Mykel Board

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Mykel Board
Born January 31, 1950
Long Island, New York, USA

Mykel Board (born January 31, 1950, Long Island, New York, USA) is a regularly published journalist, especially well known for his articles in Maximum RocknRoll. Born into a Jewish family, Mykel was a minority in his hometown, in which the population was mostly Polish/Italian. He attended Hebrew School at the age of 8 and had a Bar Mitzvah at 13. When he turned 12 he began to visit New York weekly with his Father, around 14 he began to visit the city by himself, or with his friend David. It was in Union Square park that he met "Morris" an "old commie." Together, Morris and Mykel argued theology. During this time, he discovered Greenwich Village. Mykel and David began to visit a coffee house, Cafe Wha?, where they met girls, and Jimi Hendrix. With time, Mykel began to experiment with drugs. He also began to become, as he says, the "archetypical discontented Jew." He was in trouble at school, and at home regularly, and he began to associate with the yippie movement. He met Abbie Hoffman, Paul Krassner, Bob Fass, and Jerry Rubin. Mykel meshed well with the yippie idea of revolution through having a good time. After highschool, Mykel attended Beloit College for three years. He attended the infamous 1968 Democratic National Convention. Through Beloit's "world-experience" program, Mykel was able to work at England's famous anarchist newspaper Freedom. In 2005, Garrett County Press published his book Even A Daughter Is Better Than Nothing, Mykel's memoir about living and working in Mongolia.

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