'7'l-- MX:-I-:..e-- r% 1.. r.. ,-1-.. SA ---- i_ Yew Y\r'1 P1n r ThM N ATION/\ ORLDhMoigan aily - riday, March 24, 20X-) *Napster.com makes changes to appease colleges 5 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - A company that writes software for downloading music from the Internet says the program has been changed to please dozens of universities that had banned it because students were clog- ging up the schools' computers networks. The problem arose late last year when some universities saw the connections between their own systems and the Internet bogged down by heavy traffic. Officials discovered that the traffic jams were caused by students who were down- loading free music by using an application from Napster Inc. So far, only Indiana University, which worked with the San Mateo, Calif-based company on the changes, has confirmed it will try out the updated version, though other schools are waiting. "We'll be watching," Alan Cubbage, a spokesman for Northwestern University, said yesterday. "It's nice to not be the guinea pig." The technology's capabilities haven't endeared Napster to the Recording Industry Association of America, which accuses the company of encouraging people to break the law by pirating commercially recorded music from the Internet. Many students feel otherwise. "I'm a poor college student, and I can get on Napster and download any music I want for free," said Indiana freshman Ryan Bruner, a daily Napster user before the school blocked the application last month. Bruner set up a Website and petition drive for students at 196 universities that he says have banned Napster. Eddie Kessler, Napster's vice president for engineering, said the changes will mean search requests will first be handled locally - on the special, high-speed network shared only by universities and other research-based institutions. Only if a request can't be satisfied will it cross the school's pipeline to the larger Internet, he said, greatly reducing the traffic on those roads. "We fully expect this will do what needs to happen," said Mark Bruhn, who helps set information-technology policy at Indiana University. A later version of the application will direct searches to a university's own network before sending them to the schools' shared one, Kessler said. The changes "show Napster is willing and able to work with third parties to make sure our service is as good a citizen as possible, both in this area, network citizenry, and in the area of copyright and content, as well," Kessler said. A spokesman for the Recording Industry Association did not return phone calls seek- ing comment. Super spud dn2||I~ll4ll-, Twinkies return after strike ends BIDDEFORD, Maine (AP) - An eight-day strike by truck drivers against Interstate Bakeries Corp. that cut off the flow of Twinkies and Wonder Bread across the Northeast ended yesterday. The company and the Teamsters union agreed to additional talks next week on an arbitration dispute, and the Teamsters agreed to go back to work as a gesture of good will, said Dennis Ray- mond, chairman of the Teamsters' New England Bakery Drivers Council. "Right now, it sounds like everyone is going to get their Twinkies," said Robert Piccone, president of Teamsters Local 340. About 1,400 Teamsters left their jobs on March 15, accusing Kansas City, Mo.-based Interstate of refusing to abide by arbitration rulings. The company says the process was unfair; the union says the company refused to participate. Because of the strike, the company's Biddeford plant that makes J.J. Nissen, Wonder Bread, Hostess and Drake's products was shut down, putting 400 bakers out of work. Teamsters later set up pickets else- where, shutting down plants in New York City, Philadelphia, Wayne, N.J., and Buffalo, N.Y. "We decided to pull the pickets down and to have a cooling off period and put people back to work," Raymond said. On the picket line in Biddeford, where the drivers had put up a banner that said "Fort Twinkie" at their tarp- covered shelter, they let out a cheer when they heard the news yesterday. CAMP FOWLER SUMMER CAMP FOR CHILDREN AND ADULTS WITH DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES June 20-August 18 SEEKS APPLICANTS FOR: COUNSELOR OUTDOOR EDUCATION BARN AND ORGANIC GARDEN EQUESTRIAN INSTRUCTOR CREATIVE ARTS SPORTS LIFEGUARDS OUTDOOR LIVING MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN SOMEONE'S LIFE BARRIER FREE RECREATION FOR ALL CALL: 517-673-2050 FAX: 517-673-6355 EMAIL: programs@thefowlercenter.org WRITE: 2315 Harmon Lake Rd, Mayville, MI 48744-9737 "THE FOWLER CENTER FOR OUTDOOR LEARNING" Salty Spud is one of 20 six-foot statues presented at a Statehouse ceremony in Providence, R.I., yesterday to begin a new tourist campaign dubbed "Rhode Island - The Birthplace of Fun." *College offers tuition breaks for having fun Los Angeles Times ST. LOUIS - First, a clarification: It's true that students at Missouri's William Woods University soon will be able to earn big tuition breaks sim- * ply by having fun. But not every kind of fun qualifies. Keg-party fun does not. Nor does ping-pong-with-the-roomie fun. Veg- out by-the-TV fun won't cut it, either. No, this small liberal arts college will knock nearly 40 percent off its tuition only for students who have the kind of fun that enhances an educa- tion, or boosts campus spirit. Fun like attending a women's basketball game. Swinging by a faculty art exhibit. Joining a book group. Performing in a play. Jamming at an on-campus con- cert. In a program that national education experts call unique, William Woods will slash its S13,200 tuition by $5,000 next year for every incoming freshman who pledges to participate in a set number of extracurricular activities. The college will give each activity ma point value. Serving on student government, for instance, might be worth four points, while playing intramural volleyball might merit one. Every freshman who earns 45 points will snag the discount - and will be eligible for a similar break his sophomore year. "In recent years, student involve- ment in extracurriculars has been declining," Dean Larry Kramer said. "We're interested in encouraging students to enjoy the total college experience, not just what goes on in their classrooms." But is it possible to bribe a kid to be well-rounded? Although many freshmen likely will attend events grudgingly at first, drag- ging themselves to a black history month program for the sake of that $5,000, Kramer predicts that most will soon develop a genuine enthusiasm for campus life. Not only that: He fully expects students to become so used to joining and doing that they carry on the habit even after graduation. "Once they get that job as a comput- er specialist, we still want them to go to the symphony, to the theater, sup- port the local zoo," he said. 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