Issue 15

Page 1

Volume LXXIII

“If nothing else, value the truth”

St. Louis University High School, Friday, DECEMBER 19, 2008

Issue 15

Drivers cope with winter weather Second SAC and the Highway 40 closure discusses Luke Chellis Core Staff

O

n Monday morning, the Highway 40 closure arrived at St. Louis U. High’s front door. All lanes are closed in both directions between I-170 and Kingshighway and will remain closed for an entire year as part of the second phase of the reconstruction project. The transition to this phase marked the halfway point in the completion of the new Highway 40, as the stretch from Ballas to I-170 reopened. Now, eastbound traffic travelling toward SLUH must exit at Brentwood. Westbound travel will continue to reach as far as Kingshighway to the northeast of SLUH. This change came ahead of the original open date of Jan. 2, 2009. To commute to school, students accustomed to using the now unusable asphalt have begun to explore and try alternate routes. To respond to possible delays, principal John Moran and the SLUH administration implemented a new schedule that moves activity period to the beginning of the day

(issue 14). “I think people left early like we asked them to and didn’t just treat it as a late start,” said Moran. Twelve out of 19 randomly selected students interviewed at the student drop-off on Monday reported no difference in overall commute time. “When I came in (Monday) morning at my usual time, it was certainly a little wet and slick on the roads,” said Moran. “But, at least anecdotally what I’m hearing from folks is that it was lighter than expected.” Observations on Monday ranged dramatically because of the large variety of factors and their effects at play. “I think we’ll have a better idea tomorrow because there were some people not driving today because of the weather,” said carpool parent driver Greg Zink-Duda. According to computer technician Jonathan Dickmann, 33 students were absent on Monday, compared to the average this year of 16. On Tuesday the number reverted to normal at 17. On Monday 12 out of the 16 tardies students were weather-related, and 15 of 16 students were tardy on Tuesday

Highway 40 sits quiet and dark amid the traffic on Oakland (left).

see 40, 18

photo by Zac Boesch

Facebook, respect, drugs

Peter Mackowiak Sports Editor

D

ean of Students Brock Kesterson met with the Student Advisory Committee (SAC) Monday night in the library to discuss student respect towards school facilities, faculty and staff, and each other; Facebook’s role in the life of a student; and the extent to which the school has an alcohol and drug culture. Kesterson and the advisory students, parents, and teachers kicked off the meeting discussing student respect, an issue brought to the forefront when a student drew graffiti on the wall of the recently renovated chill room. Parents expressed concerns regarding instilling a culture of respect at SLUH, and one parent suggested school-wide linewriting as a means of punishment and peer pressure against bullying. Talk soon turned to the nature of student behavior, especially bullying and the use of profanity. Junior class president Kevin Mueller said physical bullying “doesn’t really happen; it’s more exclusion that goes on.” Junior Chad Carson concurred. “Things like exclusive jokes or profanity start out with students having to draw a reaction between friends, but over time they can become a part of your behavior, and then you don’t think about them,” he said. Director of Diversity Rob Evans added that faculty and staff are also responsible for watching their language because “if students

see SAC, 18


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