Hug High School
2880 Sutro, Reno, NV, 89512-1615 - Map Map

School Overview:
Definition of Terms
Hug High School
School Level High school
Grades Offered Grades 9 - 12
County Washoe County, NV
Students & Faculty
Total Students 1313 students
% Male / % Female 53%  /  47%
Total Classroom Teachers 69 teachers
Students by Grade
Grade 9 - 504 students
Grade 10 - 271 students
Grade 11 - 146 students
Grade 12 - 385 students
Grade Not Listed - 7 students
This School
(NV) School Average
Teacher : Student Ratio 1:19 1:21
Students by Ethnicity
This School
(NV) School Average
% American Indian 3% 1%
% Asian 9% 7%
% Hispanic 37% 28%
% Black 9% 10%
% White 42% 51%
Additional Student Information
This School
(NV) School Average
% Eligible for Free Lunch 29% n/a
% Eligible for Reduced Lunch 10% n/a
% Migrant Students Enrolled n/a n/a
School Performance:
(NV) Statewide Testing Performance
School Statewide Performance View Education Department Test Scores
School District:
School District Name Washoe County School District
This School's Agency
(NV) District Average
Number of Schools Managed 98 9
Number of Students Managed 82,788 students 1,390 students
District Total Revenue $507,178,000 $30,554,000
District Expenditure $486,785,000 $30,598,000
District Revenue / Student $6,126 $21,981
District Expenditure / Student $5,880 $22,013
District Graduation Rates 84% 80%
In the News:
View all past news stories
School Notes:
  • Procter R. Hug High School is a fully accredited public high school in Reno, Nevada, and belongs to the Washoe County School District. Hug High was built on a hillside in northeast Reno in 1968 to serve students from rapidly growing areas in northeast Reno, northwest Reno and the Northern Valleys.
  • Like many other local schools, Hug High was named for a member of the local school board. Procter R. Hug was a college athlete, teacher, athletic coach and Washoe County School Superintendent who went on after retirement to serve as a Nevada State Senator.
  • History
  • Hug High's first principal, Bud Garfinkle, opened the school for the 1968-69 academic year with only freshmen, sophomores and juniors; the first senior class graduated in 1970. As Hug was founded in the late 60's when the U.S. was undergoing intense social change and political turmoil (especially in relation to guaranteeing equal rights to all of its citizens and fighting an increasingly unpopular war in Vietnam), the events of this period contributed to the idealism of the school's first years. In a recent letter, Garfinkle reiterates these sentiments: "I feel as if I gave birth to a child... A child born at a time when our nation was wrestling with many new ideas: that all people should be treated equally, regardless of race, color or creed." As one of the most ethnically diverse high schools in the district, it could be said that shifts in Hug's fortunes have often provided a litmus lest to the community at large as to how far it has come to achieving these ideals.
  • Enrollment peaked in the early 70's, and again in the early 80's. Hug High currently has an enrollment of approximately 1,274 students in grades 9-12.
  • Recent statistics on the ethnic origin of the student body of Hug High School (2007-2008 school year, with district-wide statistics in parentheses): American Indian/Native American: 1.7% (2.5%), Asian/Pacific Islander: 10.2% (6.4%), Hispanic/Latino: 57.9% (32.8%), Black/African American: 9.9% (3.8%), White/Caucasian: 20.3% (54.4%).
  • Its nine buildings (Academic Buildings A, B and C, the Industrial Arts building, the Gymnasium, the Little Theater and Cafeteria building, the Library, the Administration building, and JROTC rifle range) are set on a multilevel series of terraces, and most are connected by covered outdoor walkways. The facades of most of the buildings are covered in dark green serpentine stone panels, and the equally green campus has been landscaped with a wide variety of trees and plants over the years. Reno's first "school on the hill," the campus offers a beautiful panoramic view of the Truckee Meadows to the south, and of the Sierra Nevada to the southwest. The campus has been decorated over the years with numerous murals and mosaics depicting the mascot, school colors and the letter "H" for Hug.
  • Academics
  • Over the years, Hug has offered both a general-education and a full college-preparatory curriculum, and many of its alumni have gone on to attend some of the nation's most prestigious colleges and universities, with some earning Ph.D.'s, J.D.'s and other advanced degrees. In recent years, Principal Andrew Kelly has instituted a "small schools" program, converting the A, B, and C buildings and the Gymnasium annex into semi-autonomous academic entities, in order to create a more individualized, less anonymous academic environment for students and teachers alike. He has also spoken out publicly about the racial and socioeconomic inequality still present in the Washoe County School District. More recently, Hug has received attention from the local television station KOLO for its improving academic standing as well as the introduction of gender-separate classes in its ongoing objective to boost student performance.
  • Today Hug offers classes in English, from English as a Second Language up to Advanced Placement levels, mathematics from Algebra I to Calculus AB, sciences such as Biology, Chemistry and Physics, Spanish, French, Industrial arts and physical education, as well as numerous elective courses. In 2003, the Academic Olympics (AO) team placed 4th in Washoe County and the Science Bowl team competed in the Nevada regional competition. In 2004, the AO team placed 3rd in the district, the Science Bowl team placed 4th in the Nevada Regional, and the Robotics team placed in the top third in the Chesapeake Regional in Annapolis, Maryland.
  • Athletics
  • Hug competes in the High Desert League of the Northern Nevada 4A Region (large school). The campus has a lighted stadium for night games, tennis courts, and a baseball field, also on a descending set of hillside terraces. Hug has been successful in boy's basketball, football and boy's track this decade. The boy's basketball team won the Regional titles in 2002 and 2009, the football team was the state runner-up in 2005, along with the Northern Region championship, and the boy's track team won the state title in 2001.
  • History and Student Life
  • Sociopolitical background. While Hug has almost always had a higher percentage of students from ethnic minorities and low-income families than other schools in the district, since the late 80's the student body has undergone an even more extreme demographic shift, underscoring the underlying problem of racial and economic segregation that still could be said to characterize the school district as a whole.
  • Academic achievements. In the 1970s and 80's, it had a fine theater program under the direction of local actor and director Eve Loomis. Along with numerous musical, dramatic and dance performances, she founded a traveling children's theater troupe, the Hug High Harlequins, which traveled to elementary school audiences all over Northern Nevada. In the 1970s and 80's there was also a Shakespeare Club, active in organizing yearly fieldtrips to Shakespeare performances of professional theater companies under the supervision of English teacher Joanne Walen. This group was also commonly known as "Little Willy's Gang." Hug High, along with crosstown high school partner Wooster High, co-hosted the prestigious National Association of Student Councils conference in June 1982, bringing hundreds of high school student leaders from all over the country to the Hug campus for its three-day leadership workshop. At that time, Hug was also competitive in speech and debate at the state level, and had a marching band that eventually went on to represent the state in the 1997 Presidential Inaugural Parade in Washington, DC. The march written for the occasion by Hug High marching band director Gerald Willis was called the "Silver State Fanfare," and after being played by a number of other Nevada marching bands was eventually named the Official State March by the Nevada Legislature in 2001.
  • Cultural diversity at Hug. Whether the Native frybread lunches of the First Americans Club and Black History Month pageants of the 1970s and 80's (both organized under the mentorship of counselor Dolores Feemster) or the Cinco de Mayo celebrations and Polynesian dancing that characterize student life today, students continue to add to the history of student life at Hug through exploring and sharing their multifaceted cultural heritage with others.
  • Traditions. The school mascot is the Hawk. Although the school colors originally chosen by the student body were kelly green and white, the school administration later modified them in the 1980s to a darker forest green and white. The school yearbook is called the Talon, and the school newspaper is called "Soar." Its drill team is called the Shamrocks. The traditional school totem was the Spirit Claw, given to the class at each school assembly deemed to have shown the most school spirit.
  • School songs
  • School Anthem (sung to the tune of "Aura Lee")
  • As the Hawk soars overhead, rising high are we.Honor, spirit, make us proud, of our loyalty.Sacrifice, pay the price, proud are we to be,The Spirit of America: Hug High Hawks are we!
  • Fight Song (sung to the tune of "When the Saints")
  • Oh when the Hawks, go flying in,Oh when the Hawks go flying in,We'll be there to cheer the victors,When the Hawks go flying in!
  • (Unlike most other schools in the area, Hug has two school songs: a School Anthem and a Fight Song. Traditionally, both school songs are played at pep rallies and games by the Hug High Pep Band, and each is accompanied by a short routine performed by the Hug High Cheerleaders and Songleaders. The Fight Song is usually played during games and rallies, whereas the School Anthem is only played at the end. )
  • Source: Wikipedia; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.
  • Add/edit information about this school (e.g., awards, news stories, notable alumni, fun facts)
 
School Zip Code:
About This Zip Code (89512)
School Zip (89512)
(NV) State Average
Population (Approximate) 23,900 people 1,973,852 people
% (age 25+) w/College Degree 19% 24%
Population Average Age 32 years old 34 years old
Average Household size 2.6 persons 2.5 persons
Median Household Income $28,726 $43,410
Avg. # of Rooms in Household 3.9 rooms 4.8 rooms
Median Age of Housing Structure 34 years old 26 years old
View Current Housing Listings View current housing listings in this area
Median Value of Housing Unit
Zipcode (89512)


Zillow Median Value of Housing Unit
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Zillow Median Value of Housing Unit
% Owning / % Renting 37% / 63% 58% / 42%
School Map:
1. Washoe High School - 778 students - view location
2. Hug, Proctor High School - 1170 students - view location
3. Tmcc Magnet High School - 180 students - 1.1 mi. away - view location
4. Rainshadow Community Charter - 114 students - 1.4 mi. away - view location
5. Homebound - n/a - 1.6 mi. away - view location
View all schools in: Reno, Washoe County, Zip 89512 
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Note: Data has been gathered from several government and commercial data sources. School data reflects 2006 statistics (most recent year available).

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