~1i ffk1Igan0aj Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, January 18, 2013 michigandaily.com CAMPUS SPEAKER AKPsi hosts lecture on . complexity of euro crisis E ex ste So, euro? Adam what Stu acade in the Audit Adam comp and i The e the A and e the I dent Ad of th medic with and p an ec Ad, histor con. professor macroeconomic issue of the European Union subsequently plains fragility snowballed into another in the early 2000s. He explained that .ms from 1970s moving back to a post-World War II economy, from 1950 to By ALEXANDRA 1975, European nations enjoyed MONDALEK a stable economic expansion Daily StaffReporter and a rapid increase in living standards. just how fragile is the As oil crises of the mid-to- Economics Prof. William late 1970s shook the foundation as says that depends on of many European economies, youthink "fragile" means. Adams said it was becoming idents from a variety of increasingly difficult to main- mic disciplines gathered tain generous labor contractsin Ford School's Annenberg the face of growing structural orium of on Thursday for unemploymentand civil unrest. s' presentation on the Each of the problems result- lexity of the euro crisis ing from the 2008 recession and ts potential implications. the beginning of the sovereign vent was co-sponsored by debt crisis in 2009 exacerbated lpha Kappa Psi business longstanding issues in Europe's conomics fraternity and monetary and fiscal regime, nternational Policy Stu- Adams said. The unemploy- Association; ment rate of the most affected ams gave his assessment countries such as Greece and e situation in a pseudo- Spain hovers doggedly around al framework - complete 25 percent, more than three diagnoses, prescriptions times that of the United States. rognoses for the Europe- While the EU maintains a onomy. united monetary policy, each ams outlined the rich nation maintains an indepen- ical context of how one See EURO, Page 3 Michigan Basketball defeated Minnesota on the road 83-75 in Minneapolis Thursday night. roars to road win Hardaway Jr. and Burke combine' for 39 as Blue bounces back By COLLEEN THOMAS DailyStaff Reporter MINNEAPOLIS - Just six minutes into the first half, Min- nesota's primary ball handler, Andre Hollins, picked up his sec- ond foul and headed to the bench. Almost immediately, the Golden Gophers began to cough up the ball. Michigan took those freebies and had no issue pushing the ball up the court to finish its posses- sions in an emphatic dunk or a Tim Hardaway Jr. 3-pointer. Ten first-half turnovers for No. 9 Minnesota (3-2 Big Ten, 15-3 overall) led to 22 fast-break points for the Wolverines in their 83-75 victory over the Golden Gophers, a facet of their game that was almost absent in Sun- day's road loss to Ohio State. "I think it was important for us to get out in transition," said sophomore guard Trey Burke. "We knew in the first half against Ohio State, we were kind of too stagnant, we played too much half-court offense. When we get out in transition, MICHIGAN 83 it allows us MINNESOTA 75 to open the game up (and) it allows us to go on runs. We have a lot of players that can run the court, and it's important forus to do that." But Michigan's transition game tapered off in the second half and the Golden Gophers crept back in the game. Despite good shooting and scoring 24 points off turnovers, the Wolver- ines - who led by as many as 19 inthe secondhalf- slowed down its offense and let Minnesota execute its defense and rebound effectively to make Thursday's top-ten showdown a close game in "The Barn." The way the Wolverines (4-1, 17-1) played Thursday night against another ranked confer- See WIN, Page 3 TECHNOLOGY Linux founder talks open-source Students gather at the MPowered Start-up career fair held at Pierpont Commons on Thursday. '''' " "'"I '' """' MPowered expands fair beyond start-ups Stallman chides Apple, Google for privacy policies By AUSTEN HUFFORD Daily News Editor Richard Stallman doesn't have a cell phone. He doesn't', buy DVDs, doesn't use Windows or Mac OS laptops and doesn't use closed-source commercial soft- ware. He is not on Facebook and has never owned a car. But he isn't a Luddite or computer illiterate. In fact, he loves technology and the Inter- net. At one point, he hoped the Internet would stop censorship around the world. Stallman is the founder and presidentofthe advocacygroup Free Software Foundation and was one of the main creators of the open-source GNU/Linux operating system. Speaking for two hours at a packed Stamps Auditorium, Stallman lament- ed the prevalence of online tracking and the rise of closed- source programs. "Digital technology allows surveillance that Stalin can only dream of," Stallman said. Stallman advocates for open- source software where users are given access and encour- aged to modify the source code of programs they use. He dis- tinguished between "free as in freedom" software and zero- cost software, saying that they do not necessarily go hand- in-hand. He told the audience that closed-source programs - programs that don't allow this access - could harbor mal- ware and "backdoor" exploits because users can't review it's code. Wearing a red polo, brown pants and no shoes, he attacked companies including Apple, Google, Microsoft, Adobe, Amazon and Rovio, the cre- ators of Angry Birds. Stallman claimed these companies col- lected copious amounts of data, and some of their software allowed malicious programs to be installed. "You should never use the Amazon swindle," Stallman said to laughs. "The official naise of that product isthe Kin- dle. Kindle means to start a fire which I think is meant to sug- gest that its purpose is virtual book burning." Stallman told the audi- See LINUX, Page 3 STATE GOVERNMENT Committee to decide if Detroit needs EFM Review team will make recommendation mid-Febuary By ANGELA SON Daily StaffReporter After Republican Gov. Rick Snyder signed the emergency financial manager law on Dec. 18, focus again turned to the review team that has been look- ing at Detroit's troubled financ- es. The team of six members, including State Treasurer Andy Dillon, has been meeting since early December with city offi- cials in order to determine whether a financial emergency exists in Detroit. The review team is due to issue its recommendation to Snyder by mid-February. The governor will make a decision on whether or not to appoint a financial manager to take See DETROIT, Page 3 Tech, engineering companies look for student talent By AMRUTHA SIVAKUMAR Daily StaffReporter Suit, tie and a 401(k) seem a little staid? The MPowered Start-up Career Fair brought the Pier- pont Commons and Duderstadt Center to life Thursday, unit- ing start-up companies and students to learn about poten- tial opportunities. MPowered, a student orga- nization focused on cultivating entrepreneurship opportuni- ties for University students, has hosted the unique fair for the past three years. Though 60 percent of the start-ups at the fair were from the Ann Arbor area, start-ups with their headquarters in Detroit, Chicago and California were also present. Engineering junior Brandon Eagle, director of the fair, said the main goal this year was to expand the geographic and technical diversity of compa- nies present. In the last two years, the fair aimed solely to attract students to 'start-ups, bypass- ing large corporations. After students expressed interest in See MPOWERED, Page 3 Hail, hail Stories of heartbreak and heroism outweigh the not-so-flattering truth. PAGE 4 WEATHER HI: 44 TOMORROW LO: 20 GOT A NEWS TIP? N W ON MIC I ANDAtIYOOM Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail Justin Timberlake and Destiny's Child reviewed news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS- INDEX Vol. CXXIII.,No. 60 02013 TheMichigan Daily michigondoily~com NEWS.. .......... .....2, SPORTS..................6 OPINION....................4 SUDUKO................... 3 ARTS S.......................... 5 CLASSIFIE D.............6 4