ELIZ.4BETH CITY 8T/VTE lyRTilRSr Elevate Higher. Emerge Stronger. // (KH E C^M PAS S \lhecompass@mail. ecsu. edu (252)l335{2m March 2011 liefteris5PitarakisT//AR Anti-government protesters surround and stand atop an Egyptian army arnnored personnel carrier near Tahrir Square, in downtown Cairo, Egypt. Egyptian activists have been protesting for nearly two months. ELIZABETH CITY STATE UNIVERSITY QUALITY ENHANCEMENT PLAN THINK! WRITE! REVOLUTIONIZE! Quality Enhancement Plan Celebrated By Derek Baker Elizabeth City State University celebrated the Quality Enhance ment Plan (QEP) on February 16. In conjunction with ECSU’s radio station, WRVS-FM 89.9, QEP day aspired to inform communi ties, both university and local, of the QEP and the importance of the actual plan. According to ECSU’s website, “The QEP is a focused course of action designed to improve stu dent learning in a specific area. ECSU’s QEP will address aca demic writing. The QEP slogan is: Think! Write! Revolutionize!” The QEP is a required step for the re-accreditation of the university. The reaffirmation of accredita tion is done by the Southern As sociation of Colleges and Schools (SACS). In essence, the school or public institution, is “worthy of granting degrees and that the degrees offered are valued,” the ECSU website said. The QEP’s basis is “Academic Writing.” Academic writing is the ability to write cohesive para graphs using appropriate gram mar and sentence structure. It is the ability to integrate and criti cally evaluate information from reputable sources for exposition (explanation) and description. Additionally, appropriate docu mentation and objective presenta tion of information are elements of academic writing. Though many of the programs at ECSU are currently accredited, the university is required to be re-accredited by SACS because of funding, degree value and the schools overall worth in the uni versity community. The day was celebrated with on-going radio contests, with prizes ranging from school sup plies to High Definition televi sions. The contest consisted of questions geared toward informa tion about the QEP, how it will be implemented, and what effect it will have on the school. &ema^w0les S.OJOBTiiMI Journalist Under Attack As military leaders tooe over the country, protesters continued to unite for democracy, leaving journalists in dangerous positions Post later reported that Logan was _ _ _ back home with her children and By Brittnee Exum , . . . , xv planned to return to work alter she recovered. ABC reported that American press freedom was Mark Stassman, another member wrangled as angry Egyptians at- of the CBS team, was attacked by tacked reporters in the streets of rock throwing Egyptians, downtown Cairo. The attacks Many reporters had to rely on came on the day the tanks moved themselves and crew members to in and dissembled several of survive dangerous situations. Af- Egypt’s holiest shrines. ter being carjacked, ABC reported At least 140 journalists were their news crew members were threatened, beaten, assaulted or threatened by Egyptians to be be- detained while trying to cover headed. Akram Abi-hanna, who is the protests according to CBS. Lebanese and a veteran ABC cam- CNN’s Anderson Cooper was at- eraman, used an emotional appeal tacked by an angry mob of Egyp- to the angry Egyptians to escape tians. According to the Herald their near death experience; Abi- Sun, a newspaper in Durham, NC, hanna hugged and kissed an el- Cooper said the attacks were, “... derly Egyptian, pandemonium. There was really There was no doubt that the at- no control to it. Suddenly a young tacks on joumalistt were aimed man would come up, look and to repress coverage. According you and then punch you right in to The New York Times, The the face.” Washington Post’s foreign edi- ABC reported that another CNN tor, Douglas Jehl, said “it appears reporter, Hala Gorani, was shoved that journalists are being targeted against a fence by the crowd and a by the Egyptian authorities in a photojoumalist, Rajesh Bhardwaj, deliberate campaign of intimida- was detained. ABC also reported, tion aimed at quashing honest, PCX’s Greg Palkot and Olaf Wiig independent reporting of a trans- were hospitalized in Cairo due formation event.” ABC’s David to vicious attacks. Many journal- Mur said that many Mubarak ists struggled to get to posts away supporters claimed that the inter- from the immediate danger. The national spotlight helped to bring safety of these post areas proved their country and president down to be questionable when security “the demonstrators see the jour- officials busted into a hotel room nalists as being aligned with the where Ashley Webster, from Mubarak government and are an- FOX, was reporting about the gry at them for their support of a protests from a balcony. repressive regime,” said Barbara According to The Times of DeGeorge, and Academic Dean at London, published in the United Northwood University, reported Kingdom, CBS chief foreign in The Christian Science Monitor. correspondent Lara Logan was The Obama administration re punched and beaten by flag poles, sponded to the intimidation ploys In addition. The Times of London with heavy disapproval. The New reported: the angry mob ripped York Times reported that Robert Logan’s clothes off and beat her Gibbs, a White House spokesper- for 30 minutes leaving her cov- son, said the attacks were “com- ered in red welts. CBS described pletely and totally unacceptable.” Logan’s attack as a “brutal and Hillary Clinton, U.S. Secretary sustained sexual assault and beat- of State, said, “It is especially in ing.” Logan was rescued by a times of crisis that governments group of women and approxi- must demonstrate their adherence mately 40 Egyptian soldiers, ac- to these universal values.” cording to CBS. The New York