Beacon High School - Beacon Yearbook (Beacon, NY)

 - Class of 1967

Page 14 of 176

 

Beacon High School - Beacon Yearbook (Beacon, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 14 of 176
Page 14 of 176



Beacon High School - Beacon Yearbook (Beacon, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 13
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Beacon High School - Beacon Yearbook (Beacon, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 15
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Page 14 text:

BOARD OF EDUCATION SEATED: Mr. Jacob H. Schmitzer, Mr. Rernard S. Liquorman, Vice- President: Mr. Harry M. Allred, President; Mrs. Grant Tomlins, Mr. Dettmer Bauer. STANDING: Mr. William L. Curry, Mr. William E. Dexter, Jr., Mr. James Pappas. SUPERINTENDENT ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT Mr. Donald J. Sipe Mr. John Williamson

Page 13 text:

SOUTH KOREA Reddy for Tdke-o B ' hnloiuxtu afjttk a textbook nurmfitr of tin nii»u of foreign out. It ilor not IhIIoh . a Jii itiics tomctimr wggre . itunotnk an I to uiulirtltxi-tofMtl II till l lUP a ■ (about 2»l |wi m and per capita ii ingly low SI (Ml a S i pathetic-look mg peddlers with buinl.7 of ijUwgr on l heir li.nl lint if painful pmrrty pn iit , t|.« Itmimlworl for 4 new future ha bm Heated Kir, (in possrt capaclt I I l»crii iMir than doubled, J «-i ' v ”i [»■ . II.. .....In ..x.' I.-ix -ilv. «looblcd .111«! rl( nttn ir.. tertili -i pn«ln«t.i i I rspntrd in Wvkm m ■•'k arc piled high with isnistruc- W r Department Store bulge with 'rsers thing ftuni Max Foctw Olid cream (medium Mi-11 40) and diMp «aiti ( 16) to tinted plialm of Sy Hainan Klicr. Alhert Einstein. Charlton Heston ami Picxuleiil Pari (hunt Her Thr wene. in short, is a hustling one lull „t Uightl dressed. energetK | e n le win —after -40 years ot Japanese mle. three k B k ........ tlie U.S.. whuli has pumped m (onvnleiahlr credit Hut so can WMm ■ Mh B B ). tl.M-ateiifd I., prog Ir ne Mnas liet I tlie anti-Japanese vtinlent noli ami pushed through tlie treaty L Atei fourteen seals ot negotiatum Ik l.ren tlie two countries p On the Move. Hen b no doubt that ol«- gnni-faccd Pail, «lespite his mans '«letradars, has miected a new stability Into Korean affairs, ami. as a iesnh thr cuuntry IS brginiiiiig to muse. In thc omnlrssHle. whete puvcrtv lias liern tlie mart grinding. ctops were at a neat record level last seal «lespite thr wswxt Hoods and droughts in resent decodes Ami iimlei the hist Fis r Year Plan. NORTH . KOREA PYONGYANG % SOUTH V9L KOREA I » eno» ej«n uccm tfPUNCU k»tmh ' SMT5 C cuss oumi VT.aU.I atlas 1 loan alia 1 a ( at man) s r In si ft.inop .in ' w ! W. hut iK-s ii ties tales I run hi tls.it (Quisling, trying to sase Ins ungiided (umiiIi) Iron wars s. HoumU ictl slerprt and deepci L. ■ ! In.1.1 .-I I.isIih, With both L hglil hr appiu k lie i) B lan Hullo 1 did 11 it lei In V lilogi apiis . 11 il lei. a Mod) In Olian»ky; Swinging I’-alnu-t •m «I i l. i 11«- « mill! km so. •g (Quisling s |sislssai lilal. him iu tu tlk.it of Petaiu's. and Misists at was a si tun of tlie mob. At H ssltrii (Quisling in a im lodia aslet) In shale li.imls in lain s cais ..l on ins a« Pnu air acting undo ■ doing smil dills as vikhrit. hie W As tlie) bound him to tlie r | l.i s r I his List link While l r- ■ tu In caidboard outline oil tlie BlMnughl Ins I.ialla-in.ilnal mind i.il |.nla..«nl la. ImhI, likr a his ImnIiI), 'lie’s .ng li.nl lie’s un ilk• LI Y.ul.rl I .nii Is., lie.ird him ... . Ollansks'» stars air «m il ' I into Mil Ml lir i .in us-.nl I H him ImcI to Nrs .issk lor a killing There i (••! Quitch ), a H sil on no JOHNSON i foil Olwitiky 2S4 Kigci r 4 95 ffM f during 1'ei American Hwtory and Social Stud tea Minings' s'hemiatry Kngluh Com|MMiiuon Kuro|iean Mmiory and World Culture French i .ermnn Hebrew •• Latia Mathematica, lo-vrl I Standard Mai hemal tea. lavcl II Inirmuvr. Phyatca If uasian Spamah raaenttal I ipiik taken by L •I.. . ameia ami tine Luna, it turn out. •t tall. It eye was capable of mle to tlie horizon, and it an angle on the hard and rod were presented by M ti - president of tlie Sosiet Ktencws. in a long new Moscow Keldysh coti- ne spacemen suspected V» spare engineer built as pouible No elabo- ’empted Most of tin ; craft nl tosvard tlie .sted ot brallng rocket, elikle Tlie instrument died from the carrier ind soft-landed on the t 220 pound Tfie veyor, bv contrast, •id 700 pound But ,-tature limited it did not diminish 1 inical batteries !ew days were elaborate—and •t coukl have 'ged all during At a result, the migh i missci to lue. tlien to bc- .e it tran«nutter Soviet engineer i to avoid con- irface for future M it i standing •g on the airless ' nent to greet the •re lie lunar surface na 9. but Soviet • « vjiow a field ago. it si ailed ssilli Iff Oust to Thonia (kdd otter tF» anothei interpretation of ’ phrto Is expel to support it Buy a bug of ceinei Gold advised last steel “Tale a IwukIIuI. and throw it bar! at tlir rest of it.” The fine cement partK’les adhere to one an- other. lie reports, and buikl up highls irregular shape , creating miniature hills and tiny valley -fairy-castle Mructuiet Moon dutl. errutrd in earn of eunion b) a rain of ihk rometeorite unimpeded b) any atmosphere, wonkl in Gold estima- tion be a similarly fine powder More over, tlie dust svould adhere and form a relatively firm surface such as the one Luna 9 photogiaphed What about the angular rocks in some of the pictures? They could be broken chunk of lava, or perhaps debris blasted out ol the surface by a meteorite crash- ing nearby But Gold has still another experiment to explain them We’ve set ofi cherry bombs (to simulate an impact- ing meteorite) in fine powder. said Cold. It Iliiow out chunks of slightly compacted powder, so delicate that you couldn't pick it up with your liands, but with vertical surfaces, even overhang The composition of tliese rocks would therefore be something like beach sand that has dised up and crusted over after a heavy rain, when touched, the seem- ingly firm, angular chunks collapse into a pile of loose sand. The dispute over surface structure finds common ground in the question of belief lunar excuri fearsome cloud of dusl rw , tl.u.g i..! Mm ri.Mtiw g? Dig in According) Gold I -; robot siirtace samplers must still rj tlie moon to deteiinlne what problem await the fir si human! Tlie I' S Surveyor vehicles wil| all cany the necessary test e Surveyor. Gokl slate vehen absolutely essential Tlie first Surveyor will be ! (lie moon some time th According i h. more Lunas' attempt soft landings, perhaps in I9C Beyond tin», howevei, Keldysh did nc . r ifi-'-ir rw-fc- The gout (circa 1790»: Stimulating to the hr lesel Usually inherited, gout [abnormali) high levels of uric lie bkiod. this acid, many re- , believe, crystallizes in joints- 'y the toes—and produces severe ' inflammation tvpical of gout, s and Mueller arrived at their sion alter taking unc-acid meas- .»ents from the blood of 113 Michi- r faculty members and comparing 'men with tlie highest lesels of uric acid -only one actuali) had go it-scored highest m such categories as “achieve- ment. leadership. pushing of self and drive. Those with lower uric-acid levels, reported Brook and Mueller in The Journal of the Ameri an Medical N.K l.ltlOII. WCII II,,.! - pMffTC r»e Jing RNA I 1 • uric acid may stimulate the and help improve mental efli- Tlie reseaich suggest a new kreal mental retardation There - that man ret aided young- low uric-acid lesels in theu ;ing these lesels mi ght ton- datiomsts passed out par a skull and croscbone thro city. A doctor from Seattle fokl meeting of the unall hut voci Ftecdom Fighters for Pure Water” th fluoride was insidious poison And a Dallas psadnotlur told tlie city council that fluoridation was a Communist pk . adding illogically that big men. big in- dustry and big mones are behind it' The campaign was typical of tlie high- pitched emotional barrages «wet thr last (wo decade that have obstructed the introduction of fluorides into drinking water to prevent tooth cavities But this time, the fringe groups iatled-uitd in an area where the base been considered strong. On Jan. 29, mare than 98.000, Dallas citizens turned out in ll-d weather to support flooridatmu 3 to 1 To counter (lie anti denial and medical «M newspaper ads detailing of fluorides Finally. V appeared on TV | i t to urge pro-fluorid The Dallas v recent devekip: status «4 w. licit Ki



Page 15 text:

Dr. Raymond Ross, Principal. Mr. Michael Scoba, Supervisor. Mr. David Vandewater, District Attendance Officer. 11

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