The Waters Pelton
Organization
Public Relations Division
Contact:
Mary Wickwire (561) 310-2111
Yellow,
bulbous and 2,300 pounds,
this
Yellow Submarine will teach
Benjamin
School students about science and following their dreams
North Palm Beach, Fla. (March 24, 2005) -- When Alan Winick brings his Yellow Submarine to share with fourth through twelfth graders at The Benjamin School, he will teach them about important scientific principles such as buoyancy and density; but he will also teach them about something more important: following your dream, no matter what.
This
is what students said . . .
Winick,
science education director at Discovery Museum in Bridgeport, Connecticut, will
bring the 2,300 pound, yellow submarine which he built himself, to The Benjamin
School March 28th through April 1st. He comes to The Benjamin School through a
connection with fourth grade teacher Susan Tiedemann who taught Winick's son a
few years ago in Connecticut.
Since
most people don't have their own submarine, one might ask, why does Winick? It
all began when as a 13-year-old in Brooklyn, N.Y. he read a newspaper story
about a Coney Island man who was building a submarine. The visit inspired
Winick to build his own submarine, though he received little encouragement from
his peers and the adults around him.
His first attempt, at 16, to build a wooden sub, resulted in a
"death trap" which he did not even test on the water.
In
college Winick studied marine biology, submarines and engineering and as he
gained more knowledge about science his plans grew more sophisticated. As he entered adulthood, working, getting
married and starting a family, he was unable to shake his childhood dream and
continued to revise his plans about once a year.
His
first wife's death to breast cancer made Winick realize that among the few
things in his life of true importance were his family and his dream to build a
submarine. If it was that important, he recalls thinking, he needed to get
going. "It became my
Everest," Winick said.
He took
out his blueprints in the winter of 1997 and began searching for companies to
supply the materials he needed. He found the parts and put them together to
create his machine, and in August 1998, Winick's submarine -- painted yellow
for visibility, not in an ode to The Beatles -- was towed to shallow waters off
Fairfield, Connecticut where he shut the hatch and went below the surface.
The
trial run was successful and shortly afterward, the submarine went on display
at The Maritime Aquarium at Norwalk, where Winick realized that children were
fascinated by the machine and he enjoyed talking about it.
He
began a side business, DeepSea Schoolhouse, going to middle schools, sub in
tow, to talk to students about concepts inherent in submarine design, such as
buoyancy and density.
In
addition to his teaching, Winick dives in his submarine several times a year,
usually from May to September. Dozens of feet beneath the surface, inside a
machine of his own making, Winick experiences a world few of us will ever know. But more importantly, he gets to experience
it because he didn't give up on his dream.
* * * Alan Winick will be available for
interviews and the Yellow Submarine will be available for photographs. To arrange for an interview or for
additional information, please contact Mary Wickwire at 561.310.2111. * * *
The
Benjamin School is an independent, nonprofit school located in North Palm Beach, Florida. The mission of the school is to provide a
challenging college preparatory
education to a diverse student body.
For more information, please contact Kinch Cato, Director of Development
at 561-472-3480.
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