What’s Not to Understand About Right and Wrong?
I vigorously applaud Kenneth Passon’s letter (March 30) and sadly shake my head at the others who actually attempted to rationalize USC’s most recent scandal.
A student does not attend a single class during the entire semester, is literally handed a completed final exam at the last class session and instructed to hand it in, receives an “A†for the course, and USC supporters cannot understand what the uproar is all about and attempt to dismiss it away by stating that such cheating and practices are all too common and go on at nearly every other university in the country. This is but another example as to how far the morals and ethics in this once-great nation have fallen. Truly, the differences between right and wrong have become alarmingly blurred, relative, and, more accurately, irrelevant.
GREG HUYSMAN
Fullerton
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