Friday, September 08, 2006

"Cheap" Football Bars/Pubs

Nice! Football at Last
By Stefanie Arck
amNewYork, Sep 8, 2006

While some may lament September as the end of summer getaways, the beginning of allergy season or back-to-school time, others pull their jerseys out of their closets, sign up for their fantasy football league and happily settle into their recliner for the new NFL season. If you can’t shell out the big bucks for Direct TV, though, check out the games at one of these lesser-known sports pubs.



The Hairy Monk
337 Third Ave. at 25th Street
212-532-2929
While this local bar draws ’em in for Sunday brunch, patrons stay for the hospitality, cheap drinks and multiple TVs on which they can get the NFL Sunday Ticket. Check out the Hairy Monk around 12:30, grab a seat in the back and order the $10.95 brunch special, which includes an entrĂ©e (like their tasty burger or an omelet) plus two drinks, and gawk at the big-screen TV all afternoon over daily drink specials. If you prefer not to take up room in your stomach with food, try one of the over 15 beers on tap while gazing at any NFL game you’d like on one of their seven TVs, and get settled in with other varied fans for the 1 p.m, 4 p.m. or 8 p.m. game — or all three.

PJ Hanley's
449 Court St. at 4th Place, Brooklyn
718-834-8223
The only thing finer than hanging out outside with good food and friends is hanging out inside with good friends and watching football. At PJ Hanley’s, which claims to be one of New York’s oldest bars, you can enjoy the game with friends over mouth-watering thin-crust pizza or deliciously tasty sliders. Opened in 1874, this local watering hole hosts a mixed crowd of yuppies, Twentysomething recent grads, borough lifers who remember the area before gentrification and off-duty guys in (or out of) uniform. Hanley’s can show any NFL game on their four TVs on Sundays, and on Saturdays, enjoy a BBQ cookout with dishes like smoked chicken with your college football.

Underground
613 Second Ave. between 33rd & 34th Streets
212-683-3000
This Murray Hill spot is a crowd pleaser. You can watch the game or simply kick back and relax. Underground features the NFL Sunday Ticket so football fans can watch any game they’d like in the bar area or on the outdoor patio, while mellower friends sit back with a $10 domestic pitcher or $2 domestic pint in the comfy, couched lounge. Underground doesn’t have its own menu, but you can order in or BYOB (bring your own barbecue) and take advantage of the grill in the back.

Village Tavern
46 Bedford St. at Seventh Avenue South
212-741-1935
In this area of quiet cobblestone streets lives a sports bar with a local feel and enough room to accommodate tourists who pop in for a pint, regulars who enjoy low prices, and NYU students who live down the street along with 50 of their friends. The Village Tavern is a great place to watch the NFL on a projection TV, and 10 smaller ones spattered around the exposed brick interior. They also have ESPN Game Plan so you can watch any college game you’d like. Since they don’t have a kitchen, you can order in from a multitude of local faves, including famous Joe’s Pizza of Bleecker Street. For those who would rather play than watch games, enjoy Golden Tee, Big Buck Hunter or pool with a $2.50 PBR can or Coronita.


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Friday, September 01, 2006

Breeder's Cup Scandal - Just a Little Too Lucky

Just a Little Too Lucky
By BILL SAPORITO
Time, Nov. 25, 2002

If this tale had a racing pedigree, it would be by The Producers out of Guys and Dolls. Goes like this: three wiseguys--old college frat rats, now computer wonks--hatch a scheme to rig electronic bets on the horses. A scheme so good, they can't lose. They don't lose. They win big. Real big. Lotto big.

Too big, perhaps, which is why Chris Harn, Derrick Davis and Glen DaSilva, all 29, are facing federal fraud and conspiracy charges in White Plains, N.Y. Had a few more railbirds or telebettors got as lucky at the Breeders' Cup races on Oct. 26, track officials in Arlington Heights, Ill., might not have noticed a curious wagering pattern--part of a day of gambling that made one solitary punter $3.1 million richer. But when a 44-to-1 shot named Volponi blew away the field in the final race, he left behind thousands of Ultra Pick 6 losers and only one winner: Davis, who held all six winning tickets. What were the odds of that happening legit? Next to zero, say track officials, who withheld payment and started investigating. U.S. Attorney James Comey says the three frat brothers exploited a gap in horse racing's data network that allowed them to change their wagers after races had already been run. Harn allegedly used his job as a senior programmer at Autotote, which processes wagering for many U.S. tracks, to alter Ultra Pick 6 bets that Davis phoned in to the Catskill OTB (off-track betting) site in Pomona, N.Y. In what investigators believe was a kind of dry run for the Breeders' Cup, DaSilva placed similar bets in the weeks before, collecting more than $100,000. The three say they are innocent of any wrongdoing.

The men became friends while attending Philadelphia's Drexel University, known for its computer-science offerings. There they joined the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity, where they defied the wonk stereotype by adding club hopping to their considerable computer skills. After leaving Drexel, all three pursued work in information technology.

In Pick 6, players have to call the winners in six different races. With so many possible outcomes, even the best handicappers typically bet on more than one horse to win each race. Davis, on the contrary, "singled" the first four races, picking only one horse, in each case the winner.

When the long shot Volponi took the Breeders' final race, the winner's payout from the $3.4 million pari-mutuel pool was enormous and immediately suspect. "If the payoff had been $70,000 [per ticket] instead of $400,000, we might not have known," says Bill Nader, senior vice president of the New York Racing Association. "To that end, we were very fortunate."

What the Drexel three knew, say prosecutors, is that Pick 6 bets collected at off-site locations such as Catskill OTB aren't transmitted to the host track until the fifth race. Reason: the computer matrix that handles wagers nationwide was not designed to collect such exotic bets in real time. That time warp would give someone with access to the system a chance to change bets on the first four races after the results were in. Harn showed up unexpectedly for work at Autotote's Newark, Del., offices on Oct. 26 and logged on to the Catskill OTB site. He was fired a few days later. There's no direct evidence of tampering, say officials, because Harn knew that the Catskill OTB site is one of the few that doesn't record the telephone touch tones used in making a bet. Investigators eventually connected Harn with Davis.

That is what they call circumstantial evidence, but the feds like their odds. In the meantime, track and tote operators say they are closing any potential security gaps, scouring their records for previous big payoffs and praying they don't find any more funny business as they try to assure U.S. horse bettors--not exactly a trusting lot--that the $14.5 billion they plunk down every year isn't being taken for an electronic ride.

Improving Security In The United States Pari-Mutuel Wagering System: Status Report And Recommendations (pdf)

Communication Technology and Presence in Wired Markets (MS Word)

Breeder's Cup Scandal - All bets are off after Breeder's Cup racing fix

Breeder's Cup Scandal - All bets are off after Breeder's Cup racing fix

All bets are off after Breeder's Cup racing fix.
Gary West
The Dallas Morning News, 15 November, 2002

One normally thinks of horse race bets as bets that a specific horse will win, or will place (come in first or second), or will show (come in first, second, or third) or a "daily double" bet that a specific pair of horses will be the winners of two races.

In recent years, race tracks have introduced new forms of bets which are more like lotteries, called "exotic bets." These bets typically involve picking the winners of 3 or more races and have large prizes for success. This article deals with a "Pick Six" bet at the annual Breeders' Cup races, held on October 26th at Arlington Park. The Breeders' Cup races are sponsored by the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) and are considered the "all star game" of horse racing because they attract the best racing horses throughout the world.

This year, the Breeders' Cup had 8 races and the Pick Six bet related to the last six races. A Pick Six ticket costs $2 and requires that you select a winner for each of the six races. You win if all six of your picks win their respective races. If you get only five correct you get a consolation prize. The pool for the prizes is obtained from the money collected from the Pick Six bets. The NTRA guarantees that it will be at least 3 million dollars.

The payoffs to winning tickets are determined as follows. Suppose that the total amount taken in by Pick Six bets is B. Then the NTRA takes 25% (1/4B) for themselves. The remaining 75% (3/4B) is again divided with with 75% (9/16B) to be divided among the Pick Six winners and 25% (3/16B) to be divided among those who got five correct as consolation prizes.

This year the amount taken in from Pick Six bets was $4,569,515. The track took its 25% leaving $3,427,136 to be returned to the bettors. Taking 75% of this gave $2,570,352 to be divided among the winners and the remaining 25%, or $856,784, to be divided among those who got 5 correct. For this years race 6 winning tickets were sold and 186 tickets were sold that got five correct. Thus each winning ticket got $428,392 and each consolation ticket $4,606.20.

The winning six tickets were all bought by the same bettor, Derrick Davis, owner of a computer business in Baltimore. Davis specified the winners for the first four races and then chose every possibility for the 5th and 6th races. There were 8 horses running in the 5th race and 12 in the 6th, so Davis had to buy 8x12 = 96 tickets to cover all possibilities for the 5th and 6th race. This would assure that he would have a winning ticket if his choices for the first 4 races were correct. He actually bought 6 of these sets of 96 costing him $1152. This assured him a bigger fraction of the money designated for the winners money if he did win. His picks for the first four races all won, so he ended up with 6 winning tickets. It turned out that there were no other winning tickets so he qualified for the entire winners' money, $2,570,352. He also had 108 tickets with five correct. This qualified him for a total winning of $3,067,820.

The NTRA was suspicious about these bets. They thought it strange that a bettor would make six replications of the same set of tickets and also put all the money on a single choice of winners for the first 4 races. Their investigation led them to look into Davis' past. They found that he had two friends, Glen DaSilva and Chris Harn, who were fraternity brothers when the three of them were in college at Drexel University. The investigation led to the three friends being charged with fraud and Davis' winnings being held up. Here is the basis for this charge.

Chris Harn was a computer expert who worked for Autotote company which processes a large proportion of the race track bets. To avoid computer congestion at the race track, only the bets that are still possible winners after the first four races are sent on to the track. They are sent after the fourth race and before the beginning of the fifth race. Harn had access to the betting data and is charged with changing the bets on the first four horses to make them agree with the winners before they were sent on to the track. The Dallas Morning News web site provided the following nice graphic to show how this could have happened:



Harn is also accused of performing the same service for DaSilva, who won $1,851.20 in a Pick Four wager at Baltimore Park on Oct. 3, and $105,916 in a Pick Six bet at Belmont Park on Oct. 5. DaSilva used the same strategy of picking single winners in the early races and then every horse in later races. Harn, Davis, and DaSilva were charged with fraud under Title 18 Section 1243 of United States Code.

Section 1343. Fraud by wire, radio, or television Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises,

transmits or causes to be transmitted by means of wire, radio, or television communication in interstate or foreign commerce, any writings, signs, signals, pictures, or sounds for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than five years, or both. If the violation affects a financial institution, such person shall be fined not more than $1,000,000 or imprisoned not more than 30 years, or both.

The US Attorney who brought the charges claims that phone records showed that Harn was communicating on his cell phone with Davis during the time the Breeders' Cup races were going on and computer records show that Harn came to Autototes's headquarters, even though he was not scheduled to work, and electronically accessed the computer file that held Davis' wager.

We wondered what evidence the defense attorney could give to combat this rather impressive circumstantial evidence. For starters we thought he might try claiming that Davis just wanted Hahn to check to make sure his bet was actually received. As to how strange his bet was, we wondered what systems were used and how often it happens that there is at most one winner in the Pick Six bet. The Pick Six bet for the Breeders' Cup races has only been available since 1997. Here are the numbers of winners and the payoff information for the races up to 2002.

Number of winning tickets and payoff for Breeders' Cup races 1997-2002.


Thus we see that their lawyer would have a precedent. In 1999 G. D. Hieronymous--a videographer with a Breeders' Cup newsfeed team-- held the only winning ticket for the Pick Six bet. He created a strategy for a group of his fellow workers. His strategy was to pick two horses in the first and second races, three in the third race, and two in the last two races that he thought had a good chance to win. Thus he had to bet on 2x2x3x2x2x2 = 96 possible outcomes which cost him $192. He had the only winning ticket and won $3,088,138.60.

To compare his strategy to that used by Davis, we need to show how to evaluate a particular strategy for buying Pick Six tickets. For this we need to estimate the expected winning using a particular strategy.

We consider first how we might estimate the probability, before the race, that a particular Pick Six ticket is a winning ticket. It is reasonable to assume that the races are independent events, so we only need to estimate the probability that each of the horses picked win the races they are in.

Odds are given for the win bets so we can use these odds to estimate the probability that a particular horse wins a race. For example, if the odds given that a horse will win are 4 to 1, this corresponds to a probability of 1/5 that the horse will win.

We will find it useful to know how the track determines these odds. Here is a description, provided by our friend the "The Wizard of Odds", of how the odds for a "win" bet would be calculated for a particular horse, for example Longwind.

Assume that $1000 is bet on the "win" bets. The track takes its cut which is typically between 15 and 20 percent. Assume that it is 17%. This leaves $830. Now assume that $200 was bet on Longwind. Then the track divides 830 by 200 getting 4.15. It then returns $4.15 for each $1 dollar bet on Longwind if he wins. In this case the bettor wins $3.15 for every dollar bet on Longwind. This determines the odds on Longwind as 3.15 to 1. From this we estimate that the probability Longwind will win is 1/(1+3.15) = 1/4.15 = 200/830. If $300 were bet on another horse the probability that this horse would win is 300/830.

If we add these probabilities for all the horses, we get 1000/830 = 1.205 instead of the 1 we would expect from our estimates of the individual probabilities. So we have to normalize these probabilities to add to one by dividing them by 1000/830. When we do this the probability that Longwind wins is 200/1000 = 1/5. More generally, if b is the amount bet on a horse and B is the total amount bet on win bets then our estimate for the probability that this horse wins is b/B. Thus our estimate for the probability that a horse wins is just the proportion of money bet on this horse.

When the track publishes the odds, they normally round them off to one decimal place, rounding them down. This gives the track a little more money and makes our estimates using these odds not quite correct.

These probabilities, based on the amounts that the bettors bet on the horses, are subjective probabilities. How do we know they are reasonable estimates for the probability that a horse will win? Fortunately, Hal Stern has studied this question and was led to the conclusion that these subjective probabilities are really pretty good. As reported in Chance News 7.10, in his column "A Statistician Reads the Sports Pages" (Chance Magazine, Fall 1998, 17-21) Hal asked: How accurate are the posted odds? To answer this he considered data from 3,784 races (38,047 horses in all) in Hong Kong. He divided the range of odds into small intervals and for each interval found the proportion of times horses with these odds won their race. Here is a scatterplot of his results:

Correlation of the subjective estimates of the probability a horse will win with the empirical frequency that the horse wins.


As you can see the fit is remarkably good.

We return now to finding the probability, before the races begins, that a particular Pick Six betting strategy is successful and use this to find the expected winning for a particular strategy.

Assume first that we purchased a single Pick Six ticket. For this we specified a horse in each race that we think will win. As we have remarked, it seems reasonable to assume that the winners of different races are independent events. So from the posted odds for the races we can determine the probabilities for each horse winning and multiply these to get the probability that we have a winning ticket. For example, for a Pick Six bet in the 2002 Breeders' Cup races suppose we were to bet on the horse with the highest probability of winning in each race. We can find the relevant win bet odds from the NTRA web site. Using these we find the horses in each race with the highest probability of winning to be:

Data for determining the probability of winning a Pick Six bet on the favored horses for the Breeders Cup 2002 races.


We see that for this bet we have a winning ticket with probability .00049. Using the probabilities for winning each race we find the probability of getting exactly 5 correct to be .0137.

We now show how we compute the expected winning for for a general strategy using multiple bets. Recall that if B is the total amount bet on Pick Six bets, (9/16)B is divided amount the winners and (1/16)B is divided amount those who got five correct.

Since the payoff depends on the number of bettors with winning tickets, to calculate the expected winning we have to know how many winning bets there are for each choice of 6 horses to win. However, in this year's races, there were 1,585,584 ways to choose six horses to win so it is not surprising that this information is not available from the NTRA web site. Thus we must estimate these numbers. We do this by estimating that the proportion of bettors who bet on a particular choice six horses is equal to the probability that these 6 horses win. This is what Hal showed was reasonable for the "win" bets. With this assumption we can compute the expected winning from a single ticket.

Assume now that we make a Pick Six bet. Let p be the probability that our choice of horses win and q the probability that our choice was wrong in just one race. Then, by our assumption, the number of bettors who bet as we did is pB and the number who bet on a choice that differs only by one from ours is qB. Thus if we win our payoff is (9/16)B/pB= (9/16)/p and if we get all but one correct it is (3/16)B/qB = (3/16)/q. So our expected winning is

E = p(9/16)/p + q(3/16)/q = 9/16 + 3/16 = 3/4.

Thus our expected payoff is 75 cents for each dollar spent on tickets and this is the same no matter which horses we choose for our ticket. Of course the expected winning is - 25 cents since we paid $1 for our ticket. Since the expected payoff for any bet is the same, the expected payoff for any strategy involves buying the same number of tickets. Thus Davis' lawyer could argue that his clients strategy was as sensible as any other strategy which involved buying the same number of tickets!

The fact that no strategy is any better than any other with the same number of tickets is rather surprising, so it is natural to ask how reasonable is our assumption that the proportion of bets on a specific choice of winners is equal to the probability that this choice wins. One can argue that horse racing bets are like buying stocks. If one could find a strategy for making money buying particular stocks, then others would do the same, and the price of the stock would go down. If a horse-racing wizard figured out a more favorable way to bet, others would learn of this and do the same making the winnings less and bringing the distribution of bets back to the equilibrium situation where no one has an advantage. On the other hand, one can also argue that, given the large sums of money one can win, bettors utility function might affect their betting. For example, more bettors might include a long shot, in the hopes that they will not have to share the winning.

It would be nice to have enough data to check this assumption, as Hal did for the "win" bet. Unfortunately, we do not have this data. We do have a very small amount of data where we can compare our predicted number with the actual number of tickets sold. News accounts typically give the number of the winning tickets. We found these numbers for the 6 years that the NTRA has had the Pick Six bet. Here is the comparison for these years.

Comparing the umber of winning tickets with the number estimated


The fit of the predicted values of tickets and the actual number of tickets is not great, but then it is not bad either and, as we know, six data values do not tell us much.

Note that the Breeder's cup officials have decided that there were no winners this year. This presumably means that the the 78 legitimate winners of the consolation prizes would divide the entire $3,427,136 that had been set aside for the Pick Six prizes. This would give them about ten times as much as they had won, $43,937.6 instead of $4,606.2. They can be identified since they had to sign a federal tax identification form to get the winnings.

Well, we did not succeed in our attempts to save our computer friends from time in jail but perhaps we provided an interesting example to use in your statistics courses.

Final note: By the time we finished this long treatise, all three of the fraternity brothers pleaded guilty and sentencing is scheduled for March 11.

Manhattan Teen Accessories: Designer Jeans, $500-an-Hour Tutor

Manhattan Teen Accessories: Designer Jeans, $500-an-Hour Tutor
By Lisa Kassenaar
Bloomberg, 2006-08-29

When Casey Ravitz graduated in June from Poly Prep Country Day School in Brooklyn, she'd spent 14 years in three different private schools in New York City. For eight of those years, she'd kept weekly appointments with a $100- an-hour Manhattan tutor.

``I had a lot of friends who were being tutored, too,'' says Ravitz, 18, an investment banker's daughter who moved to Chicago in August to attend DePaul University. ``My last tutor wouldn't let me get away with anything. She was the most helpful person I've ever met.''

In New York, where tuition at some private schools will top $30,000 this fall, parents are spending thousands of dollars more on one-on-one instruction. Some teens need extra coaching -- which can cost more than $500 an hour -- to get through chemistry or Kafka. Others seek help to nab the A's required for a seat at Harvard or Princeton universities, says Lisa Jacobson, 47, who started Manhattan-based Inspirica Ltd. in 1983 and now employs more than 100 tutors.

About 75 percent of private high school graduates in New York have had some tutoring, says Sandy Bass, editor of Private School Insider, a New York-based newsletter published five times a year. Rising demand for so-called homework help, which is distinct from prepping for the SAT college entrance exam, has led the city's tutoring companies to add teachers and services.

Some are also jacking up prices. On Manhattan's Upper West Side, Allison Baer, 32, who has a doctorate in psychology from Columbia University, charges $225 an hour for helping clients as young as 12 with writing skills. Baer had more business in this year's first half than in all of 2005, she says, and will raise her fee by 20 percent in October.

`Madness'

Many parents feel pushed into hiring tutors to offer their kids the same advantages as peers, says Boston-based child psychiatrist Edward Hallowell, whose books include CrazyBusy (Ballantine Books, 256 pages, $24.95) and The Childhood Roots of Adult Happiness (Ballantine Books, 256 pages, $13.95). Pressuring children to perform can quash their long-term interest in learning, he says.

``It's madness,'' Hallowell says. ``We are living in an age of incredible anxiety about children maintaining the lifestyle that their parents have achieved.''

Bass says the boom in tutoring is powered in part by Wall Street bonuses, which have been at record levels in the past three years. Bankers at securities firms such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Merrill Lynch & Co. cashed a record $21.5 billion in bonus checks last year, according to the New York state comptroller's office.

Manhattan Teen Accessories: Designer Jeans, $500-an-Hour Tutor
Bass also credits fierce competition for spots in elite high schools and colleges as the baby boom generation's teenagers create their own demographic bulge. From 2000 to '04, the number of children aged 10-19 in Manhattan jumped 18.7 percent to 128,817, according to U.S. Census data.

The city's 87 independent schools, meanwhile, had 42,320 students in 2005, 11 percent more than in 2000, the New York State Association of Independent Schools says. ``Kids are taking harder courses and filling their schedules with things that help them stand out,'' Bass says. ``The tutor comes in to help them.''

When it comes to pressuring kids to achieve in school, New York is the epicenter, says Lloyd Thacker, a former admissions officer at the University of Southern California and founder of the Education Conservancy, an advocacy group based in Portland, Oregon.

``Tutoring is the symptom, and the fact there is so much of it says there is a sickness,'' he says. ``If past trends hold up, it's likely to spread.''

Buckling Down

Ravitz, an only child who grew up on the Upper East Side, was first tutored as a 7-year-old at Trevor Day School on West 88th Street. By the time she graduated from Poly Prep, she'd had three more tutors. One helped with essay writing; another, called in when Ravitz was struggling in 10th-grade French, steered her to B+'s in the class, she says.

``The tutors were able to help her to buckle down,'' Ravitz's mother, Debbie Dunn, 52, says. Her daughter's final Poly Prep report card, with two A-'s and one B-, hung on Dunn's refrigerator as she helped her pack for college.

Many private schools have loaded their curricula with university-level courses that demand hours of homework from students every night.

At Horace Mann School in the Bronx, for example, an honors physics class that covers mechanics, thermodynamics, electricity and magnetism focuses on teaching students how to prepare scientific papers. At Saint Ann's School in Brooklyn, one 12th- grade English class studies novels by Honore de Balzac, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Henry Fielding, Vladimir Nabokov, Thomas Pynchon and Virginia Woolf.

Real Pressure

``The pressure is real,'' says Edith Spiegel, whose daughter, now 20, was tutored while attending the Dalton School on the Upper East Side. Spiegel, 58, who taught in New York's public school system for 29 years, says the stigma attached to tutoring when she was a child has faded.

``When my friends got tutored, we thought of them as stupid,'' she says. ``Now, we need our kids to be as smart as they can be.''

Ivy League Tutors Inc., with offices on Manhattan's Madison Avenue, has instructors trained specifically to help students at Riverdale Country School in the Bronx complete a single 11th-grade course, Constructing America.

The class combines advanced placement material in both history and English, says Ryan Chang, 26, who founded the company three years ago and holds a bachelor's degree from Columbia University in economics and creative writing.

July Bookings

At least 25 kids used the service to get through Constructing America in the spring term, he says. Fall-semester students started booking in July.

Chang, whose instructors charge $125-$250 an hour, says competition is driving growth for his business, which now has about 100 clients and 20 tutors.

``Parents are worried that if they aren't doing it, it's a disadvantage to their student,'' he says. Lately, he's been turning away those who want to start their seventh- and eighth- graders on SAT preparation. The test is given in the 11th grade.

Individual instruction has ramped up all over the U.S. in the past five years, especially in California, Illinois and Texas, says Sandi Ayaz, executive director of the Lakeland, Florida-based National Tutoring Association.

Her organization is based in a state where home-schooled students are spurring demand for tutors. NTA membership, which includes private tutors, companies and others involved in administering educational services, jumped 62 percent to 4,900 this year and has risen almost sixfold since 2001, Ayaz says.

`Steroids'

In New York, the price and quantity of tutoring surpasses other regions of the country, she says. ``New York is on steroids, as usual,'' she says. Elsewhere, homework help goes for about $15 an hour from a college student and $25 from a graduate student.

Disparity in the quantity and quality of tutoring across the U.S. is deepening a divide between how wealthy and poorer kids are educated, according to Arthur Levine, who left the presidency of Columbia's Teachers College in July to head the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation in Princeton, New Jersey.

``We live in two different cultures in America,'' he says. ``The result is that we have two educational systems that are separate but not equal.''

Wealthy parents are increasingly seeking help for their children's course work and test preparation, and for selecting a prestigious preschool, filling out private school applications and narrowing a roster of potential colleges, Levine says.

Extra Services

``Everything is on the table,'' he says. ``The vast expansion in tutoring -- sometimes at an enormously high price -- is part of that phenomenon.''

Manhattan tutoring companies ratchet up their prices by offering extra services. Inspirica, which bills $225-$525 an hour, offers seminars on school admissions and has three full-time employees just to deal with parents' questions, Jacobson says.

Instructors are hired for their teaching ability, and trained how to behave professionally when they give lessons, whether in a client's Manhattan apartment, on a yacht or in a vacation home in the Hamptons or in Europe, she says.

Brig Boonswang, 34, a former investment banker at Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Inc., offers teens the use of a 42-inch (1.1- meter) flat-screen TV, one of Microsoft Corp.'s XBox 360 video game consoles and a fridge stocked with Red Bull energy drinks at his tutoring shop on East 95th Street.

Career Move

Some teens drop by four times a week and may stay hours beyond their one-hour, $250 session, he says.

Boonswang, who has a bachelor's degree in mathematics from Columbia, began tutoring as a career in 2001 after talking to Stephen Spahn, chancellor of the Dwight School on the Upper West Side, at a cocktail party. Boonswang says he was unemployed after a Brazilian Internet company for which he'd helped raise $2 million went bust.

In April 2005, he was joined at Boonswang Group by Rachel Magid, 28, a 2004 graduate of Harvard Business School who previously worked as a consultant at McKinsey & Co. The partners now employ 10 part-time tutors and aim to have the same number working full time and revenue of $3.5 million in five years.

Boonswang says his job is much more rewarding than banking ever was. Buoyant kids text-message him after receiving good grades and sometimes seek his support as late as 2 a.m., he says.

Hiring a tutor lets parents maintain a smooth relationship with their teens, says Magid ``The parents would rather us deal with the kids and the homework,'' she says. ``It cuts out an ongoing struggle between them.''

Precious Hours

Highly compensated Wall Street professionals often have little free time for their families and don't want those precious hours to be muddied with homework stress, says Kathryn Smerling, an Upper East Side-based family therapist who has a doctorate in early childhood education.

They're also competitive, driven people who see their children's success as their own, she says. ``Having your kid perform is an important aspect for many people who live in New York,'' she says. ``And there is more competition now for your kid to be a superkid.''

The surge of teenagers also means it's harder to land a place in a top high school, and students who don't manage to get good grades are more likely to be ``counseled out,'' or nudged by school guidance counselors toward less-rigorous programs, according to Bass.

Recognizing how tough their classes can be, many private schools employ learning specialists, hold study sessions and ensure teachers are available for extra help.

Horace Mann

``The school discourages extra tutoring when it's not necessary,'' says Bernice Hauser, Horace Mann's director of intercampus activities. ``We can't stop parents from seeking it.''

Julia Calabrese, 18, graduated from the Spence School on the Upper East Side in June and entered Barnard College, a women's college affiliated with Columbia, across town in August. Her math grades shot up after a tutor taught her to draw a chart of how the sine and cosine relate to the tangent in trigonometry, she says.

``I was having trouble grasping this, and the entire last term of 10th grade was trig,'' says Calabrese, who was also tutored in French.

Anxiety about college is helping fuel business at Advantage Testing Inc. on East 86th Street. Arun Alagappan, 46, president of the 20-year-old firm, is probably the city's most expensive tutor. Alagappan charges $685 for a 50-minute session -- if you can get one. The waiting list for his time sometimes stretches to two years, Advantage spokesman Charles Loxton says.

Gunning for Grades

Alagappan, who answered questions for this story via e-mail, says about half of his clients are strong students who want to get higher grades or delve deeper into material that intrigues them.

``Students are more ambitious and competitive today than they were 20 years ago, and many are now applying to colleges with truly outstanding qualifications,'' he says. Alagappan is a Harvard Law School graduate who once worked at Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, last year's top law firm for mergers and acquisitions.

A wall of academic honors isn't necessary for a good tutor, says Steven Pines, executive director of the Rockville, Maryland- based Education Industry Association. A college degree, a state teaching certificate and classroom experience can be much more relevant credentials, he says.

``You can be a great mathematician but not able to teach math,'' says Pines, who worked for 10 years at what is now called Educate Inc., the Baltimore-based owner of Sylvan Learning Centers, which has 1,200 offices around the country, including nine in New York. ``You need to be able to convey it in a way that's meaningful.''

Sacrificing Childhood

Hallowell founded a medical center in 1996 that offers treatment for attention deficit disorder, anxiety and stress. The psychiatrist encourages tutoring for children with learning problems. For other students, he says, parents may be better off banking the money and giving it to their children when they grow up and start a business.

``It's not worth it to sacrifice childhood to go to the Ivy League,'' he says.

The college admissions frenzy is at its worst in the New York metropolitan area because so many families are looking for spots in the same schools, Jacobson says. New York, New Jersey and Connecticut teens face longer odds of getting into the 25 most- selective U.S. colleges because of limits on how many are accepted from each region of the country.

Seeking Status

Princeton, which was named the top U.S. undergraduate institution this month in U.S. News & World Report's 2007 ranking of the best colleges, reported a record 17,563 applicants last year. The school accepted 10.2 percent for the class of 2010, down from 11 percent for the class of 2009, spokeswoman Cass Cliatt says. More than 7,000 of the school's applicants had high school averages of A- or better, and 95 percent of those accepted ranked in the top 10 percent of their class.

While doing better in school is the No. 1 reason people hire tutors, status can be a close second. Daniel Levine, who began tutoring in 1995 while he was playing the role of Marius in the Broadway musical Les Miserables, says parents passed his name around and bragged of their connection to a leading man. Levine, who has a bachelor's degree from Brandeis University and once planned to be a dentist, has performed as a singer, dancer and actor in seven Broadway shows.

His companies, Big Apple Tutoring and Exclusive Education, have 40 staff instructors and charge $85-$115 an hour to teach children in clients' homes.

``There's a lot of money around, and parents see that neighbors and friends are hiring tutors, too,'' Levine says. ``There's certainly no shortage of clients.''

Levine says he's just received a call from a mother seeking tutoring for a child who isn't reading well enough. The child is 5 years old.

References
Tutoring
Inspirica
Advantage Testing
Exclusive Education
Ivy League Tutors

Others
Hallowell Center
Education Conservancy
National Tutoring Association
Education Industry Association