NATIONAL CAMPUS NEWS mommoimommommENNENNE l MARCH 24 2000, THE BEHREND BEACON, PAGE 5: Students focus Web cameras on everyday dorm life by Elizabeth Simnacher Knight-Ridder Tribune March 16. 2000 Cani Brodnax recently was talking long-distance from her Florida home to her boyfriend Ryan Scott, a South ern Methodist University senior, when the connection suddenly went dead. Luckily, Brodnax's brother had al ready been online, so she quickly clicked on Scott's home page because she knew that her boyfriend's dorm room would be visible, thanks to a Web camera that was up and running. There, Brodnax could see a sec onds-old photo of Scott. "She saw me leaning back in my chair against the wall," Scott says. Scott, who was diagnosed as an epi leptic when he was in high school, had experienced a grand mal seizure. Brodnax called Scott's mother, who managed to get medical attention for him in Dallas by calling 911 in Or lando, Fla. He received help fast, thanks partly to the Web camera con nected to the PC in his dorm room. College students such as Scott are using some of the millions of inexpen sive Web cameras to transmit pictures of dorm rooms and apartments on their Web pages, mostly just because they Three popular sites featuring stu dent home pages equipped with Web cams are Real College Life (www.realcollegelife.com), College Cams (www.college-cams.com) and Web Dorm ( www. webdorm.com). Many feature shots of the staples of college life: messy rooms and dirty dishes in the sink. A 1999 Logitech-Greenfield Online study of teens and college students found that 63 percent keep in touch with their families and friends more now than three years ago, thanks in part to Web cams. The same study found that 39 percent either used or were familiar with Web camera tech nology. A study commissioned by Intel es timated that 2.5 million Web cameras Numbers abstaining up on college campuses by Dane Schiller Knight-Ridder Tribune March 15, 2000 rious college drinkers are getting cohol his freshman year. He asked DALLAS College campuses are drunk more often. The study was not to be identified. "There's a lot becoming more divided into camps conducted at 119 four-year schools in of people who party a lot and go to of serious drinkers and nondrinkers, 39 states. the bars. It is pretty normal at a col a new national survey suggests. Binge drinkers account for two- lege," he said. The number of frequent binge thirds of alcohol consumed on cam- The University of North Texas drinkers and the number of students pus and were defined by the study as chapter of Theta Chi fraternity was abstaining from alcohol both are in- men who chug at least five drinks suspended by the school and by its creasing, according to a national sur- back-to-back or women who have at national headquarters earlier this vey by the Harvard School of Public least four drinks back-to back at least month after several arrests for viola- Health released Tuesday, March 14. every other week. tions of alcohol and hazing policies. The survey of 14,000 students Wechsler concluded that frequent According to police, some underage showed that almost one-fourth are binge drinkers increased from 20 to pledges were given alcohol during frequent binge drinkers and almost 23 percent from 1993 to 1999, while hazing. one-fifth abstain from alcohol, said the number of abstainers increased Jay Perrin, who is pursuing his doc- Henry Wechsler, director of college from 15 to 19 percent during that torate in speech and hearing science alcohol studies at Harvard. same period. at the University of Texas at Dallas, "Revulsion against the more ex- Schools have had some success said there's little time to drink among treme forms of drinking may be driv- with on-campus programs to reduce his friends. ing some students away from the drinking, but more could be done to "I am around more serious people," binge-drinking scene entirely," he counter establishments that offer low- Perrin said at the Coffee Haus on said. priced, high-quantity drinks, said Hillcrest Avenue. "But I get a On South Padre Island, Nadia Wechsler, the study's chief investiga- glimpse of the younger people, and Trevino, 23, said she agreed with that tor. it seems they are doing just as much conclusion, even as other students In North Texas, some students said partying." around her celebrated spring break as drinking has played a lesser role in Gage Paine, SMU's dean of student a traditional drunken rite of passage. their lives in recent years, but for life, didn't have ready statistics on "I have cut down. People are say- some of their classmates, getting drinking by SMU students but said ing no," said Trevino, a junior at the drunk seems as much a college pas- binge drinking "is still a concern, no University of Texas at Austin. "I am time as ever. doubt about it." U.S. to track foreign students and . by William Lee Campus Correspondent Western Illinois University March 14, 2000 CHICAGO (TMS) The threat of terrorism has prompted the Immi gration and Naturalization Service to implement a surveillance plan aimed at tracking foreign students in the United States. The plan, called the Coordinated Interagency Partnership Regulating International Students program, ended its trial status with INS on Feb. 22 and has since been ex tended nationwide. The program, tested at institutions such as Auburn and Duke universities, requires for eign students and scholars in the were sold in 1999, up from 350,000 in 1997. By 2001, the projected sales will be 10 million cameras, according to the same study. Typically, Web cameras capture ev eryday events in a student's life. Amanda, 19, is a sophomore at the University of Minnesota and a devoted Web cam user. She asked that her last name not be used. She says she gets messages from viewers such as, "I saw you folding your clothes." Inevitably, there are long, boring stretches: "I let people watch me sleep," Amanda says. "It's just fun," she says when asked why she photographs her life and puts it on the Internet. Her friends gener ally don't mind, she says. "We're a crazy bunch." But why broadcast your life? Lillian Beeson studies communica tion at the University of Pittsburgh, Greensburg campus, where she is an associate professor and the director of the Humanities Academic Village. "I don't understand this usage my self," says Beeson. "I guess this is the age of exhibitionism for some. Look at the talk shows." Or perhaps students are experienc ing the same sense of community that mass media generated when a good portion of us watched the same tele vision shows at the same time, Beeson says. Or, simply put, maybe "they get a kick out of watching each other." For several reasons, college stu dents are a natural market for Web cameras "College students are consummate communicators," says Bruce Friedricks, senior vice president of worldwide marketing at Logitech, a company that makes PC peripherals, Including a Web camera called Quick Cam. "You're looking at a generation that grew up on the Internet," he says. "College students probably are the most Internet-heavy group, and they have good Internet connections in their dorm rooms," says Allison Mahoney, a spokeswoman for the col lege-oriented Web site Web Dorm. for students binge having more fun sober and watching everyone else get plastered." Wechsler's study did show that se U.S. on temporary visas to pay col leges and universities a $95 fee. Institutions forward that money to INS to pay for a database tracking the foreign scholars as they move within the country. The database is expected to be fully functional in 2002. INS officials say CIPRIS will help modernize and streamline the current process of bringing foreign students and scholars into the U.S. It also will enable colleges and uni versities to share important infor mation about students such as their fields of study and the means by which they're paying for their education with governmental agencies. But several professional associa- The Web cameras are "embraced by popular culture," says Friedricks. In the last six months, Web cameras have appeared on television shows includ ing 3rd Rock from the Sun, Ally Mcßeal, and Beverly Hills 90210 and in the movie American Pie. These days, a basic Web camera and software cost about $5O around the price of a college textbook. Besides Logitech, makers include Intel, Kodak, and Creative Labs. All also offer models in the $BO to $l5O range. These offer higher resolution and more features. Finally, college students are psycho logically ripe for the Web camera phe nomenon. "They're in a very social part of their lives," says Friedricks. They may be separated from family and friends for the first time. Scott bought his Web camera as a way to keep in touch with his girl friend and mother in Florida. With the increase in geographically separated families, Web cams have become a new tool. "In that sense, I think it could help families get closer together," says Dr. Beeson Katie Maris, 24, a graduate student in business and journalism at the Uni versity of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign, uses her Web cam exclu sively as a videophone. She commu nicates with her parents, who live about an hour's drive away. Not only can she see her parents while they talk, "it's free that way" because calls are just another Internet activity, she notes. Video calls must be prearranged, but the process is pretty self-explanatory, she says. Maris also has used her Web cam era to have videoconferences with other students from Japan, Spain, and Latin America, she says. She has used video phone calls to brush up on her Spanish. On many sites with Web cams, it's possible to summon the cam owner for an impromptu plain-text chat. Darren Rose, 21, a senior from "I can have fun without alcohol," said one Southern Methodist Univer sity pre-med student who gave up al- tions, such as NAFSA (Association of International Educators), which is based in New York, say the pro gram unfairly targets foreign stu dents as potential threats to national safety and security. "I am concerned about the mes sage that we'll be sending out to other nations," Daphne Osayade- Dumas, associate dean of multicultural affairs at Sarah Lawrence College, told the Westchester County Weekly. "I think it sends the wrong message." So does Mary C. Martin, direc tor of the University of Chicago's office of international affairs. She said the database overshadows the positive contributions foreign stu dents make to their campuses and Houston at the University of Texas at Austin, got a camera to communicate with a girlfriend. He says he likes to update the photo on his home page fre quently so people know that he uses it a lot. He has counted many more "hits" visits to his page since he installed the cam, up to a couple hun dred a day, he says. At first, Rose would forget that he was on camera and do things he didn't want to broadcast like change his clothes, he says. Now when he wants to shut the world out, "I just turn it off or point it up at the ceiling.' There's just one little problem. "My roommate doesn't like it," says Rose. His roommate runs past the camera hoping that the Web cam will miss him. But his girlfriend has re ally gotten into it and friends are OK with it, he says. But not everybody gets a warning. "Sometimes," he admits, "I like to sur- prise them." Other students with Web cameras say friends and roommates don't mind or like the Webcam. Right now, it's a wild, wild world out there, and some Web cameras record nudity and even sex. The nudity issue could be the rea son there seem to he more male stu dents with Web cams than females, Amanda, the student at the University of Minnesota, agreed. She has a FAQ, or frequently asked questions, page that explains she doesn't do nudity. Scott says the same: "I'm conscious of it [the cam] if I'm doing something I wouldn't want my mother to see." Web Dorm has an agreement bind ing its Web Dormers to non-offensive images only. This agreement is only a preventive measure, according to Web Dorm spokeswoman Mahoney. "We have not had any problems with obscenity or indecency," she writes. "In fact, the worst thing that happened was some frat boys came home a little drunk one night and mooned the cam- drinking, Paine said students are at least talk ing more about choosing not to drink. "I am hearing more conversations by students choosing to abstain," she said. "It is becoming more of an op tion." Among the steps SMU has taken to encourage sobriety are a zero-tol erance policy at residence halls and programs to help students combat al cohol abuse and understand the risks of heavy drinking. Mandalyn Clark, an SMU sopho more, said she believes figures on binge drinking are overstated. She said she believes most binge drink ing occurs at get-acquainted parties and rush parties at the beginning of the school year. "But then it goes down," she said. "As far as I have seen, people don't sit around partying. . . . they drink, but it's more social drinking." Shawn Fouch, a senior at SMU, said the amount students drink de pelids on their social circle. "You see more of it on fraternity row," he said. "I'm part of the the ater department, and there's more problems with drugs than alcohol." Dallas Morning News correspondent David Flick contributed to this report. professors surrounding communities. "International students add bil lions to the economy," she said. "They don't just pay tuition. They pay for their apartments, they buy groceries, they take public trans portation, and you can really see the impact in small [college] towns." Aside from unfairly targeting for eign students, university officials also say the INS tracking program also requires already beleaguered foreign-student advisers to com plete a mountain of paperwork something Martin said they shoildn't be required to do. "The program is making univer sities a bill collector for the federal government, and it's not a comfort able thing for us," she said. Antioch College student, friend found shot to death in Costa Rica by Elaine De Valle Knight-Ridder Tribune March 15, 2000 MIAMI -- Two 19-year-old Ameri can women were found shot to death near a popular beach town in Costa Rica that has increasingly become notorious for criminal activity, Costa Rican police reported Tuesday, March 14. The Judicial Investigation Agency identified the victims as Emily Brook Howell of Lexington, Ky., and Emily Rachel Eagen of Detroit. The bodies were found along a highway near the Caribbean seaside village of Cahuita in one of the country's most crime-ridden areas about 90 miles east of San Jose, according to Jesus Urena, a spokes man for the Public Security Minis try. Urena said one of the victims had been shot twice in the head and the other three times in the back. He said one of the victims was found nude. Scott Warren, dean of students at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, said Howell was a student at the college who had been in Costa Rica since January on a photogra phy project. Eagen was a former stu dent who was visiting her and had been in the country 15 days. He said authorities were uncertain about the motivation for the attack. "It appears to be a random, tragic incident," he said. "It's a horrible loss and cause for mourning for all of us." An American woman who lived with Howell and Eagen was identi fied as Shawna or Shawn Sellers. She was also in Costa Rica but was elsewhere when the killings oc curred, Warren said. She has since been reunited with her father, he added. Jorge Rojas, director of the Judi cial Investigation Agency, said the women had been living in an apart ment on Colon Boulevard in San Jose, the capital, but traveled to the Caribbean coast on weekends. Eagen left Ann Arbor, Mich., about three weeks ago to join Howell and the other woman in San Jose, said her mother, Shirley Eagen. She said the family had researched Costa Rica and believed it was safe. "This could have happened anywhere," she said. According to the surviving woman who reported last seeing her roommates Sunday evening, March 12 the three had gone to Limon province on Friday, March 10. On Saturday, March 11, they rented a Hyundai Galloper. The sport utility vehicle was found burned near Guapiles, about 60 miles from the crime scene, only hours before the bodies were discovered. A local woman found the bodies in bushes about three yards from the highway between the coastal town of Puerto Limon and Cahuita. Lo cal residents said they assume the bodies were dropped off there early Monday, March 13, because they heard someone unloading heavy ob- jects from a car. On Tuesday, March 14, authorities also found a casing from a .38-cali ber handgun, the victims' bras, a pair of short pants belonging to one vic tim, and other personal items about Penn State officials, students mull smoke- free campus TMS Campus March 16, 2000 UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (TMS) Smokers with a littering habit have students and administrators at Penn sylvania State University, University Park, pushing for a smoke-free cam pus. When heads of the university's clean-up efforts recently discovered that the institution spends about $150,000 a year for janitorial costs associated with picking up cigarette butts and wrappers, they decided to draft a plan to eradicate smoking on campus. 60 miles from where the bodies were found. The surviving friend said she was supposed to have accompanied the other two women on a nighttime drive, but at the last moment wasn't feeling well and therfore stayed at their hotel in Puerto Viejo, a small tourist site between Puerto Limon and Cahuita. Five slayings have been reported this month in Limon province, which includes an economically depressed area where the banana industry once thrived and a string of beaches popu lar with tourists. The region visited by thousands oftourists from North America, Eu rope, and South America each year has been called a "no man's land" by angry local residents and business people who complain of poor police protection and a high number of criminals and drug traffickers, ac cording to several sources. About two weeks ago, area travel agents asked the government of President Miguel Angel Rodriguez to provide more police officers and warned that some hoteliers were ready to take justice into their own hands to stop the increased criminal activity. According to Costa . Rican media reports, business people also com plained of two murders earlier this month in the same area. The vic tims were Austrian hotelier Helmut Waffinger and a high official with the Costa Rican electrical company, Emanuel Barrantes. One of the leaders of the Cham ber of Caribbean Tourism, Edwin Patterson, told authorities that for eign travel agents "have been horri fied since before this wave of vio lence" and could be warning tour ists to stay away from the country. Tourism is the nation's main source of foreign currency. Costa Rica one of the world's leaders in eco-tourism welcomed more than one million visitors last year, who brought more than $1 billion to the country. Patterson, the Chamber of Carib-, bean Tourism leader, added that lo cal business people and their em ployees had opted to buy firearmi to protect themselves. "Everybody is armed here," he said. "In the hotels, the order is to shoot to kill. The aggressiveness of the criminals is such that we have reached the conclusion that it is ei ther their lives or ours." A State Department travel advi sory issued late last year warns about increasing crime throughout Costa Rica. "At least seven American women have been victims of sexual assaults on beach resorts on both coasts. . . . there have been several attempted sexual assaults, including one rape, by taxi drivers." Travelers are urged to travel in groups during daylight hours, to keep valuables out of sight, and not wear jewelry, in order to lessen their risk. "Local law enforcement agencies have limited capabilities," the advi- sory states. Herald translator, Renato Perez, Herald writer Aracely Acosta, wire services, the Detroit Free Press, and reporters from La Prensa Libre and La Nacion in Costa Rica contributed to this report. It's not as if the university hasn't given smokers a chance to clean up their act. In December, Penn State clean-up crews placed several new cigarette receptacles throughout campus, but quickly found many stu dent smokers weren't using them. On an upcoming ballot, the uni versity will gauge student opinioti about a campus-wide ban. If student support for the measure is clear, uni versity administrators have agreed to discuss the matter further. The university already has phased out smoking in all campus building and has limited smoking to particu lar floors in its dormitories.