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January 17, 2017 - Image 2

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The Michigan Daily

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MEDIUM SPICE SALSA.
puzzle by sudokusyndication.com

2A — Tuesday, January 17, 2017
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

EASY AS 1 2 3.
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News




The Leaders and the
Rest

WHAT: This exhibit will
examine who belongs at the
University of Michigan and
who draws its boundaries by
showcasing student expression,
politics and culture.

WHO: LSA Bicentennial Theme
Semester

WHEN: 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.

WHERE: Hatcher Graduate
Library, Room 100

This year’s North American

International
Auto
Show

attendees went to the annual
showcase in the hopes of getting
a closer look at manufacturers’
latest offerings — primarily
eye-catching
concept
cars

encapsulating ideas that may be
present in vehicles of the future.

The University of Michigan

was represented at the show,
held in Detroit’s Cobo Center, by
the Solar Car Team, the Hybrid
Racing Team and the Mobility
Transformation
Center.
The

Solar Car and Hybrid Racing
Teams had their 2015 and 2016
vehicles on display.

Engineering junior Jonathan

Cha, operations director of the
Solar Car Team, said the auto
show offers all team members

an opportunity to interact with
leaders in the industry.

“Our team has displayed the

car and presented at the North
American International Auto
Show for over 10 years,” he
said. “We participate mainly
for the exposure it brings to
our team, but this year, with
the AutoMobili-D event, we
were given a huge networking
opportunity, which we took full
advantage of.”

Cha
also
explained

presenting at the auto show
serves as a bonding event for
the group, helping to build team
morale.

“Different
members
who

normally do not interact in such
a large team get the opportunity
of spending time with one
another,” Cha said. “They drive
together to Detroit and spend
multiple-hour shifts socializing
and exploring the auto show.”

Both team’s vehicles were

displayed in the downstairs
portion of the Cobo Center —
an area dedicated primarily
to
displaying
innovations

in the industry — and were
grouped
with
suppliers

and
other
complements

to
the
manufacturers
in

the
AutoMobili-D
exhibit.

The
exhibit
also
featured

expositions related to electrified
propulsion, hybrid propulsion
and autonomous driving.

Engineering senior Brandon

Hoffman,
Hybrid
Racing

Team
captain,
echoed
the

importance of using the show as
a networking event.

“We actually did make a

couple of really good contacts
there,” he said. “This one
company that’s looking to help
us out with some software for
next
year.
Another
contact

we might be talking to about

some lithium ion batteries
so it ended up being pretty
productive. It was good to get
the car out there and show it
off to a lot of people from the
industry that were there.”

The
Mobility

Transformation
Center

participated
in
the

AutoMobili-D
event,

displaying
an
autonomous

Lincoln MKZ. MTC Deputy
Director Carrie Morton said
despite automakers releasing
new models at the Consumer
Electronics
Show

a

testament to the digitization
of transportation — the auto
industry remains aloof.

“I do think that as the

vehicle becomes simply part
of the Internet of things, we’re
going to continue to see this
trend,” she said. “Do I think
CES is going to become the
auto show? I really don’t think
so. But I do think it is a signal
of how we — nowadays with
smartphones—we expect to
be connected at all times and

North American Int’l Auto Show
highlights innovations in industry

‘U’ Solar Car, Hybrid racing team, Mobility Transformation Center featured

AARON DALAL

For the Daily

CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES

The Aesthetic
Movement

WHAT: This exhibition will
feature work by principal
Pictorialist photographers
who drew on the movements
of the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries.

WHO: Univeristy of Michigan
Museum of Art

WHEN: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

WHERE: Museum of Art

Redefining Identity

WHAT: Stamps in Color will have
its winter exhibition reception
in partnership with the MLK
Day Symposium with the theme
of redefining identity. Judges
will look at the work of Stamps
students.

WHO: School of Art & Design

WHEN: 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.

WHERE: Duderstadt Gallery,
Room 1019

Graduate School Panel
for Undergraduates

WHAT: This panel will allow
undergraduates to get to
know graduate students with
backgrounds in JD, MS, DDS,
MSW and PhD programs and
hear their insight on how to be
admitted to graduate programs.

WHO: Alumni Association

WHEN: 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.

WHERE: Alumni Center,
Founders Room

Intrinsically Disordered
Living Systems

WHAT: Orit Peleg from the
Harvard School of Engineering
and Applied Sciences will hold
a seminar to explore the various
ways in which organisms adapt to
disorder.
WHO: Center for the Study of
Complex Systems
WHEN: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.

WHERE: West Hall, Room 411

It’s Still Terrific! “Citizen
Kane” at 75

WHAT: “Citizen Kane,” often
regarded as the greatest film ever
made, will be examined using
artifacts from UM Library’s
various Orson Welles collections
for the film’s anniversary.

WHO: University Library

WHEN: 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.

WHERE: Hatcher Graudate
Library, Audubon Room

Piano Forum: Jade
Simmons

WHAT: Jade Simmons, concert
pianist and webcast host for
the Tchaikovsky International
Competition, will give insider
insight for aspiring artist
professionals.
WHO: School of Music, Theatre
& Dance

WHEN: 11:40 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

WHERE: Earl V. Moore Building,
Britton Recital Hall

Guest Q&A: Fanshen Cox
DiGiovanni

WHAT: Michigan alum
Fanshen Cox DiGiovanni will
explain how she approaches
racial indentity in her art-
making and in her one-woman
show.

WHO: School of Music, Theatre
& Dance

WHEN: 1 p.m.

WHERE: Walgreen Drama
Center, Towsley Studio

Michigan residents who have

purchased milk or milk products

since 2003 may be entitled to up

to $20 thanks to a class action

settlement.

Fourteen other states and the

District of Columbia are included

in the $52 million settlement

over price fixing of milk and milk

products, including half-and-half,

cream cheese, sour cream, cottage

cheese and yogurt.

Depending on the number

of products and the number of

submitted claims, individuals

may receive between $10 and $20;

entities or small businesses may

receive between $140 and $560.

To be eligible, the products

must have been purchased from a

grocery store or other retail venue,

and must not have been purchased

for resale. No proof of purchase is

necessary to be eligible.

The case accused dairy

farmers of prematurely

slaughtering their cattle and

reducing herd sizes in order to

maintain higher product prices.

Half a million cows were

slaughtered after 3,000 farms

were bought out. The suit claims

that the National Milk Producers

Federation bought out herds of

cattle, primarily from small farms,

and slaughtered them early for

cheap ground beef, thus limiting

the supply of raw milk and driving

up prices.

The defendants were

the National Milk Producers

Federation. Large cooperatives

such as Dairy Farmers of America

Inc., Land O’Lakes Inc. and Agri-

Mark Inc. were also involved as

well.

The defendants deny the

allegations that they conspired to

fix the prices of dairy products but

decided to settle to avoid a trial.

- CARLY RYAN

ON THE DAILY: MI MILK DRINKERS ENTITLED TO UP TO $20

MAX KUANG/Daily

Rackham student Ambalila Hemsell presents original poems at the Mark Webster Reading
Series at the UMMA on Friday.

POETRY RE ADING

Tweets

UMich DE&I
@UMichDiversity

“I like to model myself and
my career based off of wom-
en that constantly challenge
obstacles.” -@IssaRae #umi-
chmlkday2017 #UmichTalks

Follow @michigandaily

Hakeem J. Jefferson
@hakeemjefferson

Thank you, @umich, for
an inspiring and inclusive
morning. So proud
to be a student here.
#umichmlkday2017

Coach Harbaugh
@CoachJim4UM
Vic Fangio proved right
again... The importance of
a good reliable kicker. Also
good, John crushes over an
ounce of 22 cal. whole milk

vern
@VeronicaSlaven

@MichiganDining when
I’m in mojo dining hall, I
feel like all of my stress and
worry goes away and I am
weightless

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