PA E 6 THE BEHREND BEACON MARCH 17 2000 NATIONAL CAMPUS NEWS Bidi boom: flavored cigarettes catching on by Valerie Danner Campus Contributor Columbia College March 09, 2000 CHICAGO (TMS) -- Jr. said he was smoking marijuana with some friends five years ago, when someone decided to pull out a strawberry-flavored bidi. The thin, brown cigarette, imported from In dia, resembled a joint, so Castle said he decided to try it. "I was curious," Castle, a 22-year old senior at Columbia College in Chicago said. "It made me mildly high for five minutes; it helped me unwind." Castle said he was hooked on bidis from that moment on. He even cred its his first puff on a bidi with help ing kick his marijuana-smoking habit. He isn't the only one loving bidis these days. Figures on bidi use in the United States are still in their in fancy but are slowly trickling in as bidis' popularity rises. Research ers consider the preliminary results disturbing. A study published last year in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report showed that in a sur vey of 642 youth in Massachusetts, 40 percent said they had smoked a bidi in their lifetime, while 16 per cent said they had lit one up at least once in the previous 30 days. Of those surveyed, 23 percent said they smoked bidis primarily because of Gloria Steinem tells students feminism worthless unless used outside classroom by Meredith Goldstein Knight-Ridder Tribune March 08, 2000 NORTON, Mass. Apryl Berney remembers the 1998 Time Magazine cover that featured the floating heads of Susan B. Anthony, Gloria Steinem, and Betty Friedan, next to the emaciated face of lonely, con fused thirty-something Ally Mcßeal. The headline asked: "Is feminism dead?" "No. Of course not," answered Berney, 21. It's not that feminism is dead, it's just that its message is expanding and there are different women lead ing the movement, she said. Young feminists now address issues of race and class and all of the inequities that make it more difficult for those on the bottom rung of the ladder to move to the top. "The third wave is about responsibil ity. We aren't all middle-class white ladies anymore." -Kathryn Baxter, women's studies major, Wheaton College There is a group of strong young feminists, Berney said, and thank fully, they are nothing like the tele vision character Ally Mcßeal. "I swear it was the fifth time they asked that question," Berney said, shaking her head. "Feminism isn't dead. That's just the way the media sees the issue." Berney and other women's stud ies students at Wheaton College cel ebrated their feminism and the be ginning of Women's History Month with a visit from Steinem. The 66-year-old icon of the women's movement came to speak about the history and future of women's rights and to receive the school's Otis Social Justice Award. Steinem co-founded Ms. Magazine in 1972 and founded the Women's Action Alliance and the National Women's Political Caucus. Steinem agreed that feminists are still hard at work. Young women to day have just as much to fight for. They're learning how to work for equality, and how to better their situ their taste The flavorful tastes of bidis are se ductive, but pack a mean punch, ac cording to researchers at the Center for Disease Control (CDC) in At lanta. The CDC reports that bidis contain less tobacco than traditional cigarettes but still have three to five more times the amount of nicotine and tar. CDC researchers say bidis which are unfiltered also re lease more deadly chemicals, such as ammonia and carbon monoxide. Ernest Castle In India, where bidis are manufac tured, it is estimated that 500 billion of the cigarettes are produced and consumed each year. Bidis consist of tobacco, which is hand rolled in tendu leaves giving the cigarette a brown, herbal-like appearance but a low combustibility, which causes a smoker to inhale more deeply. The smokes' seemingly harmless facade and shredded tobacco has earned bidi packs a spot on shelves in both to bacco shops and health food stores. Critics of bidis say consumers are being duped by manufacturers' claims that bidis are a "more natu ral" smoking alternative. Smokers particularly young ones are lured by bidis' cheap cost, too. They sell for $2.20 for a pack of 25 compared to $2.50 to $3 for 20 cigarettes. And they come in a variety of flavors everything from chocolate and vanilla, to more exotic flavors such as mango and lemon. The United States is the only ations, she told a group of about 60 students and teachers mostly women who attended a panel dis cussion on the future of feminism. "The third wave of feminism can not be defined by Who Wants to Marry a Millionaire?" she said. "Young women have a lot to accom plish and are doing some great work." Steinem, who dressed in black with her hair tied neatly in red rub ber hands, sat a few seats away from purple-haired Kathryn Baxter, 21, a women's studies major who spoke on the panel about the next genera tion of feminists. "There is this notion that we are done, but we are not finished," Baxter said, as Steinem offered an approving glance. Young feminists, she said, must focus on ending domestic violence and rape. They must fight for the rights not only of white women, but also of people of different races and ethnicities, homosexuals and transgendered people (transsexuals and transvestites). "The third wave is about respon sibility," she said. "We aren't all middle-class white ladies anymore." Many women of Baxter's genera tion consider themselves "third wave" feminists. First-wave femi nists are said to be the pioneers of the movement, the women who won the right to vote and took the first steps toward independence. The sec ond-wavers, like Steinmen and Friedan, author of The Feminine Mystique, brought women out of the kitchen and fought for abortion rights and birth control. The young "third-wave" feminists say they're fighting not only for true equality, but also for the identity of a movement that many think was left behind in the 19705. Many of these young women are studying feminism in university women's studies programs. They read the work of authors and theo rists such as Angela Davis, bell hooks, Andrea Dworkin, and Linda Alcoff. Steinem said it's inspiring to watch the movement grow and be come a respected part of academic institutions. But feminism is worth less, she said, unless it can be used as a tool outside of the classroom. When she speaks at universities, she is often asked what kind of feminist she is. Liberal? Radical? Separat ist? "I mean please, what does this mean?" she asked. "I'm not much into labels. Feminism is about what you do." country that adds flavor to the ciga- "They are something new and dif ferent, and they've gotten recent at tention from the media," said A. Jenny Foreit, an associate in research for the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids. "They're slightly forbidden, and they are flavored so they're easier to smoke." Bidis started out big on the West Coast, in particular California. How ever, they are now creeping across the country and into major cities, such as Chicago, which last month became the first city in the nation to ban the sale of bidis. "Teens are influenced by a lot of things," says Jonathan Swaine, chief of staff for Chicago Alderman Terry Peterson, who introduced the bidi ban bill. "This type of cigarette is more powerful, and in addition to that, is flavored, which markets it to wards children. What was done in Chicago was a preemptive strike." The state of Illinois is following suit. A bill to ban the sale of bidis statewide recently passed in the state house and is currently pending be fore the state senate. Bidis have been imported into the United States for at least 20 years, but only recently have found wide spread popularity. Between 1995 and 1998, the value of cigarettes im ported from India increased by 400 percent. Amanda Serafin, 20, also has wit- Berney, who became a women's studies student after working during the summer for the Feminist Major ity Foundation in Los Angeles, said Steinem's concern that feminism has become too academic is a genuine problem for young women who study the movement. "It's the struggle between theory and practice," Berney said. "We know the theory, but it's up to us to put it into practice. That's where the third wave has come from." Sharon Lauricella, a Wheaton graduate who just finished her doc torate in women's history at the Uni versity of Cambridge in England, came back to the college with her fa ther to hear Steinem speak. She ad mitted that they were somewhat starstruck to see her in person. "It's really great that Wheaton asked her to come. She is amazing," she said. "She really had a lot to say." Lauricella, 28, said it is important for young feminists to know their history. Seeing Steinem reminds them that they have mothers, grand mothers, and great-grandmothers who fought for the same freedoms. It's especially important on a cam pus with a history of female solidar ity. Lauricella said she realized the importance of a women-centered en vironment after attending Cambridge's Corpus Christi Col lege, which began admitting women in 1988, the same year Wheaton be gan admitting men. "Sometimes I worry that students don't remember that this was once a women's college," she said. "I think it's important that they understand the importance of that history." Lauricella said that women, young and old, define feminism differently. It has many faces, many names. It stands for different causes and be liefs. She remembers that in Whitman, Mass., where she grew up, the word feminism was used infrequently. Most people were white, and most made a decent living. Residents were educated and sexism was of- ten disguised. But she does remember a public school teacher who would refer to the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote, as the "idiot amendment." Lauricella remembers getting an gry and wanting desperately to de fend her freedom, even though she was just a young student who knew little about the women's movement. "I realized when I got to school that that something had a name," she said. "It was being a feminist." nessed the popularity of the hidi. Last year, she worked a part-time job as a telemarketer. There was a room set aside for smokers to take a break. It had only one small air vent, Serafin said. "The fan wouldn't suck up the hidi smoke," Serafin recalled. "I'd come out of the room smelling like a bidi. The smell just lingered. - Though she was turned off by the smell, curios ity did get the best of her, and she said she did try bidis. However, she says they made her feel horrible. Castle is aware of the health risks, but he said he's addicted to hidis. "I quit a couple of times, and I never smoke more than 3 a day," he says. KRT PHOTO BY RICH SUGG Bidi cigarettes from India, shown here at Tobacco Road Smoke Shop in Kansas City, Kansas. Pirating music off Web prompts U. of Texas to block site by John NV. Gonzalez Knight-Ridder Tribune March 12, 2000 AUSTIN, Texas --Joining scores of colleges around the nation, the lfni versity of Texas is cracking down on students who use the campus com puter network to download songs from the Internet Such a practice often violates ted eral copyright laws that are designed to protect entertainers. However, university officials' primary interest is in ensuring that the computer net work, which serves 75,000 students, faculty, and administrators, is avail able for higher-priority academic Though UT hasn't disclosed how much of its network capacity, or bandwidth, was being usurped by those accessing music, counterparts around the nation have estimated that 40 percent or more of their band width is monopolized by music downloads, sometimes driving up costs. Much of the commotion centers on the Web site www.napstercom, where music can be downloaded. The Web site has been rendered in accessible on several university com puter systems, including UT's. While some students defended the move to make tiapstercom off lim its, others said it is futile to try to eliminate the activity by targeting a Web site. "It's only a matter of time before a thousand mini-napsters are out there on the Net," student Anand Kumar Inala wrote in a letter to the Daily Texan, the student newspaper. The university will not be able to track the new Web sites that inevita bly will appear to take napstercom 's place, the sophomore predicted. Inala signed a petition to remove the block on napstereom. For all the same reasons as UT, Texas A&M University is consider ing steps to discourage music down loads. So far, no World Wide Web sites for music swapping have been blocked for Aggie computer network Texas Tech, Texas Christian Uni versity, Oregon State, University of California-Berkeley, University of Penn State newspaper apologizes for fake quote TMS Campus March 09, 2000 UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (TMS) Student journalists working for Penn State's Daily Collegian apologized for a fake quote attrib uted to women's basketball coach Rene Portland in the Wednesday, "It just becomes very addictive." After nearly two years of smoking bidis, he started experiencing respi ratory problems and headaches, ail ments that he links to his bidi-smok ing habit. So, Castle switched to clove cigarettes, which are dipped in honey and rum and are typically big ger than a bidi, but still pack a punch. "It just gives me a slight, sensual little lift," Castle says. "You have to be careful not to inhale too deeply. There's no buzz if it's not inhaled properly. "When you do it right, your toes should tickle," he added. "It's a nice little buzz." Clove cigarettes are not a part of the ban in Chicago. How- North Dakota, and Boston Univer sity also have taken steps to hinder access to nap.slercom. Almost all music shared on the Internet is copyright protected, ac cording to the Recording Industry Association of America. The asso- ciation is leaning on universities na tionwide to curtail unauthorized copying. The pages of several students who oft erect pirated songs already have been knocked off A&M's network at the insistence of the trade group, officials said. With 100 million computers online worldwide, the association said it was forced to shift most of its anti- piracy resources away from compact discs to the Internet. But within a college population that often thumbs its nose at the cor porate world -- including the music industry and its copyright protections threats of legal consequences for pirating often go unheeded, experts Students called UT's recent deci sion to block access to napstercom "Draconian." Napstercom is one of the most popular Web sites for ac cessing music files in the 1\41 3 3 for mat. "It never ceases to amaze me how people can claim censorship, when what they're doing is breakiiw fed eral law by downloading copy righted material onto their comput ers," said Thomas Putnam, director of A&M Computing and Informa tion Services. Student reliance on high-speed campus computer networks to speed ily acquire new music has been surg ing since mid-1999, when software for sharing songs proliferated. The MP3 format enables music to be compressed into relatively small data files. The files can be easily stored and transferred from computer to computer. Though the sound qual ity isn't always as good as a com pact disc, it is usually at least as good as the radio. The downloaded music is prompt ing heated debate between the enter tainment industry and a handful of Web site operators who enable wide spread sharing of songs from music collections stored on personal com puters worldwide. March 1, edition of the newspaper. A student on the staff whom the Collegian has declined to iden tify slipped the bogus quote into another writer's story, thinking it would he removed I t :ore the p;; per went to press. It wasn't. The quote implied that Portland has had improper relationships ever, Foreit said the clove cigarettes can be just as harmful as bidis and more traditional smokes. "The clove releases chemicals that act like an anesthetic," Foreit said. "It makes it easier to hold [the tox ins] in the lungs for a longer time." It is still too early to tell whether the ban in Chicago will have an ef fect on the growing popularity of bidis or even if other cities will fol low. But ban or no ban, people of ten find what they want no matter what, and bidis are no exception. The Internet holds several Web sites for bidi vendors. With a credit card, it's easy to get a pack. UT's Academic Computing and Instructional Technology Services office said it made napstercom off limits after it registered so much traf fic that it became "detrimental" to the entire campus network. "My interest, my responsibility, is making sure that the network infra structure on the campus operates, and is useful and usable by the 75.000 people that make up this community," said Bill Bard, direc tor of UT's Office of Telecommuni cations Services and deputy director of the office that monitors computer usage. While not as problematic at A&M, music downloading is a concern. It is heaviest in Aggie dormitories, where high-speed Internet connec tions are built into rooms, Putnam said. Putnam is frequently asked about the university policy on music down loads. His stock answer is the con trolling authority is federal law, not campus rules. "If the FBI shows up at your door, university policy is really irrelevant if you've got a computer full of copy righted software or copyrighted mu sic," Putnam said. The Recording Industry Associa tion of America is in contact, seek- ing to raise awareness about copy right law or to alert the school if a student is detected sharing pirated music via the university's network, Putnam said. Using search engines, the associa tion can easily find student Web sites that offer pirated songs. When it does, the association notifies the stu- dents' universities, citing the new federal Digital Millennium Copy right Act. "They file [notice] with us offi cially and we have legal responsibil ity to take down that site," Putnam said. "We're trying to teach the stu dents that they have liabilities . . . and what they're doing is illegal." The issue raises perplexing legal questions, Putnam said. "One of the really untested areas, in terms of legal precedent," he said, "is institutional liability for what a student does with their own com puter that happens to be located on the campus." with students. "The individual's actions went against training and Collegian policy," editor Stacey Confer wrote in a column apologizing for he incident. "That staff member has been disciplined and will no longer be allowed to work for the Collegian."