P.O. 2626
Peter Stuyvesant Station
New York, NY 10009
610 West 115th Street
New York, NY 10025-7771
(212) 222-9112

The Stuyvesant Training Corps - 1918
![]() |
![]() |
| Caliper cover, Spring 1941 by George Segal | Caliper cover, December 1936 |

Stuyvesant Math Team, Spring 1953
Seated, left to right, Michael Lieber, Leonard Solomon, Peter Markstein;
Standing, Michael Gilder, Sol Greenberg (faculty coach), S. L. Berman (chairman of department), Gerald Gonick, Lester Moskowitz (captain), George Stern, Sheldon Schlaff;
Missing, Philip Moser, Stephen Meyers.
![]() |
Box Seat 1955 |
L'Étoile – Fall ’57 |
![]() |

Telegram from Robert W. Sarnoff, Chairman of the Board, NBC to Morton Fleischner ’59, congratulating Mort on winning first prize in the NBC Broadcast News Conference
NBC had held a one-day meeting for editors of NY Capers. The day's activities included appearance by many of NBC's on-air personalities and approximately 800 students attended. At the end of the day it was announced that the best reporting of the conference in a high school newspaper would win a summer job in the NBC newsroom. When Mort won he got the summer job and his start in the business.
Correspondence with Wernher von Braun
From Morton Fleischner '59
click on letter for response in German and English.
Stuyvesant Box-Seat, Spring 1959

Stuyvesant alumnus Richard Garza, Socialist Workers Party candidate for NYC Mayor in 1961, is interviewed by Neal H. Hurwitz ’62, Editor-in-Chief, The Spectator, and Paul Berman '62, Staff Reporter (at right).

Spring 1963 Championship Math Team
Photograph from Indicator, June 1963
Left to right, Top row: Harvey Sohnen, Clyde Schechter, Philip Greco, Alexander Tarczilo, Lewis Golovin. Bottom row:
Roger Lehecka, William Lepowsky, Mr. Greenberg, Neal Felsinger
The Award Winning 1969 Indicator
"Best High School Yearbook"
Made Possible By Eugene M. Negrin '69, Editor-in-chief
Cover Design and Teacher Caricatures by Timothy Wong, DDS '69, Art Editor

The Stuyvesant Voice was founded in the 73/74 academic year, becoming one of the most successful, and controversial, publications in the school's history. Loosely modeled after "New York" magazine in its combination of serious journalism and service features, the Voice was student oriented publication that encouraged freedom of expression. After the administration limited student run publications in the 75/76 acadamic year, the Voice continued to operate independently from school departments and budgets, and the publication made a small profit from direct sales and paid advertisements.
From Gail Froiman '77