NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 10, 2000 - 5A Learning disabled attend college in greater numbers WASHINGTON (AP) - Students with rning disabilities are attending college in recedented numbers, a trend that both dis- pels the notion that they could not advance beyond high school special education classes and calls into question the number of children being labeled with a handicap. "I don't think anybody expected me to go to college. They probably thought I would be flipping burgers," said Jed Israel Pittleman, a New York University junior who has attention deficit disorder. Among the 1.6 million first-time, full-time shmen enrolled at 3,100 institutions of gher education in the United States in 1998 the most recent figures available - some 154,520, or 9.4 percent, had some kind of dis- ability, says a new study by the American Council on Education. In 1978, by contrast, less than 3 percent of freshmen reported hav- ing a disability. Of those reporting a disability two years ago, 41 percent identified their impediment as a learning disability. Ten years earlier, the blind or partially sighted represented the largest category and the percentage of learn- ing disabled was just 15 percent. Colleges are "recognizing that these students have unrealized potential, and many students who years ago would never have contemplated college are," said Beth Robinson of the Col- lege Board, which administers the SAT. Last year, 24,016 students with all sorts of disabilities asked for special accommodations when they took that test - such as extra time to complete it - compared with 14,994 five years earlier. Although it may seem counterintuitive for people with learning disabilities such as attention deficit disorder or dyslexia to be expected - or to even want - to attend col- lege, experts say the growth is not surprising. In the 1970s, Congress passed laws pro- hibiting discrimination against the disabled and mandating extra educational help for those who need it. Natalie Phelps, a senior psychology major at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, had a stroke at age 6, but with speech therapy and books on tape, she expects to attend graduate school. "I'm not shy at all about saying what I need, whether it's note-takers, or readers for exams, or untimed tests," she said. Advocates for the learning disabled say such accommodations should be accepted just like wheelchair ramps, braille and sign lan- guage translators. But critics argue the "learning disabled" label may be overused and some students could be getting unfair advantages. "Certainly there are very severe cases with- in dhe LD category, but when we look at the broad range, there are concerns that special ed and LD has become a catchall for anybody who has a learning problem," said Thomas Parrish, director of the Center for Special Education Finance at the American Institutes for Research in Palo Alto, Calif. rtolumnist says he used germ w arfare SEATTLE (AP) - Dan Savage, gay writer of an outrageous and comically explicit sex-advice column, is waging either germ warfare or a disinforma- tion campaign against the religious right. He claimed recently that while pos- ing as a volunteer for Gary Bauer's campaign in Iowa, he licked office doorknobs and coffee cups and handed the conservative Republican a slob- bered-on pen to try to infect him with the flu. midterms with her tutor, Steve Gilpatrick. Phelps, a psychology major, was disabled by a stroke at age six. -~ Dow Jones Industrial Average, NASDAQ and S&P 500 Composite for Week Feb.3 - Feb. 9 DJIA NASDAQ S&P 500 Close Change Close Change Close Change 2/4 11,013.44 +10.24 4,210.98 +137.02 1,424.97 +15.85 2/3 10,963.80 -49.64 4,244.14 +33.16 1,424.37 -0.60 2/7 10,905.79 -58.01 4,321.77 +77.63 1,424.24 -0.13 /8 10,957.60 +51.81 4,427.50 +105.73 1,44-1.75 +17.51 2/9 10,699.16 -258.44 4,362.80 -64.70 1,411.89 -29.86 HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE WEEK: It seems as though interest rate wornes are continuing to affect the major market indicators. Investors are wary of the Federal Reserve raising rates again in March, potentially cutting into corporate profits. Credit sensitive stocks, such as the blue chips in the Dow, will be affected more than the less credit sensitive NASDAQ market. The Dow's loss yesterday was the biggest setback since its 289 point drop Jan. 28. Cisco Corporation, the world's biggest maker of equipment that directs traffic on the Internet, reported its second quarter earnings yesterday and beat analyst's estimates. It ended up 3 1/16 for the session but the NASDAQ still struggled. On Tuesday, however, the NASDAQ Composite t another record when it closed above 4,400 for the first time. WHAT IS THE DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE? The DJIA represents 30 stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the NASDAQ stock market. These companies are all major fac- tors in their respective industries. These stocks are widely held by individuals and institutional investors. Many financial advisers think of it as a good indicator of the performance of the overall market. WHAT IS THE NASDAQ COMPOSITE? The NASDAQ is the fastest growing stock market in the U.S. due to it being a screen-based stock market, compared to a trading floor market like the NYSE. It also has almost all of the technological stocks available for trading, which has proved to be a very volatile industry in the last couple of years. HAT IS THE S&P 500? The S&P 500 is a market value weighted index composed of 400 indus- trial stocks, 20 transportation, 40 financial, and 40 utility. It is a far broader measure than the DJIA because it takes into account 500 different stocks traded on the two main exchanges (NYSE and NASDAQ-AMEX) compared to the DJIA's 30 all traded on the NYSE and NASDAQ. -Ciomnpiled by Dail StaffReporter Kevin Magnusonr /,vtiren reports. Hackers continue attack s against, NEW YORK (AP) - Hackers stepped up a three-day electronic assault yesterday against some of the most popular sites on the Web, inconveniencing millions of Internet users and unnerving Wall Street. The apparently coordinated attacks spread to ETrade, ZDNet and other major sites yesterday. All of them were crippled by a barrage of messages generated by hackers. The growing anxiety about the Internet's vulnerability contributed to a 258.44 point-slide in the Dow Jones average and halted three straight record-high closings for the Nasdaq Composite Index, which is heavy with high-tech stocks. The attacks also prompted top federal officials to reassure Americans that authorities are doing everything they can to fight the online vandalism. "We are committed to in every way possible to tracking those who are responsible," Attorney General Janet Reno said in Washington. She said the motives of the vandals are not known, "but they appear to be intended to interfere with and disrupt Websites legitimate electronic commerce." The hacker technique, called a "denial of service attack," involves directing a flood of messages to computers that run Websites. The effect is comparable to erecting human barricades to block shoppers from entering a mall or unleashing a wave of calls to tie up a city's phone lines. In the latest attacks, the ETrade online brokerage's Website was hit, but "customer accounts were never compromised," spokesman Patrick Di Chiro said. Less than one-fifth of its customers were affected by the clogged traffic for about 90 minutes before the company blunted the attack, he said. ZDNet.Com, a popular news site that covers technology, said its Website was shut down for two hours and "appeared to have been the tar- get of a denial-of-service attack"' Microsoft's MSN.com, another highly visited site, said it was indi- rectly affected because of disrup- tions to several Internet service providers carrying its traffic. Bauer's people were furious, but Savage now says the part about the germs never happened and was just a joke - a metaphoric reply to Bauer's rhetoric against homosexuals and gay marriage. Either way, the episode was charac- teristic of a man who regularly pushes boundaries in his Seattle-based col- umn "Savage Love," which appears in 28 alternative newspaper sound the country, including the Village Voice in New. York, and is read by an estimated 4 million people a week. "In the context of my column, peo- ple understand sometimes I'm pulling your leg, sometimes I'm not," Savage says. "In this case, people lacked that context." Savage, who with his partner recent- ly adopted a little boy, is the very incarnation of all that the Christian conservative movement despises. There is no sex act too perverse, no sex subject too outlandish for him to delve blithely into - often in blush- inducing detail. In one recent column, Savage dis- cussed the pros and cons of genital cos- metic surgery for a transsexual. In another, he strongly lectured a 15-year- old bisexual boy about the dangers of doing heroin and failing to tell a sex partner about.it. He has been known to refer to heterosexuals as "breedets." Savage can also talk about family values -- like the domestic bliss he has found raising a child. Much of what he says about parenting could just as well come from the mouths of straight parents, such as lack of sleep and the struggle to retain a sense of romance with his partner. "if the religious right really wanted to stop gay sex," he quipped in a recent interview, "they should get behind gay people adopting, because nothing puts a stop to gay sex faster." " + , #x . ; . w 'mb " "s ,, a I