Panel to educate on academic integrity The Office of Judicial Affairs will host a discussion on how to avoid academic dishonesty at 6 p.m. tonight Lindsay Sauve Family/Health/Education Reporter Chris Loschiavo is on a first-name basis with cheaters. As director of Student Judicial Affairs, he is the person faculty members must report to when a student violates the Uni versity’s Student Conduct Code poli cy on academic integrity. If students are caught plagiarizing, cheating, fabricating or otherwise engaging in academic misconduct, their names may end up in his file cabinet. Loschiavo and a panel of faculty and students will be hosting “Aea demic Integrity: What your degree is worth,” a discussion at the Knight Library Browsing Room tonight at 6 p.m. The panel is geared toward educating students on the importance of preserving their academic integrity, the conse quences of cheating and ways to avoid resorting to such conduct. Tonight’s discussion is part of a week-long seminar conducted by the Office of Judicial Affairs. Since Thursday, faculty mem bers have been attending work shops and discussions to better educate themselves on how to handle student dishonesty. “The idea is to get faculty and students involved and talking about this issue,” Loschiavo said. “Preserving academic integrity is a shared responsibility.” The Student Conduct Code de fines academic dishonesty in four ways: plagiarism, cheating, fabrica tion and academic misconduct. If a student is caught violating the code, faculty members are sup posed to first address the student, determine the grade penalty, and then file with the Office of Judicial Affairs. The conduct code man dates all acts of academic dishon esty be reported, regardless of whether the student admits to cheating or not. The code also has suggestions for students on how to avoid cheating, such as being informed about their instructors’ guidelines and refusing to assist other students who may be caught cheating, as well as sugges tions for instructors on how to ad dress the issue with students. Some universities have adopted honor codes with controversial guidelines that would require a stu dent who knows about or witness es an act of academic dishonesty to report it to school officials. If the student fails to do so, they could share responsibility with the stu dent who cheated. Loschiavo said the University is considering ex cluding this section if they adopt an honor code system. About 130 cases of academic dis honesty were reported to his office last year, according to Loschiavo. Journalism Professor Tom Wheel er said it’s important that students are aware about what is acceptable behavior and what is not. He added much of the conduct code addresses common sense issues, but there are some practices that students may be unaware are violations. “Most students probably under stand it’s not OK to lift a term pa per off the Internet,” Wheeler said. “But some departments have different policies regarding students collaborating when writ ing papers.” Wheeler said he addresses the issue of plagiarism to his students in the class syllabus, taking quotes directly from the Student Conduct Code, so from the beginning, stu dents are informed of his policies. Contact the reporter atlindsaysauve@dailyemerald.com. News brief Online democracy kicks off Wednesday The power to shape next year’s student government is at students’ fingertips with DuckWeb online voting when ASUO primary elec tions begin Wednesday. A platoon of eager students have turned out to run for office in nearly every facet of ASUO government, from the ASUO Executive to ASUO Student Senate and ASUO Programs Fi nance Committee. The virtual voting booth opens at 9 a.m. on Wednesday and runs through 5 p.m. on Friday. Students who want to exercise their constitutional right to vote can log onto DuckWeb from any computer with Internet access. To vote for their preferred can didates, students simply need to click on DuckWeb and log on with their User ID and Personal Access Code. From the Main Menu, vot ers must then click on the Stu dent Menu. Then, click on the 2003 ASUO Primary Election link. Voting electronically via Duck Web entails computerized vote tallying, so election results will be determined almost instanta neously after voting closes at 5 p.m. Friday. Jennifer Bear Ignoring the meter can cost you a ticket. Ignoring your resume can cost you your future. The Oregon Daily Emerald is an independent newspaper that provides hands-on experience in the challenging world of advertising. We are looking for enthusiastic students who believe in the power of advertising in the Oregon Daily Emerald and who can transfer that enthusiasm into sales. You will have the opportunity to hone your copy writing skills, create ad campaigns for clients and see your ideas come to life in the newspaper. To find out more, come to the Oregon Daily Emerald open house April 24, 12 pm to 3 pm at Suite 300 EMU (Enter from stairs in the ballroom lobby) Or, stop by Suite 300, EMU and pick up a job description and application. The Oregon Daily Emerald is an equal opportunity employer committed to cultural diversity. 016177 OUT WITH T4ii OLD old shirt! A Bizzillion and combination of two pieces (t-shirts, sweaters, price. Bring worn out top and you to a third FREE! Choose from: Custo Ben Sherman, rks and more, for both men's s top gear! A (on the ground Hours: Campus buzz Wednesday My Big Fat Greek Wedding (film), noon, Women's Center, free. Kalman Balogh and the Gypsy Cimbalom Band (performance), noon, 229 McKen zie, free, 346-2852. "Burning Books and Burying Scholars — A Good Idea?" Stephen Durrant (lecture), 4 p.m., Gerlinger Lounge, free, 346-3950. "What Makes a War Just?" (discussion), 7:30-9 p.m., Dyment Hall Lounge, Walton Complex, 1595 E. 15th Ave., 346-5414. Educational Leadership Dissertation De fense, 1:30 p.m., 125 Chapman, 346-5011. "Dealing with Plagiarism" (discussion), 2:30-3:50 p.m., Knight Library Studio A, free. Soprano Jennifer Bacon (recital), 5:30 p.m., Beall Hall, free. Flute class recital, 8 p.m., Beall Hall, free. ASUO Candidates Fair, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., EMU Concourse, free. "International Week Open Mic Night" (performance), 7-8:45 p.m., EMU Interna tional Lounge, free. Run your for sale item in the ODE classifieds for five days (items under $1,000) ... if you don't sell it, we'll run it 5 more days for free! Wednesday, April 9, 2003 University of Oregon Information table at the Bookstore Visit us from 10 a.m. to 2 p.nn NOLS is the leader in wilderness education and NOLS offers over 65 different course types in the world's most spectacular class rooms. College credit and scholarships are available. NOLS 1-800-710-NOLS www.nols.edu Oregon Daily Emerald P.O. Box 3159, Eugene OR 97403 The Oregon Daily Emerald is pub lished daily Monday through Friday dur ing the school year by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the Uni versity of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.The Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is pri vate property. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. NEWSROOM — (541)346-5511 Editor in chief: Michael J. Kleckner Managing editor: Jessica Richelderfer Freelance: Ayisha Yahya, editor News desks: Brook Reinhard, Jan Montry, news editor. Jennifer Bear, senior reporter—campus/federal politics, Aimee Rudin, senior reporter- city/state politics, Caron Alarab, safety/crime/transportation, Roman Gokhman, campus/city culture, Lindsay Suav6, family/health/education, Ali Shaughnessy, environment/science/technology Pulse: Jacquelyn Lewis, editor. Ryan Bornheimer, senior reporter. Aaron Shakra, reporter. Joe Bechard, Nika Carlson, Natasha Chilingerian, Ryan Nyburg, Mason West, columnists Sports: Peter Hockaday, editor. Adam Jude, senior reporter. Hank Hager, Jesse Thomas, reporters. Commentary: Salena De La Cruz, editorial page assistant. Jessica Cole-Hodgkinson, DJ Fuller, Philip Huang, Julie Lauderbaugh, Chuck Slothower, colum nists Design: Adelle Lennox, editor. Jennie Cramlet, Colleen Froehlich, graphic designers. Steve Baggs, Peter Utsey, illustrators. Tyler Wintermute, junior illustrator Photo: Adam Amato, editor. Jeremy Forrest, senior photographer. Danielle Hickey, Mark McCambridge, photographers Copy: Jennifer Snyder, Jennifer Sudick, copy chiefs. Brandi Beavers, Susan Gayton, Heather Thompson, TravisWillse, TaliaWilson, copyeditors Online: Erik Bishoff, editor. Eric Layton, webmaster. BUSINESS — 346-5512 General manager: Judy Riedl Business supervisor: Kathy Carbone Receptionist: Sarah Goracke Distribution: Joel Domreis, Heather Lake, Matt O’Brien, John Long, Mike Sarnoff-Wood ADVERTISING — DISPLAY 346-3712 CLASSIFIED 346-4343 Director: Becky Merchant Sales manager: Michael Kirk Special publications and classified manager: Hilary Mosher Sales representatives: Tim Bott, Michelle Chan, Aaron Golden, Kim Humphries, Jenn Knoop, Lindsay McNamara, Mickey Miles, Valisa Nelson, Laura Staples, Sherry Telford, Jeremy Williams Assistants: Liz Carson, Katy Cooney, Katy Hagert, Erin O’Connell, Keri Spangler, Kate Workman PRODUCTION — 346-4381 Manager: Michele Ross Production coordinator: Tara Sloan Designers: Emily Cooke, Matt Graff, Andy Holland, Marissa Jones, Jayoung Park, Laura Paz, Kira Stoops