The editors turned to their journalism professors,who traditionally stayed an arm's length away from the paper, for input.by late afternoon ,the tide of opinion was turning. One professor projected the photo on a screen at the front of his reporting class and engaged 20 students in a discussion of the ethical considerations in publishing the photo. Two students in the class steadfasty maintained that the photo should never run.sure,it revealed a truth about student life,but they-like some of the newspaper's editors and reporters-worried that negative publicity could lead to expulsion for the culprits. The other student asserted that the photo was significant news,a telling slice of university life. The believe the paper had an ethical obligation to report what apparently was going on routinely in what was referred to as"party housing" (apartment not affiliated with the university but populated primarily by ucf student).people might not want to know about this part of student life,but it was the truth, these students argued, and telling the truth is jounalism's mission. Back in the newsroom, the debate among at least a dozen staffers had shifted direction becouse of new information:early that morning,a ucf student had