opinions editorial opinion Who's responsibile here? It was a tough job, but somebody had to do it. Somebody, that is, had to point out the flagrant disregard for the Interfraternity Council’s policy that prohibits fraternities from tak ing any money except for philan thropies. , No one objects to the members of the fraternities and their guests enjoying a few parties during the summer or during any other time of the year for that matter. What was objectionable was the - blatant disobedience of the IFC’s policy and of statutes of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania requiring liquor licenses to charge admission or take donations at fra ternity parties by some mem bers of Penn State’s greek community. . And what was further objectiona ble was the attitude expressed by some that the violators the fra : ternities were not the ones who ; were wrong, but rather that the I wrongdoer was The Daily Colle ; gian which reported the viola tors. Like every newspaper, the Colie- Tolerating noisy debate The National Commission on Ex cellence in Education’s special re port has created a lot of hot air around the nation. However, it seems that some would prefer the air to blow in only one direction. In his weekly radio address Sat urday, President Reagan advised the nation to stay the course in its pursuit of remedies for the nation’s ailing education system. “The commission gave us a course to follow. It leads to better education for our sons and daugh ters. Let’s ignore the noisemakers and set sail,” the president said. In other words, let’s not debate the issue of education. But that’s a contradiction in terms. What is education, if not the exchange pf ideas? And what’s the use of having an issue in a democ racy if politicians and regular folks can’t make a lot of noise about it? The commission presented some ‘ good ideas for improving the sag ; ging quality of education in the nation. But the ideas should be '! taken as recommendations, as ; starting points for discussion, not ; as definitive answers to compli ; cated problems. Debate is essential ; in determining what changes must ■ , 11 LAZARUS, ARISE ! " gian has a responsibility to its readers to endeavor consistently to report the truth. To overlook the truth when it is not convenient, or makes some people uncomfortable, would be a breach of that responsi bility. And the fraternities, which indi vidually and collectively represent the entire greek system at Penn State, also have certain responsibi lities. One of the most important of these is to obey the rules of their governing body IFC which exists to ensure that they maintain a respected and viable position in the University community. If the offending fraternities dis agreed with the law, they should have tried changing not dis obeying it. Civil disobedience may have worked for Henry David Thoreau, but only because he was willing to accept the consequences of his acts. Unfortunately, some fraternity members seem more concerned about next weekend’s parties than the future good of themselves and their fraternities. be made in the education system and who must pay for those im provements. The people in this nation have been subject to “political voices that saw a campaign horse to ride” in the education issue, complained Reagan in his address. But if people that means vot ers did not care so much about their children’s educations, presi dential hopefuls would not have jumped at the chance to add their own ideas. Education will be debat ed and it will be an issue in the 1984 presidential election. Whether Mr. Reagan cares to ride that horse or not. Further, Reagan chided poli ticians and special interest groups because in the two months since the commission released, its report, “the taxpaying citizens of this country have been treated to a noisy debate about what to do.” But noisy debates help to keep this nation alive. In fact, next week we’ll be celebrating the 207th anni versary of another noisy debate, one without which Reagan’s advice would not have meant very much to anyone. Write to us We want to know what’s on your mind. The Daily Collegian’s editorial page is for some students the only opportunity to be heard at the University. And the page is here for other members of the University and State College communities as well. Letters to the editor and forums may be written about topics as far out as the space program or as close to home as the residence halls. The issues raised may affect many or just a few, but if they’re on your mind, they deserve to be heard. To insure that your letter is published, please limit it to one page (typed double space). Forums should be three to five double space typed pages centering on a theme. All letters and forums should include the name, ID number and phone number of the writer. Students should also include their term standings and majors; University em ployees should include their titles; and alum ni should include their years of graduation and majors with their letters. Letters may be brought or mailed to The Daily Collegian office in 126 Carnegie. Write a letter to the editor and It Penn State know what you’re thinking about. Reasons, resignations and Russian Journalists should be interested in everything. This is the only aspect of the profession in which lack of discrimination is a positive asset. But not every story a reporter encounters can, or should, appear in the newspaper. Reporters must show some compassion for the reader and answer a very important question before setting fingers to keyboard: “why would anyone care about this story?” If .the reporter cannot answer the question, the reader will not be able to, either. Last Thursday’s article “Small business grant proposals are due tomorrow," was a story in which the “why should anyone care?” question was never asked. The story reported that Friday was the dead line to apply for a federal grant to promote the export of products by small businesses. The reporter could find no one in the Centre Region who had applied for the program, or who had even heard of it. The information coordinator of PennTAP, the University’s Pennsylvania Techni cal Assistance Program, Paul Houck, said that the University had made no application, and that, in any case, “you would almost need a full-time person sitting around logging in all the (grant) possibilities.” The Small Business Export Expansion .pro gram has a $1 million budget this year (a tiny sum in federal terms) and last year spent only daily Collegian Monday, June 27, 1983 Suzanne M. Cassidy Judith Smith Complaints: News and editorial complaints Editor Business Manager should be presented to the editor. Business The Daily Collegian’s editorial opinion is and advertising complaints should be pre determined by its Board of Opinion, with sented to the business manager. If the the editor holding final responsibility. Opin- complaint is not satisfactorily resol ed, ions expressed on the editorial pages are grievances may be filed with . y not necessarily those of The Daily Colle- and Fair Play Committee of Collegian In . gian, Collegian Inc. or The Pennsylvania Information on filing grievances is available State University. Collegian Inc., publishers from Gerry Lynn Hamilton, executive secre of The Daily Collegian and related publica- tary, Collegian Inc. tions, is a separate corporate institution from Penn State, Board of Editors Editorial Editor: Marcy Mermel; News Editor: Rosa Eberly; Sports Editor: John Severance; Photo Editor: Thomas Swarr; Arts Editor: Ron Crow; As sistant Arts Editor: Ron Yeany; Campus Editor, Alecia Swasy; Town Editor: Mike Netherland; Copy Editors: Dana Buccilli, Tom Sakell; Weekly Collegian Managing Editor: Brian Bowers; Weekly Collegian Assistant Managing Editor: Lori Musser. Board of Managers Assistant Business Manager: Valerie Plame; Office Manager: $150,000 in Pennsylvania (a grant to the Philadel phia Industrial Development Corporation). This year, the grants are limited to $lOO,OOO. My point is not that small business exports are unimportant economists from Milton Fried man to Lester Thurow emphasize America’s need to compete more effectively in the world marketplace but that reporters have a respon sibility to prove to readers why a story about small business exports is important. Readers should know why they’re reading a story as well as what they’re reading. • • • A retirement is not a resignation and “recent ly” is not news. Last Friday’s front page featured an article, “Two senior administrators resign from University,"- which reported that “two of the University’s senior officers have announced their resignations giving incoming University President Bryce Jordan two more items for his list of administrative priorities." But one of the so-called resignations was really a retirement Loren M. Fortado, director of the Office of Planning and Budget, will retire from the University in October. And the other, the resignation of Theodore L. Gross, provost and dean of the University’s Capitol Campus, actual ly occurred at the end of Spring Term. The juxtaposition of the two events implied a connection, where none was demonstrated, and the inaccurate description of Fortado’s retire ment mislead this reader into thinking the “res ignations” had. something to do with Jordan's impending arrival which they did not. • • • In the category of “Lest you believe that only the Collegian makes mistakes,” comes this re port from Bob Kierstead, Boston Globe's Monday, June 27, 1983 Colleen Waters; Sales Manager: Terri Alvi no; Layout Coordinator: Kimberly Fox; Crea tive Director: Lori Hitz; Marketing Manager: Bevbrly Sobel; National Ad Manager: Kim berly Fox. c 1983 Collegian Inc. About the Collegian: The Daily Collegian and The Weekly Collegian are published by Collegian Inc., an independent, non-profit corporation with a board of directors com posed of students', faculty and profession als. Students of The Pennsylvania State University write and edit both papers and solicit advertising material for them. The Daily Collegian is published Monday, Thurs day and Friday during the summer, and distributed at the University Park campus. The Weekly Collegian is mailed to Common wealth campus students, parents of stu dents, alumni and other subscribers who want to keep abreast of University news. ombudsman. The Globe’s political cartoonist, Paul Szep, published a cartoon on May 27 cap tioned “Reagan asks for upgrading of hot line with Andropov.” It showed Reagan asking “Hey Yuri, guess who’s getting a new MX missile system to help arms reduction and world peace?” Andropov was seen responding with two short words in Russian. According to Kierstead, these words turned out to be a Russian obscenity referring; depending upon the translation, either to oral sex or to a commonly used Anglo-Saxon profanity. It seems that Szep had asked another staff, member who spoke Russian t- to provide a few real Russian swear-words rather than use “dum my” or nonsense words. What Szep didn’t ask was the meaning of the words provided. But many readers did know the meaning of the words and made sure the Glob 6 knew, too. As a result, Szep was suspended without pay for two weeks and the Globe published an apology to readers for “'the unacceptable phrase in a foreign language.” The Globe incident is the sort of thing that, happens at every newspaper. All it takes is laziness and a certain exuberant disregard for detail. The readers’ representative is available for reader comments and complaints. I can be reached at 126 Carnegie Building, University Park, PA 16802. Kathleen A. Pavelko speaks for the readers of The Daily Collegian and comments regularly on the newspaper’s journalistic performance. The Daily Collegian • • • reader opinion Plus/minus better In the April 22 issue of The Daily Collegian, Erik Randolph stated that 'the plus/minus grading system is more a minus than a plus. He said that the plus/minus grading “would cause more hassle for professors it will triple the amount of borderline cases and will lower most students’ grade point averages." He supported his view with surveys - showing the drop in the GPAs and the 'number of students favoring five point system over the 12 point sys tem. As a Penn State freshman, I was interested in Randolph’s argument, but after reading his column, I re main convinced that the twelve point plus/minus grading system is better. Randolph said, “a general drop in GPAs can be expected. . .’’By adding minuses to the letter grades, obvious ly the grade point averages would decrease. Students who would re ceive the higher straight letter grades would receive the lower minus grades they deserve. On the other hand, students who would receive a plus’ would get the lower straight Attention All Business Administration Students Fall Pre-Registration Workshop Wednesday, June 29, 7-9 p.m. Thursday, June 30, 1-4. p.m HUB, Room 225 Core Advisers will be available to assist you uidfm Fills (he musical gap in central Pennsylvania MUSICALE an uptempo mixture of classical, jazz, and folk, along with information. Weekdays 6-9 am. JUST JAZZ from big bands to avant-funk. Weekdays 9am-Ipm. JAZZ ALIVE! live performances from NPR. Friday 11am & Sunday 7pm. FREE FORM rock, and a little bit of everything else. Weekdays 1-spm, Sunday, Tuesday and Friday nights. ~ FINE ARTS SHOWCASE classical music. Weekdays 5-Bpm, Saturday and Sunday 12-6 pm. UNIVERSITY OF JAM a smooth mixture of funk, disco and jazz. Monday & Wednesday 9pm-6am. INDEPENDENT RADIO experimental. Thursday 9pm-6am. FLASHBACKS oldies, up to mid ’7o’s. Saturday 6-9 pm. METAL WIND ear crunching heavy metal. Saturday 9-12 PM. TOO MUCH, TOO SOON State College’s only punk show. Saturday 12-3 am ROOTS, ROCK, REGGAE reggae, ska and rock steady. Sunday 9-12 pm. No matter what your musical preference is, uidfm has something for everyone!! 91.1 fm ysc i# & I grade. How fair is that? Randolph supported his theory that GPAs would drop with a study of 2,000 high school students taken by science teacher James L. Shannon. The re sults of the study indicated a “signifi cant” decrease in the GPAs. But the study cannot represent the change in GPAs that the plus/minus system would have on Penn State’s student body. 1 Actually, the GPA in the five point system inflates the grade, thus mak ing the grade an inaccurate represen tation of the student’s progress. The Daily Collegian supported the plus/minus system in the April 1 editorial, “A plus for grading.” The editorial stated that through the 12 point system “students would receive a more accurate assessment of their abilities and course work.” Also, the plus/minus system “would make a student’s transcript a more accurate description of aca demic achievement. This would aid potential employers by providing them with a more accurate picture of what a student has done and could do.” That truer recording of a stu- Pollock Rec. Room dent’s accomplishments in classes outweighs the insignificant decrease of GPAs. Another reason for Randolph’s sup port of the five point system, is based on surveys of student opinions. In 1963, a poll of 556 University students showed a 57 percent preference for the five point system. Randolph con trasted the 1963 survey with the most recent survey of 251 University stu dents and stated that the recent sur vey had a “slight majority” of students who preferred the plus/mi nus system, but he failed to mention that the "slight majority” is 67 per cent. The April 1 Collegian editorial stated that “of the 251 students sur veyed, 67 percent said the would prefer a 4.0 plus/minus grading sys tem.” Besides, his incorporation of the 1963 figure into his argument was not valid. These students have since graduated; should we not focus on education in the ’80s? Randolph’s support for the five point system is also flawed in his statement,, “the systems (plus/mir nus) are no good; they would not The SconpioN _ _\ 232 W. Calder Way presents * *• tues. “TERRY WHITLOCK” no cover wed. “HARPO” thurs. “HARPO” ffi. “OROBOROS” fromClev. Ohio sat. “OROBOROS” GrateflrtDead (coming July 8-9 “CRISIS”) i benefit students or faculty.” Ran dolph also said that the change would cause more problems for professors. But, many faculty members favor the change to the plus/minus system. In an article in the April 7 Collegian, Faculty Senate Chairman-elect Peter Bennett said, “It hurts me to give a student who just squeaks by that same C.” By changing to the plus/mi nUs system, faculty, members would be able to give their students a more precise evaluation of their past work. With the five point system, each letter grade has “a range of 10 per centage points; there is no way to tell where the student was in that range. ’ ’ Borderline students also benefit from the plus/minus system, because of the better chance to receive the next higher grade. A student will find it easier to raise a B to a B plus than to raise a B to an A. More precise and fair grades from the plus/minus grading system will benefit both the faculty and students. 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