American Basic Science Club: Story of a Successful Small Business
By Jim Kerr
Imagine the excitement kids felt back in the 1950s and 60s receiving a box of scientific gizmos in the mail they could assemble into a “mystery shock box,” a strobe light and then a radio. American Basic Science Club delivered that excitement.
The club was a small business my dad dreamed up which manufactured and sold science kits through mail order. The kits were sold mainly to young people in the 10 to 16 year-old range, and were advertised in Boys Life, Popular Electronics, Popular Science, other magazines and various comic books.
The business was created and operated by my father, James S. Kerr, and ran from 1957 until the early 1980s. In later years, my father would often hear from past customers who said his kits had sparked an interest in science for them, and influenced their decision to pursue careers in science, engineering and medicine.
The American Basic Science Club kits were unique in that:
• They were comprehensive, covering a variety of subjects including magnetism, electronics, optics, photography, atomic energy, land surveying, analog computers, and weather forecasting.
• They were sold as a kit-a-month club, with each monthly kit including multiple projects and experiments. There were initially eight monthly kits, but it eventually grew to 10 monthly kits in all. Each month the customer would receive a new kit until all 10 were received.
• The instruction manuals included were educational. You not only learned how to assemble each project, you also learned how they worked and the function of each part. For instance, when a new part was introduced, such as a capacitor or vacuum tube, you would have to perform several experiments to learn how that part behaved.
• The kits were affordable, with the price for each monthly kit being less than $5. To keep the price low, the projects included with each kit often made use of parts obtained in previous kits. For instance, the radio that was built in Kit 4 used parts from Kits 1, 2, 3 and 4.
Here are just a few of the projects that were included with the kits:
Kit 1: Electrical Lab with Safety Power Transformer, Electro-Chemical Projects, Neon Lamp, “Mystery Shock Box”, Relay, Solenoid, Magnetizer/Demagnetizer
Kit 2: DC Power Supply, Voltmeter, Wheatstone Bridge, Low Speed Strobe Light
Kit 3: Amplifier, Oscillator, High Speed Strobe Light, Sound Experiments, Ripple Tank
Kit 4: Shortwave and Broadcast Radio, Audio Amplifier, Microphone, Transmitter
Kit 5: Telescope, Microscope, Lamp Housing, Optical Lab, Camera Lucida
Kit 6: 35 mm Slide Projector, Microscope Projector, Spectroscope, Ultraviolet Lamp
Kit 7: Analog Computer, Weather Station, Wind Vane and Indicator Board
Kit 8: Atomic Energy Lab, Thermal Energy Lab, Barometer, Anemometer, Sling Psychrometer
Kit 9: Photography Lab, Photomicrography Camera, Photo Cell Projects
Kit 10: Surveyor’s Transit, Telescope Mount, Talking on a Light Beam, Photoelectric Relay
During the 1960s, my father began expanding the business by selling a few of the kits through Sears Roebuck, Edmund Scientific and
other companies. The Weather Station, Photography Lab, and Atomic Energy Lab were available as individual kits. You can occasionally find these kits on Ebay.
By the late 1970s, the business was slowing down. Part of the problem was that people seemed less interested in building things, plus the electronics portion of the kits had become somewhat dated since it still used vacuum tubes. My father felt that it would be too expensive to bring the kits up to date, particularly since the demand for such kits didn’t seem to be there anymore. By the early 1980s, the business was closed.
My father was very proud of what he had done. It was a great idea, well-executed, that inspired a lot of young people.
Dear Mr. Kerr,
Imagine my surprise to discover this. I had searched the internet before but I think the inclusion of the words ” mail order” did the trick this time.
I have often thought of what it would take to revitalize this. It was wonderful and tremendously educational and I have lamented the direction that was taken by offerings that came after your father’s, particularly when it came to finding something similar for my own children…….there was nothing.
What is the status of the business and the rights today? I think with some tinkering, it is very relevant, particularly today where more and more young people are becoming disconnected with basic science.
Would love to hear back from you.
Regards,
Rick Skorick
Architect
Tokyo Japan
I got these as a kid and loved them. They were by far the best deal for the money I have ever seen. I could not wait until the next kit would arrive. I just wish I had kept them, I would love to repeat the experience again.
I learned more from the series of kits than I learned in school!
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I lived in Douglass, Kansas and saw the advertisement in a Boy’s Life magazine in about 1959 when I was 12. My folks let me subscribe and like the others that posted comments I couldn’t wait for the next kit. An extra was that I found other adults (friends of my dad’s) who were kind to assist me when there was something that didn’t work as described or was too hard to understand.
This is precisely what i was seeking. Thanks!
I will never forget those kits that your father created for us. They, more than anything else, shaped the direction my life took. They led to my majoring in Physics, becoming an electronics designer and engineer and to a lifetime interest in radio and electronics.
I lived in Nashville, TN and spent a year waiting eagerly for each new kit to arrive. Your father’s efforts made a huge difference in my life.
Hi Jim, I’d like to talk with you in regard to 5 ABSC kits that I have, three of which are the Weather Station. I am trying to determine which kit is the earliest by using the address published. Most likely, you may be able to fill in the gaps. Thanks for your time, Dave
It’s great to see something written about this by the son of the creator. Like the others said, these kits were one of the highlights of my childhood. I remember getting a lot out of these kits, but when I looked over some of the kit manuals I kept, I realized that a large portion of my foundational knowledge came from these kits. Also like the others stated, I lament that there isn’t currently anything like this available. These kits taught real science. My heartfelt thanks to your father for providing such joy and knowledge to so many kids!
I came across this web page by accident today, but very glad I found it. I remember very well the American Basic Science Club kits. They were the highlight of my life for almost year. The advertisement shown in this web page really brings back memories. I think I started getting the kits in 1958 when I was in the 5th grade. I used to eagerly await each kit each month. My family had moved from Soda Springs, Idaho, to Missoula, Montana, in the middle of this episode in my life. One kit was very late, I can’t remember which one. I think it was 5 weeks late. I remember crying one Saturday when the kit failed to arrive. In those days we didn’t have the internet. A long distance call was out of the question. So I wrote a letter and got a reply as to why there was a delay. Finally the kit arrived and happiness was restored.
I remember the cloud chamber, the regenerative receiver, the analog computer, the electrometer, the black projector box, the neon strobe light, the radio, etc. I remember how hard it was for me to get dry ice (I think I had to use regular ice) and of course the cloud chamber didn’t work all that well for me, but I did see alpha particles! I remember that little bead of radioactive material on the end of a pin that was used to generate the alpha particles. Eventually I went to MIT, majored in electrical engineering, and became a scientist in large part thanks to these kits. Today I am still working as a scientist and working on “cool” projects for a defense firm in Dallas, Texas.
I will forever be grateful to your father. What a great idea! His American Basic Science Club had a huge impact on my life, and, from the sounds of it, the lives of many others.
I came across this web page by accident today, but very glad I found it. I remember very well the American Basic Science Club kits. They were the highlight of my life for almost year. The advertisement shown in this web page really brings back memories. I think I started getting the kits in 1958 when I was in the 5th grade. I used to eagerly await each kit each month. My family had moved from Soda Springs, Idaho, to Missoula, Montana, in the middle of this episode in my life. One kit was very late, I can’t remember which one. I think it was 5 weeks late. I remember crying one Saturday when the kit failed to arrive. In those days we didn’t have the internet. A long distance call was out of the question. So I wrote a letter and got a reply as to why there was a delay. Finally the kit arrived and happiness was restored.
So eventually I went to MIT, majored in electrical engineering, and became a scientist in large part thanks to these kits. Today I am still working as a scientist and working on “cool” projects for a defense firm in Dallas, Texas.
I will forever be grateful to your father. What a great idea! His American Basic Science Club had a huge impact on my life, and, from the sounds of it, the lives of many others.
I too remember these kits with fondness. I learned a lot from and to this day when I tell of building an atomic cloud chamber complete with a radioactive source(radium)I still get raised eyebrows. Before I stumbled across this website I had no idea who had been the author. How I wish I could find something like this for my two grandsons. Anyone out there?…anyone? My career took a different direction but it is amazing how much I use things I learned from this kit. I restore muscle cars and work on hot rods and show cars. I have been able to come up with solutions to problems by inventing fixtures and gizmos that work. Much of the credit goes to the ABSC kits. Thanks.
FIND something? Anyone? First, what have you done with your set? Second, wasn’t the whole point to teach you that you could do something yourself instead, as the norm has been for at least two decades, to “call a guy” to do ANYTHING? WE have the internet to contact everyone who had any part, it can be listed in full and in the order it was sent, the booklets can be scanned and offered as .jpg, the specifications of all parts can be accumulated on a website and suppliers linked to them, some of them are ham radio operators (i.e. experts in electronics) who can find alternates to the vacuum tubes (so one can do either or both), and it can even be expanded! You are part of the lucky ones who have had access. I was too close to the cut-off point. I’ve just tracked the ads for 8 and 10 kits at long last and I’m not about to stand there and cry. I’m hitting Milton Rodriguez as soon as I finish this note to you. The key point is the convergence. At the beginning, we’ll have to acccumulate on our individual computers, then settle on a place to store the sum of it all. I’d think an American basic science club homage website would be the best form. And to protect it a bit against the uncertainties of individual life (we’re not about to start a business on that, right?), a standing invitation to everyone who has a website to hold a duplicate might make sure it doesn’t disappear easily. Watchathink? Did I miss anything?
ABSC did amazing thing for me. For you to criticize any of it makes me say — you are…
Really? Can you complain that some people got good things from this? Oh, you are one of them. I get it.
I too was a member of the American Basic Science Club back in the early 60’s,I used my hard earned monies for each kit, usually set COD so I would pony up the money for my quest for knowledge, it sparked an interest in electronics I still have to this day. I still have all the manuals and some of the kit parts, I used some of the parts for projects I still have today.
To save space, please imagine I already sent you the twenty-four volume set of books saying please on each page to preface my request! Scan all your manuals as clean high-resolution full-color .jpg and either send me a copy or place them on a website and tell me its address. If you do not have a way to scan, one can be found I’m sure. We’re all, basically, resourceful tinkerers with a positive, logical scientific mindset. This project is not so big as to escape us. Collectively, we can revive this combined toy/tool/treasure. This is not only for us and our families, but also for anyone else who might benefit from the stimulating exposure of their minds to something beyond what passes for entertainment lately. O.K., one can still absorb the wardrobe malfunctions of dyed-blondes on TV, but at least there would be a choice of something far better thanks to you. Here is at hand your opportunity to decide and make this step happen in the sequence. With you we can all know what happened after one has read the ads. I just acquired step one, please, please, please give us all access to step two. Thank you so much in advance, from me and for all concerned, if you succeed. .
Jim Kerr: your father is an amazing man whom I will forever be indebted to. He made me part of who I am today. We need more of what he did. Now. Today.
I just found an untouched Windwatch Model OH in my attic!
My mother had given it to my dad in the early 60’s, the Christmas tag was still in the box!
I haven’t looked at the box yet as she had covered it neatly in Christmas wrapping paper but I’m pretty sure it’s the original box.
Now I need to decide if any of my grandchildren would like to assemble the kit or if someone else would like it.
Thanks for posting about the company. It sounds like many learned valuable skills from these kits.
The American Basic Science Club was the coolest, most educational thing for me when I was growing up. My parents went halvsies with me on the subscription cost, and I looked forward to each new kit delivery in the mail. The re-use of the parts between the different experiments was a great lesson in both clever design and conservation of resources. These kits would still be effective for learning important concepts today, even with the vacuum tubes!
I have all the original kit manuals and hope that my grandkids share some of grandpa’s enthusiasm while learning how to do some cool projects influenced greatly by the ABSC experience. (I think we will start off by building a shockbox with parts lying around the garage. Let’s see- Tin foil, big nail, paper clip, magnet wire…)
Enjoy all that you do!
Carl Glim
I got the first kit for Christmas when I was a junior in HS. I think I learned more from those kits than I did in physics in my Sr. year. I had a lot of fun building the radios. Also took the mystery shock box with me to college and had fun with that. What a great educational tool!
Just wanted to reaffirm what everybody else has said, these kits were wonderful and one of the highlights of my childhood. I received them all at once one Christmas and it was almost too much for my young excited mind to absorb – what an amazing gift! I was spurred to look up information after I found one of the manuals whilst cleaning up this weekend – #7, The Photoelectric Effect. I still have the main lens from the slide projector kit in its sheetmetal sandwich with screws through it and continue to use that lens to this day for various projects. I wonder what other parts might be sitting in my workshop boxes that are from these kits and I’ve forgotten their original source. My only question is – why the heck did I (or my mom) throw these away? More than any of my other childhood toys I would still love to have these.
Got the entire kit at age 10 and had a full career in electronics out of the basics this kit taught me… Just saw an Ebay ad too for this kit if anyone is interested…
http://www.ebay.com/itm/VTG-1960s-AMERICAN-BASIC-SCIENCE-CLUB-MAIL-ORDER-KITS-1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-NOS-NEW-/300676391341?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4601b5a1ad
Thank you and your dad for these wonderful memories, and for your thoughtfulness in posting these…
I got the kits at an early age, and they had a profound impact on my life. There was nothing like them anywhere. While my parents slept, I’d be up doing experiments I never got to do again even in college. Your father should be a national hero. I can’t believe there isn’t a statue dedicated to him in Washington D.C. or his hometown in San Antonio.
By the way, in the early 1980’s I looked up your dad’s number and gave him a call. We spoke for a long time. He must have been quite a dad. I told him what a tremendous influence on my life those kits had and thanked him for putting them together. He said he was retired but did have one complete set of kits left. I offerred to buy them, but he said he was saving it for his neice or granddaughter, can’t remember which. He did tell me that the reason why he stuck with vacuum tubes and never made the switch to transistors was because you just couldn’t see how transistors work like you could with vacuum tubes. That was your dad.
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I wish I could have contacted your Dad and told him of the profound effect his kits had on my life. I am a retired Physicist and those kits were a spark that kindled my interest in many areas of the physical sciences. I valued those kits so much that I still have all of their parts, some of which are still being used by me. When teaching Physics I used your Dad’s well engineered experiments for everything from cloud chambers to audio oscillators. If we here in the USA still had people like your Dad we’d still be number one in the world across so many technological fields of study. If the same kits ware offered today I would buy them and do all the activities again.
Kindest regards,
Albert F. Sefl
Dear Mr.Kerr,my husband and i were watching the weather on the news today and i started telling my husband about a company my mother (Mary Montalvo)used to work for when i was a little girl called American Basic Science. I recall going to work with her at times and found these kits very intresting and at the same time recalled how i used to seal these little plastic bags with all sorts of screws for these kits and got my first 25.00dollar paycheck for doing so and i also used to organize paperwork for Mrs.Kerr and she would cut me out a check for doing so.i was around 10yrs old at the time. I had the pleasure of meeting Mr.and Mrs.Kerr and would like to say they were very beautiful people in every way. Well as i was telling my husband about those days at American Basic Science and how unique the building where they were located was with all these stairs and an elevator for the deliveries i decided to look it up in the internet and i found your article.I will always have fond memories of your parents and how they made me feel as part of the team even though i was just a kid.
AS others have said the ABSC had a profound effect on my childhood and my budding interest in physical science. I kept those kits for many years but eventually lost most of the parts moving. The closest I could find for my son was the 100 in 1 kits, etc. that Radio Shack used to sell. But its not the same as waiting each month in anticipation of the next brown cardboard box of excitement to arrive. I don’t know where that American ingenuity, business savvy, work dedication, patience even, went to but as someone else said, your father and others like him should be honored. Plus I never would have survived those awkward Junior High School years without ABSC.
My parents purchased the entire series for me for Christmas back in the 60s. I listened to ham radio operators on AM and finally got my license WA9SRV. It was great fun. I wish I could find someone who was selling the entire series so I could build that radio again!!!
I had a paper route to pay for theses kits as they came COD. I had to bike my balloon tire 1946 Schwinn to the post office some 3 miles each way and was very excited to get the kits. My sixth grade science consisted on celery and food dye or volcanoes…boring!
Or if lucky a battery and a light blub.
I met my life long friend by discovering he had the same kits coming to him as well. He went onto IIT earning an engineering masters degree.
I was involved with the introduction of the first CAT (CT)scanner working with the British and the inventor. I later was involved with the first digitizing of Nuclear Medicine images.
I’m still working as a Clinical Engineer at 66 and have 5 patent conceptions. I became a Ham operator at 12 years old (WA9DOH) and have been for 50 years having built the SW radio kit.
I ATTRIBUTE All my experience to the spark that set me in motion all those years ago as a result of ABSC.
Many years ago I found a fellow who had bought the rights to this product. He advertised in the Boyscout magazine as ABSC. I called him I ordered a kit from him on magnetism for my son. It came and I had a flash back to my boyhood!!
I’d be happy just to get copies of all the books. I had a set but when I left for Vietnam my parents toss them out. To bad I’d liked to have them now.
The radio kit you could build a photo sensor. The lenses and optics where very good quality. The weather station used a rotating magnet that triggered a neon tube as to get wind speed. It used thermometer a and cloud weather charts with pictures. Also a chamber for building a barometer.
One big remembrance was contact printing negatives and watching them develop.
I even separated H2O and had a test tube with Hydrogen which I ignited with match WOW!
All the writings before me on this blog really was a pleasure to read.
We need more people to come up with practical products to teach basic science to our kids.
73’s
I loved the kits! I got all of them and worked through all of the exercises. This was truly a great thing! My future career in engineering, at NASA and so on was built on much of what I learned in using these kits!
Thanks to your Dad for such a wonderful learning tool! I have so many fond memories from working with these kits. They were the foundation of my life in science and technology!
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I wish there were something like this today that I could get for my grandchildren! What a wonderful thing your father created!
The kits got me into ham radio, and taught me the basics of troubleshooting, which eventually got me into a career as a GM skilled tradesman. I will ever be grateful for these kits! God Bless!
I heartily agree with all of the praise for the American Basic Science Club kits–They were phenomenal. I would sure love to be able to buy something today that is half as good for my grandson. Ever since I worked on the ABSC kits, I would always check out science kits when I ran across them, and I have never found anything even remotely as good as the ABSC kits. How did your dad do it? Why can’t anyone else do it?
Wow, don’t know why I googled this! What a memory! I received my first kit I think in 1958 thereabouts. What a wonderful part of my growing up. I am 66 now and remember so well constructing the headphone radio. Also, “Resistance is the opposition offered by various types of metal which can can control the flow of electricity.” Still remember that definition. Your dad played a wonderful part of my life. Many thanks to him! Sincerely, Thomas T. Costello
After talking with a friend today about innovative ideas in electronics, my mind went back to my childhood and the absolute thrill it was to receive each of those ABSC kits! On a whim, I googled the name and found this article. Love the memories and all that I learned from hours I spent with the ABSC kits!
I have to echo all of the wonderful thing others have said about ABSC. I got them when I was about 13 and went on to become an electronics technician. The photography played an important role in my future job as a film and television producer/director. Now at 69 years of age I am still following my quest for knowledge learning computer programming and multimedia design.
I have to thank ABSC for starting me off in the right direction.
Jim Berkey
Like many others who have commented, these kits were better than any high school science lab. I waited anxiously for each new kit to arrive. No doubt my experience with these kits played a role in my eventual career in academic science. I still remember the warm glow of the 35Z5 — unlike transistors, tubes had a soul! Too bad subsequent generations of young adults did not get the opportunity to experience these truly enjoyable exercises. Your father’s vision had lasting impact.
Jim Kerr has asked me to make available his email address for anyone who wants to correspond with him about the topics covered in this article.
jkerr.tx at gmail period com
I have written it in this odd way to frustrate web bots roaming the net to pick up email addresses to spam. Please reassemble it in standard email address format.
I was one of the recipient of these kits and have learned so much from it. I was hoping that thee kits would come back for my children to learn. It was better than what I learned in school. I hope these kits will come to live again.
I, like most others one here, received my monthly science kits with great expectation! I learned alot and fueled my interest in areas of science where I might not have ever ventured if it wasn’t for these kits. My favorites were the electronic kits such as the receivers, amplifiers and transmitter. I eventually went on to get my ham license and pursued a career in electrical engineering working for Rockwell/Collins, Lockheed/Martin and British Aerospace thanks to these kits. I never have forgot them and I am so glad to see others haven’t either.
i too looked forward to the delivery of my monthly “fix” from ABSC. The kits were a Christmas present from my parents.
I started playing with electricity and electronics in the early 50’s, at the age of 6 or 7 and am still working in the field. Thanks to Mr. Kerr, I got a boost into physics and electronics.
Funny, I don’t remember vacuum tubes in the kit, it seemed that everything ran on dry cell batteries. It was about 1958 or 1959 that I got them.
Great memories!
The very first kit contained the transformer for the tube filaments and other voltages, and the very first experiment was connecting the filament winding to a D cell with the primary leads connected to the sides of a box just big enough for transformer and dry cell. Anyone picking up the box would break the circuit and get zapped by the transformer.
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internet. You definitely understand how to bring an issue to light and
make it important. More and more people should check this out and understand this side of your story.
I can’t believe you are not more popular given that you definitely have the gift.
Hi, my Dad was a science teacher and when I was young he subscribed to the club and we got the kits from Sears each month. We never open end them unfortunately. But I still have them. All of them in original boxes. How much would this collection be worth? I’m talking to a local science museum and if they wanted to buy the collection I don’t know what to ask
Thanks
Hello Catherine,
I’m interested in purchasing your kits. I already have one complete set of kits, and I enjoy it so much I’d love to have a second set. Please contact me.
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To: Evil Mad Scientist Website (regarding science and science kits):
Mike Schatzberg’s comment reminded me of a wonderful time in my teen-age life – the monthly arrival of my new science kit from James S. Kerr’s American Basic Science Club. Please read about him in the article at the website: http://quickreference.info/small-business-stories/american-basic-science-club-case-history-of-a-successful-small-business.
No need to reinvent the wheel – this man did it right. Talk with his son, imitate his format but update the kits, and you’re in business! I LOVED the kits, and having talked with him several times (he was very reachable by phone), I LOVED Mr. Kerr!!
Mr. Kerr: In 1973, I purchased and set up one of your father’s ABSC weather station kits, and got many years of good service from it. In 1983, I managed to contact your father in San Antonio and ordered his WINDWATCH anemometer and windvane, as an upgrade to the original set. I still have both the original ’73 and ’83 instrument set-ups, but now in 2013 they’re not functioning and basically just yard novelties: I need parts to get them “up and running” again! Any info on where to get parts is appreciated!
My parents bought me the first three kits (the basic electronics ones) in the late ’60s. I used them for many years. In fact, I’m sure I still have some of the parts in my parts bins to this day. I also still have the original instruction books. I got my degree in Physics, and work as an embedded systems designer, and I think that these kits helped me on my career path.
I too started receiving the kits at about age 10 in 1960. My best friend turned me on to them and I got the electronics bug too. They certainly revved up my interest in science and eventually ham radio which led to a career in radio/tv and film engineering. Wonderful memories that changed my life.
The American Basic Science Club was the highpoint of my early education. I learned a lot from the kits and earned the money to pay for them. I searched the web several times to see if the club was still functioning. Gave up for awhile, and just tried again today. Thank you for the story. Your father contributed to a lot of joy in a lot of young peoples lives.
WOW!. I read all the posts from people like me! What an impact this had on me.. thanks to the creator of these kits. I had the interest in science to begin with. Thanks to my mother for sneaking the money out of her food budget to buy the kits for me. I completed every one of them starting around age 12 and actually made each of them work properly at some point. I learned the resistor code, tubes, optics. The weather station sat on top of our house for years spinning around until it finally fell down in a storm. This stuff impacted me so much. Funny how one person could have such a deep impact on the world. I became an engineer on ships and now I’m a cyber security guy. You cant touch the value of what came out of these kits. Granted they may not pass underwriter labs these days. but going back into the 40’s there were certainly more dangerous and scary science kits. I have to post to this blog to say thanks to the creator and the son of the man who gave this to me. I almost have tears thinking about this. So amazing..
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My comments pretty much follow the group as to the seminal impact these kits had on my career as a professor and scientist. Just a few days ago I was thinking of what got me into this business and I clearly remembered the kits but could no remember the name. After a few minutes on Google, images of those booklets came up and I found these posts. My reaction actually tracks Dave above as it brought back a flood of emotions and crystal clear memories of making these kits. Unfortunately, I had lost these after my dear Mother moved and passed on. I am now a 60+ Distinguished Professor and member of the National Academies and honestly can say that the American Basic Science Club was the spark that led me on this path. I see I was not alone.
THANK YOU!
I remember the weather station as my favorite.