(e 111ND1ETaHE EA ITO R A F1EED1 M Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, October 25, 2012 michigandaily.com STUDENT RECORDS Accidental grade leak a breach of federal law Engineering sophomore David Fontenot explains the premise behind the MHackers organization to meeting attendees Wednesday evening. CSG commission hopes to unite campus entreprenuers, GSI mistakenly sends student information to 435-person class By TUI RADEMAKER Daily StaffReporter With midterms in full swing, many students are constantly refreshing CTools pages for any sign of posted exam results. For those enrolled in Cultural Anthropology 101 with Prof. Andrew Shryock however, they got more than just their own results this week. An excel spreadsheet con- taining the results of all the stu- dents's grades - including their names, uniganses, UM-ID numbers, course sections, exam percentages and the key used to grade each individual's exam - was accidentally made public when attached to an e-mail sent to them noting that their grades were posted. Under the Family Educa- tional Rights and Privacy Act, releasing students's academic records is a violation of federal law. There are some exceptions such as in the case of a student transferring to another institu- tion or in the case of financial aid applications that such infor- mation can be released. University Spokesman Rick Fitzgerald wrote in an e-mail that while the publication of midterm results is in violation of FERPA, he believes that the inadvertent nature of it will allow the University to sim- ply file a report with the U.S. Department of Education with the appropriate documentation and an explanation that will mitigate any potential FERPA violations. Chris Berk, the head gradu- ate student instructor for the course, said in an interview that the release was a clerical error and when he sent the spread- sheet to the students he thought that the identifying unignames and names of the 435 students had been taken out of the docu- ment. "It was an error," Berk said. "I spent hours with the spreadsheets and I thought I See GRADE, Page 5A Leaders from 15 organizations unite to brainstorm By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily StaffReporter Manish Parikh, the Central Student Government president, introduced the first step in making good on his campaign promise to bring more entre- preneurship opportunities to students on Wednesday. Leaders of 15 student orga- nizations convened in the CSG chambers for the inaugural Entrepreneurship Commission meeting. While several partici- pating organizations, such as MPowered and M-Entrepre- neurship, are deeply rooted in entrepreneurial pursuits, less business-focused organiza- tions such as MHackers and TEDxUofM were also in atten- dance. More than an hour of the 90-minute meeting was spent on introductions alone. Parikh, a Business senior, in his presentation of CSG to the commission, said he wants the promotion of entrepreneurship to be the cornerstone of his year in CSG. In particular, he listed Air- bus, Fall Break and UPetition as major successes of former student government adminis- trations. Parikh said he wanted See CSG, Page SA POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS College GOP looks to Dems to better image Republicans hope to improve campus presence By ANDREW SCHULMAN Daily StaffReporter The campaign ads on tele- vision aren't the only political messages on campus this fall competing for student attention. As the maize and blue donkey logo of the University's chapter of College Democrats is seen on fliers across campus, the Univer- sity's chapter of College Republi- cans also hopes to create a name and brand for itself. At the behest of LSA senior Rachel Jankowski, the chair of the College Republicans, the group is seeking to revamp its image on campus with the Col- lege Democrats' strategy in mind. The aim, Jankowski said, is to make the College Republi- cans more visible on campus, in. part by building a brand name and logo. "A lot of students don't know that the College Republicans exist (on campus), and that's really terrible," Jankowski said. "We're trying to really build a presence on campus, and build a solid look about us so that you know, when you see an advertise- ment, that's the College Republi- cans and not a different club." The task of reshaping the group's image belongs mostly to its marketing committee, which Jankowski said has attracted nearly 30 to 40 members this semester, an unprecedented number. Jankowski said the committee has been attempting to establish a brand by creating a "unified look" on the group's T-shirts, fli- ers, banners and other parapher- nalia - much like the College Democrats. "I want the College Repub- licans to have a brand name," Jankowski added. "Any good company has one, and the College Democrats have a great brand name. When you see their stuff, you know it's the College Demo- crats. That is what the College Republicans have been focusing on, and it's what we're pushing." The College Democrats ini- tially had the same concern See REPUBLICANS, Page 5A LSA freshman Emma Liburdi poses in the Haunted Bell Tower event Wednesday night on the North Campus D ag L EG AL D ISP UT E Fed. judge loosens Jenson's on conditions, lifts cufew CAMPUS CRIME At public meeting, DPS talks crime stats In October, crime has increased 98 percent from last year By MATT JACKONEN DailyStaffReporter The University Department of Public Safety held its first public crime meeting of the semester Monday to educate the Univer- sity community about crime and other safety issues. Joe Piersante, the interim executive director for the new Division of Public Safety and Security, began by discussing the reorganization of security orga- nizations, that was authorized by the University's Board of Regents at their meeting on Friday. The Division of Public Safety and Security will encompass all of the safety and security pro- grams on campus including the police, hospital security, housing security, museum security, con- tract guard security and emer- gency preparedness. "This is an effort by the Uni- See DPS, Page 5A Former UMHS resident appears in court By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily StaffReporter Though he allegedly broke his court-appointed curfew six times over the past six months, former University of Michi- gan Health System resident Stephen Jenson will no longer be held to a curfew or several other court-ordered restric- tions. Earlier this month, Jenson, who faces charges of posses- sion of child pornography with- in the University Hospital, was accused of repeatedly violating his curfew and using a comput- er not monitored by the court. After repeated violations, Jenson's nightly curfew was curtailed from an 8 p.m. start time to a 5 p.m. start time, but he still violated the curfew. In a court hearing Wednesday, the terms of his release were once again adjusted. Many of the prior conditions of Jenson's release - including avoiding contact with minors or ,anyone who could be a potential victim or witness in See JENSON, Page SA 'I ________________________________________________ WEATHER HI: 76 TOMORROW , LO: 52 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail #Michlinks: Peanut butter and pickle sandwich news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE WIRE INDEX NEWS.........................2A Vol. CXXIII, No.35 OPINION.....................4A 02012The Michigan Daily AP NEWS..6.........6A michigandoilycom CROSSWORD..............6A CLASSIFIEDS ...............6A THE B-SIDE.B.... ........1B