CONERVT V COTRVE - 0 * WATCH OUT FOR KILLER RAYS - 18 THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER *rivate or public? Admissions directors from privste universities disagree on whether they are losing applicants to public schools because of high tuition costs. - Page 4 Friendly feud Roommates with opposing political eologies exchange verbal blows over a fried chicken dinner just after meeting each ether. - Page 7 Artistic rape? Purdue U's Dave Tomaro examines the heated debate concerning the qlorization of classic black-and-white -Page 11 Running on methanol College students were challenged to redesign a car's engine to run primarily on methanol for a fuel competition. - Page 14 T.N Y The great unknown U. of Colorado's David Dudenhoefer sorts the myths and finds the facts about Ecstasy, a drug tried by 20 percent of CU students. I -Page 18 Notes sales banned as professors protest students buying their way through classes By Christy Harris The Alligator U. of Florida The practice of students buying class notes from note-selling services is not making good grades with professors. A Gainesville, Fla. businessman who pays students to give him their class notes and then sells them to other stu- dents has loot his hest sales outlet and some of his profits because a few mem- hers of U. of Florida's (UF) faculty ob- jected. A dean and some professors re- quested that a local copy center stop selling 'A' Plus Notes. As a result, Notes Group aids homeless, but IRS left in the cold By Stacey Herdlein The Technique Georgia Tech U. The Mad Housers, a group founded by Georgia Tech U. alumni and students, has gained attention by furnishing shel- ters free to Atlanta's homeless com- munity. But the attention isn't all good. The group, which last year built almost 60 shelters, is having problems with the Internal Revenue Service. Mad Houser President Mike Connor and Vice President Brian Finkel helped owner Ken Brickman's business was set back a year. The UF dean and professors said they don't want to put Brickman out of busi- ness, but they charged that his practice of selling notes for various classes is unethical and possibly illegal. Brickman, a UF finance graduate. said he is running a legal and beneficial service. He said the professors are wrong to deny students the help that he can provide. Despite Brickman's arguments, the University Copy Center sided with UF and discontinued 'A' Plus Notes last semester. But the debate about legality, ethics and old-fashioned capitalism is still going strong. Joe Barron, UF's associate general counsel, said copyright law protects professors' lectures even though they are oral presentations. If notes are based on a professor's lecture, they are also covered. No one can copyright omethingthat belongs to someone else. Brickman says the material in his product is general, factual knowledge. j He uses the notes of students enrolled in See NOTES, Page 23 See HOMELESS, Page 16 Feeling depressed? You're not alone; many students suffer from disorder By Dori Wilson The Daily Orange Syracuse U., NY ring the winter months, many stu- d s experience personal conflicts and and self-doubt, causing them to feel they are in over their heads. Depression, an obvious side effect of those feelings, is running rampant on college campuses, quickly becoming one of the leading psychiatric disorders for students. College students are 50 percent more likely to suffer from depression than p le of the same age group who do not a nd college, according to the Journal of Counseling Psychology. Julie Reighter, a graduate assistant at Syracuse U. (SU), is an active partici- pant in the Counseling In Residence (CIR) program at SU. Through the CIR, a student can seek counseling for any personal conflicts. Reighter said depression is very com- mon among students who seek help through a CIR. "Depression is more of a symptom of a lot of related issues," Reighter said. "De- pression can be the result of issues such as stress, loneliness and crises in per- sonal relationships," she added. The Diagnostic and Statistical Mea- sure (DSM III) lists the following as symptoms of depression: insomnia, low energy levels, loss of self-esteem, de- creased effectiveness or productivity, social withdrawal, less talkative, irrita- bility, loss of interest in pleasurable See DEPRESSION, Page 22