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John L. Miller Great Neck North High School

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Type
  
Senior High School

Principal
  
Bernard Kaplan

Enrollment
  
1,073 (as of 2014-15)

Mascot
  
Blazer the Goat

Opened
  
1929

Faculty
  
89.9 FTEs

Phone
  
+1 516-441-4700

Number of students
  
1,073

Asst. principals
  
Ron Levine Patricia Hugo Daniel Krauz

Address
  
35 Polo Rd, Great Neck, NY 11023, USA

District
  
Great Neck School District

Similar
  
William A Shine Great Ne, Manhasset Secondary School, South High School, Paul D Schreiber Senior Hi, Great Neck Union Free School

John L. Miller Great Neck North High School or simply "North High," or "North," is a public high school, including grades 9 through 12, in the village of Great Neck, New York, operated by the Great Neck School District.

Contents

As of the 2014-15 school year, the school had an enrollment of 1,073 students and 89.9 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 11.9:1. There were 77 students (7.2% of enrollment) eligible for free lunch and 59 (5.5% of students) eligible for reduced-cost lunch.

The school building was designed by the noted architectural firm of Guilbert and Betelle.

According to Newsweek magazine's 2015 list of "America's Best High Schools," Great Neck North High School was ranked 105th. The school is on Polo Road, about a mile and a half from the LIRR Railroad station.

History

Great Neck High School was established in 1895, in a wood frame building on Arrandale Avenue at Middle Neck Road that also housed elementary school students. The wood building was expanded in 1900 but then destroyed by fire and replaced by a brick building in 1921. By this time high school students had moved into their own building, just to the west of the original Arrandale building. The site of the east Arrandale building is now a park and an apartment building for senior citizens.

The first building named Great Neck High School opened in 1914. Its location was between the original Arrandale school and the original Great Neck Library (now Great Neck House). This school building, also built of brick, was demolished in 1976. The site of the west Arrandale building is now a parking lot for Great Neck House.

The main section of the present building on Polo Road opened in 1929. The school was still known as Great Neck High School, as engraved above the building's main entrance. As the student population grew, the school became known as Great Neck Junior-Senior High School and served grades 7–12. By 1936, there were 1228 pupils, only grades 8–12 of which could fit in the Polo Road building. Grade 7 was housed in the west Arrandale building. After World War II ended, the school district's student population grew quickly. The Polo Road building was expanded in 1947, in general accordance with its architect's original plan.

As the population explosion continued, the district built new buildings. In January 1952, Great Neck Junior High School was opened to serve grades 7–9, and the existing school was renamed Great Neck Senior High School, serving only grades 10–12. In 1958, a South campus including another high school and junior high school was opened. As a result, the existing high school was renamed Great Neck North Senior High School. In 1970, the school was renamed to honor Dr. John L. Miller upon his retirement after 28 years as superintendent of the school district. The new name was John L. Miller–Great Neck North Senior High School, though the full name was rarely used except for official documents.

The student population shrank after the Baby Boom generation graduated in the 1970s, and grade 9 was moved back to the high school building. The current name of the school was then adopted: John L. Miller–Great Neck North High School. Also called "North".

As of 1988, Great Neck North has an "open campus" policy. Students in grades 9 through 12 may go in and out of campus. Rona Telsey, a spokesperson for the district, said in 1988 that "open campus" had not been a controversy for the school.

Notable alumni

  • Jon Avnet (born 1949), movie director/producer
  • David Baltimore (born 1938), Nobel Prize winner
  • Nikki Blonsky (born 1988), actress who starred as Tracy Turnblad in the 2007 film version of Hairspray attended North for her freshman year but then left and attended the Village School and did her theatrical work at Great Neck South High School
  • Amy Bloom (born 1953, class of 1974), writer and psychotherapist
  • David Aaron Carpenter (born 1986), violist
  • Andrew Chaikin (born 1956), author, speaker and space journalist
  • Mary L. Cleave (born 1947), astronaut, associate administrator of NASA's science missions
  • Steven A. Cohen (born 1956, class of 1974), founder of SAC Capital Advisors, a group of hedge funds
  • Kenneth Cole (born 1954), clothing designer
  • Francis Ford Coppola (born 1939), movie director
  • Peter Diamandis (born 1961), engineer, physician and entrepreneur, founder and chairman of the X Prize Foundation and co-founder and chairman of Singularity University
  • Richard Epstein (born 1943), James Parker Hall Distinguished Service Professor of Law at the University of Chicago
  • Jared Evan (born 1988) singer, songwriter, rapper
  • Ilan Hall (born 1982), winner of the second season of the Bravo television network's reality series Top Chef
  • Phil Hankinson (1951–1996), former NBA player and champion for the Boston Celtics
  • Emily Hughes (born 1989), figure skater, member of the U.S. Figure Skating Team at the 2006 Winter Olympics
  • Sarah Hughes (born 1985), gold medalist in women's figure skating at the 2002 Winter Olympics
  • Adam Kantor, actor and singer
  • Michael Karlan, founded Professionals in the City networking group
  • Andy Kaufman (1949–1984), comedian/actor, played Latka Gravas in Taxi
  • Marc J. Leder (born 1962), former senior vice president of Lehman Brothers, co-founder of Sun Capital Partners
  • Minae Mizumura, novelist, essayist, critic
  • Laurie Puhn (born 1977), TV host, author
  • Dan Raviv (born 1954, class of 1972), CBS News correspondent and host of the Weekend Roundup on the CBS Radio Network
  • Jimmy Roberts (class of 1970), composer
  • David Seidler (born 1937), Academy Award winner for best screenplay for The King's Speech
  • Ziggy Steinberg (born 1945) screenwriter, essayist, producer
  • Michael H. Weber, screenwriter
  • References

    John L. Miller Great Neck North High School Wikipedia