Kansas City, Mo.-area Universities to offer medical MBA program by Donna Gehrke.White Knight-Ridder Newspapers January 9, 2001 Rockhurst University and the University of Health Sciences Col lege of Osteopathic Medicine plan to offer an MBA program for medi cal students beginning in June. Officials with the two Kansas City universities said medical stu dents would be able to earn a Rockhurst MBA degree along with a doctor of osteopathic medicine degree from the University of Health Sciences. The classes will be at Rockhurst, a Jesuit university just east of Troost Avenue on Rockhurst Road. A growing number of physicians have sought MBA degrees in re cent, .years as the nation's health Divorced father must pay half of sons' tuition, court says by Billy O'Keefe TNIS Campus Januar) 6, 2001 Divorced father Roger Zenn is re sponsible for pay ing half of his sons' college tuition and fees, a New Jersey appeals court ruled this week. A panel of three judges ruled that Zenn must pay half of son David's tu ition at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., and further ruled that the New Jersey dentist must do the same for younger son Jacob, pres ently a senior in high school. Counsel for Roger Zenn argued that the father was not trying to skirt re sponsibility, hut that he felt his son's choice of . s chool w as more than he bargained for. With fees, a year of tuition at GWV costs roughly 531,000, court records show. Zenn's lawyer, Stephen E. Samnick, argued that his client should only have to pay around $6,500, or roughly halt the cost of tuition and fees for in-state students at Rutgers Univer- Web music still a free-for-all, users vow by Lou Carlozo Chicago Trikme .lanuary 6,'_(1111 By his own account. 20-v ear-old Bradley Coleman. a junior at Rutgers University in New Jersey, is a clean cut college kid. "I'm a very moral per son,'' he said. "I never steal. I don't gossip. Him evet... - Mention the Internet -- music in par ticular -- anti the computer-science nujor dishes a guilt-riddled confes sion: "I'm a die-hard pirate on the Net. Coleman has downloaded nearly 2,000 free songs in the form of MP3s -- musical files that can be sent from one computer to another, much like e mail. He plucked a good chunk of those cuts from Napster, a service that allows its users to trade music with out paying a cent. And while Napster is the most prominent target of the record industry's anti-piracy efforts on the Internet (and, indeed, the subject of a pending merger with a record com pany), it is but one of many places where people can go for free music. And trying to shutter them all, in dustry experts say, is like playing a no win game of virtual whack-a-mole: Pound away at one site and another one (or 10) will pop up somewhere else. "It's obvious that things like Napster will continue forever and it's impos sible to try to control them," said Shel lac guitarist and Chicago-based re cording engineer Steve Albini. "I have absolutely no complaint with Napster and other protocols for exchanging music. They are free exchanges. There's absolutely no money in volved. To my ears, it's as harmless care reimbursement systems have become more complex. Karen Pletz, president of the Uni versity of Health Sciences, said fac ulty from the two universities had been formulating the medical MBA program for about three years. "We want to provide our physi cians in the 21st century the ability to manage in a business sense, as well as to be highly competent in a medical sense," Pletz said. Busi ness training will help physicians become leaders in the health care field, she added. Bill Bassett, deputy director of Rockhurst's health care leadership program, said Rockhurst planned to expand the medical MBA program and make it more widely available in coming years. city in Camden), N.J. While in the stages of a 1989 di vorce, "lean and former wife Carol Finger agreed in writing to evenly di ide payments for their children's col lege education. But nine years later, when David be gan looking at colleges, Samnick sent a letter to Finger's lawyers stating that his client, in hopes of eliminating any legal wrangling, would simply pay half of Rutgers' asking price. In the end, the panel ruled that as long as the immey is there, there is no reason for the older Zenn to go hack On his word. "Obviously, the parties' ability to pay is a critical factor in the selection of a colic :lie, - read the decision. "However. unless the parties other wise agree, selection of a college for a child of the marriage should not he governed by an artificial hottom line... A decision to appeal the case has vet to he announced hut is under con- sideratiim as making a cassette copy to trade \\ ith a Friend i\lhini raises a key distinction that separates Napster and its ilk from the traditional "pirates - or bootleggers: no one, it seems. makes any from money harterimi music via the Web. But record-industry hea‘ yweights, translating all of that free song traffic into lust income, see the piracy ques tion in entirely opposite terms, and they are still trying to shut down Napster in federal court for copyright infringe ment. Meanwhile Coleman. like many Napster users, admits mixed emotions over his downloading jones. "I would never steal so much as a Tootsie Roll in real life," he said. "But the Internet is all about getting something for noth ing.. And it is that Webhead manifesto -- "something for nothing" -- that prom ises to keep the Internet's free music suppliers operating well after Napster either closes or morphs into a subscrip- Lion service "The thing that really (ticks) me off about this Napster thing is that they are thieves, period," said Michael Greene, president of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. "People think they're ripping off the record companies, and who minds ripping them off? Maybe what they don't rec ognize is when they (use Napster), the artists, the studios, the engineers -- the entire food chain that's involved in this -- is harmed. And we've got to sensi tize people to that fact." Still, Greene acknowledges that the record industry has created a lot of ill will over the last two decades by over charging consumers for mediocre CDs -- and that free music sites, legal or no, are likely here to stay. I\fArl'i:ol\f AL cit-/:\lvf - P - US NE"WS Winter 2001: A tale of 2 regions by Billy O'Keefe TMS Campus As if there weren't enough reasons for students to love winter break With an inventory rollout that would put any department More to shame, this equal opportu nity winter season has provided Americans with lavish amounts of snow, ice and colder than cold temperatures. After enjoying a string of win ters with sparse snowfall and mild temperatures, some part of the country have seen their cold-weather immunity disap pear like the mercury in their thermometers. For most students, howevei winter break came just in time. Instead of shoveling a path from the dorm to the lecture hall or cheating death on icy highways, students could stay inside, sleep late, and kick hack while Mother Nature cleaned up the mess she made. Chat is, if she doesn't knock out your pokver in the proec We were fortunate in that the storms came just as stt were finishing finals, - sivs Roger Williams, vice chancel lor for university relations at the University of Arkansas, which kicks off its second semester this week. "Still, sonic students actually came hack toward the end of last week, because the campus had electricity, and a lot of places, including much of Little Rock, did not.' While the southern United States may not be known for its chilling winds and buckets of snow, a good chunk of ihe re gion felt the wrath of winter through a pan of crippling ice storms, which left c.loicip, ul people homeless and , ;cores more with property damage and no power. says (hat Ili Sh)1111‘,. and the hitterlv cold cattier that accompanied them, pun ished less-prepared areas like Fayetteville that much mre. This is not ('hictwo: Ik‘ said. "We're not iiccusioined to this, and there is not neatly as cuttiLg oil a lizard's tail: he'll Just grow another one. Greene said. "I don't think we should spend a whole lot of money trying to come up with secure digital music. It'll just get hacked. What we've got to do is gRe Napster founder Shawn Fanning consumers more value for their money Now" on MP3.com last year. His record and give people six or seven good cuts label, Warner Brothers, pulled the plug on aCD instead of loading it up with after a few days. good an infrastructure to remedy he situation A few degrees up north, in Markato, Minn., the snow and the cold are just settling in for the long winL!r ahead. 13ut that, according to Karen Wright, director of me dia relations at Minnesota State University, is just fine. "The snow, for us to close, would have to he absolutely cata- strophic, - she says. Students up north aren't invin cible. and even they are no match for icy roads or blistering wind chill temperatures, which can sink as low as 90 degrees below zero. Cold winters, however, are a way of life at MSU. And accord ing to Wright, students attending school up north know that snow, and lots of it, comes with the terri tory. "We expect it, and we have such a hue system of snowplows and salting that we're constantly on top o f it, she says. "We might have to cancel events here and there, but even that is very, very rare." C;v,e in point: MSU's wintertime commencement ceremony, which honors students who graduated While it may be shocking to students in Arkansas and Texas, the snow is nothing new for Kong Thao, left, and Acha Yang, shown here helping their St. Paul, Minn., neighbors by shoveling snow out of an alley. tiller indict ial What the music moguls seem to over look is that free music, somewhere down the line, can translate into a big payoll. Such was the logic when Toni Petty gas e out his single "Free Girl following the summer or fall 2000 semesters. As temperatures took a nosedive, calls poured in from parents and would-be graduates, some of whom most likely wanted to know how long, not if, the cer emony would he postponed. But the show, like the snow, must go on "We have a lot of parents and family who travel from far away to attend the ceremony, and we can't just call it off," Wright says. "So we went on as normal. And while we lost a few people be cause of the weather, we had an extremely respectable turnout." Asked how tier counterparts to the south might handle Minnesota's annual freeze, Wright laughs "That's funny," she says. "If some schools in the south get an so much as an inch of snow, they close down.' Unfortunately for a large chunk of the south, it wasn't snow, but ice, that slowed things to a crawl. "It's been very tough in this part of the country," says Williams, who adds that parts of Oklahoma, Texas and southern Missouri were But some 150,000 people down loaded the song -- meaning that Petty can target merchandising efforts di rectly to those listeners. It's also likely that he picked up thousands of new (and record-buying) fans in the pro cess. For a more old-fashioned example, consider the Grateful Dead, a band that not only allowed but encouraged fans to make unauthorized "bootleg" re cordings of all its live concerts. Years of tape swapping spread the band's renown and won it one of the most loyal followings in rock history. A key element in those cases is that the artists themselves authorized the give aways. Anti-Napster acts such as Metallica argue that it amounts to pi racy when others do the giving away on a grand scale, without permission. Still, it's equally possible that prior to suing Napster, Metallica benefited from free exposure on the exchange. "I have bought some artists' CDs that I had never heard of, all because of the free service on Napster," said Sh annon Biehl, 22, a college student from Rockingham, N.C. "You only have to download what you want and if some thing is trashy, you can delete it." Like many Napster fans, Biehl fears that if another free site gets a lot of publicity and traffic, "the greedy, money-grubbing record companies will go after them." Yet a big reason free music will continue on the Internet is that unlike Napster, exchanges such as Freenet and Gnutella operate with out central server computers. That means they cannot be intercepted and silenced by authorities. However, such freedom (or at least free music) comes with other costs: time and frustration. Near gridlock conditions often await visitors to FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2001 equally taken by surprise. "It's been brutal by comparison. Unusu ally cold." But with the exception of one fi nal exam day that had to be re scheduled for the Sunday before break, UA has gotten through the storms with little damage. Schools everywhere benefited from the good timing of winter break, which ends just as temperatures return to normal and sizeable por tions of the snow and mice melt "Our finals were complete the clay before the first storm," says Smiley Snipes, coordinator of uni versity communications at Arkan sas State University. "Offices were closed down for a day and a half, but other than that, we've been lucky. Students should have no trouble returning to campus.'' Of course, all the good timing in the world can't save schools from that other weather-related problem: the gas hill. "We're paying twice as much, about S 2 million, for heat this year," says Wright. "That hurts. But that's a whole other story." Gnutella, and learning the ropes of the service is much harder than on Napster. "The saving grace is that those sys tems are very cumbersome and don't work very well," said entertainment at torney Owen Sloane, who has repre sented artists including Elton John and Fleetwood Mac. "But that's not for long. Technology moves so quickly, and it's so easy to get a college or high school kid who develops something and it spreads like wild fire." What's more, new Internet pirates can easily evade the grasp of authorities by setting up operations outside the U.S.. Still, the question remains what moti vation there might be in it, other than the love of music itself. Despite all the publicity and a user base of some 38 million, Napster had yet to make any money before it announced a partner ship with German media giant Bertelsmann AG in October. Whether that alliance takes effect de pends on the federal court decision, which could be announced any day now. Win or lose, it's the end of free music on Napster -- though definitely not the end of free music on the Web. Loyal as he is to Napster, Coleman said he would leave in search of free songs elsewhere "in a heartbeat." Millions of others will likely join him, and where there is demand, Coleman believes, suppliers will soon follow, whether or not there's money to be made. "The reason that the record compa nies went after Napster and no one else is because Napster does it the best," Coleman said. "I would have done ex actly the same -- go after the main one, not the small fry. However, they should know that someone else will fill the void."