Page 6 The Behrend Beacon `Worm ate my homework,' Rollins College students tell teachers by David Damron The Orlando Sentinel Ever since classes started for finidents a month ago at Rollins College, a worm has been eating their homework. Hundreds of students at the small col lege say this semester has been one long computer nightmare so far. A virus-like "worm" infected the college network, slowing Internet use to a crawl and forc ing some students off campus to do re search. "This is college," said Mike Netto, a political science senior. "It's like, ember. rassing, to have a kind of problem like this." Netto, 22, said he has little luck getting on the Internet from his dorm room, and one of his classes requires online research. Netto and other students say system crashes have caused term papers and notes to be lost. stance, had to turn up monitoring systems to The school's computer technology team keep away viruses, and that slowed e-mail said Thursday that they have slain the corn- clown somewhat a few times in recent weeks. puter contagion by going door to door on. In most cases, instead of receiving e-mail campus until I I p.m. the last few days,. from someone in 30 seconds, it took 3() min looking for Typhoid Mary types with in- utes. fected computers. "It really hasn't been an issue for us," said "For the first time, we're virus-free," said UCF spokesman Tom Evelyn. Les Lloyd, associate vice president of the Next fall, Rollins will likely make students college's Information Technology depart- register personal computers at a common ment, spot to clean the machines before they are At first, the university attempted to wipe used on campus, Lloyd said. out the virus, knowit as "W32.Welchia," But with more than 2(X) computers open by asking students to lug computer towers at labs and libraries, no one had an excuse and laptops across campus to get virus-pro- not to turn in assignments, Lloyd said. tection software. " Rollins' computer network guru said a few Up to 300 students initially ignored or • lax students were the main problem. missed warnings instructing them to install •"I put More faith in them than I should a special anti-virus patch, Lloyd said, but have,' most were reached this week. Close to 35 students still don't have she W32.WELCHIA WORM safety software. They were kicked off the Targets: Computers using Windows XP, network Thursday and now face $lOO 2000,1471XF, and Microsoft lIS 5.() operat fines, Lloyd said, adding that the'fine likely ing systems. can be appe,aled and avoided in most cases. What it does: Makes computers download All students probably were affected by a special Wmdows program that forces ma the virus, he said, especially the 1.100 liv- chines to reboot s or turn off and on again. It ing in dorms. also tries to infect other machines by send- The Problem, as Lloyd described it, ing out a request, or "ping," that increases started when students arrived at wain: network traffic. • , aratlagged computers into the Rol net- The result: Intenvitstowdowns, lockouts work, bringing the virus with thlWri k The and crashel. • computer code in the worm clogged up the SOURCE: Symaruec. an Internet security network when these machines were online, company vler • 107 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Open until midnight 4334 Buffalo Rd. Sun. thru Thur. (814)898-1212 making it impossible for clean machines to get in. Disputing student accounts of the prob lems at Rollins, Lloyd said there have been few network crashes, just slow-Internet woes. Some students said they could not get into Internet chat-mom class discussions. Others drove to class to use a college computer, only to have it crash. "Ws been awful," said freshman Lindsay Phillips, 18. "Nothing was working." Phillips said Sept. 25 was the first time she got online from her dorm room, so it may be fixed, but she's had to use a relatives off campus computer since class began. "Everything is on the Internet these days," Phillips said. "It kind of affected our whole life." Other Florida schools saw similar prob lems this fall, but none apparently this se vere. University of Central Florida for in- Don't study on an empty stomach! coffee & with a frie Open 24 hours Fri. & Sat. klAhf 1 ' ite4 11 z i o Narrir API Friday, October 3, 2003 I HI puts periods on 1101 by Patricia Anstett Knight Ridder Newspapers Hate having a menstrual period or the yucky side effects that may come with it? A new drug arriving in stores in late October will allow women to avoid all but four periods a year. Seasonale conventional oral contra ceptives repackaged in a purple-and-pink plastic box has pushed into public view a lesser-known way of stopping periods known in medicine as menstrual suppres- By throwing out the seven inactive pills that come with standard oral con traceptives, women increasingly have been opting for the convenience during the past decade. It's a choice better known to female troops, physicians-in-training, honey mooning brides and women with heavy periods from endometriosis and other problems. The promise: No muss or fuss and fewer cramps, migraines, chocolate cravings and mood swings. "It will change your life," says Alicia Sokol, senior news and information of ficer for the Cleveland Clinic who has suppressed her period for more than a year. "I no longer am ravenous before my period. Before, I felt like I needed to eat everything that wasn't nailed down." But drugs, like almost everything else in medicine, come with drawbacks and possible unknown risks. "This is homogenizing women, chemicalizing them into uniformity," says Dr. Susan Rako, a Boston-based, Harvard University trained psychiatrist and author of "No More Periods: The Risks of Menstrual Suppression and Other Cutting-Edge Issues About Hor mones and Women's Health" (Harmony Books; $2l). The known methods of menstrual sup pression put women at increased risk of osteoporosis, infertility, heart attacks, strokes and cancer, Rako said. Menstrua tion actually lowers blood-pressure lev els by half each month, decreasing a woman's risk of heart-related problems, she says. She calls menstrual suppression ' Grab a bite to eat and stay a while! sponsible and hazardous," and cites 225 scientific references in her book to bol ster her argument. Though oral contraceptives may pro tect some women against ovarian can cer, Rako particularly abhors the men strual suppression trend among teens. "Girls need to get to know them selves," she says. The drug Seasonale contains synthetic forms of two hormones .03 milligrams of a type of estrogen called estradiol and 0.15 milligrams of a progestin, levonorgestrel, also contained in mod em birth-control pill doses. But instead of taking three weeks of real pills and a week of inactive or pla cebo drugs a regimen known as 21-7 women take one Seasonale tablet daily for 84 days and then take the seven in active pills, producing a period every four months. Seasonale's cost has yet to be deter mined. It will be comparable to conven tional regimens of about $3O a month and some insurance plans may pay for it, a company spokeswoman says. Birth-control products such as Depo- Provera, an injection that lasts 3 months, also stop periods. All of the choices, Seasonale included, may cause break-through bleeding, so women still may get caught unaware with the sudden arrival of a period. Birth-control pills of any kind are not advised for women who smoke because they carry an increased risk of blood clots, heart-related problems such as strokes, and certain cancers and liver diseases. They also do not protect against sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV, the virus that leads to AIDS. And oral contraceptives aren't a good choice for girls and women who forget to take their pills the reason many doc tors give Depo-Provera or tell women to put pills next to some item, like a tooth brush or an alarm clock, that they use daily. Dr. Patricia Sulak, who has prescribed menstrual suppression regimens for a decade, calls the trend to reduce periods huge. "When the Food and Drug Adminis tration approved this, it was like telling sra 'Cuz GIRLS JUST WANNA HAVE FUMY Mark your calendar. Put your books away. Grab your girlfriends. eme (§6e Edettthted,Peultimed e Educated AN EXPO THAT WILL REMIND YOU WHY YOU LOVE BEING A IYOW1,11,:, 1 ti 1) i' r ,.. 74 ..) 1,i311 NT NCE CaW ire Produced by: Erie Promotions 6 Expos Inc.. PO Box 174 North East Pa 18428 . An Expo for Today's Woman Family First Sports Park Erie-Pennsylvania October 11th & 12th Saturday from 10am•7pm Sunday from 10am-6pm General Admission $5.00 Plenty of FREE Parking 0 FREE Shuttle provided by La Grand Elite Limousine Amber women, 'lt's OK not to have a monthly period.' All of this will take off and sky rocket," she says. "The redesign of birth control pills is happening." Sulak, professor of obstetrics and gy necology at Texas A&M University's College of Medicine in Temple, Texas, and a consultant to Barr Laboratories, the Woodcliff Lake, N.J., manufacturer of the drug. says: "21-7 will be out the door. This is long overdue." The trend of suppressing menstruation is particularly popular among young, female obstetricians and gynecologists. Dr. Renee Page, clinical instructor in the obstetrics and gynecology department at the Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit, has used conven tional pills to suppress her period for more than a year. "It's not convenient to have a period every month when you work 80 hours a week and might have to be scrubbed for surgery," she says. "It's a big thing among the female 08-GYNs." She says she's observed some addi tional breast tenderness but has experi enced no other big drawbacks. She and others say they don't think menstrual sup pression regimens carry any higher risk of breast cancer and other cancers. "I think it's a great option," she said. But she adds, "Every woman who con siders it should talk to her doctor about her individual case." Dr. Kristina Sole, a Cleveland Clinic obstetrician-gynecologist, recommends menstrual suppression to counteract moodiness, crying, irritability and other menstruation-related problems. Asked whether the pills cause weight gain, she laughs and says, "If women can blame it on their pill, they do. Some women think they burned dinner because of the pill." Long-term use of any estrogen prod uct raises the risk of breast cancer, she and others acknowledge. But given low hormone doses in the pill, she doubts there is a significant cancer risk. "No medication should be taken over time without weighing the risks involved against the benefits," she says. "If their quality of life is impaired, and they are willing to assume the risks, then go ahead and take it." tkit F 144 ... 2 FREE Manicures FREE Product Samples FREE Vision Screenings FREE Chair Massages FREE Hand Waxing Make Overs Door Prizes Tasty Food Samples 'donative Seminars And Much More!!!