
The 51st Elementary District Art Show is on the front page of South Bay's Neighbor Newspaper! A BIG thank you to all students, teachers, parents, family members and Brentwood Faculty that came to visit. It was a BEAUTIFUL show! Click here to see a copy
A SPECIAL thank you to Asst. Superintendent, Scott Hartman and
Director of Public Relations, Rick Belyea
President Barack Obama hosts the second White House Science Fair celebrating the student winners of a broad range of science,
technology, engineering and math (STEM) competitions from across the country. The President talked with Samantha Garvey, 18, of Bay Shore, N.Y., about her environmental sciences project examining the effect of physical environment and predators on a specific species of mussel, in the State Dining Room of the White House, Feb. 7, 2012. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)
Click to open Newsday article (PDF)
Click for Newsday Online Article with video
Click to read more on Samantha in Newsday
Click to view Fox 5 Good Day New York Interview
Click to view MSNBC Interview
Click to view video clip of Samantha on the Ellen DeGeneres Show
Click to read Newsday coverage of Samantha's visit to Washington D.C.
Brentwood Alumni: Dec. 27, 2011 STORRS, Conn. - UConn men's soccer stars Andrew Jean-Baptiste (Brentwood, N.Y.) and Andre Blake (May Pen, Jamaica) have earned national honors from Soccer America. Jean-Baptiste was named a Second-Team MVP while Blake was named All-Freshman First Team. Andrew Jean-Baptiste earned Soccer America Second-Team MVP Honors after anchoring a UConn defense that allowed just 10 goals and recorded a program record 16 shutouts. He finished the year with two goals and an assist for five points while playing every minute of every game at center back for Connecticut. Last season, Jean-Baptiste was named a Soccer America Freshman All-American and followed that up with a selection to the All-BIG EAST First Team as a sophomore. He was also crowned BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Year this season and later went on to earn a spot on the NSCAA All-Northeast Region First Team. Congratulations to Andrew and his family on this outstanding achievement.



Brentwood Boys Soccer State Champs for 3rd time in School History
click here to- read the Newsday articles how Brentwood dominates in Middletown to claim title.
Check out the Brentwood Athletic Website for slideshow
of pictures of the 2010 State Champions.
View MSG Varsity Championship Game Highlight Video

On October 22, Two Brentwood Students were awarded semifinalist status in the prestigious SIEMENS competition in Math, Science & Technology. This competition was the culmination of the students’ summer research in the Department of Ecology and Evolution at Stony Brook University and at Flax Pond, Stony Brook, NY. The Siemens Competition recognizes remarkable talent in our youth by fostering individual growth for high school students who are willing to challenge themselves through science research.
The research paper submitted by the students titled “East meets West: The novel use of rocky intertidal bivalve recruitment techniques in a salt marsh ecosystem” presented the student researchers findings. Through the deployment of a household scouring pad, the TUFFY®, into the salt marsh at select locations, the students were capable of assessing health of the marsh. The system created by the students has the ability to efficiently collect larvae of mussels, oysters, and other invertebrates with a minimal margin of error. The experiment indicates that this tool can be effective in assisting in habitat remediation in the Gulf of Mexico as this system has the ability to obtain results quickly. Additionally, their research encourages the deployment of TUFFY® recruitment stations in other salt-marsh systems on the east coast as an effective tool to assess and monitor marsh health.
Read more in our High School Pow Wow Newspaper (page 3).
ABBOTT COLUMN: Coaching legend and champion person Joe Campo passes away at 85
Gary Abbott USA Wrestling
10/01/2010
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Joe Campo, at the time 82 years old, poses with Bob Antonacci, one of the great wrestlers he
coached at Brentwood High School in New York. Photo courtesy of The Mat Slap.
I received an email today from my friend Jose Campo, who is a very successful high school wrestling
coach out in the San Diego area. Jose let me know that his father, Joe Campo, had passed away last
night at the age of 85.
A part of my job at USA Wrestling is receiving information about people within the wrestling community
who have died and to inform the wrestling family about it. Anybody who has followed high school wrestling
for a long time knows that Joe Campo, who was known as "The Gov," was one of the greatest high
school wrestling coaches in history. There will be many people who will want to know about his passing.
However, Joe Campo was also a tremendous friend of mine and a true mentor in my career within
wrestling. I was sad to hear the news, and my mind wandered in all kinds of directions.
When I was growing up on Long Island in the late 1970s, Joe Campo was already a legend. He was the
head coach at Brentwood Ross High School, which was one of the top teams on the Island and in the
state. In fact, Brentwood Ross won the Suffolk County (Section XI) team title in my junior year in 1977. At
the time, Brentwood had two high schools, Ross and Sonderling. Prior to the split, Campo was also the
head coach of a combined Brentwood High School team. Brentwood wrestling was very successful for a
long time under Campo's leadership.
What I remember about the Brentwood Ross wrestlers were that they were all very strong, in great shape
and had excellent technique. Brentwood was known as a tough town, and many of their wrestlers came
from disadvantaged situations. Coach Campo helped these young men become outstanding athletes as
well as impressive people.
At the time, everybody knew a little bit about Brentwood's history. His program developed three great
college wrestling stars, all who went to Iowa State and became national heroes. Carl Adams won two
NCAA titles for the Cyclones, and Pete Galea and Bob Antonacci were also multiple All-Americans there. I met these great stars during summer wrestling camps when I was a
kid. All of them talked with pride about their great wrestling coach Joe Campo.
When I was a senior at Boston University, we got a new head wrestling coach named Carl Adams. He had been coaching at the Univ. of Rhode Island for the previous two
d years, one of our top rivals.URI dropped wrestling, and BU was fortunate to hire Adams at the time.In my final year on the mat,I had a chance to wrestle for a great coach, who
later became a business partner and close friend for life.
Carl ran successful wrestling camps which I worked at for many years. He always brought Coach Joe Campo to work at these camps, and it was there that I got to know him
personally. All of the great things I heard about Joe Campo and witnessed as a opposing competitor in high school only scratched the surface. Joe Campo was a wonderful
person in all aspects of life.
Coach Campo was an interesting person beyond just wrestling. When I met him, he was already considered an older coach. He did not have an impressive physique or a
commanding personality. Yet when he got on the mat, he really knew his stuff and was an excellent teacher. What I liked most about him was that he was a very nice person,
somebody who you immediately enjoyed spending time with. When you got to know Joe, you could sense why he was such a great coach. He was a winner because he was a
great man.
After I got Jose's email, I immediately called Carl Adams and we shared some thoughts and stories about Joe Campo. Carl remained tremendously close to him and gave him
so much credit for his success. Carl's first thought when we spoke today about Coach Campo is that he was "an unbelievable person."
Carl said that he was so respected by his wrestlers that they came up with the nickname "the Gov" because of his positive influence in their lives. He also noted that Coach
Campo was admired by athletes and coaches from opposing teams. He made an impact on so many people through his involvement in wrestling.
I quickly did a web search on Joe Campo, mostly looking for a good picture of him to go with this column. I discovered some information about him that Idid not know. Wrestling
USA Magazine, which has great stats on high school wrestling, places him at No. 22 on the list of all-time high school wins with 452. His head coaching career spanned from
1957-1987, a total of 30 years covering teams in upstate New York, Long Island and even in Alabama. His win total should be higher, because there were years when he helped
coach some teams later in his life when he was not the head coach.
Another website told me that his overall dual record was 452-38 with a 261-20 record in his two decades in Brentwood. His teams won eight Suffolk County team titles, and he
had nine state champions and 27 New York State place winners when New York had only one state meet. The same article explained that they recently named the gymnasium
at Brentwood Ross High School in his honor. Coach Campo came back to Brentwood for the gymnasium ceremony at the age of 82, and a large number of his former athletes
were there to celebrate with him.
Another article explained how Joe and his son Jose have both been inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame's state chapter program, with Joe going in for New York and
Jose getting honored in California. It explained how they were believed to be the first father-son combination to be so honored. Jose's email to me explained that his father had
started three different wrestling programs in New York, and that he had been elected to three different Hall of Fames.
None of this information surprised me a bit. I have always known that Joe Campo was an amazing wrestling coach. But, I also knew from personal experience how much he
meant to so many people.
I often spent time with Joe Campo when I was living out East and able to attend Carl Adams' wrestling camps on a regular basis. However, when I moved to Colorado to work
with USA Wrestling, we would only see each other at the NCAA Championships. Joe would show up with his sons each year to enjoy the tournament and visit his many friends
from across the country. No matter how busy I was at the NCAAs, I always seemed to run into Coach Campo for a nice conversation. He was genuinely interested in how things
were going with me and my family, and he was very supportive of my efforts as a USA Wrestling staff member. I felt that every time I saw "The Gov" was a treat and a privilege
for me.
This is not an obituary for Joe Campo, because I don't have all of the information about his amazing life at this time. When the official obit becomes available, we will post it for
people to see. I am sure that when you read it, you will be very impressed about what he accomplished and how many people he was able to influence.
In my own small way, I would like to honor the life of Joe Campo in a more personal way. I would like to thank Joe for all of the years of love and support, and for being such an
inspiring role model. I was truly blessed to call him friend. I already miss Joe, but I feel very good that I got to know him and have him as part of my life.
National education group honors Brentwood High School
December 10, 2009 By JOHN HILDEBRAND john.hildebrand@newsday.com
Brentwood High School is celebrating a national
education group's recognition of its academic progress - and where
school officials want students who contributed most to that success to get their share of credit.
This afternoon, more than 100 students are gathering for a ceremony marking Brentwood High's selection as a "breakthrough school" by
the National Association of Secondary School Principals.
Most of those students either have disabilities or speak limited English. Both groups improved academic performance significantly in
recent years, enough so that state authorities in March removed Brentwood High from their "needs improvement" list. "I'm not saying
money solves all problems, but it certainly was an assist in this case," said Thomas O'Brien, the school's principal.
Two years ago, Brentwood used an infusion of state financial aid to expand the high school's class schedule from eight to nine periods a day. The change allowed students taking English-language classes to take more courses in academic subjects, thus boosting the number graduating on schedule.
Meanwhile, the school also hired additional math teachers. This provided enhanced math instruction for students with disabilities whose special-education teachers were not certified in that subject.
In May, O'Brien was named New York State High School Principal of the Year. And in November, O'Brien's school was among 10 nationwide awarded "breakthrough" status, which recognizes academic achievement and improvement by secondary schools serving large numbers of impoverished students.
Winning schools each receive $5,000 grants from the MetLife Foundation, funded by the insurance company of the same name.
More than 60 percent of Brentwood High's 3,600 students qualify for free or reduced-price lunches because of modest family incomes.
Six hundred are English-language learners from 47 countries.