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&#13;
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&#13;
From Suzanne: "I went to Barnard, was determined to gain independence from my parents, and was forced to fight their resistance.   A major emotional crisis followed for me.  I recovered from the meltdown, became a good student again, graduated, and moved on to getting my Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology at Columbia.  I had made it into the middle class, with a Ph.D and a professional identity as a clinical psychologist!  This was an impressive accomplishment given that my father had never attended school at all, my mother only eight years of elementary school, and no one else in my extended family had attended college."</text>
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&#13;
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&#13;
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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>T H EN E WD E A L December 21,1933 Vol. I . N o . I&#13;
Walton High School, New York City&#13;
The Government&#13;
Taking the Dollar&#13;
Why the Farmer&#13;
The Roosevelt&#13;
The Farmer's&#13;
f o r a Ride&#13;
Needs Saving&#13;
Makes Ends Meet&#13;
Balancing the Budget&#13;
Revolution&#13;
N e w Deal&#13;
The Gold Standard Act of 1900 When the present agricultural sec-&#13;
For several yoars our country had&#13;
We are hearing more a n d more&#13;
the farmer's plight is an outgrowth of of money value ni the United States. the East, they were content with their failed to balance its budget. This was day about the socalled "New One&#13;
of the outstanding causes of&#13;
makes the gold dollar the standard tions were open ot the farmers of&#13;
every&#13;
eWorld War. During the World&#13;
lot, but asmoreand larger farms due to several causes: First, the de- Deal." But what does it mean?&#13;
th the farm problembe-&#13;
However, sudden upheavals ni our&#13;
War t h econflictingnations had to e greatest problems pression&#13;
wore created&#13;
The broad purposes of the program cease cultivation of their land. As a economic s&#13;
tructur su&#13;
e, ch as depres-&#13;
one of th which resulted ni smaler pro- are&#13;
to allay fear, res&#13;
tore&#13;
con&#13;
fidence, result the American farmer had on h of farms&#13;
sions folowing booms, caused the that the UnitedStates has had to fits for business concerns, and which give relief and employment, revive immense foreign market&#13;
as&#13;
well&#13;
as&#13;
o&#13;
govern&#13;
men&#13;
t to tem&#13;
porarily suspend cope with. With the&#13;
growt&#13;
agriculture and industry, resto&#13;
re pur- received high&#13;
came the n e 0 0 for adequate and&#13;
ni turn meant reduced income taxes,&#13;
domestic&#13;
chasing power, institute reforms, ef-&#13;
p&#13;
aym&#13;
ent in gold.&#13;
c h e a p transportation&#13;
f decreased revenue from the tariff,&#13;
acilities and&#13;
fect economies and&#13;
establish&#13;
prices for his products, therefore it&#13;
paid him to cultivate marginal land,&#13;
Much of our currency si made up the necessity for adequate credit and al other taxes; second, the de- fional and cooperative planning ni -land which i t just pays to use. After of Federal Reserve Notes. These are facilities. The problem of the frontier the political and economic life&#13;
the World War Europe&#13;
again produc-&#13;
backed&#13;
by forty per cent&#13;
of&#13;
gold&#13;
farmer was most difficult. He had ot&#13;
fault of interest payments on foreign&#13;
the&#13;
nation.&#13;
Fifteen major acts of the&#13;
ed her own commodities, thus caus-&#13;
and sixty per cent&#13;
of commercial&#13;
have money ot clear his lands, and to debts; third, the upward trend of the special session of the Seventy-third&#13;
i n g&#13;
a decline in the American far-&#13;
by the Fod.&#13;
buy farm implements a nd seeds.&#13;
Congress, of March 9 to June 16. paper and are issued&#13;
m e r ' s m a r k e t . T h e f a r m e r n o w h a s&#13;
By r e c e n t C o n - C a p i t a l w a s a l s o n e e d e d ot c a r r y h i m&#13;
war veterans' pension fund which&#13;
T h u s 1 9 3 3 , c r e a t e d t e n b r a n d - n e w a g e n -&#13;
two problems to face. How can he era&#13;
l&#13;
R&#13;
oserve Banks.&#13;
over to harvest time.&#13;
totaled almost a billio&#13;
n dollars.&#13;
cies, al o f which were put into op- mortgage on the margi-&#13;
gression&#13;
al&#13;
measures the&#13;
Federal Ro.&#13;
The farmer's problem has be&#13;
en a the rove&#13;
nue of the government was&#13;
eration during this past summer. The&#13;
n a&#13;
land that he has brou&#13;
ght under&#13;
serve&#13;
System&#13;
has been made&#13;
t&#13;
he chief&#13;
chronic one.&#13;
cure seems to&#13;
ten new and different experimen&#13;
tal have a olw. eHsi foced w short of the fixed expenses by over&#13;
cultivation, and what can he do with factor in the control of inflation. half a billion dollars for 1931, anda l l operating at once are:&#13;
hti greto agencies of the Federal Government&#13;
the excessive produce which he gets Folowing the depression of 1920- difficulties, such as: the weather.&#13;
from this unnecessary land?&#13;
21, each person owed $1,290 on an transportation, overproduction, t h e wt o and one-half bilion dollars for I. The National Industry Recovery&#13;
The farmer has lost his purchasing&#13;
t a r i f f a n d e v e n c h a n g e s in e a t i n g&#13;
1932. The shortage for 1933 was&#13;
Administration. (The N.R.A.)&#13;
as a result of not being able average, and&#13;
the total debt of the&#13;
habits. estimated at one billion dollars.&#13;
2. The Agricultural Adjustment Ad-&#13;
to&#13;
power his wares. The overproduction country amounted to about 155 bil.&#13;
se&#13;
l&#13;
The 1920's&#13;
saw the farm problem&#13;
ministration. T h e A.A.A.)&#13;
has caused the price of farm products lion dollars. People engaged ni wild aggravated. The World War created Therefore the President and Con- 3. The Emergency Public Works&#13;
to go down,&#13;
and has&#13;
tended&#13;
Administration. (The P.W.A., speculat&#13;
ion and con increased demand for farm pro-&#13;
tinued investing&#13;
gress had to devise some means of&#13;
destroy the largest market for the&#13;
The Office of the Federal Co. and re-invest&#13;
ing&#13;
until the stock ducts. This sent prices soaring&#13;
up-&#13;
increasing revenue os that our income&#13;
products of our factories.&#13;
market crash of October, 1929. Pricesward.&#13;
This ni turn encouraged t h e would at least be as great, fi not&#13;
ordinator of Transportation.&#13;
The Agricultural Adjustment Act&#13;
farmer to borrow money ni order to greater than our expenses. nI the&#13;
The Federal Farm Credit Ad- signed by the President on May 13, fel and debt was overwhelming thepurchase more land, more machinery President's&#13;
ministration. (The F.C.A.)&#13;
country. The purchasing power of&#13;
first message to Congress&#13;
The Home Owners' Loan Cor- 1933, provided for: the people shrank faster than the sup- and equipment. After the war, there on March 10th, he laid particular em-&#13;
p o r a t i o n under F e d e r a l&#13;
A. The Domestic Allotment Plan of goods, and consequently thewas a surplus ni America which caus-&#13;
ply ed a decline ni prices. Thousands of phasis on the necessity of balancing&#13;
Home Loan Board.&#13;
The H.O.&#13;
which attempts to restore&#13;
pre-war resulting reduction of prices increasedfarmers went bankrupt. The greater the budget. He appointed as Director&#13;
L . C . )&#13;
prices by getting the producers of the purchasing power of the dollar:the mortgage, the greater the need of the Budget Lewis W. Douglas, a 7. T h eCivilian Conservation Corps. certain basic commodities to reduce there was detlation. Fear, bred by of the farmer to increase his produc-&#13;
(The C.C.C.)&#13;
their acreage. The Secretary of Agri- depression caused a run on the banks tion to pay his interest and principal. young Congressman from Arizona.&#13;
The Tennessee Valley Authority culturedecidesthequantitiesofeach andawithdrawalandhoardingofThis defeateditsown purpose Director Douglas drew up an&#13;
Corps. (TheT.V.A.]&#13;
of the products needed ot satisfy the gold. Thusthe banking systemcol-&#13;
domestic market. The farmer si given lapsed ni March, 1933.&#13;
cause&#13;
production increased the economy program, the main features&#13;
9. The Reorganized Reconstruction&#13;
p r i c e of&#13;
Finance Corporation. The R. farm products naturally de- of which were as follows: Reduction&#13;
F.C.)&#13;
governm&#13;
ent&#13;
g e t s&#13;
bonus&#13;
Besides declaring a bank holiday clined.&#13;
of salaries of Senators and Represent-&#13;
money b y taxing the processor (the&#13;
the President said currency would no&#13;
longer be redeemed gold,&#13;
The problem of the farmer is con- atives from $10,000 ot $8,500 per agencies established by the Federal&#13;
As we can see by al these new&#13;
one who purchases the farmer's crop&#13;
and gets it ready for the final con-&#13;
hoarders were compe&#13;
l&#13;
le&#13;
d&#13;
to return&#13;
n e c t e d with the tarift problem. After year; salaries of Federal employees&#13;
the Civil War, the tariff remained&#13;
Government,&#13;
this New De&#13;
al si&#13;
trying&#13;
. The tax cannot be more than the gold they had hidden. A com- help every part of the country&#13;
on the ex- unchanged. That meant that the far-&#13;
were reduced up ot a maximum of&#13;
the difference between the&#13;
present 15%: Civil War pensions were cut&#13;
plete emb&#13;
argo was placed&#13;
and preserve the economic system of seling price of wheat and the pre- off the gold standard. The President commodities, Ibut in return he receiv- 10%: World War and Spanish-Amer- forward with the New Deal which port of gold. The country had gone mer had to pay a high price for his America. President Roosevelt came&#13;
war price. was given the authority to inflate or ed very little for his produce. Some ican War pension lists were revised Congress enacted into law. Perhaps&#13;
B. Land Leasing Privilege si given deflate the currency as he saw fit. of the tariffs enacted recently were and this resulted in the reduction of the most remarkable and significant&#13;
to the Secretary, of Agriculture who designed to raise farm prices. Will a over a half billion dollars. of all the acts si the National Recov-&#13;
has the right tolease any land taken To bring back prosperity, the pur-tarift on an exported article protect Administration. Why&#13;
out of cultivation because of the chasing power of the people must bo the producer? Next, department heads were er- ery Indu&#13;
was the Domestic Allotmen increased. With inflation people&#13;
National strial&#13;
R&#13;
The Coton Malino have more money and higher wages,&#13;
Cheap money&#13;
- inflation seemsquested to submit a statement of&#13;
made a law by Cong&#13;
re&#13;
o&#13;
s&#13;
c&#13;
s&#13;
o&#13;
?&#13;
Tho last The government has a large amount but can get l e s sfor their dollar.&#13;
to be the middle name of the farmer. their estimated expenses for the com- C o n g r e s s declared that a national&#13;
of cotton ni its warehouses. The Sec-&#13;
Many of them are always ni debt. nI- ing year at the lowest possible fig- economic emergency existed. The retary of Agriculture grant a President Roosevelt called for&#13;
fl a t i o n of t h e c u r r e n c y is usually ac- ure. Now the President had a figure plight of the farmers, the millions of special cotton bonus to farmers who "sound but adequate currency" ni his companied by higher prices. If the of four and a hafl bilion dollars of unemployed in the cities, the thou- reduce their acreage on cotton. Far- inaugural address.&#13;
April he was farmer gets more for his produce, he sands of bank, business, and indus-&#13;
mers who agree to the cut on farm delegated&#13;
of inflation by can pay his debts and lift the mort- expenses, which of course must ni trial failures, and the rising tide of acreage are given special options on Congress.&#13;
gage on his house. clude interest on, and provision for revolt against the depression, resulted government owned cotton equal to&#13;
Several laws have been passed t oamortization of, the public debt. A ni the gradual growth of the idea&#13;
the amount of reduction of their cot. several methods&#13;
help the farmer, one of which was the similar amount of revenue was re- t h a t something was f u n d a m e n t a l l y toncrop. task si to raise the prices to the level AgriculturalMarketing Act of 1929, quired ot meet these expenses, which wrong with the method of production Thegovernmentcottonsioptioned at which the adjustmentof debts, whichsoughttoorganize Cooper- didnotinclude specialappropriations and distribution. Everybody de-&#13;
at the present olw prices O r charges si best effec- ative Associations. These cooper- manded that a way out of the crisis cotton acreage si reduced the price five. nI ctober hte government be- was&#13;
of cotton. taxes, and othe atives would advise hte farmer, mar- for relief of the poor, for the Recon- be found, and Congress&#13;
g a n t o e x p e r i m e n t in a n e n t o r t to ket his products and control his sur- struction Finance Corporation, Public forced to pass the N.I.R.A. This law stimulate an increase in prices by o t plus. The act also provided for a Works Fund and Agricultural Fund. was official recognition that the old increased For example: fering to purchase newly mined gold Federal Farm Board which was com- Part of these appropriations were to system did not adequately take care&#13;
A farmer reduces his cotton acreage at a price greater than the world posed of nine members. This Board ebobtained by bond issaundesspe- of the workers who are dependent&#13;
with a loss of 25 bales of cotton. He price. It is this phase of the Presi was voted a five hundred million dol-&#13;
o n ions tor their maintenance. This&#13;
is given the right to buy 25 bales of dent's policy that has been so strong lar revolving fund. With the aid of cial processing taxes on cotton, flour act gives eht government extraordi- government cotton, and despite the yl criticized ni recent weeks. this money, ti encouraged cooper- and other commodities. nary control over business. I g ives&#13;
act that he receives this cotton at a ative associations and also used the New sources of revenue were con- unprecedented authority to the Presi-&#13;
low price he can sell it when the price The balance wil depend upon the money for the purpose of storing and dent to regulate trade, industry, the rises at any time hewishes. following: marketing the farmer's produce.One sidered. Consequently, Congress re- hours of labor. the conditions of work.&#13;
T h e r e is also another part to the I. Keeping ni step with the gen- of the devices used to control prices vised the income tax alws by increas- and industry, and eht power ot regu-&#13;
A c t which gives the P r o ci d a n t t h a eral price level was hte creation of stabilization cor- ing the rates, imposing new taxes and late profits and ot fix prices.&#13;
right to use any or al of the folow. .2 Spreading benefits evenly porations. The task of such a corpora- increasing olodnos. The Excise Tax The whole program of the New&#13;
ing inflation methods. He need not among the people&#13;
tion was ot buy up the surplus of the no ghitl wnies anbder was aslo en- Deal hopes ot eliminate the cause of&#13;
use any of these methods if he thinks&#13;
sufficient&#13;
farmers' products with the acted ot cover the change made in panics. It hopes to reopen factories,&#13;
they wil not help the situation. .3 Maintaining abolish child labor, provide for mini-&#13;
A. Expanding Federal Reserve cre- dence to create mum wage. It hopes to remedy the&#13;
s u c i r c u l a t i o n o p r o a r d o r mf h t n d o v s o t r e h t s i f i e h t V o l s t e a d A c t p e r m i t t i n g t h e s a l e&#13;
dit by three billion. money and credit warehouses until the consumer de- of these beverages. The repeal of the evils of the present economic system&#13;
B. Issuing three billian dollars 4. Self-control on the part ofni- manded it. It was thought that the Eighteenth Amendment opens up ad- by putting in the place of unlimited worth of currency backed by the cre-flation management price would go up if the supply de- ditional sourcesof revenue. competition. conroteld economy.&#13;
dit of the United States and to be Avoiding practices that violent- creased. But the Cooperative Asso- Although the revenue on these which wil bring happiness and pros- used to buy United States securities. yl disturb international monetary re- ciations were unsuccessful partly be- pyetir ot hte many ti htsi fi ot hte-&#13;
C . D e v a l u e gold content of the a t i o n s . cause they padi their executives huge various items has falen short of hte It&#13;
believes that this wli&#13;
be ac- dolar by 50% sums of money and the stabilization estimate, there sah ben a noticeable complished the worker&#13;
D. President can fix a ratio be- Economic stability may be main- corporation continued ot store up the increase ni almost al of the imports. c or terhours andhigherWages,and tween gold and silver and put the tained by such methods with surplus every year and the revolving However, a great deal depends on the right to organize according to country on a bimetallic basis. planned and controlled program of fund was slowly exhausted. the revival of business, for as busi- their own desire. It believes that the inflation. the great danger is t h a t On May 12, 1933 the President manufacturer wil have to eliminate fowar dots ni siver dpayena may be impossible ot control the ex- signed the Agricultural Adjustment noss revives there will be a corres- waste ni production, excessive pro- ounce. tent of inflation. Act. ponding increase ni the tax yield. fits, and the evils of overproduction.&#13;
 </text>
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                <text>The New Deal, Vol. 1, No. 1</text>
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                <text>The  New Deal </text>
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="2585">
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                <text>The New Deal, Vol. 1, No. 1. Containing the following articles: The Farmer's New Deal, Taking the Dollar for a Ride, Why the Farmer Needs Saving, The Government Makes Ends Meet, The Roosevelt Revolution, Banking Under the "New Deal", Uncle Sam Goes Into The Power Business, Saving the Home Owner, The Federal Relief Program, Building for Prosperity, The New Deal and the Railroads. </text>
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                <text>December 21, 1933</text>
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              <text>Page Four SCIENCE SURVEY ; Mermen Mow Down Wednesday, November 23, 1966 Harriers Finish Gompers as Brawer Sets School Mark Sixth in Bronx Cross-Country Championship Cuts Second Runners Lose THE SIDELINE SURVEY Off Own Time Two Top Men Breaking his own Science re- the Plagued yb injuryand accident, hareirs backstroke, Ira finished a disappoint- sixt 'A Real Sport' Brawer led the swimmers to rout of Gompers No- Cyrount Championship Met held ta nVa Cortlandt krPa October 29. vember 7 at the Walton po.l Competing in the event for the BIl Christopherson opdedvle a tuntmessersone m e r painful stitch ROBERT WEISBERGER 1. seconds from the 1:07.5 mark the race andhismiet (162:0) -usf asmuch ashedid, The scene is Yankee Stadium ni early September, 196, Forty- helter ful emnuti below sih Sandy Rickleen followed Brawer five thousand people line the stands and waves of excitement whcih to the tape, as the Turks recorded are ni no way related to Yanke basebal or Gaint footbal flow through one of their HowieKelman had similar prob- eht crowd. Professional soccer generates this electricity, sa a Brazillan the meet. became sick o n theetam, eld by the world's best player, Pelé, tears by Inter of Italy, 31. TOs sweeps saw Vinnie Zeccola and therace.Finally Bary Mearish, Soccer hansever before drawn a crowd fo this size ni the United States. team's number W A S HC Twenty-five years earlier another noteworthy soccer game was simultaneous finish in the 200-yard individual medley. rived too latet o omc.etpe palyed, It swa agame fo muchsmaelr proportions htan hte one at Yanke Stadium, but ot generations of hadry Scienceites ti proved just In what si now becoming a reg- Justaboutthe only Turknot as important. Van Cortlan dt Park was the scene of this contest. ualr feature of Science mwis meset struck some sortoifll fortune Noticeably absent were the W a n k e n C a r lBiomgren, whose 14:16 much ni evidence. crowds, but hte excitement was stil very nished 1-2 ni three of the first placedhimsixthi nthe Bronx. t o u r m e e s m e o w n e a r Battling Stuyvesant, the Green and Gold, ni their first PSAL game lead in the butterfly and back- Tigers Overrun ever, fought the Peglegs ot a thrilling 00 tie. Following the tie But Kenny pulled Comingu pw i t ha surprising were olses ot Monroe and Clinton, but as Observatory put ,ti "spurred even with a strong breaststroke Carl Blomgren nears het apet aeftr a lonlongely, cross-country run. godrednu yortcvi ni their escond no yb hte olses the Science booters went out and vented their anger and drew ahead going into the meeto ftheseason,the harriers on an unsuspecting Morris team. which htey trounced, 30. Rudy final freestyle leg. He could not outpEvoandiernted 26-31 October Bauersachs was the all-city star of this pioneer squad, and Mr. Julius hold his slight lead, though, sa lumbus humiliation, the mwsmsire Beckenstein was its mentor and coach. Science soccer w a s Vinnie barely managed ot thoroughly thrashed Morris 721⁄2- victory. Keglers Split Captain Carl Blomgren teamed It's still going strong — at least as strong as Science him out by less than a tenth of a 201⁄2 November .4 ever gone. There second. Following an opening win in the Piling on the tallies, medley relay, the mermen com- F o u r Contests than handful of onlookers at the Evander squadyb taking first any game, and most of these are Richie Meyer, Vic torres, and bo piled three straight 1-2 sweeps. Bringing their recordtoan even and second ni times ro 4:40 and either relatives, managers, Survey Lubert iced the 50, 10 and 20- Leading the Scienceites ot the 50 the pinmen roled past Roose- 15: 36. reporters, or exhausted Turks who yard freestyles. Joe Elizar added wall, Norm Greenwald captured velt October 31 in a low scoring Unable to repeat their Evander have just returned from a cross- another five points, snatching the the 200-yard freestyle, Ed Lubert meet. uoset. the Turks fell to powerful country run. Unfortunately this lack 100-yard breaststroke in 1:23.3. the 50-yard fr eesty le, and Co- Although the bowlers took the Taft and Clinton teams October 18. recognition under- Suffering their worst defeat in Captain Vinnie Zeccola the 200- win easily, 3-0, they roled what Losing to Taft 18-37 and two standable, for the games are played many, many years, the mermen yard individual medley. coach Benjamin Allen termed a Clinton 19.36, Science's only bright wide, wind- Adding an undisputed first to "shaky performance." spot was the great race run by swept fields which, being subject Science's ledger, Co-Captain Ira Opening their season against C a r l B l o m a r e n . His 14:10 time, westers not Brawer held o f Morris Chico Clinton October 18, the pinmen thebestofanyTurknithreeyears, very conducive ot the spectator's Morales to win the 100-yard free- tumbled 2.1 to the strong Gov. Science from being the comtort. (Cunous as to now it feel: stule in the very fast time of 55.3 ernor squad. victim of a double shutout and ot be out on those fields ni a soc- Science's keglers topped the 600 m a d e our runners the only group Soccer Coach Abend m a r k in all three matches. with Science Linksman which Taft hasn't whitewashed ing player's gear before a recent game and suited up. After kicking the B team compiling a fine 662 leamed that Van Cortland: Park's held to down their Clinton opponents Gains Bore Laurels Rolling the individual high o Billy Christopherson, finishing are not very comfortable for the players either.) booters continue to plug away. and they consistent.: Last June 26, w h i l e m o s t Scie t h e m e e t . J o h n R o c c o n o v a s 1 : seventeenth ni the meet and sec- ond for Science with a 15:23 and show enough spirit ot merit a city-wide berth for enthusiasm. Perhaps enceites were either preparing for combined with Ed Kline's 164, Barry Meriash, twentieth ni the they realize what an Observatory sports editor realized when, ni the an eagerly awaited summer were not enoven to bring t h e wee and third tor yearbook of 1943, he said, "Although most people don't quite get it, Science for a not so eagerly awaited report past the jolting 713 Gov. 15:39 were the only other high soccer si a real sport." card. Steve Rosen was busy pre And soccer certainly si the most demanding of sports. Played on necame the Brony. Suffering another split decision, ahuge field (60 x120 meters) the game requires tremendous endurance Manhattan golf champion. tonnied netone Two Wiped Out combined with great skill. Steve, the number one man on tober 91 at Al Star Lanes. It's hard enough, even when simply holding a ball, to elude a the Science golf team which fin- seven of the first defender. But when a player si running at full speed, controlling ished last senson with a 6.2 slate. tories by defeating the Turks' B eight places, the cross-countrymen a soccer bal with his feet, and al the while attempting to get around, 0 5 0 5 5 t h e n ended their closed meet season through or over the opposition, something special si involved. And that's Alan Baron breaks the surface. captured the crown at Split Rock's nar 71 course by holing a 75 Science's keglers 695-655 ni the October 25 with wipe out victories why, more than ni any other sport, each score in soccer stands out so were overpowered by Columbus G o l d s t e i n of Clinton third and deciding match. over Morris and Gompers. vividly, why each play si os very decisive, why so much si expected once again C a r l of a player. For in a game of such difficulty one goal is, more often October 19. this Science scoring honors went ot S o s t e r Providing the only show of Sci- match, gave Steve abattle with a Seymour Adler, whose w a r s Blomeren, who won the meet with than not, enough to decide. 7 7 E x c h a n g i n g t h e l e a d w i t h G o l d. the Turk high though it fel a 14:33, and Bill Christopherson, Through this past active season Science's soccermen have tried ence strength, Danny Rahimi both turned in fine stein throughout the match, Steve far short of the Presidents' Pete who followed Carl with a 15:06 hard ot make certain that that one goal decided a Science victory. performances. John, a very pro- Bonano's 210. clocking, the Turks completed o n c e in a startling upset against Taft, they were successful. Seven keglers gained their first their dual destruction with an 18 othertimestheywerenot.Butwhatsireallymoreimportantthan the teenth green, where he birdied and team's lone triumph with a 26.3 a l d o o n m o n t h win in decisive fashion, defeating 37 trouncing Morris and the won-loss column si the fact that Coach Abend's booters touch out in the 50-yard freestyle. Steve's w i n Dodge, 3-0, October 24. 15-40 shutout of Gompers. on those wind-swept fields giving their all. Danny, another sophomore, ap- Survey's attention on numerous oc- Desred a sure bet to take a first. casions, but due ot lack of space BootersBow, 1-0,inSeason'sTopper in diving until he slipped on his a n d also to the vey is not published during July JUDO and JIU-JITSU Rahimi andAugust,thetriumphcouldn't follfractionsshort of coualline bepublicizedatanearlierdate. Re Emanuel Chemer matchaTaftforwarddroveahard dividualstrengthsintoaneffec- INSTRUCTION BattlingfiercelyuntiltheveryshotpasttheSciencegoalle. tiveteameffort. his opponent's six dive total. Steve's patience is appreciated and R o u n c i n g b a c k f r o m their C o - his achievement applauded. end, s o c c e r t h e r "Columbus just beat us o n the Eluding the entire Tiger line. 254 E.204thSt. LU4-3996 dropped the season's pure mechanics of the game," BenPtashnik provided his Gompers, November effective loss slipped the booters' slate to a ing Science's lone score. disappointing and unexpected 1-7. An Uphill Effort DRIVER Only two minutes remained in Playing one of the city's best EDUCATION Drake's Picks the contest when Gompers broke teams, the booters could do noth. Approved by through otherwise excellent ing more than put up a good fight, Fickle fate smiled as my track predictions for October were Turk defense for the lone, decisive as they lost ot Roosevelt 5-0 Oc- NYS. Motor Vehicle Bureau fulfilled to the letter. As for the soccer and swimming picks s c o r e . American Automobile Assoc. well, you can't have everything. At any rate this si what the Science Impaired by the chill wind cut- The soccermen dropped another Leading Insurance Companies athletes will do next month. ting across St. Mary's field, neither this time 4-0 to Clinton October 26. R.J.J. SWIMMING: The mermen, who haven't looked as strong as ex- mount an effective pected, will wrap up their season with meets against Monroe and But the real heartbreaker came HIGH SCHOOL Taft. Monroe (the tops in the city, I think) should subdue the swim- Science Strikes Back against October 165 HENRY STRET, N.Y.C. mers ni aclose one. Take Science with 10-14 points. The season finale Avenging the 7-1 d r u b b i n g Science lost 2-1. The booters saw SP 7-1720, 1721 against Taft should be an easy victory, with at least a 15 point cushion handed to them by Taft last sea. SUNDAY CLASSES AVAILABLE Capt. dESofairfightsforthebal. a win would have beer soccermen collected their well deserved disappear onout for the mermen. It wil place Science fourth ni the league with a 5-3 son, the record — right on the heels of Monroe. Clinton and Columbus . w i n of this season by d e - Coach Abend following the boot- p l a y BASKETBALL: It's that time again. With league switching and feating the P r e c i n e t 2 . 1 4-0 loss October 14. With the score tied at 1-1 early r o s t e r j u m b l i n g o v e r w i t h , t h e S c i e n c e C e l t i c s a r e b e t t e r t h a n e v e n t o b e r 5 . q u i c k l y ni t h e s e c o n d h a l f , a T u r k p o u n d - You Can Put James Bond e d t h e b a l l against the crossbar. i n Y o u r H i p P o c k e t money favorites to shoot the eyes out of their new division. The first Staunch defensive work on the e n o u g h to cover part of both teams prevented any Turk forwards Dropping straight down, it landed three sames are exhibitions a n d t h e c o n s t e r s w a r m i n g thefirstperiod.Inthe goalieElliotPruzanandtheback- the goal line, but for the league opener against Food and Maritime on the sixth scoring ni KARATE December. My prediction Science in a run-away.42.28. The next second period, however, Science's field, led by Peter Freitag and was miraculously smothered by the Jimmy Hoffman, hard pressed to Monroe g o a l i e . league game i son the 13th vs. Printing. Another victory in a close proved too much and, one, 37-32. O n e of the season toughies comes o n the fifteenth with only after five minutes, Ed Pineles put contain an experienced Explorer JUDO Science on the scoreboard. attack. two days rest, against Dodge. Take Science with points or if you are Captain Four days later the booters were Knolls C a r d &amp;amp; Book WEIGHT TRAINING c o u r a g e o u s even money. After Dodge, the cagers should have little Widening the margin, trouble with Alfred E. Smith, 40-31. If our boys play up Eddie Sofair punched an impor- once again overwhelmed — this SIGWARDSPORTSACADEMY capacities, we should be in convention for the league championship. tant tally into time losing 6-1 139 West 54thStreet CHEERLEADERS: Predictions for this group three minutes later, though Evander took the credit. Sofair's score was the difference, As in their Columbus contest the REVITHBOOKS With a healthy group of varsity starters, the cheerleaders look to be in Ci 5-8086 After 1 o.m. Science team couldn't pool its in- great shape for another undefeated season. Drake Beil for with two minutes left in the SCIENCESURVEY Wednesday, November 23, 196 Bcl ence survey Comedy Elizabethan Style Hwo Girls Invaded Science Hgih Schol; published &amp;amp; times a year by the students of By Vita Miccio THE BRONX HIGH SCHOOL ater's first production of the season 1s alchemist (converter of metall The Lincoln Center Repertory The- enough to belleve ni Subtle's powers The Bloodles Coup Commemorated OF SCIENCE a play which Samuel Pepys deseribed into gold) and as an astrologer (pre- Bronx 68, N, Y. i n c o m p a r a b l e and which Cole- dicter of the future). DR. ALEXANDER TAFFEL, Principal ridgeranked with Oedipus Tyrannus In the parade of their victims are and Tom Jones as having one of the the men and women of London society November 23, 1966 t h r e e most perfect plots in literature. Vol LIV - No. 2 whom Jonson wished ot satirize: hte The play si Ben Jonson's The Al taw clerk. Dapper; chemist, a comedy built on hte theme Mark Nissenbaum or numan gullibility. of its twelve knight, Drugger; the pleasure-loving Mammon; tre two Editor-in-Chief Editor-in- Chief characters, three are thieves and seven m a c a c h e r s . a n d Tribulation; Jeffrey Berg are simpletons. Yet a nsigel and the wealthy young man from hte Associate Editor moves Then h e desire ot kel country, Kastril, with his sister. Damo Pliant. Greedy but gullible, they al Editorial Board Subtle Enterprises fal for Subtles' pseudoscientific jar- Irene Stern g o n a n d are easilv News Editors. .Joseph Schuldenrein, Feature Editors Stephen Hyslop, Vita Miccio Thaceoitn fo hte play udonslf ni moneymakers oftheir ready cash. Jon- son exposes n o t only the q u a c k e r y of Sports Editor . Robert Weisberger ter havnig left the city because ofthe the crooks dullness fo their Business Managers. Daniel Czitrom, Anthony Mauro plague, hte butler, known a s Face t o dupes. Mammon, for example, ise-r vealed as aontutlc who would ravage Circulation Manager Exchange Editor Donna Brent a swindler posing a s na alchemist, andthe world ot suhiti s pleasures while pretending t o convert it Tribulation Associate Board the esuoh as a basoefoperationsfor and Ananias he pictusaresreligious THE SPIRIT OF 4'6: Science's female firsts arrive at last Borten, crooked T h e i r fanatics ni appearance and hypocrites scheme find customers in truth scene w h i c h they By Stephen Hyslop enough pay w e l l a n d gulliblewoudl accept the Twenty years ago hte United Na- or worldly soods unlawful acquisition t i o n s William teriors, however, the will was weak with a hasty ration- Faculty Advisers O'Dwyerentered City Hal, and girls Even before the new students had ar- alization and a clceoansrcience is one was heard Literary Adviser M.r Richard Feingold of the high p o i n t s of comedy and sa- ot remark that "uncombed hair, untied Dr. Charles Hellman Daily Sessions Provide u r e in t h e play. 130 pioneers to our high school in the Photography Adviser Bronx, though Business Adviser nitely forbidden." (Science boys have Dr. Benjamin Silver Math Team Prospects London Comes Alive Perhaps hte ignored by the general public, si an since reiccted this impractical philos. geraetst appeal of the event worthy of commemoration. o p h y. ) -COCAPRES Of atmosphere it c r e a t e s the sciencerte of today, surrounded From humble beginnings WithFoodFor Thought pray was the the early 1600's. byaformidable barricade of female things may result, and so it was with By Joel Rubin Shakespeare's London comes alive in m a l l e s o t a d m e m b e R i n d attendance our finally-initiated females. Advan- TomostScienceites,thelunchper-Jonson'smendnawomen,htecountry monitors,willfindithardotimaginecienmasse,theyintitrate To Cut or Not to Cut iod si a time for socializing, last-min- and hte town gulls, the d ever N e S t u d y i n and even lunch. There and the scheming girls back in February of 1946. As it siege reach the highpoint, aspect of school life. 1950 saw wath "Apparel," afamous father once toldhis are a few individuals, however, who alchemists. directed yb Jules their sex was not handicap enough w a l l e n c t o r i a n salutatorian, and the son, "oft proclaims the man" and, whether Elizabethan Center company they were relegated as freshmen to editor-in-chief of Survey al girls. style, fourth floor of P.S. 85, today, of course, Science would not consciously or not, most Scienceites tend ot such appetizing pastimes sa geometric calculus. Sur- blocks away from the main building be Science without the feminine horde. heed this advice. We take it for granted that rounded by sheets of mimeographed times. The principals, notably Michael Needless to say, it was a hard spring. akeawaythecheesearsat good taste calls for clothing that is suitable: they one or the competitive sy necessary to convey the broader little girls ni the striped beanies, and time, attempted to remain cool in the o r g a n i z a t i o n s : t h e M a t h l e a m e n v i r o n m e n t a life in this school would never be the generally this means "not peculiar" or im- The more than thirty juniors who commend a visit to Lincoln Center. same. Twenty-one years ago, in fact, properly conspicuous. The powdered wig may change. Underneath their stony things must have been pretty dul. have been al right for George Washington daily devote fourth period to these and, judging from current developments, may team sessions concentrate on particu- larly difficult mathematical problems. Book Review —'Conversations With Casals' some day be fashionable again. However, any Under the direction of Mrs. Ruth Ru- general wearing one today would probably be derman. they work for speed and pre considered ni greater need of medical advice cision in calculation, so important to their performance curing competition Virtuoso Recalls a Lifetime than a military command. This seems simple enough and clear. A typical practice session includes the solving of two problems from for- tears of the victims of injustice," says Similarly, any Scienceite appearing in knee mer contests. a discussion of the solu- Pablo Casals, this breeches and tresses down to his should er tions, two or three l prob additiona - centus supreme lems and nerhans the derivation of a tant to me than my music and all would, to say the least, create something of a cello, formula. But the atmosphere si still and one o fi t s m o s t my cello recitals." Acting on this con- Casals imposed upon himself distraction ni the classroom. The fact si that milk, the most painful sacrifice an artist most Scienceites adhere ot and willingly ac- scattered carrot sticks and pickles, al- spirits, lives qui et- can endure, and "resolved not to accept though always t o a school as not only reasonable but entirely high level of concentration, serve to now, but the ninety cept the few restrictions on dress in o u r engagement any- where. as long as a free regime wai desirable. lighten the load. n a t e s t i m o that not re-established in Spain." It was conversations may stray to non-arith- passed since h e w a s not until 1961 that Casals broke this Yet, if apol ofstudent sentimentwere metical topics such as French tests, born in Spain on De- esolution perform taken, most Scienceites, like the Superinten- yesterday's Giant 29, 1876, at the invitation of dent of Schools, would support the refusal of game. First things first, however, and s h o w a h i s t o r y o f ac- President John Kennedy. Larry Brand and Michael Bandler at Forest the mathmen return to math and more few Hills High School to change their hair style math. men have k nown, It Art — The Message of Hope at the request of the administration. As re- Yet, ni spite of this rugged life, the is t h i s s t o r v w h i c h J An unforgettable passage in this ported in the press, it seemed clear that no Junior Math Team receives more ap" M. Corredor gives us book is the one in which Casals states plications each year than it can pos- in Conversations With threat to learning was involved in the dis- his artistic credo. Corredor had just sibly accept. Stu dents apply in their Casals, Dutton pointed o ut that, in the judgment of pute: the two "culprits" were,after all,honor students. (And really their page boy grooming sophomore vear and are chosen on the Co., some critics, "atonal musicsi are- flection of the chaotic period ni which was n o t excessively out of bounds.) Suspend- basis of classroom grades and teacher book somewhere recommendations. Former members of between an autobio- we live." Casals did not believe ni this ing them from all classes was, under these cir- junior high school teams are given w a t h and a very kind of music. "Art," he said, "should as unjustified as it was unwise special consideration 10ng interview in be used as a means of keeping alive and succeeded only in inflating an issue that Thefruitofalltheireffortdoeswine. Casals, the cult of an ideal, instead of for the might have been settled quietly into a test not appear until the springwhen ten swering a series propagation of morbid tendencies to- wareon the connection between students' ot the team m e m b e r s participate in questions. speaks i n w a r d s a s i e s t a d o n Why should an rights and civil liberties. interscholastic meets. Mirs. Ruderman timately of his child- sense of immedinte contact with a artist b e obsessed b y the uncertainties But we do also take exception to the impli- c h o o s e s a the mus. team hood, o f live regulars and his musical career. his tours. his highly talen ted and courageousman. of our time, instead of reacting against with them by showing his faith in those cations of a remark made by Bandler, one of five alternates, based upon their scores views on the great composers, ical and political personalities he has c o n v e r s i t i o n s first professional con- human values which have surv Casals ived so t he suspended st udents, as r e p o r t e d o n an- d u r i n g t h e practice sessions. At the led t o his r amble from his m a n y collective other page in this issue of Survey. "No limit," meets, alternates also solve problems, known, and the motives that Barcelona at the age of thir- sellomposed exile from Franc o's Spair cert in artist, as a man. will always fi n d oc. he is reported to have said, "should be placed but their answers are not officially i n marked. 1937. T h e n e t r e s u l t is a n e x c i t i n g teen to his meetings with Buropean totaemen o n behalf of his Spanish casions to intervene if he thinks he on clothing or hair style." should intervene in the conflicts of Republican friends. Inonememorable On the contrary, neither students nor any- r tells of t h e time his time. But art cannot be the slave passage, Corredo of these conflicts. However d one else should be permitted to do anything - The Science Scene Casals played the cello at the bedside ark our times may seem, art should bring a w h e t h e r r e l a t e d to h a i r , c l o t h i n g o r o t h e r of a dying friend and of how Camille message of hope." behavior that interferes with the @citiese Mauclair,who wasalso present,de- tional process. But we do not think that the LEORE, 2 HOLES, $ DE EP saribed the scene. "We all sat there listening o n l Casals Conducts Bach Concerti s c h o o l a u t h o r i t i e s s h o u l d n o o v e r z e a l o u s 1 1 IGLOO AND SNOWMAN in gloom and silence. glorious instrument In July of this year. I read a defining just which activities fall into that the seemed topray for Carriere and also mont a t which Casals conducted the newspaper review of aconcert in Ver- o u r inner thoughts, which merewords could not have expressed. E v e n a t the Marlboro Festival Orchestra in a pro- And w e felt almost guilty in renlizing Kram o. Bach concert usiasm that our absorption ni so much beauty orchestra age of 90, his spirit and enth entated Honor to Science was rising above our sorr ow." alike.The samespirit ismanifestin Those of us who have been privileged to be Unflinching Resistance his answer to a question by Corredor hisstuderitsknowwhatanoutstandingteach- However, although the book does Beethoven's N i n t Symphony er Mr. Falkenstein is. Science alumni in col- deal in large part with m usical mat- with its closing chorus of hope that so m e c a v a n a m e Dr o leges throughout the country can also testify ters, it is the human being rather than T h e r "Alle werden tohisskill.Infact,itwasagroupofsuch the musician who gives these pages Tenter alumni at Yale, as reported in a news story in 김 their warm appeal. Even more start- ling than his extraordinary career as "In spite of all the gruesom e hy- e predic- whose nomination of a cellist, conductor and composer is tions and dangers, in spite of th Mr. Falkenstein led to his final selection by his unflinching moral resistance to po- drogen bomb , we must not lose our a special committee o f the Uni versity as one litical injustice shown by his re fusal faith. Ih ave always believed the day of five high school teachers cited f o r o u t to compromise with the existence of would come t oJoy s tanding We teaching. congratulate M r . Котик dictat orship in his native land. would be sung by all the p eoples o f Falkenstein on this award. We are happy that I see innoc ent blood spilled and the the earth." ne is one of our teachers. Mathematics Elective Choices ... Assembly... WQXR to Hold Include Programming, Calculus 'Young Artists' By Robert Friedman the "enriched" Classes is largely seniors w h o wien to c o n t i n u e Competition The Math Department is cur- amatter of chance, since there si The first fo these si the rently offering several specialized n o p a r t c u t d r m e t n o d o f s e l e c t i o n New York State Regents course ni Applications have been distrib and enriched TOT Entrance into the two sopho- 12th math, which include Lied students in the 10th. 11th, more honors classes, however, Is modern algebra,analytic geometry, York 1966-67 and l e t braces. r e o m spatial relations, and an introduc "WQXR Young Artists Competi Lorsophomores,theregresevera and previous peror tion ot matrix and vector spaces. tion" for pianists. "enriched" classes and two honors Advanced Placement Math This competition si intended ot classes. Under a program initiated The students ni the junior year The second, Math 10, isthe ad- discover l a s t t h e c u r r i c u l u m o f t h e honors classes (Math 95 and 59h) v a n c e d o n c e m e n t c o u r s e i enriched classes wil include solid t e c h n o s e culus dna analytic geometry. It is private and parochial senior high oRne rcometry addition ot the regular h1t open t o M a t h 59 students schools of New York City. cording ot Mrs. Mazen, Math D-e have been recommended D y ther Each school has ben instructed partment chairman, entrance into structed in symbolic logic, hte ot selectand submit the name of properties ofsets, groups, and Thethird. Math 9, i sa one-yearl one entrant no later than March several areas course i nprobabilitya n d linear Alumni to Combat usually coverd i n theht21 year "Finite Single Selection Mathematics"b y Km,eyne Senior Courtmen Scienceites participating ni the Students in Analysis andThompson.Itisavailablefor competition must choose and per- T h e a n n u a l A l u m n i - S e n i o r B a s - H o u r c l a s s e s mo d c e s o p o r u r O form one selection from ketball Game will be held Friday i o r s a n d seniors are naw taking w i s h t o t a k e c a l c u l u s . t h e f o l l o w i n g g r o u p s . evening. December 23, beginning. at eight o'clock. a sixth subject, Duringthefi r s t One composition of the student's C O u r S C。 Visiting Teachers choice up to six minutes in length. andtheclassof6'6lwli mkeapu are taught how tousetheMon. Tour Seience High One of the preludes the majority fugues from Bach's Wel Tempered C iuu uer. Beatrice Gardner, ualmni advsior, The second term is devoted t o Sixtyhighschooland biologyt e a c h e r s toured October 14 under t h e auspicoefs One of Chopin's Nocturnes. uates of Science who eranitg het BMI 1620 compuet.r t h e l K o s i o n n Conterence o t the juniors and seniors in One of the following compost- National Defense Education National 8 8soc a ton 0 10 10.0 82 tions: The match between the alumni Act grant enabled the s c h o o lt o purchase a monitor orf the IBM Dividedinto five smgroauplsl Felix Mendelssohn's Introduction refereed by Mr. Norman Lefko- machine lastyear, and another a n dc i d e db yseveral staff mem- and Rondo Capriccioso ni E, Op. witz of the Health Education De- grant this vear paid for a new t h e delegatviiositned the Albert 114; Johannes Brahms' Rhapsody partment. Olivetti Programma. This smaler, thel ST.L.. ni G. Minor. Op. 79, Na. $2; Claude Tickets costing $.75 each will go less e x p e n s i v e c o m p u t e r is a com‹ the The atom is mostly empty space, explains Mr. Miles MeMahon at the Debussy's Estampes: Jardin Sous on sale shortly in official classes bination desk calculator and pro t h e grenhouse, October 19 Physical Science Assembly. H e spoke about the atomic age animal rooms, the observatory, ra Pluie;Sergei Rachmaninoff's a n d in t h e funchroom, a n y e x t r a s dio room, and the library. (Continued from Page 1) mental purposes a Scienceite was Polichinelle; Carl Maria Von We will be sold at the door. There are three electives open to expressed interest kowitz, 4-6; Sharon Elefant, 4-18; called on stage ot drink a cup of ber's Invitation to the Dance, Op. ni m a n y aspects of school 65. life, Martin 4-18; from the equipment and wide va- Adrienne Burrel, 4.6; • Burrel, 46, Barbara dine. By use of the geiger counter, April Finale riety electives available Winkler, S u e N o v i c k , 2:21, After quarter-and semifinals, the Hass Urges End of Capitalism Scienceites ot the relationship be- and Kenneth Kessler, 4-23. to the thyroid gland. final contest will be Socialist Labor leader Eric Hass tween the students' intensive train• M.r Miles M e l a n o n , a repre- M.r McMahon had a April 29 at 6:30 p.m ing and their success in college and sentative of the Atomic Energy girl from the audience illustrate winners announced urged the abolition of capitalism beforealargeturnoutof toustu professional life. Commission, lectured on radioac the e f ect or t he Dassage 0 a p TheConference,heldOctober14, tivityandhteatomicageatthis proximately30,000voltsofelec- year,ScienceiteJoseph dents at the Forum's October 72 15, and 16, consisted of three days year's October 19 assembly spon Tracity through the human body. Streisfeld achieved the status of w e c a of tours. lectures and exhibits. In sored by the Physical Science The electric particles m ane Mr. Hass compared R a c h i o n to Science, there were Department. hair standonend. Prizes for this competition will society to a dilapidated structure tring to the Sauibb Tahoratories. In one demonstration, meant to O n stage also w a s a miniature include a$750 scholarship for con- andexpressedtheopinionthatit theAtomicEnergyCommission,showtheonerationo rtere model of the nuclear reactor a t s o l o would be more effective to begin Mr. McMahon was as Indian Point, which cital broadcast over WQXR, and r e d u c e a n e w t h a n p a t c h i n u den, sisted by members of McMahon predicted, together with a d d e a r a n c e s a t a e d e t h e r e m a i n s . i t s kind, supply addition, the victor's school will Howalts e eThr s t u d e n t s w e r e g i v e n provided wiffle balls, representing half the electricity in the United be awarded a valuabie set or a u the best means of building a new S. O. Committees beta, and gamma particles, one of States by the year 2000. dio equipment. which was radioactive. However, In closing the meeting, Dr. Taf- racy and public ownership of the Choose Chairmen he assured the audience, after the fel u r g e d body national economy. S, O. committee chairmen have radiocative ball was located, that "Knowledge and r a s s stated that since not Reform Club Albert been cho sen for the coming year. no danger ot the participants was perience in both science and the capitalism political parties are also in decay, Eric Hass addresses Forum Zerrie Glicksman, 4-17, will head involved, humanities" to promote the peace- intouchanotersonehe the Art Publicity Committee; Eliot The speaker also discussed ra- ful uses of atomic energy in the lowing description of the Young his aim could best be accomplished revising either the Klugman, 4-20, Constitution and dioactive tracers, and for experi- service of a safer world. Democrats was omitted from the through the Socialist Labor Party Democratic or Republican parties. wes. here. weener. 42.In- October Survey article on Science's tramurals; Jonathan Greenspan, -ED Discounts: Peter Baosa 42, Lounge; Andrew Kraft, 4-14, Journals Announce Editors Founded by Scienceites in 1964, Science Surveyings editor and Jessica Eawards. 3-18 Young Inde co-editor, S.O. News; Sylvia Israel, Four of S ci ence's departmental individual research projects, b u t w pendent Democrats) ill also include biolors news is active in fifteenth anniversary of the An- 4 - 1 2 . a n d E r i c B e l l e r , 4 - 4 , S p e c i a l journals have selected staffs for the reform democratic movement 1966-1967 and set deadlines for the general. Faculty adviser Mr. 6 Win Scholarships dover Conference. Events; Frances Bard, 48, Ticket submission of articles. Vincent Galasso ni the Bronx. The purpose of the Dr. Herman Slutzkin, chairman Sales; and Linda Maslenko, 4-11, club is to encourage the active of the Foreign Language Depart- Seniors Frug, Skate Ushers. For the second consecutive year, al articles eb handed ni by March participation of the individual cit ment, has an t h e n, under the z e n i n D 0 1 Social Studies Journal has no 1, 1967. nounced the names of Frugging, jerking, and skating t h e m e The staff will therefore The Math Bu lleti Its members assist the retorn this year's winners of scholarships to the music of Tom Cassa and S. O. Couneil Votes accept articles a n d c a r t o o n s o n guidance o f f a c u l t y adviser Mr. movement during primary cat to the Centre d'Art Dramatique. t h e a p p r o x i m a t e l y 350 a n y m a s e of history or current Bernard Horowitz, wil be led yb p a i gn s : i n t h e They are Doree Barton, recent elections Dora Burak, 3-9; Phil Mintz, 4-6; attended the Senior 57-28 to Eliminate events. Mrs. Yetta Cohen and Mrs. editors-in-chief Housman, January Elections Maritzn Tsaggos, the faculty ad- 4-18; Richard Jankowski, 4-16, and they actively supported the Police Tony Rostain, 3-25: Michael Fel Dance Friday. November 18. Fred Wu. 2-6 Accieting t h e m w i l Civilian Review Board. This year P o n n i e S h u l m a n Lasting from 8:00 to 11:00 P.M. visers, have set J anuary 9 as the they also worked in Mike Cook's At its October 21 meeting, the all articles, which Mark Seiden, 4-10, managing Assembly campaign Normat Weinstein, 3000 3 - 2 0 . Ted S . O . C o u n c i l v o t e d 5 7 - 2 8 t o a b o l i s h l a n e t h a n f o u t ot the one-vear t h e d a n c e was a c c e n t e d by G o - G o e d i t o r , a n d W e i s s ' C o n g r e s s i o n a l r a c e , course which the winners will take girls (Science cheerleaders in dis- t h e I n t u a r y S.O. elections and typewritten pages, Barbara T h e purpose Hoch, puz zle editor, Articles about Last May theBYIDcameout is t o t e a c h r e n e n t h r o u g h d r a m a administration e l e c t e d 4-7, si ChiefCoordinator; Harvey each Jun office for waldman e to hold editorial Hen cefort h against present U.S. policy ni Viet- t i c s . E v e r y w e e k t h e s t u d e n t s w i l l 4-19, Delta D e l t a w i l l h e n c e f o r t h b e t h e e n r e c e n t contemplat- b e t a u g h t b y a n d ' I s P a r i s B u r n i n g ? ' c o m p l e t e y e a r . o r d i n a t o r ; J o s é d e J e s u s , 4 - 1 6 , i s i n g a r a l l y ni f a v o r o f l o w i n c o m e Scienceites will be able to see Accordingly, S.O. President Neil research coordinator; and Stepha- name of the Physical Science Jour- special Saturday m o r n i n g show- Clendeninn, 4-10; Vice President Art nal. P a n t o r - i n - c h i e l Ganz, housing projects ni the Bronx.Steve voted to the improvement or pro ordinator. 4.18. announced that any articles Current officers are nunciation and the second to the ings or The Biole and Is Paris Schwartz, president, 4 3.K enns studying or French drama. Burning? at discount prices. Saperstein, 3-24; and Ex ecutive y o r physics Board D o n e s m a s P e r s o n a t pertaining to chemistr vice-president, 4-23; Joel by the students in the The Bible trip is scheduled for will be given consideration they be submitted and Neil December 17. T h e reduced price 4-15. a n d spring are open to the publie. Gideon Ferebee, 4-19, T h e Journat will be requested that Shertok, secretary, 4-11; Go ld Welles, 4-17, treasurer. is S1.50: usual price ranges from will corve until Tune 1967 headedthisyearbyPaulFishman, by February15. Mr. Uriel T o l o Andover Conference $2.50 to The c o n a n d T h i m The meeting stormy 4-6,editor-in-chief; Frances smith is faculty adviser. Eliot Klugman, 4 . 1 7 a n d S O is t e n t a t i v e l y s c h e d u l e d f o r J a n - i m b e s i n c e t h e m i n o r i t y mon, 4-19, co-editor; Ellen Blecher, we lington 3-451? casionally vociferous in its oppo- editor: H o w a r d President Neil Clendeninn. 4-10, uary 7. Shimer, 4-9, business manager; and UN 3-0671 marion's potteryshop represented Science at th e Rich- Students must provide their own adviser, expressed support for the Stephanie Gei s e r , 4-4, a r t e d i t o r . PENROD'S ard Welling Student Government Conference faculty ad viser Mr. Ken- majority position, It will consist largely of articles CARDS - TOYS - PARTY FAVORS 2559 grand (alexander block) bres в. у. 1 0 0 Organization Mittent CuildFarminAndover, neth Allen also announced that a STA TIONERY -REVIEW BOOKS ах, Washington 706 Lydig Avenue, Bronx, N, Y. New Jersey, October nlanned for next term Among the main topics of dis- 'Democracy' Essay Campus Cofee Shoppe Since 1897 m i s s i o n improving student LUdlow 4.7245 faculty improving Leonard Sigal's essay on "What Tel. 364.9871 8E.BedfordParkAve. s c h o o l s p i r i t , developing the lea d. Democracy Means to Me" has been Tol. 364.8921 (3blocks from Science) ership and responsibility of S.O. S c i e n c e ' s e n t r y ni a Jahns officers and limiting the activities nationwide competition for a $5000 o f t h e Student Organization in scholarship. • Hom e-Cooked Meals OLD FASHIONED ICE CREAM PARL OR certain respects York State Sigal, 3-14, is now eligible, along A t informal "swap-shops." the with the other New • FREE DELIVERY - OPEN EVERY DAY AND COFFEE SHOP delegates exchanged ideas for in contestants in the 10th. 11th. and teresting schoo events. sucn 3g 12th grades, ot be chosen "state • Student Special . . . Pri s vate Room Available for Partie senior day. an alumni dance, a winner," compete in the na. and tion-wide finals, and to win an all. Hamburger, French 294 EAST KINGSBRIDGE ROAD BRONX, N. Y. laculy show. expense-paid t r i n o Fries, Cole isFrench. 65¢ This vear's session marked the D.C. next blarch, Page Four SCIENCE SURVEY ; Mermen Mow Down Wednesday, November 23, 1966 Harriers Finish Gompers as Brawer Sets School Mark Sixth in Bronx Cross-Country Championship Cuts Second Runners Lose THE SIDELINE SURVEY Off Own Time Two Top Men Breaking his own Science re- the Plagued yb injuryand accident, hareirs backstroke, Ira finished a disappoint- sixt 'A Real Sport' Brawer led the swimmers to rout of Gompers No- Cyrount Championship Met held ta nVa Cortlandt krPa October 29. vember 7 at the Walton po.l Competing in the event for the BIl Christopherson opdedvle a tuntmessersone m e r painful stitch ROBERT WEISBERGER 1. seconds from the 1:07.5 mark the race andhismiet (162:0) -usf asmuch ashedid, The scene is Yankee Stadium ni early September, 196, Forty- helter ful emnuti below sih Sandy Rickleen followed Brawer five thousand people line the stands and waves of excitement whcih to the tape, as the Turks recorded are ni no way related to Yanke basebal or Gaint footbal flow through one of their HowieKelman had similar prob- eht crowd. Professional soccer generates this electricity, sa a Brazillan the meet. became sick o n theetam, eld by the world's best player, Pelé, tears by Inter of Italy, 31. TOs sweeps saw Vinnie Zeccola and therace.Finally Bary Mearish, Soccer hansever before drawn a crowd fo this size ni the United States. team's number W A S HC Twenty-five years earlier another noteworthy soccer game was simultaneous finish in the 200-yard individual medley. rived too latet o omc.etpe palyed, It swa agame fo muchsmaelr proportions htan hte one at Yanke Stadium, but ot generations of hadry Scienceites ti proved just In what si now becoming a reg- Justaboutthe only Turknot as important. Van Cortlan dt Park was the scene of this contest. ualr feature of Science mwis meset struck some sortoifll fortune Noticeably absent were the W a n k e n C a r lBiomgren, whose 14:16 much ni evidence. crowds, but hte excitement was stil very nished 1-2 ni three of the first placedhimsixthi nthe Bronx. t o u r m e e s m e o w n e a r Battling Stuyvesant, the Green and Gold, ni their first PSAL game lead in the butterfly and back- Tigers Overrun ever, fought the Peglegs ot a thrilling 00 tie. Following the tie But Kenny pulled Comingu pw i t ha surprising were olses ot Monroe and Clinton, but as Observatory put ,ti "spurred even with a strong breaststroke Carl Blomgren nears het apet aeftr a lonlongely, cross-country run. godrednu yortcvi ni their escond no yb hte olses the Science booters went out and vented their anger and drew ahead going into the meeto ftheseason,the harriers on an unsuspecting Morris team. which htey trounced, 30. Rudy final freestyle leg. He could not outpEvoandiernted 26-31 October Bauersachs was the all-city star of this pioneer squad, and Mr. Julius hold his slight lead, though, sa lumbus humiliation, the mwsmsire Beckenstein was its mentor and coach. Science soccer w a s Vinnie barely managed ot thoroughly thrashed Morris 721⁄2- victory. Keglers Split Captain Carl Blomgren teamed It's still going strong — at least as strong as Science him out by less than a tenth of a 201⁄2 November .4 ever gone. There second. Following an opening win in the Piling on the tallies, medley relay, the mermen com- F o u r Contests than handful of onlookers at the Evander squadyb taking first any game, and most of these are Richie Meyer, Vic torres, and bo piled three straight 1-2 sweeps. Bringing their recordtoan even and second ni times ro 4:40 and either relatives, managers, Survey Lubert iced the 50, 10 and 20- Leading the Scienceites ot the 50 the pinmen roled past Roose- 15: 36. reporters, or exhausted Turks who yard freestyles. Joe Elizar added wall, Norm Greenwald captured velt October 31 in a low scoring Unable to repeat their Evander have just returned from a cross- another five points, snatching the the 200-yard freestyle, Ed Lubert meet. uoset. the Turks fell to powerful country run. Unfortunately this lack 100-yard breaststroke in 1:23.3. the 50-yard fr eesty le, and Co- Although the bowlers took the Taft and Clinton teams October 18. recognition under- Suffering their worst defeat in Captain Vinnie Zeccola the 200- win easily, 3-0, they roled what Losing to Taft 18-37 and two standable, for the games are played many, many years, the mermen yard individual medley. coach Benjamin Allen termed a Clinton 19.36, Science's only bright wide, wind- Adding an undisputed first to "shaky performance." spot was the great race run by swept fields which, being subject Science's ledger, Co-Captain Ira Opening their season against C a r l B l o m a r e n . His 14:10 time, westers not Brawer held o f Morris Chico Clinton October 18, the pinmen thebestofanyTurknithreeyears, very conducive ot the spectator's Morales to win the 100-yard free- tumbled 2.1 to the strong Gov. Science from being the comtort. (Cunous as to now it feel: stule in the very fast time of 55.3 ernor squad. victim of a double shutout and ot be out on those fields ni a soc- Science's keglers topped the 600 m a d e our runners the only group Soccer Coach Abend m a r k in all three matches. with Science Linksman which Taft hasn't whitewashed ing player's gear before a recent game and suited up. After kicking the B team compiling a fine 662 leamed that Van Cortland: Park's held to down their Clinton opponents Gains Bore Laurels Rolling the individual high o Billy Christopherson, finishing are not very comfortable for the players either.) booters continue to plug away. and they consistent.: Last June 26, w h i l e m o s t Scie t h e m e e t . J o h n R o c c o n o v a s 1 : seventeenth ni the meet and sec- ond for Science with a 15:23 and show enough spirit ot merit a city-wide berth for enthusiasm. Perhaps enceites were either preparing for combined with Ed Kline's 164, Barry Meriash, twentieth ni the they realize what an Observatory sports editor realized when, ni the an eagerly awaited summer were not enoven to bring t h e wee and third tor yearbook of 1943, he said, "Although most people don't quite get it, Science for a not so eagerly awaited report past the jolting 713 Gov. 15:39 were the only other high soccer si a real sport." card. Steve Rosen was busy pre And soccer certainly si the most demanding of sports. Played on necame the Brony. Suffering another split decision, ahuge field (60 x120 meters) the game requires tremendous endurance Manhattan golf champion. tonnied netone Two Wiped Out combined with great skill. Steve, the number one man on tober 91 at Al Star Lanes. It's hard enough, even when simply holding a ball, to elude a the Science golf team which fin- seven of the first defender. But when a player si running at full speed, controlling ished last senson with a 6.2 slate. tories by defeating the Turks' B eight places, the cross-countrymen a soccer bal with his feet, and al the while attempting to get around, 0 5 0 5 5 t h e n ended their closed meet season through or over the opposition, something special si involved. And that's Alan Baron breaks the surface. captured the crown at Split Rock's nar 71 course by holing a 75 Science's keglers 695-655 ni the October 25 with wipe out victories why, more than ni any other sport, each score in soccer stands out so were overpowered by Columbus G o l d s t e i n of Clinton third and deciding match. over Morris and Gompers. vividly, why each play si os very decisive, why so much si expected once again C a r l of a player. For in a game of such difficulty one goal is, more often October 19. this Science scoring honors went ot S o s t e r Providing the only show of Sci- match, gave Steve abattle with a Seymour Adler, whose w a r s Blomeren, who won the meet with than not, enough to decide. 7 7 E x c h a n g i n g t h e l e a d w i t h G o l d. the Turk high though it fel a 14:33, and Bill Christopherson, Through this past active season Science's soccermen have tried ence strength, Danny Rahimi both turned in fine stein throughout the match, Steve far short of the Presidents' Pete who followed Carl with a 15:06 hard ot make certain that that one goal decided a Science victory. performances. John, a very pro- Bonano's 210. clocking, the Turks completed o n c e in a startling upset against Taft, they were successful. Seven keglers gained their first their dual destruction with an 18 othertimestheywerenot.Butwhatsireallymoreimportantthan the teenth green, where he birdied and team's lone triumph with a 26.3 a l d o o n m o n t h win in decisive fashion, defeating 37 trouncing Morris and the won-loss column si the fact that Coach Abend's booters touch out in the 50-yard freestyle. Steve's w i n Dodge, 3-0, October 24. 15-40 shutout of Gompers. on those wind-swept fields giving their all. Danny, another sophomore, ap- Survey's attention on numerous oc- Desred a sure bet to take a first. casions, but due ot lack of space BootersBow, 1-0,inSeason'sTopper in diving until he slipped on his a n d also to the vey is not published during July JUDO and JIU-JITSU Rahimi andAugust,thetriumphcouldn't follfractionsshort of coualline bepublicizedatanearlierdate. Re Emanuel Chemer matchaTaftforwarddroveahard dividualstrengthsintoaneffec- INSTRUCTION BattlingfiercelyuntiltheveryshotpasttheSciencegoalle. tiveteameffort. his opponent's six dive total. Steve's patience is appreciated and R o u n c i n g b a c k f r o m their C o - his achievement applauded. end, s o c c e r t h e r "Columbus just beat us o n the Eluding the entire Tiger line. 254 E.204thSt. LU4-3996 dropped the season's pure mechanics of the game," BenPtashnik provided his Gompers, November effective loss slipped the booters' slate to a ing Science's lone score. disappointing and unexpected 1-7. An Uphill Effort DRIVER Only two minutes remained in Playing one of the city's best EDUCATION Drake's Picks the contest when Gompers broke teams, the booters could do noth. Approved by through otherwise excellent ing more than put up a good fight, Fickle fate smiled as my track predictions for October were Turk defense for the lone, decisive as they lost ot Roosevelt 5-0 Oc- NYS. Motor Vehicle Bureau fulfilled to the letter. As for the soccer and swimming picks s c o r e . American Automobile Assoc. well, you can't have everything. At any rate this si what the Science Impaired by the chill wind cut- The soccermen dropped another Leading Insurance Companies athletes will do next month. ting across St. Mary's field, neither this time 4-0 to Clinton October 26. R.J.J. SWIMMING: The mermen, who haven't looked as strong as ex- mount an effective pected, will wrap up their season with meets against Monroe and But the real heartbreaker came HIGH SCHOOL Taft. Monroe (the tops in the city, I think) should subdue the swim- Science Strikes Back against October 165 HENRY STRET, N.Y.C. mers ni aclose one. Take Science with 10-14 points. The season finale Avenging the 7-1 d r u b b i n g Science lost 2-1. The booters saw SP 7-1720, 1721 against Taft should be an easy victory, with at least a 15 point cushion handed to them by Taft last sea. SUNDAY CLASSES AVAILABLE Capt. dESofairfightsforthebal. a win would have beer soccermen collected their well deserved disappear onout for the mermen. It wil place Science fourth ni the league with a 5-3 son, the record — right on the heels of Monroe. Clinton and Columbus . w i n of this season by d e - Coach Abend following the boot- p l a y BASKETBALL: It's that time again. With league switching and feating the P r e c i n e t 2 . 1 4-0 loss October 14. With the score tied at 1-1 early r o s t e r j u m b l i n g o v e r w i t h , t h e S c i e n c e C e l t i c s a r e b e t t e r t h a n e v e n t o b e r 5 . q u i c k l y ni t h e s e c o n d h a l f , a T u r k p o u n d - You Can Put James Bond e d t h e b a l l against the crossbar. i n Y o u r H i p P o c k e t money favorites to shoot the eyes out of their new division. The first Staunch defensive work on the e n o u g h to cover part of both teams prevented any Turk forwards Dropping straight down, it landed three sames are exhibitions a n d t h e c o n s t e r s w a r m i n g thefirstperiod.Inthe goalieElliotPruzanandtheback- the goal line, but for the league opener against Food and Maritime on the sixth scoring ni KARATE December. My prediction Science in a run-away.42.28. The next second period, however, Science's field, led by Peter Freitag and was miraculously smothered by the Jimmy Hoffman, hard pressed to Monroe g o a l i e . league game i son the 13th vs. Printing. Another victory in a close proved too much and, one, 37-32. O n e of the season toughies comes o n the fifteenth with only after five minutes, Ed Pineles put contain an experienced Explorer JUDO Science on the scoreboard. attack. two days rest, against Dodge. Take Science with points or if you are Captain Four days later the booters were Knolls C a r d &amp;amp; Book WEIGHT TRAINING c o u r a g e o u s even money. After Dodge, the cagers should have little Widening the margin, trouble with Alfred E. Smith, 40-31. If our boys play up Eddie Sofair punched an impor- once again overwhelmed — this SIGWARDSPORTSACADEMY capacities, we should be in convention for the league championship. tant tally into time losing 6-1 139 West 54thStreet CHEERLEADERS: Predictions for this group three minutes later, though Evander took the credit. Sofair's score was the difference, As in their Columbus contest the REVITHBOOKS With a healthy group of varsity starters, the cheerleaders look to be in Ci 5-8086 After 1 o.m. Science team couldn't pool its in- great shape for another undefeated season. Drake Beil for with two minutes left in the</text>
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                <text>Science Survey, Vol. 54, No. 2</text>
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                <text>Science Survey, Vol. 54, No. 2. Containing the following articles: 2 Colleges To Augment City University, Scienceites Debate U.S. Foreign Policy, Biology Group Hears Lecture By Biochemist, Mr. Falkenstein Garners $1000 In Yale Contest, Opera Group Visits School, Forest Hills Students Give Views on Grooming, 287 in Upperclass Receive Letters of Commendation, Physical Science Courses Change, Carnival Draws Crowd, Comedy Elizabethan Style, How Girls Invaded Science High School; The Bloodless Coup Commemorated, To Cut or Not to Cut, Daily Sessions Provide Math Team Prospects With Food For Thought, Virtuoso Recalls a Lifetime, Honor to Science, Mathematics Elective Choices Include Programming, Calculus, WQXR to Hold 'Young Artists' Competition, Alumni to Combat Senior Courtmen, Visiting Teachers Tour Science High, Haas Urges End of Capitalism, S.O. Committees Choose Chairmen, S.O. Council Votes 57 -28 to Eliminate January Elections, Journals Announce Editors, Reform Club, Mermen Mow Down Gompers as Brawer Sets School Mark; Harriers Finish Sixth in Bronx Cross-Country Championship, Booters Bow, 1-0, in Season's Topper. </text>
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                <text>November 23, 1966</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 Basketballers Capture Season Opener; S e Upmalis and Wynn Excel THE BRONX HIGH SCHOOL OF SCIENCE Vol, LIV - No. 3 By Joe Schuldenrein Docember 23, 1966 Demonstrating the clutch shoot- ing and steady playmaking which may bring them to the S. 0. Council t h e i r Mr. Beckenstein Dis H league, the Science basket. cusses team Cattie from behind Hears Budget STODI tood and aritime 67-601 December 6 in this season's first The projected SO. , budget for Addiction, Alcohol, Long casuetame. 1966-1967 i s $14,710, with over air After throusnouthe one-half o f eht funds going ot By Richard Schwarz publications and athletic teams, Problems of today's teenagers as 1 points, was th e topic, fended the United SubbymFiitntaendcial Secre- States program into a disastrous third period, Food B e ck en and M.r st e in, Health Ed of foreign aid as neces sary ot pro- M a r i t i m e taryLinda Masalnko at the De- weacher. speaker a t a mote economic growtn in under cagers 22-6, turning a 32-24 Sci- cember 19 Student Councli met- packed hor developed nations. ins ,thbeudget porvdies $3220 for u m on D e c e m b e r 1 "The "Foreign aid," he said, "is not 34 a cutback of $3,000 'growing up sensible partof '," he declared, chay rehel,Rather,itiss fromlostyear,This savnigs re- "is getting an education and there- catalytic agent designed to stimu- quarter was all sultsfromteammembers financ- bythe tools with which ot solve build up the nation's and to Zweig, Wynn and Sher- m a n pecked a w a y at Maritime's i n g their own ratnspoartoitn fees your problems." dual, and not He maintained that hte indivi- lead until, with four minutes er- Includingone-halftheir personal society, is Underdeveloped sloe o r respon his o w n successes and maintained, look to the United equipmentcosts, allocationsi for failures and that States for assistance." Juris Upmalis came ot the line ni Thelargest through shuntion Soon $6,$83,500, schooling can he realize his full Backs Peace Corps, Loans Science with poured publications, O f t h e D o w n D u c k e d m a n d e d e t a r e s i n k s l a y u p a g a i n s t M &amp;amp; A squad. w i l l g o t oS u r v e y a n d $1,405 to Clean Grooming! D.r Kenen stated that assistance Dynamo, t h e l i t e r a r y magazine. Referring ot the recent hair con- programs such as the Peace Corps " w i c e w e n t o t e d e a d y accuracy should be encouraged and capital pouring i n49% T h eS.O.Council chartered the troversy,M.rBeckensteindeplored loans increased. The loans, he ad- line, and each time eh clicked for of their shots morf the flooron "SocialTheories Clautb"its No- the excessive use of authority to to solve it. As long as the kroomin Mr. Julius Beckenstein vised, should be at T W o D o m i s scoring on 21 0 1 ting Science comfortably ahead attempts. bb vember 81 meeting. a long period ot usopnisveri of M.r was neat and clean, eh went on, teachers, littering in the school, 00-aswinonwo Under the eh would not impose any restric- drinking. taking drugs. ni the game. Altogether, Upmalis Juris Goes Up - Benjamin Mazen o f het STOTA tions. During the question and answer reinforce his last point. h e read 0 0 1 0 4 expressed S c o r e d s D o t s t h e w a a r a scorers for the science a letter from a former Scienceite, himself as Department, hte club lwli conduct The speaker was very critical of being ni favor of giving aid ot t e r , m a k i n g n i s t e a m w e r e J u r i s U p m a l i s . w h o s e s t u d i e s o f h e t ms " i " . s s u c h f o r m s o f j u v e n i l e m i s b e h a v i o r a d r u g a d d i c t , w h o i s n o w i n t h e t h e c o m m u n i s t c o u n t r i e s o f P a s t . m a i n m e r i s o n t o r t h e s e t e n c e w i t h o t h a n d p u m p e d i n 18 points to lead the scorers, and Gregory Till' Aslo on het agenda was the as students' Queens House of Detention for as- ern Europe. sault and robbery. inggame,droppinginRites who came off the bench to November 4Carnival, which was MusiciansPresent John Henry Faulk, anoted radio and, along with Zweig and Comer- spark &amp;amp; second quarter rally, with declared a financial success, with and television personality, accused 47 Students Take ford, holding the toami tosothen 16 points. Frank Wright's 11 points profits approaching $300. and the John Birch with tight backcourt work. added ot the total, a s d i d g u a r d 'NutcrackerSuite', The S.O. News, was Society of seeking to stifle free Westinghouse Test "It was a real team effort, and K e n y Comertord's 8 point per- nounced, nas a new name 'Impossible Dream' thought and speech and the right I ' m j u s t delighted," said Coach formance. to dissent and protest. In "Talent Search' Norman Lefkowitz, as the basket. of year: Incite. The newsletter, un- The school orchestra and chorus t h e N o v e m b e r 17 Forty-seven Scienceites took the bal team overcame the first game Wynn, C o m e r f o r d Upmalis, der the directorship o1 Andrew gave their first performance this Forum, M.r Faulk charged that two-hour Westinghouse Science iinx that had held them power "redman Bernsten waved Kraft and Jessica Edwards, year on December 14 m the au. ditorium. txamon Decem. less in past vears b y beating Music well as udcles studenortganization news, vigilanteism. b e r andArt74-63intheseason'sfirstmarnedhy"mulaideonmental cartoons,andacolumn.Twocopies Theproctambeganwithanor. hcwih aredeliveredtoeach official sec- chestral transcription of an aria people who take the laws of so this test com- "are The of e x m o n t o n t a m e mistakes and from hte oriseoneorthethreecritercome Moza,rt followed by Tschalkovsky's though they are neither qualified Marriage ot Fraaro bv sidered in choosing the 40 final- chamishon authorizedtodoso contestant judged on a personal data form cummings. He Victim of McCarthyism filled out by themselves a n d Future Teachers' Club Views Film Watching Over Israel from the He was himself, he told the faculty adviser and on an original one or theentertainers projectinscienceormath A film about teaching ni New Explaining the advantages are willing to make sacrifices the next, and the last choral number who fell victim to the onslaught The students are competing for Y a r c o n n a i s w a s s h u t aecugn Guam. Mr. Beckett, experience can be very reward. awards ranging $7500 theDecember7meeting dithe who spent 3years asan ing." English the hit musical Man of La Man- As a result, he was blacklisted be- first prize. Entrants from Science Future Teachers Club. Teaching opportunities for cha (words by Joe Darion, music have won more major awards in T h e i m cooperation public schools, praised "the rap- Americans abroad have expanded by Mitch Leigh). ican Federation of Television and this competition than those of any faculty m e m b e r and port between teacher and student greatly recent years. During the final portion of the other high school in the nation discipline mentioned by the speaker since the initiation of the Talent probiems there w ere the Peace Corps, noted uทusual bright teacher exchange prosram. formedWaltzoftheFlowersfrom Aware Inc.. private organiza- Suite various specialists on New York chance for travel and the oppor- our various military bases, and the and The Typewriter by Anderson. the responsibility elementary n o aronour s h u t o n Russians Establish world awains those mentioned were corrective living in another culture." In the can companies the direction of Mr. Hv The reading skills three vears. Mr. communism A'MoscowScience' world, guidance Rensin and Mrs. Alice Lawner. lawyer and author. Lows Nizer, Moscow, Kiev, Leningrad, a n d counselors, and teachers who work argued Faulk's Novosibirsk now have secondary Fruits and Fiestas lengthy court p r o c e e d i n g s high schools specializing in math In addition, the speaker said Shakespeare Festival was awarded three and a half mil- lion dollars in damages. T h e four Russian schools are the people o n e contionce w a s devoted to 8 0 fault." Every Friday was Dr. Peter Kenen, Science. interesting explanation of the pro- "swamped by tropical fruit" and, Seniors See ' Macbeth' alumnus and Professor of Econo- entrance exams, osck motional system and the system of frequently, received invita- mies at Columbia University, ground in the humanities as well competitive tions to village fiestas. an address before the November as the sciences, and have extra- comprises it. O senools. lack 10 meeting of the Forum, curricular activities. A s i d e from covering t h e s e qualified teachers, and a shortage asneets of the school system. the film concerned itself with the "ex- citing and enrichine experience of lems of the Guam school system, Arista Inducts 89 Seniors living in New York." It provided ntourofthecity,showinsbincom At Semi-Annual Assembly Center, the Empire State Building, Greenwich Village, and several of Sophomores Elect Eighty-nine seniors were ni- the English Department (B As- o u r 34 m u s e u m s . ducted into Arista, November 30, odministered Mr. Ronald described Class Officers at the honor society's semi-annual Dr. Taffel pledge to the a t o n c h e r s life in Guam before assembly. representatives other high the Future Teachers For Coming Term Michael Hough, 4-3, Arista schools were present at the tradi- v e m b e r 3 0 Peter Galderisi, 2-5, Jane Lei- president, opened each assembly. tional ceremony. T h e n e w A r i s t fer, 2-18, and Rose Marie La Pila, Arista, he said, must not be a so- 2-3, were elected president, vice- cial club. Respect for others and Coming Events president, and secretary in the in sense of civic duty. he naded as well as discipline of mind, are November 17 sophomore class bal- the obligations loting. momhay Vice-President Naomi 23-Alumni College Guidance Freshmen were also permitt ed Joseph Papp's Macbeth and Dun can before Science audience Nov. 23. Guttman, 4-11, who also spoke at 24-Jan, 2-Wintervacation to vote in this election, since each Science coniore filled the au- rubs her hands to re mo ve "the each assembly, reminded Arista of the seven freshman classes are crats of their responsibility to tutor ditorium November 23 for a pre- sm ell of the blood." The players brought their own s t u d e n t s . Secretary Adole Mintz January represented this year on the So- sentation of Shakespeare's Macbeth 4•14, read the names o f the i n 3-11-Regular school days phomore Council. the New York Shakespeare i n c l u d i n aueteos. 12-17-Midyear examinations The race for president was very Festival Players. bethan stage, and their own sound noisy In a musical interlude. A l l a n c udanceJeeunm close, with This play is the tragedy of a including n a h l o o ancient Scotland whose light flashes, and smoke bursts Reiter, 3-16, and David Vega, per- 19-20-Entrance exams, no stu- Dena Kleinman , 2-28, by the slim icu larly effective formed Mozart's clarinet duet, and which were part dent attendance "vaulting ambition" to be king Merkler, 4-17. Craik margin of twenty-one votes. londs him intonseriesofbloody for the thunder and lighting of R i c h a r nonin's Fantasie 23, 24, 25- -Regular school days One hundred fifty ballots, many murders that end in his downfall the opening scene, setting the un- 26-30-No s tudent attendance of which had been cast for write- at the hands of another lord, Mac- Cisy mann or the play, as the r through the Faculty speakers at the three 31-Report 1:00 Report in candidates. were declared in- three witches "hove assemblies Donald The hich point of the produc- valid, fog and filthy air." Schwartz of the History Depart- tion was the famous sleepwalkinb This performance was the sixth ment. ( A Assembly), M r . E r n e s t February Candidates had been nominated scene in which Lad y Macbeth, vi- Department 1-ReturnRep ort cards, New earlier by representatives to the Kllen Holly. by the Joseph Papp players pre- Strom of the History portrayed by (CAssembly),Mr. Jack Luria of  h e r n e t t s Sophomore Couneil. reveals her guilt as she futilely sented at Science. Card PageTwo SCIENCESURVEY Friday, December23,1966 School Fund Aids Com salenge BURNEY edia College Dilemma n Relate s published 8 times a year by the students of Underprivileged Serious Ambitions Facing the Future THE BRONX HIGH SCHOOL Indian Youth O F S C I E N C E By R i s a W e i n r e b Steve Hyslop 75 West 205 Street Bronx 68, N, Y Unknowntothe vastmajority Before T"he Rusians Aer Com- Thanks to the arrival of the Sherwood Porest hats ALLEAANDER 2AFF&amp;amp;e、Pr ncipal ing" catapulted hmi tofilm star. Q.Howdiyoufeelwhenyou several weeks ago, it became possible for even of Scienceites, ruo schools' Stu- dom, Aaln Arkincouldeb nesno with "TheTarriers." M ostinexpertencedobservera tSciencet odistinguis Vol. LIV - No. 3 December 23, 1966 sup- statgeeht Booth Theater .A Singing was something I just the elders from the commoners. For any individus) porting a needy American Indian the hit lefl into. tI wsa nice mo upperclassman ni ney, but really intent on identitying the DanielBernstein Mark: Nissenbaum boy for the past five years. Now eh back at ti was never an aspiration the crowd, this show of senior spirit actually Editor-in-Chief Editor-in-Chief B e f o r e o u r school started hepl. theBoothTheateras of mine. unnecessary.Seniorrankwasbetrayedonthatface n e w comedy, Scarwdyke. Q. Why did you decide ot start long before; the determined, look Jeffrey Berg ing him, Jack Cody was a typicbarlter in his v e r s a t i l e career, eh directing? cynical ofa newly-confirmed realist, victim of the colege Associate Editor ten-year old Indian b o y , f r o m a n had sung whti a foklsnignig group. A. I was offered many different crisis, whti Tareirs", things t o direct, I like to do dir. ferent things. The freshman or sophomore, at this point, is prob Editorial Board little to eat nda wear. workw i t h Cy"ti. Q. Then w a b l y hat you look for si s k e p t i c a l o f t h i s d e s c r i p t i o n of t h e Science a News Editors Today, Jack i s g o i n g the and written short soteris, chalenge? senior contemplating his future, After all, he Feature Editors Vita Miccio C .H o w does tilef t obe back A.Thas't ,ti youv'e hit hte nail sists, everybody at Science 8 0 0 0 0 01 08 e ,A n y p o r t s F a n t o r Robert Weisberger money w e s e n d him. Accordingt o attheBooth, M.r Aknri? S(uvrsey' way, the line continues, science is one of the best exactly no the thumb hislatest progres epr,otr furnished interviewwas Q. How doyou feel directing a high schools ni the country. The accuracy of these Business Managers. Daniel Czitrom, Anthony Mauro anuayl yb theevaS the ficewhere Akrni wasgenial and dram alike Hail Serar dul e7 statements aside, our lowerclassman should at least Circulation Manager Federation, Jack i sdoingwellin informalin hisgern ski ajcket A.It isnt' entirely adrama, It beawareofcertaincomplications. Acceptanceatans Exchange Editor Donna Brent a n d b e i g e corduroy s l a c k s . ) starts tuo sa a riotous comedy, but college and acceptance at a colege which meets you ni dog health, andhasadjusted A .Homey. gets dramatic at the end, Comedy educational and social demands are two differen Associate Board l i f e i s gera,t and I love doing ,ti but things. As to the superiority of Science High, you Hsi adviser writes, there really is not that g r e a t may eb certain of it, and your mother may be cer distinction between comedy and tain of it, but are the men at Harvard always so greatly sonal Faculty between mih a n d Q. Wyh od uoy enjoy doing City's System l e t t e fr r o m movies s o much? T h e fi r s t a n d m o s t o b v i o u s p l a c e t o l o o k f o r a p Mr. Richard Feingold arrives at the SO., office. plication problems si the city colege system, which Photography Adviser Mr. Charles Hellman At the September 28meeting Business and Pleasure takes about half of our graduates every year. Admis Business Adviser the Student C,oulnci a motion A. I liketo ratve,l toperfect Sion. a s a n v o n e can tell you, is based solely on a increase Jacks annual a l o u Fmlis era exciting: Ilike hte p-er composite of theapplicant's average and his Colege C O C C E F R E S . f r o m $ 1 2 0 t o $ 1 0 0 ws a a n d r e l a x e d Board This simple, spite opposition. fo films.I like s u m o s p h e r e e l i m i n a t i n g l o n g a n d c o m p l i c a t e d f o r m s a n d t h a t 31S seem, what Ido. beabinleg ot se trying experience, the personal interview. But this hte average anual moceni otfhe Q. Would yolikue seeing "The objectivity, this simplicity, also makes life unfair, S.O. Reform Upheld American I n d i a n is $750. Nine out Russians are Comingn"o TV.?. l e v e l n e c e s s a r y continue to raise the score of ent Ameciran families A .I ' d loveit a d m i s s i o n to City College, and eTh .Q tWah roles woudl you like this score continues to be based on the same factors. The question of the merits of holding an- average lifes p a n o f a n Indain si to p l a y ? It si difficult ot cal i t a selective system, since nual as opposed to semi-ann ual elections of t w e n t y years els naht that of a A.There are os maInyC. hek- not even a minimum of information concerning the council officers has received wide- non-Indian andhet infant maltor applicant's special activities and interests is taken spread attention here in recent weeks. ity rate is twice as high hov, though, every role i s a chal- into account, At Science, such participation in extra- October 21 meeting of the Council, which voted Credit for ruo participation in lenge, Tenese Wiliams' Kilroy. curricular programs si taken for granted, since most Some Molière. students fcel obligated to d o something outside o! 57-28 to abolish January elections and to allow this project goes to eht Save the Q. oD you think Broadway is These thingsare obviously important and the administration elected each June to hold Children Federation, a group de- Mr. Alan introuble? often indicate more about one's college potential than office for one complete year, was reportedly dicated to helping needy children A. Everything is in trouble, why "a stormy one, with the minority occasionally areas the Q. What isthe biggest problem should Broadway be different? Next, of course, come the private colleges. The vociferous in its opposition." world. Because of its work, there of the actor? Would you do &amp;amp; Broadway admissions systems of the so-called "top-notch" &amp;amp;. are 3850 more Indian children like A. Finding a job show again? We think that one step in the directionof J a c k C o d y going t o school. The Q. What made you become na A. Not for a while. schools are certainly not simple, in any sense of the making the student council a more effective gives 69 schol- actor? word. Unfortunately, some of theapplication forms get out of hand. nI the more extreme cases, gues instrument of student government is to give arshios and has selichelp program: A. Idon't know. Ican't remem- B e g i n n e r ' s L u c k tions will range from the awkward (What do you its officers an opportunity to "carry out their at 42 Indian reservations, ber — I've always panted ot act. • W h a t d i d p r o d u c e r s s a y w h e n think is your chief personal strength?) to the promises." To do so, they need the time to get they didn't give you partsni your acquainted with their job - its responsibili- e a r l y d a y s ? about ot die. write na original message of 25 words ties, requirements, and opportunities and Alumnus Reports .A They said I was too morose or less to all humanity.). Before most students with each other. It takes teamwork to get the to d o comedy. They said i was a ataste of such delights, they wil take another look job done and it takes time to develop a team young character actor, and they at their class rank, financial status, and other en- didn't want a young character ac- couraging factors, and bring their college choices that will get the apparatus of student govern- Universities A b r o a d LOT. ment in good, functioning order. This is one By Daniel Shine Q. Do you think Hail Scrawdyke down to earth, Altogether, then, the picture si not very bright. reason why we support annual elections as At the request of SURvEY, fOr- will be good, that is, well done? Seniors are faced with one system that si too limited embodied in the following constitutional mer editor-in-chief Daniel Shine, demic problems. In practice you A. I'm positive it will be. Tell and anotherthat is almost too elaborate, amendment adopted at the October 21 meeting presently a freshman Trinity only see your tutor when vou need al your friends ot come and see which students from a large public school are at a of the Council: College in Dublin, Ireland, sent his signature, b u t t h e r e a r e ex- it. It's meant for high school and definite disadvantage. April 15 will come to Science .1 The President, Vice-President and See- Science a letter describing his col- ceptions. college audiences, It's about the and with it the inevitable disappointments for many lece emperience there and his im- Universities are made problems they encounter ni col- o1 t h o s e involved. retary of the S.O. shall be elected by the pressions of European student life constituent colleges, each of which lege; it's written about young peo- entire S.O. membership before the end of in general usually has a reputation in a par- ple by a young playwright. ARay of Hope each school year and shall hold o f fi c e Although the col- Q. How do you feel when a lady s o m e d y . 3 0 0 . V r t o c o l l e g e s n o a n e n t i e s The first thing one notices about for the entire school year. leges often nave rebsious names comes running across the street hopeless situation. There is always the example of being a student in Durope is that no longer any religious and says, "There's Alan Arkin!"? substantial number of Scienceites who manage The Student Council shall elect, no later way of life rather than merely ohhe affiliation. One's religion is more A. Shocked. I feel the loss of to beat the system and get the right answers from than the second sitting of each school British universities, anonymity very acutely, but it's a T h e m o r e take year. from their filling out the sec. however, and they tend to ask for necessity. consolation from the fact that thousands of other Thad always felt membership before the end of each school it bluntly. rather than in the m i n c Q. Would you do it again? students are undergoing the same ordeal. And after that "student" was a euphemism A. Lose my anonymity? Yes, I all, what could be more exhilarating than a hard year and shall hold office for the entire for "none". this is not the case in ing p r e x e r e n c e tional)" of America liketheopportunitytopickand slapnithefacefromthecollegeofyourchoice.An school year. Burope. There the student is a Hitch-hike choose what to do. educational experience, to say the least, respected institution. respected for Among the arguments advanced by the op- what he for Because all the major cities in posi tion to this amendment was the fa ct that whatnemaybecome Europe are so near, it would enable only three seniors each year dents move around a lot. usually Student Artist Holds Exhibit toholdstudentcounciloffice,insteadofsix this is the nirst direrence one sops. out or c o u t e e system of by hitching. Many go a s f a r a s and Turker on a "vac." as before. There is no doubt of the value of education itself is quite different. By Jeanne Thelwell Forte's versatility is demon. this experience in terms of service, leadership T h e r e h m which can be done for n e x t n o t i n g . t h i n y dollars will take T h a t e x h i b i t o f w a t e r c o l o r p a i n t i n g y o u v e b e e n strated by the unique balance be- and individual prestige. However, since the monies, the scholar's gowns you round trip by student flight admiring outside the General Office is the work of h i s m o d e r and classical council'spurposeistoservethestudentbody w e a r s the various e n t i t e s and betweenvirtuallyallmajorcities. Siliot Forte, to whom " a r s more chovable a s s work. The exhibit, consisting of as a whole, the major if not sole consideration s o o n , Nobody aca- To study abroad one has to de- hobby than as a career." three RioseDe and four ab- in evaluating the amendment should be not d e m i e T i t u n i s s e r o u s and velop more than the stracts, is bright, colorful and vi- orat three seniors but 3,000 students. often they are grumbled at, but unlike the Ameri traditional liberal tolerance. One must be able ot shift one's whole The abstracts, which Forte says Another opposition argument held that an- cans, are not embarrassed by rit- way of analyzing situations. The exoressnowspectac just nual electionsdeprived the students of an op- American. it took m e British and the continentals tend moods," are bold and striking. The portunity to remove an inefficient administra- some time before I did not have to be less tolerant of others' views colors are all carefully balancec tion in January as well as w u n e . to reduce ritual into quaintness in on politics and history than we and intense. The landscapes are there is no doubt that we will all be the losers order to deal with it. are, simply because these ques- delicate and realistic, transporting if our council officers prove unequal to their Educational Distinction tions are largely academic for us. their private responsibilities.Thebettersolution,however, u n s e r t r a d u a t e s u s t e m For Europeans history and politics realms. O n e of the landscapes. depicting a lone girl in the coun- is for all of us to take the June elections more quitedissimilar ot ours. nI Britain are too meaningful ot be tolerant seriously and to give greater thought and con- a n d , b e l i e v e , Europe, aboutthem.Ifyouare tootolerant try at night, is the best example sideration to the importance of our vote when chooses a specialized field, such as you will be thought a vegetable; of Forte's color sense. The paint- "we go to the polls.' economics or natural science, and for tolerance the British substitute ing si done in white and various three, four, years tact, shades of black and gray, creat We students have tended to take student "reads" I wouldn't encourage anyone ot ing an eerie, hushed a n d ominous council elections and activities for granted. sists of attending lectures (from apply to a foreign university atmosphere. The other landscapes, Even worse, five a week in we have been rather indifferent somearis cous he is eith er under the impressi on water both serene, scenes, are re- about them and even cynical. "They make a thirty that the Europeans are all very laxing paintings, one a lively w a lot of promises but never do anything about which you take notes b u t d o not much better educa ted terfall swirling down a hillside, or else has the notion t h e m " has best expressed the prevalent atti- "participate," going t u t o r i a l s one else (generally one a week) where five that Europe s i m p l y America bordered by narrow streets and students and a lecturer discuss the hundred years, If there were no student council or other lectures or read essays, and most ropeans are educated differently along the shore. form of student government, we would surely of all. reading in the library because Europe i sm ost funda- S ofara shiefuturenlaneare and justifiably wantone. By the same token, There si nobureaucracyassuch, mentally un like America . If any concerned, Forte is interested in we should recognize that the stren gth or weak- cince the teaching staff does the Scienceites are inte restedinap hitching his artistic talent to a work. Each student is p lying abroad I would be glad to scientific education, with a career interest, support, and encouragement. o f t h e have depends on our assigned a tutor, who is supposed give any help I can. in architecture as a possible goal. Friday. December 23, 1966 Honor Roll The Guidance Department has announced that the following list is in no special order. Seniors SCIENCE SURVEY Page Three For Scienceites ally 150Sd R tu ents' Rights Scien ce urveying S s At a December 9 rally for stu- student grievances against dents' Tients nutended some thing: Brownies, Anyone? such as dress regulations and 'Observatory' Honored a-l 150 Scienceites, several speakers leged censorship of Survey wil be Senior girls ni the "Nutritional Observatory has r e c t i v e r the c a l l e d f o r a l i b e r a l i z a t i o n of s c h o o l s u b m i t t e d the S c i e n c e " c l a s s t o o k t h e B e t t y fi r s t p l a c e a w a r d ni t h e 3 2 n d Co administration Crocker Scholarship test on De- lumbia Scholastic Prem The first speaker, Paul Steiner, lateni December bytheDuBols cember 6 tion Cardook competition Year. 2.1. listed the following sa the de The examination included ques- booksfromhigh schools through- mands being made of the schools' tions on interior design, food pre- out the country participated ni this and childern contest, administration: permission for par- Science Ends tisan organizations ot meet in the Girls with high scores on hte of the work. test are designated school win. tribute schol building, permission tods-i nartisan literature no the Charity Drive ners. From these are chosen the Sophs Plan Events Sophomore a n d state finalists who are eligible for w e r e for permission national recognition, college schol. s t u d e n t s t o evael hte budlinig annual Red Cross drive, helping Science recently completed its planned a t the November 30 or- ganizational meeting of the Class during their huncl poeidr arships, and cash prizes. Sentier sttathedat i t the de- ot bring the joys of Christmas ot Science's only past winner was maneeydy children, ta home and Beth L. Samsky, who was a state CRss president Galderisi mandsareT O t I met. t h e DuBois abroad, finalist in 1957. Soph Skating P arty Clmubight stage a sit-in. This year's drive netted about which Look Cityco-chairmanofthe DsuBoi $120, a good s h o w i n g r e c o r d i n after school at the Riverdale Ice C l u b s M a t t y B e r k e l h a m m e r , s a i d M r . M e i s e l , t h e d r i v e ' s c o o r - Entrance Exam S k a t i n g R i n k on 2 3 6 t h S t r e e t a n d "Studentsare re sponsibale n d ma- dinator, althou g h somewhat under A p p r o x i m a t e l y 5 . 0 0 0 j u n i o r h i c h broadw i t tureenoughforthesefreedoms." R i s t Y e a r ' s totall school students wil take the an- He also made plans for aSoph- He beltevesthatschool a r t With the money, toys such as nual examination January 91 and omore-Freshman Lounge p r o p e r p l a c e s f o r t h o s e w i t h p a r d o u s a n d s m a l l m u s i o n l i n s t r u 2 0 f o r a d m i s s i o n t o S c i e n c e i n t h e B o y s ' G y m a f t e r s c h o o l . No d a t e tisanbeliefso fa n yt y p et omeet In fall. hasyetbeenchosenforthisevent. and pleavnents.HegavetheNew change from previous vears. these exorcted that about 200 manC l u ba sa nexample of such forwarded TOT of the candidates will pass the Mr. Karon Gets Post News has that a group already enjoying the right not only to the Red Cross. but also reached u s e school facilities to several domestic courts and fif- aptitude in English and mathema- Mr. Martin Karon, teen charity agencies. Columbia has been appointed Anotherspeaker,GeoffreyConk- the toys were given University Psychological Bureau. Assistant Vcie Chancellor of City Scienceites will be excused from College, effective July 1. Current lin, o fa g r o u pcalledthe only to hospitals. This year, they Civill Liberties Union, lor the yl Associate Dean of Engineering stressed hat students, w i l l i n s ni underprivileged neighborhoods exams. at City, Mr. KaronthinksBronx tofacethepossibleconsequences and to the vouth of South Viet. Science a paragon of excellence ineducation, fo suspension action, hsodul adhere to their won prin- Helping Mr. Meisel ni his work P.S.A. L. Hosts ciplerasther than the decrees fo were Fred Rubin, 2-23, Rochelle Anixt, 2-13, Marylin Lipton, 4-7, 6 Representatives Poll Asks Opinions hte administration. A meor comprehensive list of and Ming Mat, 3-3. Of Leaders' Club On S.O., Parents Is the S.O, succeeding in its job Mid-Year Examination Schedule Six members of Science's Lead- of making science a better school. ers' Club were guests of the Pub- Should a one-year residency re- lic School Athletic League Girls' imposed Time T an a l 12 Ma n u a r y 1 6 T a n e a r y I s Division at a Tavern on the Green fare recipients? Are today's teen luncheon, November 15. 106:0 器 : The luncheon good example for youth? Are S.O. was to encourage girls to become dues excessive? Do welfare clients ohysica education teachers. deserve to be on the rolls. Should proximately entertainers enter politics? 999:10 and These current Sa 10 Shem their faculty attended put approximately this Scienceites an a special pou con eon, which was addressed by Mr. ducted by the Forum, Folowing 185 principal 01 D 3:is Witt Clinton High S c h o o l , Miss Roxee Joly, principal of Julia Rus. Kachman e n school Representing Science were Don- fessional artists t r o t magazines n a Bren, 424; Janet Mertz, A r t S t u d e n t s and advertising agencies. Science Rita Barbara and Music and Art were the only Gersh, 4-7; Susan Hershfield, 4-7; FOR SALE two high schools represented. and Nancy Nagel, 4-22. Paint Wards 195 ENCYCLOPEDIA RRITANNICA At Bellevue Col 887.2764 Two weeks ago several Science- Campus Cofee Shoppe ites were among 150 art students and professional artists whotook Tel. 364-9871 8 E. Bedford Park Ave. LO 7.0088 part in "Operation Christmas Win- Tol. 364-8921 3( blocks from Science) SHESLOW BROS. dows" Bellevue FLOOR COVERINGS Manhattan. HOUSEWARES - LAMPS - GIFTS Initiated ten years ago by Mrs. • Home-Cooked Meals Augusta haspert, this volunteer 142 Dyckman St., New York, N. .Y many hospital- • FREE DELIVERY - OPEN EVERY DAY C. KATZ 1769 UNIV. PL. STATIONERY TOYS JUDO and JIU-JITSU INSTRUCTI ON 254 E. 2041h St. LU 4-3996 LUdlow 4.7245 CALL CY 5-1596 UN 3.0671 PENROD'S CARDS - TO TY FAVORS YS - PAR STATIONERY. REVIEW BOOKS 706 Lydig Avenue, Bronx, N, Y. Since 1897 942-3726 Expert Alterations PREE LIET FASHIONS JU SUTEWECOWNS DRESES, I S B r o a d w a y , N e w Y o r k , N X. . 1 0 0 3 1 A Academy Sts.) Juliet Diax THE NEW QUEENS HAND L AU NDR Y 11445 Queens Blvd. , Forest Hils BU 3-1271 OLD FASHIONED ICE CREAM PARLOR AND COFFEE SHOP Private Room Available for Parties 294 EAST KINGSBRIDGE ROAD BRONX, N. Y. ized children ot spend a m o r e pleasant holiday season. Arriving at the hospital on De- cember 10. the v o l u n e e r s givenpaints, brushes, and coffee, and sent oft to a ward. Those nov actively engaged ni paintivarious themselves other odd 100s The 150 participants consisted mainly of art students and pro- WANTED 1 . Re Smal room, garage or, basement for rent. Wil be used as laboratory • Student Special ... ¢ HonaasEenc.h t 65 vti nce upon a time... High School Was Enough TODAY-YOU NEED MORE If you want a high rise, rewarding career You ned colege technical training ot make aplace for yourself in today's growing technologies. VOORHEES TECHS' 2-year colege degree programs (Associate in Applied Science Degree) excel in educating high school graduates as technicians... ot take advantage of jobs and career opportunities which have never been greater or paid more. A.A.S. DEGR EE TECHNOLOGIES Air Conditioning • Automotive • Electronics Bui lding Construction • Lithography Computer Technology • Materials Processing (Tool Design for Mas Production) CO-EDUCATIONAL High School Educatio AT VTI n Is Just The Beg inning- KEEP GROWING AP PLY NOW for Sept. 1967 FRESHMAN CLASS Write or phone Director of Admissions for Catalog H VOORHESTECHNICALINSTITUTE Endowed, Non-Profit Since 18 81 vt i 450 West 41st St., N.Y. 10036 • LO 3 -1370 EXCITING CARERS FOR YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN NI THE PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES BEGIN AT BCP The challenge of phar- maceutical research, dis- trib ution, public service and administration are some of the many rewarding areas open ot BCP graduates. Comprehensive curriculums stress profession al pre- paration in pharmac e ut ical research a n d practice. Residence Hal Available Write or phone for: I nformation nterview with Dean Arthur G. Zupko BROOKLYN COLLEGE OF PHARMACY OF LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY 600LatavetteAve.,Brocklye,N.Y.11216 Founded 1886 -MAin 2-4040 หรือ 翻 Page Four SCIENCE SURVEY Morris, MusicandArtFallas Cag Friday, December 23, 196 (Continued from Page 1) ers Take Four Straight were probably due ot excessive caution and tirscame mies. Staging hte second half surge Bowlers Set SPLINTERS FROM THE BENCH whichhasorcome fo their ofense, Season Highs downed Forest Hils November 18. By Richard Adler fisrt quarter,13-8,andby1tathe ngiStet team and nidvidiual sea- A Winning Season s o nrecords, the Sciencebowlers scoring skein in the third quarter subdued Roo2s-e1veNlotvember and popped for 14 points 21. Thweinplacedthe seasons' DRAKE BEIL Richard Sherman, who came off p o u r i n 1% tallies Rollinga record total of697, eTh ecneiSc basketbal teamis havinitgs most sucesful oeasns t h eA teamwas bolstered b yS ey- of hte decade. sudden change inhet maest' performance canot and Juris Upmalis with 13 were Adler'sfine 214pincount. eb atributed only to thefact that ti plays in a weaker league; erhet the hoopsters' high men. Adler's score was thesquasd' havebeen eral changes in eht etam itself Ronny Wynn once again showed a n do n l y2 0 0g a m e of the m•ac first Of first importance are the etams' mlanet atitudes. CoacNhorman his dribbling and bal handling Lefkowitz' squad isna optimistiocne;theony olnger have het ngiefl Pinmen's Hopes Fade that htey will bengdoi all right fi the oppositionseorcs fewer than down court with continuous fast L o s i n et oClinton0-3 Novem- a dehundr p.snoti Thecesnt ofwin isin thaeir and the weatmhole break controutu ber 3, the keglers lost yna chance kaset deper breaths htan Leadins proponents or wi points to the ocience cause theymighthavehad for a division surge of confidence ear ynRno Wyn and Juris Upms,ail the wot denosaes veterans of the clubBhot. have hadwto yeasr of varsity Icing the Win Allthreeo fthe utkeam. experience nad both havel ni t h e s e years They With a eno and one penalty sit- graduated from pckiu-p scholyard ball to a sharp stylefo strategic. uation and the game in the raD prisingly,theBandC teamcasme position playing. Wyn, oneof the smerlal menin theleague, meor failed to reach the 600 mkar. Sur- Science's Ronny nWny size with his s t e p p e d t o t h e soul niel sa i ne with595and593pinfalls. t h e n m a k e s up for and goo-outd had ice w a t e r in his veins dna Whatever Sceince scohroinogrs adeptbal handling is therewerewenttoCarl Schwartzs,ide shot. Upmalis the scorer on thesquad, averagnig abou1t7points t h i r d s t r a i g h t e x h i b i t i o n v i c t o r y whobowledeht meet highof 193. Knel Showing a gameeTs.he wot enmocib SCIENCE SCORES to form a 61•08 decision over Morris De. AGAIN! Dvnirg past a n M&amp;amp;A defender, after-effects comertord controutes Two pomts. chpcesoi a kaet charge offense that can bomb exhbioitin victory. from their hubmyiClilinatont,ion t h e pinmen away a zonferom t h e oustdie, or Leadnig comfortably at hte half, hwti a flurry o f s c o r e s until the t w o f r e e t h r o w s w h i c h o u t t h e l earlier tedt a w a y a m a n - t o - m a n w i t h s p e e d 33-23, the Science team sawtheir Msiror teambrokeand fell behind Sciencecagersouto freach. l o s s t o T a f t b y demolishingthe Presidents3-0 November10. There ismore than Rony and lead dwindle and finally diminish 57-M56o,rrismomentarily tookeht J u r i s Upmalis a n d Ronny ,Wny to40-39. The n, ta the final quar- Coming on Strong Juris, howev,er thaat ccounts for lead back, buwt ithonly3 0sec- whorantheshowfor,necSic ter began, Mosir sudenyl hiat onus Upmalis t e a m e dt os c o r e3 2 points. m o n e theA teamrolledt o a 639-596 Ther i sKenny Bernstein, Ovearctowmoingmkra deficit, this new invasion inthewins col- hot streak, shooting ahead for the unde boardsand thanhalftheSciencetotal. triumph.TheBteamhit the pock- who dipdlayn't mulcasth year but first time in the game, 48-49. sale oue a t or e x a m ew eno pout a tevenmoreoften,humbling their has now eptsped intothsetarting But the Science five responded m a r t i n no poence. Remaining Schedule played tre- adversaries660-538. Lngdaei the Whti Morrisinpossessionofthe anJ. tAr andDesign mendousnilyhte first ewf games. Cager Coach Lefkowitz A t e a m steve Seigel dropped 183 bla and o n l y 25 s e c o n d sremain- Chelsea TheirseGerg Tillamsaunrp,risingantsdout owh had done aremark- pins ing in the K a r e whJiolehn avonocRcodrop- Senior Footballers Dodge Home aebl defensive job, bolstering hte backboard power. Finally there is DumpJuniors,22-0 berinning to envision. Alfred E. Smith Away ngioCbrbel aweak Dodge squad Maty Zwg,ie ajunior,who kiel Havlicek hepls pick uphet backcourt incounter toe orches Food &amp;amp; Maritime Home -uNovender to h e kenters wont game blyending additional bal handling supo.rt By Emanuel Cherney But Rony Wynn forestalled a n y FasInhdiuosntry over Thsi year, whti hte loss ofMare Hahndna Genl deChabert, the hte 500markforhte first Watched by such Thoughts Feb. Artand Design Seson pulling down Sciencemaet figured tobedae lastinLeagueI.Suddenly,Science Away isni League IIand 4-0sa this is being writBtuten,a interesting crowd of frozen football b u l l s , Morris turnover, getting fouled, NY.. Printing Away their fourth against three Chelseal o m e ones statistic is that three of our four victories came ta the expense of napless Junior eleven tell to the non-league teams, eno fo whom,Moris hgHi Scho,l isin League 1 Science Seniors 20-0 December o this year and si supposed ot be a very tough eamt. No, the league on the Harris Field gridironi change is not hte major cause fo this excelent hsowng;i this i s the with t little どししいし。 Swimmers Steamroller Taft 79-16 result of a postuve mental atutude, added physical prowess, and unall. the fierce pass rush of a newly acquired aggressive style of play. Marc Michelstein and Bob Mesco. My charles Sukowitz About this aggressiveness, the delense is a w e b l k e net that ho longer waits for its opponents ot shoot, but harasses htem, goading after their first drive downfield Closing out their '66 campaign wIt a touns ttha was t w o yards in three plays) lacking in previous, more crucial gamblers, and on longer a wait-a-while-and-we'll-see-what-happens, Blocked, the punt attempt also meets, the Science swimmers dis- mistake ridden ioke as it used to be. Hitting no close ot 50% fo their posed of T a f 79-16 December 1 shots from the field (beter than any pro team) with a limited per- f o l l o w i n g series, S e n i o r D r a k e The win placed the mermen fifth centage of forced attemots. Science is rapidly proving to be the team Beil, behind some fine blocks from ot beat this year. If they continue ot play with the skill they have Mel Kahn, Barry Kogel, and Bruce evereowes Shown so k r the Science Celtics. which have aptly dubbed them. rumbled should be contenders for league laurels and a championship trophy — thus clearing away the misconception that Science has no basketbal Tate in the second quarter. the the 50-yard free, Horowitz-Messer butterfly, a n d team, and that the only thing of interest si the cheerleading squad. Seniors scored again, Rolling out Feigenbaum quarterback Louis (1:07.6)-Greenwald in the 100-yard free were b u t winning by over live seconds. K1 6-9632 Gordon spotted end Tommy Lusteg some of the Turks who swept After spotting the Science swim- their respective events. mers seven points on a disqualifi. cation ni the opening 200-yard GRAND PRIX ceeded ot hti mih with a perfect bitch good for twenty-three yard. Plastering the Presidents medley relay. Monroe went on to SLOT RACING CENTER and the touchdown, a n e hand the their third 5647 Broadway (near 232nd St.) By the time naltume restivites "Roreovembery.cereal Breaking of the blocks, Ira Brawer and Vci Torres begin freestyle. straight loss November 16, 67-28. feverish attempts warm ing Science 63-32. third i n the 200-yard individual second triumph, Co-captain Ira Brawer emerged numb hands or to restore any sort victorious ni both the 200 a n d ÷00 tons' Ferman ni the 100-yard free- ended, the field Snapping any hopes which Sci- medley. of play was dark, forcing the er- encess But the diving event, thoroughly stvle with a line 55.8. Ken Wink- yard freestyles, winning the final race by more than a hall lap as mainder of the came to be played for an upset, the Governors grab- dominated yb Clinton stars Lopez ler closed out his day with six he cam e home in 4:53.6. under Harris Field's lights, which bed the first three events as well and Comacho, opened a fifteen points, as he took the T O d a Y a r d Holding tenaciously to a one- F.E. S. consist. mainly of the moon and as aquick eleven point lead. point lead that was never threat- breast in1:18.1. Shaving the margin down three C h e d Scienceites tried ot outscream, stroke lead throughout the stars. Ken Winkler edged the Tra Brewer (2:29.3) and Competing ni hsi second race of outcheer, and outswim Evander as Eagles' Simonelli ni hte 100-yard K e n Winkler placed first and the meet. Ira Brawer collected his the 400-yard freestyle relay roared brenst to grab second place anc leet conditiong both tests c o n ot its conclusion. They were suc- tinued to play spirited football three points for the Green told Grand Opening! through the noriodowa only, as the Turks lost the event, ever. after the seniors ran back and with ti the meet, in one of ELENA'S PIZZA a pass interception for Second Time in Campaign the most exciting contests of any Clinton Tops Turk Shooters Homemade Italion Dishes down early in the period, season. The final Ruander 4 9 Science 46 1 E. Moshulu P'imy their coach. Bruce Feig, called the game and pulled his charges off the field. "There's no need ot con- Missing the mark yb a wide margin, Science's riflemen Deceiving Start t i n u e . " h e s a i d . " t h i n k w e w e f e l l t o C l i n t o n D e c e m b e r 8 , 7 6 8 - 7 3 9 . I n d r o p p i n g t h e i r s e c o n d H e l d N o v e m b e r 41 a t t h e C l i n - made our point." meet of the season to the Governors, the Science sharpshooters ton pool, the meet started auspi- RIVERDALE G put on their poorest perfor- ciously for the Green and Gold mance yet this year. as a win in the 200-yard medley ICE SKATIN Tw o weeks e a r l i e r , Alfred E. r e l a y a n d a 1 - 2 s w e e p Bob's Picks Smith contended with a seemingly Vinnie Zeccola and Elizur Second Bedroon RINK different etam, as Coach Martin in the 200-yard individual medley G r e e n e ' s m a r k s m e n h i t t h e t a r g e t opened a four point Science lead AL WEATHER - AL NEW As M.r Bel si occupied with the task of filling the right side of h e l d u n t i l t h e t i n a , r e l a y t h i s m o n t h ' s p a g e , I v' e a g r e e d ot fi l l ni w i t h a f e w o f my o w n p r e d i c - a s t e n W e r e a m a n n e r w h i c h tions for some future Science sports scenes. Unprecedented Performance he mermen lost a valuable two 2 3 6 t h S t . &amp;amp; B r o a d w a y BASKETBALL: Coach Lefkowitz' hoopsters are playing the type of R o m p i n g over S m i t h 815-512, at points in the T 100-yard backstroke, 543-6460 ball which Clinton usually reserved for Green and Gold teams in past hte Knickerbocker Range Novem- Sandy Rickleen and R i c h i The years and from this vantage point there doesn't seem to be any reason racked up Storm battled Evander's Park ot Long Island Sounds why Science's hot stresk should be stopped short of a division title total unmatched finish so close that the judges had On their way up ot that lofty point, the team will have some tough squad's formation three vears 380. to confer for two minutes before "LatestSoundni PopMusic" barriers to hurdle. The toughest of those are Art &amp;amp; Design and Dodge the shooters, Eugene awarding the decision ot the Tiger OL 1-6972 A r t &amp;amp; D e s i g n w i l l f a l l ot t h e h o o p s t e r s J a n u a r y , 5 6 4 - 6 2 , a n d o u t e P a c k e r s c o r e d 1 6 6 p o i n t s swimmer, Hi-Jinx Sporting Co. 3 5 0 9 J e r o m e A v e n u e will crumble 71-67 January 20. After those two games it should be O n c e again displaying w i t h S c i e n c e s t i l l u p b y t o u r smooth sailing. The cagers wil knock of Fashion Industry k o o n s h o o t i n e marksmen Evander took the top two spots in B u t our ICE SKATES -B ASKETBALL January 21. and then, on February 8, the season finale should see Chei- squeezed by Evander November th e 400-yard freestyle. Singer TEAM SWEATERS - JACKETS sea give Science aticket ot hte playoffs by losing 58-52. 30. 801-791. Leading the scoring mermen weren't about to roll over CONVERSE -KEDS -SPALDING S E N I O R A L U M N I G A M E : P l a y e d t o n i g h t i n t h e b o y s ' g y m , t h i s r a z z l e . e f f o r t s . G o u l d a n d Miller and play dead, Ken Winkler and Leathercrafts SNEAKERS stormed m n e k dazzle affair si one of the highlights of the '66-'67 season. Such Science recorded 167 out of a possible 20 BAGS - BELTS their own 1-2 sweep in the 100- UN IQUE JEWELRY Old Timers as George Rubin and Marc Hahn will grace the scene anc breast, thereby S.O. DISCOUNT the Seniors may have a tough time holding their own. Nevertheless, I With their hopes for a division UNUSU AL GIFTS end of four quarters followed by a thrilling Ask for JINX predict a 69-69 tie at the title fading, the rifle team could the four point margin. However the Tigers tore t h e doubleovertime, Unfortunately, Im' not free ot disclose who'llbe on gular meet against Clinton and do no better than split a trian- 10 East Gun BroAr. N.Y.10467 top as the final buzzer sounds. You'll have to come and learn for your- Green and Gold apart in the final, self. Alfred E. Smith December .7</text>
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                <text>Science Survey, Vol. 54, No. 3</text>
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                <text>Science Survey, Vol. 54, No. 3. Containing the following articles: Science Basketballers Capture Season Opener; Upmalis and Wynn Excel, Mr. Beckenstein Discusses Addiction, Alcohol, Long Hair, S.O. Council Hears Budget, Musicians Present 'Nutcracker Suite', 'Impossible Dream', 47 Students take Westinghouse Test In 'Talent Search', Future Teachers' Club Views Film, Sophomores Elect Class Officers For Coming Term, Russians Establish A 'Moscow Science', Seniors See 'Macbeth', Arista Inducts 89 Seniors At Semi-Annual Assembly, S.O. Reform Upheld, School Fund Aids Underprivileged Indian Youth, Comedian Relates Serious Ambitions, Facing the Future, Universities Abroad, Student Artist Holds Exhibit, Honor Roll, 150 Scienceites Rally For Students' Rights, Science Ends Charity Drive, Science Surveyings, P.S.A.L. Hosts 6 Representatives Of Leader's Club, Poll Asks Opinions On S.O., Parents, Art Students Paint Wards At Bellevue, Morris, Music, and Art Fall as Cagers Take Four Straight, Bowlers Set Season Highs, Senior Footballers Dump Juniors, 22-0, Swimmers Steamroller Taft 79-16, Clinton Tops Turk Shooters Second Time in Campaign. </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>Division Crown Captured by Green and Gold Hoopsters!! Results of Informal People Poll Released S e e P a g e 2. Seur Survey Takes O n N e w L o o k ! See Below THE BRONX HIGH SCHOOL OF SCIENCE Vol. LIV - No. 4 POLITICAL GROUP Arista Members 3 SCIENCEITES DIE Red Cross Thanks New Term Bring SEES H' UAC" FILM Choose Officers s DURING CHRISTMAS Science For Gifts SO. . COUNCLI At First Meeting To Needy Children Faculty Changes The b ON PROTESTORS eginning of the spring Elliot Figman, 4-16, was elected term brought w ith it several fa- 4-19, 1Caught nI Hotel Fire; The American Red Cross has culty changes CONVENES president; expressed its gratitude to Science- M.r Arnold Canell of the Eng- bach, 4-4, 2 Others Kiled ites for their contributions of gifts to underprivileged children d u r lish D e p a r t m e n t is o n sabbatical Berkeley Dissidents an assembly Februars leave. place has been filled Grievance Committee The total voted nI Auto Crash i n g t h e annual Red Cross Drive. by Miss Roda Neugebauer. Labeled 'Red' In a letter sent ot D.r Alexander nI the Foreign Language De- Found Unused Prior to voting, the candi- Taffel, Helen De Vito, director of partment, Mrs. susan Gold is r e ByFilm datesstressedthatAristamustbe yB Irene Stern ByStudents ruo Wolfgang M.r William Meisel, Science's Red Substituting the ProgramofService, thanked placingMrs,RosaKarlin,whosi Mrs, schosl Michitsch,and dnyeSi Navon, al Cross Sponsor, sa wel as "all the were killed in ac- — teachers and student. •Schwager, also on leave, is YOUTH DISCUSSED school, Well Mrs. Carol Golden. CLUB CHARTERED thewinter witen. who shared in making possible the r s . Anna Davis of the Mathe surrested, in order that the meme generous gift". Micwhaesl wnkgoir at H o t e l being replaced b y miss shella A n *This contribution matics on leave, Dep artment, By Barbara Walzer Club Examines Youth bers of Arista may more often Failure of the Science student Myera intheLakePlacid resort of well chosen small, new and at- tonoff. Mrs. Ru tractive playthings for little boys th Ruderman has e sbonstoil body to make use of the Student Protest Groups Mr. Rosenfeld, Arista faculty areoaf uwpeNstateYork. girls." assumed Mrs, Davis' adviser,remindedmembers that oneoffivewhodiedinafireDe- "was tiesintheGuidanceDepartment. CommitteeonStudentAffairswas nI U.S. their officers have a large task cember 27. The ohter victims, from m o s t w e l c o m e a n d s u r e l y h e l n e d In the Physical Sciences De- one subject of discussion at the before them, and must therefore Montreal dna Lake Placid, were to make the holidays happier for partnent, at. Marun Karon has youngsters Student Council meeting on Feb- be honest, trustworthy, and fully all overytfif yearsodl. w a r d s , in child-care agencies of versity leftot takeapostatCityUni- ruary3. By Danette Riso responsible. many types, and those in the fam. and has been replaced by Mrs. Marta Greene, Mr. Martin students have brought "Operation Abolition," 1 1 l m ilies of service-men. Active in civil rights and peace Marin has also left to a c c e p t a grievances to the attention of the produced by the House Un-Ameri- movements Michnes The selection of gifts included post at City. His physics and ad- Committee. Some are unaware of can Committee, SENIOR MATH TEAM shown at the pebruary 3 meetin were the social sciences. toy arounes. crayon. vanced physics classes are being the newly-formed SCSA; others school he wis nsentor Ken ant toy cars and dolls. The gifts were sent to children in ten different taught by Mr. Jerry Holzman. Mr. are unsure of its purpose. Scien. of the Political Science Club. Paul Fried, a former Scienceite based on cemon- TAKES FIRST PLACE former Soph council delegate. He would received Bronx. Manhattan and the w i l l teach air. Holzman's physic. ceites, the Council felt, seem re- strations against a series of HUAC and HDS classes. luctant to bring their problems to hesp nge at the rinivers v O C2 NI CITYWIDE MEET Scholarship. the S.O. office, which is SCSA fornia at San Francisco. It charges Wolfgang and Sidney were killed ni an automobile accident on De- headquarters. Suggested remedies The car they were for the situation included transfer "a few hard-core communist who Defeats Stuyvesant driven by Wolfgang, missed a Honor Society Announces of SCSA operations to the cafe- agitators" L u E I 0 11 dent dupes" ot do the "dirty work By Five Points teria and publicity in Survey. o1 the Party. The tilm concludes w e y cut into the traffic going Scholarship Semifinalists in the opposite aireccion. a n d n i Character Study that these demonstrations are "a surface manifestation of a w i d e The Science Senior Math Team acar driven yb Mrs. Zena Kant- High scores on the November PSAT have put fifteen took first place in r o w i z . w a s a h e a d on collision rangeofsmearactivities- formed term in the Interscholastic Math Science seniors in aposition to win college scholarships of up whose purpose is to $4,000. The students, al members of Arista, human condition and personality. stroving HUAC and our national Leaque Competition, with a live. orfnt sea.t eH was taken to Ford- for the avowed purpose of Sidney was seated ni the right are now semi- finalists charterca Dy Council. security system.' point lead over its closest compe- hall. Hospital and pronounced thenation-wide Pecultyadvisert ot h en e wciut titor, Stuyvesant. deac. Woifgang was scholarship competition spon- is Mr. Jack Luria of the Guidance HUAC Film Science compiled a team score brought to Misericordia Hospital 1 6 S e n i o r s A c h i e v e sored by the National Honor Department. 01 88: Stuyvesant a score 01 85: where he died January 6. T h e Council also voted to create A t i t s n e x t meeting. t h e c l u b and Lalavette the third place Society, Arista's Semifinalist Rating ganization a committee of two seniors, two discussed the film and why nse hoon Cocer oer 38 0ron3pand8 winner, had 54. T h e fourth and Satisfactory Condition The field of competition wil be juniors, two sophomores, and ont Is American youth sincerely in- Mrs. Kantrowitz still In 'Talent Search' o e Brooklyn Tech and Midwood, with Misericordia Hospital; her condi- the judges consider the December v i o l a t i o n s o f t h e S O freshman investigate Sixteen Scienceites were named The committee members, to b e ap- or is it merely using politics as an The Junior Math Team finished Another Scienceite,Alan Rubin, as semi-finalists in the 1967 West- Scholarship President Neil in the back seat of the boys' inghouse Science Talent Search. Clendennin, will study charges of question at the Political Science Club's December 16 meeting. Francis Lewis by one point. was treated for contusionsof the group of three saris and on the basis of biographical data, A t b o t h t h e J u n i o r a n d s e n i o r knee at Misericordia thirteen boys, a considerable ni- s e c o n d a r y s c h o o l r e c o r d s . a n d 1 - sented to the Council in a petition Some club members felt that meets, there is a starting team of and then released. nancial need. it was charged that not all de.. rebellion is fine, as long as those five members, w h o a r e a s k e d t o Sidney had been a member of among three hundred high school evates w e r e given coual times in involved have something to say solve six problems e v e r y high onenest Wolfgang which to speak and that the vot. ing for the last S.O. amendment the voung are lustitied in strug. which is valid. Others argued that school receives the 99 m e 2e 0 letterman on the Rifle Team, He became semifinalists The number of Science semi- D r o pe m s ) each worth one point had several auto racing trophies. Tinaliete gling for peace since they bear A perfect meet score is 30 points; third weekend competitions up- state and on bong Island recommended for scholarships from 23,829 entrants and will be sharply lower than last year's to- two nrevious Advocates Lower Voting Age view, however, condemned them colleges and universities vears, the number of seminalists Martha 3-17, Science's "Just From these semifinalists forty s Ht a r n o t o f o l o d s t e t o t h e C i t r C . O strings." winners have been chosen for an were 15 and 23, respectively. This year's are: Council, announcedtotheS.O The berkeley Demonstrations all-expense-paid trip to Washing- Council January 6 that she had ForumCrowdHears ton. D.C.. where they will com- Michael Bales, Eric Beller, Laura joined the City Council's Com- The final minutes of the meet- peteforWestinghousescholarships b o l d r n o l d mittee voting age ins were spent in analyzing events and awards totaling $34.250 dur. land, Judy Housman, Aaron Kar- to 18. at Berkeley. A number of students CORE'sDonaldSmith Tonathan Kat? Markeme ing the five-day session beginning Although many of the reps felt contended that the demonstrators March 1. Five of these finalists pert, Steven Meed, Jessica Pers, were hypocritical in criticizing the from New Gordon Tucker. Kenneth that a delegate representing non-Scienceites, S.O. should not act withoutcoun- existence there of a Navy recruit- Public Relations Director Explains Ronald Wilkinson, Kenneth Winkler. cil permission, it was while Science's sixteen semifinalists take no action pending further centers for the dissemination His Organization's View are: Michael Bales, 4-19; Eric Bel- discussion at a later date. information on now to escape the Of 'Black Power' ler, 4-4; Michael Borowitz, 4-24; BadilloAddresses d r a f t . 4-14; Ste- Mr. Schwartz, faculty advisor, explained the students 4.10. Poter Hermann. 4-21: Judith phen Geis, 4-19; NaomiGuttman, CouncilofStudents Coming Events Berkeley were protesting the Navy By Jeanne Thelwell Housman, 4-15: Richard Jankow- Bronx Borough President Her- comiting h o t h ns representative Tebruary ski, 4-16, 4-17; m a m m a t u l inanaddressJan- of a force outside the University, Mr. Donald Smith, Public Rela- right and the rights of the people Richard Merkler, Janet uary the B r a n y S h u t d e n t 25-NMSQT Exam and were defending the rights of tions Dircetor Harlem." the so-called announced his intentior 26-NMSQT Exam for Sab- stude nts, as mem bers of the Uni- of Racial Equality (CORE), spoke Backlash," he o b s e r v e d oroblemsandnimsofth thatwhenanonoressedbeoblebe wook41k.ToddSwick.4-16. Albert Shpuntoff, 4-17; Paul Spi- to seek funds for the building o. bath Observers versity, to take any position they centers adjacent March Civil Rights movement the February gin to gain power, it si only na- several Bronx high schools. 9 meeting of the Forum. oposed con- 1_English In-class tests tural for the oppressor to react un- He said that the pr Mr. Smith first directed his at- Juniors Announce would swimming 2-Foreign Bands Participate tention to the Black Power strug. At the January 5Forum James 'Mad Show',Dance pools w h i c h would be open for class tests In Musical Combat gle. Its goals, he stated, are "those R. Dumpson declared that govern- student use during school hours. 3-Social Studies In-class that people have sought since the mentisobligedot acceptthere- tests Ten "pop-bands" participated beginningoftime" t h e a c h i o u s . sponsibility t o r i m n i o m e n t i n g t h e Junior activities for the sprink urging students Part of M r Badillo's talk was 4_CollegeBoards in an S.O. sponsored "Battle m eno political and economic right of every person to live d e class presi- "take an active role in calming 7-Math In-class tests the Bands" on February 17. p o w e r a n d t h e e s t a b l i s h m e n t o l dent Allan Reiter, include distri- Aformer New York City Wel- bution of discount tickets for the racial prejudice." As a start, he 8-U.N. Contest Exam Friday evening dance sound leadership programs suggested the provision of more approximate ly equitably enforced federal law fore Com missioner Mr. D u m b s o n Mad Show. These tickets, tot Biology Assembly combination were valid through Feb. 19, 1967, remedial reading A s s o c i a t i o n 450 Scienceites CORE, speaker explained, responsibility yo unger people in disadvantaged of America Contest The bands repre he enc sented t l o a k e t o t h e d a y w h e n t h e N e o r g reflected in both federal and state will admit either single or counlos at the discount price. and the establishment tire spectrum of modern pop communitywillformavasteco- well dy space for under. 10, 13-P hysicalScienceIn- the n a m i e present h u m a n rights revolution." Other activities additional stu sic; f o r example, folk-rock, party and a computer dance, The privileged pupils. Beat, United States. Contrary to popular belief, i n t h e course o r his discussion. skating party will be held after RepresentingDavid Dann, Ceonee 14, 15-Biology In-class tests The idea stated, 94% of the welfare clients Rink in RI- 16-Report Cards Distributed suag ested to S.O es . P r i d e n t N e i l Mr. Smith said that the singling in this city are eitherminedis. school at the Kelton - abled,over65. under 18, o r h cordole on March 10. The "Match- and S.O. Secretary Sharo n Saper 24-B eginning o f Easter Va- Clendennin at the October city- Making' D a n c e is scheduled stein, 3-11, who is also vice-presi- cation. wide S.O, conference in Andover, ton Powell by Congress was "de- parents o r children under 18: 2 9 dent of the Bronx Council. Newersey. n i n t b a s i e Constitutional (Continued on Page 3) April 21. February 27, 1967 Page Two SCIENCE SURVEY Monday, February 27,1967 Daniel Bernstein Sgl engl Editor-in-Chief Mark Nissenbaum Behind the Science Scene Editor-in-Chief A s s o c i a t e E d i t o r Jeffrey Berg published 8 times a year by the students of Survey is once again privileged classroom conditions to present the results of the Pre- unpleasant, Political Motivation Editorial Board Analyzed and 27% couldn't read the black! THE BRONX HIGH SCHOOL Informal People Pol, boards. lam as a guidinz force ni political thought at Science seems to have OF SCIENCE News Editors .....Joseph Schuldenrein, Irene Stern conducted regularly by the mem- reture Vita b a t t o r s bers of this staff, Great care has Thumbs Down all but disappeared, A substantial 75 West 205 Street 5100X,2.2. 10460 Sports Editor Robert Weisberger been taken ot represent acc urately At e same time, students ex th maJority students ques DR. ALEXANDER TAFFEL, Principal Business Managers. Daniel Czitrom, Anthony Mauro o n i n i o n s o t Science's diverse pressed a strong personal disap- tioned (68%) placed themselves student body, a n d all tabulations nave been checked and adjusted proval of hte February 27, 1967 Exchange Editor Ira b i a n a l e x e d Welch but right of Ché Guevara? Faculty Adviser M.r Richard Feingold wy computer, bisted by category. seemed to voice the unanimous ever, and the overwnelting nun Toleratio n si still the word, how- thefindingsare asfollows: Student Activities and the SO. . school-wide events. But along with the desire Scienceites revealed a surpris them as "unenlightened despots." uals who want ot change charactermed berofScienceitesfeelthatindivid ing attitude towa rds participation The average educator, he went on political conditions in the Why Pay More? to maintain these S.O. sponsored activities must go the willingness u n a n c i a l Only somewhat senile, invariably in extracurricu lar activities. to say, NI "decided. pompous, world are a healthy influence on The proposed increase in S.O. q u e s responsibility for them. We support the of- 1l% of those questioned said that thetic about the s u b j e c t m a t t e r our culture, "After all," said sopho nounced February 3 by S.O. President Neil ficers of the Student Organization i n t h e n they and, above all, outlandishly critical moreSandy S,ot one interviewer, Othen J u s t to get the "some of the nicest boys I know Clendennin has undoubtedly elicited angry decision to accept their responsibility by rais- motivations m o r e important fo his students' abilities." vuvortheeass wear long hair." denunciations from lowerclassmen who, if the ing S.O. dues. But we also recognize alterna- orom S.O. Council approves, will have to pay high- M.r involvement were "the feel. nig fo satisfaction one derives from er dues ni September. Many are inclined ot dent were to attend only two OS. events year- doing a good job." (36%), "the question the need for paying $3 instead of $2 ly, the S.O?s' financial difficulties would v e a s u r e working with other All Hail 'MacBird'? annually for S.O. membership. However, the s o l v e d a n d t u r t h e r increases i nd u e s avoided. peopel", (29%), and "the simple recent publication of the projected S.O. Bud- Every student must realize that,one way or oyj of belonging," (24%). By Stephen Hyslop another, the SO.. must met itsfinancial obli- Forward March S.O. Council on December 9, will provide the gations. eH must also realize t h a th ec a n pay Producing a play with Lyndon dent Kennedy) si brutally assa- answer to this question. for it by either attending S.O. activoirties Asfor enoofthe major issues Johnson, Robert Kennedy, and sinated by bacbeth, a trusted no facnig theSO.,.the various other polítical celebrit The new budget, the lowest since that of paying higher dues. ies bleman and general, whose home 1962-1963, calls for the expenditure of $15,210, dues, the student body appears ot P o r t r a y e d as characters in a in Dunsinane (Texas) the King be steipntpoingline. Of those Shakespearean tragedy was a is honoring with a royal visit, $1263 less than the 1965-1966 budget. As in The Proper Plan osunded ,out actually pretty bright idea. If only for The major characters in Mac past years, the S.O. wil provide funds for a kiedl the diea but almost al were originality of approach, it couldn't wide variety of student activities and events. wnigli t o go along with it, if, as Bird! include handsome John Ken Approximately 75% of all expenditures falls one non " th e guys up lose, MacBird!, which opened last U Dunc, who wins the nomination into three major groups. Seven publications si that i t s sinificance has b e e n alrgeyl hon- addition, 34% of hte students se lost at the box office; but wheth and assumes the throne, and his A perennial problem of Arista membership stairs reayl need the money." nI wek at the Vilage Gate, has not will receive the largest share of budget ap- orary and entailed little of thceonstructive het proposal sa an act of political successor, MacBird, who rules the propriations 一 $6830 or about %54 ofthe activity that should go gnola whti academic co ur age on t e Palt ok the 3 o er it has won what ti could have province ni which OD'une si as total; of this, Survey will receive $3500 which a c h i e v e m e n t . president. Stanley G., a freshman, sa a dramatized attack on Amer- sassinated. Rounding out the group represents 23% of all projectedS.O. spending It is therefore fitting that candidates for pointed out, "It certainy dimin. ican power politics si another mat- si ruthless Robert, John's younger for this year. Dynamo wil receive $1405 - or Arista office this term advocated a program ishes hsi chances for reelection." ter. brother. Certain of his right to about 10% of the total. The remaining publica- of activities for Arista which goes beyond the Academic Problems tions have been alloted smaller amounts which merely ceremonial. Unfortunately, while some sponding ot the poll, individuals Macbeth Modified rule, he gathers forces against MacBird. The confrontation comes, will be supplemented by sales and private con- w e r e widely critical, Written yb Barbara Garson, the tributions. The Senioryearbook, Observatory, of the candidates made ti clear that Arista vious years, of the academic struc- play si a loose interpretation of and as Bobby si about to stab his will receive no S.O. funds. Varsity sports have must not be a social organization, al pro- ture at Science. 76% of those ni- some recent domestic history, a-r opponent, MacBird falls to the been appropriated $3220 this year, a reduc- posed a program of theater parties, bowling volved said that too much home- T a u r e e for, more accurately, ground, clutching his heart. The tion of $1800 from last year. Special activities trips, and even an Arista baseball team. work was assigned, two-thirds felt evil schemer is finished as is the have been alloted $1210 this year. This appro- This seems a good time to define Arista's that t o s t e l w e r e overemphasized, wrenched) to resemble the events of Macbeth. nI that play, the noble priation provides funds for the operation of goals more concretely. It was conceived as an over half insisted that the school honor society and partially serves this ob- was too long, 42% found King Duncan of Scotland (Presi- Neatly Staged the stage squad, Math Team, Forum, and Arista, as well as for the production of the jective by honoring those who have achieved That is, briefly, how MacBird! Annual Show, which has realized a profit scholastic distinction. However, its highest ful- Faculty Corner is put together, and it is all neat. yl presented on hte stage of a very from ticket sales in past years. The remaining imentcancomeonlywhenitutilizesits The dialogue. 25% of the projected budget will go for S.O. potential to raise its own intellectual sights as much of it skillfully adapted from administration, departments, clubs, and mis- well as those of the entire student body. Energetic Physicist cellaneous expenses. It is not Arista's place to schedule parties By Vita Miccio and Mark Nissenbaum famous lines, misses few oppor- tunities to attack, expose, or sim Simple arithmetic indicates that S.O. dues and trips - het Student Organization is the During his four years here, v i r . J e r o m e Holzman has will cover only about 40% (about $6000) of ply make fools of the speakers and proper organ for planning those activities. taught general science, physics, H.D.S., and Electronics. He is those spoken Much o f t h e funds required by the S.O. this year. The Instead, it should concentrate, for instance, on an energetic and enthusiastic teacher, who combines a sense remaining 60% must be financed by other expanding the tutoring service so that the of humor with an ability to lines of the chorus of three witches The S.O. Store is expected to earn supply of tutors will more closely meet the convey his knowledge and en- onerevolthothr onewarDro $ 3 0 0 0 - $ 4 0 0 0 p r o fi t t h i s y e a r w h i c h w i l l b e d e m a n d f o r h e l p . O r p e r h a p s , a s w a s sug- thusiasm to his students. Black Muslim) used by the S.O. While the basketball team has gested by some candidates, the tutoring serv- A native New Yorker and grad- sculuestvestereste provided considerable amounts of moneyin ice can be expanded to include students of uate of Stuyvesant High School, fillip to the action. Themselves past years through ticket sales, it produced a other schools. Mr.Holzmanholdsthedegreesof obec or some m e a n i e deficit last year and, ni Mr. Kenneth Allen's An effort might also be made to found Bachelor and Master of Science. the three still manage to remain above the action, laughing at its words, wil be "a financial disaster" this year Arista clubs as societies with limited member- Currently finishing his term as absurdity, and dropping into it, due to poor attendance. S.O. activities also ship to serve as forums on the arts, the sci- vice-president of the Physics Club occasionally, to play games with provide revenue; the Carnival earned some ences, the world scene. Quite possibly, with of New York, a group concerned with the problems and new de- the individuals whom they pretend $300 this year, but last year the S.O. lost a little effort, faculty advisers could be se- velopments in teaching physics, he money on many activities. Finally, it is hoped cured who would lecture, answer questions, will be president of the club next that Survey, through advertisement sales, will and in general give this program needed guid- Theconter oftheactionis horr be able to return as much as 20% of its costs ance and direction. As a teacher and a parent (both to the S.O. This apparently will not be enough. These suggestions of course by no means ex- his sons are Science seniors), M r ever, MacBird, and Stacy Keach If the S.O. is forced, through lack of funds, possibilities. Cooperative planning Holzman takes a personal interest the underhanded Head of State. to eut its budget further, it will have to de- with Arista of other schools and words with in some o1 the school's academie ButwhileMacBirdisaccusedofa prive Science and Scienceites of the services the disadvantaged, for example, a r e a r e a s and social problems. He si con- variety of atrocious acts, the play and events it has sponsored in the past. This worthy of further exploration. In any event, alternative should be unthinkable to all Scien- not picnies but planning is called for if Arista students' attitudes toward physies nims at an ultimatel» greater ob jeet — the brutality of power it- ceites who wish to attend a school which does is to make its maximum contribution to our self and its evil effects on thos have a newspaper, varsity teams, and regular Mr. Jerome Mozmian onthe course. Be- who pursue it. Thus, Robert Ken lieving that curriculum evaluation O'Dunc (Bobby Kennedy), is always desirable. he attended play's analogue to Mac portraved as an equal to MacBird the Harvard Physics Project Con• in treachery, only with fewer op D' ynamo' Advisor: Budget Deceiving - Meeting of the 'Ism's' ference last month. where a new approach to teaching physics was portunities to exercise his talents. But, it this impartial attack 1: We're Poorer Than You Think By Charles Bernstein discussed, in which history, devel- opment, and theory are stressed. written into the play, unfortunate Gentlemen: wall-to-wall carpeting) for re- For those serenceites interested provide ample opportunity to stu- Concerning aspects stunning performance As faculty advisor to Dunamo. 1 decorating Room 007 inMarxism,Trotskyism,Maoism, dytheideasofsocialism. Stacy Keach overwhelmsthe per- feelImustcallyourattentionto 4.ThavebeenvisitedbynoCastroism,Anarchism,Capitalism club,whichmeetseveryschoollife, Holzman is an t h e r o u d l e y o u h a v e C R u s e d fewer than four sales representa with an advocate of expanding the use o and Utopian Socialism, his rival, and finally we are left withyourstoryontheSO..Bud- tives from The Encyclopedia Bri tendance of fifty-eight people, has Science's planetarium c l e a m o r e s s i o n that vet ("S.O. Council Hears Budret." Club, offers a forum for the dis- named Das Kanital as its "basic there is only one villain here, and Dec. 23). The fact is that, while this mo- e n e r a l i s t thinking in also believes that a more relaxed h e is a bulldozing combination ot In t h e article, you reported that ney may be laid out by the S.O the widest sense." reference work." Italsourges its ignorance, vulgarity and brutality. F a u l b e k s t e i n . 2 2 .3 m e m b o r Capitalism, by Anna Rochester, as members to read The Nature of sirable and to that end recom- His name is Lyndon Johnson. "the largest allocation is for pub- t o c o v e r the printing m e n d s t h a t t h e P. A . s y s t e m b e Hications $1.405 will col to Dinamo. the income from sales of the club's five man executive wellasJohnKennethGalbraith's removed and the S.O. store re- Fatal Flaw Damamo, the literary 2000 copies, at sixty cents apiece) American Capitalism. the The implication here is that $1.405 is returned to the school. The a c a few of the people who come to help of these and other books, the This is a rea, fault of the pro ot S.o. tunds will be spent this the meetings have not been active club members are currently When he's not busy with school duction (although it could is approximately two hundred dol- in political affairs before." Their ing to formulate a orprofessionalactivities,Mr.Holz masson for any year to subsidize the magazine. As a result of the lars. reasonforattending.hesaid."is definitionofcapitalism. enjoys hiking and camping cess MacBird! enjoys New reated b y your article. the f o l Having thus, at a stroke, to decide in their o w n w a y the Tano Maida, 3-21, another mem• wineovonteoudtavonninet nros and cons of various social ber of the club's executive c om camped in Colorado, New Mexico 1y attacks the ligure it has choser systems and to think t o r t h o m whose function is ot a n d w h e r e h e y e m o v e d for its villain. it has not succeded .1 Many students have asked, windfall of twelve hundred dol- selves." wormulate n lesson plan for not only the scenic splendor of ni expressing its central assertion tinas The Kocky Dynamo, if S.O.is already would make this fact known to The club w a s founded by M r basic course o f study" Mountains and the - that there are no heroes divina them 81405 O F M Y MO. your renders. And. incidentally. Benjamin Mazen, ni response ot young sophomore s and Southwest, but also the slower pace In a real sense, then. MacBird! the widesnrend interest and the friendly hospitality of the NEY." you know of anyone who needs has taken the easy way out. It has D i m a m o editors have Volume One of the Britannica, freshmen who come to the meet- people out West "where folks fi n c dents were exhibiting ings "are politically unsophisticat- chosen to make a very chartered a yacht for their year- who use s e v e r a l tiny cintism Feeling that the world ed, but very anxious ot lea rn." He time to say hello." Enthusiastic statement w h e n could have tos milan squares of beige wool-twist history and economics courses that said he was confident that athes a r e o f f e r e d by t h e s c h o o l " d i d n ' t are being encouraged to thin k for would like to see a chapter of the Several interior decorators peting, you may direct him to the A n d a s a n y red- have submitted interesting propo- Dinamo office. delve deeply enough," his students themselves perhaps our major Robert Rossner decidedagroupsuchasthiswould o b i e c t i v e . " at Science, can tell you, that's just not right. sals cincluding rare specimen of</text>
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                <text>Science Survey, Vol. 54, No. 4. Containing the following articles: Political Group Sees 'Huac' Film on Protesters, Arista Members Choose Officers At First Meeting, Senior Math Team Takes First Place In Citywide Meet, 3 Scienceites Die During Christmas, Red Cross Thanks Science For Gifts To Needy Children, New Term Brings Faculty Changes, S.O. Council Convenes, Honor Society Announc3s Scholarship Semifinalists, 16 Seniors Achieve Semifinalists Rating in 'Talent Search', Forum Crowd Hears CORE's Donald Smith, Bands Participate in Musical Combat, Juniors Announce 'Mad Show', Dance, Badillo Addresses Council of Students, Behind the Science Scene, Why Pay More?, The Proper Plan, All Hail 'MacBird'? Energetic Physicist, 'Dynamo Advisor: Budget Deceiving - We're Poorer Than You Think, Chelsea Topples, Cagers Take League Crown, Turks Show Poorly At St. Francis Meet, Science Sportswomen Find Happiness in Leaders Club. </text>
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                <text>February 27, 1967</text>
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                  <text>Bronx Schools Newspaper Collection, 1933–1969</text>
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                  <text>The collection comprises various student newspapers from Bronx schools, including Bronx High School of Science and 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>Gymnast Enters Hall of Fame See page 4 Student Rights sahende survey Controversy THEBRONXHIGHSCHOOLOFSCIENCE Seepage2 Yol. LV -No. 1 March23,1965 Musicians Name Richard Jankowski D e Study Hall Changes Schoolwide Winner Leads Scienceites Student Coun m cil Proposed by S. 0. In WQXR Contest On M. A. A. Exam Bronx setences school Wide Richard Jankowski, 4-21, with iscuss m To Administration winner of hte WQXR Young Art- a score of 132.50 out of a possible Year s B dg t, u e 5 blaine Baxan. 3-10 ists Piano Competition this 150, led Science on the Mathema- tical In auditions hdel March ,1 she America (DAA) examination. held March New A end ent A proposal for setting up two separate study halls, one man, and 9 in the student cafeteria, periods By Howard Adler for studying and the other for quiet conversation and realx- one through three. A recomm endation whic h would ation, has been submitted by the S.O. to the administration B a c hPrelude W o r d o t Tucker, 4-19, w i t h dealing with constitutional a mendm alter the procedure in awaiting a final de- eitherb o o ko f "The Well Tem 120.00, iller, 4-4, with ecutive Board was ents proposed to the Ex- the main topic o f cision. peredClavier,"aChopin Nocturne, 116.25, second and third, discussion at Co the S.O. uncil's March Because of sti poor lighting and Students Compete and twb other pieces. acopeeuver dud housman. who 3 me eting- program girls, and Robert Sacks, 3-12, was New System ecutive member The proposal, submitted ucomtorfibleseat.thesororet byE x - For Scholarships Gideon arues.Theauctoramsnotcou Bach'sPreludea n d Fugue No. 21 suaVThelibrary,on het junior class, Of Dismissal Ferebee,4-19,provides for pub- In U. N. Contest Nocturne, with 67.25. lication of a special S.O, newslet the othernand. while satisfactory Etude Approximately 300 S c i e n c e i t e s Rondo Science has consistently placed ter, containing the amendment and these espects. is inadequate both in its limited seating capa S I S T A n n u s explanation by its author. Capricioso. well in the nation-wide standing. Inaugurated city and its rule against textbooks. High School United NationCson- T o Blaine, "music i s just a hob- for the MAA exam, and this year's be distributed to the S.O. reps by the Executive Poordi Neither permits student est melanere on Marche cumulative score should place Sci. A new method of afternoon dis- The three bets papers willbe 10 vears,f o rt h ep a s t six. under by."Shehasstudied thpeiano for ence at the top. missal w ent into effect Tuesday , s u c h amendments will take place examination tests student March 14, after the administration within ten days at a special meet s e l e c t e d weren CeliaSalomonoftheBronx House abolished the official ing of the Council. Ho we ver ment to be submited t o hte state music department. Not planning skill ni coping with advanced period on an experimental basis. a majority of the reps may close U n d e r the new system suggest- tobecomea porefosinal musician, c o n c e d s T t i t h e m a t i e s . A c c o r d choose three entries for national The former alternoon official discussion of the amendment. Rat- ed by the SO.,. the auditorium she adtdhsatsheis thinking of ing ot the official brochure of the Classis teaching music. MAA, the e x a m consists of "chall been replaced by ification will require a three-fitths 12 minute break the majority of the Council, and mod- conversation, and the Student Ac- nouced ni May. Sponsored by the Hre favorite composers are De- lenging problems within the realm e l g a t h a n d n i n t h p e r i o d s during ification a simply majority. United Na bussy and Bach. But aside t r o t or possibility for highl s c h o o l s t wher tables and chairs, would be set tions Association of the United dents. However, students obtain Alsoupforconsideration si an hte clasics, Elaine aslo sha wide trow competition consisted cautions that it a student is "able o f fi c i a l r o o m a n d amendment calling for the addi- aside as a study nall. interests in jazz and popular mu straight ot the ninth period class tionofajunior, sophomore,and ExecutiveBoard,Mr.K. ofa sei.Asked whatshtheinksoftheotsolvecorrectlyevenafewoforleavetheschoolbuilding. (Un- freshman SO..Executive Allen students Knowlcare Beatles, sherepliedthattheirnew the problems, shoule Teet derconsiderationsithepossibility Board. vise the study room 2nd, 3rd, 7th, world organization and his ability style, as expressed in the ditty sense of genuine accomplishment." of cutting the 12 minute interva The S.O. Council voted to cir and oth periods, and teacher aids "Penny Lane," si an improvement The exam was given to all stu- down to eight minutes.) culate a school wide petition ask might eb made available 4th, 5th, The national winners will r e over their first cuts. Hre favorite dents in the special math classes The proposal for the new sys- ingthe government ot lower the and 6th periods. ceiveawardsrangingfroman$800 rook n roll orolne are The louin andthoseonthejuniorandsen- theadmini. minimum voting age ot eighteen. However, some teachers have c o l l e r e s c h o l a r s t a n d a t h e o Spoonful and the Young Rascals. ior math teams. stration of Science's chapter of the The decision came after Martha questioned whether Europe to a $400 college scholar- United Federation of Teachers, as Gold, 3-17, Bronx Council repre- advisers would be willing to su- ship United s i t u a sentative, reported that the move pervise the Study Room, since this States. tion that had been the subject of ment ot lower the voting age had is an additional assignment. Furth- M.r Merovick, chairman of the Assembly Takes Trip long-standing complaints Council, ermore, two of the teachers pres- History dents and faculty. Neil Clendennin, S.O. president, assigned to the student ac- Strom, a member of both the Eng. 1 s 2 p Advantages of New System announced that the anual school tivities room have disapproved of Through Giant Cell the pronosal. feeling that it will The new system relieves teach. trip, which is to be held sometime were ni charge of the program at interfere with their work. Science. Students ofthe Biology Depart- ers of the necessity of taking a-t during the spring, will be to Wash- ment, under the supervision of Mr. girlsiexpelledfromthecelljust tendance and students or waiting ington,DC.. Itwillnotcostmore lNie Jafe and .Msr PeSartrlom, sphts. Needless to say for dismissal after they have got- than sto per person presented a lacmius acfre entitled Musical numbers included a cell explained that in order for the A financial report by faculty Forum Debate: 'Should We Mr. described "Through the Cel Membrane," at membrane song-and-dance, based S.O. "financial successes" t hi s the March 2 Biology Assembly. h o v e r s a m e a m m e n s t e i n s loitering ni the halls and no cloth- The basketball team netted Be Ashamed of America?' written and di. "There si Nothing Like aDame"; ing lett in the lockers during the Neil Sass, 4-2. Todd a song entitled, $416, most of the profit coming The Forum's March 2 meeting niks and doeadence strone Swick, 4.16. Rhona Auerbach, 4-4. a V a c u o l e " sung by Sandy Vas- ninth period. No student si per- the play-off Guscurseshe cuestion. "Should factors ni the United States." and Nancy attempted quez and Barbara Chester to "1m games. "The Battle of the Bands," Called Little Buttercup"; an adapt- theninthperiodhasbegun. which netted $107, and Is Paris Wevetroudorashamedoramer Russians believe t h a t ation or Lionel " o n s i d e r Tonis Heitner of the U F T Burning? were also listed by Mr. "permanent and inevitable con the structure and tunction or the statedthatthesuccessoftheex- Alen as budget achievements. tlict" exists between our two sys living cell. Yourself," by Michael Bales; a of the Panel Finally, ni a report to the Coun tems, he added, and "a final crisis between the West a n d the Com- Chester in Clutch love duet done by W i d e o n Committee, speaking for the nega• Barbara Chester, 4-19, portrayed Fear the Cell Will Have ot Split" They must cooperate, he said, and Council representative, announced bee and Barbara Foster called "I students utilize their new liberties. cil, David Dann, tive viewpoint, noted the rise of munists is likely. although it need n o t b e n u c l e a r . " a biology student studying for a ot the tune of "I've Never Been ni demonstrate that this system can a borough wide dance to be held such conservative groups as the operate without the necessity of at TaftHigh School on May 5. John Birch Society and the Amer- Two Rifts test of particular importance, hav- Love Before"; and a finale, more rigorous control Scienceites will be weicome a n e d h e r last 17 biology Biology Chorus," sung by the cast ican Nazi Party. "The House Un- Mr. Rusher dismissed the Sino. to Handel's "Hallelujah" C h o r i s American Activities Committee," Soviet F a l l i n g a s l e e p . s h e d r e a m s o f f r o m " T h e M e s s i a h . " he asserted, "has no constitutional t h a n being engulfed by a cell. During Other members of the cast were Mr. Herman Campsen Retires h e r cototrn inside, she is contront right to accuse everybody of being MaggieRogow,3-15;MarilynMe- ed by such dangers as a vacuole, a communist." In anotner area of cow-Tito split, which was "it" ni Intosh, 3-8; and Tina Vozick, 4-12. Long Career at Science 1951,but"whichhasleftTitovery portrayed by Sandy Vasquez 3-9. The choreography was done by After national life, Slayton accused the friendly w i t h t h e and a British Lysosome, played United States of "mismanaging its pointed ot French support of the by Michael Bales. 4-19 Ilyne Peters, 4-24; Maggie Rogow, M.r Herman Campsen, Physical founding ni 1938, M.r Campsen Grionce Menartment chairman. has is a graduate of Columbia Univer wealth." United States during the Cuban Saved by Messenger RNA (Stev. 3-15; a n d H a r r y Farkas, 4-23; gone on te sity a rminal leave, prior to n d h a s also studie datYU missile crisis as proot that, in a en Bohrer, e n o Alan Singer, 4-6, served as stage more than London Before Greg Hudis disputed Slayton's crisis, such "splits" have little sig- through the endoplasmic reticulum manager. Music was provided by years at Science, Mr. Campsen left coming ot Science, he taught at opinions, while D a v i d Keiss, also to meet the nucleus, Ellen Blecher, 4-4; Robert Holz- M a w h clinton. neurotte the Meridian Connecticut JHS, on the Panel Committee, supported sometimes necessa t o l l o w p o r t r a v e d b y Tech, term f r e e d o m . " s p e a k e r rebee, 4-19. man, 4-10; and Richard Merkler, Chairman of the Physical Sci- of September, 1967, he wil offi c o n c l u d e d The dream sequence ends as the ence Department since Science's Mr. Jack Newfield was to have cially retire. On an interim basis, Mr. Sidney addressed the meeting on the "New alco otthe Physical Left," but he was delayed in Dushman, Washington. D.C. and could not 622 SeniorsReceive Regents Scholarships Science Department, will tallMir omnsen's Dosion He did this a p p e a r . previously, when Campsen Katz, Meed, Drooks Recipients Can Get had been out on sabbatical leave. Mr. Dushman'sPhysics andH.D.S. The publisher of National Re- a conservative magazine. Earn Highest Scores Up to $1000 Yearly classes will be taken over by Mr. Lance Geshwind, who is current- believes that "a viable relation- By Anthony Mauro ship semifinalist. He has applied ly serving in the armed forces. s h i p " b e t w e e n the o p p o s i n g sys- A l m o s t t h r e e t h e t o C o r n e l l , H a r v a r d , a n d C o l u m A permanent chairman will be tems of Communism and Capital- s e n i o r class have won New York bia. chosen in September. State Regents S ch olarships this behalf of the de ism "is not practical" and that year. Six hundred twenty-two s e n TiedforSecond On war between the West Steven Meed and Larry Drooks partment, Mr. Speaking Duchman said 0f Mitimate iors.or71.1percentofthosetak andtheCommunistsislikely. ing the exam, are now entitled to were tied for second place in the "We'll all miss him." The February 23 Forum guest, annual scholarships ranging from school, and in the Bronx, with 282 William Rusher, expressed 8 2 5 0 t o $1.000, d e p e n d i n g o n 11 points. Steven applied to Harvard, nancial need. One hundred twelve Columbia, and University s o m e admiration for communist have achieved alternate status. Pennsylvania. He hopes to major Coming Events dedication and willingness ot pur- Last year 65.2 per cent won the in architecture and eity planning. APRIL sue certain basic principles. R u n t arants: 62 per cent won in the Larry, applied 5. 6 - Open School after he added, it is this very steadfast- Katz, Larry Drooks —Science's highest scorers. Y a l e , Columbia, will major Steve Meed, Jon noons from 1: 00-3:00 p.m. makes peaceful co-ex- istence so difficult. Qualifying Scores Vary ferent counties including the Jonathan Katz, 4-13, led the in math. Scienceites have received 7 . 8 = S c i e n c e F a i r ( c i t y . The scholarships, which can be different boroughs of New Yo r k scho ol with 286 out of a possible Six wide "New World" second used only in N e w York schools, City have varying qualifying D o i n t s . special s cholarships from the state: mittesco M a n h a t t a n . A two have won four-year nursing 14, 15 Annual Show According to M.r Rusher, the are awarded by county. The num- per o f high school graduates from All of the 875 Scienceiteswho member of the Senior Math Team, beliet in the inevit- sch olarships, three rec eived three- 19 - STL Assembly communist he is also a Westinghouse Science y of a "new world" has su r. each county determines the num- tookthe test this year are eligible year nursing s cholarships, and one 9 8 Hootenanny a b i l i t han of scholarshine to be awarded for scholar incentive awards of up Talent Search semifinalist and a vived the last thirty years and is N otlonal H ono rS ociety S cholar. senior won a veteran's scholarshi p. "not likely to waver while beat. there. This is the reason why dif m e r e rowdiness. assistant arrangement out-of-school here's monity general as unmistakable se The references Everyone from Mick pointing out problems that student issues, and in turn to desirable ing from sheer popular music. Page Two S C I E N C E S U RV E Y Thursday, March 23, 1967 B gngg e BBe TraditionalActivitesEnded Sound and Style published &amp;amp;times a year by the students of Schoolwide Outin g, THE BRONX HIGH SCHOOL Simon &amp;amp; Garfunkel OF SCIENCE Senior Day Lost 75 West 205 Street Bronx. y e To Scienceites DR. ALEXANDER TAFFEL, Principal By Dorothy Cuff Vita Mic cio Since last May sophomores have Since its assimilation into the pop music scene Vol, L V - No. 1 March 23, 1967 not had to anticipate being hte almost two years ago, folk rock has developed inte targets of rapid bursts from a more sophisticated musical style, capable fo giv. Daniel Bernstein Mark N ing sti listeners more than a beat ot dance to, A antor-inethiet issenbaum tunner" Juniors handful of singers and stylists have contributed t Editor-in-Chief have been relieved of the need for this new movement, but the te Neuteybers Associate Editor proof smock s. A nd , sa fo this May, Garfunkel epitomizes .ti They am of Simon and have suc c es s f ul ly Scienceite s wil l on longer eb under lilting har di of the Mama mony, stantly re Editorial Board s and hte Papas, lat e d varied instru neWS bulors. Joseph Schuldenrein, Irene Stern landt Park. Day alst mental "sounds," similar ot hte variety used by hte year and Field Dav this Lovin' Spoonful, with a lyric th at expresses adep and searching look at the values of modern society. spons tantor Robert Weisberger have been eliminated as features Alexander Taffel takes his turn at bat in the Faculty-Stud fo life at Science Softbal Game, an annual event at Van Cortlandt fi ent Business Managers. Daniel Czitrom, eld days. Modern Art T hemes Circulation Manazer Toshi Taketomo Senior Day was abolished ha e n o 0 9 8 Ye lohcs F i e l d Day dah traditi onally Moun tain, Described by on e national magazin e as "trouba Exchange Editor Donna Brent ceivedthe support of the student tory. Despite het administration's was disappointing response. but once again there dors" and by music critic Ralph Gleason as "po Simon and Garfunkel combine form and ets", Associate Board body. dek Mra bygood aetndance, c a r e r u oranning ina the coopera theDay's evenst includedafacul- student 000y signed up for the emotional and intellectual impact When less than 80 per cent of the heighten the content to tion of the Senior Council, Senior udnetsy-t basebal game, ackrt and events, the Field Day t h e i r . case songs This is was can- not the with Day had all too oentf erupted into events, rockers who many folk "an occasioni field aer conten t ot leave the b a l ir listeners sus Faculty Advisers brawls." Previous days competition. oS the Scienceites of 1967 have utes of a poundin In 1964, a pirt pended or hypnotized by five, eight or eleven mni Mr. Richard Feingold T h r k e d o w i n k solatterd to t h e World's Fair acedeplr the lost their day ni hte sun and grad. g, tuneless, electroni e bea t. Literary Adviser trip. But wneh the Using vivid, vibrant imagery, songwriter Simon Photography Adviser M.r Charles Hellman w i n e . a n d regoutlinugr w uating classes of the future may builds his songs on themes like alienation and mans' as held t he w i th Business Adviser next Dr. Benjamin Silv er year,itwas an unexpected fai lure, ileges or activities of their own. v failure ot communicate, themes out any special pri- which havebeen 2 COC C:i PRES with only 03 per cent otf h e stu- A t t h e treated by modern artists such sa novelist Albert Past Proposals d e n t s aetndnig. Last spnirg, same time, Taffel however, D.r Camus and filmaker Michelangelo Antonioni. U nlike d e n t c o m m i t t e e s remains willing ot consider much modern art, however, their total effect si not Atempts ot infuse some med organized fiedl control trips Rye Beach Beat and discuss any proposals for new relentlessly bleak and hard; their love ballads, for the anual Improved Dismissal sure of example, express a warmth and an almost "old fash- upperclass rite hda always been ioned" sentimentalism. Last week, the school administration abo- unenthusiastically LETTER TO THE EDITOR And os you see I have co me to d oubt lished, on an experimental basis, the after- Science's seniors. For example, i t Al that I once held as true; noon official period, long considered a nui- might be chosen to act as princi- I stand alone without beliefs. sance by most of the students and faculty. It 'Survey' For Scienceites? The only truth I know is you. In these lines from Kathy's Song Paul Simon echoes has been replaced by a twelve minute break and to prepare and give lessons To the Editor: ond argument si that students are some of the 17th Century poet John Donne's thoughts between the end of the eighth period and the After reading another one of not m a t u r e e n o u g h to make intel. beginning of the ninth period, during which was never popular darrot sut- onthe enduring nature of a true love which lasts your caltorials defending the sta ligent ve an opportunity to obtain outer dents, Who lavored &amp;amp; more intor decisions concerning the beyond any other form of human experience. u s u o a oU d e t c e i n v e n c r i a n c r u n n i n s o f t h e i r o w n l i v e s . U n d e n s t u d e n t s h a m a l , u n i n h i b i t e d Al other things, to th eir destruction draw, clothing from their official classes, go to ninth of the SO. in particular. T felt it the p resent system, however, stu- O nly our lov e ha th no de cay; period classes or activities, and leave the which sometimes degenerated into w a s m y d u t y b o t h a s a s t u d e n d e n t s a r e r a r e l y r i v e n a c h a n c e to (The Anniversarie) school building. Similarly, and as an s . . rep to speak out. demonstrate maturity. At eigh- Breakfast Survey si a student newspaper. teen &amp;amp; s t u d e n t is a l l o w e d to kill. For Emily, Whenever I May Find Her, catches the The purposes of the old afternoon official arranged, but ti too failed to re- out not permitted to decide such fragile nature of a love which si compared to "a period were to help secure clothing left in of- ceive student s c o n support. It should therefore be les cerned with supporting the present i simple matter as whether or not dream pressed in ficial class wardrobes and especially to pro- organdy, clothed vide some measure of control over the flow *64 - Last Senior Day system than with taking editorial he can go outside for lunch The last regular Senior Day was That would promote the Kiss in the nails, Students have no of traffic within the school during afternoon held ir: 1964. The following year, e d u c a t i o n a n d w e l f a r e o f t h e s t u - rights. Does Survey cry out? Al softer t h e r dismissal. By abandoning this method of con- the e v e n t took place dents supposeaty surveys. anc rain" and the joy trol, the administration has given to the stu- official title. And last year it was there are many valid criticisms dent body more responsibility for maintaining D e r m a n e n t c a n c e l l e d . b o t h that can be leveled at the school. order in the building. culty and administration agreeing Students have courses they The sad truth is that most stu- walk "on frosted dents are not really too concerned For the new system to succeed, students t h a t s u c c e s s i e r o r o v fields of juniper will have to observe a few easy and desirable students, forced to take,-slothes they are with these problems. In fact, many forced to wear, lind food tney arc more and lamplight." procedures. n o w e v e r . s t e e n e d s e e n c e r h o t forced to eat. Students are not non, carried on unomicially. even bermitted a room in whieh parents would be ni a similar 1. Get your clothing quickly. Leave imme- This year, it was expected that to relax during their free periods diately. boat from warmth sets Si 2. Make no attempt to open the wardrobes seventh and eighth period classes have a smoke. and perhaps a cur mon and Garfun- before the teacher arrives t a t i n i a s t to view the annual Senior show them. Recently, however, because none kel apart from complacency by the civil Kight of the scripts were acceptable to the forced "coo!" 3. Come into your official room through Mr. J o s e p h C o t t e r cancelled There are two usual arguments of his by the Viet Cong, so too of those who dis- one door. Leave through the other. d a i n show Art Garfunkel and Paul Simon .4 Make no attempt to carry your clothing these proposals. The first is that tions to stir them out of theirs. emotion. to seniors. They will be permitted the B o a r d ~ u TU e t c o u l e D i v a n i m p o r a n around with you. e n t r a n d e r t Meaningless and empty, the small-talk, table-talk, never permit their passage. But role in this movement. Mournfully shop-talk, and cocktail-party-talk which destroy our Please cooperate. We've all wanted this. It's t h e h i s w e e k o r s c h o o l if this is the case. isn't it Surew's it has not. chances of communicating with each other are the up to us to make it work. U n k e S e n t o r O n y . T h e s c h o o l job to write editorials calling for Sincerely yours, objects of Simon's protest in The Dangling Conver a change in Board policy? The se- H a r v e y Wa l d m a n sation. The song is sadly ironic; it paints a beautiful word picture of a still room at sunset and places in it a couple who can no longer reach each other Imaginative Leadership, New Programs ... A Rebuttal Only one realizes what is happening and must suffer First, as far as Survey is con• the Southern Negro or Vietnamese alone and helpless. You're a stranger now unto me. lost Are the Goals of Citywide GO. . Council cerned, its editorial policy is to peasant. ni the dangling conversation, take stands that will "promote the Responsible students w i t h re- ByCharlesSilkowitz education and welfareofthestu. sponsiblecitedacion bordersofourlives. On hearing the words "City Council." groups such as Science's to obtain an dents," at least to the best of its changes and influence administra- New Yorkers will think immediately of outside view of their student govern. nroblem is that tion policy. Mr. Parodies Society m e e t r e d ment and provided them with ideas for much of what Mr. Waldman thinks right in wanting to give students Simon and Garfunkel blend sharp wit with their ularly with Mayor Lindsay to argue out activities here that had proved success. " r i g h t t o m a k e d e c i s i o n s . o u t t h e r own kind of protest ni the satirical The Big Bright t h e s o l u t i o n s t o o u r t i t a n i c m e t r o p o l i t a ful at other schools. doesn't. While he expresses a be- "intelligent decisions." Green Pleasure Machine and A Simple D e s u l t o r For o b i e c t i o n t h a t freely translated, means random problems. There is another such organ. inthe area. nowever. The City Council's function is not own lives," he really seems to be "students have courses they are digressions on a particula r argument) and al- limited to i n school concerns. however. forced to take" suggests a widen acollection of the wild promises of a VT commer- though its tasks may not be of the same Recently, Martha Gold, Science's alter- importance, the obstacles in the way of nate representative to the Council. and anarchy, giving the administration ing of the elective program, which cial for a super-product that will at least help you its success sometimes seem just as for with is an excellent idea. Additionally. forget about your problems if it can't cure them organization members have as- midable. It is the G.O. City Council, sumed a task that could bring them in final decisions left to student re- the proposal forsettinguptwo It is an effective parody of a society whose gullibili a n d its purpose is to improve the rerondmme ass mefor9ro ments separate study halls, one for study. yt eded only by its desire ot escape from si exce contact with their counterparts at City Hall. Martha is currently member of a sake that the majority of students ing and the other for quiet con. fr ank am itation of Bob Dylan's tivities of student governments through. itself. Sung A Simple Desultory Phootes o u t t h e N e w Y o r k a r e a bermuda versation and relaxation, has been folk rock style, committee working to lower the state shorts, sm oke-filled study halls, submitted to the a dministration by Monthly Council Sessions Y o u n g a r e r e d u r e m e n t t o l a v e a r s . T h e and is awaiting a final to Dylan e r s s e n plans a city-wide student lunches, and maybe even student pounding beat of the music. Attracting delegates from 89 public hich schools. the Council meets monthly chefs might be n e w features of Jagger to the tasteless teeny boppers get a chance Constructive at Art &amp;amp; Design in Manhattan, Informal Government Make-Up nothing wrong with al this. It's In our a n i n i o n . m a n y o f M r For sheer exuberance or giddy happiness few songs As a gathering of student leaders, the brought about by student apathy and just impossible, and for a n v i o u s Waldman's plans would be detri. can match Paul Simon's The 59th Street Bridge Song G.O.C.C. could not be without its own eas ons mental to school life. But he has (Feelin' Groovy). Halfsung, halfwhistled, as briet mal level, the G.O.C.C, sponsors two Explanation Needed? nevertheless been very helpful in as the moment and as gay as skipping",).it is an ode ident, who directs the meetings, a vice- ll si groovy pres who ident. acts as his assistant. and It high school students a r e m a some to life ("Life, I love you, a his lyrics are c i t a t e in some high one in the fall and the other in the two secretaries. In addition, n a t i v . t u Although r e , should be carefully considered by inistration. Even school English c lasses, Paul Sim on doesn't cla im that are supervised b y Mr. K aska, are, then they don't need intricate students and adm important, we hope his warn. they hold any deep or obscure meaning. "We are," Last fall's rally, knownastheWelling a ssistant explanations about why smoking more s a y s . "ask ing a few questions, tryin g to Conference Board of Education in charge of G.O ni school and out-of-school lunch nroblems a few doubts." They have succeede d incapturing by Science's G.O. representative, Elliot marine thir o r w h y about be heeded. This would lead to more the spirit of youth and expressing it in moods rang- Klugman, Student Organization Presi- activities. clothing regulations and adminis- exuberance to somber reflection. dent Neil Clendennin, and other S.O Whether or not it is always success. thought important responsible nich Their arrangements l the artist's of anything from an old English officials. Seeking to provide for an ex- ful in improving the quality of our high to a standard folk-rock tune revea change n e e s m e a n t suggestions programs, the Counch ol stude n t k n o w s it is not his pressure on the two organs of stu- air i m portant center or expression scho dent expression, t h a concern for deta ring in il, form and harmony. It is refresh- among t h e delegates from different is an place to run school life. He also knows that there is no parallel Surren. ing to find these elements of style reappea for those students who have a real in. D.B. informal exchanges whieh allower torost In sovernment between his problems and those of</text>
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              <text>Vol. 55, No. 1</text>
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                <text>Science Survey, Vol. 55, No. 1. Containing the following articles: Study hall Changes Proposed by S.O. To Administration, Musicians Name Schoolwide Winner in WQXR Contest, Richard Jankowski Leads Scienceites on M.A.A. Exam, Student Council Discusses Budget, New Amendment, New System of Dismissal Inaugurated, Assembly Takes Trip Through Giant Cell, Forum Debate: 'Should We Be Ashamed of America?', Mr. Herman Campsen Retires After Long Career at Science, 622 Seniors Receive Regents Scholarships, Traditional Activities Ended, Improved Dismissal, Simon &amp; Garfunkel, 'Survey' For Scienceites?, Imaginative Leadership, New Programs Are the Goals of Citywide G.O. Council, ...A Rebuttal..., Math Society Hears Talk On Motion, Visitor Describes Life in Tanzania, Cornell Professor Speaks At Biology Club Meeting, American Institute To Hold Boro Fair At Bronx Science, Scienceite Earns NAS Scholarship, 'Survey' Receives First Prize Rating At Press Gathering, S. T. L. Awards, Political Science Club Sees Viet Cong Film, Gymnasts Split Early Meets with Alfred E. Smith, Morris, Champion Horseman Enters Hall of Fame, Basketball Coach Reviews Science's Record Season, Runners Show Well In Final. </text>
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                <text>The Bronx High School of Science </text>
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                <text>March 23, 1967</text>
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