CAMPUS LIFE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 20, 2004 - 3B Subject sets fire o toilet paper An unknown person set small fires in a restroom at Towsley Cen- ter at 1515 Hospital Dr. on Monday afternoon, according to DPS state. The fires were reported by the building's housekeeping service. Rolls of toilet paper appeared to be the fuel used. DPS does not have any suspects. (Sept. 8, 2000) *Unwanted man masturbates in Markley dorm room A male subject allegedly entered the Frost House room of a female resident of the Mary Markley Residence Hall without permission and masturbated in front of her Thursday afternoon, Depart- ment of Public Safety reports state. The suspect was described as a white male, with blond hair and a beard, wearing glasses, a hunter green shirt and shorts. DPS has not reported having any sus- pects in the incident. The subject in the incident was alleged to be the same man who was seen masturbating in the Mary Markley Residence Hall. (Sept. 19, 2000) Man runs, screams through Bursley An unidentified man ran screaming through hallways in Bursley Residence Hall early yesterday morning, according to DPS reports. The man also caused minor property damage and attempted to flee when offi- cers arrived at the scene. The man was subdued and because he appeared to be under the influence of drugs or alco- hol, he was taken to University Hospi- tal's emergency room for evaluation. (Oct. 27, 2000) Rubber figurines reported stolen Three rubber figurines were reported stolen Wednesday morning from an office in the Clinical Delivery building on South State Street, DPS reports state. *An incident report was filed but DPS did not report having any suspects in the incident. (Nov. 3, 2000) Suspicious package turns out to be hangers There was a suspicious package at City Hall Friday night, DPS reports state. The owner requested K9 assistance. DPS officers opened the package and found five plastic hangers. The owner remembered that he had mailed himself the hangers. (Sept. 3, 2003) Officers arrest dancing man DPS officers on Friday morning arrested an 18-year-old man wanted on a *bench warrant from the Ann Arbor Police Department. The man was found dancing on steps near a parking lot on Observato- ry Street known as Old Main Hospital at 5:11 a.m. DPS officers would not give the reason behind the man's bench war- rant. (Sept. 4, 2003) Egg-throwing incident prompts call to DPS DPS records show a caller from the Diag reported being assaulted by sub- jects throwing eggs at midnight on Sat- urday. Officers checked the area but found no suspects. (Oct. 20, 2003) Vendor tells competitor to stay off his turf Department of Public Safety reports state that a T-shirt vendor threatened to physically abuse a competing T-shirt vendor if he saw him selling T-shirts at the football game on Saturday. The verbal assault took place on the 500 block of State Street Monday at 4:22 p.m. (Oct. 23, 2003) *Student crawling in lab ceiling damages tiles A 40-year-old male student was arrested Friday morning in the Space Research laboratory. The man dam- aged some ceiling tiles while crawling around in the ceiling area, where he was not supposed to be. DPS arrested and released him pending warrants. (Oct. 27, 2003) Traditions too taboo? p i .FILE PHOTO > : ABOVE: Students participate In the Naked Mile In 1998 on the steps of Angell Hail. Recently, attendance to the event has dwindled as students and alums lose Interest. JOEL FRIEDMAN/Daily Right: Trina Moss,of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, dresses up as a bong on the Diag for Hash Bash '04 ony Saturday, April 3, 2004. New syste-m slows access, ik Wstudents RIAA subpoenas students March 24, 2004 By Aymar Jean Daily Staff Reporter Following numerous lawsuits against Internet users suspected of file-sharing, the record industry will soon subpoena the University for the names of students allegedly sharing music illegally. In January, the Recording Industry Association of America filed suit against 532 individuals nationwide, many of them college students. The suits, called "John Doe" lawsuits, are against users identified only by their Internet protocol addresses. RIAA is subpoenaing the University for the names of the students under its network. "We are waiting to receive them," Assistant General Counsel Jack Bernard said, who added that the subpoenas will most likely come within the week. The University has already notified those who may receive subpoenas. Bernard said about nine students will be subpoenaed. If the subpoenas are "substantively and procedurally valid," the University will follow the law and release the names of the individuals, Bernard said. Subpoenas compel their recipients to release important information for an intended trial. ably filed suit information is "These arei refuse," Berna The Univer poenas unless release inform nas pass legal The sued st court or likely ments can var legal challeng costs. But RI Lamy said th $3,000. Thisa upon how man Recently, th RIAA had to] had previous Whether or no cedure will aff will release th But Lamys Philadelphia, majority of its The 532 tar average 837 who face pot large number and sharing e is illegal. Job market little promi Since RIAA has presum- "We want to be fair and reasonable. t against these users, that The intent here is not to make money, the student's name. nor is the intent to win a lawsuit, Lamy very difficult subpoenas to said. "The goal is simply to send a mes- rd said. sage of deterrence, that this activity is sity always disputes sub- illegal, that it can have consequences they are valid and will not (and) that if digital music is what you nation unless the subpoe- want, turn to the great legal alternatives muster, Bernard said: that are available," he added. udents could either go to Students can take precautions to avoid settle out of court. Settle- participating in illegal activity. File-shar- y in size, especially since ing programs like Kazaa have an option es have increased RIAA's to disable the uploading of files. But AA spokesman Jonathan many students, administration officials ie average settlement is say, are not aware of this option. amount is also contingent RIAA uses a simple technology ny files a student shared. called webcrawler to scan IP addresses ie federal court ruled that for copyrighted material, but if a student file its suits individually. It is not sharing or uploading files, then ly filed collective suits. RIAA cannot view the material on a t RIAA followed this pro- person's computer. Fect whether the University Sharing files online can be legal as e students' names. long as the material is not copyrighted, said this ruling, issued in but most files are copyrighted. did not affect the vast Administration officials said they will lawsuits. strive to protect the rights of its students, rgeted users uploaded on but it must do what is legal. songs. Most individuals "We will of course comply with tential lawsuits share a the law," Associate Provost James of files, but downloading Hilton said. "Violation of copyright ven one copyrighted file laws is a violation of our own com puting policies." growth shows se for seniors said. ing an increase from 3 to 8 percent for ely, students' frustrations graduates with bachelor's degrees. n't be relieved anytime But both reports also stress that the ng to recent studies, this number of jobs available still cannot ting seniors can expect accommodate the higher number of r job prospects than last job searchers holding college degrees. mpanies are slowly hiring Economics Prof. Matthew Shapiro graduates. said while the economy has gained e these increases in hir- ground, job growth is still too sluggish ts and experts also warn to warrant any significant change in niors they will still strug- the job market. "Most forecasts have obs as they see no easy shown that this year's prospects are head in today's tough job better, but it will still take some time for people to be absorbed into the job s focused on college hir- market,"he said. and 2004 predicted Shapiro said the job market will still, hiring of college gradu- be challenging for seniors not only because the increase in hiring still isn't by National Association great enough, but also because of nd Employers study fore- strong competition. "In addition to percent rise in college competing with other new college ng from last year, while graduates, they will have to compete by Michigan State Uni- with the clog of workers who have showed a less optimistic been trying to find work since the ing for this year, predict- recession,"he added. March 2, 2004 By Michael Kan Daily Staff Reporter It's no walk in the park to get a job these days. With 2.2 million jobs lost since 2001 and the Michigan unem- ployment rate at more than 7 percent, many seniors searching for jobs are still ogling the employment pages of newspapers, hoping one of the ads will lead them to the ultimate payoff of col- lege education: their first full-time professional job. But many also realize they might not have a job in their preferred career by graduation. LSA senior Genevieve Marino reluctantly accepted this possibility after sending out more than 500 resumes, only to get back dozens of rejection letters in return and a few "B- rate" job offers. "It's the most frustrat- ing thing ever. There are no other words to describe it except frustra- tion," Marino< Unfortunate probably won soon. Accordi year's gradua slightly better year since cor more collegeg Yet, despit ing, the repor graduating sen gle to find jo ways to get al market. Two studies ing in 2003 increases in h ates. One study,1 of Colleges an sees a 12.7p graduate hirin another study versity study forecast in hir Sept. 7, 2000 By Rachel Green Daily Staff Reporter Engineering junior Nishmant Verman had a close call this morning. After wait- ing nearly two hours yesterday to access his schedule, he was able to print it just 30 minutes before his first class. "When I got to the prompt where I had to choose which term I wanted to access, only Spring and Summer 2000 came up. I tried to call 764-HELP, but was line was busy," he said. Many students' biggest problem with the University's new online regis- tration system is waiting for the com- puter to process information. Because Wolverine Access now serv- ices both student records and class reg- istration, the overload of students accessing the system during the first few class days has caused delays, leav- ing many students unable to access their schedules when they are most needed. Linda Green, communications coor- dinator for Michigan Administration Information Services, said more than 3,000 students used the new Wolverine Access yesterday to modify classes, far more than the old system could handle in one day. Most registration horror stories cir- culating among students "are not new problems," Green said. "They're not system problems; they're registration problems that we deal with every year." Green said the benefits of the new system outweigh the initial difficulties facing students trying to get accustomed to computer-based class registration. "The old CRISP system was able to handle 128 concurrent registration sessions at a time," she said. "That means that the 129th caller would always receive a busy signal. Wolver- ine Access has handled between 600 and 1,000 users at once and the sys- tem has held up." The phone CRISP system registered 128 students at a time; while on wac- cess.umich.edu others accessed their schedules, looked for classes, changed personal information and checked financial aid. The new system pools requests for all those services save financial aid. Security is an important issue for the Web-based system, but Green said this system is just as effective, if not more because it doesn't use Social Security Numbers. The new system relies on students' unignames and passwords, which she said "is one of the most secure systems available." The online system can be accessed from all public University computers, many of which require user log in. Green said the safest way to protect personal documents such as class schedules is to logout of both Wolver- ine Access and the computer itself. But, Green said, after a user has exited their internet browser, Wolverine Access should reset itself. "A security issue is only as good as the people who use it," Green said. Other students say they don't under- stand how to search for classes. "I can't find what sections are open for discussions," said LSA junior Al Birmingham. "When I pull up different classes I only see the lecture times. It's hard because I don't know where to find the class numbers to register." MBR *STADIUM Open 24 Hours Since 1972 127 washers and dryers $~JvbrazaIJ, 4 "X 0 ;::: m