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January 11, 2013 - Image 2

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The Michigan Daily, 2013-01-11

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2 - Friday, January 11, 2013

The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com

2 - Friday, January 11, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom

MONDAY: TUESDAY:
In Other Ivory Towers This Week in History
LEFT Rackham student'
Brandon Seward unicycles
by the cube on Jan. 8. (Terra
Motengraff/Daily)
TOP RIGHT The original Bob
Marley backing band, the
Wailers, perform at the Ark on
Jan. 8. (Adam Glanzman/Daily)
BOTTOM RIGHT. Spanish
lecturer Jose Luis Fernandez-
Garcia and CSE Graduate Tim
Lane practice fencing in the
League on Jan. 10. (Patrick
Barron/Daily)
NEED MORE PHOTOS?
See more Photos of the
Week on our website,
michigandaily.com.
CRIME NOTES1

WEDNESDAY:
Professor Profiles

420 Maynard St.
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www.michigandaily.com
ANDREWWEINER RACHEL GREINETZ
Editor in Chief Business Manager
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CAMPUS.EVENTS & NOTES

Tight squeeze
WHERE: Fuller Pool
Parking Lot
WHEN: Wednesday around
4 p.m.
WHATi After another
vehicle parked too close to
it, a vehicle received minor
damage, University Police
reported.

Ticket market
WHERE: Crisler Center
WHEN: Wednesday around
7:30 p.m.
WHAT: A visitor to the
University received a verbal
warning for attemptingto
sell three basketball game
tickets. The tickets were
subsequently confiscated.

Smokey socket License to stop

'Fiddler on the
Roof' opens
WHAT: Come see a
theatrical performance of
"Fiddler on the Roof" put
on by the Young People's
Theater. Adult tickets cost
$15, and tickets for children
under 18 and seniors over 65
are $10.
WHEN: Today at 7:00 p.m.
WHERE: Mendelssohn
Ross displays
art collection
WHAT: The Ross School
of Business is exhibiting its
wide array of collected and
donated pieces of art around
the school and online.
WHEN: Today from 9:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
WHERE: Ross-School of
Business

CORRECTIONS
* The articles beneath
two headlines inthe
Jan. 9 edition of The
Michigan Daily ("Anti-
Israel advertisement dispute
continues with new AATA
policy" and "University
targets IT budgetfor cost
savings") were incorrectly
on page IA. The article
on the left containing
the AATA's aslvertisment
policy corresponds to
the headline on the
right, while the hospital
research article to the
right corresponds to the
headline on the left.
. Please report any
errors in the Daily
to corrections@
michigandaily.com

According to Gawker,
a vaccine composed
of RNA could free
humans from the flu
for good. The new vac-
cine would target proteins
on the virus that evolve less
quickly.
Columnist Pat Malliet
has advice for homesick
students abroad: Go on
long, aimless walks to
explore your new surround-
ings. Just bring water
>> SEE PAGE4
Researchers at the
University of Rochester
said they are able to
predict when someone will
get sick based on data from
Twitter. They created an
algorithm to differentiate
between a sick and healthy
person's tweets.

EDITORIAL STAFF
MatthewSlovin Managing Editor mjslovin@michigandaily.com
Adam Rubenfire Managing News Editor arube@michigandaily.com
SENIOR NEWS EDITORS: Alicia Adamczyk, Katie Burke,-Austen Hufford, Peter Shahin,
KC W -s n, TarWizne
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS: Molly Block, Jennifer Calfas, Aaron Guggenheim, Sam
Gringis,DanieleStoppemann,aSteveZoski
Melanie Kruvelisand opinioneditorsmichigandaily.com
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SENIOR EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Jesse Klein, SarahSkaluba, Derek Wolfe
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Thomas, LizVukelich, Daniel Wasserman
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SSINTARTSnEDTORS:Sean Czarnecki,Carlina Duan, Max Radin,AkshaySeth,
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ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITORS:KatherinePekala, Paul Sherman, Adam Schnitzer
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SENIORCOPYEDITORS:JennieColeman,KreIlyMcLauglin
BUSINESS STAFF
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Connor ByrdFinance Manager
QUy Vo circulation Manage
The Michigan baily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during thefall and
winter terms by studens at the University of Michigan. One copy is availablefreeofcharge
to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for
fall term, starting in September,viaU.S. mailare $110. Winter term (January through April) is
$115, yearlong (September through April) is$195.University affiliates are subject to areduced
subscriptionrate.On-campussubscriptionsforfall termare$3.Subscriptionsmustbeprepaid.
The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press.

0

0

WHERE: East Ann Arbor
Medical Center
WHEN: Wednesday around
8:50 p.m.
WHAT: Two wall sockets
reportedly malfuncted,
resulting in some smoke,
University Police reported.
There was no fire and no
injuries.

WHERE: 1000 Cedar Bend
WHEN: Thursday around
4:20 a.m.
WHAT: A vistor to the
University was arrested
during a traffic stop for
driving with a suspended
license, University Police
reported. She was later
released pending warrant
authorization.

MORE ONLINE Love Crime Notes? Find them on the Crime
Notes blog at michigandaily.com

i

5
1 : .

GOING
TO THE
AIRPORT?
~ AirRide
Every day.
$12 one-way*
www.MyAirRide.com
ct&vus
For U of M breaks. $7 one-way*
www.msa.umich.edu/airbus

The Institution, a new blog of The
Michigan Daily, goes live next week.
The blog will be the go-to site for any
news concerning student leadership at
the University of Michigan, including:
CSG, GEO, LSASG, RSG, UMEC,
CTE, BBM, SAM and many more
acronyms
Follow @TMDinstitution for
everything student leadership

Student opens
fire on Calif. high
school, injures one
16-year-old The shooter didn't show up for
first period, then interrupted the
planned to shoot class of 28 students.
Youngblood said the sus-
two students using pect alleges the two students
brothers rifle he targeted had bullied him for
more than a year, but the sheriff
couldn't confirm the allegations.
TAFT, Calif. (AP) - A 16-year- "Certainly he believed that the
old student armed with a shotgun two people he targeted had bul-
walked into a rural California lied him, in his mind. Whether
high school on Thursday, shot that occurred or not we don't
one student and fired at others . knowyet,"Youngblood said.
and missed before a teacher and Youngblood did notrelease the
another staff member talked him student's disciplinary record, say-
into surrendering, officials said. ing he didn't have it.
The teen victim was in critical The shotgun is believed to
but stable condition, and the sus- belong to the boy's brother and
pect, whose pockets were stuffed was in the boy's home, Young-
with ammunition, was still being blood said.
interrogated, Kern County Sheriff The Sheriff's Department
Donny Youngblood said at a news did not release the boy's name
conference Thursday evening. because he was a juvenile and
The suspect used a shotgun had yet to be charged. But many
that belonged to his brother and students and community mem-
went to bed Wednesday night bers said they knew the boy and
with a plan to shoot two fellow said he was often teased, includ-
students, Youngblood said. ing Alex Patterson, 18, who went
Surveillance video shows the to Taft with the suspect before
alleged shooter trying to conceal graduating lastyear.
the gun as he nervously entered "He comes off as the kind of
Taft Union High School through kid who would do something like
a side entrance after school had this," Patterson said. "He talked
started Thursday morning. about it alot, but nobody thought
When the shots were fired, he would."
teacher Ryan Heber tried to get Trish Montes, who lived next
the more than two dozen students door to the suspect, said he was "a
out a back door and engaged the short guy" and "small" who was
shooter in conversation to dis- teased about his stature by many,
tract him, Youngblood said. Cam- including the victim.
pus supervisor Kim Lee Fields "Maybe people will learn not
responded to a call of shots fired to bully people," Montes said. "T
and also began talking to the teen. hate to be crappy about it, butcthat
"They talked him into putting kid was bullying him."
that shotgun down. He in fact Montes said her son had
told the teacher, 'I don't want to worked at the school and tutored
shoot you,' and named the person the boy last year, sometimes
that he wanted to shoot," Young- walking with him between class-
blood said. es because he felt sorry for him.
"The heroics of these two peo- "All I ever heard about him
ple goes without saying. ... They was good things from my son,"
could have just as.easily ... tried Montes said. "He wasn't Mr. 4
to get out of the classroom and Popularity, but he was a smart
left students, and they didn't,"the kid. It's a shame. My kid said he
sheriff said. "They knew not to let was like a genius. It's a shame
him leave the classroomwiththat because he could have made
shotgun." something of himself."

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