Volume 66, Issue 3 (January 2022) - The Rampage

Page 1

The Rampage The Newspaper of the Ramaz Upper School

New York • Volume 66 • Issue 3 • January 2022 • Shevat 5782 • the-rampage.org

Chanukah at Ramaz: Eight Great Days Raymond Ashkenazie ’24

making a myriad of different chesed opportunities available to students. Many students felt the presence

The smell of sufganiyot wafted in the air as Ramaz students entered the building in early December: Chanukah had arrived. This year, Ramaz students participated in the traditional Central Park trip, daily activities, and special treats for Chanukah, planned by student activities coordinators Rabbi Segal and Rabbi Dov. Ramaz’s celebration of the holiday started with the annual Central Park trip, where students could choose to play sports, participate in chesed opportunities, visit the Central Park Zoo or ice skate at Wollman Rink. “I really enjoyed ice skating in Central Park and hanging out with my friends,” Roey Denti ’24 said. Overall, most of the student body enjoyed spending the day with friends and doing fun activities. Ramaz also did their best to ensure that the school was in Chanukah spirit with daily Krispy Kreme donuts, sufganiyot, a coffee station, and creating school ruach with music playing around the building. Many small details were also made to make Chanukah more special, like the dreidel hunt competition and a “gelt guess” in the lobby, with prizes like Nets tickets, Amazon gift cards, and a UE Boom Speaker. Ramaz’s Chesed Director, Ms. Deeni Hass, made sure to incorporate chesed into Chanukah,

of Chanukah in the school building, and agreed that Ramaz made sure students were happy and felt the

Follow us on Instagram

@ramazrampage

Chanukah spirit all eight days of Chanukah. There was also an assembly commemorating the Sephardic expulsion and programs led by Rabbi Albo, which allowed all students to learn about Sephardic culture and ancestry. Students were left with the message to always stand up for the Jewish religion and identity, which is the most fitting message during Chanukah, which celebrates this exact ideal. “I really loved the Central Park trip and all the other activities Ramaz planned for Chanukah,” said Anna Braun ’22. “It [Chanukah] felt much different than my other years at Ramaz.” Even though the majority of students enjoyed the activities planned during the holiday, some students felt that there could have been more. Mia Schreiber ’25 said, “I think what they [the Ramaz activities planners] did was very nice, but I felt like they could have done much more in increasing ruach and doing more activities for each grade.” Other students shared this concern, feeling that more should have been done for each grade, and there could have been more planned activities during the day. “The different programs that were put into place allowed everyone to have a fun, exciting, and an enjoyable Chanukah in school” said Rabbi Segal. The Chanukah festivities implemented this month implore many students to wonder what Purim, Lag B’Omer, and Yom HaAtzmaut activities will look like next semester.

Snack Attack: Non-Kosher Snacks in the Vending Machines Rebecca Silber ‘23 In November, rumors about the vending machines selling non-kosher snacks circulated throughout Ramaz. Any student who stopped by the vending machines to confirm the truth behind this rumor could see that the bright red bags of Nacho Cheese Doritos were, in fact, being sold. Rabbi Dov explains that the issue was first brought to his attention by president of the G.O, Yona Weinstock. “Yona cares deeply about the religious identity of the school, and as president, he brought the issue to my attention immediately after spotting the non-kosher snacks,” said the rabbi. According to Dov, Ramaz is not directly in charge of running the vending machines. Instead, Ramaz uses a vendor that takes care of which snacks are ordered, when they are replaced, etc. Larry Berman, who man-

ages IT, maintenance, food services, nurses, and buildings, is also in charge of overseeing the vendors, and informs them that only kosher snacks can be ordered for the school. While the vendors do the best that they can to accommodate our needs, they obviously do not completely understand the idea of kashrut, and are therefore not completely aware of our sensitivity to it. Dov states that this is not the first time in which the vendors accidentally ordered non-kosher snacks to the school. When the incident first occurred, Dov explains that he “was very upset,” and “sent an email to the vendor explaining that if this happens again, the school is going to switch vendors.”

Unfortunately, both this year and last year, the vendor made that mistake yet again. Around March of last year, three non-kosher snacks (Sour Patch Kids, Cheddar Ruffles, and Combos) were being sold in the vending machines. Not even one year after those snacks were removed, another non-kosher snack, Nacho Cheese Doritos, made its way into the vending machines. The commonality between the two instances is that both occurred during Covid. Dov supposes that the pandemic may have contributed a great deal to this scandal. “During the coronavirus pandemic, certain snacks became more or less popular, and so the vendor wanted to make changes based on which snacks would sell.” In addition, “many jobs were lost during the pandemic, so it is possible that old employees were fired and new ones were hired, which may have led to confusion in ordering the correct snacks.” Either way, the school responded to the issue immediately after Yona informed the administration, with Dov sending the vendor an email that very day. Now, the school has somebody in charge of looking at which specific snacks are ordered before putting them into the vending machine. Because of this, Dov is doubtful that the school will run into the issue of non-kosher snacks being found in the vending machines ever again.

Inside this issue... Shakspeare Competition p. 4

L.A.

Basketball Tourament p.

6

Ramaz: Next Level p.

7

Snow Days p. 9


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Volume 66, Issue 3 (January 2022) - The Rampage by The Rampage - Issuu