Prep Volume 77, Issue 26
“If nothing else, value the truth”
News sluh.org/prepnews
St. Louis University High School | Friday, April 26, 2013
Out of
photo | Ben Banet
Despite two rain delays, students still manage to roll in on Car Free Day BY Paul J. REPORTER
photo | Kyle Vogt
Fister
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Left Field This sinkhole—15 feet in diameter and eight feet deep—was discovered a week ago in left field of Sheridan Stadium. The hole has been filled since then with concrete. Sinkholes have been a persistent problem on the SLUH grounds. The baseball team has been forced to relocate to Aviation Field in Forest Park until the hole is fixed and grass regrown on the spot. Repairs have already begun, but the field is not expected to be playable again for two weeks. For more information about the sinkhole, efforts to repair it, and the the history of sinkholes at SLUH, see the article on page 5 of this week’s Prep News.
72-page Sisyphus out next week drawing
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Jack MacDonald
Alumnus treats victims of bombing at Boston Children’s Hospital BY Adam Thorp NEWS EDITOR
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s America stood shocked by the sudden bombing at the Boston Marathon finish line the afternoon of April 15, one St. Louis U. High alumnus was intimately involved in the treatment of children injured by the blast. David Mooney ’77, Trauma Director at Boston Children’s Hospital, had already completed one surgery for the day when he heard about explosion. Mooney had treated a child whose arm had been badly cut and was completing paperwork after the surgery when his wife called and told Art from the spring edition of him about the bombing, which Sisyphus. occurred only a few blocks away from Boston Children’s. BY Garret Fox With injured victims of the REPORTER bombing on the way, Mooney wice a year, a group of Saint went down to the hospital’s emerLouis U. High students, led gency room and met with staff to by moderators Rich Moran and prepare his response. Frank Kovarik, review some of Boston Children’s prepares the best pieces of literature and for disaster situations with drills artwork that the faculty and stu- every six months. The hospital dents have to offer, and publish reacted by declaring a ‘Code Tricontinued on page 6 age.’ The staff dressed in yellow
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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/prepnews prepnews@sluh.org
News
Victoria et splendor Latin masters bring home great victory from conquest in the land of Columbia, Mo. ©2013 St. Louis University High School Pages 2 Prep News. No material may be reprinted without the permission of the editors and moderator.
ozens of Jr. Billikens walked, biked, skateboarded, scootered, and even unicycled to school on Monday for Car Free Day 2013, organized and promoted by science teacher Bill Anderson and his AP Environmental Science class. A tradition started by art teacher Joan Bugnitz and former science teacher Michelle Perrin, seniors in the Environmental Science class have been organizing the event for the last five years. The class was split into different groups that made a trailer, posted fliers, and obtained Metrolink passes for students in preparation for Car Free Day in hopes that people would elect not to drive. “I originally thought it was something put on by the staff and school, but we were told that we were going to be in charge
gowns to protect themselves from body fluids of the victims. Four stretchers—four patients were the most the emergency room could handle at once—were prepared in the trauma bay, each surrounded by a team prepared to treat the injured. Three seriously hurt children ended up being brought into the hospital from the bomb site. Mooney closely directed the hospital’s response to the injured, working alongside emergency room doctors. “I directed the first patient into one bed, the next patient into another bed, and the third patient to a third bed. Because we had three critically injured kids, the teams got to work. (They) started putting in IVs, making sure the kids had enough oxygen, that they were breathing okay, that their blood pressures were okay,” said Mooney. One of the children had sustained injuries to the head in the bombing; the other two were injured in their legs, both by the explosion and the shrapnel packed continued on page 6
of it,” said senior JJ Gunther. “I thought it was kind of neat that the students took it into their own hands.” Gunther was in charge of contacting the Metro agency and continued on page 7
SLUH Confessions takes on a life of its own Anonymous Facebook page seeks “wild, funny, and disturbing stories” Jacob Hilmes STAFF
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he Internet, with its catastrophic overflow of kitten pictures, stale pop culture references, and sweaty chatroom debates, can be a terrible place. However, some anonymous St. Louis U. High students have found a new way to use it by forming the newly popular Facebook page SLUH Confessions. The Facebook page encourages students to share any “wild, funny, and disturbing stories” anonymously, applying a post number for every submission. “With electronics and social networking, these kind of things can take on a life of their own,” said Brock Kesterson. “On the flip slide, there are some really nice
News
International Exchange Confucius Institute’s collection grows with the beneficent generosity of PRC’s Hanban Institute. Page 3 News
Junior Eddie Howe takes a unicycle to school for Car Free Day.
Read Shift! Counseling department and librarians shift gears with choice of young adult novel for summer reading. Pages 2
and sweet things on there that I think anybody would be proud to say without (anonymity).” The posts began on March 4, starting off with relatively simple ‘confessions’ of unpaid nickels and post-graduation insights. In its prime, the page boomed, gaining roughly 800 likes over the course of a few weeks, offering a vast and colorful array of opinions, grudges, and tall tales. “I looked at it pretty intensively, maybe the first week or so it was up. And my general thoughts are that 90 percent of the stuff up there is fine—it’s funny, respectful; sometimes it’s even praise,” said film and English teacher Mark Cummings. The anonymous aspect of the site created an unfiltered window into the minds of SLUH students past and present. Some have shared accounts of English teachers improvising imaginary shootouts, while others offer sharp criticism of SLUH faculty. “Ninety percent of it I’m fine with. Ten percent I’m not fine with. It’s either sexually inapprocontinued on page 6
Sports
B-bills drop the ball Mighty SLUH baseball team bashed 11-2 by Francis Howell Vikings; clawed by Golden Griffins. Pages 11 Stars of track and field Pressure is on busy Varsity trackers and fielders to keep pace with performance of JV and C. Pages 9