DITORIAL TSANALL-TOO-COMMON OPINION that P.E.I. is a boring place. Many of the forward-thinking fixed link boosters drool t the very thought of a bridge that would able them to blow this provincial popsicle tand at will. Our sleepy little landmass is a particularly agonizing environment for the verage journalist. How often can you report bn the latest potato scandal before turning to a vegetable yourself? This is the challenge acing Island journalists- and unfortunately, bur perpetual news drought sometimes drives athetic extremes. Take U.P.E.I., for example. One has but to hisper the slightest hint of something otentially newsworthy, and reporters descend pon the joint like Japanese tourists on Green ables. Last year’s alleged sexual assault prings to mind; before the incident had been jonfirmed or even made known to all levels of e administration, reporters were crawling ll over the place like ants. While many Island journalists go into peding frenzies over the smallest morsel of ews, that’s to be expected of most reporters ywhere. Our job is to cover the news. What truly disturbing is when journalists are pparently desperate or unethical enough to to manufacture news. Sadly, there are more than a few do-it- ourselfers out there. Take, for instance, the ecent controversy over the Panther lounge’s d-of-semester pub. Evening Patriot staff riter Barb McKenna wrote the catchily-titled Dad bucks booze bash” article wherein cKenna told readers about the decadent Drink the Barn Dry” annual event, which was pposedly soon forthcoming and which had rawn (purportedly) complaints from a single, blitary parent “who wished to remain be onymous” [sic]. This covertly concerned izen reportedly complained to protest the omotion of drunkenness on campus- rrticularly “in light of the controversy rrounding the RCMP Mess”, since students ere involved heavily in the protests against rving liquor in the mess (the outcry having emmed from an RCMP officer hitting and lling a youth with his car while driving home om work after several drinks). The RCMP rndal was huge news, so what could be Ptter than cooking up a spin-off article or ©? Take one anonymous complainant, add allegedly drunken campus, stir in a topical tirrelevant RCMPalcohol controversy with St a hint of hypocrisy, and presto! Instant 7. : ; Like most instant products, though, stories € this are instant gratification without much the way of substance. The article was ensation-starved reporters to desperate and. obviously sensationalistic and tried to generate controversy by linking two unrelated things. Even if students were a pack of drunkards as the anonymous complainant implies, that would pub event she wrote about is no longer the excessive alcohol-fest it once was- there were no plans to attempta liquidation of the Lounge’s inventory last semester. For that matter, the Take one anonymous complainant, add an allegedly drunken campus, stir in a topical but irrelevant RCMP alcohol controversy with just a hint of hypocrisy, and presto! Instant news. be irrelevant to the issue of whether the RCMP should serve liquor; moreover, the article has very little basis in verified factual sources. The only “sources” cited were anonymous (the complainant), unverified (the supposed lounge staff member) and irrelevant (Dr. Eliot, who was unconnected to the matter). Had McKenna bothered to dig a bit deeper or double-check, she would have learned that the 7 ee : Ss We ‘gue ge ts os eo One more anti-football fan | would like to lend my support to Bruce Davison as a fellow UPEI student who feels that football and this university do not mix. With our yearly student costs rising so much each year, how can people expect a Board of Governors, that is constantly looking for ways to cut corners on spending, to agree to funda football program which would require serious funding to get off the ground--not to mention the cost for the upkeep and running costs. I'm tired of hearing about people whining that they had to go away to university in order to play football. | guess they forgot about the primary purpose that universities are here for: EDUCATION. If the only reason for your enrolment at university is to play college athletics, then why don’t you go to a school that is only there for that reason? Leave this learning business for the people who take it seriously. One reason that many people think that football would be a good idea is that it would draw people together. Well, | think that the university hockey and basketball games do a pretty good job of that. If you want to watch a sport outside, why not check out a soccer game, I’m sure that they would love some fans, “employee” McKenna questioned by phone for her article was not actually a Lounge employee (nor did he say he was)- and he claims that McKenna wildly misquoted him to boot. This kind of newsmaking is far from rare- another recent instance would be the reaction of a Guardian reporter to the X-Press’s then- forthcoming sex supplement last October. he Girl Who Cried “‘Booze!”’ ou can fool some of the people some of the time... Our advance poll for the supplement incurred no publicity or negative feedback until the Guardian article saw print, and even after its probe into how “shocking” our supplement might be, we received no significant negative feedback. Like the recent alcohol controversy at the Barn, this was simply an unsuccessful attempt by a reporter to make news. Though reporters are often stereotyped as sensationalistic muck-rakers, the majority of journalists are dedicated, ethical chroniclers of current events as they come to light. It’s a shame that the profession's credibility should be damaged as often as it is by irresponsible journalists. Leading or self-perpetuating journalism is self-indulgent and ultimately self- destructive, eroding its own authority. The more reporters cry wolf, the less attention they'll command from the sheep they presume their readers to be. Thankfully, you can’t always pull the wool over the public’s eyes. Sean McQuaid Non-alcoholic editor plus it’s pretty enjoyable. Or if football is all that you want to see, then go and watch the city league play. The Potato Bowl wasn’t bad football. In short, be happy that you can play football on PEI-- at least you're getting a chance to play. The jump from that level to university would probably be more than most players in that league could handle. It’s not like PEI is just a big hotbed of football talent. You have to be realistic enough to realize that the university cannot afford a luxury like a football team. So why don’t you stay home ona Sunday afternoon, do some school work and watch the NFL? It seems like a plan to me. Sincerely fed up with football, Scott MacDonald “E-Mail: The New Drug?”: A legit commentary or a cry for help? In response to “Iceman’”’s commentary in this * year’s eleventh issue, | feel he is merely an E- mail junkie who is blaming a good thing for his non-existent will power. That’s the problem with this country, people are always looking for things to dump on. Next thing you know, he will be trying to “ice” pub-nites. For “Iceman” and all you other pessimistic people, there is a way to censor E-mail from your system. Before you have a cow, know your facts (I just got a message, | have to go!). Sincerely, Jean-Claude Van Damme | _x.press january eighteenth 1994 page 9 | ST Ree al sciaenscamineneiicgimatiiasiattas tiie hindi aapriaiyegeeapeapeg cas ---LALL A STAR! CELL TTL oo Avonlea Bookstore 4 Water Street Summerside 436-1921