WU.TH NTINA C~G NWSAPR VNas~n~s OTOER199 Dolas ndSese00OBR 98 V U.TH NTI@LCOLEE EWPAa1 i. Adlk.L i U. THE NATIONAL CO GE NEWSPAPER a' NewsR rs OCTOBER 1989 !r ns.AO 1989 Dollars and Se jT 0 U. THE NATIOI6L COLLEGE NEWSPAPO 19 Graffiti lists ways to torture, maim female students Students win Chevy, Olds, Pontiac, Buick in sweepstakes Four students won new cars as grand the United States. prize winners in the General Motors Sahler won a Chevrolet Camaro RS, Acceptance Corporation Sweepstakes Mulligan received an Oldsmobile Calais By Deborah Gluba The Daily Iowan U. of Iowa A graphic list describing ways to tor- ture and brutalize women outraged U. of Iowaofficials and promptedprotests and an investigation to determine the list's author(s). "What they didn't realize was there was no humor in writing about violent images, of women in particular," said Denise Collins, coordinator of the hal where the graffiti first appeared in a 1990. Your in Europe. Complete your education with a semester or a year in Europe while fulfilling university requirements. Live in a dynamic seaside or mountain setting in Spain or France, or in one of Italy's most exciting economic centers. - Fully accredited courses transfer to your university. - International business and economics program - Italy. - Intensive language courses - Spanish, French, Italian, Basque - Anthropology, history, political science, education, economics, art... and more. - Experienced American and European faculty. - Financial aid and scholarships. - Spring, summer, or fall semesters. Make 1990 your year insEurpe. Write or call now for your information packet Dr. Carmelo Urza University of Nevada-Reno Reno, Nevada 89557-0012 (702)784-6569 US C Consortium A project of seven universities men's bathroom. After the graffiti, titled "The Iop Ten Things To Do To the Bitches Below,"was printed in the March 2 Daily Iowan, about30 people picketed outside the res- idence hall claiming the UI administra- tion tried to cover up the incident. They accused officials of ignoring, or tolerating, complaints of sexism and racism. "We are appalled at the lack of action taken by the administration regarding thelist,violencetowardwomenandanti- racial comments and actions that go on at this campus," said Bethany Marcus, a freshman who organized the protest. UI President Hunter Rawlings said the administration was making every reasonable effort to identify the culprit or culprits. "To say that we should not be con- cerned because only words were used, and because no one was physically harmed, is toignorethe powerofwords," he said in a statement. One item on the list suggested to beat the residents below "into a bloody pulp with sledgehammers and laugh." Other items on the list described how to muti- late female genitalia with an electric trimmer, pliers and "a red-hot soldering iron." The list was presumably directed at female residents who live one floor below the residence hall floor where the writ- ing was found. Relations between resi- dents on the two floors became strained after the women complained about loud stereos. "We dealwiththerapevictims and this is a piece of the type of attitudes that allow rape to occur," said Rape Victim Advocacy Program Director Karla Miller."Thesearethreats.Whatifpeople act on these?" Phillip Jones, UI dean of student ser- vices, saidresidents ofthehallwere sent a letter regesting they assist the UI administration in identifying the author(s). Aninvestigationfollowed, but, no culprit was identified. Many hall residents said the graffiti did not even warrant a protest. "It was justgraffitiwas allit was,"saidfreshman Tim Bell. "It happens all the time. This is sensationalism." Still, Miller was adamant that the issue was not being blown out of propor- tion. which ran in U. The National College Newspaper last spring. The winners, Central Washington State senior Jacquie Sahler, Clarion U. senior William Mulligan, Eastern Kentucky U. senior Maria Koenig and Rhonda Collins, Northern Illinois U. sophomore, were ran- domly selected from 62,000 entries from college and university students throughout International Series Coupe, Koenig won a Pontiac Sunbird GT Convertible and Collins won a Buick Regal Gran Sport. Mulligan, like the other winners, didn't think he had a chance of winning. He remembers, "I opened U. and sawthe cars in the ad. They were all great cars, and even though I didn't think I would win, I decided to take the chance." Jacquie Sahier Maria Koenig Rhonda Collins i Live-in fraternity advisers regain popularity* By Steve Miliano Adviser Scott Feeney have a good working relationship. The Daily Maine Campus "He keeps track of what's going on," Roberts said. "If there U. of Maine, Orono are any problems or if he notices that things are not being taken care of, he brings them up to me." During the '60s, fraternities and sororities stopped using Roberts said he was originally a little worried about a pos- live-in advisers. sible conflict about the adviser's role in a fraternity, but that U. ofMainealsomovedawayfromthelive-inadvisersystem, afterameetingwithFeeney, anyapprehensionwasputtorest. butattitudesabouttheseadvisersamongbothcampusofficials "We set down ground rules and defined positions," Roberts and fraternity members are changing. said. Eleven of the 13 national fraternity chapters at U. of Maine Lucy said the existence of live-in advisers is not meant to be currently have a live-in adviser, said William Lucy, associate a hindrance to any fraternity or sorority, but "is one more way dean of Student Activities and Organizations. Pi Beta Phi, the to strengthen the organization." only sorority at U. of Maine with a house, also has a live-in "The role of an adviser is not to run the organization," he adviser.. said. "He or she is there to step in, if necessary, to avoid things "During the '60s, their value was questioned," Lucy said. that may be illegal or embarrassing to the group." "Today, the iiportance is appreciated. It's an old tradition To be of more influence than is necessary would be "to take that is coming back. Our fraternities and their national head- away from the true meaning of fraternity," he said. quarters support the idea of live-in advisers. "I've never heard Sam Civiello, Phi Kappa Sigma's adviser, agreed. "The guys one fraternity with a live-in adviser say it was a bad idea,.' here can take care of themselves. I'm really a correspondent Jim Roberts, president ofTau Kappa Epsilon fraternity, also between the undergraduates, the alumni and the administra- expressed his support for live-in advisers. He said he and TKE tion," he said. TAs Continued from page 1 A&M President William H. Mobley reports that 6.7 percent of undergraduate lecture classes and 21 percent of undergraduate labs are taught by TAs. Junior horticulture major Susan Bernhard was in one of those labs and experienced a communication problem with her TA. Bernhard estimated the assistant's English proficiency at 60 percent. "He had problems getting the point across because of his accent," she said. Although Mays admits these situa- tions do occur, he said some studentsuse a foreign-born professor's accent as an excuse for poor classroom performance. "They say a teacher has poor knowl- edge of English after not getting along with a teacher or getting poor grades," he said. If a TA does have a problem with English, it can usually be detected early, Mathematics Department Head H. Elton Lacey said. TAs at A&M have to pass an English proficiency exam in addition to standard tests, he said. "If it's apparent that a TA has poor English-speaking capabilities, he is assigned non-teaching duties, such as tutorial work, until we feel confident of his or her English." Sandra Burke, a TA in education tech- nology from Ireland, said she is aware of complaints other assistants have received, but attributed them to xeno- phobic attitudes. . "It seems like in America, everyone is broughtup with the philosophy that they only need to know English and the whole world willaccommodate them,"she said. "But they need to realize that many cultures and languages exist other than their own. " Plagiarism Continued from page 16 Teaching assistants and faculty members who suspect plagiarism are required to report it to Sundt's office. She keeps copies of term paper cata- logs, and papers suspected of being purchased are compared with similar entries. Term papers may be pur- chased from the research companies to compare with a student's work. . "The majority of students admit to some form of plagiarism if they are being summoned by our office, because we have usually done enough research thatif we're actual- ly going to make a case, it's very unlikely that plagiarism didn't occur," Sundt said. Students are not the only ones at fault. The sale ofpapers is prohibited by the California Education Code if the seller knows the paper would be submitted for academic credit. In February, a Los Angeles Superior Courtjudgeissued aprelim- inary injunction to stop a woman from selling term papers to college students. The crackdown was reported to be the first court action in 15 years aimed at the practice. It stemmed from a complaint by an assistant engineering professor at Cal State U., Los Angeles, who was angeredby flyers on campus advertising a term paper service. "The action is a warning to other similar businesses that we will take whatever legal means that are avail- able to us to shut them down," said Lee Kerschner, CSULA's vice-chan- cellor of academic affairs. However, Stekel believes his com- panyisnotjeopardizedbytherecent court action. "We follow strict guide- lines," he said, including requiring clients to sign a form stating they willnot submit purchased papers for academic credit. Papers also are stamped and the introduction reformatted to make it difficult to be submitted. Research Assistance papers are sold for $7 a page, while customized papers writ- ten to students' specifications run from $16.50 to $20 a page. The penalty for submitting a pur- chased term paper at UCLA ranges from warning to dismissal from the university, although Sundt said the penalty usually involves some type of suspension. A FREE PHONE CALL COULD HELP PUT YOU IN A NEW GM CAR OR LIGHT-DUTY TRUCK THE EASY WAY. THE GMAC COLLEGE GRADUATE FINANCE PLAN...GET $400 AND MAKE NO PAYMENTS FOR 90 DAYS.* Call 1-800-237-3264, and you'll find out how GMAC can make your after- college math a lot simpler. With GMAC's College Graduate Finance Plan, you'll receive: $400 to apply to your down payment when you buy a new GM car or light-duty truck. M OR, $400 to apply to your first lease payment. 1 PLUS, whenyou buy you may be able tp defer your fyrstpayment for 90 days...giving you time to get your career up and running before you start makdng payments. Finance charges accrue from date of purchase. Another important fact: Your $400 discount is in addition to any rebate or special financing rate available when you buy your new GM vehicle. 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Afterclass, Schoengart takes onhisjob as store manager at Adams Shoes. He keeps "three or four days worth" of clothes hanging in the office closet there, and his textbooks are stacked next to books titled "Swim with the Sharks" and "Thriving on Chaos." A scanning radio on his desktop keeps Schoengart alerted to the demands ofhis third role in life - he is on 24-hour call with the Madison County Fire Department. "Iget really boredifI'mjust sitting around for very long," he said. In addition, Schoengart, a trained emergency medical technician on call six to 12 hours a week, sleeps many nights each week in the Madison County Ambulance Center. - He is also a member of the Madison County Rescue Squad, a volunteer ser- vice designed to augment routine ambu- lance services. Schoengart said these jobs take him into a lot of intense situations, but he said his workismoreimportant than any emotions to the life-and-death crises he encounters. "I'm sort of immune to it now," he said. 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