Petitioners, who are professional photographers, appeal from an order of Special Term denying their application under article 78 of the Civil Practice Act for an order compelling respondents, the board of education of the City of New York and the superintendent of schools, to refrain from requiring petitioners to bid competitively for contracts to photograph graduates of public schools.
Prior to May 1, 1952, section 90 (subd. 24) of the by-laws of the board of education prohibited canvassing or selling of materials by an outside agency on school premises. For many years this restriction appears to have been enforced more in the breach than in the observance. On May 1,1952, the by-law was amended to permit arrangements with outside contractors for the sale to pupils of class photographs and other articles in accordance with rules established by the superintendent of schools. At the same time the board of education adopted a set of regulations designed to chart the course of this departure from the previous practice.
*492A number of abuses had sprung up under the former procedure. Faculty advisors and principals received personal considerations from commercial firms seeking the privilege of selling photographs, class pins and similar articles to the students. Prices charged to the students were excessive and there was no uniformity in prices, extra charges or discounts. Students and parents were subjected to humiliating sales pressures. The regulations under attack here were drawn by the superintendent of schools and adopted by the board of education with a view to correcting these known abuses.
It is the contention of petitioners that the procedure adopted by the superintendent was in violation of the regulations adopted by the board. Eegulations 1 and 2 require that arrangements with outside contractors be made under the direction of the principals of the various schools; and that provision be made for approval by pupil representatives in any decision affecting the choice of articles or the terms of purchase. It is claimed by petitioners that the superintendent, acting in excess of the authority conferred upon him, by-passed the principals and student representatives, and diverted their functions to the bureau of school supplies. This bureau issued formal invitations to petitioners and other photographers to bid for what are in essence agreements giving them permission to sell photographs at agreed prices and on agreed terms to students.
Petitioners contend that in doing this respondents poached on the preserves of the school principals, since regulation 1 specifies that arrangements with outside contractors were to be made under the direction of the principals. However, it is incredible that in promulgating regulation 1 the board intended to delegate to the principals the exclusive power to direct arrangements with outside contractors — from preliminary invitations and negotiations tó contract closing. This was the very procedure that produced the evils and abuses complained of by the superintendent. It must be remembered that regulation 1 was enacted as submitted by the superintendent, without change. To attach this meaning to the regulation would imply that the superintendent, after roundly condemning the practices that had previously existed, submitted a regulation prescribing a continuance of the precise practices that had brought about the abuses of which he complained. The word “ direction ” is susceptible of comparative shadings, and it would appear that the board did not use it in the same sweeping sense employed by petitioners. The superintendent of school supplies did in fact notify the acceptable contractors to make their arrange*493ments with the various principals. The substantial area of direction thus delegated to the principals seems more in keeping with the sense of regulation 1.
Moreover, a reading of all the regulations and of the minutes of the meeting at which they were adopted indicates that no effort was made to spell out specific techniques and procedures to be followed slavishly by the superintendent. In the regulations it adopted, the board enunciated general principles to be respected by the superintendent, who was charged with administering the new program. Thus, the board’s major directive to the superintendent in authorizing this untried program is reflected in the following regulations:
“4. No personal gain, advantage or benefit shall accrue to any teacher, supervisor or other employee or official of the Board of Education, or to any pupil in the school affected, as a result of such purchase.
“5. No pupil shall be compelled, directly or indirectly, to purchase any such article against his wishes.”
These regulations must be examined in their entire setting (Matter of New York Ambassador v. Board of Stds. & Appeals, 281 App. Div. 342, affd. 305 N. Y. 791; Cummings v. Board of Educ. of City of N. Y., 275 App. Div. 577, affd. 300 N. Y. 611). It must be understood that they were not designed to blueprint precisely nor permanently the methods to be employed. On the contrary, in submitting them to the board, the superintendent said that the regulations were to be established “ pending the outcome of further studies which are to be initiated by me. ’ ’ And in writing to petitioners’ counsel, the superintendent referred to the first year of operation as “ experimental ” and said, “ I think we all agree that the specifications are not perfect this year, and that a number of bugs will be discovered in the operation of the plan. ” Also, in his affidavit he stated that " [further modifications of the current procedure may be in order.”
It is clear that the board intended merely to outline the procedure for this first year of experiment in the broadest and most elastic of terms and that the superintendent has acted properly within the intent and spirit of the grant of power given to him. True, the bureau of school supplies, and not the principals or faculty advisors, distributed the invitations to bid and functioned in the initial stages of the proposals. This was done to provide safeguards against a repetition of the undesirable practices previously uncovered. The procedures evolved by the superintendent were designed to preserve as much autonomy as possible for the principal and student repre*494sentatives of each school, while procuring preliminary contract commitments so that the contractors authorized to undertake the sale of photographs to students would thereafter deal with them on a fair and uniform basis. As pointed out by respondents, so urgent was the necessity for quickly implementing their program that they used the regular public works proposal and contract forms as a matter of convenience, although in fact a mimeographed proposal was the eventual basis for selection of the successful bidders. Of course, these were not contracts for public works within the purview of section 103 of the General Municipal Law or section 2556 of the Education Law but merely an adaptation of the techniques of public bidding to a preliminary screening of contractors, to insure the integrity of their future dealings with students.
The petitioners’ plaint that the superintendent has not afforded local merchants a reasonable opportunity to offer their wares comes with poor grace from these seven petitioners, who allege in their petition that they formerly furnished 90% of all the photographic work in the schools.
Now that the first year of experiment is over and after appraisal of the methods and results, it is evident and to be expected that respondents will modify their regulations and procedures to conform to their experience, with a degree of exactitude heretofore impossible. It is also to be expected that the bidding and contract documents will likewise undergo extensive revision.
The order appealed from should be affirmed.