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July 30, 1983 - Image 2

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Michigan Daily, 1983-07-30

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Page 2- The Michigan Daily - Saturday, July 30, 1983
Anchorwoman lacked

warmth, says agency
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)' - The But in August 1981, the company said
president of a consulting firm that ad- Craft should be reassigned to a repor-
vised a TV station to hire anchorwoman ting job because surveys indicated she
Christine Craft testified yesterday that was not providing the "warmth and
hs agency later recommended her comfort" viewers in Kansas City
demotion, partly because she didn't wanted, Bewley said.
give viewers a feeling of "warmth and Bewley testified that viewer surveys
comfort." also indicated Craft "was too casual in
Ed Bewley testified in U.S. District her dress, signifying she was not as
Court that in late 1980 his Dallas-based serious about her job" as other female
firm recommended that Craft be hired anchorwomen, was too opinionated and
for the job of co-anchor of weeknight was too prone to talking about her life in
newscasts on KMBC-TV in Kansas City. California.
Academicjudiciary
used reluctantly at 'U-'
Continued from Page 1)
expelled or suspended. Lighter senten- plagiarize work by copying off another
ces include requiring students to com- student's exam, which Nissen said is
plete more credit hours to graduate or the most difficult kind of cheating to
disciplinary probation for a term. prove.
Many professors, however, think the "Even if a student looks at someone
judiciary's punishments are too severe, else's paper - how can you prove they
said Political Science Prof. George cheated?" Nissen said.
Grassmuck, who serves on the FALSIFYING transcripts or forging
judiciary. an override to get into closed course
"Professors have no axe to grind," are usually easy to spot, Nissen said.
said Grassmuck. "It takes time to ap- Another category of cheaters which are
pear before the board, and professors tough to pin down are those who permit
don't want to ruin students' careers." someone to copy their papers and don't
LSA SENIOR Chris Jaksa filed a report the incident.
$10,000 suit against the University this But most cases brought to the
week charging that the judiciary un- judiciary are found guilty. Ninety per-
fairly expelled him for cheating. cent of students accused of cheating in
Jaksa, currently a resident adviser in the past three years were found guilty.
West Quad, charges that the judiciary "You don't take a case to the
violated procedures during hearings in judiciary unless you have very strong
April 1982 for his alleged cheating on a evidence," said Statistics Prof. Morrey
statistics final exam. Kramer.
Jaksa's charges include that he was There is no pattern of cheating in par-
denied the right to have an attorney and ticular University departments, said
that he was subjected to "public Nissen, although he added that many
ridicule and embarrassment," because cases are reported in the "hard scien-
he was expelled. ces" such as chemistry, biology, and
STATISTICS Prof. Ed Rothman physics.
reported Jaksa to the judiciary because Professors try to prevent cheating by
he had "good evidence" that Jaksa making copies of a students exam, to
allegedly put his cover sheet on another ensure that a student who asks for a test
student's final exam. to be regraded doesn't change the
There are a number of ways students original answers, said Arthur Ashe,
cheat at the University. Students chairman of the chemistry department.
The Michigan Daily
Vol. XCIII, No. 29-S
Saturday, July 30, 1983

TODAY
Rent a husband
AGOOD MAN may be hard to find, but a good man who does windows?
Check the classifieds. When Anthony Jennings began advertising a
Rent-a-Husband service - indicating he does windows, too - his business
picked up dramatically. "I'm not making a killing, but I am making a
living," Jennings said recently. "A lot of people are starting to hire han-
dymen or people who can perform more than one specialized tast - one per-
son they can trust." Jennings, is married and has a young child. "Eighty
percent of the people who called told me the ad caught their eye," Jennings.
Treehouse Monopoly
BY THE 10th DAY of a treehouse Monopoly marathon, players said it
seemed less important to pass "Go" than to pass the insect repellant.
"Give ita year, and somebody might want to play again," said Mark Ryan,
one of six teen-agers from St. Nazian, Wis. who claimed a new record for
continuous playing of Monopoly in a treehouse. The marathoners ended
Wednesday after 240 hours and 67 straight games, and after going through
three playing boards - one drenched in a thunderstorm - and six cans of
mosquito spray. Playing in four-hour shifts, they claimed their effort out-did
a nine-day record set by six teen-agers in Louisville, Ky., although they were
well short of the indoor record, 408 hours. The payoff? No, they don't get a
house on Park Place or a ride on the Reading Railroad, but Monopoly
marathoners will appear in the City of Valders parade. And the game's
maker, Parker Brothers, is sending each playera free game.
HAPPENINGS
SATURDAY
Highlight
Get ready for the fourteenth annual Ann Arbor Medieval festival this
weekend. This celebration of the drama, crafts, and arts of medieval times
begins today at 11 a.m. at West Park, and continues at 3 p.m. in Burns Park.
Films
AAFC - La Cage Aux Folles, 7,8:40 & 10:20 p.m., MLB 3.
Cinema Guild - 2001: A Space Odyssey, 7 & 9:30 p.m., Angell Aud. A.
Cinema II - Breathless (1959 version), 7 &10:05 p.m., Shoot the Piano
Player, 8:40 p.m., Lorch.
CFT - Carnal Knowledge, 7 & 11 p.m., One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest,
8:45 p.m., Michigan Theater.
Performances
School of Music - Bassoon recital, Kim Zelenka, noon, Recital Hall.
Performance Network - "Cabaret," 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington,
Student Theatre Arts Complex - "The Real Inspector Hound," dinner at
6:30 p.m., show at 7:30 p.m., Union Ballroom.
Meetings
Ann Arbor Go Club - 2-7 p.m., 1433 Mason.
Miscellaneous
Brecht Company - Open auditions for "A Man's A Man" and other fall
productions, 2 p.m., Rm. 126 East Quad.
Ecology Center - Workshop, "Household Toxics: Alternatives and
Disposal," 1-3 p.m., Leslie Laboratories, 1831 Traver Rd.
Michigan Abortion Rights Action League - Nostalgia Night Dance Party
and Dance-a-thon, 8:30 p.m,-1 a.m., Pendleton Rm., Union.
SUNDAY
Films
Cinema Guild - Major Barbara, 7:30 p.m., Dodsworth, 9:40 p.m., Lorch.
CFT - Cabaret, 7:15 p.m., New York, New York, 9:30 p.m., Michigan
Theater.
Performances
Performance Network - "Carbaret," 6:30 p.m., 408 W. Washington.
Miscellaneous
Ann Arbor Medieval Festival - 11 a.m., Ark Coffee House, 1421 Hill, 3
p.m., Arboretum.
MONDAY
Performances
School of Music - Carillon recital, 7 p.m., Burton Tower.
Meetings
Taw Kwon Do Club - Practice, 6-8 p.m., outside behind IM building.
Ann Arbor Support Group for the Farm Labor Organizing Committee -
7:30 p.m., 308 E. William.
Christian Science Organization - 7:15 p.m., Rm. D., League.
Miscellaneous
School of Music - Workshop, "Practical Uses of Motivation in the
Teaching and Learning of Music."
Humanities - Conference, "Teaching Professional & Technical Com-
munication," all day, E. Engin.

(ISSN 0745-967X)
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