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March 31, 2017 - Image 2

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2 — Friday, March 31, 2017
News
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com



CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES

Phishing & Suspicious
Email Workshop

WHAT: This workshop will
teach attendees about protecting
personal information and email
from internet scams and identity
theft.

WHO: Information and
Technology Services

WHEN: 11 a.m. to Noon

WHERE: Michigan Union,
Room G312

Fun Friday Night

WHAT: The Museum of Natural
History will have extended hours
until 8 p.m. and will offer dinosaur
tours and Planetarium shows.

WHO: Museum of Natural History

WHEN: 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.

WHERE: Ruthven Museums
Building

Symphony Band Concert

WHAT: To celebrate the
University’s bicentennial, the
Symphony Band will perform
works of music that have greatly
influenced its history.

WHO: School of Music, Theatre
& Dance

WHEN: 8 p.m.

WHERE: Hill Auditorium

Detroit Historical
Society Presentation

WHAT: Tobi Voigt, from the
Detroit Historical Society,
will present on a project
to commemorate the 50th
anniversary of the unrest in the
city in July 1967.

WHO: Museum Studies Program

WHEN: Noon to 1 p.m.

WHERE: UMMA, Room 125

Food Truck Friday

WHAT: Food trucks from
Bigalora Cucina, Cool Jacks and
Shimmy Shack will be on North
Campus selling food to students
to celebrate the end of the school
week.
WHO: Michigan Dining

WHEN: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

WHERE: North Campus,
Gerstacker Grove

Economics at Work
Lecture

WHAT: University alum Gail
R. Wilensky will talk about her
career experiences, including
time spent as a White House
senior adviser to President
George H.W. Bush on health and
welfare issues.

WHO: Department of Economics

WHEN: 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.

WHERE: Lorch Hall, Room 140

Refugee Crisis Lecture

WHAT: Students Organize for
Syria will host Turkish Consul
General Umut Acar and the
Honorary Consul General Nurten
Ural for a speech about Turkey’s
role in the refugee crisis.

WHO: International Institute
WHEN: 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.

WHERE: Mason Hall, Room 3437

World Peace Conference

WHAT: This three-day
conference will focus on
empowering community
members and students to promote
peace and social justice. Student
registration is $35.
WHO: Rotaract Club at the
University of Michigan

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

WHERE: Michigan League

Tweets
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Michigan Basketball

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Playing at Detroit on
Saturday for the WNIT
championship and we want
to see you there in your
MAIZE! #goblue

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April for #UMich200

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emily

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College is having peanut butter
toast and a rice krispie treat for
dinner because nothing in the
dining hall sounds good

More than 122,000 University of Michigan email “.edu”

addresses are available for sale on the internet, according to a
report from Digital Citizens Alliance, a nonprofit organization
focused on internet safety, as reported by the Detroit Free Press.

These addresses are harvested by hackers and put up for sale

on the Dark Web, also referred to as the darknet, which is an
internet network that can only be accessed with certain software
or connections where illegal goods can be peddled, the Free Press
reported.

Brian Dunn, managing partner of ID Agent, the company that

gathered the data for the report, said the hacked addresses could
potentially be used to steal peoples’ identities or trick others into
giving up information, the Free Press reported.

“What is more trusted than an e-mail coming from a ‘.edu’

address?” Dunn said. “They can be used to launch malware or
Trojan horse attacks, because people might be more willing to
click on an e-mail coming from an ‘.edu’ e-mail address, thinking
it’s real.”

These Trojan horse attacks function by tricking users into

launching a program, then unleashing a virus onto a computer
using the intent to steal further information.

In the report, the University topped the list of schools by

number of email accounts available for sale on the darknet, while
Michigan State University was fourth on the list with about
116,000 “.edu” addresses available.

- CALEB CHADWELL

ON THE DAILY: DARKNET TAKES .EDU

KATELYN MULCAHY/Daily

Papermaker Radha Pandey demonstrates the traditional techniques of paper-making from
India at Hatcher on Thursday.

M AKING PAPE R

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The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the
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Students are annoyed by the

various construction projects
around campus that obstruct
their walks to class — many of
which will not be completed
in time for current University
of Michigan students to take
advantage of them.

Some recent changes to the

campus landscape that have
been completed are the new
Biological
Science
Building,

opening in summer 2018, which
will
house
the
University’s

Museum of Natural History and
Weiser Hall, which will open
this summer and will house the
Department of Astronomy and
LSA’s International Institute.

LSA junior Claire Bartosic

shared how the closing of the
sidewalks near Weiser Hall
continues to make an impact on

her walk to class.

“On a daily basis, construction

can often get in the way of just
walking,” Bartosic said. “It’s not
as bad now, but last year, when it
was all closed off, you couldn’t
easily walk.”

The renovations at Weiser

Hall also put a strain on students
who had classes there and
needed to get to their next class
on time.

“Having
to
walk
around

the construction was super
annoying and almost made me
late a couple times,” said LSA
sophomore Kate Bishop.

Currently, over $986.1 million

is planned to be spent among
13 major construction projects
currently underway across the
campus, not including current
projects on the University’s
Medical
Campus,
smaller

renovations
and
recently

completed
projects.
Of
the

running total, $102.6 million

of funding of the construction
projects will come from the
Student Life Student Fee paid
with student tuition.

Of the student tuition money,

a
portion
will
go
toward

renovations of the Michigan
Union and the North Campus
Recreation Building. Some new
features for the Union include
the enclosure of the courtyard
on the main level for year-round
usage and a new open-concept
layout. The NCRB will gain
expanded weight and training
rooms.

An estimated total of 934,600

gross
square
feet
will
be

constructed in new buildings and
building additions, along with
the renovations, an estimated
total of 608,500 square feet
of existing buildings around
campus will be renovated.

The sidewalk leading to the

Hill Neighborhood from Central
Campus, where new Biological

Science Building is located,
would
often
be
closed

during the initial stages of
construction and required
students to find alternate —
often longer — routes to class.

“When I lived on the Hill

last year and had to walk
through
the
walkway,
I

would leave earlier just in
case the walkway was closed,
which happened like twice,”
said Bishop.

Last
year,
with
the

construction
of
the
new

addition to the Ross School
of Business, many residents
of East Quad Residence Hall
felt the construction had a
largely negative impact on
their experience.

LSA
junior
Sophia

Davidson
shared
how

the
sheer
noise
of
the

construction
influenced

her academic and personal
experience at the University.

Construction across campus leads
to vast complaints among students

Students are forced to take alternative routes or are woken early by noises

DYLAN LACROIX
Daily Staff Reporter

Read more at
MichiganDaily.com

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