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== Athletics ==
== Athletics ==
The Athledics at city have no longer been good the are now bad so the can go away no one likes the school they have a high crime rate they constantally recriut for there teams witch are bad yet they still insist on recruiting and kicking off the "good Players"
''Sports Illustrated'' listed City High as the top sports school in the state of Iowa, citing the school's dominant track and cross country teams.{{Fact|date=July 2008}} The boys and girls cross country teams have won more than 20 state championships since 1990.{{Fact|date=July 2008}} State titles for Boys Cross Country include titles in 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, and 2000.{{Fact|date=July 2008}} The girls have been toward the top the last few years, including a state title in 2006.{{Fact|date=July 2008}}

Other sports that have won state titles since 1989 include Girls' Volleyball (1998,2007),{{Fact|date=July 2008}} Football (1993, 1994, 1996),{{Fact|date=July 2008}} Boy's Basketball (1989, 2008),{{Fact|date=July 2008}} Girl's Basketball (2008),{{Fact|date=July 2008}} Wrestling (1992, 1999, 2002),{{Fact|date=July 2008}} Boys Tennis (1999){{Fact|date=July 2008}} and numerous Boys and Girls Track state titles.{{Fact|date=July 2008}} City High has achieved the honor of being the second school in Iowa's history, and only 4-A school, to win state titles in one sport for both girls and boys teams.{{Fact|date=July 2008}}


== Student Journalism ==
== Student Journalism ==

Revision as of 01:09, 21 November 2008

City High School, Iowa City, Iowa.
City High School
Address
Map
1900 Morningside Drive

,
Information
Typepublic
Established1938
PrincipalMark Hanson
Grades9-12
Number of studentsapprox. 1600
Color(s)Red and White
MascotLouie the Little Hawk
AffiliationMississippi Valley Conference
Websitehttp://www.iowacityhigh.org

City High School is a public high school in Iowa City, Iowa. It was founded in 1938 as part of the Public Works Projects started by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to provide jobs. The first classes were held in the fall of 1939. The first high school building was converted to a junior high school after the new building opened. It was located where Mercy Medical Plaza now stands. The new building sits atop a hill on the east side of Iowa City and the tip of the bell tower is said to be the tallest point in Iowa City. The school motto is "The School that Leads."


History

City High School was built through the Public Works Projects, one of many other programs formed in Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal package. City High would become the second high school to be built in Iowa City, as the older one was becoming overcrowded as the population of the city increased. To determine the new location of the school, Iowa City residents had to vote whether to build the school in a central location, closer to the existing high school, or in a morningside location, which was the name of the street which it would be built by, out of town on the city's east side. The morningside location was favored, and the school was built on top of a large hill outside of town. Over time, the city's suburban expansion reached the school, enclosed it, and the expanded past it. Now, City High School is a landlocked school.

Athletics

The Athledics at city have no longer been good the are now bad so the can go away no one likes the school they have a high crime rate they constantally recriut for there teams witch are bad yet they still insist on recruiting and kicking off the "good Players"

Student Journalism

City High is home to three student publications, The Little Hawk, the Scribe and Red and White. City High's journalism department was also a charter member of international journalism society Quill and Scroll.[citation needed]

  • The Little Hawk, a monthly newspaper, has earned more National Pacemaker Awards than any other newspaper in the nation.[citation needed] The newspaper was most successful in state and national competitions in the late 1980s and 1990s under adviser Jack Kennedy, who now advises the student newspaper, The Rock, at Rock Canyon High School in Highlands Ranch, Colorado. During Kennedy's fourteen-year tenure as adviser, The Little Hawk earned eleven Pacemaker Awards.[1] The most recent Pacemaker Award to The Little Hawk was awarded in 2000, the year after his departure.[2]
  • The Scribe is a literary magazine open to submissions from all students. Work for the Scribe is entirely extra-curricular and includes poems, essays, photos and drawings.
  • The Red and White is City High's annual yearbook.

Other Accomplishments

References