The Spectator The Stuyvesant High School Newspaper
Volume CIV No. 6
• Education specialist Sadye Campoamor, advisor to Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio, addressed Social Studies teacher Kerry Trainor’s AP U.S. Government class on Thursday, November 21. She talked about de Blasio’s plans to reform the education system in New York and her experience working in politics. • The Stuyvesant Speech and Debate Team won first place at the Villager Speech and Debate Invitational tournament in Philadelphia. • The New York City Math team placed sixth overall out of 70 at the Princeton University Mathematics Competition. The eight team-members, seven of whom are Stuyvesant students, competed against teams from across the world, including China, Korea, and India. • Former New York State Supreme Court justice William Erlbaum discussed the morality of the death penalty with Social Studies teacher Linda Weissman’s Civil Law class. Erlbaum, who served in State Supreme Court from 1979 to 2004, was an active advocate of full abolishment of the death penalty while on the bench, and currently teaches a course on the death penalty at Brooklyn Law School. • The boys’ fencing team won the city championship for the second year in a row. The Foil team finished first in their match against McKee/Staten Island Tech H.S., and the Epee team finished in second-place against the Queens H.S. of Teaching, with the championship based on their combined results.
stuyspec.com
Out for Frees Policy Extended to Juniors
By Tina Jiang and Ariel Levy
Stuyvesant students have wanted the privilege of going outside during free periods ever since it was revoked several years ago. This privilege was granted to seniors in a trial period last May. Many, however, were unsatisfied with this limited concession by the administration. Now, the administration is extending this policy to juniors, who will be able to leave the building between fourth and ninth period. Throughout most of Stuyvesant’s history, students have held the right to leave the building during free periods. When the school was located on Fifteenth Street, students of all grades were allowed to go out during their free and lunch periods. “You just walked out. Once in a blue moon the security guards checked your schedule card to make sure you had that free period or lunch period, but after a while the guards got to know you and you could just leave,” Ann Mejias Rivera (‘79) said. “Most of the time, they didn’t really crack down unless the administrators were there watching.” This privilege, rare among schools in the city at the time, was granted to Stuyvesant students because of the school’s high attendance and graduation rates. In addition, neither student behavior nor cutting raised any major concerns for the administration. “It’s not like we went outside and got into fights, most of the time we were just playing frisbee,” Rivera said.
Students in the old building greatly valued their freedom. “I think there would have been all kinds of riots if they had tried to take that away from us, precisely because we felt like we were being responsible with it,” Rivera said. However, when Stuyvesant moved to the new building in 1992, there was a change in the tone of the administration. “In the old building everything was rather loosey-goosey, and for the most part it worked. Students felt respected, there weren’t a ton of rules and for the most part we acted like the somewhat mature almost-adults that we were. Then in the new building there were suddenly all these new rules in place, it felt like the administration was taking advantage of the move to clamp down on us. It all felt like an excuse,” Danielle Langton Ellingston (‘93) said. Eventually, the administration in the new building did revoke the policy. Residents of Battery Park had begun to complain about congregating students in the neighborhood. Right after the attacks on September 11, 2001, students were no longer allowed to go out for frees due to concerns about unsupervised student safety. Under Principal Jie Zhang’s administration, seniors were first let out for frees again in May 2013, following a petition by The Spectator. The petition stated three reasons as to why students should be allowed out continued on page 2
Hochlewicz and Yang Win Closely Contested Sophomore Caucus By Coby Goldberg with additional reporting by Andrew Wallace Sophomore Caucus President Krzysztof Hochlewicz’s campaign was born from a simple series of questions and answers: “What is the Third Estate? Everything. What has it been until now? Nothing. What does it ask? To become something.” Hochlewicz posted these lines, which draw parallels to the French Revolution, on his Facebook page on Monday, November 4, marking the start of his campaign. He and running mate William Yang ultimately won over sophomores Rahul Debnath and Tanumaya Bhowmik in the runoff elections on Thursday, November 21, receiving 193 of the 365 votes. Hochlewicz’s aspirations almost ended on Wednesday, November 13, when his campaign was accused of bribery. Hochlewicz and his campaign managers handed out what he estimated to be about thirty
Opinions
frosted pretzels, an infraction of the Board of Elections (BOE) ban on bribery and a violation of the Department of Education health code, according to Coordinator of Student Affairs Lisa Weinwurm. However, even though the elections handbook calls for disqualification in this situation, the BOE only assigned the campaign six points, four less than the necessary amount for disqualification. “Personally, I supported disqualifying them,” junior and BOE chairman Kevin Yoo said. “But we all voted, and a lot of members decided not to disqualify because he didn’t fully understand the rules.” Junior and Student Union Liaison to the BOE Kyle Oleksiuk provided further insight into this decision. “Most of what they [BOE] do is defined by caution, in respect to holding an election that is fair,” Oleksiuk said in a telephone interview, further elaborating that the BOE wishes to avoid the controversy of last year’s disqualification of the Cahn-Moon campaign. Hochlewicz’s campaign fo-
cused on increasing the power of the Sophomore Advisory Council (SAC) and hosting more events, including two dances other than the Soph-Frosh Semiformal. Specifically, Hochlewicz plans to advertise applications for the SAC with speeches that he and his associates will make in each homeroom. Additionally, he wants the eventual SAC representatives to distribute surveys in their homerooms. “The point of any Caucus is to represent the opinions of their grade. For me to represent my grade’s opinions, I have to know what they think first: I need solid numbers,” Hochlewicz said in an e-mail interview. “We’re also arranging for people to make brief speeches about the SAC applications in every sophomore homeroom, so our pool of applicants won’t be limited to people who check Facebook on a daily basis.” Some doubt Hochlewicz’s ability to effect change once in
Article on page 18.
Point-Counterpoint: Closing Zoned Schools Has the DOE been addressing the plight of “over the counter” students?
continued on page 5
So and Tuhktamisheva Win Freshman Caucus in a Blowout
Stephanie Chan/ The Spectator
Newsbeat
December 9, 2013
“The Pulse of the Student Body”
Freshman Matthew So hands out flyers to freshman on the Tribeca Bridge, campaigning for Zuhra Tukhtamisheva and himself for Freshmen Caucus.
By Scott Ma with additional reporting by Rebecca Chang Even the first snowfall of the season did not stop freshman Matthew So and a group of supporters from handing out flyers outside Stuyvesant for two hours on Tuesday, November 12. So and freshman running mate Zuhra Tuhktamisheva would go on to win 195 of 824 votes in the primary election on Thursday, November 14 and 250 of 318 total votes in the runoff elections on Thursday, November 21, defeating freshmen Mitch Choi and Yuan Yue in a landslide victory. Many accredit So’s success to his advertising and publicity. “I saw a lot of his posters around school and a lot of posts supporting his campaign on Facebook,” freshman Alex Berg said in a telephone interview. “I think that Matthew So really wanted to win, seeing that he spent his mornings waiting outside campaigning in bad weather,” freshman Caitlin Phung said. “I didn’t really see too much of [Choi]’s posters.” “Honestly, we were just the most dedicated candidates. I mean, we spent so many hours, way too many hours, out there, and I think voters really saw that,” So said. “In the end, it was just the effort we put in being out there and into the ads.” So also believes that his campaign managers, who helped campaign and solidify the platform, played a large role in his success. “They’ve been really, really helpful, and we couldn’t have gotten this far without them,” So said. Freshman Lowell Weisbord, one of So’s campaign managers, suggested ideas that became core components of So’s platform, including monthly forums. In addition, Weisbord’s presence as campaign manager helped sway voters in So’s favor. “If I have connections Article on page 24.
and people who respect me see that I respect Matt, they’ll respect him,” Weisbord said. So and 21 other freshmen campaigned in an extremely enthusiastic election. Voter turnout more than doubled from last year. Of the eleven tickets that participated in the primary election, So’s efforts to raise awareness for his campaign were far from alone. “The candidates were engaged, constantly discussing with their campaign managers on new ideas that could be implemented to win the support of the student body,” junior and Board of Elections (BOE) chairperson Kevin Yoo said. The competitive nature of the election and the number of candidates, however, led to a relatively large amount of rule infractions. Freshman Kofi Lee-Berman and running mate Danielle Eisenman made a name for themselves by ordering personalized tshirts to support their cause, and former candidates Danny Akilov and Anna Usvitsky were accused of bribing students with food. Both were given warnings by the BOE, but neither was penalized. Freshmen Jessica Titensky and Gwyneth Yi were disqualified for slandering other campaigns. Candidates brought forth several platforms. So and Tuhktamisheva created a five-point platform called the Communication, Academics, Money, Events, and Leadership (CAMEL) Plan. The duo plans to make the Student Union (SU) budget more transparent, talk to teachers about using extra credit to incentivize underclassmen to sign up to be tutors, create new areas for students to stay during free periods, increase communication between the SU and students, and hold continued on page 5
Humor
Mistaking Ferry for Ferry’s, Student Find Himself Trapped on Staten Island One Stuyvesant freshman takes getting lost to a whole new level.