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@hie ftain
Their 5-1 streak was halted over Sycamore on September 13. Sycamore was ahead 1-0 until coaching position for the remain- Vo.34N0.3
at the worst possible time by Goals were scored bv junior Lee the third quarter when the der of the season.
Loveland, 4-2, in the opening Baumes, Hall, and Craig. Squaws came back strong to fin-
October 5,1984
round of the EHL tournament lndian Hill High School
last Saturday. I t dashed their
hopes for a possible victory.
JV kickers lose close one to 9-1-1 Moeller Cincinnati, Ohio 45243
The Squaws led 2-0 at half- the Braves' defense at goalie. level wh~ch we have exhibited
time with goals by sophomore by Chris Kemczinski As IH approaches the tail through our last five games, we
Kathy Ott and freshman Kelly The JV soccer Braves have end of their season, if "we should end on a winning note,"
Ovington, but the Tigers came
back to lead 3-2. The Squaws
hoped to tie the score, but with
been playing some tremendous
soccer of late
In IH's most recent game
continue to play at the peak said coach Steve Thompson.
Band wins Roaer Bacon contest V
only performed in exhibition at
its own contest.
b y Paul Monach
50 seconds remaining the Tigers against the 9-1-1 Moeller Crusa- I T T -
Commented Strider, "This
were granted a penalty shot,
which goalie Cadi Cucinotta failed
ders, the JV lost 3-0 after a hard-
fought battle. That evened
The marching band notched
perhaps i t s biggest victory in win-
-"
"What makes Indian Hill so good? Its emphasis on mark of Indian Hill education. by Matt Feltman finish, so they had no team
The boys' cross country team score.
a liberal education with a well-rounded curriculum Freedom to experience responsibility and room t o ran in the final EHL meet last Junior David Ahlert led the
that meets the needs of several levels of students (and grow inside oneself is also a key to liberal education. Tuesday, held at Glen Este. way for IH in ninth place
not just rich ones)." This quotation from the August However, in the past few years, restrictions and rules The Braves finished fifth, re- and a time of 18:OO.
issue of Cincinnati Magazine reflects the manner in taining their placement of last IH ran at Wyoming only to
have been created by the administration or by the find steep hills and their un-
year.
which the rest of the world views Indian Hill. state hierarchy. Mariemont just narrowed out conditioned selves on September
One phrase in particular which catches the reader's Rules created to protect students often are oppres- IH with a score of 132 to the 25. On the 3.4 mile course
eye is "liberal education." Upon reading the passage, sive and enforced simply for the purpose of "going by Braves' 138. The winners, Monach again placed first for
Glen Este, had a score of 40. the Braves with a time of 21 :26.
the students in us questioned what sort of education the book." Whether "the book" is right is of no con- Milford, the team predicted to A t the Ross Invitational the
we were receiving. Does liberal education really exist sequence, of course. The only people who question win, wound up second with 42 running Braves placed eighth out
at Indian Hill? "the book" are the students, but students have no points. of 11 teams with a combined
Among the student body, the opportunity for a IH's lead runner was senior score of 190. McNicholas won
say because many responsibilities that have given
Paul Monach with a time of the meet with 57 points. Again
liberal education is available, yet hard to obtain. In- them a say in the past have been taken away by con- 18:45, good for 2lst place. Not Ahlert was the pacesetter for IH,
teraction among all types of students is needed in a servative administrative restrictions. far behind was freshman Mark running in 15th place and a time
liberal education, so one can learn how to cope in a The teaching staff at Indian Hill is excellent and Young, who ran a 19:20 and of 19: 14. He was closely follow-
finished in 24th place. ed by Monach, who received
society which is racially and ideologically separated. does its best to offer a fine liberal education. The Coach Enid Redman summar- 22nd place and a time of 19:21.
The make-up of the student body at IH offers only a pressure exerted by the administration, though, is ized the meet by saying, "The With the season coming to a
limited social background. Integration is not a hall- harmful to the educational process. For example, the field was extremely tough but the close, IH only has two meets left
team did well against the fine on the regular schedule. The
editorial lesson plan system locks a teacher into a tiresome in- competition." New Richmond Invitational is on
doctrination which trains the pupil by rote. Heaven
Y@
On September 27 the Braves Monday, which should serve as a
forbid a teacher ever find an inspiration, and use an ran in a quadrangular meet with tune-up for sectionals, which will
photo by Mariano Fernandez
Glen Este, Hamilton, and CAPE. be held next Saturday, September
Last year a minor furor errupted over the manda- untried approach. After all, no student can acquire I H placed third with a score of
Junior David Ahlert (left) strains to stay ahead of his Glen Este oppon-
ent in last week's home quadrangular. 16.
tory inclusion of basic skills tests in all courses. Many anything from liberal teaching, except for maybe a 85.
teachers were understandably irked that their grading liberal education.
practices were deemed inadequate for determining The answer to the original question, therefore, is Hockey Squaws down Oakwood a second time
whether a student was passing a course. The grumb- yes, liberal education does exist at Indian Hill, but it
by Anne Richards on Talwanda's side of the 50-yard
ling died down quickly, though, because, as has been is laboring hard under the approach the administra- The varsity field hockey line for the vast part of the game,
noted many times, the practice was only begun at the tion takes toward instruction. The administration's Squaws, 5-3, are doing much bet- aiding junior goalie Linda Keller
insistence of those eminent public servants at the approach may win national "excellence" in education ter than their record would sug- in getting her first shutout.
gest. In their most recent game, The previous game the Squaws
Ohio Department of Education. awards, but it sacrifices liberal education in the they beat Oakwood, 2-0. Both travelled to Seven Hills and beat
No state edict has yet been quoted, however, to process. goals were scored by senior Gay them, 9-1. The scorers were
justify the most recent breach of faith in teachers' Stauft. The Squaws were excited Stauft (51, Wiatt, Kohls, Amy
about this victory especially be- Albl, and Anne Richards.
abilities, the required "course syllabus." This re- cause Oakwood i s the team they This win left IH 3-0 in the
quires each teacher to write and distribute a formal will play In the first round ot sec- league. Coach Carol Wehmann
outline of subject matter, textbooks, expectations, Chieftain is written and composed, printed and sold as an extracur- tional~. IH defeated Oakwood is pleased with the overall perfor-
ricular activity by the students of Indian Hill High School, 6845 Drake earlier in the season, 2-1. mance of tne teani, ~ l u she
t feels
and grading practices. Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45243 5 6 1 4 2 2 5 .
For the Oakwood game the that "they have a lot of work
The usefulness of the syllabus is dubious. As one Sponsor: Wm. P. Kincaid; Editors: Ken Jones, Paul Monach; News
Editors: Anna Batsakes, David Cook; Features Editors: Tracy Megi- Squaws were coming off a tough ahead of them in order to ad-
photo by Mariano Fernandez
Seniors Missy Milligan and Anne Richards (center) bring the ball up-
teacher pointed out, the collected syllabi could be son, Janet Nicolas; Sports Editors: Brian Rowe, Kevin Walzer; Maga- loss to Fairmont, 6-0. This i s the vance to state competition."
field in IH's 6-0 loss to Fairmont.
zine Editors: Ellen Alvord, Joel Ruff; Business Manager: Kelly Martin;
useful to a student new to the district; granted, but second time the Squaws have
isn't this process already taken care of by the Course
Circulation Manager: Davis Griffin; Production Managers: MaryBeth
Heidrich, Dan Rosenthal; Assistant Production Manager: Arianna New- been defeated by the state champ- Koulouris confident for Sycamore win Eagles thumped the Braves 26-8.
man; Typesetter: Karen Wiedemer; Photographers: T o m Taylor, Scott ions, who account for two of by Kevin Walzer their last three games. They won "They are a powerful team,"
Offerings Handbook and the Counseling Department? Blanchard, Mariano Fernandez; Contributors: Elizabeth Gorman, IH's three losses. It looks like "Tomorrow we win," said JV one, came an extra-point away said Koulouris. "They beat
James Gruskin, Peter Wilke, Kym Sollinger, Jeff Currier, Anne Rich-
Indeed, the syllabi appear only to be a glorified, ards, Jeff Gibson, Marci. Jacobson, James Anderson, Tiffany Meyer,
the Squaws will have t o defeat football coach Greg Koulouris. from winning another-and got Sycamore 36-0."
Fairmont in districts before they "Put that in there. Coach Kou- whaled on in the third. Does that give rise to hope
color-coded Course Offerings Handbook. Chris Kempczinski, Allison Claybon, Paula Lyon. Alissa Raleigh, Peter
against the Aviators tomorrow ?...
Batsakes, Matt Feltman; Production Staff: K y m Sollinger, Elizabeth can go to state. louris predicts that the Braves The game Koulouris described
Worse, the new policy serves not only no purpose Gorman, James Anderson, Jamie Winget, Marci Jacobson, Warren Hill, The game before that was a will beat Sycamore.' " as "the heartbreaker" was last They got shut out, IH did not ?...
but also a negative one. Teachers inevitably outline Rob Seal, Jenny Lippold, Barbara Hug, Angela Beattie, Suzanne Luns-
ford, Alex Overhoff.
win against Talwanda, 7-0. Five Who else would they be play- week, when Glen Este edged IH "Like I said, we will win,"
their grading policies at the beginning of school, goals were scored in the first ing? What other opponent lights 30-28. "So close...so close!" said Koulouris.
half by seniors Amy Wiatt, the fire in Koulouris' eyes? None he murmured. "See, we were Was this said before or after
and students discover academic and behaviorial
expectations early. Some teachers even hand out
Sophomores eligible for O'Brian Award Stauft (who had two) and but the arch-rival Aviators. down 22-8 at halftime, and came IH's 18-8 win over Deer Park
Missy Kohls (2). Stauft and "tt's a pretty strong predic- back to tie at 22-then they went three weeks ago? Well, after,
Applications are now avail- written questions and through
more complete and informative outlines of subject able to sophomores who want an interview with past Hugh
Kohls scored in the second half tion," conceded the coach of the ahead 30-22. Then we scored a actually, but the romt, over the
as we1I. 2-3 Braves. "But we have a pretty touchdown-and missed the extra Wildcats could have given cre-
matter. in fact, the mandatory course syllabus be- to attend the Hugh 0' Brian 0' Brian award winners, tea- The varsity used their ability strong team." point." dence t o Koulouris' kimilar pre-
trays a lack of confidence in the judgment of the seminar in Columbus this chers, and administrators. Ap-
and quickness to outwit the Tal- Indeed. So close, so close. diction three weeks ago. He said
spring. The Hugh 0' Brian plications must be turned in
teachers; we should treat them as what they are: wanda team for most of the six- Well, at least, the Braves have IH's loss to Milford two weeks the Braves would win that game,
delegate will be chosen on the by Friday, October 12. came close ro winning twice in
adult professionals. ty minutes. They kept the ball ago wasn't quite as close as the too.
basis of his responses to three
Page 10 CHIEFTAIN October 5, 1984 October 5,1984 CHIEFTAIN - Page 3
30 years of IH-Sycamore t o end tonight given Deer Park two more TDs.
Visiting
Kym
Spaniards get taste
by sobnger - .
Five Spanish exchange stu-
; : ; ; ;U
; : ; ; ; ; : :of : :S
:ri :::::
February or are considering parti-
cipating in the exchange this year.
serves as IH
tobacco products i n Ohio." l am Thompson and his supporters
scored a point off them since
1981. Anyone commenting on
opposed t o this new law because I what the difference i s for an adult Education by Department
Brian Rowe honors
tion, and currently De-
Tirey establishes
around the tri-state area and i s Rhoad, violin; senior Scott Sew- The first doubles team of we play under pressure, and the
a- division
- .
- of the Pre~aratorv ard, trumpet; and sophomore
Jeff Tuckey , percussion. CYSO members from IH: (1. to I.) Scott Seward, Bill Haffner, Bill
Neely Mack and Debbie Horton players rose t o the occasion," she
I
tournament
Department of Cincinnati's solidly beat their opponents commented.
College Conservatory of Music.
"CYSO has been a great Creedon, Karen Rhoad, Doug Backus, Jeff Currier, Ken Jones (im- 6-4, 6-2, while the second The day before the Centerville by Joy Rowe
It i s sponsored by the Cincinnati experience. It has given me a poster), Stephanie Hug, Rob Nichols, Janet Nicolas; not present: doubles team of Beth Myers match, I H played another diffi- For the first time ever there saying that the reasou there isn't
Symphony Orchestra (CSO). chance t o play professional music Barbara Hug, Jeff Tuckey, Brad Adrien- and Sona Tipnis won as well, cult match against Fairmont, will be an Ohio Girls Coaches a tournament presently is because
Instead the couple moved to travel because "you want t o see geot twelve-speed. Years on both the Legend staff photo by Torn Taylor
something different from what Before taking off on his daily trek, Eric conscientiously prepares for
Philadelphia after her husband In fact, Eric admits that "cy- and Student Government. Eric his next English assignment.
completed his masters. They you've got. That's how you ap-
started a family with the birth of
senior sketch
their son John and later, daughter
Anna Maria. Travel enthusiast her settles down at IH.'
photo by T o m Taylor
see SHAER p. 8 Fun-loving Valkyrie just waiting to hop out
movie review by Tracy Megison one should go." perience in high school. "You Mickey feels that the great out-
I t could easily be labeled as a bor- emotions are rarely revealed. The Most of us think we know On the academic side of life, get to meet a lot of differ !nt pouring of time, sweat, and ener-
'September' proves worthwhile ing love story, because of the
movie's thoughtless dialogue. I n
same criticism may be aimed at
Allen, except t o a lesser extent.
Mickey Kamfjord. American
through-and-through, right? Tall,
Mickey enjoys her involvement
in her studies and in the champ-
people. We work really hard, but
it pays off in the end- 'cause we
gy i s definitely worth it. "When
-. - .. the Band wins a competition, the
by Janet Nicolas dinner. addition, although Karen Allen i s Until September can be criti- intelligent, with rosy cheeks- ionship IH Band. win a lot, too." feeling is in-gredible. It's such a1
Until September i s a movie of I n i t i d y , Xavier appears every supposedly a "step up" from her cized for many reasons, but it everything Mom could want. Mickey considers her parti- As a mallet player in the no- za, and the whole Band feels it."
broken hearts and broken lives. b i t the gentleman, but this illu- performance i n Raiders of the also has some better features. right? Wrong. cipation in Band her best ex- toriously wild Drum Section,
Turnina to Mickev's
- other ac-
--
Filmed i n Paris, France, the film sion is soon shattered when he Lost Ark, her acting is not espe- The two characters are believable Lurking beneath that deceiv-
3 - - -
:\
no one is home. Flustered and cides to leave him when his wife Xavier de LaPeroux, as Lher- . ~ itd is n o t meant to be the ac- really good experience," left her people. Like there was this
confused, she sits down and pon- returns from her vacation. mitte acted the part, was rude and tion-packed adventure or enter-
ders what she should do. She Xavier soon realizes that he unfeeling throughout most o f the taining comedy that many films
with "a sense of independence
that you just can't get anywhere
7FK4( * 3 " ; Black Lesbian Convention once....
oh, never mind."
soon meets up with Xavier de
LaPeroux, played by Frenchman
Thierry Lhermitte, who takes the
does not love his wife, but that
he loves Mo. In the final chase
scene, Xavim catches Mo at the
movie, yet he changes drastically
at the end, becoming a caring and
loving man. The audience is left
are. If you are willing to accept
the faults and experience the
movie for what it is, an emotional
else. When you're in Europe, you
have to be self-reliant. To live in
another culture i s a really differ-
:'( %
t.
.
Instead the couple moved to travel because "you want t o see geot twelve-speed. Years on both the Legend staff photo by Torn Taylor
something different from what Before taking off on his daily trek, Eric conscientiously prepares for
Philadelphia after her husband In fact, Eric admits that "cy- and Student Government. Eric his next English assignment.
completed his masters. They you've got. That's how you ap-
started a family with the birth of
senior sketch
their son John and later, daughter
Anna Maria. Travel enthusiast her settles down at IH.'
photo by T o m Taylor
see SHAER p. 8 Fun-loving Valkyrie just waiting to hop out
movie review by Tracy Megison one should go." perience in high school. "You Mickey feels that the great out-
I t could easily be labeled as a bor- emotions are rarely revealed. The Most of us think we know On the academic side of life, get to meet a lot of differ !nt pouring of time, sweat, and ener-
'September' proves worthwhile ing love story, because of the
movie's thoughtless dialogue. I n
same criticism may be aimed at
Allen, except t o a lesser extent.
Mickey Kamfjord. American
through-and-through, right? Tall,
Mickey enjoys her involvement
in her studies and in the champ-
people. We work really hard, but
it pays off in the end- 'cause we
gy i s definitely worth it. "When
-. - .. the Band wins a competition, the
by Janet Nicolas dinner. addition, although Karen Allen i s Until September can be criti- intelligent, with rosy cheeks- ionship IH Band. win a lot, too." feeling is in-gredible. It's such a1
Until September i s a movie of I n i t i d y , Xavier appears every supposedly a "step up" from her cized for many reasons, but it everything Mom could want. Mickey considers her parti- As a mallet player in the no- za, and the whole Band feels it."
broken hearts and broken lives. b i t the gentleman, but this illu- performance i n Raiders of the also has some better features. right? Wrong. cipation in Band her best ex- toriously wild Drum Section,
Turnina to Mickev's
- other ac-
--
Filmed i n Paris, France, the film sion is soon shattered when he Lost Ark, her acting is not espe- The two characters are believable Lurking beneath that deceiv-
3 - - -
:\
no one is home. Flustered and cides to leave him when his wife Xavier de LaPeroux, as Lher- . ~ itd is n o t meant to be the ac- really good experience," left her people. Like there was this
confused, she sits down and pon- returns from her vacation. mitte acted the part, was rude and tion-packed adventure or enter-
ders what she should do. She Xavier soon realizes that he unfeeling throughout most o f the taining comedy that many films
with "a sense of independence
that you just can't get anywhere
7FK4( * 3 " ; Black Lesbian Convention once....
oh, never mind."
soon meets up with Xavier de
LaPeroux, played by Frenchman
Thierry Lhermitte, who takes the
does not love his wife, but that
he loves Mo. In the final chase
scene, Xavim catches Mo at the
movie, yet he changes drastically
at the end, becoming a caring and
loving man. The audience is left
are. If you are willing to accept
the faults and experience the
movie for what it is, an emotional
else. When you're in Europe, you
have to be self-reliant. To live in
another culture i s a really differ-
:'( %
t.
.
Tirey establishes
around the tri-state area and i s Rhoad, violin; senior Scott Sew- The first doubles team of we play under pressure, and the
a- division
- .
- of the Pre~aratorv ard, trumpet; and sophomore
Jeff Tuckey , percussion. CYSO members from IH: (1. to I.) Scott Seward, Bill Haffner, Bill
Neely Mack and Debbie Horton players rose t o the occasion," she
I
tournament
Department of Cincinnati's solidly beat their opponents commented.
College Conservatory of Music.
"CYSO has been a great Creedon, Karen Rhoad, Doug Backus, Jeff Currier, Ken Jones (im- 6-4, 6-2, while the second The day before the Centerville by Joy Rowe
It i s sponsored by the Cincinnati experience. It has given me a poster), Stephanie Hug, Rob Nichols, Janet Nicolas; not present: doubles team of Beth Myers match, I H played another diffi- For the first time ever there saying that the reasou there isn't
Symphony Orchestra (CSO). chance t o play professional music Barbara Hug, Jeff Tuckey, Brad Adrien- and Sona Tipnis won as well, cult match against Fairmont, will be an Ohio Girls Coaches a tournament presently is because
30 years of IH-Sycamore t o end tonight given Deer Park two more TDs.
Visiting
Kym
Spaniards get taste
by sobnger - .
Five Spanish exchange stu-
; : ; ; ;U
; : ; ; ; ; : :of : :S
:ri :::::
February or are considering parti-
cipating in the exchange this year.
serves as IH
tobacco products i n Ohio." l am Thompson and his supporters
scored a point off them since
1981. Anyone commenting on
opposed t o this new law because I what the difference i s for an adult Education by Department
Brian Rowe honors
tion, and currently De-
"What makes Indian Hill so good? Its emphasis on mark of Indian Hill education. by Matt Feltman finish, so they had no team
The boys' cross country team score.
a liberal education with a well-rounded curriculum Freedom to experience responsibility and room t o ran in the final EHL meet last Junior David Ahlert led the
that meets the needs of several levels of students (and grow inside oneself is also a key to liberal education. Tuesday, held at Glen Este. way for IH in ninth place
not just rich ones)." This quotation from the August However, in the past few years, restrictions and rules The Braves finished fifth, re- and a time of 18:OO.
issue of Cincinnati Magazine reflects the manner in taining their placement of last IH ran at Wyoming only to
have been created by the administration or by the find steep hills and their un-
year.
which the rest of the world views Indian Hill. state hierarchy. Mariemont just narrowed out conditioned selves on September
One phrase in particular which catches the reader's Rules created to protect students often are oppres- IH with a score of 132 to the 25. On the 3.4 mile course
eye is "liberal education." Upon reading the passage, sive and enforced simply for the purpose of "going by Braves' 138. The winners, Monach again placed first for
Glen Este, had a score of 40. the Braves with a time of 21 :26.
the students in us questioned what sort of education the book." Whether "the book" is right is of no con- Milford, the team predicted to A t the Ross Invitational the
we were receiving. Does liberal education really exist sequence, of course. The only people who question win, wound up second with 42 running Braves placed eighth out
at Indian Hill? "the book" are the students, but students have no points. of 11 teams with a combined
Among the student body, the opportunity for a IH's lead runner was senior score of 190. McNicholas won
say because many responsibilities that have given
Paul Monach with a time of the meet with 57 points. Again
liberal education is available, yet hard to obtain. In- them a say in the past have been taken away by con- 18:45, good for 2lst place. Not Ahlert was the pacesetter for IH,
teraction among all types of students is needed in a servative administrative restrictions. far behind was freshman Mark running in 15th place and a time
liberal education, so one can learn how to cope in a The teaching staff at Indian Hill is excellent and Young, who ran a 19:20 and of 19: 14. He was closely follow-
finished in 24th place. ed by Monach, who received
society which is racially and ideologically separated. does its best to offer a fine liberal education. The Coach Enid Redman summar- 22nd place and a time of 19:21.
The make-up of the student body at IH offers only a pressure exerted by the administration, though, is ized the meet by saying, "The With the season coming to a
limited social background. Integration is not a hall- harmful to the educational process. For example, the field was extremely tough but the close, IH only has two meets left
team did well against the fine on the regular schedule. The
editorial lesson plan system locks a teacher into a tiresome in- competition." New Richmond Invitational is on
doctrination which trains the pupil by rote. Heaven
Y@
On September 27 the Braves Monday, which should serve as a
forbid a teacher ever find an inspiration, and use an ran in a quadrangular meet with tune-up for sectionals, which will
photo by Mariano Fernandez
Glen Este, Hamilton, and CAPE. be held next Saturday, September
Last year a minor furor errupted over the manda- untried approach. After all, no student can acquire I H placed third with a score of
Junior David Ahlert (left) strains to stay ahead of his Glen Este oppon-
ent in last week's home quadrangular. 16.
tory inclusion of basic skills tests in all courses. Many anything from liberal teaching, except for maybe a 85.
teachers were understandably irked that their grading liberal education.
practices were deemed inadequate for determining The answer to the original question, therefore, is Hockey Squaws down Oakwood a second time
whether a student was passing a course. The grumb- yes, liberal education does exist at Indian Hill, but it
by Anne Richards on Talwanda's side of the 50-yard
ling died down quickly, though, because, as has been is laboring hard under the approach the administra- The varsity field hockey line for the vast part of the game,
noted many times, the practice was only begun at the tion takes toward instruction. The administration's Squaws, 5-3, are doing much bet- aiding junior goalie Linda Keller
insistence of those eminent public servants at the approach may win national "excellence" in education ter than their record would sug- in getting her first shutout.
gest. In their most recent game, The previous game the Squaws
Ohio Department of Education. awards, but it sacrifices liberal education in the they beat Oakwood, 2-0. Both travelled to Seven Hills and beat
No state edict has yet been quoted, however, to process. goals were scored by senior Gay them, 9-1. The scorers were
justify the most recent breach of faith in teachers' Stauft. The Squaws were excited Stauft (51, Wiatt, Kohls, Amy
about this victory especially be- Albl, and Anne Richards.
abilities, the required "course syllabus." This re- cause Oakwood i s the team they This win left IH 3-0 in the
quires each teacher to write and distribute a formal will play In the first round ot sec- league. Coach Carol Wehmann
outline of subject matter, textbooks, expectations, Chieftain is written and composed, printed and sold as an extracur- tional~. IH defeated Oakwood is pleased with the overall perfor-
ricular activity by the students of Indian Hill High School, 6845 Drake earlier in the season, 2-1. mance of tne teani, ~ l u she
t feels
and grading practices. Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45243 5 6 1 4 2 2 5 .
For the Oakwood game the that "they have a lot of work
The usefulness of the syllabus is dubious. As one Sponsor: Wm. P. Kincaid; Editors: Ken Jones, Paul Monach; News
Editors: Anna Batsakes, David Cook; Features Editors: Tracy Megi- Squaws were coming off a tough ahead of them in order to ad-
photo by Mariano Fernandez
Seniors Missy Milligan and Anne Richards (center) bring the ball up-
teacher pointed out, the collected syllabi could be son, Janet Nicolas; Sports Editors: Brian Rowe, Kevin Walzer; Maga- loss to Fairmont, 6-0. This i s the vance to state competition."
field in IH's 6-0 loss to Fairmont.
zine Editors: Ellen Alvord, Joel Ruff; Business Manager: Kelly Martin;
useful to a student new to the district; granted, but second time the Squaws have
isn't this process already taken care of by the Course
Circulation Manager: Davis Griffin; Production Managers: MaryBeth
Heidrich, Dan Rosenthal; Assistant Production Manager: Arianna New- been defeated by the state champ- Koulouris confident for Sycamore win Eagles thumped the Braves 26-8.
man; Typesetter: Karen Wiedemer; Photographers: T o m Taylor, Scott ions, who account for two of by Kevin Walzer their last three games. They won "They are a powerful team,"
Offerings Handbook and the Counseling Department? Blanchard, Mariano Fernandez; Contributors: Elizabeth Gorman, IH's three losses. It looks like "Tomorrow we win," said JV one, came an extra-point away said Koulouris. "They beat
James Gruskin, Peter Wilke, Kym Sollinger, Jeff Currier, Anne Rich-
Indeed, the syllabi appear only to be a glorified, ards, Jeff Gibson, Marci. Jacobson, James Anderson, Tiffany Meyer,
the Squaws will have t o defeat football coach Greg Koulouris. from winning another-and got Sycamore 36-0."
Fairmont in districts before they "Put that in there. Coach Kou- whaled on in the third. Does that give rise to hope
color-coded Course Offerings Handbook. Chris Kempczinski, Allison Claybon, Paula Lyon. Alissa Raleigh, Peter
against the Aviators tomorrow ?...
Batsakes, Matt Feltman; Production Staff: K y m Sollinger, Elizabeth can go to state. louris predicts that the Braves The game Koulouris described
Worse, the new policy serves not only no purpose Gorman, James Anderson, Jamie Winget, Marci Jacobson, Warren Hill, The game before that was a will beat Sycamore.' " as "the heartbreaker" was last They got shut out, IH did not ?...
but also a negative one. Teachers inevitably outline Rob Seal, Jenny Lippold, Barbara Hug, Angela Beattie, Suzanne Luns-
ford, Alex Overhoff.
win against Talwanda, 7-0. Five Who else would they be play- week, when Glen Este edged IH "Like I said, we will win,"
their grading policies at the beginning of school, goals were scored in the first ing? What other opponent lights 30-28. "So close...so close!" said Koulouris.
half by seniors Amy Wiatt, the fire in Koulouris' eyes? None he murmured. "See, we were Was this said before or after
and students discover academic and behaviorial
expectations early. Some teachers even hand out
Sophomores eligible for O'Brian Award Stauft (who had two) and but the arch-rival Aviators. down 22-8 at halftime, and came IH's 18-8 win over Deer Park
Missy Kohls (2). Stauft and "tt's a pretty strong predic- back to tie at 22-then they went three weeks ago? Well, after,
Applications are now avail- written questions and through
more complete and informative outlines of subject able to sophomores who want an interview with past Hugh
Kohls scored in the second half tion," conceded the coach of the ahead 30-22. Then we scored a actually, but the romt, over the
as we1I. 2-3 Braves. "But we have a pretty touchdown-and missed the extra Wildcats could have given cre-
matter. in fact, the mandatory course syllabus be- to attend the Hugh 0' Brian 0' Brian award winners, tea- The varsity used their ability strong team." point." dence t o Koulouris' kimilar pre-
trays a lack of confidence in the judgment of the seminar in Columbus this chers, and administrators. Ap-
and quickness to outwit the Tal- Indeed. So close, so close. diction three weeks ago. He said
spring. The Hugh 0' Brian plications must be turned in
teachers; we should treat them as what they are: wanda team for most of the six- Well, at least, the Braves have IH's loss to Milford two weeks the Braves would win that game,
delegate will be chosen on the by Friday, October 12. came close ro winning twice in
adult professionals. ty minutes. They kept the ball ago wasn't quite as close as the too.
basis of his responses to three
(c
Page 12 CHIEFTAlN October 5,1984 b
1
@hie ftain
Their 5-1 streak was halted over Sycamore on September 13. Sycamore was ahead 1-0 until coaching position for the remain- Vo.34N0.3
at the worst possible time by Goals were scored bv junior Lee the third quarter when the der of the season.
Loveland, 4-2, in the opening Baumes, Hall, and Craig. Squaws came back strong to fin-
October 5,1984
round of the EHL tournament lndian Hill High School
last Saturday. I t dashed their
hopes for a possible victory.
JV kickers lose close one to 9-1-1 Moeller Cincinnati, Ohio 45243
The Squaws led 2-0 at half- the Braves' defense at goalie. level wh~ch we have exhibited
time with goals by sophomore by Chris Kemczinski As IH approaches the tail through our last five games, we
Kathy Ott and freshman Kelly The JV soccer Braves have end of their season, if "we should end on a winning note,"
Ovington, but the Tigers came
back to lead 3-2. The Squaws
hoped to tie the score, but with
been playing some tremendous
soccer of late
In IH's most recent game
continue to play at the peak said coach Steve Thompson.
Band wins Roaer Bacon contest V
only performed in exhibition at
its own contest.
b y Paul Monach
50 seconds remaining the Tigers against the 9-1-1 Moeller Crusa- I T T -
Commented Strider, "This
were granted a penalty shot,
which goalie Cadi Cucinotta failed
ders, the JV lost 3-0 after a hard-
fought battle. That evened
The marching band notched
perhaps i t s biggest victory in win-
-"