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St. Louis University High School - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

St. Louis University High School

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

St. Louis University High School
Religioni et Bonis Artibus
(Latin: Faith and the Fine Arts)
Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam
(Latin: For The Greater Glory of God)
Men for Others
Address
4970 Oakland Avenue
St. Louis, MO, 63110
USA
Information
Affiliation(s) Catholic, Jesuit
President Mr. David Laughlin
Principal Dr. Mary Schenkenberg
Enrollment

1070

Gender Male
School type Private secondary
Grades 9 to 12
Mascot Jr. Billiken
Yearbook The Dauphin
Newspaper The Prep News
Established 1818
Homepage

St. Louis University High School (SLUH), a Jesuit Catholic high school for boys, was founded in 1818. It is the oldest secondary educational institution in the U.S. west of the Mississippi River, and one of the largest private high schools in Missouri. It is located in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Saint Louis.

Contents

[edit] History

SLUH was founded in 1818 as St. Louis Academy. It quickly grew to include a college division, and the college was granted university status in 1832. The high school retained the identity of St. Louis Academy on the university campus until 1924 when it moved to its own facilities and incorporated separately under the name of St. Louis University High School. The school's new home, on Oakland Avenue, was a gift of Mrs. Anna Backer in memory of her late husband and alumnus George Backer. That facility, also known as Backer Memorial, has grown considerably over the years and remains the school's home. SLUH has been successful in its city location while many other private high schools have followed population moves to the western suburbs.

In 2005 SLUH hired the first lay president, David Laughlin, in its history.

[edit] Academics

In the school's class of 2006, four members attained the top score of 36 on the ACT Assessment, the most widely-accepted college entrance exam in the country.[1] Nationwide, fewer than 300 students per year attain this score (out of over 2 million tests administered). Two students in the class of 2007 have achieved the top score of 36. According to the figures released in SLUH's 2005 annual report, the average ACT score for SLUH students is over 29 and SAT over 1300, while the national average on the ACT was only 20.9 in 2005. Virtually all graduates immediately enter colleges and universities.

Students participate in many extracurriculars ranging from a superior theatre department to sports to Missouri's only weekly high school newspaper, The Prep News.

The humanities receive a strong emphasis within SLUH's curriculum, particularly evidenced in the language department, which has offered four year programs in Russian and Chinese for many years. In keeping with its strong Jesuit Catholic heritage, courses in Latin and Greek are offered, as are the popular choices of French and Spanish.

SLUH is ranked in the top seven percent of schools in the nation for highest composite ACT score.[2]

[edit] Facilities

Over the years, SLUH has been forced to expand to meet demands for new facilities and expansions that still keep it in the city. The first major expansion took place in 1956, when a new gym was built to replace the original gym in the main building. The new complex contained the enlarged gym (which is still used today), locker rooms, and several music facilities. A new library was added in 1970 and dedicated to Dr. James Robinson, a long-time history teacher at the school, who endowed it using his winnings from the Irish Sweepstakes.

In 1978, the school began soliciting funds for the "E-3" program (standing for "Education, Endowment, Expansion"), which helped to remodel the interior of the school (which had been largely unchanged from the 1940s and 50s), build up a large endowment and erect an upper field, faculty parking lot and the current football stadium on the Oakland Avenue side of the school.

1997 brought about a major refresh of the interior (a new paint scheme, new floors, several new offices and classrooms, and air-conditioning), but most importantly built the Joseph Schulte Theater/performing arts wing of the school, extending west on the Oakland side. It is named for long-time SLUH drama teacher and St. Louis theatre figure Mr. F. Joseph Schulte. The Schulte Theater has 350 permanent seats, and the capacity is expandable to 600 with the addition of bleacher seating in the balcony-like "loge" section. The theater is often rented to outside groups to perform plays and other functions.

A large recreation room was built in the basement of the Backer Memorial in 1945, and in 2001 it was formally named the Fr. Hagan Rec Room to honor Martin Hagan, S.J., a retired priest who spent more than 40 years on the SLUH faculty and was a longtime supervisor of the recreation room and rifle coach. The Fr. Hagan Rec Room includes over 20 billiard tables and also contains foosball, ping pong, bumper pool, and shuffle board. The Fr. Hagan Rec Room is a favorite hang out for students, especially freshmen, before school, during Activity Period, and after school. The SLUH Rifle Range is right next door to the Rec Room, and the Pettit Fitness Center and Weight Room is across the hall.

[edit] Vision 2000

In the late 1990s, a large capital campaign to fund growth and expansion projects began. Called VISON 2000 (V2K), the plan included reducing class sizes, better integrating technology into the curriculum and increasing class options. More resources have been poured into academic enhancements than to any other part of the V2K plan, but the most visible aspects of V2K are the construction projects.

The early phases of the program included the addition of new teaching and counseling positions in order to reduce class size and teaching loads and to expand the curriculum. Over a period of eight years, 18 new teaching and counseling positions were added.

The physical improvements began 2004 when the stadium was upgraded with the installation of artificial turf to expand its usability. That same year, a new entry boulevard to the west of the campus was constructed jointly with the adjacent St. Louis Science Center. The construction continued with the addition of a new soccer/track complex and baseball field, new campus green space and a parking lot constructed jointly with the St. Louis Science Center.

In May, 2008, construction began on the new Danis Field House. This will be a free-standing field house which will contain two gymnasium spaces, offices and meeting space for the athletic staff, and some locker facilities. An additional portion of the field house will be a space that will serve as the wrestling gym during the winter season, but will be a test-taking center and study area during the fall and spring seasons.

Upon completion of the Danis Field House (scheduled for the fall of 2009), the existing gymnasium and surrounding spaces in the current building will be renovated into a new Multi-Purpose Commons. This area will serve as a new student cafeteria. It will also be a convocation space for all-school Masses and student assemblies. Plans call for the ability to sub-divide the space to provide banquet facilities of varying sizes for alumni reunions, meetings, and other gatherings.

Once the Multi-Purpose Commons are completed, the existing cafeteria and kitchen area will be renovated. A portion of the existing cafeteria will become the new “main office” of the school. Other portions will be renovated for academic purposes. Then, the existing “main office” in the center corridor will become a new “student commons” area, with offices for student clubs and activities. This location at the center of the school will be ideal for creating this new hub of student activities.

[edit] Activities

Some of the most popular student organizations are: Community Service Program (CSP), which sends students to sites across the area to work with the poor, disabled and aged; the Sisyphus literary magazine, offered twice a year in February and April; Student Council, which chairs the seniors-only "Blue Crew" cheering section at games; and Intramurals, which runs all year and includes events such as Music Trivia, Guitar Hero, basketball, and "bashball", a sport popular among students at SLUH that is best described as a mix of rugby, ice hockey, water polo, team handball and American football.

Many students at SLUH participate in the fine arts, including chorus, dance, band, drawing, painting and ceramics. The theatre program (called the Dauphin Players), puts on four productions each year.

The school is also noted for the Senior Service Project (or Senior Project). Seniors are given three weeks away from their studies at the start of the Spring semester and work full time on a service project with a not-for-profit agency. Most projects serve in and around the St. Louis area, but also offered are projects in Honduras and other places across the globe. SLUH is one of the few schools that provides time away from studies for this type of activity, which the school sees as critical to its Jesuit mission of educating "men for others". SLUH was among the first Jesuit schools to introduce this program, doing so in 1970.

[edit] Sports and Rivalries

SLUH's athletic teams are known as the Junior Billikens, or Jr. Bills. They are very competitive in the Metro Catholic Conference and are the current holders of the All Sports Trophy for that conference.[citation needed]

[edit] Missouri state titles

They have also won the national racquetball title three times, most recently in 2004. Before the inauguration of a state-wide Missouri football title in the late 1960s, the Jr. Bills football squad won ten city championships, retiring the St. Louis Globe Democrat City/County trophy, which sits proudly in one of the trophy cases by the school's switchboard.

Its biggest rivals in athletics are two other all-male Catholic schools, De Smet Jesuit High School and Christian Brothers College High School (CBC). The De Smet rivalry is a relatively recent development, since De Smet has only been open since 1967. The fact that both schools are operated by the Jesuits, however, brings a special fervor to their competitions.

The archrivalry with CBC (est. 1850), dates back to the late 19th century. For years the schools were located just two miles apart along Oakland Avenue/Clayton Road. The intensity of the rivalry was showcased for years at an annual football game played in Busch Stadium rather than on either school's home field. That practice ended in 1995 when Busch Stadium was remodelled into a baseball-only facility. The soccer rivalry has heated up in the last decade. In 2003, when both schools had nationally-ranked soccer teams, the district playoff between them was attended by over 6,000 fans. Perhaps the signature event of the rivalry is the Running of the Bills, an annual event during which many members of the student body run to a football game from near by Forest Park clad in blue paint to cheer on the Jr. Bill football team.

SLUH also competitively participates in many academic sports, such as math contests, Math League, Speech Team, Mock Trial and Quizbowl (Academic Team). SLUH has placed as the top scoring high school in the Missouri chapter of Math League for five years running.[3] The Quizbowl team of 2006-07 won the title for SLUH's district, won second place at the state competition, and won the individual second place medal at the state level.[4]

SLUH's Latin Club also competes yearly in Missouri Junior Classical League's Certamen competition in Columbia Missouri. In 2007, both the freshmen and varsity team took first place.

The school is one of very few in the area to have a rifle range and team. The "Riflebills" have won many awards over the years, including national titles, in both .22 calibre smallbore rifle and air rifle competitions. In 2007, the team switched to the exclusive use of air rifles, due to a lack of interscholastic competition available in smallbore rifle.

[edit] Notable alumni

Business
Clergy
Entertainment
Government
U.S. Sacagawea dollar coin, showing Charbonneau on his mother's back
U.S. Sacagawea dollar coin, showing Charbonneau on his mother's back
Historical
Humanitarianism/Activism
Journalism
  • Greg Burke, reporter for Fox News Rome bureau.[30]
Military
Science
Sports

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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