HIGHER EDUCATION The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 4, 1999 - 5A .Study finds cheating commi on By Chris Lawton The Washington University Student Life ST. LOUIS - According to a report on student conduct released by Washington University's Committee on Academic Integrity, 16 students failed classes last semester because they were caught in the act of plagiarism, chang- ing answers or collaborating on exams. The report showed a small rise in the Umber of complaints of academic dis- honesty since spring 1998. In actuality, the answer is unclear. The exact degree of cheating that occurs on campus is unknown. "I don't really see it," said Washington sophomore Kelly McDonough. "People who got into this school don't need to resort to cheating." "I personally have never seen it," senior Lisa Marcus said. "But there's e honor code." Marcus referred to the university judicial code, which defines academic misconduct as "including, but not limited to, cheating, plagiarism, misrepresentation of student status, and resume falsification." Cases of cheating can be handled one-on-one with the professor, but Washington University recommends to its faculty that the cases be kept confi- dential and brought before the academ- ic integrity committee, where they are , ijudicated by a group of students and ,aculty. . Using the rules of due process, the committee hears all cases of academic misconduct. Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Sara Johnson said the procedure actually benefits the accused, as both students and professors are assured a fair hear- .ng. "They (students) need an impartial %roup to talk to" Johnson said. English Prof. Joe Loewenstein said he would rather report an incident of .cheating than deal with it on his own.. "Most of us are tempted to handle such things ourselves, when the board is in a better position to know if the sfu- dent has been a chronic offender against the university's policy for acad- emic integrity,' Loewenstein said. If the professor's methods are rought into question, a fair trial for "oth students and professors is essen- tial. James McLeod, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, recog- nized the possibility that a student might feel like they were the victim of unfair treatment. I I1 Duke signs CLC Code Student group, administrators reach compromise after 31-hour sit-in By Katherine Stroup The Duke University Chronicle DURHAM, N.C. - For members of Duke University's Students Against Sweatshops, the most important challenge of being locked in the Allen Building was trying to broad- cast news of their 31-hour sit-in to the outside world. But upon vacating the premises Saturday night, they faced an even larger task: spreading news of their achievement. By Monday morning - the scheduled deadline for sign- ing the Collegiate Licensing Company's anti-sweatshop code - almost everyone involved in the apparel licensing debate knew about the compromise eked out by SAS and Duke administrators, and most were intrigued. "The Duke agreement, from what I've heard, seems to be a balance between the two sides," said Casey Nagy, execu- tive assistant to the provost at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. Under the agreement, Duke will sign the CLC Code of Conduct. By joining the code, the 170 member schools would impose human rights standards on the licensed man- ufacturers producing goods bearing their logos. The licensees will be responsible for hiring monitoring agencies to check for compliance and report back to the CLC. But this weekend's agreement insists on full disclosure: Companies must reveal their factory addresses to universi- ties, who can notify students, who in turn can inform inde- pendent human rights groups. If the CLC code does not achieve full disclosure within a year, then the university must leave the group. Even without considering the Duke agreement, adminis- trators at most schools with vocal anti-sweatshop move- ments said they need more time to evaluate the code's cern about his drinking. "I don't know if it had anything to do with the incident in East Lansing, but the employees kept tabs on me," Radito said. Radito said he was not offended by the watchful eye of the employees. "We should be able to make a judg- ment about how much we can drink, but there is a time and a place for a manager to step in and say, 'you know what? This person's had too much'," he said. MSU junior Sara Hollander said she doesn't think Rick's of East Lansing should bear fault in the death of McCue. "Honestly, I don't know how respon- sible Rick's should be for the whole t thing" Hollander said. "There's no way t they'd be able to control how many drinks this one guy had." strengths and weaknesses. The University of Wisconsin, New York University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, for exam- ple, are each still considering whether to sign. The deadline "was certainly not feasible for NYU," said John Beckman, the school's director of public affairs. "We're a campus with a wide diversity of opinions and a campus in a city that has a sizable garment district, and there are a lot of voices on campus that we feel need to be heard." Bill Battle, CLC's chief executive officer, said the com- pany has received responses from fewer than half of the schools. Trinity senior Tico Almeida, a founding member of the University's SAS, said he hopes other schools will use the Duke agreement as a model for compromise between activists and administrators. Nagy said the agreement "certainly bears considering." But Beckman said he was not sure the compromise is pro- gressive enough for his liberal campus. "There are certainly some folks on the campus who feel that no code should be signed until the transparency issue has been addressed," he said. The Duke compromise "has been a matter of some discussion among my colleagues. But whether that will be something that's widely applicable to other universities, I'm not sure." UNC-CH is only days away from a final proposal to Chancellor Michael Hooker, said Rut Tufts, director of aux- iliary enterprises. Although its draft report is subject to change, he said it contains an 18-month trial period. The CLC monitoring system will take six months to imple- ment, Tufts said; the additional year would give UNC-CH ample time to assess the monitoring system. Battle said he was not sure how much time would be needed to bring the CLC code up to full public disclosure of factory addresses. Notre Dame students head toward a dining hall for symbolic glasses of water and empty plates yesterday in South Bend, Ind., at the beginning of a three-day hunger strike in support of gay rights at the Catholic university. Gra nger " e leavesjal after 4 months GRANGER Continued from Page 1A more information about individuals that deserves taking another look;' Boutelle said. "The application does not ask for criminal record or anything like that." Rick Granger said his son would spend some time "resting and chilling out" after serving the last four months in a detention facility. He said he could not speak about his son's feel- ings toward the sexual incidents, but said jail time was an inappropriate punishment. "In retrospect, (my wife and I) don't approve of what happened, but we donit think it was a criminal offense," Rick Granger said. RICK'S Continued from Page 1A are licensed separately by the Liquor Control Commission. But it would be wrong to assume Rick's of Ann Arbor has not examined the way they handle the issue, Doyle said. "I don't think they can help but be more aware of what has happened," he said. "I wouldn't be surprised if some of it carried over." A spokesperson for Rick's of Ann Arbor could not be reached for com- ment. LSA senior Alex Radito said he cele- brated his 21st birthday recently at Rick's of Ann Arbor and noticed thai employees exhibited heightened con-