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89.04

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Prep

“If nothing else, value the truth”

News

Volume 89, Issue 4

St. Louis University High School | Friday, September 13, 2023

sluh.org/prep-news

Volume LXXXIX, Issue IV

St. Louis University High School | Friday, September 13, 2024

sluh.org/prep-news

In With the New: Class of ’28 Bathed In Blue

At a Glance new faculty

Fitts Fitts is a perfect fit. New Director of Athletic Performance joins the brotherhood to build up fitness. Page 2

72 clubs represented at Activities Fair BY Henry Hassenstab and Hendrix Fyvie reporters

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global ed

Poland Jr. Bills have a cracking time in Krakow, exploring city’s culture. Page 3 global ed

Latvia and Lithuania Students held captive as Baltic banter goes too far. Russian students take on Latvia and Lithuania on a summer immersion trip across the pond. Page 3 sports

XC Fast and Furious 12? The SpeedBills dominated in Illinois, brings home 1st and SLUH’s all-time fastest race. Page 5 sports

Soccer To the top! SLUH soccer has almost reached the peak of St. Louis soccer, ranking 2nd in the city after a dominant week. Page 6 sports

Swim & Dive The Jr. Bills dive into a dominant win over Parkway South. Page 6 sports

Football Hungry for Moore. SLUH Football has eyes set on an exciting season after a dramatic home opener win vs. Hillsboro. Page 7 INDEX 2-4

News

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Sports

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Entertainment

The weekly student newspaper of St. Louis University High School 4970 Oakland Ave. St. Louis, MO 63110 (314) 531-0330 ext. 2241 online at sluh.org/prep-news prepnews@sluh.org ©2024 St. Louis University High School Prep News. No material may be reprinted without the permission of the editors and moderator.

photo | Kathy Chott

The blue-painted Class of 2028 roars for Zach Allen’s first touchdown. BY Thomas Juergens and Madhavan Anbukumar Core Staff, Staff

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he St. Louis U. High School campus was a sea of blue last Friday night as the Running of the Bills kicked off the football team’s first home game. This cherished event, which serves as a rite of pas-

sage for incoming freshmen, was filled with energy, enthusiasm, and blue paint. The evening began with a series of competitions between freshman advisories to help them bond and acclimate to the SLUH brotherhood. The fun started in the Field House and the Rec Room with a variety of games from ping-pong

Under Pressure: Weather balloon ventures to the edge of the world

to bashball. Freshmen also participated in a trivia contest held in the Si Commons. This lively environment set the stage for the evening’s festivities. As the evening went on, the freshmen and Senior Advisors gathered for a hearty dinner of burgers, chips, cookies, and soda

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Feature Down the drain: are paper towels already in jeopardy? BY Leo Hahn Features Editor

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he epic and long-awaited return of paper towels this school year means hands and hallways will remain dry. This monumental return comes two years after paper towels were infamously removed from St. Louis U. High restrooms as an environmental measure, but there are already talks of removing them again after a recent wave of seemingly intentional cloggings. The discussion for the return of paper towels has been taking place over a long period of time, with varying degrees of seriousness. Students and teachers alike expressed interest in their return. photo | Courtesy of Bill Anderson The weather balloon floats above Earth. “I think it was one of the things that BY Micah Doherty and down in Illinois. we had talked about almost, kind of in Lucas Hayden “Big picture is we’re looking at a joking way, in different circles around Editor in Chief, News Editor climate, and climate change,” said An- the school,” said Assistant Principal for derson. “Climate is long-term patterns, Student Life Brock Kesterson. “Some t. Louis U. High’s Environmental primarily temperature and precipita- teachers kind of wanted them back, STEM class, taught by science tion. Weather is on a given day.” and then I would have informal conteacher Bill Anderson, launched their By sending out a weather balloon versations with students like, ‘When annual weather balloon this past to take data on the wind speed, temper- are we getting our paper towels back?’” Tuesday. The balloon provided great ature, pressure, weather, among other After two years of paper towel disdata and photos alike before coming continued on page 2 pensers collecting dust in storage, they

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verything from Beyoncé to BMWs were displayed last Friday as St. Louis University High held its annual Activities Fair, an exposition event for most of SLUH’s extracurricular clubs and affinity groups. Over 70 clubs were part of the fair, which took place on the Circle Drive, and the fair was a joint venture for the Food Drive, where StuCo sold Pretzel Boys and donuts to raise money for freshman service. The Activities Fair provided an opportunity for students to explore the many clubs that SLUH has to offer. Members and faculty who participate in the clubs had tables for posters, sign up sheets, and items representing their club. “I was most interested in robotics due to my fascination with computer programming and coding,” said freshman Mack West. “The club I was the most interested in was the Bushwhacking Club, because you get to go camping and learn survival skills,” said freshman William Doerhoff. “It interested me because I have been camping since a young age and I enjoy it a lot.” The Activities Fair isn’t just

were finally reinstalled in time for the 2024-’25 school year by Director of Maintenance Rick Figge and Director of Facilities Services Joe Rankin. It’s important to note that the dispensers were only removed from the highest trafficked restrooms of the school: all M-wing, locker room, Si Commons, and theater lobby restrooms. All teacher restrooms, J-wing restrooms, and Field House restrooms were left untouched. But what caused paper towels to be removed in the first place? Two years ago an unruly student (or students) began deliberately flushing paper towels down the school toilets. Because the standard brown paper towels aren’t as biodegradable as toilet paper, this quickly created blockages in the building’s 100-year-old plumbing system. “There’s an older system, it’s all ceramic and clay piping,” said Director of Security Dan Schulte. “And that’s over $1000 to fix that clog. So, the clog is because people are putting paper towels down the toilet, not trash cans. They have to literally walk further away to make that a problem, which makes it seem pretty intentional.”

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