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2A — Thursday, April 6, 2017
News
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

 

CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES

The Research University 
and Society 

WHAT: Five former University 
presidents will take part in 
a bicentennial conversation 
about the past and future of 
the University and higher 
education. 

WHO: Bicentennial Office 

WHEN: 4:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.

WHERE: Rackham Auditorium

Arab Folk-Dance 
Workshop

WHAT: As part of Arab Heritage 
Month, Karim Naji, an Egyptian 
dancer, percussionist, musician, DJ 
and composer, will host an Arab 
Folk-Dance workshop. 

WHO: Department of Near 
Eastern Studies

WHEN: 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. 

WHERE: Michigan League, Room 
4 (Ground Level) 

Gender and Feminist 
Psychology 

WHAT: Harley Dutcher, a 
University of Michigan graduate 
student, will expand on the 
“safe” sex conversation for young 
women. 

WHO: Department of Psychology

WHEN: Noon to 1:30 p.m.

WHERE: East Hall, Room 4464

Feast of Ideas 

 

WHAT: Faculty from 
different disciplines will 
present 20-minute talks at 14 
participating restaurants, shops 
and galleries around Ann Arbor. 

WHO: Bicentennial Office 

WHEN: 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. 

WHERE: Ann Arbor 
restauraunts, shops and galleries 

Ancient Philosophy 

WHAT: Come hear David Charles 
from Yale University lecture 
about ancient philosphy. Charles 
has researched the connection 
between philosphy and psychiatry.
WHO: Department of Philosophy
WHEN: 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.

WHERE: Angell Hall, 2175 
Classics Library 

Freedom and Flourishing 
Project Talk

WHAT: Listen to Charles 
C.W. Cooke, the author of “The 
Conservatarian Manifesto,” 
speak about the future of 
government, specifically local 
governments. 

WHO: Department of Philosophy

WHEN: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

WHERE: Michigan League, 
Vandenberg Room 

Stamps Senior Show 

WHAT: A showcase of live art 
featuring thesis work by BFA 
Interarts Performance and BFA 
Art & Design sudents will be on 
display.

WHO: School of Art & Design
WHEN: 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.

WHERE: Duderstadt Video 
Studio 

 Policing Black 
Citizenship

WHAT: A Harvard Law School 
professor, Annete Gordon-Reed, 
will speak on Black citizenship, 
from the country’s founding to 
Ferguson, as part of the Brian 
Simpson lecture. 
WHO: UM Law School

WHEN: Noon to 1 p.m.

WHERE: South Hall, Room 1225

Tweets
Follow @michigandaily

Michigan Students 

@UMichStudents
it’s the best day of the week! 
thanks @michiganalumni 
for the bagel & coffee (bring 
your own cup to reduce 
waste!)

Nubar Gambourian @nubarg98

Only in Michigan can it 
be under 50 degrees, rain, 
thunderstorm, be super 
windy, snow, and be over 70 
degrees within 10 days...

daniel
@dfrechettee

I’m about to get hit by 
lightning on my walk from 
class and I won’t complain 

Abby

@stuffedcabbage1

All’s fair in war and Umich 
Engineering

In an email sent to students, 

faculty and staff in the school, 

Dworkin announced that he 

has mixed emotions about his 

resignation.

“It is necessary for me to have 

the opportunity to focus more on 

my family, and this step reflects a 

joint family decision on our part,” 

he wrote in the announcement. “I 

appreciate your understanding about 

this, and my need for privacy on this 

matter.”

Dworkin was the first African-

American man to lead the program, 

and he was approved by the Board 

of Regents for the position in March 

of 2015.

In his resignation 

announcement, Dworkin stated 

he will work as a faculty member 

teaching creative entrepreneurship 

and arts leadership courses in the 

fall. He will also help with the 

transition for the interim dean.

“I look forward to supporting the 

interim dean, as well as furthering 

the field of creative entrepreneurship 

and arts leadership for the broader 

university community,” he wrote.

The interim provost, Paul 

Courant, is set to recommend 

an interim dean in the coming 

months, and he will lead a national 

search to appoint the next dean. 

The University Record reported 

that Courant reached out to Music, 

Theatre & Dance faculty and staff 

to ask for recommendations for 

potential search advisory committee 

members.

In the announcement, 

Dworkin highlighted some of 

the Music, Theatre & Dance 

School’s accomplishments that he 

witnessed while he was part of the 

staff, including the creation of the 

Department of Chamber Music, 

and the increase in community 

engagement activities for the school, 

to name a few.

“I am honored to have been part 

of the tremendous evolution of our 

school over these past two years, 

which has been extraordinarily 

exciting, and has included so many 

successes on the part of so many 

students, faculty, and staff,” he wrote.

Dworkin has spent some time 

at the University of Michigan, as he 

obtained a bachelor’s degree and 

master of fine arts degree in violin 

performance from the University.

“From my time as a student 

once upon a time to my role as dean, 

the School of Music, Theatre & 

Dance—which means the people 

who comprise our school— has 

transformed my life, as I know it has 

for so many of you,” he wrote. 

- ERIN DOHERTY & 

 MATT HARMON

ON THE DAILY: SMTD DEAN TO TAKE LAST DANCE IN AUGUST

JOHN YAEGER/Daily

Dr. Cameron Gibelyou, Coordinator of Teaching, Programing, and Innovation for the LSA 
Dean’s Office, leads a seminar on Christianity and science for the Bicentennial Interfaith 
Conference in Ross on Wednesday. 

RE LIGION AND SCIE NCE

After seven years of planning 

and design, the University of 
Michigan Nuclear Engineering 
Laboratory 
building 
reopened 

Monday afternoon, complete with 
more space and renovations in its 
laboratories, offices, conference 
rooms and collaboration rooms for 
students.

Previously, the building housed 

the decommissioned Ford Nuclear 
Reactor, which shut down in the 
early 2000s.

Electrical 
Engineering 
Prof. 

David Munson, Jr., a former dean of 
engineering, said he was involved 
in 
the 
building’s 
historically 

relevant renovations.

“It was constructed sometime 

after World War II and there 
was a research effort that was 
launched in the University that was 
really done as a memorial to the 

University alums who were killed 
in World War II,” he said. “The 
goal of this research was to pioneer 
peaceful uses of atomic energy.”

Munson 
said 
despite 
the 

building’s nuclear reactor shutting 
down more than a decade ago, it took 
many years for federal regulators 
to approve new construction and 
renovation because of the need to 
clean and ensure the safety of the 
space. The building is now home to 
a variety of features and laboratory 
space aimed at advancing nuclear 
security, 
safety, 
energy 
and 

nonproliferation, the prevention of 
the spread nuclear weaponry.

Sara Pozzi, a nuclear engineering 

and radiological sciences professor, 
is one of the researchers using 
the new facilities to detect and 
characterize 
nuclear 
material 

in a popular new field in nuclear 
engineering. Pozzi mentioned one 
of the cornerstones of the nuclear 
engineering labs included the 
linear accelerator, a medical device 

that came from the Department of 
Homeland Security. 

“We’ll be able to host a linear 

accelerator, which is a machine 
that accelerates electrons,” she 
said. “It’s a medical machine so it’s 
actually used for cancer treatment 
but it’s being donated to us by the 
Department of Homeland Security, 
whom we work for.”

Pozzi said the linear accelerator 

will be especially helpful in 
detecting 
nuclear 
material 
in 

containers. She said this is critical 
in advancing nuclear security.

“In 
these 
applications, 
we 

are 
looking 
for 
Uranium 
or 

Uranium-235 
inside 
hidden 

containers,” Pozzi said. “So imagine 
someone were to try to smuggle in 
some Uranium for a weapon and 
you want to find it inside a shielded 
container. To do that you would 
have to interrogate the container 
with a beam of particle from a high-
energy X-ray that would come from 
the linear accelerator.”

Other 
world-class 
lab 

equipment has been added to 
the building, including imaging 
tools and gamma ray detectors, 
which Pozzi described as critical 
to characterizing radiation.

“These can detect not only the 

presence of gamma rays but also 
tell you where they’re coming 
from so they can characterize 
a whole field of radiation and 
where it comes from,” she said.

For the students who will be 

doing research in the nuclear 
engineering lab, Pozzi said 
collaboration rooms, generous 
lab 
space 
and 
advanced 

lab 
equipment 
promise 
a 

more 
intellectual 
working 

environment. These facilities, 
she explained, will positively 
affect 
students 
who 
are 

investigating topics in nuclear 
engineering and writing their 
theses.

“A lot of students will be 

affected by this lab,” she said. 
“Student doing on their thesis 
work will be able to do some 
great experiments because of 
the new space.”

Former Ford nuclear reactor lab
building reopens for engineering use

$12.4 million in renovations over seven years add equipment, safety measures

RASHEED ABDULLAH

Daily Staff Reporter

420 Maynard St.

Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327

www.michigandaily.com

ARTS SECTION

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sports@michigandaily.com

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NEWS TIPS

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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, 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

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

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Managing Photo Editors photo@michigandaily.com

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Statement Editor statement@michigandaily.com 
 

Deputy Statement Editor: Brian Kuang. Yoshiko Iwai

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Managing Copy Editors copydesk@michigandaily.com

Senior Copy Editors: Marisa Frey, Ibrahim Rasheed

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Editorial Staff

Business Staff

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Production and Layout Manager

Senior Photo Editors: Zoey Holmstrom, Evan Aaron, Alexis Rankin
Assistant Photo Editors: Claire Meingast, Emilie Farrugia, Sinduja 
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Senior Sports Editors: Laney Byler, Mike Persak, Orion Sang, 
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Senior Social Media Editors: Carolyn Watson, Molly Force

Read more at 
MichiganDaily.com

