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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
Follow @michigandaily

Michigan Basketball

@umichwbball 

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

Michigan Alumni
@michiganalumni

The Burton Memorial Tower 
is going to light up the night 
sky in maize and blue this 
April for #UMich200

umichARTS & Culture

@umichARTS

12 decades of the Michigan 
daily have been digitized 
& recorded in a searchable 
database courtesy of 
@umichbentley

emily

@stringham_

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

420 Maynard St.

Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327

www.michigandaily.com

ARTS SECTION

arts@michigandaily.com

SPORTS SECTION

sports@michigandaily.com

ADVERTISING

dailydisplay@gmail.com

NEWS TIPS

news@michigandaily.com

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

tothedaily@michigandaily.com

EDITORIAL PAGE

opinion@michigandaily.com

HUSSEIN HAKIM

Business Manager

734-418-4115 ext. 1241

hjhakim@michigandaily.com

EMMA KINERY

Editor in Chief

734-418-4115 ext. 1251

kineryem@michigandaily.com

PHOTOGRAPHY SECTION

photo@michigandaily.com

NEWSROOM

734-418-4115 opt. 3 

CORRECTIONS

corrections@michigandaily.com

The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the 
University OF Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily’s office 
for $2. Subscriptions for September-April are $225 and year long subscriptions are $250. University affiliates are subject to a 
reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a 
member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press.

REBECCA LERNER 
Managing Editor rebler@michigandaily.com

ALEXA ST.JOHN 
Managing News Editor alexastj@michigandaily.com
Senior News Editors: Riyah Basha, Tim Cohn, Lydia Murray, 
Nisa Khan, Sophie Sherry
Assistant News Editors: Kevin Biglin, Caleb Chadwell, Heather 
Colley, Erin Doherty, Maya Goldman, Matt Harmon, Andrew 
Hiyama, Jen Meer, Carly Ryan, Kaela Theut

ANNA POLUMBO-LEVY and REBECCA TARNOPOL 
Editorial Page Editors 
 opinioneditors@michigandaily.com

Senior Opinion Editors: Caitlin Heenan, Jeremy Kaplan, Max 
Lubell, Madeline Nowicki, Stephanie Trierweiler

BETELHEM ASHAME and KEVIN SANTO 
Managing Sports Editors sportseditors@michigandaily.com

ANAY KATYAL and NATALIE ZAK 
Managing Arts Editors 
 arts@michigandaily.com

Senior Arts Editors: Tess Garcia, Dayton Hare, Nabeel 
Chollanpat, Madeline Gaudin, Carly Snider 
Arts Beat Editors: Caroline Filips, Danielle Yacobson, Danny 
Hensel, Erika Shevchek, Matt Gallatin

Senior Design Editors: Alex Leav, Carly Berger, Christine Lee

AMELIA CACCHIONE and EMMA RICHTER 
Managing Photo Editors photo@michigandaily.com

MICHELLE PHILLIPS and AVA WEINER
Managing Design Editors 
design@michigandaily.com

LARA MOEHLMAN 
Statement Editor statement@michigandaily.com 
 

Deputy Statement Editor: Brian Kuang. Yoshiko Iwai

DANIELLE JACKSON and TAYLOR GRANDINETTI 
Managing Copy Editors copydesk@michigandaily.com

Senior Copy Editors: Marisa Frey, Ibrahim Rasheed

DYLAN LAWTON and BOB LESSER
Managing Online Editor lesserrc@michigandaily.com
Senior Web Developers: Erik Forkin, Jordan Wolff

ABE LOFY
Managing Video Editor video@michigandaily.com
Senior Video Editors: Gilly Yerrington, Matt Nolan, Aarthi 
Janakiraman, Emily Wolfe 

JASON ROWLAND and ASHLEY TJHUNG 
Michigan in Color Editors michiganincolor@michigandaily.com
Senior Michigan in Color Editors: Christian Paneda, Tanya 
Madhani, Neel Swamy, Adam Brodnax, Areeba Haider, Halimat 
Olaniyan, Sivanthy Visanthan

ELLIE HOMANT
Managing Social Media Editor

Editorial Staff

Business Staff

EMILY RICHNER
Sales Manager

ANNA HE 
Special Publications and Events Manager

SONIA SHEKAR 
Digital Marketing Manager

JESSICA STEWART 
National Accounts Manager

JULIA SELSKY
Local Accounts Manager

CLAIRE BUTZ 
Production and Layout Manager

Senior Photo Editors: Zoey Holmstrom, Evan Aaron, Alexis Rankin
Assistant Photo Editors: Claire Meingast, Emilie Farrugia, Sinduja 
Kilaru, Sam Mousigian, Marina Ross

Senior Sports Editors: Laney Byler, Mike Persak, Orion Sang, 
Minh Doan, Chloe Aubuchon, Sylvanna Gross, Chris Crowder 
Assistant Sports Editors: Rob Hefter, Max Marcovitch, Avi 
Sholkoff, Ethan Wolfe, Matthew Kennedy, Paige Voeffray

Senior Social Media Editors: Carolyn Watson, Molly Force

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

