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CAMPUS NOTEBOOK
From Doonesbury Inspiration to Dean
Now They Have to Worry About 'Stanford.banc'Stanford has contracted a service that each week tells University officials about any cybersquatters who are highjacking the word "Stanford" to profit from the school's name recognition. It was already "difficult to keep up with the level of activity," says Shelley Hebert, director of business development for the University. Then the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers announced that it planned to add new domain suffixes such as ".shop," ".banc" or ".firm" in November. That same month, however, the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act takes effect, making it a civil offense to register a domain name that mimics other trademarks. For the Bookstore, a New CoverA three-month renovation of the Stanford Bookstore is scheduled to be finished in time for the start of fall quarter classes on September 22. Tully's Cafe and Photo Express had to suspend services during the construction, and a number of departments within the store were moved around. Follet Corp., which took over managing the Bookstore last July, orchestrated the new look. It features a mission oak motif on the general merchandise floors and high-tech Silicon Valley packaging for the supplies and textbook floors.
After a 50-Day Strike, a New Nurses' Contract
Grad Applications Drop -- Except in Law
Cybersex is 'Ruining Their Lives'More than 60,000 websites now generate an estimated $20 billion a year for pornographers and other cybersex businesses -- and that's bad news for many people's mental well-being, a Stanford researcher contends. Alvin Cooper, a psychologist at Cowell Student Health Services and the research-team leader for a recent MSNBC poll, says hundreds of thousands of people are pursuing sex online, "and it's ruining their lives." Cooper says cybersex is a powerful addiction, one that is harder to treat than many other dependencies. One of the most pressing problems with cybersex, he says, is its explosion in the workplace, where 20 percent of men and 12 percent of women go online in search of sexual material.
University Research: A Government BargainA new study by the Rand Corp., commissioned by the White House Office of Science and Technology, finds that colleges and universities are behaving prudently in their billing of expenses in federal research contracts. The congressionally mandated study shows that overhead charges have held steady for the last 10 years, at 24 to 28 percent of government funding for research by colleges and universities, and that those institutions have assumed an increasing share of costs. "The federal government really does get a good deal in university-based research," says Nils Hasselmo, president of the American Association of Universities.
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