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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 2002)
6pm - 9pm Doors Open at 5pm 014063 Handouts Tickets on sale now at EMU $6 Now - $8 Door. Sponsored by Put on by IFC and West Eugene Boxing Club All proceeds will benefit YMCA Big Brother/Big Sister Program SPORTS North Campus 579 E. Broadway 686-1166 South Campus 2870 E. Willamette STUDENT ID SPECIALS • Show Your Student ID • Order by Number X-LARGE 1-TOPPING _$B09 The Big New Yorker MEDIUM 3-TOPPING Pan, Thin 'N Crispy or Hand Tossed STICKS 'N WINGS 10 Breadsticks, 10 Wings X-LARGE 3-TOPPING The Big New Yorker e MEDIUM l-TQPPINGS Pan, Thin ’N Crispy or Hand Tossed STICKS ’N WINGS 10 Breadsticks, 20 Wings -$899 _$899 91099 91099 91Q99 2 FREE Cans of Soda with Any Above Order! Delivery charges may apply FIND THINGS IN ODE CLASSIFIEDS (BICYCLES, PETS, CARS, JOBS, ROOMMATES, APARTMENTS, CONCERT TICKETS, PLAN E TICKETS, STUFF YOU LOST, TYPING SERVICES, ON-CAMPUS OPPORTUNITIES) Breakdown of the 100 recreational minutes the average college student spends online: Browsing: 39 minutes E-mail: 35 minutes Games: 8 minutes Chatting: 7 minutes Usenet activities: 5 minutes FTP: 4 minutes MUD activities: 1 minute Cybersex: less than 1 minute I 4 Internet continued from page 1 service and, ultimately, God. “It’s all part of the climate of hav ing to escape something,” he said. A recent study of 1,300 college students from eight different college campuses backs up Lewis’ claims that high Internet use can provide harmful side effects. Researchers at the Troy, N.Y.-based Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute found that nearly 10 percent of respondents said the Net is affecting their grades, sleep time and social interactions. Keith Anderson, a staff psychol ogist at Rensselaer’s Counseling Center, said Internet dependence is the same as a dependence to any other substance. As the student uses the Internet more and more, he or she withdraws further from school and social activities. “Eventually you see students in teract with others less and become less social,” Anderson said. The reasons for online addiction are easy to trace, he added. Colleges C PHOTO SPECIALS MAY 13-19 $2.00OFF PREMIUM PROCESSING: Fujicolor's highest quality finishing: Includes index print Upgraded packaging Sleeved negatives Hand inspected 35mm C4I color film. 4x6 or 5x7 prints. Allow 2-5 working days. FUJICOLOR P B 0 C E S 5 I H G I N C 1 www.uobookstore.com nationwide are racing to build wired campuses with faster con nection speeds and more academic services online, which has become -< a selling point to prospective stu dents. Students are spending more * time on fast and easy services, in eluding class registration, distance education classes and class assign ment Web pages, such as the Uni versity’s Blackboard pages. Anderson warned that there is not always a correlation between high Internet use and online de pendency because “some of the stu dents manage quite well when their lives become unbalanced, (and) some students cannot.” He added that Internet addic tion is so new, many victims may not recognize inordinate online hours as the cause of their anxiety or depression. “They don’t identify the Internet as being part of the problem,” he said. “Nobody is coming out say ing, ‘This is ruining my life.’” Ron Miyaguchi, outreach coordi nator for the University’s Counseling and Testing Center, agreed. He has not seen any cases of Internet de pendency so far. But Miyaguchi said his case load might increase in the next few years as Internet use grows. “This is a very new medium. It has the potential to be a big phe nomenon,” he said. The Counseling and Testing Cen ter offers a set of group discussions and outreach services on a passel of different topics. So far, he said, there have not been any requests for Internet dependency groups. Brooks Harrop, a University sophomore studying biology and ^ neuroscience, spends an average of two hours a day on the Internet do- » ing non-academic work. “It doesn’t detract from my courses or studies,” he said. “It’s a utility. People use the microwave a lot, but they probably don’t know how much they use.” However, Harrop thinks Lewis may have a point with MediaDetox. Harrop knows a few people who he thinks have a problem managing their time on the Internet; however, Harrop agreed with Anderson that these people probably wouldn’t ad mit they have a problem. “People being addicted to the Net is a pretty new issue, and the prob lem is that they won’t believe it,” he said. “It took years for people to start talking about the harms of cigarettes.” Meanwhile, Lewis said he will keep plugging away at raising awareness of Internet dependency. His discussions on the media will run every Wednesday until the end of the term. He is also considering alternative ways to reach students. He said his patience will perse vere. “I think I may be ahead of the curve,” he said. “I have a sense of what it will be like in 10 years.” E-mail Pulse and features editor John Liebhardt at johnliebhardt@dailyemerald.com.