The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, January 25, 2013 - 5 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, January 25, 2013 - 5 SOCIAL From Page 1 Twitter account's followers tri- pled from 9,9000 to 30,200, and the University's Facebook page received 100,000 new likes. In a March interview, Miller said she hoped to establish the University as a national leader in the use of social media. "In the same way that the Uni- versity is a top school in so many other ways, we can and should be a ground-breaker and a thought- leader in social media," she said. "We should be a school that other schools can look to and say 'That's how the University of Michigan's doing it. They're doing it right and that's how we should be doing it too."' While Miller served inthe posi- tion, she curated the University of Michigan Social Media plat- forms and social profiles. She also launched the @umichstudents Twitter account in July, which is hosted by a different University student each week. Each department and specific position at the University under- go unique interviews and employ- ment processes, which all involve a background check, according to University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald. When asked how the Universi- ty may have missed Millers claim that she had her diploma on her resume, Fitzgerald said that this was an unusual circumstance,' and that it does not happen often. The job listing closes on Feb. 13. HACKATHON From Page 1 The competition offers $5,000 in prizes with a $1,500 cash prize for first place. Students will arrive Friday evening and the competition will begin at midnight and end Sun- day morning. "(On Sunday morning) we're, going to have an expo similar to, like, a science fair where we're inviting the public in," Fontenot said. "You're going to pretty much be demoing your hacks to anyone who's interested." MHacks has already spent about $50,000 on the event so far. The majority of that money, $23,600, will pay for transpor- tation costs, including buses to shuttle students from students from other schools in the region. The next highest expenditure is $16,500 on food - with $3,000 allodated for Red Bull alone. The hackathon will be financed by donations from several spon- sors, including Mail Chimp, ven- ture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, Groupon and others. Despite its sizeable budget, MHacks has allocated no money for lodging. But Fontenot said that's deliberate. "At a hackathon, you usually take, like, a 3-hour nap or some- thing in the middle, but you don't get a full night's sleep," he said. Nonetheless, there will be "desig- nated nap rooms" with neck pil- lows, Fontenot added. At the end of the competition, Fontenot said the best app isn't necessarily the most profitable app, but the most usable. Teams cheating by teams is a possibil- ity, but preparing an app before the competition could do little to help ateam's cause. "(Cheating) has happened before and it's somewhat hard to detect," he said. "I honestly think that the most innovation comes in this kind of setting where you're completely under pressure." He continued by saying the limited time forces apps to be fairly basic, but these form the foundation for later development. "A lot of the most successful apps ... started off really, really simple," he said. Last weekend, programmers from the University traveled to the University of Pennsylvania for PennApps, which Fontenot said is the nation's premier col- lege hackathon. Fontenot said MHacks intends to overtake Pen- nApps in terms of prestige and student involvement. 440 students participated in PennApps and MHacks already, has about 450 students signed up, Fontenot said still shy of the 500-student goal. Students interested in sign- ing up for MHacks can sign up at the Hackathon's event page. The event is free. ONLINE From Page 1 MOOCs are very important as a new forum for education, they are also limited in many ways. "MOOCs are an incredibly handy vehicle for packaging up material that can be taught effec- tively in this style," Russell said. "Having said that, not all educa- tional material fits into this for- mat equally well." Performance studies such as music or theater complicate the matter, but Russell said he believes new technologies will arise to satiate the need to advance these disciplines. "You will start to see the inte- GEO From Page 1 said that without zero-premium GradCare, they could not afford to attend grad school at UM." However, Howard argued that this will not be a problem for GEO. She noted that as long as most members stay active, right- to-work legislation will have little to no effect. "GEO has an advantage because gration of different sorts of real- time interaction technologies in a sort of collaborative sense and in an individual one-on-one sense that will allow us to evolve in ways that will allow this stuff to happen," Russell said. However, MOOCs also stand as a potential threat to the Uni- versity's revenue. Russell added that while the fear is that MOOCs will deteriorate the need for uni- versities, the institutions retain an "experience that is difficult to reproduce" in an online platform. Russell also noted that the use of MOOCs is still in the experi- mental phase, and many factors are unknown, such as how they will be funded and whether free MOOCs will prove to be viable since we have a completely demo- cratic structure and such a high turnover rate in our membership, bottom-up, member-to-member organizing is already what we're used to," Howard wrote. Howard worries the discon- nected unions will suffer the most, and GEO's member-focged strategies are more effective than the traditional top-down model. GEO's membership consists of graduate student instructors and graduate student assistants, total- against premium, paid versions. At the September meet- ing of the University's Board of Regents, several members expressed concerns about pro- viding the online courses for free in light of a perennially difficult budget situation. University Vice Provost for Academic and Bud- getary Affairs Martha Pollack told the regents that while the University is currently offering online courses for free of charge, it could begin charging for pro- fessional and continuing-educa- tion courses. Kaul was not immediately available for comment. -Daily News Editor Peter Shahin contribtued to this report. ing approximately 1,600 members per year. Although the legislation is unpopular within union ranks, Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder and the Republican-majority Michi- gan House of Representatives and Senate created the legislation in hopes of making Michigan's econ- omy more attractive to business. Legislators hope that more businesses and workers will move to the state because of the added freedom. ABROAD From Page 1 that maintaining "cultural sensi- tivity" was also a top priority for the students participating in the Take U-M Abroad program. "You don't really want to impose your views on any- one else," she said. "I think it's important to look for projects that are not only a good idea, but also are adaptable." One student is going to make a "cross-cultural cookbook" that 'draws from the foods of Michi- gan and Cape Verde, an island nation in the Atlantic Ocean near Africa, where the student will be studying. Sales of the cookbook will go toward funding charities in Cape Verde. Following the participating students' trips abroad, Mott said CSG will be creating a book- let and a presentation with the results. She added that CSG is looking to continue the program through summer term and may look for more ways to institution- alize it. In an e-mail interview, Busi- ness senior Manish Parikh, the president of CSG, called the pro- gram "spectacular" and noted its ability to "create impact glob- ally," "A program like this is unique to Michigan," Parikh wrote. "(It's) our small way of making LIKE THE PAPER? YOU'LL LIKE OUR FACEBOOK AND TWITTER EVEN MORE. LIKE US AT FACEBOOK.COM/MICHIGANDAILY FOLLOW US AT @MICHIGANDAILY Yemen: Al- Qaida's No. 2 dies after U.S. drone strike in Oct. Caeed al-Shihri's de Charles Dharapak/AP Egyptian protesters try to tear down a ceinent wall built to prevent them from reaching parliament and the Cabinet building near Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Thursday. V 0 iolent clashes in Egy on of u SAN Qaida's of wou drone ern Yer news a cialsai Saee al who spent si prison wound. souther accordi The fallen i was no died. A se( missile -operat craft. F anonyn o1 government for spreading ath considered the "rumor about my death ... as though the lbilling of the mujahi- major blow deen (holy warriors) by America is a victory to Islam and Mus- lims." AA, Yemen (AP) - Al- Al-Shihri went through Saudi No. 2 in Yemen died Arabia's famous "rehabilitation" ands sustained in a U.S. institutes after he returned to his attack last year in south- home country, but then he fled men, the country's official to Yemen and became deputy to gency and a security offi- Nasser al-Wahishi, the leader of d Thursday. an al-Qaida group. d al-Shihri, a Saudi nation- Al-Shihri's death is considered fought in Afghanistan and a major blow to al-Qaida's Yemen ix years in the U.S. military branch, known as al-Qaida in The at Guantanamo Bay, was Arabian Peninsula. Washington ed in a missile attack in the considers it the most dangerous rn city of Saada on Oct. 28, of the group's offshoots. ng to SABA news agency. Al-Qaida in Yemen has been agency said that he had linked to several attempted nto a coma since then. It attacks on U.S. targets, includ- rt clear when he actually ing the foiled Christmas Day 2009 bombing of an airliner over curity official said that the Detroit and explosives-laden had been fired by a U.S. parcels intercepted aboard cargo :ed, unmanned drone air- flights last year. He spoke on condition of In 2011, a high-profile U.S. nity because he was not drone strike killed U.S.-born Anwar al-Awlaki, who had been linked to the planning and exe- cution of several attacks target- ing U.S.. and Western interests, including the attempt to down a Detroit-bound airliner in 2009 and the plot to bomb cargo planes in 2010. Yemen, the Arab world's poor- est nation, has fallen into lawless- ness during a yearlong uprising starting in 2011, when millions of Yemenis took to the streets demanding the ouster of their longtime authoritarian ruler Ali Abdullah Saleh. Al-Qaida militants exploited the unrest and took control of large swaths of land in the south until last spring, when the mili- tary, backed by the U.S., managed to drive hundreds'of militants out of major cities and towns. Since then, the group has carried out deadly attacks tar- geting mostly security and mili- tary officials, including suicide bombings that targeted military and security compounds. r an CAI rity foi protest Moloto demons raising versary toppled Preside Yout groups] lies on in Cairc front o the ups The ens injt in cent ers trie wall b from r and the street darkne capital. Thre that er eventua of office Since gone a under t military tion la Morsi Morsi urges hood group. His first six mont t eaCe among in office were markedby politic tensions, street protests and an L ti-corruption economic crunchthat sapped his t popularity. i protestors As the protests continued,o Morsi visited the western city i RO (AP) - Egyptian secu- of Ismailia to inaugurate a mari- a rces fired tear gas and time project, but he was received m ers hurled stones and by activists who blocked a rail- v V cocktails in a day-long way station, tore down the wel- tration on Thursday, coming banners and issued a a fears of a violent anni- statement stating that they were t r of the 2011 uprising that opposed to inaugurating new s long-time authoritarian projects while there's corruption t nt Hosni Mubarak. in the railway system. p h activists and opposition Later in the day, Morsi urged u have called for large ral- Egyptians to mark the anniver- the anniversary Friday sary peacefully. C o's Tahrir Square and in "I call upon Egyptians to cel- e f the president palace in ebrate the revolution ... with g cale suburb, Heliopolis. civilization - and peacefully to t protests, which left doz- preserve our nation, our institu- n ured, began before dawn tion, our souls, our streets and i ral Cairo when protest- our sons," he told agathering in a d to tear down a cement speech meant to mark the birth- uilt to prevent them day of Muslim Prophet Muham- eaching the parliament mad. e Cabinet building. The "We have to feel that we are clashes continued after all in one ship and we have to ass fell on the Egyptian preserve its safety and respect the people and their free will e weeks of mass protests which they express in their bal- upted on Jan. 25, 2011, lot boxes," he added. ally forced Mubarak out But die-hard fans of Egypt's e. most popular soccer team, Ahly, then, Egypt has under- who took part in the clashes, * tumultuous transition warned in a statement: "The hat left 74 dead. The soccer fans, known as Ultras, also called for mass pro- ests on Jan. 26, the day a court s expected to rule on the fate f security officials being tried n connection with the deaths t the soccer game, one of the world's bloodiest instances of iolence at a sports event. On Tuesday, in an attempt to ssuage anger, Morsi announced hat the victims will be con- idered "martyrs." That means heir, families will receive com- pensation like those killed in the prising against Mubarak. That same day, Egypt's prose- utor general, who was appoint- d by Morsi, asked the court to ive the prosecution more time o introduce new findings and new defendants before issuing ts verdict. authorized to speak to the press. Yemen had previously announced al-Shihri's death in a Sept. 10 drone attack in the prov- ince of Hadramawt. A subse- quent DNA test however proved that the body recovered was not that of al-Shihri. On Oct. 22, al-Shihri denied 4 7 1 5 his own death in audio message posted on Jihadi websites. , 7 6 8 Also known by the nom de guerre Abu Sufyan al-Azdi, he 1 6 8 7 denounced at the time the Yeme- he interim leadership of y generals until the elec- st June of Mohammed of the Muslim Brother- price of blood is blood." It was a reference to the deaths of many of their friends last year in a vio- lent rampage at a soccer game