Teaneck High School Explained

Teaneck High School
Motto:Latin: Mentem Colere Et Personam Meliorare
Motto Translation:To enrich the mind and improve the character
Enrollment:1,271 (as of 2022–23)
Ratio:11.7:1
Us Nces School Id:341608000840
Principal:Pedro H. Valdes III[1]
Address:100 Elizabeth Street
Zipcode:07666
Country:United States
Pushpin Map:USA New Jersey Bergen County#USA New Jersey#USA
Colors: Royal blue
White
Hours In Day:6 hours
Teamname:Highwaymen / Highwaywomen
Conference:Big North Conference (general)
North Jersey Super Football Conference (football)
Athletics:Baseball • basketball • cheerleading • crew • cross country • fencing • football • indoor track • soccer • softball • tennis • track • volleyball • wrestling
Yearbook:Hi-Way
Free Label:Magazine
Free Text:The Looking Glass

Teaneck High School (known as The Castle on the Hill[2]) is a four-year comprehensive public high school in Teaneck, in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States, serving students in ninth through twelfth grades as the lone secondary school of the Teaneck Public Schools. The school has been accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Elementary and Secondary Schools since 1935.[3]

As of the 2022–23 school year, the school had an enrollment of 1,271 students and 108.3 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 11.7:1. There were 282 students (22.2% of enrollment) eligible for free lunch and 112 (8.8% of students) eligible for reduced-cost lunch.[4]

The school was renovated in 2003–04, giving students new classrooms as well as a new student center. Teaneck created two academies that focus on the sciences and the arts.

Teaneck's sports teams are nicknamed the Highwaymen; girls' teams are called the Highwaywomen. The team name comes from the highwaymen who would seize money and belongings from those traveling along highways during the 17th and 18th century and for the school's location overlooking Route 4.[5] [6]

History

The school was opened in the current building, which resembles a Tudor palace, in 1928, and a new wing was added in 1936. Honors courses were introduced in the 1960s. Teaneck has been a four-year high school since the 1980s. In 1934, Teaneck High School became the first in the nation to offer a program in aviation as a vocational component of its academic program. Using a plane purchased for $1,800, students were trained in class regarding the technical aspects of flying during the first year of the two-year program, with students getting at least the minimum 50 hours of flight training during the second year needed to obtain a pilot's license.[7]

In May 1964, Teaneck's schools were officially desegregated, after the district's board of education voted to implement a centralized sixth grade school that would serve the entire township.[8]

In 1972, the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey represented Teaneck High School student Abbe Seldin in her legal battle to play tennis at the school. The coach would not let her play for the men's team, although no women's team existed. Seldin won her case and later became the first woman at Syracuse University to win an athletic scholarship.[9]

In 1987, the school was the subject of a 20/20 documentary on the effects of Heavy Metal on students.[10]

On May 1, 2014, more than 60 students were taken into police custody following a senior prank at Teaneck High School. A police officer described the overturned tables and vaseline-smeared doorknobs as "the craziest thing [he'd] ever seen" in his 19-year career.[11] Initial reports claimed that students had also urinated in the halls, which was refuted by the district's superintendent.[12] [13]

Awards, recognition and rankings

In Newsweek's May 22, 2007, issue, ranking the country's top high schools, Teaneck High School was listed in 1080th place, the 33rd-highest ranked school in New Jersey.[14]

The school was the 156th-ranked public high school in New Jersey out of 339 schools statewide in New Jersey Monthly magazine's September 2014 cover story on the state's "Top Public High Schools", using a new ranking methodology.[15] The school had been ranked 126th in the state of 328 schools in 2012, after being ranked 114th in 2010 out of 322 schools listed.[16] The magazine ranked the school 121st in 2008 out of 316 schools.[17] The school was ranked 102nd in the magazine's September 2006 issue, which surveyed 316 schools across the state.[18]

Schooldigger.com ranked the school 266th out of 367 public high schools statewide in its 2009–10 rankings which were based on the combined percentage of students classified as proficient or above proficient on the language arts literacy and mathematics components of the High School Proficiency Assessment (HSPA).[19]

Academies

In the fall of 2002, two academies, or "schools within a school," were launched. The T.E.A.M.S. Academy (Technology-Enriched Academy for Mathematics and Science) is a three-hour daily program that seeks to integrate technology, mathematics, science, and computer science in a smaller learning environment. The TAA Performing Arts Academy aims to integrate various art forms such as dance, film making, instrumental music and technical theatre to prepare students for college majors and internships in the Fine and Performing Arts.[20]

Extracurricular activities

Shearwood "Woody" McClelland, III (Class of 1996) won the National 11th and 12th Grade Chess Championship in 1994 and 1995, the first repeat champion in tournament history.[21] Teaneck High School won the New Jersey State High School Chess Championship in 1997, captained by Woody's sister, Kimberly (Class of 1998).[22]

Athletics

Teaneck High School Highwaymen / Highwaywomen[23] compete in the Big North Conference, which comprises public and private high schools in Bergen and Passaic counties, and was established following a reorganization of sports leagues in Northern New Jersey by the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA).[24] In the 2009–10 school year, the school competed in the North Jersey Tri-County Conference, which was established on an interim basis to facilitate the realignment.[25] Until the NJSIAA's 2009 realignment, the school had participated in Division A of the Northern New Jersey Interscholastic League, which included high schools located in Bergen, Essex and Passaic counties, and was separated into three divisions based on NJSIAA size classification.[26] With 876 students in grades 10–12, the school was classified by the NJSIAA for the 2019–20 school year as Group III for most athletic competition purposes, which included schools with an enrollment of 761 to 1,058 students in that grade range.[27] The football team competes in the Liberty Blue division of the North Jersey Super Football Conference, which includes 112 schools competing in 20 divisions, making it the nation's biggest football-only high school sports league.[28] [29] The school was classified by the NJSIAA as Group IV North for football for 2022–2024, which included schools with 895 to 1,296 students.[30]

Sports offered include:[23]

Fall: boys and girls cross country, football, boys and girls soccer, girls volleyball and girls tennis
  • Winter: boys and girls basketball, boys and girls swimming, indoor track, scholastic wrestling, boys and girls bowling, and boys and girls fencing
  • Spring: baseball, softball, tennis, boys track, girls track, golf, boys volleyball, boys and girls crew
  • Teaneck won the Group IV cross country state championship in 1961. The school's Dave Hunt was the individual champion in Group IV in 1964.[31]

    The boys soccer team won the Group IV state championship in 1965 with a 1–0 victory against runner-up Steinert High School in the tournament final.[32] [33]

    The boys tennis team won the Group IV state championship in 1967, defeating Wayne Valley High School 2–1 in the final match of the playoffs.[34] [35]

    The boys' basketball team won the Group III state championship in 1999 (vs. Rancocas Valley Regional High School), 2003 (vs. Trenton Central High School), 2016 (vs. Winslow Township High School) and 2017 (vs. Ewing High School).[36] The team won the Group IV state championship in 1999 and advanced to the Tournament of Champions final, losing 54–45 to Seton Hall Preparatory School.[37] [38] The team won the 2003 Group IV state championship with a 61–54 win over Elizabeth High School in the semis and a 68–56 win against Trenton Central in the finals.[39] [40] Winning their 28th consecutive game that season, the Highwaymen took the 2011 North I Group III state sectional title with a 68–40 win over Passaic Valley Regional High School during their first year under head coach Jerome Smart.[41] That same season, head coach Shenee Clark led the Highwaywomen to a state sectional title in the North I Group III region with a 63–42 win over Ramapo High School.[42]

    The THS homecoming football game has been held annually on Thanksgiving Day against rival Hackensack High School since 1931, alternating each year with each school as host.[43] Hackensack has won 62 of the 85 games through the 2017 season. NJ.com listed the rivalry as 27th best in their 2017 list "Ranking the 31 fiercest rivalries in N.J. HS football".[44]

    Runner Kahlia Taylor won the Group III state championships in 2012 in both the 100m and 200m sprints, becoming only the sixth female runner from a public school in North Jersey to achieve this accomplishment.[45]

    In 2020, the girls' bowling team won the Group II state championship, the first state title in program history.[46] [47]

    Administration

    The school's principal is Pedro H. Valdes III. His core administration team includes two vice principals.[48]

    Notable alumni

    Notable faculty

    Sources

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Burrow, Megan. "New Teaneck High School principal's goal is to send more students on to college", The Record, September 4, 2019. Accessed February 12, 2020. "As students walk through the doors of Teaneck High School on Thursday morning, they will be greeted by a new face: Principal Clifton Thompson, who took over as the school’s leader in July."
    2. Buchsbaum, Herbert; Monagle, Katie; and Peart, Karen N. "Race and class. (problems of school integration)", Scholastic Update, November 18, 1994. Accessed June 15, 2011. "The Gothic-style school building, set back on a 15acres campus, resembles a medieval fortress. Residents call it 'the castle on the hill.'"
    3. https://www.msa-cess.org/school-profile/?oId=0065e00000B8SB3&typ=school-profile Teaneck High School
    4. https://nces.ed.gov/ccd/schoolsearch/school_detail.asp?Search=1&DistrictID=3416080&ID=341608000840 School data for Teaneck High School
    5. Tartaglia, Greg. "The stories behind North Jersey's wackiest high school sports nicknames", The Record, July 23, 2018. Accessed May 11, 2020. "The main reason Teaneck is the Highwaymen (and Highwaywomen) is because a state highway, Route 4, runs directly past the school. Their logo is an outline of a horse-mounted highwayman, i.e. the type of robber that victimized British travelers in the 17th–19th centuries."
    6. Houck, Emerson B. Go Huskies! Beat Felix the Cat!: the story of America's high school athletic nicknames and mascots and what they reveal about who we are, p. 67. Bradford House, 2003. . Accessed August 18, 2015.
    7. Staff. "Aviation Now Taught in Jersey High School", The New York Times, March 4, 1934. Accessed October 16, 2011.
    8. News: Burrow . Megan . Desegregation of schools: Teaneck led the way . . www.northjersey.com . May 14, 2014 . February 5, 2017 . Fifty years ago, on May 13, 1964, the Teaneck School Board voted 7–2 to have children of all races, from all areas of town, attend a central sixth grade school. . https://web.archive.org/web/20170206105737/http://archive.northjersey.com/news/education/desegregation-of-schools-teaneck-led-the-way-1.1015748?page=all . February 6, 2017 . dead . mdy-all.
    9. Markos, Kibret. "Making legal history, and a few enemies", The Record, November 1, 2010. Accessed March 2, 2011.
    10. Web site: 20/20 Heavy Metal Clip Pt. 1 . www.youtube.com.
    11. News: 60 Teens Arrested After Senior Pranksters Break Into New Jersey School, Urinate in Hallways . NBC News . May 2, 2014 . May 2, 2014.
    12. News: At least 60 New Jersey students arrested for trashing school, peeing in hallways in elaborate senior prank: cops . . May 1, 2014 . May 1, 2014.
    13. Peralta, Eyder. "Superintendent: Reports On N.J. High School Prank Were 'Exaggerated'", National Public Radio, May 2, 2014. Accessed September 16, 2014.
    14. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18757087/?sort=State&count=1257&search=&start=700&limit=100&year=2007& "The Top of the Class: The complete list of the 1,200 top U.S. schools"
    15. Staff. "Top Schools Alphabetical List 2014", New Jersey Monthly, September 2, 2014. Accessed September 5, 2014.
    16. Staff. "The Top New Jersey High Schools: Alphabetical", New Jersey Monthly, August 16, 2012. Accessed September 20, 2012.
    17. Staff. "2010 Top High Schools", New Jersey Monthly, August 16, 2010. Accessed February 10, 2011.
    18. http://njmonthly.com/articles/towns_and_schools/highschoolrankings/top-new-jersey-high-schools-by-rank.html "Top New Jersey High Schools 2008: By Rank"
    19. http://www.schooldigger.com/schoolrank.aspx?Level=3&findschool=0318002498 New Jersey High School Rankings: 11th Grade HSPA Language Arts Literacy & HSPA Math 2009–2010
    20. http://www.teaneckschools.org/index.php?id=26&id2=125 Academies
    21. Staff. "New Jersey High School Senior Is National Chess Champion", Jet, January 22, 1986. Accessed February 14, 2016. "The hard work and dedication, matched with his helped McClelland, a senior Teaneck High School in Teaneck, NJ, become the National 12th grade chess champion, his second national title. He is the first repeat winner from the 11th to the 12th grade."
    22. Stancavish, Don. "Chess Champs Beat All Odds", The Record, March 23, 1997. Accessed February 14, 2016.
    23. https://www.njsiaa.org/schools/teaneck-high-school Teaneck High School
    24. https://www.njsiaa.org/sites/default/files/documents/2020-10/2020-2021-lc-officers-schools.pdf League & Conference Officers/Affiliated Schools 2020–2021
    25. https://web.archive.org/web/20110724142847/http://www.njsiaa.org/NJSIAA/09leagueaffiliations.pdf League Memberships – 2009-1010
    26. https://web.archive.org/web/20090509221527/http://www.nnjil.com/ Home Page
    27. https://www.njsiaa.org/sites/default/files/documents/2020-11/general-classifications-2018-2020.pdf NJSIAA General Public School Classifications 2019–2020
    28. Cooper, Darren. "Here's what we know about the new Super Football Conference 2020 schedule", The Record, July 23, 2020. Accessed March 22, 2021. "The Super Football Conference (SFC) is a 112-team group, the largest high school football-only conference in America, and is comprised of teams from five different counties."
    29. Cooper, Darren. "NJ football: Super Football Conference revised schedules for 2020 regular season", The Record, July 23, 2020. Accessed March 22, 2021. "The Super Football Conference has 112 teams that will play across 20 divisions."
    30. https://www.njsiaa.org/sites/default/files/documents/2022-08/Football%20%2722%20%26%20%2723.pdf NJSIAA Football Public School Classifications 2022–2024
    31. https://www.njsiaa.org/sites/default/files/documents/2021-12/21-xc-group-team-champions_0.pdf NJSIAA Boys Cross Country State Group Champions
    32. https://www.njsiaa.org/sites/default/files/documents/2021-12/21-boys-soccer-history.pdf NJSIAA History of Boys Soccer
    33. https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/491477559/ "Teaneck Gains Group 4 Crown"
    34. https://www.njsiaa.org/sites/default/files/documents/2020-11/20-team-tennis-history.pdf History of Boys Team Tennis Championship Tournament
    35. https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/492150246/ "Teaneck Captures Group 4 Net Title"
    36. https://www.njsiaa.org/sites/default/files/documents/2020-11/2020-basketball-history_0.pdf NJSIAA Boys Basketball Championship History
    37. https://www.njsiaa.org/sites/default/files/documents/2020-11/2020-basketball-tofc-history.pdf NJSIAA Boys Basketball Tournament of Champions History
    38. Stancavish, Don. "Teaneck Hails Hoop Heroes", The Record, March 16, 1999. Accessed July 4, 2008. "Students, teachers, and township officials continued to celebrate Monday, one day after the Teaneck High School boys' basketball team captured the State Group 4 championship."
    39. http://www.bracketmaker.com/tmenu.cfm?tid=30528&tclass=Group%20IV%2C%20Semis%2FFinals 2003 Boys Basketball – Group IV, Semis/Finals
    40. https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/145666725/ "Boys Roundup"
    41. Idec, Keith. "Teaneck defeats Passaic Valley for North 1, Group 3 title", The Record, March 9, 2011. Accessed May 15, 2011.
    42. Doviak, Cory K. "Teaneck takes a timeout, then takes North 1, Group 3 title", NorthJerseySports.com, March 8, 2011. Accessed May 15, 2011.
    43. Schutta, Gregory. "Hackensack's Carter Buries Teaneck", The Record, November 29, 1991. Accessed August 11, 2008. "Carter ran for and three touchdowns as Hackensack trampled Teaneck, 39–21, in the 60th Thanksgiving football meeting between the Northern New Jersey Interscholastic League Pacific Division rivals."
    44. Stypulkoski, Matt. "Ranking the 31 fiercest rivalries in N.J. HS football", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, October 27, 2017, updated May 15, 2019. Accessed December 1, 2020. "27-Hackensack vs. Teaneck These two schools have been playing on Thanksgiving since 1931, alternating each year as host school.... All-time series: Hackensack leads, 62–23"
    45. Schwartz, Paul. "Track: Teaneck, EC stars are golden", The Record, June 3, 2012. Accessed June 3, 2012. "Teaneck always has been known as a sprint powerhouse. But Kahlia Taylor took the Highwaywomen this weekend to a place that they've never been in state competition – a gold medal in the 100 or 200.And not only did the senior win the Group 3 100 Friday in less than ideal conditions, she added the 200 Saturday by more than a half-second, becoming just the sixth North Jersey girl from a public school in any group to record the sprint double."
    46. https://www.njsiaa.org/sites/default/files/documents/2020-11/20-bowling_0_0.pdf History of NJSIAA Girls Bowling Championships
    47. Tartaglia, Greg. "Girls bowling: Brick Memorial wins Tournament of Champions, Teaneck gets first state title", The Record, February 12, 2020. Accessed February 12, 2020. "Teaneck (2,565) won the closest race of the day, holding off Carteret by 25 pins for the first Group 2 championship in program history."
    48. https://www.teaneckschools.org/Administration.aspx Administration
    49. http://www.denverbroncos.com/team/roster/Lance-Ball/BAL511704 Lance Ball
    50. Hi-Way 2003 Yearbook, p. 51.
    51. http://www.cathybaobean.com/publications.htm The Chopsticks-Fork Principle, A Memoir and Manual
    52. Hi-Way 1960 Yearbook, p. 20 as "Cathy Bao".
    53. Spelling, Ian. "Let the Lion Roar: Teaneck native Roger Birnbaum shines brightly in Hollywood", (201) magazine, June 1, 2011. Accessed October 6, 2011. "Much of the producer's touch, the instinct that drives Birnbaum to financially back a script or to help nurture a pitch into a script and then into a feature, and his overall taste as a filmmaker, can be traced back to his formative years in Teaneck. He was raised there and attended Teaneck High School."
    54. [Louis Black|Black, Louis]
    55. Staff. "New Jersey Briefs", The New York Times, June 4, 1977. Accessed September 13, 2011.
    56. Hi-Way 1946 Yearbook
    57. Teaneck High School Hi-Way 1945 Yearbook.
    58. Staff. "Janet Price Bride of Richard Bolles in New Jersey", Janesville Daily Gazette, January 4, 1950. Accessed August 18, 2015. "Miss Janet Lorraine Price, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Price of Pomander Walk, Teaneck, became the bride of Richard Nelson Bolles in Christ Episcopal Church. West Englewood, N. J., Friday evening.... Both the bride and groom are graduates of Teaneck High School, class of 1945."
    59. https://web.archive.org/web/20140317003416/http://archive.news.ku.edu/2004/04N/SeptNews/Sept17/states/newjersey.html KU SUMMER 2004 GRADUATES NEW JERSEY
    60. Hi-Way 1980 Yearbook, p. 25, "Christopher Brancato".
    61. https://thepressgroup.net/godfather-of-harlem-creator-to-appear-at-teaneck-international-film-festival/ "Godfather of Harlem Creator To Appear at Teaneck International Film Festival"
    62. http://www.databasefootball.com/players/playerpage.htm?ilkid=BRANTCHR01 Chris Brantley
    63. via Associated Press. "Hitmen playing in XFL with hopes of return to NFL", CNN Sports Illustrated, February 1, 2001, backed up by the Internet Archive as of February 14, 2006. Accessed February 12, 2020. "'It depends on how well everything goes. How well I play,' said wide receiver Chris Brantley, a Teaneck High School star who played for Rutgers before three NFL seasons with the Rams in Los Angeles and the Buffalo Bills."
    64. Hi-Way 1989 Yearbook, p. 111.
    65. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCJ/is_3_30/ai_95844098/pg_4 "The game I'll never forget: the Timberwolves' first go-to guy had his career day on the expansion franchise's biggest stage yet"
    66. https://web.archive.org/web/20120402111748/http://www.galecandaras.org/pdf%20bio/CANDARAS_BIOGRAPHY.pdf Gale Candaras Biography
    67. 1995 THS Alumni Directory, p. 27.
    68. Garcia, Alfa. "With a song in his heart for Teaneck: Native son returns to pay tribute", The Record, May 14, 2009. "For Gordon Chambers, returning to Teaneck to perform is more than just a homecoming; it's a chance to pay tribute to the town that helped him on the road to becoming an award-winning songwriter and performer. 'Teaneck is the place where I had all my musical training,' says Chambers, who was born in the Bronx and moved to Teaneck in 1977. As a student at Teaneck High School, Chambers took up trumpet and piano and joined a high school 16-piece cover band called New Progressions."
    69. 1995 THS Alumni Directory, p. 31.
    70. https://web.archive.org/web/20071004201114/http://www.northjersey.com/page.php?qstr=eXJpcnk3ZjczN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXkyNzImZmdiZWw3Zjd2cWVlRUV5eTcwMjUxNTYmeXJpcnk3ZjcxN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXk3 "Teaneck actor got in the zone to land 'Friday Night Lights' role"
    71. Hi-Way 2001 Yearbook, p. 55.
    72. https://ualbanysports.com/sports/mens-soccer/roster/carlos-clark/5349 Carlos Clark
    73. Beckerman, Jim. "Where Stars Are Born", The Record, August 19, 2000. Accessed February 12, 2020. "When Shanell Jones graduated from Teaneck High School in June, she already had a deal with Def Jam, a major recording label. But as former Motown Records artist Taral Hicks (Teaneck, Class of 1994) and Alligator recording artist Shemekia Copeland (Teaneck, Class of 1997) could tell her, that's no big deal in this neck of the woods."
    74. Johnson, Paul H. "Thomas Costa, former Teaneck mayor, assemblyman", The Record, April 5, 2003. Accessed December 31, 2014. "Thomas Costa, the former mayor of Teaneck and a former assemblyman, died Friday in Florida. He was 90. Born in the Bronx, Mr. Costa grew up in Teaneck. He was a member of the first graduating class of Teaneck High School in 1931 and attended the Longfellow School."
    75. via Associated Press. "Degerick Gets Over $50,000", The New York Times, June 24, 1961. Accessed September 12, 2011. "Mike Degerick, a pitcher for Teaneck High, signed a contract with the Chicago White Sox last night for a bonus in excess of $50,000."
    76. Hi-Way 1961 Yearbook, p. 31.
    77. Hi-Way 1965 Yearbook, p. 35.
    78. Coutros, Evonne. "The guy who knows the score; Composer's movie career is on a roll", The Record, May 18, 1994. Accessed February 12, 2020. "Edelman, born in Paterson and raised in Teaneck, also has scored the films Beethoven, Beethoven's 2nd, The Distinguished Gentleman, The Last of the Mohicans, and Kindergarten Cop.... For the 1965 graduate of Teaneck High School, his big break came after scoring the children's animated feature The Chipmunk Adventure."
    79. [Alvin Klein|Klein, Alvin]
    80. 1995 THS Alumni Directory, p. 56.
    81. Staff. "Bridge:; Jersey-Westchester Team Loses Grand National Final", The New York Times, August 2, 1976. Accessed September 13, 2011. "In one case that came very early, for Martin Fleisher of Teaneck, NJ, is 17 years old and has just completed high school."
    82. Hi-Way 1976 Yearbook, p. 56.
    83. Hi-Way 1989 Yearbook, p. 116.
    84. Popper, Steve. "A Coach in Training, Even as a Teenager", The New York Times, January 28, 2004. Accessed March 28, 2008. "Almost 20 years ago, Bruce Frank was the starting point guard for the Teaneck High School team, playing alongside the future N.B.A. player Tony Campbell. Frank was good enough to dream of playing in the N.B.A. himself someday and to earn a place in Howie Garfinkel's Five-Star Basketball Camp. The camp also held interest for Bruce Frank's younger brother, Lawrence, a 16-year-old who had been cut from the same Teaneck High team."
    85. https://www.usatoday.com/sports/scores102/102244/20020901NL---NYMETS----0nr.htm Philadelphia vs. New York Mets
    86. Hi-Way 1988 Yearbook, p. 113 as "Douglas Glanville".
    87. Pagan, Marion B. "Down Our Street; Drug discovery", The Record, June 23, 1978. Accessed January 1, 2022, via Newspapers.com. "Dr. Mark S. Gold, a psychopharmacologist at the Connecticut Mental Health Center run by Yale University School of Medicine's psychiatry department, has found that Clonidine, a recent drug being prescribed for high blood pressure, prevents withdrawal symptoms in drug addicts. Dr. Gold, a 1967 graduate of Teaneck High School, warned that there are dangerous side effects which make it inadvisable for addicts to use Clonidine."
    88. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/93115396/marriage-of-goldenberg-shapiro/ "Goldenberg, Shapiro"
    89. http://www.cheriebennett.com/about_jeff.asp Jeff Gottesfeld
    90. https://www.jeffgottesfeldwriter.com/about-jeff About Jeff
    91. Hanley, Robert. "From Political Heights to a Quiet Life in the Suburbs", The New York Times, September 25, 1997. Accessed February 12, 2020. "He maintained an athlete's trim, which dated from his teen-age days as an all-county tackle on Teaneck High School's football team, by jogging regularly and pursuing his avocation of golf."
    92. Hi-Way 1949 Yearbook, p. 80.
    93. https://ballotpedia.org/Daniel_Grossberg Daniel Grossberg
    94. http://kcchiefs.com/news/2006/04/29/chiefs_select_de_tamba_hali_in_round_1b/ "Chiefs Select DE Tamba Hali in Round 1"
    95. Lipowsky, Josh. "Muslim mayor and Jewish deputy highlight Teaneck's diversity", Jewish Standard, July 9, 2010. Accessed September 12, 2011.
    96. Hi-Way 1970 Yearbook, p. 51.
    97. Lisberg, Adam. "Teaneck product is named No. 2 leader at Harvard; As provost, he will be principal planning officer",The Record, October 30, 2001. Accessed January 4, 2021, via Newspapers.com. "A 1970 graduate of Teaneck High School was named provost of Harvard University on Monday after serving five years as director of the National Institute of Mental Health. Steven E. Hyman will assume the provost's position in December, making him the principal planning and policy officer of Harvard and second in command to President Lawrence H. Summers.... Hyman, 49, grew up in Teaneck and attended its public schools. He was captain of the Teaneck High School wrestling team and was named 'class intellect' in the senior yearbook."
    98. Robb, Adam. "NJ native designers Marc Jacobs, Proenza Schouler, nominated for CFDA Fashion Awards", The Star-Ledger, March 17, 2011. Accessed February 12, 2020. "Jacobs was raised in Teaneck and attended Teaneck High School and McCollough grew up in the New Jersey suburbs. (It's not uncommon for high fashion designers to be vague about their NJ roots.)"
    99. Ruse, Leslie. "Did you know these New Jersey celebrities were engaged?", Daily Record, August 7, 2018. Accessed February 12, 2020. "Marc Jacobs, Teaneck – Fashion designer Marc Jacobs, a graduate of Teaneck High School, used a flash mob performance to the Prince song “Kiss" to propose to boyfriend Charly Defrancesco at a Manhattan Chipotle on April 4, 2018."
    100. http://www.soulandjazzandfunk.com/interviews/2108-the-chris-jasper-interview-part-1.html "The Chris Jasper Interview ... Part 1"
    101. Rohan, Virginia. "The seeds of 'Grey Gardens' songs", The Record, June 6, 2007. Accessed February 13, 2020. "Michael Korie, the Tony-nominated Grey Gardens lyricist, leads a visitor to a room in the Teaneck home where he grew up... This place, the Indicks' home since 1963, and these parents had a profound influence on Korie (his middle name, which he uses professionally), a successful lyricist who has also done several operas.... By the time Korie got to Teaneck High School – where he was rehearsal accompanist for shows like "Oklahoma" – he was going on his own, and with friends, to see New York shows."
    102. 1995 THS Alumni Directory, p. 103.
    103. Hi-Way 1963 Yearbook, p. 58 as "Robert J. LaKind".
    104. Staff. "Teaneck's Maya Lawrence to represent USA fencing at Olympics", The Record, April 17, 2012. Accessed August 10, 2016. "Teaneck's Maya Lawrence has qualified and will represent the United States in fencing at the 2012 Olympics in London. She will be competing in the individual épée and team épée events.... A 1998 graduate of Teaneck High School, Lawrence was a two-time first team all-state selection in épée her junior and senior years."
    105. Web site: Teaneck HiWay, 1976. Amazon.
    106. Mushinske, Joram. "Behind The Curtain; Stage Actress Ilana Levine celebrates live performance in her podcast", (201) magazine, December 2020. Accessed January 4, 2021. "Grew up in: Teaneck... Education: Teaneck High School, Fordham University"
    107. Siegler, Bonnie. "'Lost' and found", American Jewish Life magazine, February / March 2008. Accessed August 31, 2011. "Lindelof's imagination and dreams actually began during his freshman year at Teaneck High School. 'I always wanted to be making movies, doing something in television or writing a novel', says Damon who, prior to Lost, wrote for Nash Bridges and Crossing Jordan."
    108. Lumenick, Lou. "Leonard Maltin's Reel-Life Story – Movie Maven Went From Teaneck To Hollywood", The Record, October 17, 1994. Accessed May 21, 2007. "Leonard Maltin was a so-so student. 'I was the only student in the history of Teaneck High School to fail a take-home, open-book exam,' he says with a mixture of pride and embarrassment."
    109. Hi-Way 1968 Yearbook.
    110. http://www.horatioalger.org/member_info.cfm?memberid=MCD04 Gabrielle Kirk McDonald
    111. https://www.thehistorymakers.org/biography/honorable-gabrielle-kirk-mcdonald The Honorable Gabrielle Kirk McDonald
    112. Alvarado, Monsy. "Bulletin Board", The Record, October 13, 1996. Accessed April 21, 2009. "Melissa Morgan, a junior at Teaneck High School, has been accepted as a scholar for the National Young Leaders Conference in December in Washington, D.C."
    113. Hi-Way 1973 Yearbook.
    114. [Brian Morton (American writer)|Morton, Brian]
    115. Hi-Way 1970 Yearbook, p. 60.
    116. [Mike Kelly (journalist)|Kelly, Mike.]
    117. Rohan, Virginia. "Teaneck teen actor lands his dream role", The Record, February 2, 2012, backed up by the Internet Archive as of November 10, 2013. Accessed February 13, 2020. "'On set and off, I dance all the time,' says O'Neal, who's actually a senior at Teaneck High School, where he's been in the theater program."
    118. Hi-Way 1963 Yearbook, p. 73.
    119. Cloud, David S. "A Marine on message", The New York Times, April 23, 2005. Accessed August 31, 2011. "Peter Pace, the son of an Italian immigrant, was born in Brooklyn on Nov. 5, 1945, and raised in Teaneck, N.J. At Teaneck High School, he played soccer, ran track and was vice president of the senior class. The entry by his name in his senior yearbook reads, 'Leadership, modesty, reliability and character are all qualities that personify Pete.'"
    120. https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-record-bob-peck-of-teaneck-and-teane/127052997/ "Sutherland Pacing Bates College Five"
    121. Hi-Way 1963 Yearbook, p. 52 as "Linda Ruth Jacobs".
    122. Kisseloff, Jeff. Generation on fire: voices of protest from the 1960s : an oral history, p. 228. University Press of Kentucky, 2007. . Accessed September 14, 2011. "My name was Linda Jacobs... I wanted to have a name that seemed powerful and funny and distant and unforgettable. V seemed like a wonderful letter, and Doris Lessing had a lot of verandas in her work, so I chose the name Verandah Porche because I was sitting on a porch. The e was just a festoon. What got me started on my alien path was moving to Teaneck, New Jersey, when I was eight years old. Growing up in Teaneck was anesthesia.
    123. [Adrian Wojnarowski|Wojnarowski, Adrian]
    124. http://www.gomarquette.com/sports/m-baskbl/mtt/prioleau_jean00.html Jean Prioleau
    125. http://ericpulier.com/#education Education
    126. https://transcription.si.edu/mediaPlayer/36763 "Adventures In Science: Interview With Winners Of The Seventeenth Annual Science Talent Search"
    127. Hi-Way 1953 Yearbook, p. 84 as "Paul Allen Rothchild".
    128. https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-record-teaneck-high-school-class-of/126973924/ "World Getting Bigger, Horizons Unlimited, Graduates Are Told: Teaneck Ceremony Graduates 294; Brees Talks"
    129. Beckerman, Jim. "A play about ex-cons, played by themselves", The Record, July 6, 2008. Accessed January 21, 2022, via Newspapers.com. "That's the combined prison time of the four ex-convicts who play themselves in this unique off-Broadway play, conceived and directed by Bergen County native David Rothenberg.... Rothenberg, who grew up in Ridgefield Park and Teaneck (Teaneck High School, class of 1951), began his career as a part-time sports writer for The Record."
    130. [Cathy Horyn|Horyn, Cathy]
    131. Murrells, Joseph. Million Selling Records from the 1900s to the 1980s: An Illustrated Directory, p. 156. Batsford (publisher), 1984. . Accessed July 23, 2011. "Linda (real name Linda Joy Sampson) was born on 11 June 1945 in Queens, New York and has been performing as a singer since she was four. She moved to Teaneck, New Jersey when 11 and enrolled at the high school there."
    132. https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/491026563/ "Atlantic City: New Milestone For Linda Scott Of Teaneck; Top Teen Singer Heads Steel Pier Bill, Reads Poe For Diversion Teaneck Headlining the Easter show at Atlantic City's Steel Pier is just another feather in the professional cap of Linda Scott."
    133. Hi-Way 1974 Yearbook, p. 80 as "Paul 'Rocky' Shambroom".
    134. https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/499841209/ "Photographer: Focuses on the faces of small-town politicians"
    135. Hi-Way 1988 Yearbook, p. 135.
    136. Longsdorf, Amy. "Cameraman always has eye on Jersey roots", The Record, June 1, 2009. Accessed June 2, 2009.
    137. http://www.njsiaa.org/sites/default/files/document/14mSinglesDoublesTennischamphistory.pdf History of the Men's Single/Double Tennis Tournament
    138. Levine, Cecilia. "Teaneck Tennis Player Inducted Into Hall Of Fame", Teaneck Daily Voice, April 20, 2017. Accessed February 13, 2020. "During Siegel’s senior year at Teaneck High School, Siegel won the boys’ tennis state championship. He went on to play collegiately at Miami Dade Junior College North for two years, where he was a two-time All-American in singles and doubles."
    139. Coutros, Evonne. "The Drummer Whom 'Gump' Marches To", The Record, March 26, 1995. Accessed October 21, 2007. "Nearly three decades after Alan Silvestri drummed out beats for the Teaneck High School band, he's hoping to march to the podium Monday night to collect an Oscar."
    140. https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/493547082/ "Sharing a part in a student play"
    141. Staff. "David Sklansky", Current Biography Yearbook 2007, Volume 68. H. W. Wilson Co., 2007. Accessed August 31, 2011. "Sklansky attended Teaneck High School, graduating in 1966."
    142. Hi-Way 1966 Yearbook, p. 128.
    143. Nash, Margo. "Still Singing, Still a Fan Of Trains", The New York Times, June 22, 2003. Accessed January 5, 2013. "Her first record, Phoebe Snow (Shelter 1974), with the single Poetry Man, went gold, and the 22-year-old, who had been discovered performing in a Greenwich Village coffeehouse, shortly after graduating from Teaneck High School, found herself a sudden success."
    144. http://www.fdu.edu/newspubs/magazine/00sp/himm.html Sports Historian Relishes Distant Replays
    145. Hi-Way 1959 Yearbook, p. 73.
    146. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/35443535/38-10-29-stone-new-friends-report/ "Reports on Grads; Teaneck High School Music Instructor Points To Accomplishments"
    147. Christie, Julie. "Former Owl embarking on Olympic journey 2012 graduate Kamali Thompson is attempting to qualify for the 2016 Olympics.", The Temple News, February 16, 2016. Accessed February 8, 2022. "Along with every first- and second-year fencer in New Jersey, Kamali Thompson competed at Freshman, Sophomores in February 2005. In her first year of the sport, the then-freshman at Teaneck High School watched her teammate finish third at the annual competition."
    148. Staff. "A Visit With Lynn Tilton", Rotor & Wing, February 1, 2009. Accessed April 1, 2015. "Education: 'I went to Teaneck High School... Yale undergraduate and I have an MBA from Columbia.'"
    149. Hi-Way 1981 Yearbook, p. 69.
    150. Treaster, Joseph B. "Paul Volcker: The Making of a Financial Legend", Accessed July 6, 2007. "Donald W. Maloney, another Teaneck High School graduate, entered Princeton along with Volcker. Although they had been in the same homeroom at Teaneck High for several years and had been high achievers, they had not been especially close."
    151. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/W/WalkQu20.htm Quentin Walker
    152. Hi-Way 1979 Yearbook, p. 59.
    153. Hi-Way 1970 Yearbook, p. 89.
    154. https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/493984514/ "Sportlight; NASL strike possible"
    155. https://www.jamesgmartin.center/author/robertweissberg/ Robert Weissberg
    156. [Gary Rosenblatt|Rosenblatt, Gary]
    157. Mills, Ed. "H.S. fencing: Fair Lawn's Gene Packer goes out strong", The Record, January 12, 2016. Accessed February 8, 2018. "Teaneck, under coach Herb Cohen, a former United States two-time Olympic fencer in foil, qualified all three of its competitors in both foil and épée for the final individual round of six at the BCT on Sunday."