The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, November 29, 2004, Page 4, Image 4
Teachers say teens
gambling futures
with poker frenzy
By MARTHA IRVINE
TI IE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHICAGO — Now that his high
'chool football season is over, Zak
(ioppinger has been playing poker every
chance he can get.
With his mom’s blessing, he’s turned
the family dining room, complete with
green walls and a chandelier, into a
poker parlor for himself and his buddies.
He also keeps a deck of cards at school so
he can play impromptu games during
class or lunch.
“It's better than homework, I can tell
you that,’’ the 18-year-old from Austin,
Texas, says with a chuckle.
He’s just one of the many young
people who have become avid players of
1 exas Hold ‘Em and other poker games
— a trend sparked, in part, by TV shows
that feature tournaments for celebrities
and professional poker players. But
gambling opponents wonder if some
teens, and the adults who let them play,
are taking it too far.
“It’s fun. It’s exciting. It’s glamorized
on TV and in the media in a way that
other addictions are not,” says Keith
W hyte, executive director of the National
Council on Problefn Gambling. “There’s
the impression that through skill you can
beat the odds. But randomness is always
going to have a bigger factor in
determining the outcome than your skill.
“And unfortunately, that’s not the
message these kids get.”
Some parents have heeded the
warning, cutting back on casino nights at
after-prom parties and other events. And
officials at a growing number of schools
— from New Trier High School, north
of Chicago, to Apple Valley High School
in suburban Minneapolis — have
recently started banning poker-playing
on their campuses.
Dave Smiley, principal at Elgin High
School in suburban Chicago, began
enforcing an old ban on card and dice
games months ago: “We’re like church
— you shouldn’t be gambling in
school,” he says.
That said, Smiley concedes that his
view softens when it comes to teens
playing poker at their friends’ homes.
“I’m not going to be hypocritical. I
think my own son has participated in
some of these games — and he’s in high
school,” he says, noting that he likes
knowing his son is somewhere safe and
supervised.
Teens also argue that, with the
standard $10 buy-in to get into a game,
the stakes aren’t particularly high.
“You’re paying for entertainment,”
says Eli Goldfarb, a freshman at
Columbia University in New York.
“The long and the short of it is, I have
fun playing poker, and when I play well,
I can buy more burritos.
“What’s not to like?”
He started playing Texas Hold ‘Em
when he was in high school at the Field
School, a private academy in Washington,
D.C., where teacher Will Layman says
poker’s never been a problem. But
Layman also understands that some teens
may not be able to control their betting.
“I would never criticize a parent who
felt that poker — which really isn’t much
JACK PLUNKETT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Westlake High School seniors, from right, Zak Coppinger, Marc Effenson, Tony Gulla and Brandon Black play poker around Coppinger’s
dining room table on Nov. 14 in Austin, Texas. With his mother's blessing, Coppinger has changed the family dining room into a poker
parlor, complete with chandelier and green walls, for himself and his friends.
of a game at all if you don’t bet in some
form — was too tempting for their kid,”
says Layman, who plays poker with his
daughter and son, ages 14 and 10. “But it is
not the same as, say, smoking pot because
with poker, the activity isn’t harmful unless
it becomes an overindulged habit —
whereas pot impairs you every time.”
Some parents goes as far as saying
that poker teaches critical-thinking and
math skills.
And Josh Kohnstamm, a father in
Mendota Heights, Minn., says it’s
become the perfect escape for his
studious 16-year-old son, Josh, who
“takes everything too seriously.”
Poker, Kohnstamm says, allows Josh
to “whoop the school’s best athletes —
computer geek that he is — and allows
him to come away feeling lucky when
that is a sensation that rarely happens in
his everyday life.”
But Dan Romer, a researcher at the
University of Pennsylvania, worries
about kids who take gambling too far.
“At a minimum, it should be
monitored,” says Romer, director of
research at the Adolescent Risk
Communications Institute at the
University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg
Public Policy Center. .
He oversaw the 2003 Annenberg
National Risk Survey of Youth, which
found that about 8 percent of the young
people surveyed showed signs of having
a gambling problem.
Those results led him to conclude
that schools should teach about the
dangers of gambling, the same way they
teach that alcohol and drugs can be
addictive. He also says that government
officials who oversee public gambling —
casinos and lotteries — have a special
responsibility to closely watch young
people, who are allowed to gamble
legally in many states as young as age 18.
Romer says Internet gambling is a
particular worry because it can be done
on the sly and is often less regulated.
Still, Ross Atteberry, a high school
senior in Westfield, Ind., says the poker
he plays with friends is not in that league
of gambling.
“Obviously,” the 18-year-old says,
“cops aren’t going to be kicking in doors
to bust in on friendly card games.”
■ BRIEFING
Continued from page 1
buildings but more as a vision of
expanding the university in the
technology areas we’re declared,”
1'astides said.
USC officials have already planned
for research focusing on
nanotechnology, hydrogen energy,
photonics, cancer and bioterrorism
defense.
Sorensen said at the initial
announcement that he hoped to have
500,000 square feet worth of new
research space to be built on the west
side of the campus within 10 years, now
less than nine left since the time of that
comment. He also said plans were
flexible and not final, as he wanted to
rely primarily on Davis’
recommendations.
Pastides confirmed Sunday that
development between Assembly Street
and the Congaree River would be the
primary focus.
“We’re looking at growth of the
university toward the Colonial Center
and well beyond there,” he said.
Pastides also said the focus of the
meeting at the convention center would
be for city and county officials, as well as
business leaders, to receive details on the
campus. He said business leaders are
interested in future presence of
interdisciplinary cooperation in research
to benefit several industries. The city has
a potential for interest in development
because USC officials are planning for
retail and commercial space to be
integrated in the campus.
“We’re looking at a 24-7 model in
which the lights don’t go off every night
at 6 and all of these facilities will be
deserted,” Pastides said about using
commercial development to help the
new campus benefit the public on a daily
basis.
USC officials announced earlier this
year that November would be the target
month for a groundbreaking for
construction in the second phase.
Officials are in consultation with faculty
members and students about preferred
amenities to consider when planning the
campus and are expected to give an *
update at Tuesday’s briefing on their
progress in working out details.
Sorensen isn’t expected to name any
corporations that might be interested in
partnerships with USC, even though he
has said for more than a year that he is
regularly in private meetings with
executives of several firms ready to move
in to the buildings as soon as they are
finished.
Comments on this story? E-mail
gam.ecockneTvs@gwm.sc.edu
f University of South Carolina
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