106 Y lursday • October 14, 1999 Jft "W" a V*KS*,'%# r Ml 42 SITY College Station, Texas Volume 106 • Issue 34*16 Pages ule change makes proving lagiarism by faculty difficult BY STUART HUTSON The Battalion |Aggies may not lie, cheat or steal, but a June ,1999, revision to the University Rules and Reg- fetions which mandates that intent must be pven to convict a faculty member of plagiarism, ;some professors asking if the University toler- ; those who do. [Colin Allen, associate professor of philosophy. Id the revision followed an investigation of pla- |rism charges between two professors of sociol- hhat revealed Texas A&M — College Station’s [tinition of plagiarism conflicted with the Texas [University System’s definition of plagiarism. [“Basically what happened was that the inves- lation was canceled until the differences could rectified,” Allen said. “While they were re fining the rules, the word intent came to be part lour campus’ rules.” [Allen said the inclusion of “intent” greatly in cased the likelihood that professors would not found guilty of plagiarism by the University. I “To prove intent, a person would usually have [prove some sort of pattern of plagiarism by the ofessor, which is extremely difficult to do,” Allen lid. “It seems like the University is saying ‘we [n’t want to hold our faculty members account- lie for plagiarism.’” [Harland Prechel, associate professor of sociol- , pointed out that The University Student Rules does not mandate that intent be proven for a stu dent to be found guilty of plagiarism. “The students are judged purely on whether or not they committed an act of plagiarism, while a faculty member is judged on whether or not he or she actually meant to plagiarize,” Prechel said. "/t seems like the University is saying, 'We don't want to hold our faculty members accountable for plagiarism/" — Colin Allen associate professor of philosophy “This is an embarrassing double standard that makes us hold our students to a higher standard than our own faculty, who are suppose to be the role models for our students to follow.” Robert Kennedy, vice president for research and associate provost for graduate studies, said that while the inclusion may make proving guilt diffi cult, it may often protect professors from abuse of power, false accusations and honest misunder standings and oversights that may be made by oth er faculty members. “There was considerable debate over the inclu sion of this word by the Faculty Senate and Acade mic Program Council,” he said. “But our policy does now include intent in it’s definition of plagiarism.” Max Amoss, a professor of veterinary physiol ogy and chairman of the Faculty Senate Research Committee, said the Faculty Senate chose to in clude the word after hotly debating the issue be cause the word was needed to protect professors from allegations of plagiarism that may rob them of their reputations. “We were referring to plagiarism in the narrow context of scientific research,” he said. “In that con text, a professor may use the good ideas of another professor without even realizing it, and we needed something to safeguard that a professor wouldn’t lose his reputation over an honest mistake. ” Mark Goodman, executive director for the Stu dent Press Law Center in Washington, D.C., said the inclusion of the word intent often makes prov ing guilt in a plagiarism case difficult. He said proving intent requires that whoever is judging the case to speculate as to what state of mind the defendant holds while committing the alleged crime. “What you have to do is try to get into the de fendant’s mind, but the only way you can try to do that is by examining a lot of circumstantial ev idence, which can lead to a subjective ruling by the judge,” Goodman said. “There is rarely a smoking gun to indicate intent.” CHAD ADAMS/Thi Battauon Rick Younts (left), senior adviser to Asia Pacific Affairs with Motorola Inc., and Dr. Julian Caspar, director of the Center for International Business Studies, field questions from the audience at the George Bush Library. Global disability Forum addresses future of China BY STASIA RAINES The Battalion The director of the Center for International Business Studies said China has taken a huge leap forward in the last 20 years last night as the Kyle R. Younts Forum on United States-China relations. Dr. Julian Caspar, who spoke last night at the George Bush Li brary, said he thinks it is time to question if possible changes need to be made to continue the progress in China. “The question we must ask is if the Communist party that suc cessfully guided China through the last 20 years will be able to successfully guide China through its transformation in the next 20 years,” he said. Caspar said a potential prob lem in China is the possibility of social unrest due to the huge eco nomic disparity between the classes. Caspar pointed to in stances in which this disparity has see China on Page 2. CODY WAGESA'hk Batialion Students at the Brayton Fire Training Center train for one of many firefighting-related scenarios Wednesday. Last night the students prac ticed on a mocked-up blaze involving oil equipment. College of Education faces reorganization BY MATT LOFTIS The Battalion The Texas A&M College of Educa tion is gearing up for a large-scale re arrangement. The College will sub mit plans outlining the rearrangement to the Graduate Council tomorrow and to the University Curriculum Committee on Friday for considera tion and approval. According to a memo from Dr. Jane Conoley, dean of the College of Education, foremost on the list of changes is a transformation from five school branches to four, with more specialized areas of coverage. The current configuration contains five branches named the Department of Educational Administration, the Department of Educational Human Resource Development, the Depart ment of Educational Curriculum and Instruction, the Department of Edu cational Psychology and the Depart ment of Health and Kinesiology. According to the memo, the De partment of Health and Kinesiology will remain the same in both form and function, but the rest of the areas are preparing to undergo potentially extensive rearrangement. The first of these changes will be to alter the names of the colleges to better fit function and scope. The Col lege of Education will have four de partments following the change, named the Department of Education al Administration and Human Re source Development, which will be a the the go a 1 is to enhance academic^ research OC service functions associated with our technology^ JR BEATO/The Battalion combined form of the Department of Educational Administration and the Department of Human Resource De velopment, the Department of Teach ing, Learning, and Culture, the De partment of Educational Psychology and the Department of Health and Ki nesiology. According to a “Nonsubstantive Administrative Change Request” is sued by the College of Education, the changes will increase the depth and breadth of research and instruction focused on adults, increase diversity among their student body to meet the needs of an increasingly diverse pop ulation and foster the creation of a na tionally prominent program in edu cational technology and distance education. The “Change Request” said the proposed reorganization will allow the College of Education to better serve the needs of the schools and cit izens of Texas in the next century. see Education on Page 6. NSIDE Sports •There is no T in Jameson A&M safety quick to credit others for his success in football. ,7 Page 11 Aggielife •Looking closer at Kevin Spacey Spacey speaks about his new ac claimed movie, American Beauty. Page 3 Opinion Dumb & Dumber Website ad dress envi ronmental o concerns of Bonfire. Page 15 Batt Radio Listen to KAMU-FM 90.9 at 1:57 p.m. for an interview with Acade my Award winner Kevin Spacey. Administration names interim vice president BY KENNETH MACDONALD The Battalion Charles Sippial, vice president for Physical Plant since August 1995, has assumed his new du ties as interim vice president for administration. His new position was left vacant by Dr. Jerry Gaston, deputy chancellor of the Texas A&M Sys tem, and will be permanently filled after a na tionwide search is completed. Sippjal said that while his job has changed, his mission to provide service to A&M remains the same. “This is a career broadening opportunity,” Sip pial said. “It is a larger job with more responsi bilities, but about the same amount of business. ” Sippial said the transition has been very com fortable for him. “Dr. Gaston is a good leader and mentor, it is easy to follow in his shoes,” he said. “I appreci ate the opportunity Dr. Bowen has given me.” Sippial will oversee Food Services, Parking Traffic and Transportation Services, Geograph ic Information and Graphic Services, Universi- JP BEATO/The Battalion Charles Sippial has been named as as interim vice president for administration. ty Police Department, Human Resources and the Physical Plant. Sippial was a supervisor of maintenance and operations at Air Force bases in the U.S. and Eu rope and retired as a Colonel. He was also direc tor of the physical plant at San Diego State Uni versity for six years prior to coming to A&M. Texas A&M President Dr. Ray M Bowen said Sippials broad-base will aides him in his tempo rary position. “Chuck Sippial has done an outstanding job in managing the varied facets of our Physical Plant,” Bowen said. “I am confident that he will do an equally good job overseeing our overall adminis trative functions during this interim period.” Until Sippial returns, former assistant director Dick Williams will act as interim vice president of Physical Plant. see Sippial on Page 2. Committee’s contest offers $3,000 prize for oratory skills BY ROLANDO GARCIA The Battalion Six Texas A&M students will compete for over $3,000 in cash prizes in the “What’s the Word” oratorical contest tonight at 7 in the MSC. The topic for the competition, spon sored by the Black Awareness Commit tee (BAG), is “Bias in the Media: How Stereotypes Are Perpetuated.” Tammy Henry, BAG president and a sophomore political science major, said the contest encourages dialogue on im portant issues and current events. “There’s a lot of subjects [students] need to speak out on, and this is a way for students to voice their opinion,” Hen ry said. “And public speaking is also a skill you need in the real world.” Henry said the BAG hosted the first “What’s the Word” contest last year. The topic was the ramifications of the Hop- wood court decision that restricted using race as a basis for admission into a Texas institute of higher education and for awarding scholarships. With the success of the previous com petition, the BAC hopes to make the con test an annual event. The Committee chose “Bias in the Media” as the topic for this year to in corporate several themes, primarily in light of minority groups recently criticiz ing television networks for not placing enough African-Americans and Hispan- ics in lead acting roles. “This ties in several important issues because the media is how we get our in formation,” Henry said. “We wanted a broad subject, and this can address not just race, but other stereotypes like gen der and age. ” Twenty-four students had originally applied, but preliminary rounds nar rowed the field to the six finalists and each contestant will have five minutes to deliver his or her speech. The first place winner will receive a cash prize of $1,500. Second place will receive $1,000, and $750 will go to the third place finisher. The judging panel consists of Student Body President Will Hurd; MSC Council President Bill Anderson; Rodney McClen don, coordinator for Student Retention and Development at the Multicultural Ser vices Department; and Carolyn Sandoval, the assistant coordinator for diversity ed ucation at Multicultural Services.