Technorati Tags: humor
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THON 2009 began Friday, Feb. 20, in the Bryce Jordan Center on Penn State's University Park campus. The 46-hour Penn State IFC/Panhellenic Dance Marathon, the largest student-run-philanthropy in the world ...And news outlets, like the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, uncritically repeat the claim. Last year I put the lie to this idea and this year the Centre Daily Times did some very good reporting which made it even clearer that this isn't a student-run event in an meaningful way.
Penn State spokeswoman Jill Shockey said the university’s Associated Student Activities office within Student Affairs helps the finance committee for Thon — as it does with all student clubs — and the university development office handles corporate donors and donations for those wanting tax receipts.If this were a student-run philanthropy wouldn't this information be controlled by the students and not Old Main?
Information on those donors is considered “proprietary,” Shockey said.
Organizers call "THON" the largest student-run philanthropy in the world. They say they'veI hope this signals a more skeptical attitude from the CDT toward Old Main.
raised $52 million since 1973, including $6.6 million last year.
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...Bill Mahon said with the amount of marketing of alcohol, he is surprised the university isn't number one. He said 353 Penn State students were taken to the emergency room for alcohol overdoses last year. "There are 90 bottle shops, beer distributors, bars, state (liquor) stores and restaurants that sell alcohol within a five mile radius of Old Main. Our students don't stand a chance," Mahon said in an e-mail. "We are not going to wave the white flag and give up, but it is a struggle every year to compete with the businesses in this community that aggressively promote alcohol consumption with our students," Mahon saidI've always found this a bit odd. It's as if Old Main were arguing that the large enrollment at University Park isn't due to any Penn State policy, rather it is a result of all of the student housing within a five mile radius of the Old Main.
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Carnegie Mellon University today announced a 2.94 percent increase in undergraduate tuition, the smallest increase in 34 years.
"It is not a good time to try to raise tuition any more than even a fraction of a percent over what was proposed," [Spanier] said. "It would come at a time when it is harder than ever for the families of our students to cope with that."
The proposed increase, voted on at the Sept. 19 Penn State Board of Trustees meeting, would raise tuition by 4.5 percent for out-of-state students and 5.5 percent for in-state students at University Park for the 2009-10 academic year.
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Philadelphia Newspapers L.L.C., which owns The Philadelphia Inquirer, the Philadelphia Daily News, and Philly.com, filed for bankruptcy protection Sunday in a bid to restructure its $390 million in debt load.Technorati Tags: Philidelphia Inquire, bankrupt
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It must make the people in Smeal proud that their high tech showpiece Trading Room has produced such outstanding graduates.I spent a decade on Wall Street working for Alex. Brown & Sons, Deutsche Banc Securities and Goldman Sachs. I found Wall Street a largely liberal environment with one major exception, the trading floor. In my experience I found traders, who are largely white ethnics -Irish, Italian, Greek, Polish or Slovak among others- and graduates of the Seton Halls, the Boston Colleges, the Notre Dames, the Penn States were the most rabid conservative and foul mouthed people on the planet.[Emphasis added.] Nor could any of them ever get my name right. "My name is Charles, not Chuckie" was something I would repeat whenever I had the misfortune to have to interact with them. Some of these folks made William Buckley appear moderate.
Whatever my own views on traders and their culture, it appears that Rick Santelli is their patron saint. In his five minute rant, Mr. Santelli went on to compare Barack Obama's America to Castro's Cuba and to suggest a kind of modern day "Boston Tea Party" - a call for a Chicago Tea Party as an anti-spending revolt. Mr. Santelli's "I'm mad as hell and I am not going to take it" tirade on CNBC brought cheers and applause on the floor of the Chicago Board of Trade not to mention accolades from across the conservative blogs.
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...THON is not registered as an independent charitable organization. When you make a donation to THON you use Penn State's tax-exempt identification number:24-6000-376. [Ed 2/19/09: The link from last year is dead. Here are screen shots from this year and of the Penn State's IRS W-9 Form used for the tax-exempt donations to Thon.] Hence the money disappears into the the Penn State information blackhole and since The Four Diamond Fund is also a part of the University, the money never sees the light of day again.Yesterday, Anne Danahy at the Centre Daily Times wrote a piece about this very issue.
Is the money misused? There is no way of telling. But it is worth recalling how Old Main has been handling the donation to student groups and colleges.Beginning this year, donations to colleges and student groups exceeding $5,000 will take a pit stop at the Office of University Development for 90 days while Penn State pockets the interest, a university official said.And the University never told anyone about this scheme including the those donating the money. Imagine then what they might do with $6.6 million.
...Thon and the Four Diamonds Fund are not independent charitable organizations. Rather, they are part of Penn State and get their tax exempt status from the university. As such, they — and Penn State — are not required to make any part of their finances public.Danahy does some good reporting and the article is well worth a read. I would like to see more of this type of reporting in the CDT.
Aside from the list of the top 10 fundraising fraternity and sorority teams, and the top three independent fundraising groups, Thon releases few details on its donors. Similarly, the Four Diamonds Fund doesn’t have to provide specific information about its budget.
In Pennsylvania, educational institutions are exempt from the Charitable Purposes Act, which oversees registration of charities.
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"We made a decision several weeks ago to put Russell on probation. We informed them more recently of our deadline for addressing issues that have been identified and for answering questions we posed to them," Penn State President Graham Spanier wrote in an e-mail. "Their response will determine whether we renew our relationship with them."Notice the time lags between the conception, execution, and public announcement of the plan. What was happening during that time? Could it have been that Old Main was colluding with Russell during that time to cook up a plan to staunch Russell's loss of contracts with other schools? Now that would even be slicker.
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He singled out a provision for weatherizing poor people's homes, causing it a worthy goal but saying it does nothing to create new jobs....because weatherizing homes requires no labor. That's a pretty weak reason to oppose the bill.
LIMBAUGH: You could call this the “porkulus.”
CANTOR: Right. (laughing) Let me tell you something. It is porkulus. That’s a great description.
Every member made their own decision and decided to vote against the bill. It was nice to see that we were all united.
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Q: When your audience began to grow and the power you wield to influence people grew did the message change?To better understand what Beck has in mind when he talks about common sense, watch the following video clip (Via Media Matters) of Beck with Bill O'Reilly.
A: From 2000 to today you see a profound change in me. I am extraordinarily aware of the responsibility that I have. I still have to be an entertainer. I still am who I am. I get a lot of mail from the Fox viewers saying, "Can you please watch your language?" I mean, help me, please. I'm an alcoholic that gave up everything in my life. I'm working on it. I'm a work in progress. So I am still a flawed individual, but I'm trying my hardest to do my job in a responsible way. Nobody listens to each other anymore. They just put you in a box, a category. I am truly not against Democrats, and I am truly not for the Republicans. I am for common sense. I just said to my producer I don't know how we do this show without politicians, but I have found myself in the last week finding myself as the host not even listening to them, left and right. I don't think the majority of them believe anything. It's just like a show to them. It's a game. I really truly believe our republic is at stake.
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Pseudonyms have long served writers whose voice would be otherwise suppressed or who, because of professional or political constraints, would not have been able to bring their thoughts to the public. Until the 20th century women would often have to use a pseudonym to ensure their works would be read, or even published. Popular writers such as Stephen King and Anne Rice have used pseudonyms, especially for fiction outside their normal genres. Nobel laureate Doris Lessing wrote two books under a female pseudonym to highlight the difficulty unknown writers have in garnering an audience. Authors of erotica often use a pseudonym. Revolutionaries and political agitators often use pseudonyms. And people have long used pen names and pseudonyms to avoid using their foreign-sounding names.
Other writers have used pseudonyms to separate their professional life from their published works. David Cornwell, an agent in the British intelligence services MI-5 and later MI-6 wrote three novels under a pseudonym. After the success of his third novel, The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, John Le Carre' left MI-6 to devote himself full time to writing. A few years ago the New Yorker ran a terrific series of articles by a NYC police officer writing under the pseudonym Marcus Laffey. When no longer a beat cop, the writer eventually "came out" as Edward Conlon, author of the memoir Blue Blood and now a detective with the NYPD.
As anyone with even a smidgen of knowledge American history can tell you, our most famous pseudonym is Publius, the name used by James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and John Jay for The Federalist Papers, their articles published in newspapers urging adoption of the Constitution. The Anti-Federalists, too, used pseudonyms from Roman history such as Cato and Brutus. In the eighteenth century using pseudonyms was widely accepted in public political discourse. Among other virtues, it helps focus attention on the argument instead of the person advancing it.
Pseudonymous writing can, of course, lead to abuses. A few years ago I was managing a Congressional campaign in New Hampshire when the bloggers at three separate blogs (which have since been merged in to Blue Hampshire) figured out that a commenter urging readers to support Democrats in other states was really a staffer for the Republican incumbent we were trying to beat. (That case is used as an example in the Wikipedia entry for concern trolls.) Certainly at DKos we have to ferret out a decent number of sock puppet and other miscreants who hide behind pseudonyms.
Pseudonyms are also used for more dubious reasons. It's hard to argue that anything other than his privileged position in the Washington press corps and unquestioned access to inside sources with the Clinton administration were put at risk when Joe Klein published his loose roman a clef novel Primary Colors under the pseudonym "Anonymous." And it can sometimes be harder to assess public and historical figures because their writings include lesser-known works published under a pseudonym. The writer of alchemical works who published as Jeova sanctus unus would probably deserve to be little more than a historical oddity if his real name wasn't Isaac Newton (who himself pulled a John Lott/Mary Rosh and wrote letters under fictitious names vouching that he was the inventor of calculus).
The Klein case probably contributed to the frenzy of activity trying to figure out the identity of a blogger who back in 2003 seemed to know everything. "Is it Sidney Bluenthal? It just HAS to be Sidney Blumenthal," thought a lot of people. But no. The guy blogging as atrios was an academic economist with a temporary appointment who wasn't a mouthpiece for DC insiders, but rather a guy who had a computer, internet access, read a lot and had a terrific wit and an eye for hypocrisy and cant.
The atrios situation should probably have told some of the hide-bound and insecure journalistic protectors of decency and promoters of "transparency" that their fevered beliefs about the identities of these new pseudonymous bloggers were probably crazy. Like most people who write comments on political blogs, the pseudonymous bloggers—who are also sometimes anonymous; the two are not the same—were often people without any particular inside access, but simply informed readers who wrote well and could attract an audience.
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We were expecting a frustrating meeting of passion on one side and corporate doublespeak on the other. Instead, what we saw was a genuine collaboration between two groups with slightly different missions, but similar ideals. We won’t get into specifics here– the conversation got pretty wonky, including one nice discussion about how best to test the different toilet paper options– but it was cool to see. Paul Ruskin, the Communications Coordinator for OPP, even brought tea for the group.What is to be made of the difference in the response of the University to these two groups? Not much, both responses are consistent with the current dominant corporate culture.
... has reduced annual shipping container use by 500 units, preventing the consumption of 1,000 barrels of oil and 3,800 trees while netting $2.4 million in cost savings,and the US Chamber of Commerce, whose Web site is chock-full of positive stories about Going Green.
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"We made a decision several weeks ago to put Russell on probation. We informed them more recently of our deadline for addressing issues that have been identified and for answering questions we posed to them," Penn State President Graham Spanier wrote in an e-mail. "Their response will determine whether we renew our relationship with them."How does this Double Super Secret Probation work, you ask? It's simple. Old Main demands that Russell comply with ten remedial steps in a Fair Labor Association report on Russell's practices in the Honduran plant in question or else the University will cancel its contract with the apparel maker.
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Despite the deficit, Shakely is confident the program could still work.Of course, Tom was a bit confused about the difference between the Federal government, which can run a deficit, and Pennsylvania state government, which can't, but nonetheless he was fine with deficit spending.
"The bottom line is that the government has proved it doesn't have a problem with deficit spending," Shakely said.
Congress very well may sentence our young people to a two-fold punishment with this bill: first, to suffer institutions of higher education less affordable, and second, to bear the responsibility of footing the bill for this borrowed, $1 trillion “stimulus.”You have to admire that he can do this without his head exploding while he types.
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[He]warned Tuesday that a $1 billion reduction in Pennsylvania's expected share of federal economic stimulus aid in a bill passed by the U.S. Senate would force deeper state spending cuts and result in the loss of hundreds of additional state jobs.
[...]
The federal money removed by the Senate would have been set aside for the Corrections Department, which plans to add 2,400 beds to state prisons and community correctional facilities. It would free up an equal amount of state dollars for other programs at a time the national recession has caused a multibillion-dollar budget shortfall.
Failure to restore any of that money would likely require additional spending cuts for such services as education and health care. The governor said it also would result in the loss of 1,500 state workers along with the 2,600 jobs already scheduled to be eliminated under his budget.
"This is not a slush fund for governors," Rendell said of the federal aid for states. "This is all about state services, local services and jobs."
Republicans who control the state Senate are also closely monitoring the debate in Washington.
"If the federal stimulus bill passes in this form, we will be very interested in the details of the governor's additional proposed cuts," said Erik Arneson, spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi, R-Delaware.
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The Senate version would also provide significantly less money to states that have been counting on the stimulus package to help them backfill budget gaps for education programs. The original Senate legislation, like the House version, would have created a $39 billion “stabilization” fund designed to be distributed to states to keep their higher education and K-12 budgets at their 2008 levels, as well as $25 billion in additional money for states to use to sustain crucial public services, including education.The IHE piece is well worth a read, as it contains a complete run down of the implications of the senate bill for higher education. Not all of the implications are bleak, for example, increased funding for Pell grants remains in the compromise bill.
Under the revised Senate version, the stabilization fund would be cut by a third, to $26.7 billion, and the additional $25 billion pool would shrink to $9.6 billion.
This is likely to be a major issue in states such as Missouri, where Gov. Jay Nixon’s agreement with university leaders to keep higher education whole in the 2010 budget, in exchange for freezing tuition, depends on the federal stimulus funds to make it work.
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Have to say I laughed out loud when I read the post below by one of our anonymous bloggers (Veblen) in town.Bob should take note of what I did here. I linked to his blog post. He should have done the same with mine. [Update 2/6/09: I checked Bob's blog a few moments ago and found that he's put in a link to the post. Thanks, Bob.]
I'll give credit where it's due: He's so right and I wish I would have come up with this line.
Here's what he wrote, after having been burned by posting a perceived "negative" comment about Penn State football on our Web site:
" ... just a warning, making any comment at the CDT that can be construed as the least bit negative to Penn State football is the cyberspace equivalent of walking in a Penn State frat in an Ohio State sweatshirt."
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...also warned today that it planned cost cuts of $100 million to $110 million this year. It didn't say how much, if any, would come from layoffs.
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Every member made their own decision and decided to vote against the bill. It was nice to see that we were all united.That GT is some sort of kidder... isn't he?
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Since its inception in 1855, Penn State has been committed to making a high quality college education available to the sons and daughters of the working class of this state,...Graham Spanier, June 15, 1997
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