LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 7, 2002 - 3A Mail storm floods students with e-mail Blood pressure treatment made more effective Kenneth Jamerson, associate professor and director of the Uni- versity Health System's Program for Multi-Cultural Health, along with two other physicians discov- ered a more effective treatment for high blood pressure, which occurs more often in blacks than in any other ethnic group. Results from his study indicate that blacks with high blood pres- sure and resulting kidney damage benefited most from new medica- tions that help preserve kidney function by acting on hormones produced by the kidney. Jamerson's study found the most effective type of medication for 1,100 back participants diagnosed with hypertension-induced kidney damage. According to Jamerson, with the right medication and lifestyle changes, the risk of kid- ney failure in blacks was no higher than in the rest of the population. An estimated 50 million Ameri- cans have high blood pressure. Also referred to as the silent killer, high blood pressure causes no dis- cernible symptoms until it is too late to prevent complications including heart attack, stroke or kidney failure. According to Jamerson, scien- tists used to believe that blacks were genetically predisposed to develop high blood pressure but there is little evidence of a genetic basis and blacks in the U.S. are genetically more similar to whites in the U.S. than they are to blacks in Africa. The cause of racial differences in the incidence of high blood pres- sure is still unknown, but Jamerson believes that with improved treat- ment, new medications and better education, racial disparities in dis- ease complications should be elim- inated. 'U' researchers look at improving insulin injections Endocrinologists at the Universi- ty Health System are studying two insulin delivery systems for diabet- ics. They include injections using the insulin "pen" and continuous insulin itfision using the pum.' Diabetes is a serious lifelong condition that occurs when the body doesn't produce enough insulin to convert sugar into ener- gy. The insulin injections, part of the prescribed treatment for diabetes can be difficult to manage. The insulin pump delivers a contin- uous dose of insulin through a catheter placed under the skin. The pump can also be programmed to deliver additional amounts of insulin before meals and snacks. The "pen" also allows diabetics to set a dial to the desired amount of insulin. To find the most effective way of delivering insulin for older people with Type 2 diabetes, researchers at the University of Michigan in collabo- ration with the University of Texas Southwestern, are conducting a 13- month study to compare the insulin pump treatment and daily insulin injections in patients who are 60 and older. Treatment satisfaction, cost- effectiveness, side effects and blood control will be the comparative meth- ods for the study. Americans over the age of 65 with diabetes, which is an estimated 15 to 20 percent of Americans over the age of 65 are specifically targeted for the study. Researchers are trying to come up with the most cost-effective way to manage blood sugar levels in elderly diabetics. Diabetes can lead to chronic life- threatening complications such as kid- ney failure, blindness and can affect the nerves in the legs and arms, possi- bly resulting in amputation. People with Type 2 diabetes- dia- betes that begins after the age of 40- are more likely to have cardiovascular disease, strokes and heart attacks. Controlling blood sugar levels is a key part of preventing diabetes complica- tions. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter April Effort. By C. Price Jones Daily Staff Reporter Following the "My Party" computer virus that spread throughout campus e-mail accounts last week, a new mass-mailing list filled inboxes and strained Information Technology Central Services with more than 700 complaints. "This is our first mail storm in a while, and the worst I've ever seen," said ITCS User Advocate Jim Sweeton. "Getting a lot of e-mails is serious in the individual's mind ... we get bogged down with complaints." Although the original message was not a virus, its subject and body resembled the Sircam virus, which damaged computers this summer by delet- ing hard drive information and filling desktop recy- cle bins to capacity. The user "sent this e-mail from a group he cre- ated," Sweeton said. "Hiding his unigname, he used (the group) to send the message to hundreds of groups." ITCS knows the identity of the person who start- ed the mail storm, but Sweeton declined to com- ment further. As a result, two groups of people responded - those who didn't know any better and asked to be removed and those who responded maliciously. For each e-mail, the hundreds of groups listed in the reply lines of the e-mail received responses, too. "By Monday morning, it had escalated," Sweet- on said. "I sent out a mail to inform people not to respond. ... By 3:00 Monday afternoon, anyone who (sent e-mail) would have their service sus- pended for 24 hours." Six or seven people had their e-mail services suspended beginning last night. Sweeton added that although many individual's inboxes were filled, the University mailing system could handle the barrage of e-mail. "If 5 percent of the people complained, then several thousand people were affected," he said. "Our mail systems are pretty robust, so they weren't affected. ... We have an unusual facility - that anyone can create their own groups. Most of the time they are used appropriately." Later next week Sweeton and other ITCS staff will meet to discuss solving future mail storms and to affirm a policy that will allow abusive users to be suspended more quickly. Some students hope that measures will be taken or utilities be available to restrict and monitor e- mails. Student go' "I probably got 50 to 60 e-mails, it was kind of annoying," said LSA freshman Gabrielle Szyman- sky. "I wish there were some kind of program that U-M had to restrict all those e-mails." Other students were concerned with the ability to block and filter e-mails themselves. "I think you should be able to block or filter what comes in," said LSA freshman Kaema Akpan. She added that students should still be able to create their own groups. School of Art and Design senior Jeff Glogower said that the e-mails didn't anger him - he simply deleted them. "I think I got (the e-mails) from a list or group I recently joined," he said. "I changed the e-mail on the list to a Hotmail e-mail that I have to avoid all of those messages in my mail- box." vernments Message on a wall from Big Ten schools meeting in. Ann Arbor PATRICK JONES/Daily Graffiti decorates the wall of the Michigan Theater in an alley off East Liberty Street. Senate approves state's anti-terror legislation LANSING (AP) - A sweeping package of tap individuals. legislation designed to thwart terrorism in "The suggestion that this bill will protect Michigan easily cleared the state Senate yester- Michigan citizens from terrorism is just a day, with senators evoking the attacks on the spoonful of sugar to help the medicine go World Trade Center and the Pentagon to rally down," said Sen. Martha Scott (D-Highland By Tomislav Ladika Daily Staff Reporter Eight student government delegates from every Big Ten school will arrive in Ann Arbor tonight to take part in the tri-annual Association of Big Ten Students conference, which will be hosted by the University for the first time since Oct. 1997. "It's an amazing congregation of thought, of people who are willing to put a lot of time into student government," Michigan Student Assem- bly President Matt Nolan said. "The opportunity to be able to be the school to host the conference is an honor." Nolan said the primary benefit of the confer- ence is that MSA can share its ideas and con- cerns with the other schools and learn what programs have worked at campuses across the Big Ten. Quinn Wright, chairman of the Associated Students of Michigan State University, said he hopes the representatives "can come together as a Big Ten and pass legislation on rape awareness, as well as brainstorm ideas that we can take back to our own campus." Another benefit is that the MSA delegates will develop connections with the other student lead- ers, said LSA Rep. Zack Slates, chairman of the External Relations Committee that organized the meeting. Nolan said when MSA was working to' insti- tute a fall break at the University last fall, he needed statistics from Penn State University, which had already implemented a similar pro- gram. He said he was able to access this informa- tion through the relationship he had developed with Penn State's student president during ABTS. "When you need information, it's there," Nolan said. Slates said the conference this weekend will consist of four issue sessions focusing on issues including student government accountability, housing and communications between university administration and students. Nolan added that the sessions will be informal discussions between the delegates where most of the ideas and problems experienced by the vari- ous student government will be shared. Wright said he believes ASMSU will be able to offer some innovative ideas to the other schools on relations between students and police, an issue that has plagued Michigan State recently. He added that his delegation hopes to leave with ideas on how to cope with student apathy on its campus. In addition to the issue sessions, the student governments will meet on the final day of the conference as a general assembly to pass joint resolutions. "When we speak as MSA, we speak for 38,000 students, but when we speak as ABTS, we speak for 400,000 students," Nolan said. During the final meeting, the student govern- ments will also discuss changes to the ABTS constitution, which primarily provides the struc- ture of ABTS conferences. Wright said the constitution is defunct because its "philosophies and principles are not what ABTS stands for right now." Nolan said MSA is looking forward making the constitution work better for the conference, but he added that the changes will not have a sig- nificant effect on how ABTS is run. Slates said he has worked several hours a day to organize the conference. He said he had to plan out and make arrangements for the entire agenda, including funding, dinner and hotel reservations and tickets for the Saturday night Michigan hockey game. "The University is very much behind us in hosting this conference, and we feel that's part of the reason it will be so beneficial; Slates said. $ Nolan said the ABTS conference "gets you re- excited about ideas because you spend an entire weekend talking about them." broad support. "September 11th was a wake-up call for everyone," said Sen. William Van Regenmorter (R-Georgetwn Twp.), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee which approved the 19 bills. "The issue of terrorism is real. We need to give our police agencies the powerful tools-they need to protect us." Several senators - all Democrats - balked at a bill to permit state and local police to wire- Park). But Van Regenmorter said the bill contained extensive protections to avert abuse. That bill and others were approved by lop- sided majorities and sent to the House, which is already considering several more minor mea- sures to complete the anti-terrorism package. The primary bill in the package would make terrorist acts a crime in Michigan and enhance the penalties for those acts. Arab League names local man to act as liaison to the U.S. DEARBORN HEIGHTS (AP) - A Dearborn Heights businessman will work for better communication between the Arab world and the United States as an Arab-American liaison for the Arab League. Nasser Beydoun, a local Arab- American community leader, was tapped for the post earlier this week. He will help open lines of communication between the Arab world and the United States for the League, a leading political organi- zation in the Middle East. The 56-year-old group represents 22 Arab countries. Beydoun, 37, is traveling this week in Washington with Amr Moussa, secretary general of the Arab League. The Arab League announced it was going to create the liaison position during a November conference in which Detroit's large and influential Arab- American community brought Moussa and other diplomats from Arab nations together with business and political leaders from Michi- gan. "This is the first time there will be a commissioner to deal with you and make you part of the Arab League," Moussa said in November. Beydoun, who has worked to build bridges and better under- standing of Arab-Americans, said much of his duties in the volunteer position will include 'trying to build stronger economic ties between the Middle East and the United States, especially Detroit. "Through economics, you can build cultural understanding," Beydoun told the Detroit Free Press for a story yesterday. "You have to give people a reason to understand each other, and trade is a good reason." Michigan is home to about 350,000 Arab-Americans, with the population concentrated in the southeastern part of the state. THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor today EVENTS "Women Redefining Security in East Asia"; Sponsored by the Center for Japanese Studies, 5:30 p.m., Vandenberg Room, Michigan League "Nickelkand Dimed: On (Not) Getting by intAmeri- ca"; Sponsored by the ( anta.. fnra 6,,cat ninn 4:30 p.m., Colloquium Room, East Hall "Monika Fieischmann and SERVICES Campus information Centers, 764-INFO, info@umich.edu, or www.umich.edu/ -info S.A.F.E. Walk, 763-WALK, C ,I go