pages THE RIDGERUNNER October 27, 1977 Closs of 1980: Diplomas will be horder to get MARYKNOLL MARYKNOLL. N Y. 10545 WORLD By Ounpua Digest News Service Once upon a time, there was something called "grade InHatlon.” This was when, in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the radical chic more or less ruled the academic roost and grades were con sidered somewhat reactionary. As a result, grading was made considerably less harsh-to be blunt, professors and Instructors were throwing "As" and "Bs” around like confetti. Hence, grade inflation. Well, now like all Inflation, we are paying for It. lately, a crackdown on too- easy grading has swept the schools and colleges of the nation. Hard times, academically, have hit the campus. And the latest manifestation of this new trend bodes 111 for the future. The scene is the Newton Conover High School In Newton, N.C. The time Is 1980. The story Is that no student below a "C" average will be able to graduate. This Is the decree of the Newton school board. Alarmed over the ever-increasing number of high schol graduates who cannot read their diplomas, the board has decided that begliuilng for the class of 1980, no one will be able to graduate without at least what the board calls a straight "C” average. That means that any grades a student earns below "C" would have to be offset by grades above "C”. Last spring, 32 of the schools 187 graduating seniors had "D” averages; nonetheless, they received their diplomas, the school board found. Not only that, but the board has recently heard complaints that some of their graduating seniors were func tioning at the level of seml-llUteracy. "We heard gripes from employers who were hiring high school graduates who couldn't read or write," WUli Zlntbaum, chairman of the school board, told the Associated Press. "We want this to happen less frequently and one way Is through the stlffer requirements." Newton's plan sounds logical, but some educationists are saying it's a pipe dream. "I can't think of any high schools in the nation that have gone to a grade-point requirement," said H. T. Connor of the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction. "In a typical high school in North Carolina, this sort of thing would Increase the number of students who don't get diplomas." However, the school Is trying to help. At this point, current sophomores will be affected by the new policy. School of ficials say they are going to provide extra help to those students who need It. These needy students will be found when the sophomores' grades are computed against the straight "C" average they will have to meet In two years. What about those who complete their senior year and (literally) don't make the grade? They will be Issued "sub stitute" certificates that specifically say the student holding them did not technically graduate. Some teachers have complained that such a certificate would hurt a student seeking a Job. But to the high school principal, Jerome Ingle, the new requirement’s benefits outweigh its problems. "I think all the students will buckle down and meet the average. They’re all certainly capable of it,’’ he said. Time will tell. Meanwhile, U the Newton plan carries on, It mlgt>t spread across the country...even to sme college campuses. IF LOVE IS A SIDELINE His Christian name is Bernard and he looks like an ordinary American kid. But as one of the estimated 3,000 illegitimate off spring of U.S. soldiers stationed in Korea, he learned a bitter truth: in a society which traditionally esteems racial purity, his ap pearance was stigmatizing. Bernard was luckier than most. His mother and stepfather loved him and did not abandon him, but they realized his features condemned him to life as an outcast in. Korea. They turned to Father A1 Keane, a Maryknoli Missioner for help. Al’s deep, personal involvement with the problems of racially mixed children began accidentally in 1970 during Christmas Eve festivities at San Kok Dong in the northern part of Inchon. “I glanced up arid saw these kids who looked like Americans. Then I noticed how poorly they were dressed in old rags.” After Christmas, Al found 25 of these Korean-Americans crowded together in an unheated room, surviving the cold by shar ing their body heat. Originally wards of an orphanage that crumbled under fmancial pressures, the children were no longer small and cute and had no hope of adoption. Al bought them clothes and food. Because SAUM ARABIA Newspaper awards given By Gampus Digeet News Service Recently, the Society of Professional Journalists, otherwise known as Slgnut Delta Chi, made its annual student newspaper awards. Read 'em or weep (or cheer): The Daily mini, at the University of Champalgn-Urbana won the award as best newspaper. Anthonie H. WoUer of Brlngham Toung University, Provo, Utah, won the best news story award for his version of the execution of Gary Qllmore. (Who?) Laura Bloodworth, Jackie Medley and Jerry Pannln, students at the University of Oeorgla, MUledKevlUe, won the radio ^porting award tor lila broadcut "An Kduc&tlonal Kmergency." PhlUip Benson, a student at Drake University, won In the television reporting category for a story on a nursing home fire In Altoona, la. Rhonda Dickey of the University of Iowa, Iowa City, won the editorial writing competition with an editorial calling for an investigation of local law enforcement officials. (Qul custodlet custodlentls?) Craig Newman, a student at Arizona State UiUvenrity, Temj>e, won In the news photography award for a picture of a woman praying after a tornado. DavidOrlffln, of Woodstown, N.J., won the feature photography award for a photo of a dog straddling a doghoua* (no kidding). And Robert M. Ooldstein of Oregon State University, Corvallis, won the feature writing award for an article on defoliants. The editorial cartooning competltlcn was won by Brain Basaet at Ohio State University at Columbus. We have no description of the cartoon. The prize-winning nonfiction magazine article award went to Mark Sackett of Marquette University In Milwaukee for an article concerning the next aoo years. BtnaUy, the top student magmslne according to the professional journalism fraternity is Kllpsnn, produced at Western Washln^on State College, Bellingham Wash. Four of the society’s chapters per formed the Judging; greater Bulfaio, greater Kansas aty, and plain old Loa Angeles and Connecticut. To those of you who made It; CONGRATS from CDNS. To those who didn’t make it; you’re not alone. Medical schools rate high Qjr Ounpoi DIgMt SwvlM Recently, the Bakke caae Haa Omnm U.S. medical ■cboola Into aom* disrepute. Well, b« that aa It may, but compared to tboM outalde the UJI., our medical schools aeem to ■tlU b« no. 1. An Inveatlgatton o acorea on itTI and ivra certUlcatton examlnatkma of the American Board of Internal Medicine diows that graduatea of fonslgn madlcal schools au not perform as wall as .graduates of UA and Canadian maHeal schools. An article of his kindness they began coming around each day. He admits that he did not know what his next step should be. “I figured that if I taught them English, somehow they'd survive," he explains. He tutored them and then undertook a far more difficult project—finding homes in America for them. With perseverance, the help of friends and cooperation of the Hope Adop tion Agency, all but two eventually made it to the U.S. Word of Al's efforts spread. As a conse quence, his "family" expanded to include Billy and Danny, brothers retrieved from the custody of a "nice man" about to employ them in a house of prostitution. That was in 1971. Billy and Danny are still with Al and he provides for their support. Billy, 19, is a college student and Danny, 17, is in the first year of high school. For a time Al's household also included Jamie, an energetic 13 year old who left for the U.S. last summer to join his new family. For Bernard, too, meeting Father Keane signaled a new beginning. Al arranged for his adoption by an American family who met his real family in Korea. “His new parents want him to be their son by love,” says Al, “but they encourage contact with his mother and stepfather who will always have a place for him in their hearts.” And later he reflected, “I thought I was doing something for them, but I realize now. I’ve gained far more.” Remarkably, Father Keane's concern for these children, human war surplus who have experienced so much scorn and so much suf fering has been very much a sideline to his many other responsibilities. That is, if you can call love a sideline. 1077.1 I’m Fr. Ron Saucci. High times in Matpii Bjr OaniNia Dtgeat Newa Rarvtca Think lobsters are the high point tn Maine? Not qulte~at leaat in Auguata. There, local puahen have provan th«t "hl^ times” are everywljere in the U.S. Forty-nine bales ot marijuana was confiscated there Uurt week with a atreat value of some $1,800,000. A 23-year^d student, Jeffrey Boylan, from the Vl^^ Islands, had the pot In a truck he waa driving. And apparenUy, thia waa not aU the pot that waa gt>lng to be puahed In Mahie. Boylan’a arreat waa prompted by the selsure by Ute Coaat Guard of a aafflXMit and 90 more balea of pot at dockatda in an unidentified point on the Maine coastline. Looks like “flah and chlpa” might ba replaced by "the evU weed” aa the MMM heartthrcrt*. appearing In tlw oC BtedMae reported that their had been much dlacuaslan over the part foraign madlcal achool graduates play in U.S. medicine, "particularly about the preparatton for practice In the United States attordad them.” As a rasult of that dlacuaalon, the authors of the article, Dra. Jolm A. Meakauakaa and Jcdm A. Banaon, and Kllaabath Hopklaa, UlYaattc*ta4 th" performanca at 2.CM foraicn Tnertlral achool gradnataa, moat of wiiom «Uh three yean of raaKtency tralatac in tba U.8. The reautt?’n>a aattkora fouBd that tha over^ ootnpoatta aooraparlormanca ot the total group “la slgnlflftantly lower" than that o( U.8. or Canadian medical achool graduataa, Holdera of the loweat mean acore wara graduataa of PhlUlplne mediesil adtoola, and those who moved to the bead of the slaaa Included graduataa at madlcal schools in India, Peru and Thallani!. Intel eetlngly. there was conalderably vmrtablUty wUhln Hie groupe aa weU aa iMtween them. Bald the authors. “TIm pertormanee of the very beat foreign medical graduates waa equal to that of the beat of the graduataa of United Btataa medical achoola.” Also Interaatlng la the finding by the authors of the article that U.S. students who studies at medical schools In Italy, Switzerland, Mexico and Belgium also did poorly on the exama. Well, now you know where not to get sick.