James Madison High School (Brooklyn)
James Madison High School is a public high school in the Sheepshead Bay neighborhood of Brooklyn in New York City. It serves students in grades 9 through 12 and is in Region 6 of the New York City Department of Education.
James Madison High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
3787 Bedford Avenue Brooklyn , New York United States | |
Coordinates | 40.61°N 73.9477°W |
Information | |
Type | Public high school |
Established | 1925 |
Principal | Jodie Cohen |
Grades | 9 to 12 |
Enrollment | 3,456 |
Color(s) | Black and Gold |
Mascot | Knight |
Newspaper | The Moment |
Website | madisonhs |
Established in 1925, the school has many famous graduates, among them United States Supreme Court Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, two sitting U.S. senators, Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Chuck Schumer (D-NY), former Senator Norm Coleman (R-MN), and other famous authors, musicians and athletes. It is one of only four secondary schools worldwide that can claim to have educated five or more Nobel laureates.
Academics
James Madison High School is organized in accordance with the house system. There are eight houses, each having a Teacher Coordinator, a Guidance Counselor, and an Assistant Principal assigned to supervise and assist students.
Special programs
Most students who apply to James Madison High School have the opportunity to apply to a specific "House". These include:
- Law Institute: The Law Institute is designed for successful Social Studies students. In addition to being taught reasoning and communication skills, the students develop an understanding of American Legal institutions. Students in the Law House take classes/participate in activities such as Mock Trial, Moot Court, We The People, Legal Economics, Criminology Advanced Placement Economics. It is a four-year program designed to promote an understanding of our legal system and help students develop an appreciation of the Constitution and basic civil liberties. Students will study about our government and laws in honors level classes and will hone their skills by participation in moot courts, mock trials and mock congressional hearings. We strive to have students become active citizens and critical thinkers who are well-prepared for post-secondary education.
- Bio-Medical Institute: The Bio Medical Institution (Bio Med House) is a program for talented students interested in science, technology, engineering, and medicine. The Bio Med House is composed of students (scholars) and teachers who seek to understand the complex world around us. This program explores science through experimentation and hands-on experience. Through participation in honors and AP-level science courses such as Biology, AP Biology, Chemistry Honors, AP Chemistry, Physics Honors, Pathology, Laboratory Techniques, AP Environmental Science, AP Psychology and Science Research. Our scholars have tackled challenges that include building LEGO robots, dissecting fetal-pigs, participating in lectures at SUNY Downstate Medical College, performing soil and water purification tests, building urban gardens, among others. Bio-med scholars enjoy small classes with like-minded students that work together throughout their high school experience. Students also participate in field trips, research experiments, sports teams and school events with friends and colleagues.
- Math Academy: The Mathematics Academy, a prestigious and diversified program, provides a creative and challenging curriculum designed to enhance the student's problem-solving abilities and fosters an appreciation of mathematics. Students are given a unique opportunity to explore and investigate a variety of mathematics topics and to participate in math related contests, events and trips. Through participation in honors and AP-level science courses, our students have tackled challenges that include working together in small groups, participating in Math Team events, AP Calculus, designing robots, analyzing statistics and competing in state and national-level mathematics competitions.
- Liberal Arts House/AVID Academy: The Liberal Arts Academy offers a course of study in Humanities and Arts including project based studies in History, English, Literature, Creative Writing, Music and Theater. Project based coursework gives students opportunities to learn through experience. Through our growing network of partnerships including AVID, Roundabout Theater Company, Poetry Out Loud and Random House Publishing, students gain competencies in the Arts with exciting experiences such as acting workshops, writing seminars and gateway designed to model successful learning habits and prepare students for the college level. Liberal Arts academy students take classes with like-minded students that work together throughout their high school experience. Students also participate in field trips, sports teams and school events with friends and colleagues.
- Information Technology House: One of the newer houses at Madison. Known informally as the I.T. House, it is one of the only programs in NYC high schools that offers students the chance to take the Microsoft Word and Microsoft Excel certification exams for free. The I.T. House is a program at James Madison High School for talented students interested in computer technology, web design, programming and computer engineering. This prestigious and diversified program provides a creative and challenging curriculum designed to enhance the student's problem-solving abilities and fosters an appreciation of the technological world in which we live.
- Academy of Finance: The Finance Academy is a program at James Madison High School for talented students interested in careers in finance, banking, economics, accounting, commerce and business management. This prestigious and diversified program provides a creative and challenging curriculum designed to enhance the student's problem-solving abilities and fosters an appreciation of comparative financial systems on both the macro and micro-scale. Through participation in rigorous mathematics and finance courses, our students have tackled challenges that include working together in small groups, participating in finance competitions, participating in internships, analyzing statistics and competing in state and national-level finance competitions.
- The International House (for students of limited English proficiency): The International House for English Language Learners is a program at James Madison High School for students whose primary language is not English. The purpose of this program is to immerse students in the language and culture of the United States of America while also fostering a deep appreciation for the diverse cultures of the world. Students will benefit from the support of an instructional program focused on developing literacy and language skills. Through participation in ESL classes and by participating in language workshops and tutoring, students gain the confidence to communicate and read effectively in English.
- Instructional Support Services (ISS) House: The Madison Academy of Citizenship and Community Service (MACCS House) is a program at James Madison High School for students who will benefit from the support of an instructional program focused on developing literacy skills. Students in this house enjoy access to a literacy curriculum that will help them increase their reading levels so that they can be successful in all their academic endeavors. They participate in community service projects such as "Cross-Age Tutoring" which matches them up with elementary school students who need help learning how to read. It is our belief that by taking an active role in our school community and the community at large, the students will learn the importance of helping others and thus promote a sense of belonging within them.
- Madison Academy of Community and Civil Service: The Madison Academy of Citizenship and Community Service (MACCS House) is a program at James Madison High School for students who will benefit from the support of an instructional program focused on developing literacy skills. Students in this house enjoy access to a literacy curriculum that will help them increase their reading levels so that they can be successful in all their academic endeavors. They participate in community service projects such as "Cross-Age Tutoring" which matches them up with elementary school students who need help learning how to read. It is our belief that by taking an active role in our school community and the community at large, the students will learn the importance of helping others and thus promote a sense of belonging within them.
Main campus
James Madison High School is a six-floor red brick building with many rooms.
- Subbasement: Boiler Room and storage areas.
- Basement: The cafeteria is located in the building's basement.
- 1st Floor: On the first-floor main offices such as guidance and programming are located. As is the main entrance to the theater. The Music Department is in the back on the 1st floor. The library and swimming pool are also located on this floor.
- 2nd Floor: English Department, Access to Gym 1. Back of Gym 1 is the Athletic Wing staircase leading upstairs to gym 2/3 or down to the Pool
- 3rd Floor: Science Department, IT House, Language Department, Teachers Cafeteria access to Gym 2. Gym 2 shares a room with Gym 3 and has a staircase in the back leading up to Gym 4 or down to Gym 1
- 4th Floor: Science Department, Math Department, Social Studies Department, Law Department. Houses Gym 4 or otherwise known as the Health room which can only be accessed by either of the 3 gyms
- 5th Floor: Science Department, Computer Repair Room, Art classes, Social Studies Department.
- 6th Floor: Offices and Photography.
- Athletic fields: Football Field, Soccer Field, Baseball Field, Tennis Courts, Track, Lacrosse Field, Roller Blading, and several more athletic facilities.
Mock Trial
In May 2010, the James Madison High School Mock Trial team became the New York State Champions, while representing their region of New York City in Albany. The team competed against about 600 schools for first place. It was Madison's second time appearing in Albany after 5 years, and their first time winning. It was also the first time any New York City public school had ever won the State championship. The team accomplished their victory with the help of attorneys from Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, who've always had a long-standing solid relationship with James Madison High School.
Sports
Madison also offers a wide range of Boys And Girls PSAL Varsity and Junior Varsity Sports: Football, Soccer, Basketball, Track and field, Wrestling, Baseball, Softball, Tennis, Volleyball, Swimming, Cross Country, Handball, Cheerleading, and Lacrosse.
The James Madison Baseball Team is among the most successful in the school ranked fourth in the New York City PSAL and sixth including Catholic High Schools. They have been in the final four three years in a row. In 2008, the team made it to the finals but fell short. The program has put a lot of their players into college baseball and three professional players Frank Torre, Cal Abrams, Harry Eisenstat. Went undefeated in 1954 capturing the PSAL city championship team leaders (Mike Weltman) and Jackie Kahn) who went on to become a highly decorated Homicide Detective with the Miami-Dade PD
Another very successful team is the Madison Wrestling Team. In addition to having many NYC Mayors Cup and City Champions, the team has posted a winning record and made the playoffs 10 out of the last 12 seasons, with an eight-year streak of making it past the first round of the PSAL Team Championships. The team was ranked #8 overall (public, Catholic and private schools combined) by MSG Varsity this past season.
James Madison High School is home to a very successful Swim Team. It has won countless competitions. It is currently coached by Mr. Davis who is retired but continues to train the swim team for each winter swimming season. He was retired in 2009. Mr. Tigre is the current swimming teacher at James Madison High School and has been for 2 years now. This is one of Madison's most prosperous teams.
Full list of teams (as of 2017)
- Badminton Boys Varsity
- Badminton Girls Varsity
- Baseball Boys Jr. Varsity
- Baseball Boys Varsity
- Basketball Boys Jr. Varsity
- Basketball Boys Varsity
- Basketball Girls Jr. Varsity
- Basketball Girls Varsity
- Bowling Boys Varsity
- Cross Country Boys
- Cross Country Girls
- Flag Football Girls Varsity
- Football Boys Jr. Varsity
- Football Boys Varsity
- Girls Varsity Bowling
- Golf Co-Ed Varsity
- Golf Girls Varsity
- Handball Boys Varsity
- Handball Girls Varsity
- Indoor Track Boys
- Indoor Track Girls
- Lacrosse Boys Varsity
- Lacrosse Girls Varsity
- Outdoor Track Boys
- Outdoor Track Girls
- Rugby Boys Varsity
- Soccer Boys Varsity
- Soccer Girls Varsity
- Softball Girls Jr. Varsity
- Softball Girls Varsity
- Stunt Co-Ed Varsity
- Swimming Boys Varsity
- Swimming Girls Varsity
- Table Tennis Boys Varsity
- Table Tennis Girls Varsity
- Tennis Boys Varsity
- Tennis Girls Varsity
- Volleyball Boys Varsity
- Volleyball Girls Jr. Varsity
- Volleyball Girls Varsity
- Wrestling Boys Varsity
- Wrestling Girls Varsity
SING!
SING!, a musical competition between the grades, has been a Madison tradition for over 50 years. On November 15, 2008, the Senior/Sophomore team lost to the Junior/Freshman team for the first time in 6 years, on the 60th anniversary of SING!. The SING! theme that year was "It's Never Too Late to Change." It is one of Madison's Most popular clubs. There is a new tradition called Brooklyn SINGS, also known as "InterSING", started in 2014. InterSING is a competition between Madison, Midwood, & Murrow High Schools to see who has the best SING performance. The winning team at Madison, Midwood, & Murrow will advance on to InterSING. In 2014-2015, InterSING took place in the Joseph Anzalone Theater in Edward R. Murrow High School in Midwood, Brooklyn. InterSING is a fundraiser for the American Cancer Society.
Teachers
Alumni
Distinguished alumni of James Madison High School include:[1]
- Cal Abrams (1924-1997, class of 1942), Major-League Baseball player.[2][3]
- Maury Allen (born Maurice Allen Rosenberg; 1932-2010, class of 1949), sportswriter.[3]
- Arthur Ashkin (born 1922, class of 1940), Nobel Prize winner, physics.[4]
- Julius Ashkin (1920-1982, class of 1936), Manhattan Project physicist.[5]
- Gary Becker (1930-2014, class of 1948), Nobel Prize winner, economics.[6]
- Paul Bender, attorney, author, judge, law professor, and former Dean of the Arizona State University College of Law.
- Mimi Benzell (1918-1970), opera singer.[7]
- Walter Block (born 1941, class of 1959[8]), Austrian School economist, anarcho-capitalist theoretician, professor of economics
- Harry Boatswain (1969-2005, class of 1987), former professional NFL football player.[9]
- Andrew Dice Clay (born 1957 as Andrew Clay Silverstein), comedian.[10]
- Stanley Cohen (1922–2020, class of 1939), Nobel Prize winner, medicine.[7][11]
- Norm Coleman (born 1949, class of 1966), former US Senator (Republican of Minnesota).[12]
- Robert Dallek (born 1934, class of 1952), historian.[3]
- Roy DeMeo (1942-1983, class of 1959), mobster.[13]
- Harry Eisenstat (1915-2003, class of 1935), Major League Baseball player[2]
- Devale Ellis (born 1984), professional football player.[14]
- Harvey Feldman (born 1931, class of 1949) US Diplomat: known for planning the 1972 Nixon trip to China, US Ambassador to Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, Alternative US Representative to the United Nations (an ambassadorial rank position)
- Sandra Feldman (1939-2005, class of 1956), President of the American Federation of Teachers.[3]
- Stan Fields (born 1955, class of 1973) US biologist: discovered the two-hybrid system
- Norman Finkelstein (born 1953) political scientist, activist, professor, author.
- Sonny Fox (born 1925), TV personality.[15]
- Kevin Francis, class of 2011 CFL player
- Leonard Frey (1938-1988, class of 1956), actor.[16]
- Joseph S. Fruton (1912–2007), born Joseph Fruchtgarten, Jewish Polish-American biochemist and historian of science.
- David Frye (1933-2011; born David Shapiro), comedian.[17]
- Sid Ganis (born 1940, class of 1957), motion picture executive.[3]
- William Gaines (1922-1992, class of 1939), founding publisher of Mad magazine.[18]
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg (born 1933, class of 1950), Associate Justice, US Supreme Court.[7]
- Richard D. Gitlin (born 1943, class of 1959) – National Academy of Engineering, co-invention of DSL Bell Labs
- Marty Glickman (1917-2001, class of 1935), Olympian and broadcaster.[7][19]
- Ron Haigler (born 1953, class of 1971), basketball player.[20]
- Stanley Myron Handleman (1929-2007, class of 1947), comedian.[15]
- Ellis Horowitz (born 1944, class of 1960), computer scientist, professor
- Garson Kanin (1912-1999, class of 1927), writer and director of plays and films.[7]
- Stanley Kaplan (1919-2009, class of 1935), test preparation entrepreneur.[19]
- Buddy Kaye (1918-2002), songwriter, musician, producer, author and publisher.[15]
- Carole King (born 1942 as Carole Klein, class of 1958), singer and songwriter.[21][22]
- Paul L. Krinsky (born 1928, class of 1946), U.S. Navy rear admiral.[3]
- Martin Landau (1928-2017), Academy Award-winning actor.[7][15]
- Rudy LaRusso (1937–2004), five-time All-Star NBA basketball player.[19]
- Mell Lazarus (1927-2016), cartoonist.[15]
- Andrew Levane (1920-2012, class of 1940), professional basketball player.[23]
- Elaine Malbin (born 1932, class of 1948), opera singer.[3]
- Marvin Miller (1917-2012), class of 1933, MLB players union executive director. [24] [25]
- Bruce Morrow (born 1935, class of 1953), radio personality.[3]
- Herbert S. Okun (1930-2011, class of 1947), diplomat.[3]
- Martin Lewis Perl (born 1927, class of 1942), Nobel Prize winner, physics.[26]
- Sylvia Porter (1913-1991, class of 1930), economist and journalist.[19]
- Deborah Poritz (born 1936, class of 1954), N.J. Attorney General then Chief Justice, N.J. Supreme Court.[3]
- Chris Rock (born 1965), comedian and actor who withdrew before graduation.[27]
- Norman Rosten (1913-1995), poet, playwright and novelist.[7][19]
- Dmitry Salita (born 1982), professional boxer.[28]
- Murray Saltzman (1929–2010, class of 1947), Reform Jewish rabbi.
- Bernie Sanders (born 1941, class of 1959), US Senator, (Independent of Vermont) as well as a 2016 and 2020 U.S. Presidential candidate.[29]
- Larry Sanders (born 1935), British politician and brother of Bernie Sanders.[30]
- Babe Scheuer (1913–1997), American football player
- Harvey Schlesinger (born 1940, class of 1958), US District Judge for the Middle District of Florida
- Ted Schreiber (born 1938), Major League Baseball player.[2]
- Chuck Schumer (born 1950, class of 1967), U.S. Senator (New York)[12]
- Irwin Shaw (born Irwin Gilbert Shamforoff; 1913-1984, class of 1929), playwright, screenwriter and novelist.[7]
- Judith Sheindlin (born 1942, class of 1961), television personality (Judge Judy).[3]
- Barry Simon (born 1946, class of 1962), IBM Professor of Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at Caltech.
- Robert Solow (born 1924, class of 1940), Nobel Prize winner, economics.[6][31]
- Irving Terjesen (1915–1990, class of 1934), All-American college basketball player for NYU and early professional.[32]
- Frank Torre (1931-2014, class of 1950), professional baseball player.[2]
- Sidney Verba (born 1932), political scientist.[33]
- David Wohl (born 1954, class of 1971) television and film character actor.
- Joel Zwick (born 1942, class of 1958), film, television and theater director.[3]
References
- The Wall of Distinction Archived January 29, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, James Madison High School Alumni Association. Accessed June 11, 2013.
- "Madison (Brooklyn, NY) Baseball". The Baseball Cube. Archived from the original on February 3, 2013. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
- Abruzzo, Shavana. "Judge Judy inducted with elite alums on Madison's wall of fame", New York Post, June 1, 2010; accessed June 11, 2013. "Joining Judge Judy on the 2010 roster are late Brooklyn Dodger Cal Abrams ('42), former US ambassador to the United Nations Herbert Okun ('47), sportswriter Maury Allen ('49), University of Maryland Dental School professor and pain research pioneer Dr. Ronald Dubner ('51), historian and "dean" of presidential experts Dr. Robert Dallek ('52), retired Chief Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court Deborah Tobias Poritz (‘54) and director Joel Zwick (‘58), whose screen and credits include My Fat Greek Wedding, Laverne & Shirley and Broadway's Oklahoma!.... No small wonder when the school’s august alums include educator Stanley H. Kaplan (‘35), former American Federation of Teachers President Sandra Feldman (‘56), radio personality Bruce "Cousin Brucie" Morrow (‘48), opera star Elaine Malbin (‘48), Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ President Sidney Ganis (‘57) and Paul L. Krinsky (‘46), who served as the superintendent of the United States Merchant Marine Academy from 1987 to 1993, attaining the rank of rear admiral."
- "2,291 Are Graduated by Boro High Schools". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. June 26, 1940. p. 6. Retrieved October 3, 2018.
- "Madison High Graduates Told; Rev. Cornelius Greenway Tells Class to Prove School Benefit". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. June 24, 1936. p. 30. Retrieved October 3, 2018.
- Fuchs, Victor R. "Nobel Laureate - Gary S. Becker: Ideas About Facts", Journal of Economic Perspectives, Volume 8, number 2 - Spring 1994, pp. 183-192. Accessed June 11, 2013.
- Behrens, David. "The Reunion/The Class of '35", Newsday, November 23, 1995; accessed June 11, 2013.
- Walter E. Block, Senator Bernie Sanders, President?
- Eskenazi, Gerald. "Keeping Offense in Protective Custody, Jets Lose to Oilers", The New York Times, August 4, 1996. Accessed June 11, 2013. "'I never left Brooklyn,' said Boatswain, who grew up there and starred at James Madison High School. Brooklyn still called to him when he joined the 49ers in 1991 and spent four seasons there, before moving on to the Eagles last year."
- Daly, Sean. "The return of Andrew Dice Clay", New York Post, August 21, 2011. Accessed June 11, 2013. "The only performer to be banned for life from MTV, Andrew Clay Silverstein was raised in Brownsville and attended James Madison High School before moving to LA in 1980."
- Gleick, James. "MAN IN THE NEWS; HOLDOUT ON BIG SCIENCE: STANLEY COHEN", The New York Times, October 14, 1986; accessed June 11, 2013. "Stanley Cohen was born Nov. 17, 1922, in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn.... He attended James Madison High School and Brooklyn College, eventually getting his doctorate in biochemistry from the University of Michigan in 1948."
- O'Shea, Jennifer L. "10 Things You Didn't Know About Norm Coleman", U.S. News & World Report, January 7, 2009. Accessed June 11, 2013. "Coleman graduated from James Madison High School in Brooklyn in 1966. Another future senator was there at the same time: New York's Chuck Schumer, who graduated one year later."
- Dickson, Michael M. "Roy Albert DeMeo – Leader of the Gambino Family Murder for Hire", American Mafia History, October 18, 2012. Accessed June 11, 2013. "Roy Albert DeMeo was born on September 7, 1942 in Bath Beach Brooklyn to working class Italian immigrants. In 1959 DeMeo graduated from James Madison High School with an accomplished loan shark business bringing in hundreds of dollars each week."
- Rock, Tom. "JETS, Ellis spreading Pride in NFL", Newsday, October 21, 2006. Accessed June 11, 2013. "He was a basketball player - small for that sport, too - when Jeffrey Ishmael, the football coach at James Madison High School in Brooklyn, saw [Devale Ellis] grab a defensive rebound, dribble the length of the court and make an acrobatic layup."
- Brantley, Robin. "Beverly Hills Brooklynites; A Brooklyn Evening in Beverly Hills", The New York Times, October 1, 1980; accessed June 11, 2013.
- Gussow, Mel. "Leonard Frey, Actor, Dies at 49", The New York Times, August 25, 1988. "Mr. Frey was born in Brooklyn and attended James Madison High School."
- Grimes, William. "David Frye, Perfectly Clear Nixon Parodist, Dies at 77", The New York Times, January 29, 2011; accessed June 11, 2013. "David Shapiro was born in Brooklyn and attended James Madison High School there."
- Tebbel, John Robert. " What, Me Gone?", Instant Classics, June 5, 1992; accessed June 11, 2013. "I spoke earlier about the influence he had, and I just thought of one incident. Bill and I both, as I said, went to James Madison High School in Brooklyn."
- Campbell, Loriann. "Mad About Madsion 1,000 Alumni Of A Brooklyn High School, From 1927 Through 1970, Plan A South Florida Reunion.", Sun Sentinel, December 18, 1988; accessed June 11, 2013.
- Missanelli, M. G. "Temple Adds Two Top Scholastic Talents from alabama", The Philadelphia Inquirer, April 25, 1992; accessed June 11, 2013. "Laster is a 6-5 swingman from Clayton High in suburban St. Louis, Mo., and Piskun is a 6-6 forward from James Madison High in New York City, the same school that produced former Penn star Ron Haigler."
- "Carole King Biography". biography.com. Retrieved March 17, 2013.
- James E. Perone (2006). The Words and Music of Carole King. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 3. ISBN 9780275990275. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
- Berkow, Ira. "Sports of The Times; He Made Music of His Own", The New York Times, March 4, 1999. Accessed June 11, 2013. "In 1939, as the star center of the undefeated city championship James Madison High School team, Fuzzy was named the outstanding schoolboy player in New York City."
- Marvin Miller, union head who revolutionized sports, dies at 95 - CentralMaine.com
- Beyond Stereotypes:American Jews and Sports in the Twentieth Century (Annual Review of the Casden Institute for the Study of the Jewish Role in American Life) by AriF. Sclar (...
- Autobiography of Martin L. Perl, Nobel Prize; accessed June 11, 2013. "I was sixteen when I graduated from James Madison High School in Brooklyn in 1942. My sister, who is now a well known writer in the United States, moved through school even faster - she graduated at fifteen and one-half."
- via New York Post. "Chris Rock Gets Show Based on Childhood", Fox News, June 18, 2005. Accessed June 11, 2013. "Finally, after years of bullying, Rock's parents pulled him out of James Madison HS at 17. 'If we didn't, he was going to get killed,' said his mother, Rose Rock."
- Farrell, Bill. "A NIGHT OF CHAMPIONS The 73rd Daily News Golden Gloves", Daily News (New York), April 28, 2000; accessed June 11, 2013. "Dmitry Salita, 17 Starrett City BC: A two-time Metro champion, this senior at Brooklyn's James Madison H.S. is boxing in his first Golden Gloves."
- About Bernie, Bernie Sanders. Accessed June 11, 2013. "Education: James Madison High School, Brooklyn NY; University of Chicago, B.A. 1964"
- Stein, Ellin.Growing Up With The Bern, Slate, February 4, 2016. Accessed February 11, 2016.
- Zahka, William J. The Nobel Prize Economics Lectures: A Cross Section of current Thinking, p. 47. Avebury, 1992. ISBN 1856280861. "At the suggestion of one of his teachers at James Madison High School, Solow began his studies at Harvard College in 1940 on a scholarship."
- "Six Boro Men get Violet Letters". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. December 7, 1936. p. 19. Retrieved February 22, 2015 – via Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com
. - Verba, Sidney.A Life in Political Science Annual Review of Political Science.2011.14:i-xv.