Ab COLLEGE FROM THE INSIDE OUT testing creates on civil rights A study to determine the prevalence of the AIDS virus among college stu- dents has raised a controversial ques- tion of health education versus civil rights. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of New Jersey lodged a formal protest last semester against Rutgers U.'s participation in the anonymous testing program. The study, coordinated by the Nation- al Center for Disease Control (CDC), is designed to determine the number of individuals on 20 randomly selected American college campuses who have the HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) virus, known as the "precursor for AIDS." The blood samples, leftovers from those drawn for other medical reasons, will be completely confidential and anonymous - only the age, sex, race, month of collection and a number will appear on the transfer tube, said Dr. I Eric Neisser, ACLU legal dire called the testing program "coer because health care recipients See RUTGERS, Pa Robert Bierman, medical director of health services at Rutgers. Because of anonymity, those who test positive for the virus will not be notified. Student fined, suspended forstarting computer vir By Bill Jacob Albany Student Press State U. of New York, Albany Last spring, officials at the universi- ty's Computing Center found them- selves fighting off a potentially danger- ous virus. But unlike the measles, this virus was high-tech. And it proved fatal to one student's academic career. University officials would not dis- close the student's name. The student was suspended from the university and fined $2,000 for creating a computer virus on one of the Center's mainframe computers, according to Gerard Forget, the Center's director. It was the first virus found in the school's computer system. Computer "viruses" are complicated programs designed, like their biological counterparts, to reproduce themselves, and often execute instructions to print out messages, change other programs, or - what computer users fear most - erase files in memory. Tiny, invisible programs have invaded the person: computing industry like biological virus. See Pag( 16. Computing Center officials susp foul play when the computer syste gan to receive large amounts of jc be processed, Forget said, expla that when the student was approached, he admitted to creatir virus. The student must pay $2,000 in pensation for the two and a half d took the Computing Center staff the system of the virus, Forget sz In this case, Forget said, the was "simple by comparison," des to eventually reach a faculty rE cher's files. He said it was "memor suming and destructive." - Butya Computing Center emj who asked not to be identified sa student didhot mean to do any I - I