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Page 17 text:
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25, rw? gjlaave 0 01401405 f'2 LUNCHROOM STAFF ffront row, left to right! Mrs. Nelson, Mrs. Rossbach, Mrs. McCarthy, Mrs. Kern, Mrs. Marion, fseeond rofwj Mr. Hunter, Mrs. Montanna, Mrs. Zim- merman, Mrs. Bakalo, Mrs. Tarzna, Mrs. Hornzing, Mrs. Heimer, Mrs. Stzmgel, Mrs. Borg- storm, Mrs. Seagerz, Mrs. Maroli, Mrs. Porter, Mr. Kranz, frhird rofwl Mrs. W'alter, Miss Dwyer, Mrs. Snow, Mrs. Smith Dear to the heart of every hungry Baysider Work because of the variety of experiences in is the Lunchroom Staff. Familiar faces to us all, the lHHChf0Om- We all kI10W What they mean the staif has recently acquired a new dietician, by that! Mr. Slvatore. All the staff say they enjoy their rjze yjlieafs n CUSTODIAN STAFF ffront row, left to right! Mrs. Carr, Mrs. Tempesta, Mr. Kelle- her fCustodian Engineerj, Mrs. Hannon, Mr. Reed, Ksecond row! Mr. Reed, Mr. Wrynn, Mr. Mulligan, Mr. Mullaly, Mr. Schmidt, Mr. Parker, Mr. Smith, Mr. Abitz Mr, Parker has been here 24 years :syn v 9 if,
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Page 16 text:
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me QQCCOYJ all X -1 SCHOOL SECRETARIES lfront rofw, left to right! Mrs. Reges, Mrs. Linder, fsecond rofwl Mrs. Quis, Mrs. Cole, Mrs. Mayer, Miss Glasmzarz, Mrs. IVise, Miss Miller, Mrs. Flanagan The job of being a School Secretary is not, Office is general in the true sense of the word. as one might suspect, routine - at least not at In fact, the secretaries have dubbed it The Pulse Bayside High School. The work of the General of Bayside. ome, oselo ine, gn my Ijzying macAine MRS. HELEN JOYCE Elevator Operator Mrs. Joyce, elevator operator extraordinaire, has been at Bayside High for fourteen years. Although she has her ups and downs Mrs. joyce enjoys the opportunity to meet people and make friends.
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Page 18 text:
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'Nfx Fil? Q D o Practically all of the 180 members of the Bay- side High School faculty hold bachelor's degrees. The vast majority hold master's degrees as well. Five teachers are endowed with doctorates. Sixty- seven of our teachers graduated from City Col- lege, with Hunter College and New York Uni- versity contributing thirty-eight teachers each. Fourteen came from Brooklyn College and Queens College added eight. Five graduated from Columbia College, three from Cornell, three from Barnard, two from Rutgers and two from jamaica Teachers. Undergraduate schools represented in our faculty include Harvard, Yale, Michigan, Wisconsin, St. john's, Wesleyan, Syra- cuse, St. joseph's, Oswego State, St. Michael's Monastery, Fordham, Colgate and Smith. Seventy-eight members of the faculty received their graduate degrees at Columbia University with seventy-two deriving theirs from N.Y.U. Twenty took their masters at City College, five at Hunter and four at Brooklyn. Other schools figuring prominently in training our faculty in- clude Colorado State, Ohio State, Queens Col- lege and Bryn Mawr. Thirty per cent of the faculty came originally from Brooklyn and only about twenty per cent from Queens. Bronx and Manhattan gave us close to forty per cent and ten per cent of the faculty came from out of town. About a tenth of the faculty lives out of the city at present. Chief among the high schools that con- tributed their graduates to our faculty are Town- send Harris fnow defunctj, Boys High School and Newtown. From Harris we received four- teen alumni with Boys High and Newtown adding thirteen and eleven, respectively. Alto- gether, sixty-seven high schools are represented on our staff including some in Wisconsin, New jersey, Massachusetts, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Canada, upstate New York and Eng- land. Flushing gave us four graduates, Bayside just two. A V05 N fi 5 .. frm, I A N X 5 U. .. fi' f X ff' Most of our men teachers with families to support are forced to look elsewhere for a source of income. Our teachers engage in work as lawyers f 31, real estate agents, social workers, business executives, teachers in private schools and private tutors. A dozen work in the city's evening high schools, as well. We have a practic- ing architect and builder, a psychologist, a for- mer newspaper book editor, an insurance agent and an importer of toys on the staff. Some teach- ers operate summer camps, work as industrial engineers and are certified public accountants. One is the former aquatics director of the Boy Scouts and others have been athletic or educa- tional directors of industrial plants. The super- visor of basketball officials of the Ivy League and the E.C.A.C. teaches at Bayside. Two of our men are managers of resort hotels and one is a full-time commercial photographer. Add to these: salesmen of various kinds, two hospital supervisors, research assistants in chemistry and medicine, an advertising agency copy writer, a technical illustrator, an ocean steamer junior ofIi- cer, an industrial chemist, a tax consultant and auditor, several teachers of instrumental music and a commercial dog breeder and you have a fair sampling of the ways in which our teachers have tried to earn a living. The honors awarded our teachers have been numerous. Seventeen are members of Phi Beta Kappa, the national honorary scholastic society. Sixteen graduated from college magna cum laude or better and members of various honorary so- cieties are found in our faculty. To the benefit of the students, traveling is one of our teachers' greatest interests. How many of our teachers have been to Europe? Fifty-seven. To Japan? Six. To South America? Ten. To Mexico? Twenty-one. To Africa? Seven. To the West Coast? Thirty-six. Many have been to India, New Zealand, Australia, Canada Cby the scorej, Hawaii, Alaska, Israel, Southeast Asia and the West Indies.
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