page 4 - The Behrend College Beacon. Thursday, February 11, 1999 The Behrend College Beacon published weekly by the students of Penn State Erie, The Behrend College News Editor Shannon Weber Editorial Page Editor Natalie Gagliano Business Manager Jaime Davis Photography Editors Jason Blake Andrea Taffino Layout Editors Mike Perkins Elizabeth Guelclter Wire Services Editor Katie Galley Advisors Robert Speel Jim O'Loitf’lilin Postal Information: The Beacon is published weekly by the students of Penn State Erie, The Behrend College; First Floor, The J. Elmer Reed Union Building, Station Road, Erie, PA 16563. The Beacon can be reached by calling (814) 898-6488 or (814) 898-6019 (FAX). ISSN 1071- 9288. A view from the lighthouse What’s the deal lack of participation? There seems to be a total lack of participation by the part of students on campus. Activities, programs, and extracurricular activities are held on a continual basis throughout the cam pus, and only a small proportion of students attends these events. $220,000 will be allocated for stu dent activities for the 1999-2000 school year. This amounts to approxi mately $75 per year that each student is charged. Each student is charged this fee whether they are involved or not in activities in campus. Students should get involved with how their money is being spent and should also join clubs that are being funded by the student activity fee. Without their input, decisions, as to what the money should be spent on, will be made by others. Students may not concur with these decisions made, however, they have no right to com plain. It’s similar to the voting con cept, if you do not get involved, you have no right to bitch and complain concerning the problems that arise through the lack of input. So, why are students displaying such a lack of motivation? Maybe their academic schedule is too time Letter to the editor My View This country has been transfixed by the Clinton-Lewinsky affair for over a year now. We have been flooded with literally thousands of media-driven stories that have quenched a thirst for more tabloid journalism. Our nation is governed by the ex ecutive, the legislative, and the judi ciary branches. These are maintained by checks and balances preventing the dominance of any single branch. The system was not established to let polling data, or powerful media mo guls dictate our people’s sense of eth ics. President Clinton, in my estima tion, has worked well in managing our domestic affairs, and foreign af fairs. I believe that he has received the “lion’s share” of the credit for the robust economy. Like many presidential adminis trations in the past, the president has had his share of scandals. They in clude slich names as Paula Jones, Gennifer Flowers, and the Vince Fos ter incident among others. In addition, he lied to an army officer about en tering Vietnam, by not following through in the ROTC program. President Clinton is one of our most consummate politicians we have had in the oval office. His char acter, or lack of, is the focal point of this issue. I remember in the 1992 and 1996 election, the major media, in reference to Bill Clinton, said that "character doesn’t count! Most Americans believe it does. In the President’s defense, I have thought of several points that other “political pundits” have not covered : 1. If Hillary and Bill had divorced before this or been separated this Editor in Chief Will Jordan Managing Editor Avodele Jones Features EdUor Jon Stubbs Sports Editor Jason Snyder Advertising Managers Erin Carey Smith Copy Editor Rose Forrest Associate Editors Angela Rush Jessica Tucci Assistant Editor Mike Frawlev Distribution Manager Mark Greenhank Letter Policy: The Beacon encourages letters to the editor. Letters should include the address, phone number, semester standing and major of the writer. Writers can mail their letters to behrcoll2@aol.com. Letters must be received no later than spm Tuesday for inclusion in that week’s issue. consuming. Maybe they are too busy partying. Or maybe they just don’t care. Behrend has a lot of resources and opportunities to offer. We were very lucky to have such events as the Goo Goo Dolls concert and the speech given by Jerry Greenfield. The Blue Bus, which may not be run next year due to the lack of its usage, is also funded by the student activity fee. Campus activities enrich out of classroom experiences. They raise the awareness and knowledge of stu dents. They are integral to our devel opment as students. They are neces sary for future career growth; em ployers are looking for more than just academics on a resume. would have been a moot point. 2. If the President were not a prac ticing Christian, apathetic about reli gion agnostic or an atheist; or if his personal convictions allowed this, he could remain vigilant that he was be ing true to himself. 3. If the President had committed what the general public thought was clearly out of bounds of legal or moral decency, perhaps if had relations with a minor child, a foreign national, someone that could have "compro mised” national security, this could have had a different spin. This whole incident will clearly, in a historical context, taint whatever the President has accomplished. I believe, however, that the eroding morality of this entire country in the last generation cannot be pinned on one man. As Americans, we must look to unite, whatever color, creed, or country of origin. Accepting the behavior of the President in such a cavalier fashion has definitely “lowered the bar” tor what is expected of any future Presi dents or politicians. If my memory does serve me well, Senator Packwood was drummed out of the Senate for harassment charges and Supreme Court Justice Clarence Tho mas was grilled and scrutinized for his “supposed” joke telling and innu endoes with Anita Hill. In closing, we, as a nation, cannot expect our leaders to be as pure as the driven snow, however there must be a standard that must be met to maintain the public trust in our elected officials. Michael Coursey Senior Political Science Major the with Live From Guyana Love should be expressed everyday Here we go again. It's only three days from Valentine's day, and all the hoopla has begun. Every year around this time we are bombarded with pictures and images of roses, chocolates, and, of course, LOVE. Valentine's day honors love and those in love, yet the origin of this holiday is the death of a saint. Valentine's day is named alter a Ro man priest. Valentine, who secretly married young couples against an emperor's decree. He was arrested and beheaded on February 14 for de fying the orders. After his death, Val- The Lobster and the Music to the Dance of Life How many planets do we have? Every child in elementary school learns that our solar system is made up of a star and nine planets. Neptune, Mercury, Venus, Earth. Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Flulo. However, that number may be soon reduced by The planet Pluto may be soon downgraded to the status of minor planet, in the same class as asteroids and other large objects that orbit in the solar system. The downgrading of Pluto is causing quite a commotion in astronomical circles, notably among Americans, because Pluto is the only "planet" discovered by an American. But why drop Pluto into a lower classification .’ The reason is not too difficult to understand. First, is its si/.e; it is smaller in size than the United States. Pluto's orbit is also not Bribery may By Leonard Pitts Jr. Knight-Ridder Tribune So, I’m working for a certain na tionally syndicated radio show, where one of my duties is to sift through the hundreds of letters listeners send each week asking us to dedicate songs to their loved ones. And I open one of those letters, and money falls out. It’s not much money maybe a buck or two. Just a little inducement to give this letter special attention, I tack the bills to the bulletin board, intending to send them back to their owner. Never get around to it, though. As best 1 can remember, the money was still on the board when 1 left that job for this one, eight years ago. The sender Was a young person, which accounts for the modest size of the attempted bribe. But I always felt there was some minor insult im plicit in the notion that our favor could be bought for money, two bucks or two hundred. 1 guess that only goes to show that 1 have abso lutely no future us a bellhop, a maitre 'd or a member of the International Editorial entine was made a saint. Whether or not Valentine envisioned a holi day full of Hallmark cards, mylar balloons, and Godiva chocolates, one will never know. Nevertheless, that is what the holiday has become. Alter the Christmas decorations are taken down, hearts and cupids are abundant everywhere. The up coming weeks are filled with anxi ety; how much do I spend on my valentine, how do I let my secret crush know' how I feel, and how much is too much? normal. Many people know that Pluto and Neptune occasionally switch places as the farthest planet from the sun. No other planets have orbits that cross each other, so this is strange. Also, Pluto is inclined to the other planets. That means that while all the planets orbit on roughly the same level, Pluto goes above and below all the others. This further separates it from the pack of normal planets. However, Pluto also has factors that distinguish it as a full-fledged planet. First, while it is small, it is bigger than most minor planets. It has a thin atmosphere, is spherical, and has a large moon. The Minor Planet Center, which classifies and keeps track of all mi nor planets, currently has 9,999 ob jects classified. On March 2, they be routine but I don’t have to like Olympic Committee If you had asked me six months ago how the members of that com mittee went about choosing host cit ies for the Olympic Games, I’d have assumed they weighed relevant fac tors and made responsible decisions. Silly me. Turns out that you get the Olympics to come to your town by plying the decision makers with lav ish gifts, including scholarships for their kids, fancy cowboy hats for their heads, and hookers for their, urn ... stress. At least, that's the unmis takable inference of the mushroom ing scandal surrounding Salt Lake City's winning bid to host the 2002 Winter Games. Naff that I am, I seem to be one of the few people who's been taken by suiprise here. A Time magazine report indicates that this kind of thing goes on all the time. The Miami Her ald recently editorialized that any suiprise over this affair belongs to "a more-innocent era.” And a colum nist for the Washington Post suggests that vote-buying and bribery have been staple features of the Olympics Before we begin our shopping sprees for the right cards and the per fect gifts, let me ask a question. Is Valentine’s day the only day we think of expressing our love to those we care for? Isn’t the love we share supposed to be expressed every day of the year and not just the fourteenth of February ? Love is the everyday things that we do for each other, like calling a friend when they’re down, giving a word of encouragement, or even a shoulder to cry on w hen needed. There are three kinds of love; eros (romantic love), philia (reciprocal want to classify Pluto as number 10,000 in a large ceremony. When it was announced that the Minor Planet center wanted to list Pluto as number 10,000, there was an uproar. Imme diately an anti-10,000 group was founded to oppose the transition, while the Minor Planet Center ap pealed to amateur astronomers for support. While temporarily the Sec retariat of the International Astro nomical Union has announced Pluto will not be downgraded, the fight con tinues on, and it raises an interesting question. Has national interest and pride be come more important than scientific truth and classification? If it has then the future is grim, since science should not be based on national in fluence at all. I feel that the decision to rename for a hundred years. OK, point taken. Here’s my prob lem: I don’t want them to be right. Oh, I accept that corruption happens. What I’m having difficulty with is the suggestion that I ought not be sur prised when it does. I find it difficult to be that jaded. Difficult not to won der what I’ll next be called upon to consider unremarkable. Maybe it'll be the politician who belongs to the corporate donor. Or the judge whose ruling was purchased in chambers. I don't want them to be right be cause even if these things happen every day and yeah, they do it seems to me that we can’t afford to regard them as expected and unsuiprising. To do that is to cross a line we don’t want to cross, to abro gate the sense of outrage, which is our best defense in the face of cor ruption. I don’t want them to be right ... but maybe they are. Maybe surprise is beyond us now. Maybe a sense of outrage is like a sense of smell it weakens if you use it too much. You know how it is, after you sniff AYODHI.fi JONHS love), and agape (overflowing love for all). Love is not a robe from Victoria s Secret or a pair of boxer shorts trom the GAP. Let Valentine's day be a celebration of the love that we should celebrate every day ol the year and not just February I4tii. Axoileie Jones is the manaxiny editor oj the Beaeon. Her enhnnn appears every three MIKE PERKINS Pluto should wait for awhile, until we know more about the asteroid fields that lay beyond Neptune’s orbit. We 1 know that there are many objects similar to Pluto that orbit far out in the solar system. But until we dis cover if any of those are larger than Pluto, have atmospheres, or a moon, we should leave Pluto alone. How ever, I do agree that this confronta tion over Pluto’s future has forced as- tronomers to come up with a more concrete definition of what a "major” planet is. Only then can we prevent future conflicts over classifications like this. Mike Perkins is layout editor oj the Beacon His column appears even three weeks a few perfume samples in the store, your nose loses the ability to distin guish between them? Well, this ain’t perfume we're smelling here. It’s gamier, an odor of cynicism and pes simism and the smug assurance that the person who hasn’t yet been bought is the one who has nothing to sell. I keep thinking of the kid whose money I left tacked up on the bulle tin board. We never used her lelter it w'as disqualified on its merits. But I remember wondering where on earth she might have gotten the no tion that cash could render those merits irrelevant. Where did she get the idea that this is the way the world works? Bui may he that's the wrong ques tion. We routinely see judges, cops, and politicians nabbed lor peddling influence. We're learning now that the Olympics have been sold to the highest bidder. Maybe the belter question is this: Where could she have gotten the idea that the world works any other way?