2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 13, 1994 E-MAIL Continued from page 1 word as a series of dots, the "Trojan Horse" showed the actual password. That should have raised a red flag, said ITD User Advocate Manager Laurie Burns. Krause said he was startled to see his actual password displayed, but he proceeded to work on a physics take-home exam. Two days later, acomputer hacker apparently used Krause's e-mail ac- count to distribute the racist e-mail to about 30 Usenet discussion forums. The Usenet groups included forums for fans of McDonald's restaurants and for activists and automobile col- lectors. ITD officials launched an investi- gation into the incident the next day, spurred by hundreds of angry phone calls and letters. The investigation has yielded few clues, and investiga- tors admit the culprit may never be caught. The e-mail note sent under Krause's name illustrates the sophis- tication of some computer hackers - and the University's difficulty in stay- ing a step ahead. "We started these conversations (on password security) months ago, but the problem is that technology changes so fast that it's hard to keep up with it," said Virginia Rezmierski, assistant to the vice provost for infor- mation technology. "It has to be a concerted effort across campus," Rezmierski added. Among the options ITD officials are discussing are caller identifica- tion for modem users and a central computer that boots up terminals in University computing sites. Krause said he plans to retain his e-mail account and put the episode behind him. Of his recent experiences with e- mail, Krause shakes his head and says only, "It's been surreal." MCC Continued from page 1 through a student referendum. Roberts said students should decide on whether to withdraw from the coalition. "We think they should run a counter-referendum to see if this 35 cents should go to something else," Roberts said. With MSA's withdrawal, eight of the 15 public universities in Michi- gan are now members in MCC. The other two large research universities in Michigan - Wayne State Univer- sity and Michigan State University (MSU) - are not members in MCC. MSU pulled out of MCC this year and Wayne State has never been an MCC member. In order to fill the lobbying void, the proposal requires a representative from MSA's executive officers and the External Relations Committee to lobby in Lansing at least three days during each week this summer. For the upcoming year, MSA may look at having its own lobbyist work on behalf of students in Lansing. University Vice President forGov- ernment Relations Richard Kennedy offered to allow MSA use of its Lan- sing office, but an amendment to th proposal prohibits this. The amend ment requires MSA to have separate offices from University lobbyists. Law school Rep. Amy Braley said the proposals offered did not provide a responsible alternative. "It's an issue that we need to be concerned about and I didn't think it should have been resolved this quickly," Braley said. I MASS MEETING The Michigan Daily Summer Weekly WHEN: Thursday, April 14 at 7:30 WHERE: 2nd floor Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard Over 300 University of Michigan students took Kaplan to prepare for the April exam. To find out why, come to our free MCAT seminar at 337 E. Liberty on April 13 at 6:00 p.m. Practice with Kaplan now - so you can practice as a doctor later. For more information call 313-662-3149 KAPLAN The answer to the test question m o o o= mo o h o o i n 000o * 'hmat time ofyear when I o the sun shines, the ffowers K blo dtom andte hearts ofE y young peopfe everywhere ' >turn to thoughts of g S>DELICIOUS NONFAT FROZEN YOGURT! . I gy Treat yourself (or a friend) to some today! I Mon-Thurs 8:30-8:30 '/ti iith e I COOwES Fri 8:30-5:30 Sat 10-5:30 761 -CH IP MM=M=MMM=M==MM==M=MMMA MARKLEY Continued from page 12 - were collected but not deposited. In a letter sent yesterday to senior staff members, Mucha explained the council's poor financial condition. "I was informed that council col- lects hall dues and turns them in to SOAS by some time mid-fall," he said. Reneka Edwards, who was then president of house council, appar- ently did not deposit the collected fees in a timely fashion. The house dues were not turned in until January and "an immediate rush was made to retain the funds and get them depos- ited into the account," the letter said. Edwards resigned from house council in February. In addition, the list of residents who had paid their dues could not be located during the transition period. "What we did not understand is that the list of residents that paid was misplaced in the shuffle, and no fur- ther record is even made of the checks that are turned into SOAS," it read. An official in the Housing Divi- sion said Edwards turned over $18,000 before she resigned. The council usu- ally collects about $24,000 from its 1,148 residents. In a meeting Monday with staff members, another letter from Mucha was read, indicating a shortfall in dues. "The council had $6,000 less turned in this year by the students than we should have," the letter stated Kevin Kashawlic, treasurer of the Markley council, also sent a letter to Markley residents yesterday that read, "Despite the late cashing of Hall Dues, not every one has paid. If you have not yet paid Hall Dues, you will not be allowed to CRISP this week." Max Chu, acting president of the Markley council, said failures in the system prevented the shortfall front being discovered earlier. SOAS is required to give the Hous- ing director a monthly report listing the account balance. "The system never gave the reports this year. They should have been given to our building direc- tor," Chu said. "We never knew if the money had been deposited. We knew the money was collected," he added. odo"4 2 gtDu vw (IiNCL t tS MMM MMM MMM MMM SWIMMiN G IN YO1UR O(i-AN J2I1 AFf NIONS A COF FtF t SPOON', REAL I TY B I TES -U SHOUT Continued from page 2. Coppola and organizers chose the topic for this year's speech, and tonight's forum also includes a hand- ful of his colleagues to speak on Coppola's behalf. Michael Brooks, executive direc- tor of Hillel and the founder of the program, said his idea for the award stemmed from a the ideas of a Jewish prophet who stressed the importance of doing everything as if it is one's last deed. "I'm really quite delighted with the whole program," Brooks said. LSA junior Doug Daniels has worked closely with Coppola doing research for two years and is one of his biggest fans. "It's no coincidence that this is the only student award and he's the one who received it," said Daniels,achem- istry concentrator. Daniels added that Coppola's con- nection with students is remarkable, pointing out, "It's really difficult to understand the obstacles a student will face when you already know the material, and for some reason he un- derstands those obstacles." LSA junior Niels Rosenquist, a member of the SHOUT committee, said Coppola was chosen through the same process the group has used for the past four years. Ballots are distributed and col- lected in early January. Different bal- lots carry different weight - a ballot that simply states a name does not carry as much value as one with a paragraph or essay explanation of the professor's qualities. "We're not claiming it to be a perfect democratic process as far as the numbers of ballots everyone re- ceives," Rosenquist said, adding that the committee takes many factors into consideration. 4 Brooks said approximately 500 ballots were turned in this year, and the decision came from many hours ofdeliberation. "The committee tries to balance everything out. They don't do it as a popularity contest - they try to select someone someone who not only had the support of large num- bers of students, but who very clearly had something to say." Although all of the three previous winners have been in the humanities fields, Coppola is the first natural science teacher to gain this distinc- tion. The majority of students whom Coppola comes in contact with are registered in his classes, and many first-year students have had him for both Chem 210 and 215 this aca- demic year. Heather Landino, an LSA first- year student who has Coppola for the second consecutive term, said, "The way that Prof. Coppola teaches makes a class as challenging as organic chem- istry more enjoyable and easier to learn. He is energetic and relates to his students well." Although a student group gives the award, Coppola's supporters ar* not limited to undergraduates. He works daily with teaching assistants and other professors, the majority of whor offered similar kudos. Seyhan Ege, associate professor of chemistry, said Coppola is espe- cially interested in the ways students succeed in learning and keeping them interested. "(Coppola) is a creative, exciting and vital teacher, and I guess his stu- dents noticed," she added. *Coppola will speak tonightfat Rackham Auditorium at 7:30. Doors open at 7:00. - Daily staff reporter Zachary M. Raimi contributed to this report I ED S OPEN 9AM TO MIDNIGHT EVERYDAY!.MAIL ORDER: 1-800-648-4844 (9AM-9PM E.S.T.) 41A994 v An.IanSouth University Galleria MORE THAN A BOOKSTOR E .t:. vA Exrs **4" 1214 South University Avenue, Upstairs (313) 741-9600 r- W-/ f~e~cf '/ /. 0 X (C / - X '1 Looks Iuk Vivarin nil The big one's only 12 hou could have paid more class, but tonight cram. First, you c those eyes f CO Revive w Safe he] f' awake a ale So whe difficul so stay awa a V ght. rs away. You Pattention in you've gotta u better keep rom closing. with Vivarin. e as coffee, it lps keep you nd mentally ert for hours. en your most t problem to lve is how to ke...make it ivarin night! The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95. year-long (September through April) is $160. 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