Regis High School (New York City)

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Regis High School
Location
55 East 84th St, New York, USA
Information
President Fr. Phillip Judge, S.J.
Principal Dr. Gary Tocchet
Faculty approx. 56[1]
Type Jesuit, Private, Catholic, Single-Sex
Motto "Deo et Patriae"
(For God and Country)
Established 1914
Students approx. 530[2]
Homepage

Regis High School is an all-scholarship, Jesuit, college preparatory school for Catholic young men. It is located on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City. Annual class enrollment is limited to approximately 135 male students from the New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut tri-state area. The school's motto, "Deo et Patriae," speaks to its intention to produce a man committed to devoting the advantages of his education to the service of society and the underprivileged.

Contents

[edit] History

Regis High School was founded in 1914 through the financial bequest of a single anonymous benefactress, who stipulated that her gift be used to build a Jesuit high school providing a free education for Catholic boys, with special consideration given to those who could not otherwise afford a Catholic education. The Foundress and her family were the sole financial supporters of the school until the late 1960s, when they reluctantly agreed to allow alumni and friends of Regis to contribute to the school's financial support. Today, Regis is still able to provide an outstanding education in the Jesuit tradition free of charge through the generosity of the Founding Family and its alumni and friends.

[edit] Education for Young Men

Students must complete a curriculum in subjects such as science (requiring study in biology, chemistry, and physics), mathematics (algebra II, geometry and trigonometry, and pre-calculus, and either calculus, linear algebra, or statistics), English language arts (American literature, Poetry, British literature, and two electives such as science fiction or Russian literature), social studies (Western civilization, American history, and European history, and optionally Middle Eastern history, Latin American history, Chinese/Japanese history, or African history), theology (Church history, Scripture, and Moral Theology), foreign language (one of Latin, French, German, Spanish or Chinese, for three years, an optional fourth year. fine arts (studio art, film, art history and music history, and optionally architecture, with jazz band offered as an extracurricular activity for credit), two years of computer technology, and four years of physical education. The Science Research Project is a mentor-based extracurricular credited course. The curriculum is challenging because of the advanced level at which subjects are presented to students, using college-level books and, in many classes, exceeding the requirements of the Advanced Placement curriculum.

[edit] Athletics

Sports currently available to Regis students include baseball (on the junior varsity and varsity levels), basketball (on the freshman, junior varsity, and varsity levels), cross country, soccer (on the junior varsity and varsity levels), indoor and outdoor track and field, and volleyball. The school is a member of the Catholic High School Athletic Association. Regis's athletic teams have seen success in recent years, including several City Championships in their division at the junior varsity and varsity levels. In 2005, the year after winning the city championship, the Varsity basketball team won the B division State Federation Championship in Glens Falls, NY, beating the best of the private and public schools of New York.

Prior to the 2007-2008 season, golf and tennis were offered; the sports were scrapped for numerous reasons, due in part to being deemed "not adequately representing the interests of the student body".

Regis utilizes several athletic fields and complexes, including Central Park, Randall's Island and the Armory on West 168th Street.

[edit] Extracurricular activities

Students who attend Regis have many extracurricular activities to select from, in addition to athletics. The most popular activity is the Hearn, Regis's speech and debate society. The Hearn competes on state and national levels in Lincoln-Douglas Debate, Public Forum Debate, Student Congress, Extemporaneous speaking, Declamation, Duo Interpretation, and other forms of dramatic interpretation of literature. The team posts consistently strong performances at the New York State Championship, and has captured first place in speech, debate or student congress in every year since 2001. There are also various publications that students can work on, such as the newspaper (The Owl) and yearbook (The Regian) as well as several magazine publications dedicated to debate, sports, and the arts, including The Edge and The Crow. Regis Repertory stages a musical in the fall and a drama or comedy in the spring, relying on the efforts of over 90 students in the cast, stage crew, business staff, and band. Recreational clubs include the Flag Football club, the Billiards Club, the Games club, the Anti-Gravity juggling club, the recently founded Rock Music Club, the Indoor soccer Club, and various cultural and special interests/political clubs, and more. Regis's Amnesty International chapter has organized letter-writing campaigns, bake sales, and gone to rallies; its most recent focus has been on the genocide in Darfur. The Owl, the school's student newspaper, interviewed CIA Leak case prosecutor and alumnus Patrick J. Fitzgerald in 2006. The subsequent article was linked on the Drudge Report and quoted in an Associated Press article. [1]

[edit] Ethnic Distribution

Asian/Pacific 99%
African American/Caribbean .33333%
Hispanic/Latin American .33333%
White/Caucasian .33333%

[edit] Film Spots at Regis

Regis High School has been used in several television and movie filmings, which include:

Regis High School inspired the atmosphere and setting of the play Child's Play by Robert Marasco, who was a teacher there in the early 1960s.

[edit] Alumni

Notable alumni include:

[edit] External links

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