OHIO VALLEY REGION
ANNUAL REPORT
1999-2000
The past year has been busy but gone smoothly in the Ohio Valley region. No
major problems or concerns have come to my attention; membership has remained
strong and the state VPs have functioned as efficiently as I have come to
expect from these loyal and capable colleagues. WV's Charles Lloyd and OH's
John Sarkissian report positive developments. CPL proposals for 2000 from each
state have arisen and been put in the pipeline at the time of this writing.
Regional membership issues were addressed, especially by way of hortatory notes
to non-renewing member.
Appreciative correspondence to follow up on the highly successful 1999 CAMWS
meeting in Cleveland was completed. Letters of congratulations were sent to
successful contestants, both students and teachers, in various CAMWS
competitions (e.g. Translation Contest, Stewart Scholarship). A full report on
the 1999 meeting in Cleveland was prepared for Humanitas, the
prize-winning newsletter of the Ohio Classical Conference. Various classical
activities were attended where the cause of CAMWS was promoted. Ohio has
continued to fill a leadership role in the American Classical League, the
Advanced Placement Latin program and the Vergilian Society as well as in CAMWS;
the Ohio Classical Conference and its newsletter Humanitas are healthy; Ohio's
involvement in the VRoma project continues and, of course, Ohio hosted the 1999
CAMWS convention in Cleveland (see VP Sarkissian's comments below).
VP Lloyd reports on three developments from West Virgina. On March 18-19,
1999 about one hundred high school Latin students who represented six schools
met at Bethany College near Wheeling for the annual JCL Convention. Latin
teachers prepared the events and contests involved, enlarging the convention to
two days with a Roman banquet the first evening. The Maier Latin Sight-Reading
Contest with substantial monetary awards formed an important convention event
the next morning. Secondly, instead of its fall luncheon, the West Virginia
Classical Association will meet in conjunction with the West Virginia Junior
Classical Association Convention to be held 30-31 March 2000 at Jackon's Mill
in Weston. This event and other important announcements were included in the
WVCA Newsletter mailed out in February. Finally, the $3,900 in Latin awards and
contest prizes sponsored by the Maier Foundation and administered by the
Marshall University Department of Classical Studies (High School Latin Cup
Awards, High School Latin Sight-Reading Contest, and the Maier Latin
Scholar-ship at Marshall) continue to flourish.
VP Sarkissian focused on five topics in his report on Ohio's year. The first, naturally, was CAMWS' annual meeting held in Cleveland on April 15-17, 1999. The local committee, under the guidance of Donald Laing of Case-Western Reserve University, worked long and diligently to help make the meeting remarkably smooth-running and a complete success. The Ohio Classical Conference (OCC) publication Humanitas was recognized as the "Best State Newsletter for the 1998-99 year." Editors Robert Bennett, Kenyon College and Jim Andrews, Ohio University, are to be congratulated, as are former student assistant Gary Sternberg, Ohio University, and former editor John Sarkissian, Youngstown State University. For the current year Professors Bennett and Andrews are continuing their good work as editors, with help from student assistant Jason Bartley, Ohio University.
The second topic was the OCC which met October 14-16, also in Cleveland at
Case Western Reserve University, with President Martin Helzle of that
university presiding. At this meeting, Stergios Lazos of Hawken School made a
presentation concerning a mosaic designed and created by his students, in part
with the assistance of a grant from CAMWS' CPL. At the banquet the Hildesheim
Vase, awarded annually to an outstanding Latin program in the state of Ohio,
was presented to Hawken's Lazos and Jodi Gill. After the banquet, conference
attendees were treated to a spirited performance of Plautus' Menaechmi
by CWRU's Theater Department. Incoming president, CAMWSian William Prueter of
Chesterland High School, announced that 2000's meeting would be held the first
weekend in November at Punderson State Park. Succeeding Mr. Prueter as president
will be CAMWSians Richard Krill, professor emeritus, University of Toledo, for
2001 and then, for 2002, Kay Fluharty, Madeira Jr./Sr. High School, Cincinnati.
VP Sarkissian noted that the award given to Humanitas reflects positively on
the membership of OCC as well, for it has been willing to allot sufficient
resources to make the newsletter a large and attractive publication.
Thirdly, Sarkissian stressed that the OCC continues to explore ways to
become a more active participant in the Ohio Foreign Language Association, the
comparable organization for foreign language teachers in the state. Some years
ago the name of this organization was changed, with the word
"Foreign" replacing "Modern" in order to include
classicists. Interactions between the two organizations, however, have been
limited, not through any sense of competition or hostility, but because
classicists find that the OCC meeting, held in the fall, has more relevant
sessions than does the OFLA meeting held in the spring, and high school
teachers generally can be reimbursed for only one meeting annually. On the
other hand, the interests of the two groups converge on matters of policy, and
the size of the OFLA and the efficiency of its very active Political Action
Com-mittee make it attractive and practical for OCC to try to be a more visible
presence in the organization. To this end, CAMWSian Susan Bonvallet, The
Wellington School, Columbus, has for several years given selflessly of her time
to serve as OCC Representative to the OFLA. She and Judith de Luce, Miami
University, made a presentation on VRoma at the 1999 meeting of the OFLA in
Columbus. At least two other CAMWS/OCC members will make presentations at the
2000 meeting of OFLA: Sherwin Little, Indian Hills High School, Cincinnati,
will speak on "A Modified Foreign Language Class for Students with
Learning Disabilities," and John Sarkissian, Youngstown State University,
will speak on "Using Computers to Monitor the Practices of Foreign
Language Students." In the future, OCC will continue exploring ways in
which it can work more closely with OFLA.
There has been an exciting development at Ohio University in Athens. Timothy Wutrich, Director of the School of Comparative Arts, and James Andrews, Department of Classics, assisted by Laura Parrotti, School of Theater, organized an extraordinary educational (and incidentally promotional) project which involved a continuous public reading of the Iliad
in its entirety. A collection of readers consisting of faculty, students and
some teachers from the surrounding area, read around the clock from Lattimore's
translation of the Iliad. The event, held in the outdoor theater on the OU
campus, was such a success that the organizers will be conducting a similar
activity this May, reading Vergil's Aeneid.
Last year's report noted the Ohio's Latinists were involved in drafting exit
competencies in foreign languages for high school graduates. This group of
university and high school language teachers, business leaders, parents, and
community representatives had met in Columbus under the aegis of the Ohio Board
of Regents and the Ohio Department of Education to develop a set of common
expectations for Ohio's future high school graduates in foreign languages. The
work of that committee was brought to a successful conclusion last spring and
this fall. Since foreign language study currently is not one of the areas in
which Ohio high school students must take proficiency tests, the work of this
committee at this point remains more of a goal than an actuality. What must be
emphasized is that Latin was afforded full recognition and the concerns of the
Latinists who served on the committee were accorded full consideration, even to
the point of having specific goals statements for Latin which differed from those
of the modern languages. If there is any resistance to Latin by modern language
people in Ohio, it is not in evidence in the workings of the higher state
administration or in the state's professional organizations.
Finally, Sarkissian noted with deserved pride that CAMWSian Mary Jo
Behrensmeyer, who teaches Latin at Mount Vernon High School, was accorded the
signal honor of being inducted into the Ohio Women's Hall of Fame in a ceremony
at the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus on October 28 of last year.
These remarks indicate, I think, the vibrant health of Latin and the study of the classics in the Ohio Valley region. As I wrap up my tenure as regional VP, I would be remiss if I did not publicly acknowledge and thank both Charles and John, and Janet Waggoner before him, for their dedication, competence, energetic leadership and supervision of activities in their individual states. My task has been made so much easier and more pleasant because of my association with these outstanding professionals.