Bronx High School of Science - Observatory Yearbook (Bronx, NY)

 - Class of 1960

Page 23 of 120

 

Bronx High School of Science - Observatory Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 23 of 120
Page 23 of 120



Bronx High School of Science - Observatory Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 22
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Page 23 text:

serves to highlight the efficient job which Mr. Jacobson, Senior Class faculty advisor, and the Senior officers and Reps do in organizing the various operations that serve to make the final year of high school a more happy one. The items for which the money is used include class dances, the yearbook, S.O. dues and privileges, and the 'clovelyw hats and pins. Of course, the Senior Repis job involves not only collecting, it also entails distributing such items as Senior cards, hats, and pins. One of the hardest-working Senior groups, the Senior Council, is comprised of Larry J. Platt, Barbara Wexler, Dale Lindenberg, Peter Hoffman, Diane Levy, Gail Gorenstein, Phil Gerstein, Douglas Berg, Barbara Rogow, Hal Kugelmass, Stewart Rubin, Arthur Priver, Mike Finkelstein, Herbert Bergman, Andrea Leskes, Alan Shapiro, Ralph George, Bruce Rubin, Danny Marcus, and Larry Miller. Several other senior committees have also been working admirably to make this year a great success. The Dance Committee, headed by Linda Friedman and Barbara Rogow, sponsored two very successful Senior Dances. Editor Mike O7Hare and staff supplied us all with inside tips and worthy information in the Senior News- paper, Fourth Year Scratch. As Spring began to look like more of a possibility, the Senior Prom Committee crawled out of its burrow. With a few pep-up talks from the chairmen, Danny Marcus and Danielle Fraenkel, the members started working on one of the hardest jobs in the schools. Their Herculean task was to convince the Seniors to want, need, and pay for a Senior Prom. After a few anxious weeks, the final total of sales was announced: fifty-six tickets sold factually fifty-live, because one was mistakenly sold to a gullible Freshmanj. Only two days remained to sell the additional required 125 tickets. Although the sun rose the next day on a scene similar to the blizzard of Eighty-Eight, the necessary tickets were sold, and the Prom turned out to be a glorious success. By the way, the members of this committee were: Ann Pinsky, Ken Pinsker, Sheila Siderman, Nancy Silver, Fred Oberstein, Alan Freeman, Mike Goldberg, Madelaine Cooke, Jerry Fischoff, Joan Hecker, Libby Zimmerman, and Sarah Greenberg. An original and very amusing Senior Show was written by the combined genius of Danny Fermaglich, Victor Marrero, Serena Bachels, and Fran Stillman. It was entitled, They Shall Not Pass, and was a fitting satire on school life. Without two very important people the senior committees might never have operated as eHiciently as they have. Mr. Jacobson, the Senior faculty advisor, has done an excellent job in guiding the committees in their activities. Special tribute must also be paid to Miss Doris Eliazon, who, as faculty advisor of the Student Organization, is responsible for superbly coordinating its activities. She has done her customary job of making the impossible seem only a bit difficult. Thank you, Mr. Jacobson and Miss Eliazonl And to all those who helped make our Senior year at dear old Bronx High School of Science a happy and enjoyable one, thank you! JEFF GREENFIELD J W 19 AE 5, 1 .Z L gg g a A 1 Q

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ARISTA RICHARD DAYNARD Early this year, a sophomore, looking for the S.0. Office, noticed a cubicle marked Arista. Through the glass panel above the letter- j ing he could distinguish a small group, clustered about a desk, minutely examining a long mimeo- graphed sheet. One member of the group drew out a 31 Parker Iotter, vigorously made circles on a paper, and, when the ink began to flow, made a small check in the top right hand corner. The puzzled student, being a true scholar, inquired, and found that the group, Arista Pres. Bob Ho.rowitz, Vice-Pres. Terry Krulwich, Sec. Nancy Silver, and faculty advisors Mrs. Eidenberg and Mrs. Lawner, were engaged in selecting, on the basis of Scholarship, Character, Leader- ship, and Service, the latest crop of Arista members from the myriad of applicants. After heated argument with their Spring term counterparts, Pres. Charles Brooks, V.-P. Douglas Berg, and Sec. Jeff Mallow, the decision was clinched. The sophomore, a boy of definite aristocratic tendencies, decided to try for Arista. Realizing that Arista membership entailed certain sacrifices, he immediately foreswore eating. Since he knew that Arista members may not fail any subject, he applied to Diane Alexander and Charles Brooks, Co-Chairmen of the Arista Tutoring Committee, for tutoring in Spanish, Biology, Mechanical Drawing, Social Studies, Geometry, English, and Health Education. To keep his file in Mr. Rae's office reasonably thin, he ceased dismantling Auditorium seats. To fulfill his leadership requirement he joined a Cub Scout Pack, and, through deft manipulation, became an Akela, or Assistant Den Chief. He found getting his service credit more difficult, for he had only three free periods K3 periods X M point per period of service : IW pointsl. So he gave up sleeping, and now arrives at school in time for the -6th period f4:37 AMD custodial squad. He also joined the Administrative Squad, the Advanced Chem. Squad, Art Squad, Alumni Squad, Animal Squad, Automotive Physics Squad, and Cross-country, indoor, and outdoor track teams, giving him a total of 4175 service points for the year. Next year will be much the same. Sometime in the Spring he will receive a mimeographed application form. He will enter his service points, add up his marks and divide to obtain his scholastic average f90.0lj, and confidently hand in the application. But success will not come this easily. For when he finds his average he will neglect to use the Scientific method of computation, by adding his major marks, taking the first derivative, adding S.T.L., and taking the definite integral, using periods 1 and 9 as the bounds. As a senior he will encounter little difficulty. His application will be quickly approved, he will be handed a green and gold pin, and a yellow carnation, and will sit on the stage where he, and a horde of fellow students, will be duly inducted. 20

Suggestions in the Bronx High School of Science - Observatory Yearbook (Bronx, NY) collection:

Bronx High School of Science - Observatory Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Bronx High School of Science - Observatory Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Bronx High School of Science - Observatory Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

Bronx High School of Science - Observatory Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 1

1988

Bronx High School of Science - Observatory Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 117

1960, pg 117

Bronx High School of Science - Observatory Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 84

1960, pg 84


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