d pear to be impolite tub fi I didn't I might become thick "thin" letter or a thin "thick" leter. When political organizations ot apply to the S.O. for it lal figured out, ta thmiate.t I was ot go ot Cyti uncomfortable dna hten nervous dna tense. I also I opened the letter I learned why it was neither official sanction. In addition, we call on the smipel, uncomplicated, cheap, and perfectly -ed began ot doubt whether hte interviewer would be thick nor thin. I was put on Cornell's waiting list. administration to issue a definitive statement sirable City. I swa one ofhtose ear creatures who thrilled by my unmistakable Bronx accent.&#13;
permitting distr&#13;
ibution of political literature&#13;
would have been perfectly happy to attend CCN&#13;
Y. The interview had hardly begun when I realized&#13;
and collection for political causes. After all,However, during the next wto years I was brain- my interviewer's name swa Irving D. Rosenman. This&#13;
w a s not emotionally prepared to be put on a the precedent has already been set.&#13;
w a s h e d&#13;
wsa no Arab. I immediately crosed my elgs and&#13;
waiting list. Even being rejected would have been Whenever asked about college, Irevealed my am- lapsed into my Son of yMllo&#13;
better. But 1 resigned myselt to stll further walthe bition ot attend City. Shocked and aghast ta any&#13;
my " f r i e n d s " t r i e d t o c o n v i n c e m e t h a t&#13;
1&#13;
From Attraction to Addiction&#13;
I returned to school and found out all the gossip Student Voice&#13;
a b o u t c o l l e g e a c c e p t a n c e s . F o u r S c i e n c e i t e s made should attend one of the "better" colleges. After al,&#13;
During the interview, Ifound myself saying strange Harvard, ten Yale, thirteen University of Pennsyl- As evidenced by campus revolts across the&#13;
you never know what kind of people are going ot&#13;
thinks&#13;
= thinks like how I w a n t e d to g o to Cornell vania, five Vassar, and two Radcliffe. In the next nation, students are demanding that they be&#13;
a public college.&#13;
more than anything else in the world and what a few days, everyone from my drivers' ed teacher to given a role in making the decisions that affect&#13;
Although I at first rejected this kind of middle great place C o r n e l s . Y o t s e my neighbors to my closest friends inquired whether the idea of attending a prestige college when I said those things. I was finally hooked on I had made Columbia. At first I vigorously protest their IIves. Certainly, the high school atudent, I relished the C o r n e r ed that I didn't apply there, but later on 1,began due to his generally insufficient maturity, image of me, hte ofmrer stickball player, mxinig I sadi ot myself even it I don't make Cornel, I ot say Columbla accepted me and had offered me should not be given as much authority as uni- with the tennis set at Harvard. Yale. Dartmouth. or would be just as happy at Stony Brook. Then the a full scholarshio. After all, as one of my neighbon versity students. However, it is important that Princeton.&#13;
drug scandal hit Stony Brook, Reputation, reputa- said, "Columbia, Cornell — they're all the same to high school students serve in at least an ad-&#13;
tion, reputation. Laughter greeted me whenever I&#13;
visory capacity at their schools. Fortunately common sense prevailed ni my de-&#13;
said that I had applied ot Stony Brook and I was&#13;
I was comforted by the fact that about 45 per cent AtScience, the StudentOrganization has cision to apply to Stony Brook, Kensselaer Poly-&#13;
getting abit sensitive aboutit. Idecided tiwould&#13;
of the seniors were to be going t o City University proved itself ot be unwieldyand ineffectual technic Institute, and Cornell University. Only Cor- be for the best C o r n e l l did take m e and s o&#13;
colleges and about 15 per cent to State University in granting participatory democracy to Sci- nell could be considered a prestige school and I began the wait for a "thin" or "thick" envelope.&#13;
colleges. These colleges I told myself are all fine e n c e i t e s . T h e r e f o r e , w e p r o p o s e t h a t a D i - w a s n ' t s u r e w h e t h e r I w o u l d g o t h e r e i f a c c e p t e d . nI F e b r u a r y , S t o n y B r o o k a c c e p t e d m e . T h i s w a s i n s t i t u t i o n s a n d m a n y o f t h e m a r e c o m p a r a b l e t o partite advisory committee of students and Soon, alas, my rational approach to college slipped not a big thrill because it appeared that everyone the so-called "better" schools I realized now&#13;
f r o m m e . " fi r s t b e r a n t o r e a l i z e t h i s j u s t b e f o r e else at Selence was also accepted. I put hte notice what matters si not whether I go ot Cornell, Stony faculty be formed ni order to advise the ad- my Cornell interview. I was going to be my usual, of acceptance aside to wait for Cornell's response. Brook, City, or even Bronx Community, but rather ministration on vital questions affecting the&#13;
unaffected Bronx self However. the night before In March, Rensselaer accepted me but Iput that&#13;
counts si what Iaccomplish there. Right. student body. Matters discussed by the com-&#13;
mittee would include curriculum, discipline&#13;
procedures, clothing rules, political matters,&#13;
ete. The body would also serve as a review&#13;
The Bronx's&#13;
answer&#13;
t o&#13;
t h e&#13;
'Dynamo's' Achievements board for student complaints against teachers&#13;
P Hayden Planetarium of&#13;
regarding discipline, marks, and other mat-&#13;
fum. Surprisingly, the instru-&#13;
Fall Short of Excellence&#13;
ters. Although the committee would have no&#13;
ment has never been fully util-&#13;
By CHARLES BERNSTEIN&#13;
ultimate authority, it would make recommen-&#13;
ized and ni the past couple of&#13;
Perhaps it is unfair to be harsh&#13;
works. Lastly, Ina Cholst's story dations to the principal or department chair-&#13;
years seems to have been used&#13;
man, who would then determine what action&#13;
ni one's judgment of a high school&#13;
was a fascinating and somewhat exclusively for midnight witch&#13;
literary art publication, especially&#13;
successful attempt ot delve into should be taken.&#13;
hunts held by the senior drama&#13;
when it can boast of many first.&#13;
the real feelings of a girl talking Recently, Dr. Taffel proposed a committee&#13;
rate pieces and is as good or bev&#13;
to her father on the phone.&#13;
of parents, teachers, administration, and stu-&#13;
The roof-top installation in&#13;
ter than past&#13;
issues. Yet, i n the&#13;
On the deficit side, the several dents to discuss school-related matters. Even&#13;
the not been&#13;
"Dynamo 1968" is&#13;
pieces that seemed to be over if this plan is adopted, as it should be, there&#13;
much because of the mechan-&#13;
disappointing&#13;
its many&#13;
ambitious and tried&#13;
will still not be adequate representation of&#13;
ical ills of the projector.&#13;
fine pieces indicate just how good&#13;
found, used forced even awk student sentiment, since parents do not neces-&#13;
s e o r e m b e r .&#13;
Science's principal,&#13;
Mr. Kligm&#13;
an (left) and&#13;
Mr. Gesh-&#13;
it could have been.&#13;
ward&#13;
— language, becoming m ere sarily reflect the opinions or concerns of their&#13;
Dr. Alexander&#13;
Ta f f e l ,&#13;
a s k e d&#13;
wind admire newly&#13;
revived pro-&#13;
one sees a tre-&#13;
ly exercises in&#13;
formality.&#13;
the Board of Education's local&#13;
iector. inside school&#13;
p l a n e t a r i u m&#13;
mendous amount of triteness, both&#13;
also too clear that faculty adviser children. The bipartite committee would still&#13;
man, the District Superinten-&#13;
in theme and in writing style. The&#13;
Mr. Robert Rossner's lament last be needed to give a potent voice ot student and&#13;
d e n t to arrange to have the "except the stars&#13;
stories, the poems, and even the&#13;
January that there&#13;
faculty opinion regarding discussions vital to&#13;
"slip" in the projector repaired,&#13;
out of focus," M.r Kligman ad-&#13;
art showed a marked lack of ori-&#13;
morous stories submitted for pub- their everyday lives. It is a voice that could&#13;
What was this "slip"?&#13;
mits.&#13;
a nd boldness. う つ fact&#13;
lication was painfully t r u e&#13;
not be ignored.&#13;
e Holzman has al-&#13;
A Very Good Year&#13;
Mr. Jerom&#13;
thatart and writing has radically&#13;
h i s&#13;
changed in the last decade,&#13;
both&#13;
Visually Beautiful&#13;
It seems that just as the pro-&#13;
ready&#13;
classes up to see the revitalized&#13;
content certainly&#13;
teetor would be set on the&#13;
and style,&#13;
The photography in "Dynamo" planetarium&#13;
. "I loved it," cooed&#13;
might&#13;
have&#13;
was superior.&#13;
Christopher Dun Annual Show&#13;
night sky of September,&#13;
senior Danette Riso. "You get&#13;
publication whose name, after all,&#13;
can's 14 pictures showed remark projector would slip and June&#13;
oking&#13;
ably good composition and clarity, The best tribute that can be paid to al those&#13;
would p r a c t i c a l l y&#13;
a cramp in your neck lo&#13;
but I love the stars." Soon,&#13;
"Dynamo" tried ot be exciting and&#13;
who were responsible for the Annual Show is&#13;
before school had begun, Two&#13;
the HDS classes and the Astro-&#13;
foiled itcouldbeadmiredforthe&#13;
FredHemley'stwophotographs that, remarkably, one quickly forgot that it&#13;
planetarium-fixers&#13;
nomy-Physics cl&#13;
ub will utilize&#13;
attempt. But for the magazine to&#13;
o n l y a n was a high school production.&#13;
"they fixed the slipping but the&#13;
the planetarium, in order to&#13;
present a very unimaginative col-&#13;
cellent writer but also a fine pho- Everything about the show was superior.&#13;
stars wouldn't work,"&#13;
observe constella&#13;
tions, merid.&#13;
lection, with several poor works,&#13;
tographer. In general, the art work ing to Mr. Jack Kligman of the&#13;
ians, eclipses, lunar&#13;
phases,&#13;
and&#13;
is disappointing.&#13;
was appropriate&#13;
if unimaginative. The sets, lighting, costumes, and makeup, un-&#13;
Physical Science Department.&#13;
the planets.&#13;
Certainly, however, there were&#13;
noted th at&#13;
der the design and supervision of Mr. Alan&#13;
The two HDS teachers, Mr.&#13;
some very fine pieces, and if all staff of "Dynamo" is not neces- Schlussel, were fresh and exciting. The senior&#13;
Jack Kligman and Mr.&#13;
Schwarz Says..&#13;
drama class, directed by Mr. Martin Greene,&#13;
Geshwind, as wel as Physical&#13;
Survey editor-in-chief Richard&#13;
the pieces g o o d a s t h e&#13;
sarily to blamefor the paucityof best of them, there would be little&#13;
outdid even the brightest expectations.&#13;
Science&#13;
Schwarz voiced the feelings&#13;
C a mm i n i n&#13;
"Donamo.&#13;
good&#13;
Fred&#13;
student body A high school play is usually something to&#13;
Mr. Herman Gewirtz, tinkered&#13;
editorial&#13;
our&#13;
Hemley's&#13;
poems were out&#13;
be condescending towards. Somehow-through&#13;
with replacing&#13;
s&#13;
aid, "We are pleased that&#13;
s t a n d i n g&#13;
f o r&#13;
t h e i&#13;
r extremely aot.&#13;
with patronslike hard work, luck, and, mostly talent-this year's&#13;
and checking&#13;
contacts,&#13;
editorial of last November has&#13;
finally borne fruit."&#13;
even beautiful, descriptions of na-&#13;
the Son of the Eternal Forest, Dow show transce&#13;
nded that. In a school which can&#13;
Finally, Mr. Gewirtz discover-&#13;
ir To.&#13;
with invariably observant, C h e m i c a l S t&#13;
Jerome theLesser, ed th&#13;
e faulty contact and,&#13;
with&#13;
repri&#13;
nted&#13;
in Toward T&#13;
he&#13;
well written verse. James Howard,&#13;
boast of having some of the finest student&#13;
ditorial doubtless&#13;
the Associated Press,&#13;
"Peace,"and assistance of Mr. Kligman&#13;
morrow, this e&#13;
scientists and mathematicians, Science can be&#13;
Tamar Head, Susan Levine, and -the enemies of the Red Baron ani and Mr. Geshwind, soldered it.&#13;
gained influence.&#13;
MO&#13;
AinsSchwarznisohadverytine&#13;
the BoardofEducation,onemight proud that it also has a near-brilliant theatre&#13;
Now, at last, everything works,&#13;
i n t e r e s t i n i&#13;
have expected more.&#13;
group, both dramatically and technically.&#13;
&#13;
 youth."&#13;
Friday, May31,1968&#13;
SCIENCE SURVEY&#13;
Page Three&#13;
S. M. Bogdonoff Addresses 5 Clubs&#13;
New Arista Members&#13;
MathBulletin&#13;
P&#13;
rofessor Seymo&#13;
ur M. Bogdonoff&#13;
ics clubs, Mr. Bogdonoff examined numerous air molecules, it slows&#13;
The following are the new&#13;
Arista&#13;
of Princeton Univ&#13;
SeelstoHac&#13;
ersity discussed&#13;
e&#13;
high speed aerodynam&#13;
ics before a&#13;
problem involved in flying down and eventually returns ot&#13;
with great speed at high altitudes&#13;
joint meeting of five science clubs,&#13;
Wide&#13;
Appeal As altitude decreases, Bogdonof! Certain vehicles, notably weath-&#13;
Addressing the&#13;
explained, there si an increase ni&#13;
satellites,&#13;
should&#13;
The Math Bulletin has taken&#13;
on&#13;
Math, F a r a d a v&#13;
the concentration of air molccules&#13;
When a spacecraft collides with&#13;
close&#13;
to the&#13;
earth, he&#13;
said. It is&#13;
anew look for 1968.&#13;
Chemistry, Astro.&#13;
nomy-Physics, Biology,&#13;
and Bion-&#13;
theob the&#13;
o r scientist&#13;
to&#13;
deter&#13;
"This year's&#13;
Bulletin wil n&#13;
ot&#13;
mine an orbit low&#13;
enough&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
for a select few,"&#13;
satellite ot make&#13;
acurate&#13;
H a r o l d Samtur, 4-17,&#13;
S.O. Will Sponsor&#13;
3WinAwards&#13;
chiet. "Our a&#13;
editor-in- rticles are easter ot Collection of Funds&#13;
sti nwo maintenance.&#13;
understand, but their quality has&#13;
I n C i t y - W i d e&#13;
not been sacrificed."&#13;
"Ten years&#13;
The e d i t o r s of t h e j o u r n a l c u&#13;
For Poverty March&#13;
S c i e n c e F a i r&#13;
donoft predicted,&#13;
"we'llbe&#13;
doing&#13;
their printing costs in half by typ&#13;
The Student Organization adopt- Three Scienceites nwo prizes ta fo ye.t There's ydobon in aepdipl&#13;
ing their articles on a rented IBM ed resolution s u D o o r i n e t h e&#13;
the annual city-wide Science Fair&#13;
electric typewriter. The saving was&#13;
Poor People's Campaign, May 17.&#13;
April 4. Bret Berner,&#13;
31-0,&#13;
invested in a color cover, the first For one week, twenty v o l u n t e e r s&#13;
o n e o f t h e t w o m a j o r&#13;
a w a r d s .&#13;
earned ustdynig if y o u do,&#13;
ni the history of the Buletin,&#13;
will collect contributions during&#13;
obnsiolevfiete years.&#13;
Berner's project,&#13;
"Polyploidy's&#13;
Inanother break with tradition, the morning official period.&#13;
Effect on Resistance ot Ultraviolet&#13;
Professor Bogdonoft i s the cerdi&#13;
the Bulletin wil contain an article T h e r e s o l u t i o n w a s p a s s e d b y&#13;
Light ni Physarum Polycephalum,"&#13;
each from a freshman, a sopho a large majority. Several dissent-&#13;
hte effect of certain&#13;
atPnriceotn&#13;
Uy.nvtiesir&#13;
more, and a junior. The remaining&#13;
ing delegates&#13;
mute Mons on the slume mold's ter&#13;
pieces are the work of seniors.&#13;
a political action, and therefore sistance to ultraviolet light.&#13;
John Churnin, 4-9, is the other outside the jurisdiction&#13;
better varchosed t h e threr&#13;
END-YEAR EXAMINATION SCHEDULE&#13;
editor-in-chief of the Math Bule- n a t i o n a l&#13;
S c i e n c e&#13;
F a i r ,&#13;
d h e l i n&#13;
D e -&#13;
tin. Fred Wu,3-24, Is assistant Mr. Kenneth Alen, S.O. adviser, troit.&#13;
T mi e&#13;
T u e s d a y ,&#13;
J u n e&#13;
4 t h&#13;
" c a n e s d a y ,&#13;
J u n e&#13;
o t h&#13;
CORRECTION&#13;
wasn error&#13;
said he dia not "view it the re. Kenneth Lieberman, 32-6, and 8:30 Mhta 4 Eng. 2&#13;
Science Survev&#13;
its report that Me M. J. Walsh&#13;
s o l u t i o n as a partisan political Robert Rosenberg, 3-14, w o n t h e t o&#13;
Eng. 6&#13;
had threatened disciplinary action&#13;
w e h a v e a n obligation to Army and Navy Awards, respec-&#13;
10:00&#13;
respond on a humanitarian basis tively. Lieberman studied Teh"&#13;
against students refusing ot stand Tiny Tmi endorses all birect or ricrotoxin no Memory&#13;
101:5&#13;
Eng. 4&#13;
Int. Sci. 2&#13;
for the Pledge of Allegiance dur-&#13;
ing the April 5 assembly. Mr.&#13;
of the many fine&#13;
"To use the word 'political' -sdi Capabilities ni Planaria". Rosen.&#13;
11:45&#13;
N.S.5 B&#13;
Walsh made no su&#13;
editors deeply ch threat. The&#13;
Sadie Vrintz products tion," Mr. Allen said. "Since wel&#13;
feets o f Partial Presures o f Oxy-&#13;
regret this error.&#13;
S.S.6&#13;
King, we wanted ot show we wer&#13;
hwGotr o f Plants."&#13;
Mitchell Beaelm an. 2.27. was n&#13;
11:30&#13;
H.D.S.&#13;
Chem4&#13;
DRIVER EDUCATION NONE&#13;
phrases. B y passing this resolution,&#13;
first palce winner ni the xnoBr&#13;
Ph3ys&#13;
Approved by:&#13;
Mchlteli&#13;
• N.Y.S. Department of Education&#13;
Two new&#13;
received S.O. Kaplan, 31-, nad Aeln Salzberg.&#13;
cMisu&#13;
Chem 3&#13;
• N.Y.S. Motor VehicleBureau&#13;
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• Leading Insurance Companies supervised by&#13;
Eugene Falk&#13;
Third acepl awards went to M-ti&#13;
3:15&#13;
chel Tolles, Ku. Hovenver. 3-o&#13;
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN H.S.&#13;
ty adviser, of the Model Airplane&#13;
Barbara Rosenberg,&#13;
3-24, and Eric&#13;
горку, 3-15.&#13;
1734 WLILAIMSEROIGE RO, phone 79256 Pk. Ave). Bornk, N. .Y10161 Club.&#13;
REGENTS EXAMINATION SCHEDULE&#13;
APPLICATIONS BEING ACCEPTED FOR THE FAL TERM NOW Write or phone&#13;
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Time&#13;
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9:15-11:15&#13;
Begins Activities in Science&#13;
12:00- 3:00&#13;
COLLEGE-LEVEL COURSES&#13;
.F Lang.&#13;
2 yrs.&#13;
FOR HIGH SCHOOL JUNIORS AND SENIORS Aspira, a new club for Puerto 1961.&#13;
founded&#13;
ni&#13;
Rican students, held its first meet.&#13;
Time&#13;
Mon., June 17&#13;
AT THE NEW SCHOOL'S&#13;
ing, May 14. The m o m b o r g c h o s e "El Cont&#13;
9:15-12:15 English&#13;
Amer. Hist &amp; Chemistry&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
Acting president Gladys San- quistador" as a name for their&#13;
M o r l d c h r&#13;
tiago, 2-14, deseribed Aspira as a group. The club will sull be known&#13;
"private, non=brot&#13;
sa Aspira in the Dayli Buletin.&#13;
151-: 4:15 11th X.r Math&#13;
INSTITUTE FOR&#13;
designed to develop&#13;
Mrs. Dorothy Weiss is the fac.&#13;
9th yr. Math&#13;
potential in The Puerto&#13;
ulty adviser.&#13;
YOUNG ADULTS&#13;
Mr. Kenneth Allen, S.O. adviser,&#13;
UN 3-0671&#13;
Nineteen courses for high school juniors&#13;
and seniorsseeking introductory&#13;
s h i d t h e r e had been a science&#13;
PENROD'S&#13;
collegeworkinanatmosphereof&#13;
c h a p t e r o r a s p i r i b e v e r a l y e a r&#13;
ago. It is unnecessary, he said, for&#13;
Phoeni&#13;
x Laboratories&#13;
CARDS - TOYS - PARTY FAVORS&#13;
serious intellectual inquiry. Under-&#13;
graduate credit will be available&#13;
the club to reapply for an S.O&#13;
STATIONERY - REVIEW BOOKS&#13;
ollowing the student's graduation&#13;
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706 Lydig Avenue,&#13;
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&#13;
 Page Four&#13;
SCIENCESURVEY&#13;
Friday, May 31, 1968 Science Netmen Win Bronx-Manhattan Title Tennis Team Takes Crown&#13;
For 6th Time in 7 Seasons&#13;
Baseball Team Closes Season With 3-7 Record&#13;
By HOWARD SHAW&#13;
The Science tennis team, with a perfect 6-0 record, has won the&#13;
weak-hitting, weak-fi&#13;
elding&#13;
lided with&#13;
th&#13;
1968 Bronx-Manhattan championship.&#13;
e center fielder, and&#13;
Science baseball team has finished&#13;
Urrico came around to score.&#13;
The team swept four of its matches on the way ot its sixth title 15 1800 season With a disappoint&#13;
Selence added three more runs&#13;
ing 3-7 record.&#13;
The team&#13;
ni the seventh on singles by Mazel received R e h e r a l&#13;
and Hofman, and amighty center&#13;
B U L L E T I N&#13;
g o o d p i t c h i n g ,&#13;
day 2-0 wni&#13;
s a n i ht e o p e n i n g&#13;
fi e l d h o m e r u n b y C l e n d e n n i n . Gompers,&#13;
but&#13;
The hitting fell off again May Science's tennis team won its semi-final match May 27, defeat-&#13;
scored more than three runs o n l&#13;
10 as the Turks lost ot Monroe b) ing Tottenville 4-1&#13;
wtcei ducing the year.&#13;
a5-2 score,&#13;
Bernard opened with a 6-4, 6-3 triumph, and Diller followed by&#13;
Evehteu pitching wasof, how-&#13;
Paul Hoffman allowed the hard winning 6-0, 6-0. Fifer lost his match 1-6, 2-6. Saslow&#13;
ever, in octenco's 70 loss to Clin&#13;
hitting Eagles just three hits over man then clinched the victory, winning 6-4, 6-2. Silfen and Engel&#13;
on,t April 26.&#13;
the first five and two thirds in&#13;
also triumphed, 6-3, 8-6.&#13;
t h i inning, three&#13;
ninys&#13;
-&#13;
Science erors dna several other&#13;
However, the Turks managed A report on the finals, May 29 against Bayside, wil appear ni&#13;
ngdiflle&#13;
plays let in foun&#13;
only twohits all game, both their the next issue of 'Survey?&#13;
runs scoring on three errors by the&#13;
dah two hits in the&#13;
Monroe shortstop.&#13;
The racketmen showed efficiency and a diversified attack ni rout-&#13;
i n n i n g ,&#13;
o n e a f t e r&#13;
In their May 14 contest against ing Music &amp; Art 5-0, May .8&#13;
that, and&#13;
despeti&#13;
geting six walks,&#13;
Roosevelt, the Turks kept it close&#13;
In the first singles match, Andre Bernard overcame occasional&#13;
for five innings, then let up and lapses of control to 6-2. Larry Diller then crushed hsi op-&#13;
Lou&#13;
Maz,el injured in a n&#13;
lost, 6-1,&#13;
ponent, 6-0, 6-0, and Julian Fifer won handily, 6-0, 6-1. Both doubles starting&#13;
hibition&#13;
returned&#13;
In their onlyextra-inning game teams, Eric Saslow and Allen Friedman, and Michael Silten and Alan&#13;
fineup&#13;
Tori&#13;
the Clinton&#13;
of the year the Turks lostto Engel, shut out their foes 6-0, 6-0.&#13;
game. However, theteam lost ace&#13;
Dodge, 4-3, May 17.&#13;
Ditchen 300 Priceman who suf&#13;
Science&#13;
Scored first&#13;
the Taft provided stiffer competition for the tennis team May 9.&#13;
Bernard was forced to make a comeback, dropping his first tes&#13;
fered from&#13;
n dol blood blister&#13;
Baseball team&#13;
third inning, when Lionel Phillips and a new er iniury&#13;
captain Phil Clendennin tak&#13;
MERAR L O T&#13;
es&#13;
cut in game against tripled with a man on first base 4-6, then winning the next two 8-6, 10-8. The marathon match lasted&#13;
April 26 contest ot the Governors, 7-0.&#13;
two and one half hours, and was decided only atter Bernard Droughy ot 1-2 whti a 2.5nwi over Smith, Despite the protests of the&#13;
The Tukrs brought their record&#13;
Dodge took a onerun lead ni the fourth on a walk and twr his service under control. He clinched the match with a service ace Ap29.ril Science players and fans, and the&#13;
The Science hitters finally came errors, and added one more in the&#13;
o n t h e t i n a l p o m t The flist ehrt Smith baters fo obvious disappointment of even Morris.&#13;
to life May 7 ni an 8-2 romp over sixth on a pair of singles and a Fifer, after a streak of erratic play, rallied ot win 3-6, 6-2, 6-3. the game gott o starting pitcher several Evander players, the game sacrifice fly.&#13;
The other Scienceites found their opponents easier prey. Diller Paul Hmofan for a wali, a home&#13;
was stopped.&#13;
Mingione again walked ot open In the bottom of the seventh, and the two doubles teams all won 6-0, 6-0.&#13;
thegame, but this time catcher reliever Fred Wallach&#13;
Science's racketmen continued their winning ways May 10 against&#13;
run, and a line drive single.&#13;
Turk&#13;
w&#13;
ere&#13;
virtually&#13;
Hottimen&#13;
drove him in w i t h Pinch hitter Ralph Salvietti was Clinton.&#13;
Wallach Given a Ring&#13;
shackled May 3 as they lost et n o m e r u n over Crotona Field's safe on an error and stole second. Bernard faced a struggle ni every set, but held on ot win 7-5,&#13;
Taft, 6-0.&#13;
left field fence&#13;
4-6, 6-2. Diller overcame some early difficulty to triumph 6-2, 6-0. Coach Herbert Abend called&#13;
After giving up two first-inning&#13;
Starter Fred Wallach set down&#13;
Mazel Bounces&#13;
Serving trouble plagued Fifer, but eh recovered enough ot gain a 2-6, ni pitcher Fred Walach, Walach,&#13;
runs, Science starter Jerry Solo-&#13;
the first ten Morris&#13;
6-1, 7-5 victory. who had been brought up from&#13;
mon nitover&#13;
order. But he tired in the fourth&#13;
Mazel then bounced a single Saslow and Friedman, 6-1, 6-0, and Silfen and Engel, 6-2, 6-2, the junior varsity ot replace the&#13;
the next three frames. However,&#13;
over second base to drive in the and Morris tied the game on two&#13;
injured Friedman, retired the side&#13;
Scionceortorsorinorunsim&#13;
tying runs.&#13;
were hardly challenged.&#13;
singles, a walk, and a fielder's&#13;
However, ni the eighth, three The shutout string ended as the Turks defeated George Washington&#13;
on a double play and a strikeout.&#13;
the second.&#13;
choice.&#13;
Moanwhile Dom Minstone. who&#13;
walks and a sacrifice fly produced 4-1, May 15.&#13;
Wallach went on to finish the&#13;
the top of the sixth, Phil&#13;
the winning run for Dodge. Unable ot produce an effective attack, Bernard suffered his first game, giving up only two hits and&#13;
led off the game with a walk, was&#13;
Clendennin singled and stole sec-&#13;
the&#13;
the only science onserunner i n h e&#13;
season loss of the year, 5-7, 3-6. Diller followed with a 6-2, 6-0 rout. Fifer, striking out eight.&#13;
ondthenscoredonasingleby&#13;
May 20, losing a 12-4 fiasco to a hampered by a sore shoulder, still took his match with a pair of 6-1 Science tied the game as Roy&#13;
first five innings. The only Turk&#13;
relief pitcher Solomon. Roy Urrico&#13;
very ronkCoumoussouse Urrico walked with the bases full&#13;
Misin the w m e were seventh t&#13;
ONlowed drive t&#13;
Only two of the Columbus runs sets.TheSaslow-Friedmanteamwonconvincingly,6-2,6-2,whileSilfen in both the second and fourth ni-&#13;
ning singles by Lou Mazel and&#13;
right, As the fielder at were earned runs, the rest coming Paulottman.&#13;
and Engel chalked up an easy 6-2, 6-1 victory.&#13;
tempted to catch the ball, he col as aresult of errors.&#13;
In the fifth, after three walks&#13;
Revenge Is Bitter&#13;
had again loaded the bases for&#13;
Selence, Phil Clendennin lIned a&#13;
In a bitterly contested match, May 17, the tennis team avenged&#13;
to right, driving ni two&#13;
Marriers H i t H a r d Times&#13;
last year's loss ot Stuyvesant with a 3-2 victory. runs. A bunt, a walk, and another&#13;
Larry Diller clinched the win and assured the championship by bunt brought ni the final Turk&#13;
downing a very powerful opponent 6-3, 5-7, 6-4.&#13;
Before this, the team of Saslow and Friedman was unable to The game was called after six&#13;
In City-Wide, Dual Meets mount a consistent attack, and bowed 4-8, 6-3, 4-6. In the second innings d u e to a league-imposed&#13;
Science's mile relay team finish. had hoped for a better perfor- ners for Science were David Tash- doubles, Silfen and Engel trounced their opposition 8-6, 6-1. curfew, which prohibits any in.&#13;
edsecondinnfieldofeightat&#13;
mance, but fourth place in the 2.&#13;
man, 11:53.6 in the two mile run, In singles contests, André Bernard lost to an aggressive Stuyve- ning from starting after 5:45&#13;
the New York Relays, April 27.&#13;
mile relay was the best the Turks&#13;
sant player, 1-6, 3-6, but Julian Fifer breezed to a 6-3, 6-2 triumph. In a May 1 contest, the curfew&#13;
The team ran n 3:44.9 mile. the&#13;
could do.&#13;
and the 880&#13;
relay team of Adel. TheracketmenclosedouttheseasonMay20bydowningColum- workedduanstheunks.asthey&#13;
track team's best showing at the&#13;
The Turks finished their regular&#13;
Sebag.&#13;
bus 5-0.&#13;
droppeda4-3decisionot Evander.&#13;
running the&#13;
dual-meet season with a 1-3 record.&#13;
man.&#13;
The Saslow-Friedman team bounced back from its Stuyvesant&#13;
Science, trailing 4-1 a n e r&#13;
third leg, "broke novice" by win-&#13;
Competing against&#13;
The&#13;
Turks&#13;
battled&#13;
t w o teams loss to win 6-0, 6-1. Silfen and Engel battled ot a 7-5, 6-4 triumph.&#13;
innings, was able ot cut the lead&#13;
ning his nirst medu&#13;
April&#13;
25, Science dominated the&#13;
simultaneousl&#13;
y&#13;
May&#13;
l os i n g t o Bernard took his singles match 6-3, 6-), and Diller won easty&#13;
to one run by the sixth&#13;
The squad managed only three&#13;
running, but scored only six points&#13;
Taft 621⁄2-221⁄2, and beating Mor- 6-3, 6-0. Fifer lost his first set 3-6, but came back to complete the&#13;
Then, as Evander batted ni the&#13;
the&#13;
in the field events, and lost the&#13;
Tls 691⁄2-221⁄2.&#13;
sweep 8-6, 6-1.&#13;
bottom&#13;
of the&#13;
sixth, 5:40&#13;
came,&#13;
shipsMay 14. Coach Louis Heitner&#13;
meet 54-52.&#13;
Against the understaffed Morris Lenny Adelson (54.9), Jerry&#13;
team, Science won every running Sebag (56.6), and Steve Zelner&#13;
event except the 100-yard dash. Gunars Lucans, however, w a s Lower Left Hand Corner&#13;
(59.6) took first, second, and third&#13;
places in the 440-yard dash.&#13;
the only individual winner against Harold Schwenn won the 20 Taft, edging out the opposition in w i t h a 2 4 . 8 c l o c k i n g . O t h e r w i the 880 with a time of 2:07.5. Destroying An Image&#13;
Golfers Win 5 Straight Science's golf team has gotten tinal match of the vear t oClin of to a strong start, winning its ton, 31⁄2-11⁄2. This season, for the Charles Silkowitz first five matches of the 1968 first time ever, the Turks swept a match from Clinton, 5-0.&#13;
season.&#13;
Playing May 6at Van Cortlandt, The linksm&#13;
en opened the season&#13;
Spiwack took his opponent in the Since this school's inception 29 years ago, generations of&#13;
This "bad" image led to demands by other schools that&#13;
against Monroe, April 29 at Van&#13;
minimum live holes John Latel- Scienceites have been ca&#13;
refully cultivating an image that rivals&#13;
the programs at Scie&#13;
nce&#13;
be discontinued.&#13;
"Break up Bronx&#13;
The Turks took la, substituting for Kator3100 the creations of Madison Avenue for mass appeal.&#13;
Science!" became a favorite chant of rival cheerleaders.&#13;
the contest 31⁄2-11⁄2. Lance Gordon each w o n in six They have tried to foster the image that Scienceites are&#13;
It is quite obvious that there is asinister plot here. Per-&#13;
Saience recordedits first shut moles.&#13;
all brains but no brawn.&#13;
haps it is the last gasp of a vengeful Board which wants to&#13;
out of the yearMay 3, as&#13;
The Turks met Roosevelt at Pel T h e v a r i o u s m e d i a p i c k e d up t h i s s t e r e o t y p e a n d&#13;
s e e u s d e s t r o y e d b e f o r e i t t o o g o e s . B u t I w i l l n o t a c c u s e t h e m . g o l f e r s t o o n e d E v a n d e r o n t h e&#13;
h a m B a y P a r k M a y 1 0 , a n d w o n ported the achievements accordingly: high academic and low&#13;
And that brings us to the present situation, which is very Split Rock course.&#13;
4-1.&#13;
The third sweep of the season athletic accomplishments were taken for granted.&#13;
joyousindeed.ActualproofthatScienceites arenolonger tothe5-0score wereEdRosen physicallyinferiorhascometomyattentionthroughtheread-&#13;
Dave Spiwack,&#13;
came May 13 against Taft at Van The Scienceite's physical appearance of the past, char-&#13;
Dave Pilossoph,&#13;
and&#13;
Cortlandt. This is the second year acterized by thick glasses, baggy pants, and an overstuffed&#13;
ing of Survey's sports page. (Yes, I really do read it.)&#13;
Lance Gordon.&#13;
in a row that the linksmen have briefcase,&#13;
did nothing to discourage those of th&#13;
e public at&#13;
The&#13;
Scienc&#13;
e basketball team has advanced to the divisional&#13;
Last year's linksmen los&#13;
tt&#13;
heir&#13;
shuto u ta&#13;
large who believed in this image. However, the increasing&#13;
playoffs two years in a row. The bowling team won its divi-&#13;
popularity of contact lenses, the recent rule change that per-&#13;
sional championship. The soccer team won more games than&#13;
mits the wearing of jeans, and the discontinuation o f&#13;
the&#13;
W a l l m e&#13;
n H a v e W o e s production of the green and gold "Science fag-bags" are help-&#13;
it lost. so, some skeptics dismissed these remarkable ac-&#13;
Even&#13;
After losing two close matches, the Science handball team finally ing to change the outsider's concept of us.&#13;
complishments as mere flukes. But the events of the Tenth&#13;
of May on the tennis courts at the Oval Park are enough to&#13;
won its first of the year May 2.&#13;
More thananything else, though, the Turks' historyof&#13;
de oulias&#13;
stroy these diehards' delusions.&#13;
The ice-breaker was a 5-0 sweep ag , Marty Rosenberg, and ainst Roose&#13;
velt. Steve Lott failure i n varsity athletic competition promoted our institu-&#13;
tion's image. For years, everybody had known Science was not&#13;
It doubles teams Joe Caruso and Dona wastheretheSciencetennisteamdefeatedtheircoun- openedwitha21-2victory.WillyNlderRoth,andNatKestenmanand a n athletic powerhouse. And those few who hadn't known&#13;
terparts from De Witt Clinton five matches to none. A shutout!&#13;
Len Wolmanalso won&#13;
surely guessed it.&#13;
Larry Diller and the first and second doubles squads dis- The wallmen opened against Taft April 25. Lott scored a 21-0 rout Also, our "loser's image" had a bad connotation for most&#13;
posed of their opposition and cruel efficiency. Tired André a n d Rosenberg w o n 21-18.&#13;
the teamlost3-2whenCarusoandRothwereedged outsiders. I t i s part of this nation's heritage that "the good&#13;
Bernard and sleepy JulianFifergavetheircompetitiona&#13;
However,&#13;
g u y s a l w a y s w i n i n t h e e n d . " S o w h e n we l o s t , w e s m a r t g u y s&#13;
thrillby prolongingtheirmatchestothreesets.&#13;
20-&#13;
21 after a long, hard-fought strugele.&#13;
were equated with t&#13;
hebadguysintheinf&#13;
antile&#13;
minds ofthe&#13;
S&#13;
o&#13;
,i&#13;
n onematch,themythsofClintonsuperiority and&#13;
TheTurkslosta3-2contesttoDodgeApril30.&#13;
Lott came through with another shutout and Rosenberg won 21-15, victors. The result was, of course, vicious anti-intellectualism,&#13;
Science inferiority were shattered.&#13;
with brutal insults like "See! Ya ain't so hot after all, ya bad-&#13;
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