Seminary Computing Services (SCS)
provides information technology resources for Bethany Theological Seminary and the Earlham School of Religion... (Read more...)
Try
, also i recommend you
provides information technology resources for Bethany Theological Seminary and the Earlham School of Religion... (Read more...)
Try
, also i recommend you
Automatic email forwarding from @earlham.edu and @bethanyseminary.edu accounts via Webmail is out of order for nearly all users*. Earlham Computing Services is working on the problem, but they have no time estimate for a solution.
We recognize that many seminary folks rely on this feature to allow them to check their seminary email account from another email account. There are three options for people who have been forwarding their mail:
Whitehouse.gov has converted their site to Drupal! Drupal is a CMS (content management system) that has been gaining in popularity over the past couple of years. Currently, all seminary websites (TWIC, SCS, ESR, Bethany) are Drupal sites. Here's a fun article about how the President's IT staff is utilizing Drupal.
http://techpresident.com/blog-entry/whitehousegov-goes-drupal
Looks like another round of email scams have started to make their way around campus. I'd like to take this time to remind everyone that SCS will NEVER ask you for your account information through email. Earlham Computing Services is not purging accounts based on user feedback.
Two more attempts have been launched to trick users into submitting their account information under the threat of losing access to their email accounts. It is important to remember that neither SCS or ECS will ever ask users for their account information through an email. If you have responded to either of these two emails you should contact the SCS helpdesk at (765) 983-1568 and we'll make sure your account hasn't been compromised.
Automatic forwarding of @earlham.edu and @bethanyseminary.edu mail is still broken in WebMail, so we've added more instructions for retrieving your mail with Yahoo and GMail accounts. Enjoy!
This scam keeps it short, giving you less time to think about how strange the whole thing is. Happily, in addition to asking you to send in your password via email (which neither SCS nor ECS will ever do), the senders make some clear errors:
Update: This issue appears to be solved - contact us if you're still having trouble.

As I noted in an earlier post, the amount of spam that we turn away at our network perimiter started to increase in early December, settling in at an average of around 250,000 messages a day. Yesterday, we saw a spike in those numbers, rejecting 984,386 spam messages in one 24 hour period.
Just in time for the holidays (and exams!) - we're seeing a 37% increase in the amount of spam that attempts to enter our network compared to this time last week. Why do spam rates continue to rise? Because spamming is still quite proffitable; a recent study showed that spammers can make very good money with a response rate of 1 in 12.5 million.
Another variation on an Earlham-targeted scam; this one even tries to abuse the name of the real Silpakorn University. Comments are in bold.