The Spectator The Stuyvesant High School Newspaper
Volume 106 No. 5
“The Pulse of the Student Body”
November 18, 2015
stuyspec.com
Penguins Protest PSAL’s Enforcement of Postseason Eligibility Requirement
NEWSBEAT
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reshman Ben Platt, juniors Asher Lasday and Evan Lieberman, and senior Lucas Weiner won awards for best delegate in the Model United Nations conference at Brown University on Saturday, November 7 and Sunday, November 8.
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uniors Zovinar Khrimian and Kiyan Tavangar won second place in the girls’ and boys’ varsity races in the NYC Cross Country Individual Championship.
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enior Krystal Lara qualified for the 2016 United States Swimming Olympic Trials in the women’s 100-meter backstroke.
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he Stuyvesant Speech and Debate Team won third place sweepstakes at Fordham Preparatory School on Saturday, November 7.
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he Stuyvesant Debate Team competed at the Scarsdale Invitational. In Public Forum Debate, Junior Zachary Ginsberg and Sophomore Daniel Ju were finalists and Inbar Pe’er and Abie Rohrig were semifinalists. In Lincoln Douglas, Senior Shannon Lee was an Octafinalist.
Julia Lee/ The Spectator
unior Yiqing Hu placed third in the Northeastern Council of Teachers of Japanese speech contest.
By Sonia Epstein and Julia Ingram
The Stuyvesant girls’ swimming and diving team, the Penguins, protested the Francis Lewis Lady Patriots’ alleged violation of the Public Schools Athletic League (PSAL) eligibility requirements for student-athlete participation in postseason meets. The protest was overruled by PSAL Executive Director Donald Douglass, who exempted the divers from the requirement for medical reasons. The PSAL’s Swimming and Diving rule 23.3 requires studentathletes to participate in at least five regular season dual meets in
order to be eligible to participate in any postseason meets. However, neither of Francis Lewis’s two divers had met this requirement; according to the PSAL website, one diver participated in two meets, and the other participated in three. Contrary to Douglass’s decision, no documentation on the PSAL website states that athletes could be exempt from the postseason eligibility requirements for medical reasons. Despite this, the two divers continued to participate in playoff meets, including a semifinal meet against Stuyvesant on Tuesday, November 3. Penguin Coach Peter Bologna approached the PSAL
Girls Swimming Commissioner Robert Kolonkowski prior to the meet with a verbal complaint, but he did not take any action to prohibit the divers from participating in the meet. The two Francis Lewis Divers earned seven points for the Lady Patriots at the meet, contributing to their 53 to 49 win against the Penguins. The next day, the Penguins filed a written complaint to Kolonkowski, the first step in the official PSAL appeals process. According to this procedure, they would have the opportunity to appeal to Douglass after receiving Kolonkowski’s decision. However, due to what the PSAL
referred to as the sensitive nature of the charge, the complaint went straight to Douglass, who overruled the protest. “In light of the medical situation, both students are granted a medical exemption,” he wrote in his response to Bologna. Since this notice came from Douglass, the decision was final and the Penguins could not appeal further. Douglass and Kolonkowski did not respond to The Spectator’s requests for interviews. Following the incident, the Penguins circulated a Change. org petition via Facebook to call attention to the matter. The petition, titled “Protest PSAL’s Lack of Enforcement of Their Own Rules!” expressed dissatisfaction with the alleged failure to follow established protocols and to follow the customary appeals process, as well as the fact that a written medical exemption policy was not made available online. The petition criticized the PSAL’s response to the alleged foul play rather than Francis Lewis’ actions. “We want the anger to be directed towards the PSAL, not Francis Lewis,” senior and Penguins’ co-captain Yuxaio Lei said. The petition further asserted that the PSAL’s behavior is contrary to its central goal. “[The PSAL’s] mission is simple: educating students in physical fitness, character development, and socialization skills through an athletic program that fosters teamwork, discipline, and sportsmanship,” the petition stated. “The manner in which the PSAL has dealt with this situation contradicts their mission statement.”
Sophomores Allowed Outside During Free Periods By Sharon Chao and Shameek Rakshit The administration granted sophomores the right to leave the building during free periods at the School Leadership Team (SLT) meeting held on October 27. The decision came one day after seniors Kryztsztof Hochlewicz and Ryan Boodram and sophomore Kevin Boodram posted a petition on Facebook to mobilize student support for the approval of the policy. The petition received over 200 signatures. SU President Ares Aung and Sophomore Caucus President Tahseen Chowdhury originally requested that the privilege apply to sophomores at the SLT meeting in June 2015, when Aung was SU Vice President and Chowdhury was Freshman Caucus President. Principal Jie Zhang agreed with the idea at the meeting. “[In June] I approved of it because it helps re-
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duce traffic in the hallways, and it allows students to get some fresh air or food,” Zhang said. “We already had the procedure in place for seniors and juniors, so it wouldn’t [have been] that difficult to extend it to sophomores.” According to the minutes of the meeting, the SLT approved the SU’s request. However, the privilege was not extended to sophomores at the beginning of this school year. Hochlewicz, Ryan Boodram, and Kevin Boodram, who had been meeting informally since the end of the last school year to discuss ways to improve the school, noticed that the rule had not changed. Some sophomores also did not know that they had the right to leave during their free periods. “I was unaware of our [right] to go outside during free periods before the petition was made public on Facebook,” sophomore Aren Tucker said. Seeing this issue, Hochle-
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wicz, Ryan Boodram, and Kevin Boodram decided to take matters into their own hands. “[We thought] that the SU had enough time to deal with the issue, so [we decided] to try to do something ourselves,” Ryan Boodram said. They talked to Zhang, who had forgotten about the proposed sophomore privilege, on October 26, the day before the SLT meeting. “The [topic] had slipped from my mind over the summer break, and it wasn’t brought up at the September SLT meeting,” Zhang said. Zhang wanted to discuss the matter with the SLT before making a decision. “The fact that [Zhang] wanted to get the SLT’s opinion again despite the decision in June showed that [the privilege] wasn’t set in stone,” Ryan Boodram said. He, Hochlewicz, and Kevin Boodram decided to circulate the petition to show the members of the SLT, specifically
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those who had been recently elected, the widespread student support of the policy change. Some students were confused by the purpose of the petition because they thought that sophomores already had the privilege to leave during their free periods. “The majority of us sophomores knew that our right to go out existed, but [...] the faculty wasn’t letting us do so,” sophomore Sammie Paul said in an e-mail interview. Some of the confusion may have stemmed from the ambiguity of the minutes of the June 2015 SLT meeting. According to the minutes, “Sophomore privileges begin in September.” Junior and former SLT Alternate Hasan Tukhtamishev, who took the minutes for that meeting, clarified what he meant to say. “What I had written down was supposed to show the privilege was something still being planned [...] and a follow-up was still needed to confirm ev-
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erything.” Tukhtamishev said. Chowdhury explained that the SU planned to meet with Zhang again to officially grant the privilege later in the school year. “Due to the multiple changes in the Programming Department, the job got lost and people forgot about it,” Chowdhury said. “[The SU was] waiting for things to settle within the administration [before] going to discuss the issue with [Zhang]. Of course, other concerned students assumed that [the privilege] had not passed and brought it up to SLT. Then, they re-passed something that had already been passed.” Nevertheless, Ryan Boodram presented the petition at the SLT meeting, and it was met with no dissent. Parental consent forms to allow sophomores to go outside during free periods were officially released on October 28, 2015. continued on page 2
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