Students Get the Last Laugh M AYBE YOU REMEMBER competing in the school talent show. Maybe you recall singing "Yesterday" in a voice- cracking pubescent howl. Maybe you think you were pretty good. Well.... Youth and exuberance fade, but the talent show will always be around. And the mother of them all was recently initiated by MasterCard and the National Association of Campus Activities. Featuring 10 finalists drawn from 81 schools and more than 200 contestants, the first Nation- al Collegiate Talent Contest represented the best of campus music and comedy. A Texas Southern U. a cappella group and a junior comedian from Christopher Newport U. in Virginia walked away the winners at the Anaheim, Calif., finals on Feb. 18. "We were very nervous because they had some amazing talent," says Texas Southern U.'s Derek Brotherton, whose a cappella group 2nd Nature took first place and won $15,000. "We weren't 1Y at eager to win or lose - we were just eager to sing. Youi This year's compe- tition will include more than 100_ schools, says Ron Laf- HEN fitte, NACA's event stag coordinator. (Check Cert with your campus stu- dent activities board to see if your school is regis- tered.) There is also a new video submission cate- gory - students can send in short VHS tapes of musical or comedy routines to 13 Harvison Way, Columbia, SC 29212. Call NACA at 1-800-962- 2287 for more information. "The students get to intermingle with enter- tainment industry folks," Laffitte says. "It's a real- ly great opportunity for them to get their talent shown and for agents to see what's out there." MandyStadtmiller, Northwestern U. r Step N YOU THINK OF PEOPLE TRAMPLING A ;e, you probably envision a rock con- t with a bunch of security guards t of the spotlight. yanking fans out Sc hools Drop Th elr Scores ACK UP YOUR NO. 2 PENCILS, KIDS. A RECENT survey from the National Center for Fair and Open Testing reports that more than 200 colleges and universities have dropped SATs or ACTs as an admissions requirement. "The bottom line is that SAT/ACT scores are not good predictors of how stu- dents will perform in col- lege," says Pamela Zappar- dino, executive director fore the American testing watch- dog group. "The best pre- dictors are high school records." Zappardino says the scores are unreliable and highly coachable, which gives added opportunity to students who can afford coaching material l Hasta la vista, SAT! "Nothing says schools must use SAT scores, but our move that both students and faculty studies have shown an increase in have praised. the number of schools using "We felt attention on a four-year [them]," says Jan Gams, executive examination of quality was more director for the SAT College important than a three-hour test," Board. says Lee Coffin, Connecticut's dean Kansas State U. offers open of admissions. admission to students graduating Courtney Minden, a junior at from an accredited Kansas high Connecticut College, says the school but requires SAT/ACT change is good and that she looks scores from out-of-state students. forward to a more well-rounded "Requirements for out-of-state atmosphere. students are stricter, but we do not "My SAT scores were a huge hit discourage them from applying," on my self-confidence because I did- says Barbara Dawes, associate direc- n't do as well as I'd hoped," Minden for of admissions at KSU. says. "I think some students fear col- Dawes believes that SAT/ACT lege because of their scores. This scores are a good comparative assess- way, students can think about col- ment of a student's skills and some- lege and not about outsmarting an times all a school has to go on. SAT test." After one semester of being SAT/ACT free, Connecticut Col- Amy Osmuiski, Texas Tech U./Photo by lege has diversified its campus, a Maggie Welter, James Madison U. But at the MGM studios in Orlando, Fla., about 50 members of six black fraternities and soror- ities stomped around on stage as much as they pleased... to the tune of a $5,000 award. In this year's annual stepping competition, S.T.O.M.P! '95, each team had only three min- utes to wow judges with their best step routines. And we're not talking step aerobics. Stepping is a traditional dance made up of synchronized footwork and clap- ping that has been passed down through generations of black Greek life. After outstepping the compe- tition, the Phi Beta Sigma men from Clark Atlanta U., Ga., and the Delta Sigma Theta women of Southern Methodist U., Texas, walked away with the prize money. Phi Beta Sigma members never doubted they'd take first place. "Of course we came on with a cocky attitude - who didn't?" says Phi Beta Sigma member William Jones. Missed the competition? You can rush the stage at next year's event or catch S.T.O.M.P! '95, hosted by rapper LL Cool J. and TV Siren Adrienne-Joi Johnson, on national TV this fall. By La Chanda Jenkins, Howard U. Poached Eggs At the U. of California, Irvine, "scrambled eggs" have taken ona new and disturbing meaning. In June, three panels appointed by the university found that Ricardo Asch, a fertility specialist at UCI's Center for Reproductive Health, had transplanted patients' eggs and embryos and con- ducted research on them without the donors' knowledge or consent. Officials at UCI announced in July that as many as 35 women may have been involved in improper transplanta- tion of eggs and embryos at the clinic. The panel also found that at least nine patients received a non-FDA-approved fertility drug. The initial findings by the panel released in June estimated that only five women received eggs from non- consenting donors. The accusations alleged that Asch and two other doctors, Sergio Stone and Jose Balmaceda, mishandled the con- sent process, didn't report all of their earnings to the university and didn't make the required payments to the university for the undeclared income. The investigation stemmed from several reports, dating to February 1994, filed by various administrators who dealt with the clinic. Because the investigation began seven months later, UCI also was accused of neglecting to respond quickly to the complaint, but the panels didn't sustain the allegation. Fran Tardiff, a university spokesperson, says the investigation progressed slowly because the physi- cians refused to produce the necessary records and information. The panel also found that the university acted as quickly as it could to put together the investigations, Tardiff says. All three doctors have denied any wrongdoing. On June 2, the university terminated its contract with the clinic and told its doctors to remove their medical equip- ment from campus. Although the preliminary investiga- tion is over, Tardiff says that the uni- versity is in the process of suing the clinic for records that the physicians have refused to release. Until those documents are recovered, "the true scope of the wrongdoings will remain unknown," she says. "The doctors were wrong, and a lot of people here feel itwas wrong for UCI to cover this up," says Ken Felipe, a sophomore at UCI. "It's not really the talk of the school or anything.... But I think an explanation of exactly what happened and whatthe school will do about it should be published." Heather Orey, California State U., Fullerton step mtlsway. August/September 1995 0 U. Magazine 13