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"i:s.,r. 4.lrnr.."r : :+.'rrrr.v.,.r:...:L ..:.kw:.?.f..,....:,:....r . .r'....:>_.r:.:..,.,..,r.....," 'r..' n '".1....n..{ }'+ .r .{ r'r.$::F.v....+.S.n .v....n...n.,.n...r..{" .................................. .......:..:. .v..:.::...ry::::i}:.:.::::::;: b..f,.:."...............,fL.........' 4.t........:...........,...................:.........r.:. MUsic The Motown sound Page 3 Twenty years ago the Temptations and the Four Tops achieved national fame for their Motown soun- ds. The groups will perform together Friday night at Hill Auditorium. FILM An unusual family Page 4 The children of a hotel proprietor have trouble coping with the pressures of life/in the Hotel New Hampshire. Beau Bridges, Jodie Foster, Rob Lowe, and Beau Bridges star in the movie based on John Irving's best-selling novel that is reviewed this week.. THE LIST Happenings Pages 5 -8 Your guide to fun times for the coming week in Ann Arbor. Film capsules, music previews, theater notes, and bar dates, all listed in a handy-dandy, day-by-day schedule. Plus a roster of local restaurants. THEATER Women's roles Page 9 Wife, working woman, mother, and housekeeper are roles that women play in society today. The Per- formance Network interprets these roles in four one- woman acts entitled Female Parts. Also, this week, the University Mime Troupe presents a series of eight skits called Mimages. See this week's previews to find out what there are all about. COVER STORY Cheating 101 Pages 10 & 11 They may be indignant at first, but with a little prodding, most students will admit that they plagiarize. The cheating runs the gamut from padded biographies to attaching a new title page to another student's paper. This week's cover story looks at the increasing acceptability of cheating, the professors why try to fight it, and the students who break the rules and don't feel guilty. Cover by Doug McMahon. BOOKS Exploring strange, new worlds Page 12 In The Trellisane Confrontation, the newest ad- dition to the Star Trek library, a group of terrorists take control of the Enterprise. Kirk must enlist the aid of the alien pepple of Trellisane, and even convin- ce a fierce Klingon captain to fight at his side to prevent galactic destruction. Find out why author Blish fails to go where others have gone before. i Weekend Friday, March 23, 1984 Vol. it, issue 20 Magazine Editor' ..................Mare Hodges Sales Manager .................. Debbie Dioguardi Assistant Sales Manager ............ Laurie Truske Weekend is edited and managed by students on the staff of The Michigan Daily at 420 Maynard, Ann Ar- bor, Michigan, 48109. It appears in the Friday edition of the Daily every week during the University year and is available for free at many locations around the campus and city. Weekend, (313) 763-0379 and 763-0371; Michigan Daily, 764-0552; Circulation, 764-0558; Display Adver- tising, 764-0554. Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily.N t Come back to the Michigan Theater, J i mmy Dean, Jimmy Dean. (Friday, March 30) DELI and PARTY STORE We carry a full line of Groceries and Fresh Meats and Vegetables papers and exams to the infamous files for their future brothers' use. Though some houses files are out- dated, those which are kept current can supply a student with research papers on subjects ranging from world politics to art history and exams covering rigorous courses from accounting to biochemistry. Jim, who asked not to be identified, compared the files at his fraternity to the collection of old exams at the University Student Counseling Office in Haven Hall. Old notebooks, study guides, exams, and even a list of classes in which members have been enrolled fill the cabinets in the study room of one popular sorority on campus. One mem- ber of the sorority, who asked that her name not be used, said the updated lists makes finding help for a class con- venient. Members of several fraternities on campus who were contacted by the Daily admitted that their houses had files of old exams, notes, or lab reports, but they didn't consider sharing past assignments out of the ordinary. Students who aren't members of fraternities or sororities save class notes or exams for a variety of reasons, said Frank, a member of a large cam- pus fraternity. "It's not like we're saving them for the sole purpose (of letting other mem- bers use them)," he said. But Frank said that if a fraternity brother asks another member for an old paper or exam, without exception, the assignment will be turned over. "It's only fair," he said. Files provide instant academic vic- tory. With a little editing, a used paper can be ready to go the night before it's due. "If I were in a fraternity," Brad says, "I could have four years of college done with.'' And students can always turn to the numerous paper-writing services ad- vertised in magazines. For about $5 a page, students can buy papers with complete bibliographies, footnotes, and a complementary .list of places to which the paper has already been sold. This protects the customer from unknowingly turning in the same paper to the same university. Art Stekel, owner of Research Assistance, a paper-writing company in Los Angeles, Calif., says his service is for "research purposes only." * But he admits that "when the things leaves here, we don't know what hap- pens to it." Professors at the University are con- cerned with the number of students who cheat or plagiarize and make efforts to discourage them. But many are reluc- tant to report students to the Univer- sity's academic judiciary office. This year, 11 cases of plagiarism have been brought to LSA's academic judiciary board, compared to only five in 1974. Last year, seven cases of plagiarism and 18 incidents of cheating were reported to the judiciary, both more than double the number 10 years ago. The board is made up of seven students and seven faculty members. "With a total registration of around 13,000, you're talking about a very small small percentage of cases that reach (the judiciary) office. I suspect that most cases don't get here," said Assistant Dean of LSA Eugene Nissen who heads the academic judiciary.d- The University' allows individual schools and ,colleges to handle academic misconduct independently. Most professors, however, don't use the formal procedures. If they suspect a student has cheated or plagiarized,. they will handle the matter privately to avoid the lengthy hearing process. Bob Weisbuch, the associate chair- man of the English department, is critical of professors who are unwilling to press charges against a student. "Dealing with it privately is no good, but I don't blame professors for avoiding the system because it is time consuming." Weisbuch is infamous among stud- ents for his hard-line stance on plagiarism. He has brought two cases to the judiciary. "(Plagiarism) is deep dishonesty. I think of it as an academic felony,' Weisbuch says. . "I was reading an essay (by a student) on Charles Dickens which came out of J. Hillis Miller's book (on Dickens). I called the student in, and read her the riot act." The student told Weisbuch that she didn't get the essay from Miller's book, rather she copied the paper from her roommate. "I call that plagiarism squared," he says. In the College of Engineering, studen- ts are bound to an honor code. Before every exam, engineering students must sign a statement guaranteeing that they have not received, seen, or given another student information about the exam. Some engineering students say the code helps avert the desire to cheat. "It affects me," says Brett Hanks, a freshwoman engineering student. "There is a psychological effect when you have to sign your name.'" But the code is hardly a cure-all for students who have become wizards at cheating. "It goes on just as much in engineering (as in LSA)," says Mike Jansen, an LSA freshman who has taken classes in the engineering school. Regardless of which school, it is dif- ficult to prove a student has plagiarized, says LSA senior Jay Kalter, chairman of the judiciary board. The burden of proof is on the professor, Kalter says. "While we are not a court of law, we do function on the premise that a student is innocent until proven guilty," Kalter says. "How can we impose a penalty otherwise?". The penalties most commonly issued are academic probation or suspension. In some cases students will be required to take additional credits in order to graduate or a letter of reprimand will be placed in their files. Professors can also give students a failing grade for the course. Featuring our famous LEAN GROUND BEEF FROM ROUND $1 .69 lb. R D in C NI Once students have been caught for an academic offense they face potential problems applying to graduate schools, Nissen says. "I can't tell you the trauma and problems a student deals with in an in- 'fraction of the code of conduct," he says. Most graduate, school applications ask if students have been found'guilty of an academic offense. Students who lie on the application could be expelled if the school discovers the information is false, warns Nissen. Some professors try to control cheating by warning students on the first day of class that they will take cases to the judiciary. "I make it clear this is a serious mat- paranoid. "I'm le of my colleagues, trusting students folks who want to c Honest students have pushed for Erste says. Students whoat those who c frustrating. "I d plagiarize. I neve senior Kelly McD resent it when a pe paper (that has recopied and I dor an English major. But for those reworked papers, rare. -And some F '(Plagiarism) is deep dishonest; of it as an academic felony.' -Bob English D( associate OAST BEEF eluxe Sandwich cludes:Roost Beef, heese, Lettuce, Tomato Ow: $1.49 lg. 1.89 nd one 1/ price 20 varieties of sandwiches under $2.00 bI III ter and that I won't treat it privately," said Weisbuch. Herbert Hildebrandt, a professor of communication and business ad- ministration, says he keeps copies of student papers on file to compare them with similar papers submitted in future semesters. Geology Prof. Daniel Fisher says he distributes three different versions of the final exam to prevent students from cheating. Other instructors take even stricter precautions. Lou Erste, a teaching assistant in the political science depar- tment, collects and stamps blue books several days before an exam to prevent students from bringing in prepared an- swers. When the exam is given he distributes the blue books randomly. Erste calls his anti-cheating measures prudent, rather than than a little trout students can a cheating. "Maybe I'm moralist, but I thin major character Prof. James Gind academic judiciary But psychology says he is hesita pathological, rat standard behavior "It becomes seer acceptable - not s would want to g barrassed, but it really cheating," s "It's seen as a so says. It is in our cu Silbar is a Dail r 000 OCITIZEN r .HE A Special on RE CASE BEER 2 KEG BEER $4.00 above wholesale DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED BEER AND WINE DESERVES CITIZEN 1028 E. University ANN ARBOR 662-0202 _ . , iii ui . r Consider this handsome quartz watch with a classic strap and contemporary case. Hasn't he earned it? 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