List of Bronx High School of Science alumni

Last updated

The following is a list of notable people who attended the Bronx High School of Science in the Bronx, New York City.

Contents

Academia

Activism and government

Harold Brown Harold Brown photo portrait standing.jpg
Harold Brown
Majora Carter Majora.Xena rdx.JPG
Majora Carter
Richard Danzig Richard Danzig, official Navy photo.jpg
Richard Danzig
Alan Grayson Alan Grayson high res.jpg
Alan Grayson
Bill Lann Lee Bill Lann Lee.jpg
Bill Lann Lee
Ronald Lauder Ronald Lauder 90126.jpg
Ronald Lauder
Nita Lowey Rep Nita Lowey.jpg
Nita Lowey

Arts

Fine arts

Performing arts

Authors and journalists

Pulitzer Prize winners

Other authors and journalists

Samuel R. Delany Loz delany 2015.png
Samuel R. Delany
William Safire President Bush presents William Safire the 2006 President Medal of Freedom (cropped).jpg
William Safire

Business, finance, and economics

Nobel Prize winner

Other business, finance, and economics alumni

Science

Nobel Prize-winning scientists

Sheldon Glashow Sheldon Glashow at Harvard.jpg
Sheldon Glashow
Roy J. Glauber Roy Glauber Dec 10 2005.jpg
Roy J. Glauber
Leslie Lamport Leslie Lamport.jpg
Leslie Lamport
Neil deGrasse Tyson Neil deGrasse Tyson - NAC Nov 2005.jpg
Neil deGrasse Tyson
Steven Weinberg Steven-weinberg.jpg
Steven Weinberg

The Bronx High School of Science counts nine Nobel Prize recipients as graduates. Seven of these Nobel laureates received their prize in the field of physics. Robert J. Lefkowitz was awarded the 2012 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Other science and engineering alumni

Sports

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Leon M. Lederman</span> American mathematician and physicist (1922–2018)

Leon Max Lederman was an American experimental physicist who received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1988, along with Melvin Schwartz and Jack Steinberger, for research on neutrinos. He also received the Wolf Prize in Physics in 1982, along with Martin Lewis Perl, for research on quarks and leptons. Lederman was director emeritus of Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Batavia, Illinois. He founded the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy, in Aurora, Illinois in 1986, where he was resident scholar emeritus from 2012 until his death in 2018.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michael Spence</span> Canadian-American economist

Andrew Michael Spence is a Canadian-American economist and Nobel laureate.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gertrude B. Elion</span> American biochemist and pharmacologist (1918–1999)

Gertrude "Trudy"Belle Elion was an American biochemist and pharmacologist, who shared the 1988 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with George H. Hitchings and Sir James Black for their use of innovative methods of rational drug design for the development of new drugs. This new method focused on understanding the target of the drug rather than simply using trial-and-error. Her work led to the creation of the anti-retroviral drug AZT, which was the first drug widely used against AIDS. Her well known works also include the development of the first immunosuppressive drug, azathioprine, used to fight rejection in organ transplants, and the first successful antiviral drug, acyclovir (ACV), used in the treatment of herpes infection.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bronx High School of Science</span> Specialized high school in New York City

The Bronx High School of Science is a public specialized high school in The Bronx in New York City. It is operated by the New York City Department of Education. Admission to Bronx Science involves passing the Specialized High Schools Admissions Test.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lehman College</span> Public college in the Bronx, New York

Lehman College is a public college in New York City. Founded in 1931 as the Bronx campus of Hunter College, it became an independent college in 1967. The college is named after Herbert H. Lehman, a former New York governor, United States senator, and philanthropist. It is a senior college of the City University of New York (CUNY) and offers more than 90 undergraduate and graduate degree programs and specializations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Howard Northrop</span> American biochemist (1891–1987)

John Howard Northrop was an American biochemist who, with James Batcheller Sumner and Wendell Meredith Stanley, won the 1946 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. The award was given for these scientists' isolation, crystallization, and study of enzymes, proteins, and viruses. Northrop was a Professor of Bacteriology and Medical Physics, Emeritus, at University of California, Berkeley.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joseph Erlanger</span> American physiologist (1874–1965)

Joseph Erlanger was an American physiologist who is best known for his contributions to the field of neuroscience. Together with Herbert Spencer Gasser, he identified several varieties of nerve fiber and established the relationship between action potential velocity and fiber diameter. They were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1944 for these achievements.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Herbert Spencer Gasser</span> American physiologist (1888–1963)

Herbert Spencer Gasser was an American physiologist, and recipient of the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1944 for his work with action potentials in nerve fibers while on the faculty of Washington University in St. Louis, awarded jointly with Joseph Erlanger.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henry Taube</span> Canadian-born American chemist (1915–2005)

Henry Taube was a Canadian-born American chemist who was awarded the 1983 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for "his work in the mechanisms of electron-transfer reactions, especially in metal complexes." He was the second Canadian-born chemist to win the Nobel Prize, and remains the only Saskatchewanian-born Nobel laureate. Taube completed his undergraduate and master's degrees at the University of Saskatchewan, and his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley. After finishing graduate school, Taube worked at Cornell University, the University of Chicago and Stanford University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Xavier High School (New York City)</span> Private school in New York City

Xavier High School is an American independent university-preparatory high school for boys run by the USA East Province of the Society of Jesus, in the Chelsea neighborhood of the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Herbert A. Hauptman</span> American mathematician (1917–2011)

Herbert Aaron Hauptman was an American mathematician and Nobel laureate. He pioneered and developed a mathematical method that has changed the whole field of chemistry and opened a new era in research in determination of molecular structures of crystallized materials. Today, Hauptman's direct methods, which he continued to improve and refine, are routinely used to solve complicated structures. It was the application of this mathematical method to a wide variety of chemical structures that led the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences to name Hauptman and Jerome Karle recipients of the 1985 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">DeWitt Clinton High School</span> Public school in New York City

DeWitt Clinton High School is a public high school located since 1929 in The Bronx, New York. Opened in 1897 in Lower Manhattan as an all-boys school, it maintained that status for 86 years. In 1983, it became co-ed. From its original building on West 13th Street in Manhattan, it moved in 1906 to its second home, located at 59th Street and Tenth Avenue. In 1929, the school moved to its present home on Mosholu Parkway in The Bronx, which more recently has been across from the renowned Bronx High School of Science.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Abraham Lincoln High School (Brooklyn)</span> Public high school in Brooklyn, New York

Abraham Lincoln High School is a public high school located at 2800 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, New York under the jurisdiction of the New York City Department of Education. The school was built in 1929, and since graduated four Nobel Prize laureates. The current principal is Ari A. Hoogenboom.

Solomon Aaron Berson was an American physician and scientist whose discoveries, mostly together with Rosalyn Yalow, caused major advances in clinical biochemistry. Five years after Berson's death, Yalow received a Nobel Prize, which cannot be awarded posthumously, for their joint work on the radioimmunoassay.

James Monroe High School was a comprehensive high school located at 1300 Boynton Avenue at East 172nd Street in the Soundview section of the Bronx, New York City.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elvin A. Kabat</span> American biomedical scientist

Elvin Abraham Kabat was an American biomedical scientist and one of the founding fathers of quantitative immunochemistry. Kabat was awarded the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize from Columbia University in 1977, National Medal of Science in 1991, and American Association of Immunologists Lifetime Achievement Award in 1995. He is the father of Jon Kabat-Zinn.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Lefkowitz</span> American physician and biochemist

Robert Joseph Lefkowitz is an American physician and biochemist. He is best known for his discoveries that reveal the inner workings of an important family of G protein-coupled receptors, for which he was awarded the 2012 Nobel Prize for Chemistry with Brian Kobilka. He is currently an Investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute as well as a James B. Duke Professor of Medicine and Professor of Biochemistry and Chemistry at Duke University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jill Bargonetti</span> American professor at Hunter College

Jill Bargonetti is an American professor at the City University of New York with dual appointments at Hunter College and The Graduate Center. Her research is focused on tumor suppressor protein p53 and its role as an oncogene when it is mutated in breast cancer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Townsend Harris Hall Prep School</span> Public school in New York City

Townsend Harris Hall Prep School was a public preparatory school located in Manhattan in New York City.

References

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  6. Wellman, Barry; et al. (April 2003). "The Social Affordances of the Internet for Networked Individualism". Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication. 8 (3). Los Angeles, CA, USA: University of Southern California (USC) Annenberg School for Communication. ISSN   1083-6101 . Retrieved May 23, 2010. In 1965, Barry Wellman moved from his Bronx High School of Science slide rule to IBM cards and an 029 keypunch in the bowels of Harvard University.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Perlez, Jane (April 30, 1988). "50 YEARS OF NURTURING EXCELLENCE IN SCIENCE". New York Times. Retrieved May 18, 2010. Tonight, at a dinner-dance at the New York Hilton in Manhattan, more than 1,000 alumni of Bronx Science, a school that its graduates and teachers have always thought of as more than just a school will celebrate its 50th anniversary ... At tonight's celebration, graduates who will be honored include three Nobel Prize winners in physics and a former Secretary of Defense (Harold Brown), writers (E. L. Doctorow), politicians (Harrison J. Goldin), political advocates (Stokely Carmichael) and even performers (Bobby Darin).
  8. Weintraub, Bernard (NY Times News Service) (February 5, 1978). "Defense Buck Stops at Harold Brown". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. pp. 1F. Retrieved May 18, 2010. Harold Brown was born in Sept. 9, 1927 ... He grew up on West End Avenue, attended public school in Manhattan and graduated at 15 from the Bronx High School of Science.
  9. "The Nation: Childe Harold Comes of Age". Time Magazine. Vol. 109, no. 1. Time Inc. January 3, 1977. ISSN   0040-781X. Archived from the original on December 15, 2008. Retrieved May 18, 2010. Harold Brown has always been in a hurry. He graduated at age 15 from New York's Bronx High School of Science, finished Columbia at the head of his class by age 17, had his doctorate in physics from Columbia by 22.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Ackerman, Spencer (August 21, 2001). "Nobel Aspirations: Bronx Science's First Woman Principal Prepares to Lead". New York Press. Retrieved May 11, 2010. Leon N. Cooper, Melvin Schwartz, Sheldon L. Glashow, Steven Weinberg and Russell A. Hulse all won Nobel Prizes. Like E.L. Doctorow, Joseph Lelyveld, Kwame Ture, Robert A. Moog (the inventor of the Moog), William Safire, Jon Favreau from Swingers and myself, all five of them graduated from the Bronx High School of Science. They've also never administered a school, and would probably never credibly argue that they could. Yet another of our number, a 1970 graduate named Harold O. Levy
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Bronx High School Of Science Celebrates 75 Years With Gala". Look to the Stars. March 29, 2013. Retrieved March 31, 2020.
  12. "Majora Carter — entrepreneur". biographic sketch. The Sundance Channel. Archived from the original on June 15, 2011. Retrieved May 19, 2010. Majora is a life long resident of Hunts Point in the South Bronx, a graduate of PS 48, IS 74, the Bronx High School of Science, Wesleyan University (BA) and New York University (MFA). She is a 2005 MacArthur Fellow, 2002 Open Society Institute Community Fellow.
  13. Waldman, Amy (August 15, 2001). "A Dreamer, Working for Beauty in the South Bronx". New York Times. Retrieved May 19, 2010. As a child she watched buildings burn while drugs and prostitution bloomed. She wanted to leave. Her father, who was among the first blacks to buy a house in Hunts Point, said they weren't going anywhere. At the Bronx High School of Science, she heard teachers talk about those people from the South Bronx.
  14. "張宜民任北伊州聯邦法官 | 世界新聞網". Archived from the original on September 16, 2016. Retrieved September 9, 2016.
  15. Kristol, William (June 30, 2008). "Obama's Pooh-bah: A childish foreign policy". The Weekly Standard. 13 (40). Washington, DC, USA: Clarity Media. ISSN   1083-3013. Archived from the original on August 28, 2008. Retrieved May 19, 2010. Richard Danzig is an intelligent and well-read man. He's a graduate of Bronx High School of Science and Reed College, with a law degree from Yale and a Ph.D. from Oxford.
  16. Sugarman, Raphael (July 26, 1999). "BOOK LIST FLUNKS BRONX SCIENCE ASSIGNMENT FILLED WITH ERRORS". New York Daily News. Retrieved May 15, 2010. State Assemblyman and Bronx Science graduate Jeffrey Dinowitz (D-Bronx), whose son Eric will attend Science this fall, called the mistakes "inexplicable and inexcusable," ...[ permanent dead link ]
  17. "Program Administration — Todd Gitlin". biographic sketch. Columbia University, Department of American Studies. 2010. Retrieved May 19, 2010. Todd Gitlin attended New York City public schools, where he graduated as valedictorian of the Bronx High School of Science.
  18. "Members of Congress/Alan Grayson". biographic sketch/voting history. The Washington Post. 2010. Archived from the original on September 7, 2010. Retrieved May 19, 2010. GRAYSON, Alan, a Representative from Florida; born in the Bronx, Bronx County, N.Y., March 13, 1958; graduated from Bronx High School of Science, Bronx, N.Y ...
  19. "Featured Speaker: Hon. Dora Irizarry — Federal District Court Judge, Eastern District of New York" (PDF). program for Intern Appreciation Day; biographical sketch. The NYS Division of Human Rights. July 9, 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 4, 2011. Retrieved May 20, 2010. Appointed by President George W. Bush in 2004, Dora L. Irizarry is the first Hispanic District Judge to serve in the Eastern District of New York. Born in Puerto Rico, she migrated with her family to the South Bronx as an infant. She attended public schools and graduated from the Bronx High School of Science.
  20. "Raising the Bar: Pioneers in the Legal Profession — Bill Lann Lee". biographic sketch. American Bar Association. May 2002. Retrieved May 20, 2010. After graduating from the Bronx High School of Science, Bill Lann Lee attended Yale University on a scholarship, and majored in History.
  21. "Coordination and Review Section: Civil Rights Forum — Bill Lann Lee sworn in as Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights". brief. United States Department of Justice. Summer–Fall 2000. Archived from the original (newsletter (vol. 14, #3)) on June 2, 2010. Retrieved May 20, 2010. As previously reported in the Civil Rights Forum, Bill Lee, the first Asian-American to head the federal government's premier civil rights post, was born in New York City, and grew up in Manhattan, where his parents owned a small laundry. He attended the prestigious Bronx High School of Science and won a scholarship to Yale, where he graduated magna cum laude.
  22. 1 2 Steinberg, Jacques (June 9, 1998). "Bronx High School Gets $1 Million Pledge". New York Times. Retrieved May 25, 2010. Less than three months after alumni pledged to create a $10 million endowment for Brooklyn Technical High School, Leonard and Ronald S. Lauder said yesterday that they would donate as much as $1 million to a campaign seeking to raise $10 million in behalf of their alma mater, the Bronx High School of Science. Leonard A. Lauder, the chairman and chief executive of Estee Lauder Companies, the cosmetics concern, is a 1950 graduate of the school; his brother Ronald, the chairman of Estee Lauder International and a former American Ambassador to Austria, graduated in 1961.
  23. Hartocollis, Anemona (February 8, 2001). "Bronx Science Loses Acting Principal to L.I. School". New York Times. Retrieved May 20, 2010. The acting principal of the Bronx High School of Science, one of New York City's most prestigious schools, has taken a job in an affluent Long Island suburb, after a four-month struggle between his supporters and Chancellor Harold O. Levy ... The chancellor, who graduated from Bronx Science in 1970, added: This remains one of the most powerful, terrific schools, with one of the best reputations in the country.
  24. Hoque, Imaan, Ira Millstein '43 , retrieved February 2, 2022
  25. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Jon Favreau & E.L. Doctorow At Bronx Science Gala". The Bronx Daily | Bronx.com. April 25, 2013. Retrieved March 31, 2020.
  26. "New York City Comptroller Liu to Ring The NASDAQ Stock Market Closing Bell". Forbes.com (Press release). May 3, 2010. Retrieved May 20, 2010. Hailed as a "Trailblazer" and "Pioneer", John Liu's historic elections as the first Asian American elected in New York City – both to legislative office in 2001 and citywide in 2009 – were marked milestones for Asian Americans in New York and across the nation. ... John Liu immigrated to New York at the age of five. He is a proud product of New York City public schools beginning with kindergarten at P.S. 20 in Queens through to the Bronx High School of Science.[ dead link ]
  27. "LOWEY, Nita M. (1937 – )". biographic sketch. United States Congress. 2010. Retrieved May 20, 2010. LOWEY, Nita M., a Representative from New York; born Nita Sue Melnikoff in New York, N.Y., July 5, 1937; graduated from Bronx High School of Science, Bronx, N.Y., 1955 ...
  28. "Members of Congress/Nita Lowey". biographic sketch/voting history. The Washington Post. 2010. Archived from the original on September 1, 2010. Retrieved May 19, 2010. GLOWEY, Nita M., a Representative from New York; born Nita Sue Melnikoff in New York, N.Y., July 5, 1937; graduated from Bronx High School of Science, Bronx, N.Y., 1955 ...
  29. "MAYOR BLOOMBERG DELIVERS EULOGY AT FUNERAL SERVICE FOR TERENCE D. TOLBERT: Renames School Campus at I.S. 195 in Harlem the Terence D. Tolbert Education Complex" (Press release). Office of the Mayor of New York City. November 10, 2008. Retrieved May 20, 2010. I often talk about New York as a city of opportunity, a place where anyone who works hard and catches a little luck can follow their dream and Terence really did live that story. He's a kid who grew up in public housing, earned a spot at Bronx Science – I never would have – worked his way through college and climbed his way up the political ladder ...
  30. "Green Acres: George Pataki, Ronald Lauder and the politics of new beginnings". New York Press. February 8, 2005. Retrieved May 20, 2010. Less known, Lauder also headed the two Pataki-created commissions that pushed for the privatization of the World Trade Center: the New York State Commission of Privatization and the New York State Research Council on Privatization. Even further below the public radar, Nobel has uncovered that Lauder has family connections to Libeskind dating back to their student days at Bronx Science High School, where the two graduated four years apart in the 1960s.
  31. Collins, Glenn (February 28, 2003). "REBUILDING AT GROUND ZERO: THE ARCHITECT; A Man of Many Faces Comes Home to Cast A New Face for the City". New York Times. Retrieved May 20, 2010. It was the magnanimous Daniel Libeskind – the adopted son of the great metropolis, the engaging former math and music wunderkind from the Bronx High School of Science – who showed up at center stage in the Winter Garden yesterday to accept the most extraordinary commission that any city has ever offered.
  32. ARTIST PROFILE | ZACHARY ALFORD (DAVID BOWIE, B-52´s, BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN). YouTube . Archived from the original on December 11, 2021.
  33. "David Bowie 'Likes the Struggle' of Winning Fans, Says Drummer". Rolling Stone . February 2013.
  34. Rothstein, Mervyn (September 24, 2004). "A Life in the Theatre: Emanuel Azenberg". Playbill.com. Archived from the original on July 15, 2011. Retrieved May 14, 2010. He attended the Bronx High School of Science—and he first became interested in the theatre when he went to see John Garfield in 1948 in a play called Skipper Next to God by Jan de Hartog ... He won a theatre award at Bronx Science ...
  35. McNeil, Kate (April 24, 2008). "Generation green". Riverdale Press . Retrieved December 19, 2020.
  36. Yates, James P. (May 1, 2008). "ARTS: Dominic Chianese: Uncle Junior is back with another round of Grandpa Domencio's favorite songs at Lorenzo's Cabaret". SILive.com. Retrieved May 23, 2010. Music has always been a part of life for Dominic Chianese, as much a part as his Italian heritage or his career as an actor. "I'm like a melodic storyteller," says the graduate of the elite Bronx High School of Science during a phone interview from his Upper East Side home. "I'll tell you about Grandpa, why he liked this particular song, his loves, his observations."
  37. Smiley, Tavis (June 20, 2005). "Jon Cryer". interview. Tavis Smiley Show — Public Broadcasting System (PBS). Retrieved May 23, 2010. The son of Broadway actors, Cryer modeled as a child. He studied at London's prestigious Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts before completing his senior year at the Bronx High School of Science.
  38. 1 2 Evanier, David (2004). Roman candle: the life of Bobby Darin . USA: Holtzbrinck Publishers. ISBN   1-59486010-6. (p. 30) In 1955, Bobby developed a songwriting partnership with Don Kirshner, another student with whom he had become friends at Bronx Science
  39. DiOrio, Al (2004). Bobby Darin: The Incredible Story of an Amazing Life. Philadelphia, PA, USA: Running Press. ISBN   0-7624-1816-8. (p. 29) Although Bobby had been a top student at Clark Junior High School, and had no trouble meeting the academic requirements for admittance to Bronx Science, once there he found the experience unsettling.
  40. MacMedan, Dan (May 9, 2010). "Jon Favreau's a comic-book hero with 'Iron Man' franchise". USA Today. Retrieved May 23, 2010. But like all good comic-book directors, Favreau has an inner geek. A native New Yorker, Favreau attended the Bronx High School of Science and kept himself busy at home with toy monsters and his father's 8mm camera, which he used to create stop-motion carnage.
  41. Trebay, Guy (October 1999). "There's Just One thing You Need To Know About Jonah Falcon: 13.5 inches (And know you do)". Out. 8 (4). New York, NY, USA: Here Publishing: 84. ISSN   1062-7928. When Jonah attended Bronx Science, he was introverted and uncool, obsessed with computer games and baseball stats and so morbidly self-conscious about his penis that he wore enormous sweatshirts and jeans all the time.
  42. Wild, Stephi. "Actress Sondra James Dies at 82". BroadwayWorld. Retrieved September 27, 2021.
  43. "They Call Me Q - 60 minutes .... 13 characters...1 woman". Tennessee State University . Retrieved September 10, 2022.
  44. Bronson, Fred (2003). The Billboard book of number 1 hits (5th ed.). New York, NY, USA: Billboard Books. ISBN   0-8230-7677-6. (p. 59) As a teenager, Darin graduated from the Bronx School of Science. After dropping out of Hunter College, he wrote some songs with another Bronx Science student, Don Kirshner.
  45. "CAST: Ando Masahashi/ James Kyson Lee". biographic sketch. NBC. 2010. Archived from the original on August 27, 2010. Retrieved May 23, 2010. Born in Seoul, South Korea, Lee moved with his family to New York City at the age of 10. He graduated from Bronx High School of Science and continued his education at Boston University and New England Institute of the Arts, where he studied communications.
  46. "Obituary: Reggie Lucas", Montclair Local, May 25, 2018. Accessed July 15, 2020. "Reggie Lucas, a guitarist, songwriter, producer, and longtime Montclair resident, died of complications resulting from heart disease on May 19, 2018 at New York-Presbyterian Hospital.... Unusually talented and independent, Mr. Lucas dropped out of Bronx Science High School after the New York City teachers’ strike of 1968 and pursued a career in music."
  47. "Bunchy Donovan Played by Dash Mihok - Ray Donovan | SHOWTIME". SHO.com.
  48. Rosenberg, Neil V. (2005). Bluegrass: a history (20th ed.). Champaign, IL, USA: University of Illinois Press. ISBN   0-252-06304-X. (p. 144) Within a few years of Margolin's first appearances in Washington Square young musicians began showing up there with five-string banjos. Among them were Tom Paley, a graduate of Bronx Science High School, who was attending Yale ...
  49. "The Green Room with Paul Provenza: Paul Provenza Executive Producer, Host". biographic sketch. Showtime Network. 2010. Archived from the original on September 18, 2012. Retrieved May 24, 2010. Born and raised in New York City, Paul Provenza graduated from the prestigious Bronx High School of Science in 1975. Even before he graduated, Provenza was writing and performing stand-up comedy.
  50. "Christopher 'Kid' Reid". concert notice. Pegasus News (Dallas/Ft. Worth, TX, USA). April 17, 2009. Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. Retrieved May 24, 2010. Christopher Reid, formerly known as Kid (born April 5, 1964, in The Bronx, New York City) is an African American actor, comedian, and former rapper. He graduated from the prestigious Bronx High School of Science in 1982. He is best known as one-half of late-1980s/early-1990s hip hop musical act Kid 'n Play with fellow rapper/actor Christopher "Play" Martin.
  51. Deneen, Nancy (Spring–Summer 2008). "Homecoming Queen was just one "first" for Daphne Maxwell Reid, actress, designer, film producer". Cross Currents: The Magazine of Arts and Sciences. 9 (1). Evanston, IL, USA: Judd A. and Marjorie Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, Northwestern University. Archived from the original on June 10, 2010. Retrieved May 24, 2010. At Bronx High School of Science—then, as now, regarded as one of the nation's best—she excelled and was elected president of her senior class. She came to Northwestern, not having seen it first, as a merit scholar.
  52. "Daphne Reid Biography". interview summary. The History Makers. July 21, 2004. Retrieved May 24, 2010. Born Daphne Maxwell, actress Daphne Reid was born on July 13, 1948 ... Despite her initial desire to attend the Fashion Industries High School, she was swayed to attend the Bronx High School of Science. While attending Bronx Science, Reid was highly involved, serving as senior class president and joining the Group Theater Workshop.
  53. "karina smirnoff". biographic sketch. Dancing With the Stars (ABC Television). 2010. Retrieved May 24, 2010. In 1992, Smirnoff emigrated to the United States and became a U.S. citizen. After this, Karina laid off the samba and focused on her studies. She attended Christopher Columbus High School in New York and the Bronx High School of Science.
  54. "2009 Fur Ball Live Auction Items: Dancing With the Stars". biographic sketch. Big Cat Rescue. 2009. Archived from the original on November 19, 2008. Retrieved May 24, 2010. In 1992, Smirnoff moved to the United States and became a U.S. citizen. Once in the U.S., Smirnoff took time off from studying dancing for school. She attended Christopher Columbus High School in New York and the Bronx High School of Science before going to Fordham University, during which time she picked up her interest in dancing again.
  55. McFadden, Robert D. (September 27, 2009). "William Safire, Political Columnist and Oracle of Language, Dies at 79". New York Times. Retrieved May 12, 2010. William Safir was born on Dec. 17, 1929, in New York City, ... (The "e" was added to clarify pronunciation.) He graduated from the Bronx High School of Science and attended Syracuse University, but quit after his second year
  56. "Bernard L. Stein of The Riverdale (NY) Press". www.pulitzer.org
  57. Weingarten, Gene (July 26, 2005). "Chatological Humor* (Updated 7.29.05)". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 27, 2010.
  58. "Spencer Ackerman". The Guardian. Retrieved January 14, 2021.
  59. "Congratulations to our new Pulitzer Prize winner, Bronx Science alumnus, Robert Samuels '02!". bxscience.edu. Retrieved May 22, 2023.
  60. "AWP Board Members". directory. The Association of Writers and Writing Programs. 2010. Retrieved May 14, 2010. Judith Baumel was born in The Bronx in 1956. She attended The Bronx High School of Science, Radcliffe College (Harvard University) and The Johns Hopkins University Writing Seminars.
  61. Cohen, Rich (July 8, 1996). "Funny Girl". New York Magazine. 29 (26). New York, NY, USA: 30. ISSN   0028-7369. First novelist Jennifer Belle dropped out of Bronx Science at 15, but that doesn't mean she didn't get an education.
  62. Wikipedia
  63. 1 2 3 Samuels, Tanyanika (March 10, 2010). "'Hurt Locker' Oscar winner Mark Boal schooled at Bronx High School of Science". New York Daily News. Retrieved May 14, 2010. Turns out the Oscars were especially memorable this year for the Bronx High School of Science. Alumnus Mark Boal ('91) took home two Oscars – one for Best Original Screenplay and one for Best Picture (he was one of the movie's four producers) ... Boal now joins the ranks of other illustrious alumni wordsmiths, including E.L. Doctorow, William Safire and Richard Price.
  64. Eichna, Charlotte (March 11, 2010). "Past Editor Has Big Win at Academy Awards". West Side Spirit. Archived from the original on July 17, 2011. Retrieved May 14, 2010. Boal, who was a co-producer for the film, based his fictional screenplay on reporting he did in 2004 while embedded with a military unit that defuses bombs in Iraq. In the 1980s and 1990s, however, he was a New York City kid who lived on York Avenue and attended Bronx High School of Science, graduating with the class of 1991.
  65. "Samuel R. Delany: The Grammar of Narrative". Locus Magazine. 64 (3). Oakland, CA, USA: Locus Publications. March 2010. Archived from the original on March 27, 2010. Retrieved May 16, 2010. Samuel R. Delany grew up in Harlem in a middle-class black family, and attended the prestigious Bronx High School of Science before going on to City College.
  66. Tucker, Jeffrey A. (2004). A sense of wonder: Samuel R. Delany, race, identity and difference. Middletown, CT, USA: Wesleyan University Press. ISBN   0-8195-6688-8. (p. 156-7) Citing Oscar Wilde's witticism that "the only true talent is precocity", Delany tells his readers just how precocious he was as a youth. at the beginning of his career at the Bronx High School of Science, "a city public school ... of megacephalic reputation, Delany is already reading the novels of Faulkner and Camus ...
  67. 1 2 Freedman, Carl, ed. (2009). Conversations with Samuel R. Delany. Jackson, MS, USA: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN   978-1-60473-277-1. (p. xix) 1956–60: Attends Bronx High School of Science ... 1961: Marries Bronx Science classmate (and later renowned poet) Marylin Hacker.
  68. Diamond, Edwin (October 24, 1988). "Monday–Night Politics". New York Magazine. 21 (42). New York, NY, USA: News America Publishing: 24. ISSN   0028-7369. But Greenfield has seen the heartland; after high school at Bronx Science, he went to the University of Wisconsin ...
  69. "News Team — Pablo Guzman". biographic sketch. WCBS-TV. 2010. Archived from the original on April 24, 2010. Retrieved May 16, 2010. Guzmán graduated from the Bronx High School of Science ... he became a founder and co-leader of the Young Lords Party, a radical political organization that fought for Puerto Rican and Latino rights. "During the next six years, Guzman was one of the group's main spokespersons ...
  70. "Clyde Haberman". biographic sketch. New York Times. 2010. Retrieved May 16, 2010. A 1962 graduate of the Bronx High School of Science and 1966 graduate of the City College of New York, Haberman lives in New York.
  71. Stout, David (November 22, 2000). "Lars-Erik Nelson, 59, Writer Of Columns at The Daily News". New York Times. Retrieved May 16, 2010. A native of New York City, Lars-Erik Nelson graduated from Bronx High School of Science (where he was a hurdler) and from Columbia with a degree in Russian.
  72. Robbins, Tom (November 28, 2000). "He Was the Best of New York: Lars-Erik Nelson and the Business of Journalism". The Village Voice. Retrieved May 16, 2010. A Brooklyn native and Bronx Science graduate, he spoke Russian and other Slavic languages and had served as a wire service reporter in London, Moscow, and Prague.
  73. Singer, Mark (April 12, 2010). "Going, Going, Book Sale". The New Yorker. Vol. LXXXVI, no. 8. New York, NY, USA: Condé Nast Publications. pp. 23–24. ISSN   0028-792X. After graduating from the University of Michigan, in 1963, Otto Penzler (Bronx Science, Class of '59) repatriated to his old neighborhood, near the Grand Concourse, and went to work as a copy boy at the News.
  74. Alterman, Eric (July–August 2007). "My Marty Peretz Problem – And Ours". The American Prospect. 18 (7). Washington, DC, USA: The American Prospect, Inc. ISSN   1049-7285. Archived from the original on December 22, 2010. Retrieved May 16, 2010. Peretz was raised in a lower middle-class, Yiddishist household in the Bronx and attended the Bronx High School of Science before going on to Brandeis in its Jewish intellectual glory years.
  75. Judis, John (May 22, 2006). "Kevin Phillips, Ex-Populist: Elite Model". The New Republic. Washington, DC, USA. ISSN   0028-6583. Phillips himself was neither Italian nor Irish. His ancestors were a blend of English, Irish, Scottish, and Welsh. His father was Catholic and his mother was Protestant. He went to the Bronx High School of Science rather than to a Catholic school.
  76. Slen, Peter and Phillips, Kevin (December 7, 2008). In Depth with Kevin Phillips (video interview). C-SPAN. (00:48:49) YOUR EDUCATION? (00:48:51) I WENT TO THE BRONX HIGH SCHOOL OF SCIENCE WHICH IS THE BIG NEW YORK CITY – YOU TAKE A TEST TO GET...
  77. Gliickel, Jen (November 28, 2005). "The Uncommon Interview: Dava Sobel". University of Chicago Maroon. Archived from the original on October 18, 2009. Retrieved May 17, 2010. CM: Were you a science geek growing up? DS: Well, I came from a pretty geeky family, so I didn't think that was weird. Then I went to the Bronx High School of Science where… I mean, you want to talk geeks? Those were the days when the boys who were really geeks wore slide rules on their belts like swords in scabbards.
  78. "Norman Spinrad :The Transformation Crisis". Locus Magazine. 42 (2). Oakland, CA, USA: Locus Publications. February 1999. Retrieved May 17, 2010. Norman [Richard] Spinrad was born September 15, 1940, in New York City. Nearly all of his childhood was spent in the Bronx, and he went to the Bronx High School of Science.
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  81. "Guests: Millard Drexler". biographic sketch. Charlie Rose, LLC. February 19, 2010. Archived from the original on March 27, 2010. Retrieved May 25, 2010. Millard Drexler is a businessman, formerly CEO of Gap Inc, he joined the board of directors of Gap in November 1983 and left his position in October 2002. Since January 2003, Drexler has been Chairman and CEO of J. Crew Group, Inc. He has been a director at Apple Inc. since 1999. He received his MBA from the Boston University Graduate School of Management. He is a graduate of the Bronx High School of Science, and C.C.N.Y.
  82. "Millard "Mickey" Drexler Honored: J. Crew CEO and GSM alum is among this year's honorary degree recipients". BU Today. Boston, MA, USA: Boston University. May 6, 2008. Retrieved May 25, 2010. Drexler, the son of a New York garment-district buyer, grew up in the Bronx and worked in the garment industry while attending the Bronx High School of Science.
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  86. Martin, J. Quinn (November 8, 2007). "The 21-Year-Old Behind a 'Darling' New York Web Startup". The Sun (New York, NY, USA). Retrieved May 25, 2010. Mr. Karp was a sophomore at Bronx Science when he quit school to work full-time on UrbanBaby, single-handedly running the technical side of the business for three years from his mother's Upper West Side apartment.
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  91. 1 2 3 Crease, Robert P.; Mann, Charles C. (1996). The Second Creation: Makers of the revolution in twentieth-century physics (Revised ed.). New Brunswick, NJ, USA: Rutgers University Press. ISBN   0-8135-2177-7. (p. 239) In the summer of 1961 Salam attended a conference in Madison, Wisconsin, with Steven Weinberg ... John Bardeen, Leon N. Cooper, and John R. Schrieffer ... developed what is called the BCS theory of superconductivity. (Cooper, like Glashow and Weinberg, is a graduate of the Bronx High School of Science ...)
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  102. "Gregory Chaitin". biographic sketch. World Science Festival. 2010. Retrieved May 15, 2010. Gregory Chaitin is a mathematician and computer scientist who began making lasting contributions to his field while still a student at the Bronx High School of Science.
  103. "Group Members". biographic sketch. Physics of Information Group at IBM. 2007. Retrieved May 15, 2010. Beginning in the late 1960s, Gregory Chaitin made contributions to algorithmic information theory and metamathematics, in particular a new incompleteness theorem similar in spirit to Gödel's incompleteness theorem. He attended the Bronx High School of Science and City College of New York, where he first developed his theorem while still in his teens.
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  107. "Leonard Kleinrock's Personal History/Biography: The Birth of the Internet". biographic sketch. Department of Computer Science, University of California Los Angeles (UCLA). August 27, 1996. Retrieved May 15, 2010. Leonard Kleinrock spent the next few years cannibalizing discarded radios as he sharpened his electronics skills. He went to the legendary Bronx High School of Science and appended his studies with courses in Radio Engineering.
  108. Vardalas, John (February 21, 2004). "Oral-History:Leonard Kleinrock". interview. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). Retrieved May 15, 2010. Leonard Kleinrock starts this interview with a discussion of his early interests and education. He mentions the importance of the practical experience that he acquired, including his independent childhood interest in radio. Kleinrock describes the learning environments of the Bronx High School of Science and of the City College of New York's engineering curriculum.
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  111. Pasachoff, Jay M. (January–February 2010). "Norm Levitt: An Obituary". Skeptical Inquirer. 34 (1). The Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. ISSN   0194-6730 . Retrieved May 16, 2010. Norman Levitt, a professor of mathematics at Rutgers and, for the last couple of decades, a major figure in combating pseudoscience and pseudoknowledge, died at the age of 66 on October 24, after a few years' bout with a heart ailment. He was born in the Bronx, attended P.S. 114 and the Bronx High School of Science, graduating in 1960
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  116. Hillis, Danny; John McCarthy; Tom M. Mitchell; Erik T. Mueller; Doug Riecken; Aaron Sloman; Patrick Henry Winston (2007). "In Honor of Marvin Minsky's Contributions on his 80th Birthday". AI Magazine. 28 (4). Menlo Park, CA, USA: Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence: 109. Minsky's wide-ranging scientific and mathematical curiosity started in his childhood in New York City where he amused himself by taking apart his father's ophthalmological instruments. He thoroughly enjoyed the opportunity to focus on his interests at the Bronx High School of Science in the challenging company of several classmates who went on to become Nobel Prize–winning physicists.
  117. 1 2 McCorduck, Pamela (2004). Machines who think: a personal inquiry into the history and prospects of artificial intelligence. Natick, MA, USA: A K Peters, Ltd. ISBN   1-56881-205-1. (p.104-5) One of the largest such efforts was a system called the Perceptron, which was the work of a group of researchers at Cornell led by Frank Rosenblatt, who had been a classmate of Minsky's at Bronx Science.
  118. "Robert Moog, Ph.D. '64, inventor of the music synthesizer, dies of brain cancer" (Press release). Cornell University News Service. August 23, 2005. Retrieved May 15, 2010. At 14 he built his own theremin – the first electronic instrument, named for its inventor, Leon Theremin – based on descriptions in a hobby magazine. Moog attended the Bronx High School of Science, Queens College and Columbia University's engineering school.
  119. "Obituary: Dr Robert Moog". BBC News. August 22, 2005. Retrieved May 15, 2010. Alongside his hobby, Moog was studying hard. From the Bronx High School of Science, he went on to Queens College, before graduating in electrical engineering at Columbia University and earning a doctorate in engineering physics at Cornell.
  120. "Jay M. Pasachoff". biographic sketch. Williams College. 2010. Retrieved May 15, 2010. Education: Bronx High School of Science H.S. 1959; Harvard College A.B. 1963; Harvard University A.M. 1965; Harvard University Ph.D. 1969
  121. Hay, Kim (June 2003). "Society News – National Council Meetings". Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. 97 (3). Toronto, ONT, CAN: Royal Astronomical Society of Canada: 136. Bibcode:2003JRASC..97..136H. Prof. Jay Pasachoff is the Director of Hopkins Observatory ... He graduated from Bronx High School of Science in 1959 ...
  122. Christian H. Ross (April 13, 2017). "Stanley Alan Plotkin (1932- )". The Embryo Project Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on August 14, 2017. Retrieved August 14, 2017.
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  124. "Edl Schamiloglu :: Electrical & Computer Engineering | The University of New Mexico". www.ece.unm.edu. Retrieved September 3, 2021.
  125. Alan Macfarlane (interviewer), Sarah Harrison (editor) (August 7, 2009). Interview of Ben Shneiderman (video interview/print transcript). Cambridge, UK: University of Cambridge, Department of Social Anthropology. ... going through the school system in New York was very good, with the same group of kids from third to sixth grade, and then on through high school; I went to the Bronx High School of Science, a famous school in New York City, one of three where you were admitted by exam.
  126. "Physics is stuck in a crisis: The dream of a Grand Unified Theory has collapsed, the new theories can scarcely be tested. Is cosmology still a science?". article. Rabbett Run). Retrieved August 27, 2014. Perhaps they are missing the socialization of the Bronx, where Leonard Susskind and Steven Weinberg attended the same High School.
  127. Larry Tesler: Computer scientist behind cut, copy and paste dies aged 74, BBC News, February 20, 2020
  128. "About the Series Host". biographic sketch. NOVA ScienceNOW. 2008. Retrieved May 23, 2010. A graduate of New York City's Bronx High School of Science, Neil Tyson studied physics at Harvard before receiving his doctorate in astrophysics from Columbia University. He has twenty-one honorary doctorates and has received numerous awards, including the 2008 Washburn Award. The International Astronomical Union officially named an asteroid "13123 Tyson" in honor of his contribution to the public awareness of the cosmos.
  129. Williams, Scott (1997). "Astronomers of the African Diaspora: Neil deGrasse Tyson". biographic sketch. State University of New York at Buffalo, Department of Mathematics. Retrieved May 23, 2010. When he was thirteen, Neil went to summer astronomy camp in the Mohave Desert, where the sky was clear and he could see millions of stars. At the Bronx High School of Science, he focused his studies on astrophysics.
  130. "2010 President's Commencement Colloquy: NEIL DEGRASSE TYSON, PH.D. — Honorary Doctor of Science". colloquium invitation. Rensselear Polytechnic Institute. 2010. Retrieved May 23, 2010. Dr. Tyson was born and raised in New York City, where he was educated in the public schools and graduated from the Bronx High School of Science. He went on to earn his B.A. in physics from Harvard and his Ph.D. in astrophysics from Columbia.
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  139. Lee, Jeanette; Gershenson, Adam Scott (2000). The Black Widow's Guide to Killer Pool: Become the Player to Beat . New York, NY, USA: Random House, Inc. ISBN   0-609-80506-1. (p. 23) I was the runt of the litter, underweight, and misunderstood. Bright enough to get into Bronx Science, a magnet school in New York City, but stubborn enough to drop out as soon as I could.
  140. Hansing, Krista (October 1998). "Hot Shot ó: The Black Widow of billiards pockets success in her own unmistakable style". Indianapolis Woman Magazine. 5 (10). Indianapolis, IN, USA: Weiss Communications. Retrieved May 25, 2010. In reality, Lee was a pretty young girl with a bright mind. She attended the Bronx High School of Science, earned good grades in accelerated classes and loved working with children: She originally planned to become an elementary teacher or open a community youth center in New York City.
  141. Adler, Phillip (February 8, 2013). "Ira Rubin, Champion Bridge Player, Dies at 82". New York Times. Retrieved May 30, 2013.
  142. Sugarman, Raphael (December 1, 1997). "SCRABBLE CHAMP HAS RED-LETTER DAY SAYS GAME IS COMPLEX, BEAUTIFUL". New York Daily News. Retrieved August 20, 2013. Sherman said he was also lucky "to have good teachers wherever I went:" PS 89, JHS 135 and the Bronx High School of Science.
  143. "The Quiz Show Scandal – Herbert Stempel". biographic sketch. PBS — The American Experience. 1999. Retrieved May 17, 2010. When Stempel was chosen as a contestant, he was a 29-year-old college student, who had a prodigious memory and a remarkable fund of knowledge. He had graduated from the prestigious Bronx High School of Science and had scored an impressive 170 on an IQ test.
  144. NYO Staff (August 15, 2004). "Rock for W." New York Observer. Archived from the original on September 21, 2007. Retrieved May 25, 2010. Meanwhile, at the Bronx High School of Science, Mr. Wigo was just as competitive as he was in the pool. His father, Bruce Wigo, would catch him under the bed covers with a flashlight doing math problems so that he could outperform his friend David in school the next day.