The Roundup roundup.brophyprep.org
December 2010 Edition 3
SS tt r e s s e d OO uu tt
Loyola Academy debuts in August By Ian C. Beck ’12
THE ROUNDUP
Photo Illustration by Ben Jackson ’11
Media adds stress to busy teen lives By Eric Villanueva ’11
THE ROUNDUP
W
ith his thumb, Cyrus Afkhami ’11 pushes up on the screen of his friend Jeff Pisauro’s ’11 iPhone 3GS and counts the number of texts Pisauro has received so far that day. “One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight,” Afkhami counts as he scrolled on Pisauro’s phone. Pisauro grabs the phone back. All eight texts were from one of five Inside
• More news about student stress See News, Page 4
Movember brings cancer awareness, moustaches Page 3
conversations Pisauro was having simultaneously at lunch. By the end of the day, Pisauro said he will send and recieve about 150 texts and will spend about one hour texting, which falls in line with research on teen texting. According to research by the Kaiser Family Foundation, in 2010 teens (ages 12-18) report spending on average one hour and 35 minutes daily sending and receiving texts. Pisauro said he agreed with the numbers from the research, but added that teens who text more than an hour daily have a problem. See MEDIA, Page 4 • Students should strike technological balance; classwork weighs on students See Opinions, Page 6
Stress unavoidable for busy students By Michael Moroney ’13 and Brian D. Brannon ’11
THE ROUNDUP Brophy student Nick Giancola ’12 is one of the busiest kids on this campus. He is involved in an assortment of in and out of school activities along with taking multiple honors and AP classes. As a person with things to do at every moment of every day, Giancola said it See PROFILES, Page 4 • Student athletes feel stress on field, in class See Sports, Page 8
Staff Editorial: Breast cancer bracelets cross lines Page 5
Brophy will open Loyola Academy in 2011, a middle school for underprivileged students that will be located on the second floor of Loyola Hall. “It’s a new program, part of Brophy, to help those students who have the intellectual ability to do well at Brophy but don’t have the academic and study habits background,” said Brophy President Fr. Eddie Reese S.J. The program is geared toward taking the academically gifted out of the public school system and installing them into a middle school environment that will better prepare them for Brophy. “These will typically be kids from less affluent, poor backgrounds, who don’t have the advantage of the grade schools or parent’s with a college education to help them study,” Fr. Reese said. The all-boys school will begin with a sixth grade class of about 30 students in August and will progress to the eighth grade. To qualify for the school, students will have to qualify for the Federal Lunch program, which means the families will have an annual income of about $20,000 or less. Loyola Academy will hopefully develop students so that they are better prepared for a Brophy education but their acceptance to Brophy after their completion of the program is in no way guaranteed. “(It’s) not automatic but that’s the assumption,” Fr. Reese said. “That they would do well enough and if they don’t then they’ll probably be out of the program by the end of their sixth or seventh grade.” The program will be staffed by a teacher, a program director and an office assistant.The program director will be an assistant principal at Brophy who will report to Brophy Principal Mr. Bob Ryan. The teachers will be on full pay scale and will be full faculty members as would any other Brophy teacher. Fr. Reese said he hopes the Academy will have the same amount of programs and athletic teams as a normal junior high. See LOYOLA, Page 4
Football team exits playoffs in second round Page 8
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‘Black Ops’ raids video game market Page 14