JASON SADOFSKY - THE TRIBUNE ARTICLES, 1987-88 By Jason Sadofsky The following articles are the actual word-processed documents that were printed in one of my school's newspapers over the course of my Senior year in high school. I have decided to release them in this form because I was on the staff under the heading of "Humor Staff", and subsequently, I created what I thought were very funny articles. The name of the paper was "The Greeley Tribune", and the name of the high school was Horace Greeley High School in Chappaqua, NY. I have included a glossary for those who might be confused by some of the references I make in the articles. Have Fun. - Jason Sadofsky 5/30/88 ============================================================================== GLOSSARY FOR PEOPLE WHO DON'T LIVE WHERE I DO AND DON'T ATTEND HORACE GREELEY HIGH SCHOOL IN CHAPPAQUA, NY ADVOCATE - The school has 5 publications. Among these publications are two school newspapers, The Tribune and The Advocate. I worked on the Tribune, therefore I make rivalistic comments about the other paper. "BUILDINGS" - I make references to places such as "J Building" and "L Building". Horace Greeley High School was designed like a school in California, and therefore has lots of separate buildings connected by open walkways. Twisted, eh? CAFETERIA A - There are two cafeterias in our high school: Cafeteria A and B. Cafteria B is the large cafeteria with all the regular lunch lines and stuff, and loud obnoxious people and food. Cafteria A is a smaller cafeteria that was once an auxilliary eating area and is now where study halls are kept. COFFEE HOUSE - The Horace Greeley equivalent of "Talent Night". An excellent time, whenever it was held. Always good to see the new school bands. INTERVENTION COUNSELOR - This is an independent counselor in our school who is not affiliated with the school in any way and has no obligation to tell the school anything you tell her. I don't particularly like the one we have, and so I make negative references to her constantly. LISTENING CENTER - This is a room full of little booths with tape recorders and headphones in each little booth where students who are taking a foriegn language must go once a week for a class period to hear little tapes of audio learning about that language. I don't like this place. MR. HART, MR. BREEN, MR. COFFEY - The Principal and Vice-Principals of our school, respectively. Administrators make great targets. SATORI - One of the other publications is Satori, which an art and literature magazine. I don't like them either. Nyahh. ============================================================================== TRIBUNE: September, 1987 ============================================================================== STRESS TEST By Jason Sadofsky The world of high school IS a stressful one, as everyone knows. And for every stress, there usually must be a way to relieve it, or solve the problem at heand. This test is designed to evaluate your stress-management techniques. If you pass, you get the hearty knowledge of knowing you'll probably graduate without wrist scars. SITUATION 1: You show up at a Coffee House alone, because your girlfriend said she had a load of homework to do. But as you're sitting in the audience, watching "Steve and the Slimeballs" play their punk version of "Stairway to Heaven", your eyes wander to the back of the room, where you see your girlfriend holding hands with some guy who seems to have had his neck surgically removed. WHAT DO YOU DO? (A) Grabbing an empty metal chair, you rush headlong though the crowd at your newly EXed girlfriend and attempt to smash them until they resemble graffiti, or steak-ums. (B) You listen half-heartedly to the rest of the performances, then slip out the door quietly and go home, where you drink every bottle in the liquor closet until your parents find you the next morning in the bathtub, caked in your own vomit. (C) You neuter yourself with whatever sharp tools you find. (D) You shave off your eyebrows and your hair, and listen to "The Wall" until your brain explodes. SITUATION 2: After forsaking whatever little social life you had to study for the long and tedious final in your worst class, the teacher gives you a grade lower than the number of kidneys you have, and writes a comment on it admonishing your "Blatant disregard for the subject, and education in general." WHAT DO YOU DO? (A) Track down the teacher's car, and fill his/her gas tank with nitroglycerin, laughing like a maniac from the top of the gymnasium as his/her car explodes like a supernova, sending body parts and Mercedes shrapnel flying in all directions, which then proceeds to take out a few cheerleaders as a bonus. (B) You take it all lying down, and start looking in the vocational college section of the college/career room, to gain more information on your future occupation as an assembly line worker's assistant. (C) You lock yourself in your room for a week, listening to rap music and watching public television at the same time. Eventually, your parents break down the door to find you slowly cutting parts of your body off in alphabetical order and flinging the bloddy chunks into the fishtank. (D) You drop out of school, grow your hair long, and work in a Grand Union, where you are eventually killed in a mindless deli robbery. SITUATION 3: Because of your below-average physical makeup, you are constantly terrorized by bullies who can only be described as lower components on the food chain. Latley, they seem to discuss blood when you pass hurriedly by them. WHAT DO YOU DO? (A) Pack an Uzi, and wait intently until one of them insults some pseudo-close relative of yours, at which time you turn them into a somewhat ugly-looking wall mural. (B) You keep taking their sub-human jibes until you are reduced into a quivering mass of rodent. Eventually you try to slash your wrists, screw up (like everything else in your life) and end up on a respirator. (C) Make yourself look like a lunatic in the feeble hopes that they will think you have an incurable disease and should not be touched, because your being here must be some sort of administrative screw-up. (D) Engorge yourself on milk, lemonade, pizza, wine and corn, and puke on the thugs when they demand cash. SITUATION 4: Lately, you are overcome with the unseen enemy - Teenage Depression. You can't place what's gritting your teeth, but everything seems to have sharp edges, and people appear to be hateful and ignorant of you. The world seems cold. WHAT DO YOU DO? (A) Physically assault your Peer Counselor with Industrial Arts tools. (B) Smash windows randomly until Keith the Security Guard subdues you with a baseball bat. (C) Stick your pets in the microwave oven, and stopwatch their detonation times for an extra-credit science lab. (D) Paint the soda machines black. SITUATION 5: While keeping a 4.0 average in all 7 of your classes, you work on three school publications, and have a pretty good baseball average, which compliments your football gaming nicely. Unfortunately, it looks like you MIGHT not get the G.O. Presidential election by a landslide. You are miffed. WHAT CAN YOU POSSIBLY DO? (A) Call up daddy on your 3-mile range cordless phone, and complain, which guarantees that he'll have a talk with the voting booth people. (B) Glut the schools with your professionally printed posters, and give out pamphlets when your lesser classmates get off the bus. (C) Pay everyone off. (D) Wake up, and shake your head, because you're apparently having some sort of drug-induced pipe dream, and you'll be late to school where your 1.7 average is awaiting you, along with the bully with the 14-inch knife. ENJOY! ============================================================================== TRIBUNE: October, 1987 ============================================================================== ALTERNATE ACTIVITIES II: GREELEY FREE TIME Don't try these at home. Try them here. By Jason "Rebok" Sadofsky Assuming that you're not the type of person who considers excessive amounts of academic log-time to be some sort of heavenly virtue, you probably have some free mods scattered throughout your exciting school schedule. You also probably find that you have nothing to do during these glimpses of freedom, because you, the busy beaver of the educational system, have finished your homework. So, I present you with some possible activites to do while you wait eagerly for your next torture period to begin. DECLARE A LEGAL HOLIDAY. Actually, that's a contradiction in terms, but logic never fits in properly when it comes to goofing off. Get a bunch of friends together and take off from school because "It's National Freon Day!". Hopefully, your parents won't know what Freon is. And if they do, maybe you'll be lucky and have elders that worship refrigerator chemicals. SPREAD RUMOURS. You don't need me to give you ideas. (You don't need me period, you think.) But be unique. "The Pizza is Made With Snake Pus" was already tried, and resulted in only four student deaths. Shoot for a dozen. AGGRAVATE PEOPLE WHO HAVE STUDY HALL WHEN YOU DON'T. Stand in front of the entrance to Cafeteria A and say loudly, "Gee, I really feel like going outside and doing NOTHING in the sun." Laugh in an evil manner and saunter away. ATTEMPT TO DETOUR THE SAW MILL PARKWAY INTO ROARING BROOK ROAD. Make a bunch of sawhorses in the Industrial Arts room, paint them yellow and orange, and get a big carboard sign that says "DETOUR". And pray to Cthulu that a person can read a cardboard sign while zipping along to work at 90mph. MAINTAIN CONVERSATIONS WITH INANIMATE OBJECTS. Teachers with Study Hall Duty don't count. Try something easy, like a Mercedes-Benz, or something more difficult, like the darkroom. Try conversations on a metaphysical level, and be careful of lapsing into a Socratic Dialogue. PROPAGANDIZE NEEDLESSLY. Put up posters announcing your candidacy for some spurious office, like "Pornography Inspector", and see how many eager fellows follow you around asking what the job entails. Don't hesitate to put up other posters with simple revolutionary slogans like "Viva Le Plumera" and "Nell Carter is a Fat Cow." STORY TIME WITH THE INTERVENTION COUNSELOR. Slide your feet back and forth nervously on the floor as you confide to Ms. Griswold the fact that you constantly find yourself with a desire to pour cherry cough syrup on your cat and throw "Snuggles" into the dryer. Also explain your emotional attachment to Freddy in "Nightmare in Elm Street". GO SURFING IN THE GUIDANCE DEPARTMENT. Bring along your best Boogie-Board and lots of colourful clothes and be prepared to go for the big "Kahuna". Keep in mind that some of the wallflowers might not go for your "riding the tube", so bring along a six pack of tequilas. START A FOOD FIGHT. But be DIFFERENT. Start it in a classroom. Get about $10 and buy two dozen satanic "Chicken Littles" from a Kentucky Fried Chicken and toss them at your teacher when he/she does something inexcusable, like use a verb in a sentence. THROW THINGS AWAY. Help clean up Greeley! Try small papers, gum wrappers, and soda cans, and work yourself up to bigger things, like freshmen, shubbery, benches, and maybe Mr. Breen's Car. (If you have friends.) TERRORIZE LITTLE PEOPLE. While this mostly would apply to some freshmen, there is a plentiful supply of other underclassmen who seem to be lacking in the glandular department. Consider the following sports: 1. Hanging them upside down in Mr. Hart's office with a little sign on their back marked "$1.99/lb". 2. Wrapping them in electric tape and toting them around claiming that you have discovered "Anti-Mummies". 3. Chaining them to Mr. Hart's Car in the hope that he won't notice them when he leaves for home and that they'll break some sort of world record. 4. "Krazy-Gluing" them to a stray dog. ACT SUSPICIOUS. Wear a large, dark overcoat and a large hat and stare intently at Mr. Breen or the administrative secretaries through their office windows. Also try looking real nervous when you walk by a janitor and pretend to be clutching something explosive. If he comes near you, scream "One move and you're FOOT FUNGUS!!" Be prepared to have yourself subdued with a wrench. CONDUCT SOCIAL EXPERIMENTS ON YOUR TEACHERS. Pour about 15 ounces of baking soda on their desk with a mirror, razor blade, and a straw. Leave a little sign next to them that says "Give me an A." WATER FOUNTAIN PHILOSOPHY. Sit in front of one of the "plentiful" water fountains located around the school and contemplate the following questions: 1. Assuming that 20 people use each water fountain every day, how many thousands of people have pressed those buttons and held their questionable mouths mere centimeters above the nozzle in the last few years? 2. How many of those people have had any sort of close contact with "Ivory Soap" lately? 3. What about all the brain-dead degenerates who lack the physical and mental coordination to swallow their saliva? 4. What would be the percentage decrease in health risks in the school if someone were to, you know, SMASH THE THING OUT OF THE WALL WITH A SLEDGEHAMMER? RUN FOR SCHOOL PRESIDENT WITH AN EGGPLANT. Actually, chuck this one. Who'd ever dare do such a thing? ============================================================================== TRIBUNE: December, 1987 ============================================================================== TEST TAKING: WHAT'S LEFT IS RIGHT By Jason "Voorhees" Sadofsky It happens many times in a young pseudo-person's life. You're sitting in the middle of class, just minding everyone else's buisness, when suddenly, the teacher starts passing out tests. You wonder why, since you haven't taken a test lately, and at that point you discover that the teacher expects you to TAKE a test. Of course! You were out the last two days becuase it's bad luck to attend all the classes in a week with a Friday in it. The teacher is not sympathetic. In fact, he/she seems to sadistically enjoy your torture. You cringe helplessly in your seat, and look forlornly at the stack of papers in front of you. At this point your GPA is at stake, and that means that tonight could be spent at a party or in a gas oven. The best thing to do? STUDY. But whipping out your remedial gerbil-classification manual in the middle of the test is in bad taste, so you've instead got to figure out some way to take this travesty without getting a grade lower than the number of minutes you've actually paid attention in class. LOOK AT OTHER PEOPLE'S TESTS. Now, it's not quite that easy. Looking eagerly over at your neighbor's test has some good and bad points. If the student is a complete dullard, the teacher will find it suspicious that both of you thought that Europe is a type of fish, and if YOU are a complete dullard, you will make the teacher laugh when he notices you blindly copied the neighbor's name and (wrong) date. You COULD look at a few other tests and comparison shop, but walking around is not good. Solution? Throw a rock or other large object at a window. The resulting crash should attract everyone's attention for a significant amount of time, especially if you were lucky enough to have the object hit a passing student as he runs to his class late. FEIGN ILLNESS. This is the best way to get out of the class early to "pseudo-pstudy" in time for a make-up. Fall to the ground, eagerly clutching your stomach and screaming in Latin ("Pecunia Loquit! Pecunia Loquit!"). If you were prepared enough to eat a large breakfast, vomit on someone, preferably someone you don't like. Mental illness counts too. Draw pentagrams on your forehead with a pen and scream that you want to speak to "Wallace". GUESS RANDOMLY. Easiest trick in the book. Just choose whatever fits in the blank. Try using the word "Statistically" a lot. Teachers like students who can use five-syllable words, even if they don't fit. If you are blessed with a test that's multiple choice, then make the little fill-in balloons show designs down the paper, like DNA strings, or maybe a sine wave. Or even spell little words, like BAA, BADBADBAD and ADBEBACABD. LEAVE SUBTLE HINTS IN THE ANSWERS. Write "Redrum" as the date. Write little notes in the margins like "2.0=One ear, 1.5=Two ears, 1.0=Leg, etc...." and "Life is just a test. I hope I don't fail". Make it a point to draw little skeletons next to the teacher's name. Start stabbing in the air with your pencil. The teacher will probably refer you to the Intervention Counselor. Tell the teacher that you set Intervention Counselors on fire. Don't be afraid to ask the teacher when he/she gets off of work, citing "personal reasons" as to why you want to know. IRREVALENT DATA: Nobody likes an idiot, Therefore it's your responsibility not to like an idiot. This is the rule of PEER PRESSURE. Remember that the person who said "'Tis better to have loved and lost, then never to have loved at all" is in all seriousness dead, and that it will be better off in the long run not to worry whether or not that cute person who sits in front of you cares if you like warm summer nights. PANIC. Jump up from your desk, yell "I neither have the brain capacity nor the precious time to waste on this useless piece of academic bullwash, and I'm going to leave this place and do something USEFUL with my life!" Punch out the smallest kid in the class. Throw your desk across the room and run out the door. Do not expect a high grade. GET BITCH. Nobody's going to argue with a kid who's got an attitude about his test. Chances are about 75% that a good amount of your fellow students don't want to take this test, and if YOU stand up and yell "We never covered this subject, you godless heathen!" you'll be in some miniscule way backed up by 24 mumbled "yeah"s. Actually, chances are even BETTER that you'll have 24 mumbled "yeah"s no matter WHAT idiotic thing you say to the teacher, so shouting things like "I want to take life on the pass/fail option" and "Let's have class field trips to Heritage USA" will be joyfully approved of, since it's certainly more interesting to listen to you ramble than to start trying to figure out why cooking was invented. You might even take the time to get a few demands through, like beanbags instead of desks, and the removal of all red objects from the classrooms (for religious reasons). BE VAGUE. When the test asks why certain numbers add up the way they do, write "Qualitatively, Forlorn esq. etc." in red, pointing to the question. What does it mean? NOTHING. But maybe your teacher just won't be in the mood at 11:00pm to burn the caloric equivalent of a small animal trying to figure out what that means, and will assume you're working on a higher plane of existence than he is and are worthy of some sort of blood sacrifice (although cash works just as well). At least attempt to put spurious endings after your name, like "Construct Elt." and "1 removed Frt." GO FOR A GRADE CURVE. When it becomes obvious to you that your number grade is going to be the same as the body weight of a hamster, you could probably make your crushing defeat seem a little less out of the ordinary by dragging down your classmates' averages too. The best way to do this would be to pull out your fingernails and throw them at your neighbours, in the hope that the resulting panic will cause them to be shaken. If in fact you forgot your pliers, try making a sound like the word "pip" over and over, and stopping the minute people look up. The time that they spend looking up will hopefully increase as you switch to shuffling your feet and throwing small bits of your desk, and the rest of the class will have a properly lowered average so that the teacher will curve the grades about 75 points. IGNORE EVERYTHING. Your future as a tree inspector will be beautifully insured by simply thinking "Gee, it's only a test!" which, of course, is the exact opposite of the philosophy of Horace Greeley, which is "Pass or die." And when the test comes back with a beautifully enscribed Zilchmark on it, there's at least ONE thing you could say: "My GOD, this is NOT my test. I didn't take this test! I was elsewhere! There must have been some sort of double switch, because I was NOT here! This is all a farce! I've never seen this test in my life! What is this? I don't know how anyone could've gotten this low a grade except intentionally! I'll sue! I'll sue......" ============================================================================== TRIBUNE: January, 1988 ============================================================================== SCHOOL IS A RELATIVE TERM By Jason "Jason" Sadofsky We are zooming towards the middle of the year now, and it's time for you to think to yourself (in a darkened room) "Why am I so miserable?" The answer, of course, is that you're a pseudo-intellectual, non-freethinking little sot, but you don't want to hear that. What you want to hear from me is that there are ways for you to improve your somewhat dismal sociological/physical/emotional situation, and of course, I'll do my best to contrive some ideas for making your existence moderately tolerable. MORNING: When getting up, don't just think about getting up for school. Think about being dressed, going to morning classes, eating lunch, going to afternoon classes, going home, eating dinner, avoiding homework, getting undressed, and going back to sleep. See, you just cut out the middle man! Stay in bed! When your parent/guardian/warden wanders into your room 15 minutes before mod A and hits you over the head with a skillet, saunter into the shower. If you're lucky, you'll have two showers in the house and at least one excrutiatingly annoying sibling. When you've finish your required delousing, get out of the stall and turn the hot water up all the way. After you're sure your relative has adjusted his heat accordingly, turn off everything completely and listen excitedly for the resulting death scream from the other side of the house, wondering what clothes he'll have to wear today to hide his exposed rib cage. The bus is always a great place to see how the school day is going to be. (Unless, of course, you're a lucky junior or senior who has decided to sink the equivalent of several dozen hours of work at a fast food joint to buy a car that you have to start by rolling down a hill.) Children are always so cheerful as they are brought to the bleak school buildings like pigs to a slaughterhouse. This is a special time in the student's life, and one they will always keep in their memories, right next to the first time they were cursing at a friend about some pitiful conflict and turned around to be staring right in the face of some embittered old faculty hag whose previous vulgar vocabulary prominently displayed the word "gosh". If things are really on your side, you'll be in the bus when there are chains on the tires to fight a coming snow, which makes the entire vehicle as quiet and unbearing as a cafeteria worker that has been shot. Keep in mind that the busdriver deals with hundreds of kids each day, and constantly wonders what it would sound like if he/she drove the entire mess over a cliff. Finally, you're in school, and the bell has just rung, signalling that you have 10 minutes before you're properly late. Teachers are especially fun in the mornings, especially if those mornings are memorable. A mere pull of the fire alarm switch should give them the quick physical warm-up they need to face the coming day. In between classes, it's always interesting to see one or two people who are so completely dazed that they seem like they aren't quite sure if "L" building has two doors. This is a good time to say "HI! How's it goin? Got any change?" because maybe they'll be afraid of offending a "good friend" and "lend" you some money. This will work great with Horace Greeley's economic theory (The Negative-RIP policy: No Records, No Interest, No Payback) and enable you to pick up your caffeine fix for the day, without which you would fall into a study hall-like stupor. MID-DAY: Congratulations! You aren't dead! And only 3 or 4 more hours to go before you break out into blissful, empty freedom. It's food time in Greeleyville, and so you wander onto the back of the long, lemming-like line that leads to lunch. Even from out here in the hallway you can smell the wonderful aromas that accompany dead animal matter. If you're really in some sort of hot mood to reach the food before it travels up the evolutionary scale, consider yelling "My God, WHAT did you do to the hamburgers?!" to an imaginary friend (you probably have a few). If this doesn't clear up the line quickly, try borrowing an extinguisher and yelling "FIRE!" while randomly blasting freshmen with a needed stream of carbon dioxide. Assuming that by this time you haven't been locked and chained in a little room with the Intervention Counselor asking you what toys you played with as a child, you might want to stop by the library. The library is a great place to be most of the time, especially if you really get into watching small people with glasses read. The best thought I can come up with is to get about 10 books on suicide from various shelves, go into one of the study areas, open them all to haunting passages, and place a piece of looseleaf paper next to the small pile with the words "Dear parents" scribbled on it, and a line running off the page to a ballpoint pen placed on top. Splendid times in the listening center will always be appreciated by the students in this school, so why not stick a tape magnetizer on your particular copy when you're done with it? That way when the next student is forced to endure a repetitive soundtrack to an even more repetitive book, they can listen intently to a low, dull hum. They'll appreciate it, and so will you, since about 20% of the kids won't notice. AFTERNOON: School is going to end soon, and you're still not coherent. This is easily fixed by pulling the fire alarm again. This causes conditioning in the student body towards fire drills, and might eventually mean you climbing higher in the class rank in the event of a real blaze. That eye-opener accomplished, you can proceed to the cafeteria again to see how much of a food-orgy the floor resembles at this point. If you happen to see an especially questionable piece of protein on the floor, pick it up with tweezers and place it in your favourite science teacher's mailbox, so that he/she can see what the frontier of biochemistry is revealing. Or, at least it would make a great example of the wonders of prolonged radiation exposure. The buses by this time have come, and the entire student body is released like cattle onto the main parking lot, where they proudly climb onto whatever vehicles aren't moving. This would be a wonderful time for you to "borrow" a school bus to take it for a spin. The old "Deathrace 2000" complex would become especially poignant here. Just avoid hydrants. And me. NIGHT: After finishing your dinner, you've got to consider what homework is really worth your time doing. Take out your list of relatives to figure out which one you're going to say died yesterday, thereby relieving you from a major part of your responsiblities. For those real tightwads about homework, write on ink-blotter type paper so that when the teacher tries to read it, they'll calmly assume that they have an eye cataract, and you are guaranteed one or two days off. Turn on the radio while you do your homework, so that your teacher will be treated with unintentional top-40 lyrics in the middle of your essay questions. Nothing like the latest sappy love song lines to spruce up a history paragraph. After about 20 minutes of heart-wrenching scholastic torture, turn in for bed. While waiting to fall in a chemically-induced coma (you ended up eating that brown pizza, you futz) think about the wonderful sight that will accompany you tomorrow when Mr. Hart opts for martial law. ============================================================================== TRUBUNE: February, 1988 ============================================================================== ALTERNATE SCHEDULING: I AIN'T GOT NO CLASS By Jason "Fruit Farmer" Sadofsky DJ, WHGH Homeroom Announcements You poor fud! You're right in the middle of a schedule that's got more classes packed into it than the amount of poisonous substances in a druguser's locker, and because you're on bad terms with your parents about that really nasty thing you did to the cat with the Car-Vac(tm) you're basically stuck with it. Well, you might as well take your lumps this year in the ol' academic department, but keep in mind that when September rolls around, you can enroll in some of the following scholarly pursuits in Horace Greeley. (Provided, of course, that you're not a senior, who really should be taking one class a day right now anyway.) CLASS: Primary Marine Biology TEACHER: Mr. Phlegmonger ROOM: L-Whatever This program is intended to relate to students about the importance of marine life in the world's food chain, but Mr. P has a habit of forgetting when classes are and the students basically come in and smash windows or write obscene messages on the desks. Prerequisite: Students must be used to sitting in a study hall staring at an ugly brown desk that doesn't even let marker show up good on it. CLASS: Chappaquidian Behaviour TEACHER: Mrs. Fudservant ROOM: I-105 Working off the concept that yes, we ARE better than anything even slightly human on the face of the earth, this class teaches students the art of getting parents to buy a car that goes 200mph in first gear for our 16th birthday and the need to buy clothes that have a fashion lifetime of 3 days. Extra credit given: Your choice of Visa or Mastercard. CLASS: Why am I basically a laggard? TEACHER: Dr. Phluid (retired) ROOM: Lots of it The "Doc" goes into the in-depth reasons of why you seem to think that there is no number higher than 97 and that cars promote more understandable conversation with you than your friends. Classes begin with your somewhat questionable family background, focusing on your grandfather Stanley, who lived in a tree. No prerequisite: You'd spend half the year trying to spell it. CLASS: Social Nightlife in Chappaqua TEACHER: Mr. Pus ROOM: I dunno, where do YOU wanna go? In a somewhat dismal attempt to find out what a person under the age of 21 can do in the surrounding area, this class involves taking a large amount of field trips to such hot-spots as Grand Union, The Chappaqua Library, and the Post Office. By mid-term, the teacher has probably given up and most of the remaining periods will be spent snorting high amounts of Liquid Paper(tm) and chocolate milk, eventually at the same time. CLASS: Breathing AP TEACHER: Mrs. Dingo ROOM: Health Office Basing itself on the motto "Breathing is good", the students will do their best to master the techniques of inhaling and possibly exhaling, depending on the time allotted to the teacher. Special credit given to kids who work up to more advanced course objectives, such as holding one's breath and yawning. Pre-requisite: 1 semester in an equivalently important class, such as Y-Mod check and Study Hall. CLASS: Greeley Logic TEACHER: Mr. Wartesugher ROOM: J-9 The purpose of this little jaunt is to figure out the mathematical reasoning, if in fact any exists, of some of the following questions: Why has Satori been putting up posters calling for meetings on Fridays without giving the date when they are fully aware the posters stay up for weeks? Why do we even CONSIDER buying pizza that looks like it was shot with a flamethrower? Where does David Gavril get the humour for his comic strip? Why do we call an independent advisor an "Intervention Counselor" when the name means to get in the way, and why did the Tribune print a "new teacher" article about her in two different issues? And why hasn't anyone protested the disappearence of "Electric Dinosaur" in the quad? CLASS: School sports for the true adventurer TEACHER: Mrs. Waystlande ROOM: (ruum) n. A small place with 4 walls Because soccer and football and all those other intramural sports have been already beaten into unoriginality, this course goes ahead and creates new ones: Scaling L building, Tipping Mr. Breen's car, Horizontal rapelling, Taking flash pictures of the darkroom, cafeteria dining (without looking first), and filling Mr. Hart's office with water and putting live fish in it. Pre-Requisite: 5 minutes in detention. CLASS: Humor- Myth or Reality? TEACHER: Jason Sadofsky ROOM: AV Department In clear, simple terms, Mr. Sadofsky explains how easy it is to fill half a page of student newspaper with mindless, anarchistic rhetoric and yet still maintain a place in the staff box. Prerequisite: 50,000 volts; head or spinal chord preferred. ============================================================================== TRIBUNE: February, 1988 With the supreme court ruling on student papers being censored, the editor of the Tribune asked me to write a letter to the editor so they could say something about the subject. Here's what I spit out: ============================================================================== Pseudo-Editor: I have read with great interest the NY Times article on the supreme court ruling towards the freedom of censorship in the public school (there's an oxymoron for ya). This brings a new era of thought in the mind of the high-school journalist, especially one of whether or not the term "high-school journalist" is in anyway accurate anymore. I, for one, am not really a journalist, but a person whose job is to bring comic relief to a publication system that many people already find a joke. But that doesn't mean that what I am producing on school premises is not at risk of also eventually being censored or edited heavily to reflect the whims of some nameless old laggard who decides he doesn't like my referring to the school in a negative manner. Actually, in a perverse sort of way, I can understand and see why a high school administration would find itself justified in cutting out the words "shit" or "fuck" from an article. It would figure that this would disrupt the learning process sufficently to cause damage to the big picture. That may or may not be true, but it's no surprise that Horace Greeley choses a more middle ground in what gets printed. Student Newspapers in most of the 6 schools that I have spent my learning career at have either been non-existent, or only slightly above the quality of this school's daily bulletin. What makes this one different to my point of view is (or was?) it's allowance of a range of dissenting opinions within the same few publications, and even side-by-side on the same page, to give the students a more varied and detailed picture of the range of events within the school and national arena. In the process of allowing this freedom, the paper must, as far as they're concerned, not allow these articles to approach the point of complete distraction from the purpose of the newspaper, which is to give students of the school technical and (hopefully) realistic experience with some of the facets of a newspaper, including deadlines, assignments and responsibility. Unfortunately, the world isn't quite that simple, and a person who happens to write about something that doesn't sit well with the people who pay the bills, say, an article about abortion or divorce rates, is possibly putting themselves up to a whole new angle about the effect of the article. When I first came to this school, I was delighted with a certain column in the Tribune called "Notes from the Underground", by one Glenn Herman. The class of '90 and '91 are completely unaware of his creations, I'm sure, but the best way to describe them would be to take my humour column and turn up the violent angle, and make the humour a little more specialized. They were violent, libelous little articles that put down every aspect and person in Horace Greeley High school, but I loved them because that meant that I had a chance to put in articles of my own in and not worry about censorship, since my stuff would seem tame by comparison. This "you ain't seen nothin' yet" trick tends to work rather well, and makes a person wonder what the standards really are for the administration or teacher to work by. 101 degree heat doesn't seem quite bad when compared to 500 degree heat, so to speak. And an article with something mildly controversial means nothing when another shows in the mailbox that is totally off the mark. In the process of making EsnesnoN, John Rescigno, Alex Weissman and myself were faced with the following questions with some of our more controversial material: "Will this be allowed to print?" "Does this DESERVE to be printed?" "Will it be appreciated by at least a significant percentage of people?" Needless to say, some articles, illustrations, and concepts were cut from our magazine, for many various reasons. To give you an idea, some of these "self-censored" items included articles about Suicide, and the image of a certain teacher in a dominatrix costume. The question that comes to mind is whether or not we were justified in not letting the student body decide for itself whether or not these items were appropriate, but then we would have had to print them anyway for the students to be given the opportunity. This is one of the more vicious Catch-22s in the profession of the printed word, and I'm sad that this means that the thoughts of other students must be decided by a precious few. What I think I'm trying to say is that it is now up to the discretion of Mr. Hart, Mr. Breen, and Mr. Coffey (Thank Cthulu that we are still at the point where we know the decision-makers' names) as to what degree of freedom they will allow the printed word at Horace Greeley, and that although the current trend in the nation is one of conservatism, this particular high school's reputation of being an open-minded and individualistic environment can still be maintained regardless of the damage it has sustained over the years. - Jason Sadofsky ============================================================================== TRIBUNE: March, 1988 ============================================================================== LOOK! THE WORD "SADOFSKY" IN BIG LETTERS! By Jason "Reznik" Sadofsky Where was I? Oh, yes. If you've ever gone through the pleasurable experience of having your parents discover that those four videotapes of yours which were labelled "Disney" were in fact eight hours of hardcore pornography, then you will know full well what I mean. The life of a high school teenager is a constant give-and-take between what the defendants (hereafter labelled "parents") want you to be like and the instinctual desire not to resemble a child actor in "The Brady Bunch". What this tends to pan out to is that you like to live under the delusion that what parents want is completely detrimental to anything resembling a social life, when actually they're only interested in crippling your somewhat studly prowess to something minimally above that of a castrated monk's. Ski weekends with a girl named "Bubbles" may be definitely out of the question, but how about that pretty girl named "Shecky" who is the daughter on one of your mother's bridge partners? Do them a favour and ignore the fact that doing anything even slightly naughty with Shecky is an experience comparible to attempting to seduce a Subaru "Justy". But then again, this was the same woman who thinks that you're interested in constantly seeing that beautiful picture of you at age five. You know, the one with you in the blue bunny suit with the chocolate streaming down the sides of your mouth...... Social prowess and proper protocols for letting people know you like them is the main thrust of this article, so to speak. Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending if you're a reader or a gym teacher) any sort of viewpoint that I put forward would end up being one of the meancruelviciouskillsmallanimals male variety, but that's your tough luck, and anyway, I happen to think that this sort of vocabularic manure is at least a few degrees more interesting than the articles you usually see in this paper, such as the ones that interview seniors but always cut out the truthful statements, like "If I see my math teacher in the street after I graduate from college and get a job, I will not hesitate to stick a revolver down their throat and pull the trigger while screaming the Cosine formula in their ear.", or even better than the entire Entertainment section, which has about as much influence on the media I choose to enjoy as that of a cafeteria worker's. Is it just me, or do I write really obscenely long run-on sentences? Social interaction within the school environment has been around for a long time, obviously. There are reasons for small alcoves within the darkroom, beside storage of flammable materials. What? You've never considered that possibility all those times you developed pictures in there while unmeasurable damage was done to your eyes by a yellow bulb? You seem out of it. Tell me, have you ever wondered what goes on in the Greeley Candy Store before 1:30? Or what other uses have been found for the soundproof booths in the music room? No? Hmm. You apparently aren't the type of person who thinks that the backseat of cars are about as effective for climbing the social ladder as punching a cheerleader in the face. (Look! You're saying to yourself, "My God, not only can he be violent and insidiously biligerent, he can be sexually offensive too." but because of your small brain capacity you can only handle the phrase "He's a pervert.", which is completely fine with me.) Somewhere down on that slummy part of the social spectrum, slightly below mooning your sweetheart and hitting on the girl next to you in listening center, would have to be any sort of school social activity. What this includes is the prom (which is actually an ancronym standing for "Please Remove Our Minds", which it does very well) or perhaps the Homecoming Dance (which is second only to wearing a cowboy hat and drooling into the back of a TV as a great thing to do on a Saturday Night) and especially a Coffee House (where the chances of picking up a girl while the band is playing is equivalent to asking her to dance while in the engine of a 747 flying to LaGuardia). "But wait," say the multitudes of dimple-faced girls who make the annoying posters for these travesties of parties, "That's not true! These are fun, enjoyable get-togethers to provide an alternative to getting drunk or in trouble." to which I say "Shut up." Intervention Counselor, Intervention Counselor, Intervention Counselor. By the way, is there anything particuarly WRONG with annihilating a good 15-16 years of learning with a bottle of Jack Daniels? Is there really SOMETHING DETRIMENTAL to the action of taking enough acid so that a Stridex pad is an interesting thing to look at intensely for 4 hours? Will you be SERIOUSLY AFFECTED if you snort enough coke to watch the windows explode? Perhaps. But since everyone knows that my experience in such a below-the-table, disgusting, low-angle type of social activity is seriously limited by retarded mentalities in the community, I would be rather unqualified to decide in either way what would be proper for you, "The Thinking High School Public Who Can't Vote". But I figure it this way: If there is some wonderful substance that most of the "social adept" can consume in large quantities and put themselves in a mental state that will enable them to cause a grade curve that will put me with a GPA above that of a pretzel, well, what's so bad about that? Off the drugs. The point of social interaction is to meet people. Actually, forget that. The point of social interaction is to PRODUCE people. And lots of them. Sometimes I wonder if things are ever taken to their logical conclusion enough times. You are meeting people of the opposite sex so that you can eventually produce more people so the earth does not become a wasteland, or more of one. If along the path of producing more people, you happen to see a movie or two, or meet other people who are also working at producing more people, well, then, consider it a fringe benefit. Also consider it a fringe benefit if along the merry way to duplication you don't break some laws or incur the wrath of authority, which is a sexless institution anyway. Enough of this for this month. Just remember that when you are talking to a person, the only thing they are thinking about or paying attention to is that zit which the Noxema equivalent of a napalm strifing was unable to uproot, and you'll do just fine. ============================================================================== TRIBUNE: April, 1988 - The April Fools issue ============================================================================== WHAT ARE YOU LAUGHING AT? By Jason Sadofsky What I seem to be proudly located in the middle of is the official April Fuel issue of the Tribune, which is the issue whe