Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC April 1991 Daily Egyptian 1991 4-24-1991 The aiD ly Egyptian, April 24, 1991 Daily Egyptian Staff Follow this and additional works at: https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_April1991 Volume 76, Issue 142 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1991 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in April 1991 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Daily Egyptian Southe rn Illinois University at Carbondale Wednesday, April 24, 1991 , Vol. 76, No. 142,20 Pages Faculty Senate OKs conduct code reform By John Patterson S1aff Wri1er Changes lO the student conduct Senate votes.on drug poli(:,)', code cheating policy were unanimousiy approved by the Faculty Senate Monday. elects officers at I~ meeting A Faculty Senate committcc has By John Patterson guilty of alcohol or drug abuse. been drafting proposals since SepL Staff Writer The wording of the new 28. and th e final versio n was resolution was argued by Alben finally approved. It now will be P. MeIone. 1l"lfessor of political sem to President John C. Guyon for science, w"ho said greater final approval. protection was neededbccause The passing of the new policy ofW'un; statUs. ' was the "end of an old problem ," "¥Qu can nrin a person's life said Faculty Senate President Don Gamer. if )'00 i:aII thCm an alcoholic or In the case of cheating. the a dnig abuser;" McIooe said. The -reSriJulion was instructor wiU have the fi nal say in what grade a student receives. Until the studem is found guilty, however. he or she may return to the class, he said. If a teacher accuses a studem of cheating and the student admits i~ the teacher has the power to decide what measures to take, Guyon said. In the event the student denies cheating, the matter is put on hold until Lhe process is complete and then me instructor determines the grade if the student is found guilty, he said. "It provides the option of giving an incomplete grade, but doesn' t give the faculty member the power to dCLCnnine guilt," Garner said. "Teachers do not kick out students, pcrio.l." the faculty member. goes to the dean of the sperific f Air bubble trouble The new policy recognizes Wriuen confessions of guilt no college. grading as the prerogative of the longer will be required from The committee began revisions Jeny Upe, a carbondale city employee !tom Pomona, f\.Jshes teacher, he said. students, and the departmental after a senate motion claimed the the air out 01 a pipeline on the comer 01 West CherTy Street "Faculty should be in charge of chairperson dClcnnines if students code " .. fails to respeet the and South University Avenue Tuesday afternoon. Water to grading and nobody else," he said. violated the code. inherent authority of faculty area residences had to be sI'ut off while wor1< was done on the Garn er call ed the policy an T h,. c urrent co de has no members to control and sanction plpe;ln",. Upe flushed the air out of the pipeline via a fire appropriate compromise that provisions for hearings at th e academic dishonesty and hydrant. returns half of the responsibility to depanmentaJ level. Instead the case mi sconduct practiced within their Local day care center to find new home TillS By Amy Cooper Instruction. District 9~ ".ans to remodel the said. Staff Wr~er Head Start, a federally funded eight rooms in Lakeland He also said the City of MORNING program for low-incom e families Elementary School 10 provide Quoondale and the Depanmem of A Carhondale Day Care Center and th eir children. leases Lakeland space for the di strict's eight full- Transponation informed the school will ;,nd a change of address at the ElementarV School, 925 Giant City day kinderganen classes currently district that Glendale School was end of a rainbow. road . through SIUC from the held in the Glendale School on on the site of a proposed by-pass to The lease for Rainbow's End Carbondale Elemen tary School NOM Illinois Avenue, he said. go through Carbondale. Child D<:velopment Cemer. which District 95. Dixon said. He said the kinderganen classes Jacober sait! eventually the tums violent subleases from SIUCs Head Start Larry Jacober, superintendent for are growing too large for the space district wants to turn the rest of the Program, will expire June 3D, said District 95, said the school district in the Glendale School. Lakeland school into an early -Page 6 Billy Dixon, chairman of the needs the space back for its ''We were fonunate we had space University poet Department of Curriculum and expanding kinderganen program. at Lakeland we didn't sell," Jacober See RAINBOW, Page 5 wins top honors -Page 10 Betting parlor Pentagon awards fighter contract gaining more • SPOHTS worth $60 billion to Lockheed team Billikens down local opposition WASHINGTON (UPI) - The produced by the bidding companies dubbed the Lightn ing 2, features Pentagon se ttled a hi gh-stakes with 51 billion of their own money, almost unimagined maneuver­ Salukis 12-1 By Leslie Colp competition Tuesday betwccn two blendec high performance, ability, including the ability to fl y -Page 20 SlaffWriter defense contractor team s by in clud ing cruising speeds well awarding a S60 billion contract to above the speed of sound, and See CONTRACT, Page 5 Suppon is mounting for an build Ameriea's nex t generation of stealth technology, the ability to organization opposed to jet fi ghters to a group led by elude radar detection. Gus Bode @i1S bringing a belling parlor to Lockheed Corp. "In evaluating engine and BusIness Carbondale. The Advanced Tactical Fighter airframe ... onc combination -Page 7 Joh n C. Taylor, a member project is heralded as the most offered beuer eapability with lower Classlf1ed of th e Ni ne Mile Baptist lucrative and prestigious aviation cost, thereby providing the Air ~\ -Page 13-16 Association, said the ComIcs contract of the 1990s. The decision Force with a true best value," said I I I ,'', , I ex ecutive council of his establi shes Lockheed and its team Air Force Secretary Donald ,{icc in -Page 17 organization is endorsing as leaders in the aviation industry announcing the decision. Citizens for a Better and could deal financial sctbacks to In awarding the contrac~ military CJmmunity's decision ( 0 North, op Corp. and the other leaders opted for the Lockheed pdf t the parlor. companies on its team. group's angular design and They also may participate The ATF is to replace the F-15 stunn ing airborne agi lity over the Eagle, master of the sk ies during Nonhrop team's smoothly curved Gus says Northrop's team Sunny, 60s See BETTING, Page 5 the Persian Gulf War. design and raw spoed. was lightning struck In this I '3'-1 Both competin~ . ~r.ototypes, Loc.k_h.eed's YF-22 ilr~totype . contract battle. Page 20 April 24, 1991 Sports ()ail~ E~~pti;m .... Suuthern lIIinnis l nilersi',) al Carhundale Salukis struggle in 'nightmare' game By Cyndl Oberle fall apart Siaff Wr~er The Billikens plated two runs in the fourth when Adam Lynn When Ih e SI. Louis Billikens reached on a fielder's choice and slaughtered th e Salukis 12-1 scored on a double by first Tuesday, Coach Sam Riggleman baseman Jason Boehlow. After two said there W3£ 110 rational excuse walks, right fielder Chris Crabtree for il singled to bring home Boehlow, "It was a nightmare," Riggleman Sophomore Bryan Oestreich said. "We came into this game on relieved Meyer and retired the nex t an upswing. Our pitching and hiucr hitling had been improvin g, The noodgates opened in th e although you didn't see that today. fifth, After the Billikens loaded the We didn't show up ready to play bases on a infield single, a bunt today. It was just a game we must single and a walk, Oestreich threw put behind us." a wild pi!Ch to score Dan Burnett. This is the fU'Sl time the Billikens Two more walks and two more have ever beat SlUC and it brings wild pitches led to four more SI. their r':cord to 14-29. SlUC now Louis tallies. Junior Mike Van has a mark of 18-24. When th e Gilder was brought in to relieve teamS met last year in Sl Louis, the Oestreich. Salukis obliterated th e Billikens Van Gilder could do no better, 21-1. After a single by Ed Gresham and The Dawgs came off a four­ a sacrifice bunt. Crabtree hit a slow game series against seventh-rnnked roUer back to the mound that Van Wichita State, winning one and Gilder mi splayed. Another ·.. ild losing three. Riggleman said after pitch brought home Gresham with p!aying such hard games he the final run of the inning. thought they had gained ground in The Billikens added two runs in terms of where they are headed for the seventh on a two-run triple by the remainder of the season. center fielder Pat Conreaux and "It was disheartening," two in the eighth on a two-run Riggleman said. "I thought we homer by third baseman Eric started to show good signs of Decker, AU four runs were cbarged progress. I just don't know what to pitcher junior George Joseph, happened. With so many games The Salukis' only scoring came coming up this week it hun us to in the ninth, Billikens' swter Brad stan in this fashion," Lindemann had cruised through Senior htuler Dale Meyer started eight innings, giving up only four the game out strong for the Dawgs, hits and seven walks, Salukl junior catcher Derek Shelton tags out to the Blllkens Tuesday afternoon at Abe striking out four in the rust three St, Louis second baseman Ed Gresham Martin Field, The Salukls hope to make a innings, bUI then things began to See SALUKl5, Page 19 attempting to score during SlUe's 12-1 loss come back today against Eastern Illinois, Softball team challenges Purple Aces at home By Cyndl Oberle one was C3!1Cclled by the opposing The last time the Salukis and the "We have been making up th e Sophomore right fielder Colleen S1affWr~r team, Austin Peay.
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