Editorial Cheating sanctions require consistency While most won't admit it, the facta are that just about every University student cheats at some point during his or her academic career, whether it be a fur tive glance at a neighbor's test or the full-scale crib sheet tucked under the desk. And as many ways as there are to cheat, there are also, at present, as many ways to punish those who get caught. A recent proposal submitted by the ASUO Of fice of Student Advocacy points out the need for con sistency In handling academic dishonesty cases, and it is a proposal that should be implemented. Presently, there is a wide diversity of styles in the way educators handle cheating cases. In similar cases, one professor may fail the student, another may grant an incomplete and allow the student to make up the work, and a third professor might average the course work all together without the dishonest work Such in consistencies in punishment are unfair to students. Under the OSA proposal, the instructor may not impose any academic sanction until the disciplinary charge is resolved by the student conduct coordinator. The student stays in class and continues to do the work. If the student is found guilty of cheating by the conduct coordinator, the student's grade is adjusted up to and including a failing grade. In adjusting the grade, the faculty member assigns zero credit to the student's dishonest work, and in cludes that work in the student’s sum total when figur ing out the grade. For most major cases, such as cheat ing on a midterm or final, that would still mean failing a class. If there are any drawbacks to the OSA proposal, one would be that such a strict procedure may not be a good disincentive in all cases. Students, knowing that not much is at risk, might be willing to sneak a peek on the ubiquitous weekly 10-point quiz. Another drawback: The new rule might also not al low for extenuating circumstances, those unavoidable incidents in life that we occasionally use to justify not studying for exams. There is arguably, less to lose here through adopting the proposal. If the matter is serious enough, the student should have discussed it with the professor before the test Despite these tw-o problems, it still seems that a greater justice and a more fair, more equitable one — will be served by adopting the OSA recommenda tions and the standard of punishment it contains. Yes. students should learn that cheating isn't right, no mat ter where or when. But they should also expect to be treated fairly in the administration of that lesson. THIS MOMKE/WAS PEP ENOOSH OF ^ TrtE ARTIFICIAL SWEETENER CYClAMOTE ID HffETEN 30 CANS OF SODA EVERT PAT,5RWSAWEEKRXI17 YEAR? and these IS NOWINS wrong WflHH»M...V\IElL, ALMOST UOTH1N6. t : , *OStG& i Mental evaluation must be independent One fundamental tenet of proper law is the right to independent : ounsel the right to seek legal help or documentation from re liable sources outside the state. A new pro posal to amend the University's conduct code would disturb that tenet. The proposal from the office of the vice president for the administration deals with cases concerning academic dishonesty and mental instability. Under the changed rule, students charged with any violation of the conduct code would be required to submit a written document from a University Student Health Center psychiatrist if they are to claim mental instability during the hearings process. In a sparsely attended public hearing held last Wednesday, some important con cerns about this change were voic ed. While it is clear that some form of ex amination and documentation is necessary in those tvpes of cases, it is also equally clear that students' rights would not be ade quately served if psychological evaluations are limited to the University's team of coun selors. The evaluation must come from a source not affiliated in any way with the Universi tv. Ann as trie item ot psycnotogy is popu lated enough by reliable therapists, there is no reason why the student couldn’t submit to testing by an outside counselor. In the outside legal world, people are allowed evaluation independent of the state: so it should be here. There is also the concern about requiring the student to see a doctor "before the fact." That is. by requiring a student to visit a psy chiatrist and secure a mental instability cer tification before the hearing, the student would have to make the realization that he or she is instable. It seems to us that in most cases, the student simply cannot make that decision. This situation catches students in the classic catch-22: if a person is instable, he or she wouldn't realize it and can’t use that as a defense, where the person who only thinks they might be instable and seeks help is ac tually demonstrating the good sense we would expect out of a perfectly functional human being. The determination that a student is sick must be made by non-University-affiliated personnel, and the determination shouldn't bo limited to certain window of time. Letters Credit Being a senior senior at the University is both a grind and a million laughs. I was bom in tin? days of Cal vin Coolidge; most of my fel low students were t>orn during the Nixon years. A few of the "middle-aged" students arrived on this earth during the first or second term of Dwight David Kisenhower. Tuition is free to seniors over 05, hut you don’t get any credit added onto your transcript un less you pay tuition. I'm studying political science at the University: U S Foreign Policy, involving writing a 15 page term paper on “Could a Now United States Foreign Policy Help tiring Peace and justice to Nicaragua?" As a professional writer with -10 years experience. I could ex pect to 1m- paid up to $3,000 for this paper Hut. my fellow stu dents (and I. if I want transcript credit) are expected to pay the University $10,000 in tuition for letting us spend about -to hours apiece to write this pa per It's a lot of work, but fun, including 40 pages of reading daily, and two written exami nations. Next month I'll do It weeks work in five days at the University. Even without tuition educa tion is expensive. Seniors should get full transcript cred it, just as Nixon-era students do! J.J. Albi Eugene Give a hoot I do not see how intelligent college students can have such difficulty defining a word for a common object. This entity is fathered at conception and is mothered before birth, whence the phrase "prenatal care If we do not can? for the phrase "killing a p re burn." we can use "terminating a preg nancy." These are synony mous In fact, another circle will speak prec isely of "termi nating with extreme prejudice" an agent they want to disown, when they mean to kill him If the man who wished he had not fathered it and the woman who does not wish to mother it want to name it fetus, well, it is their prerogative to name it whatever they choose. And if fetus is getting to be a common name, so much the better. |ust remember you cannot make an omelette without breaking eggs. And as for tying environmental issues in with this concern for life, a lot of people just don't give a hoot. Karl (losnell Eugene Firebrand In regard to Bert Tryba’s let ter "Beware agenda" (ODE. May 15). there is nothing more hypocrite al than the pot call ing the kettle black I don't mind Tryba believing what he does, but you think he would be consistent “Emotional buttons” and "... exploits emotion, shunning reason?” Mr. Tryba, you are a repeat offender of such acts you charge against Jon Wollander And in the same letter even, as evidenced by your last para graph about "Christian zeal ots" who are "undermining our Constitutional liberties.” For someone who is as logi cal and reasonable as yourself. Mr. Tryba, you sum come across as quite the emotional firebrand. Rob Hartsoek leisure studies Clean house I am writing in response to Craig Namba's article that de fended the Greek system (ODE. May 17). He stated. "1 agree that then! are things that indi vidual Greeks have done that are reprehensible but to blame the entire system is a cop-out " Well Craig, that's not how 1 sec; it. You see, the Greek sys tem can expel or at least punish those members in the system that act in a "reprehensible” fashion. Hut the Greek system refuses to do so; thus I feel that the system is responsible for the actions of its members. If a person becomes affiliated with an organization, that organiza tion is at least partially respon sible for that individual, and vice versa. Namba went on to state that people should not criticize Greeks because "stirring up bad feelings doesn't accom plish anything." Well Craig, it seems that somebody needs to do something because I don't see the Greeks volunteering to mend their ways. In other words Craig, clean your own house or someone will do it for you. And Craig, the; logic (or qua si-logic) in your closing state ment was weak Gerrit koepping journalism