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GAMEOOOK LXXIV, No. 57 University of South Carolina Friday, November 20,1981 , Booklet N By MARY C( SUA Wr You have an exam everyday due next week, and someone off< This isn't cheating, it's an ai Wrong. According to the new C you're definitely cheating. Unfortunately, the book is no be. In fact, most students are un cuiicenuiig c nettling nave ueen < 4| Dr. Charles W. Tucker, a member of the Student Academ feels that this lack of awarenei unfair to both students and faci is not a valid excuse for cheai subtly cheating without knowing Tucker said not only has n. _ _ a puuucizing me cnanges, dui inf Magazine Solicitation Prevented By DAVID CORVETTE New* Editor Girls are being stopped by university police for soliciting magazines subscriptions on campus & without a permit. They use 1 high-pressure sales tactics laden with sexual innuendos, their customers say. The girls, in their 20s were described as "gorgeous, glamorous" and hard to refuse. Residents in LaBorde and Preston have been hit, but apparently the eirls are not limiting their soliciting just to men's L. ^ dorms, as several residents of Baker ? a girls dorm ? testify. Joe Burch, a USC senior, paid one of the girls $33 for a two-year subscription to Hi Fidelity magazine. Burch said the girl who approached him Monday night at his LaBorde dorm room told him, "We get more points if you give us cash." Burch and others approached by the girls said the sales pitch begins with a " A 41 A. f request uiai imu uiimuiiici "vote for me." They then explain they are selling the magazines to win a trip to ' f Europe; each sale earns them a certain amount of points. When they reach ^ 20,000 points, it's off to Europe, they say. I Burch said the girl who him thp suhsrrintion used sex appeal to make the sale. "She said, 'You mind if I sit on your bed?' While talking to me, she kept j getting closer and closer. Soon she was almost in my lap. t "When it came time for me to sign me cnecic, sne h ^ started cooing, 'Oh, c'mon, I \ really need this.'" Burch !H ^aid she got defensive when Is '^gan to question her lakes Chan [)LEMAN distr ilex Stud this week and two projects Th ;rs you some help. plag nswer to you prayers,right? man Carolina Community booklet, that num t as easy to find as it should reali laware that many of the rules Fc altered and elaborated on. unai sociology professor and a ofch ic Responsibility Committee, anot 5S concerning the changes is Ts Lilty. Tucker said "ignorance the I ting, but many students are ches I it." Ei there been negligence in chai ; university has also failed to CI >*' I; - 3 ^1 z : ^ ^ ^ ? ^ r jfc, V ^. ^viS I hese girls were given a wai sales. If they are found on icam about the operation, telling aft him, "I'm not pulling a coi scam!" cla !nt Tho crirl tnlH Rnrrh hpr p,.. . name was Ruth Anderson , and that she was from Massachusetts. During her re* pitch, another girl, calling herself Victoria Valdez, Jr1 came into the his room and / also tried to sell him a jr subscription. * mi ah "I almost bought one from tal her, too," Burch said of cu Valdez whom he described iSi as Oriental, about 5'3", and saying she was from Hawaii. b< Burch became suspicious A! iges in Chea ibute the booklet to the majority of I ents are having a hard time locating th< e committee has seen a number of ca iarism to blatant cheating. Tucker sai< A. 1 1 y conscientious siuuenu> are luiauy un they have been violating the new cod ber of examples of changes which s ize are now considered cheating. ?r example, the booklet defines cl ithorized use of materials or work." Un leating any outside help from a friend, i her professor may be considered cheati tlking to another student about a test < test prior to the teacher's distribution iting. /en the use of Cliff notes may resul -ge if the organization or format of the r langes have also been made in the pen; f . . -v" SUN ning by campus police for magazine ipus again they will be arrested. er the girls left and they hac ? - -1 ?1 ? ?.. (Un., (>nmnlainl nacieu Hie company Uicjr vu.np.M.... imed to represent, Trans- from cust ernational Processing Co. received or TIPCO ? in Michigan but they y, Ind. informe " ? I vjeuner 01 ine iwo nr-^w aauomu < jresentatives he spoke to uld give him their names, Solicitii irch said. They admitted outside ey were a magazine prohibite< iaring house with "job- by a 1 rs" out soliciting organizat agazines nationwide. They student >0 told him it normally cording kes 120 to 150 days for a deputy stomer to get his first Enforcen >ue. Even th< Burch then called the are ;tter Business Bureau in can soiic lanta, Ga. The BBB said permit. ting, Plagi :he student body. Students face hi ? hnnlrlpk Thp .QtnHont t ses ranging from of three faculty d he believes that dean of the co aware of the fact sixty hours an e. Tucker cited a committee, itudents may not Tucker is m? aware of theii leating as "any students to try I der this definition with the new re oommate or even Lack of infor ing. students. Man) 3r actually seeing plagiarism ind is also a form of suspect to thest So what ma t in a plagiarism committee rooi lotes is used. be wise to reac alties for cheating, one. I^MI ? 11 ' '' ma Je' an h( fWl JEl link: K& JBi hemisphere through on gpy ->^ ^Japf promises tc | *iJfW 0 America.1' I s McGee sav ^JiSBIlt and negativ M" Carter's |.>oli America. R* Panama Cani m?% JSP? wisc 8estun p' v,V relations wit Photo by RK HARD VOC.il a subscription % --"' Jj| i received three :s about TIPCO ' omers who had not ! their magazines, Jfl said they were d TIPCO had r$ these claims. organizations is Jjl i unless sponsored icensed campus gtifl or advertised in publications, ac- flHHHKl to Danny Baker, to it and must have a forr iarism R arsher conseauences for th \cademic Responsibility C members and two studen liege. These students mu: d have 3.0 GPR. Each c ainly concerned with mak academic responsibility to obtain a booklet and fam gulations. mation could prove harml r professors have intensifi are not hesitating to re i committees. y seem like a shortcut r ti facing severe consequen 1 through the booklet? th<ee Disci 'eign Pol JAMESON impact of vriter Carter tention a )ming Senator Latin Ai lectured to positive studies classes ter's "pel the trends in the pres toward Latin was an ongoing extensive work McGee. rica under the that the Reagan ad- relations A fn IT Q onrl nLLUI Vllll^ tv/ IJ .U. UHU iy Carter was McGee resident who erred in mest effort to of econ s with the Accordir and follow made a r his campaign at temp wards Latin derdevel nivintJ i v the positive countrie: e effects of enough cy with I^atin the inf McGee. signing the qualified i\ Treaty was a under Ce ? in opening Reaga h other Latin rhetoric ountries said America I cannot His boir he tremendous hhH||^Hh|39|H1M ? JiH^^ " ^ k ...._. ner Wyoming Sen. Gale f ules eir actions. Committee consists ts appointed by the st have completed ollege has its own ;ing students more ;s. He encourages iliarize themselves Ful to conscientious ed their search for port students they nay iana you in a ces. Students would it is,if you can find isses licy this motion." 's nersonal at I ? nd involvement in merica formed a atmosphere. Carrsonal rapport with ident of Mexico," example of his concern. said He pointed out withdrawal made lapse between the Latin America. ( said Carter also his "broad formula omic assistance." ig to McGee, Carter loble but unrealistic t to aid unoped countries by lid to the poorest 5 "Thorp was not effort put towards rastructure," said Haiti and Bolivia I for economic aid irter. n used "extreme toward Latin i on his campaign, ibastic nature soon see McGee page 4 If ^IcGee