6 1 TUESDAY, SEPT. 9, 2008 z 0 T I) t Collegian Terry Casey Editor in Chief Stef Kemmler Business Manager About the Collegian: The Daily Collegian and The Weekly Collegian are pub lished by Collegian Inc., an independent, nonprofit cor poration with a board of directors composed of stu dents, faculty and profes sionals. Pennsylvania State University students write and edit both papers and solicit advertising for them. During the fall and spring semesters as well as the second six-week summer session, The Daily Collegian publishes Monday through Friday. Issues are distrib uted by mail to other Penn State campuses and indi vidual subscribers. Complaints: News and edi torial complaints should be presented to the editor. Business and advertising complaints should be pre sented to the business manager. Who we are The Daily Collegian's edito nal opinion is determined by its Board of Opinion, with the editor holding final responsibility. The letters and columns expressed on the editorial pages are not nec essarily those of The Daily Collegian, Collegian Inc. or The Pennsylvania State Uni versity. Collegian Inc pub lishers of The Daily Collegian and related publications, is a separate corporate institu tion from Penn State. Editori als are written by The Daily Collegian Board of Opinion. Members are: tan Brown, Manssa Carl Terry Casey, Julia Chapman, Matt Conte, Abby Drey, Katie Dvorak, Brian Eller, Stacey Federoff, Virginia Harrison. Kristen Huth. Katherine Lack ey, Bnanna Labuskes, Katie Maloney, Steve Maslowsky, Lauren McCormack, Bridget Monaghan, Paul Nordeman, Alyssa Owens, Ryan Pfister, Jillian Raines, Julie Reis, Jes sica Remit, Nicole Sciotto, Brendan Shorts, Rossilynne Skena, Leslie Small, Nathan A. Smith, Andrew Staub, Brandon Taylor, Jessica Turn bull, Christopher Weidman and Kevin Liman. Letters We want to hear your corn ments on our coverage, editorial decisions and the Penn State community. ■ E-mail collegianletters@psu.edu ■ Online www.psucollegian.com ■ Postal mail/In person 123 S. Burrowes St. University Park, PA 16801 Letters should be about 200 words. Student letters should include class year, major and campus. Letters from alumni should include year of graduation. All writ ers should provide their address and phone number for verification. Letters should be signed by no more than two people. Members of organizations must include their titles if the topic they write about is connected with the aim of their groups. The Colle gian reserves the right to edit letters. The Collegian cannot guarantee publica tion of all letters it receives. Letters chosen also run on The Daily Colle gian Online and may be selected for publication in The Weekly Collegian. All letters become property of Collegian Inc. Students have an obligation to vote Just register to vote, dammit. Look, we know those voter registration people are really annoying. If you haven't had at least dozen people push forms in you face over the past week, you probably haven't gone out side. But think of how much easi er it would be to just say, "yes, I'm registered" than to have to make up a silly excuse each time. The deadline is to register is Oct. 6. All you have to do is fill out a simple form. They'll deliver for you. You can even fill out the form online at psu vote.org and drop it off later if you don't have time to do it on your walk to class. And if you really hate those voter registration people, get all your friends to register too. Because if the whole campus is registered, they won't have a job left to do and maybe they'll go away. Seriously, though: You need Voting machine switch long overdue By Leslie Small THIS SWUM MER, HILE MOST OF you weren't look ing, the county decided to change the way we vote!. Following increased com munity pressure and concern about its touch screen systems, Centre County officials chose to switch them in favor of optical scan machines which leave an all important paper trail. I'd applaud our leaders for their more sensible choice, but it's a deci sion they should !mire made two years ago. Flash back to 2006. Under pressure from the Help America Vote Act to revamp its old system, the county weighed two options: fancy, electronic touch screen systems, or the more reliable optical scan. Predictably, the county went for the touch screens and eschewed democ racy in favor of design. Fifty-four per cent of voters supported the touch screens, though more informed citi zens showed up to lobby for optical scan machines when the final vote went through. I first used the system when I voted in the 2006 midterm elections. I suppose my vote was counted, but unless I track down that machine and VOTER REGISTRATION to register. And if you're already registered, you need to vote. You owe it to yourself, and you owe it to your fellow students. You'll hear a lot of talk about how this is an important elec tion, and it is. But for students, every election should be important, because each one is an opportunity to show politi cians that we matter. And if there's one truth in elections, it's that politicians care about one demographic above all others: voters. Consider the numbers: According to the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engage ment, just 36 percent of people 18-24 years old voted in the 2000 presidential election. Among people over 25, 63 per cent voted. Or how about this: "Only 8 percent of the party chairs identified young people as the most important demographic for the long-term success of sTikecALM! ciAttwie KOW , WE ore HEW. Yo \eat) OUT SO trto cANt go t it_ournir 114amm ON s - 114 AT M Tow.. deconstruct its hard drive, I'll never be sure. To be fair, few problems were recorded countywide during that his toric election. As I wrote a news story about the machines' performance as a young reporter, I felt myself heave a sigh of relief. But across the state, other voters reported problems whose origin could've been the machines or the operators' fault. In Lebanon and Lan caster counties, polling hours were extended until 9 p.m. after voters had to switch to paper ballots because of programming errors with the new machines. In neighboring Rush and Spring townships, some voters MY OPINION reported the machines recording the opposite of who they chose for gover nor. Certainly the touch screens were more effective than Florida's famous butterfly ballots, but what if some thing had gone more seriously wrong in 2006? With no original paper ballots to hold up to the light, we could be looking at another election decided by the Supreme Court this November. Computers are a wonderful inven tion, but they aren't infallible. Hacking, sabotage, straight-up mal function take your pick Each is a reason to have a back-up plan in place. When a new set of county commis sioners finally decided to scrap our two-year-old system for a new one, they said their decision was partly influenced by the soaring costs of the touch-screen systems. Not that I'm one to complain about the machine switch, but after two years of their party,' compared to 21 percent who named senior citi zens." Why else do you think politi cians talk endlessly about social security and are willing to run billion-dollar deficits effectively passing the bill onto us to avoid cutting benefits or raising taxes? It's not because Mr. Wash ington has a soft spot in his heart for grandmas. It's because grandmas, as a group, are statistically a heck of a lot more likely to vote than you are. The best way to get politi cians to care about issues that matter to us isn't by protesting on Old Main lawn. It's not by complaining to your friends. It's by filling out that form and showing up at the polling place on Election Day. So just do it. Even if you don't care yourself, do it for the rest of us. Because every student who skips out on Nov. 4 is just one more excuse for politiciatis to write us off. _ -,---- _- -,---, ------ _ _ ,,i - eik rilii4. ii„...;_; w at Ae. . 4. ,..x._„ k ~...„-__,:, protests, is money the final tipping point? If money's really an issue, the county could've saved hundreds of thousands by just using the optical scan machines in the first place. Instead, we're looking at a brand-new system coming in unfamiliar to both voters and poll workers just in time for an incredibly important election. Unfortunately, partisan politics also seem to have played a role in the whether we got truly reliable machines. Only when Democrats Jon Eich and Rich Rogers were elected, erasing the Republican majority, did forums actually take place to discuss the issue of getting new machines. I don't care if your political affilia tion is blue, red or purple making sure votes count should be an issue we can all agree upon. What Steve Dershem and Chris Exarchos, the Republican commissioners that ush ered in the touch-screen machines, were thinking in 2006, I'll never know. But I'm guessing it had more to do with a childlike fascination with tech nology than anything else. This November, I'll stride out of my voting precinct with a paper ballot in hand, thanking my lucky stars this county finally got some sense. Next time, join me in holding our local leaders to task for decisions that threaten democracy. After all, this isn't Palm Beach. Leslie Small is a senior majoring in journal ism and political science. She is The Daily Collegian's Tuesday columnist. Her e-mail address is Icsso2o@psu.edu. • NNW vmo sAw, /, :van? 5A>,4,v6 6 , PIG Loo / 4 1: A Lor LiKe Eso av PicKsit THE DAILY COLLEGIAN LETTERS Penn Staters should look at who the real 'brats' are Poverty-stricken children throw stones at a bus of visiting Americans. One American asks the kids how they could do such a thing and walks away thinking of them as brats. Such was the scenario presented in the article, "Students learn from Middle East experience" (Sept. 3). Imagine an alternate dimension where instead of the pompous American lecturing the starving third-world child on maturity, the child went to a well-educated upwardly mobile American at one of the country's leading universities. "Where are the rest of you?" he would ask "Where are the other 40,000 of you and why aren't you doing any thing to alleviate our condition?" If our stu dent responded honestly, would he not admit that, if it were a weekend night, most Penn State students would be out getting drunk? And that the following Monday, they would walk into Hass hung-over, thinking that wearing an "Obama for President" sticker meant that they were making the world a better place. If our hypothetical Palestinian child knew the extent of the sit uation, would he not be the one lamenting to his friends about the bus full of "brats" who had made an attraction out of their war-torn homeland? Living our sheltered upper middle-class lives, it easy to judge the rest of the world. Perhaps if we looked in the mirror, we might realize that maybe we're the brats. Problems with liquor laws highlighted at tailgates While visiting a friend's tailgate, a gentle man was at nearby tailgates asking for identification from anyone with a beer in hand. 'Avo females, who were not being dis ruptive, were unable to produce identifica tion. The gentleman, identified as an officer of the Pennsylvania State Police Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement, searched a handheld database for their names and cited the females for underage drinking After citing them, the officer told them that they should plead guilty and enroll in the Youth Offenders Program, versus exercis ing their tights to a hearing before a magis trate, for the program would be unavailable if sentenced by a judge. This is an example of why liquor laws must be reformed. The females were not disturbing anyone, nor were they a danger to themselves. Instead of preventing serious property and personal crimes, the officers were tasked with enforcing a law that is not effective and causes more alcohol consump tion. Thus, I would encourage students to join in the national discussion on the drink ing age and to encourage Penn State to join with fellow Big Ten member Ohio State and support the Amethyst Initiative. Alex Weller President, College Libertarians Take alma mater to heart, lead our school with pride "May no act of ours bring shame." This line from our alma mater has been geared towards the students of Penn State, or even more namely, the fans, over the past few years. But after yet another incident dealing with players on our football team, I think it's time for them to take a good, hard look at the fourth verse of the alma mater. It should be an honor to play for such a prestigious football team and such a prestigious and caring coach. These young men do not take such things seriously, and have made us look like the Miami University of the 1980 s, and one word described them: thugs. The next time the players walk into the locker room, this quote should be put up on their lockers and every other prominent place possible, just to remind them of the coach, the team, and most importantly, the school that they are representing. Race an issue in election regardless of platforms This letter is in response to Curtis Reink ing's letter, "People don't separate race from the issues" (Sept 5.). He brings Alyssa Owens under scrutiny for addressing race as in issue that should be avoided in the upcoming elections. Race is a serious issue. Not just in the elections, but as an everyday intolerance. I have heard too many people say that America isn't ready for a black president. But why not? Is he not a man? Does he not want to reform the country from the last eight years of disastrous deci sions from an inept president? If Mr. Obama stood on those platforms and provided the hope that we can take back our once-pros perous economy, stable housing market, countless other liberties and look forward to the rebirth of the American dream as a cau casian man, would we still be debating his credentials? If any man is for this, then how can we be against him? Collegian: Foolbkg The football writers break down the action from the Oregon State game at their postgame picnic, and Penn State jumps to No. 17 in the AP polls. Read the Collegian: Footblog blog at www.psu colleglan.com under the "Blogs" heading. Hamdam Yousuf Class of 2007 Dan Vacsllk) sophomore-meterology Elizabeth Olatunp Class of 2006