Mustang Daily - 2/27

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Gender Equity Center pokes fun at ‘Phallacies’ of stereotypes

SLO Comedy Fest: round 3 ARTS, pg. 5

ARTS, pg. 4

Volume LXXVII, Number 74

Thursday, February 28, 2013

www.mustangdaily.net

COURTESY PHOTO

Each year, a group of industrial and manufacturing engineering students band together to help build or renovate a local house for individuals in need (2011 house pictured above).

Students ‘Move to Build’ PolyHouse LAURA PEZZINI

lpezzini@mustangdaily.net

It’s not often college students are able to put their coursework to use in a philanthropic way, but for industrial and manufacturing engineering (IME) students, that opportunity has been made possible in the form of PolyHouse. In the PolyHouse program, students and faculty work together to improve the home of a local family in need. IME professor Roya Javadpour started the program as part of a project management course,

and it quickly developed into an annual undertaking. “PolyHouse project is a part of the graduate level class that I teach,” Javadpour said. “It’s a class that’s offered every spring and we’ve been doing it every year since 2004.” A group of students in Javadpour’s class remodels and improves the home of a family in the community that may need special conditions because of disabilities, and might not have the funds necessary to provide those conditions. “The benefit is for someone in the community who

has a physical disability and is financially disadvantaged,” Javadpour said. “The purpose of the project is for students to learn the industrial and manufacturing skills through the ‘Learn by Doing’ philosophy, and it’s really learning by doing good.” Javadpour said she began the program because she saw need in the community that could be an opportunity to use coursework for good. “It was just a little bit more than getting the usual reports that the students turn in,” Javadpour said. “I wanted all

their hard work and efforts to go toward giving back to the community.” The students who plan and execute the housing remodel do so with some guidance from Javadpour, but for the most part it is up to the student volunteers to provide planning, management and even their own physical labor. Volunteers are also able to help with the remodel. “The students plan and also do the physical work of the project, but we welcome volunteers for the physical implementation of the project,”

Javadpour said. Because the project takes place during spring quarter, no family has been selected yet for this year’s PolyHouse. Javadpour said the class collaborates with local agencies to select an appropriate family. “We work with nonprofit agencies,” Javadpour said. “They nominate the candidate, someone who has a disability and is financially disadvantaged.” After the candidate family is selected, the first step is to determine the needs of the family. “Students first go to the

house and meet with the family, ask for their wish list and see what can be done,” Javadpour said. The PolyHouse project is funded entirely by donation, and that the project volunteers have various methods of fundraising. One of the more outstanding methods in the past five years is the Move to Build race, a 5K run to benefit the PolyHouse project, put on by students in one of Javadpour’s lower division IME classes. see POLYHOUSE, pg. 2

COURTESY PHOTOS

To fund the PolyHouse project, students put on a “Move to Build” 5K run. Based on this past year’s run (participants pictured above), they hope to raise approximately $8,000 this year.

Identity phishing scam targets Cal Poly emails MUSTANG DAILY STAFF REPORT

news@mustangdaily.net

Cal Poly sent an email to faculty, staff and students on Wednesday after receiving an influx of phishing emails, or email attacks targeting Cal Poly users, this past weekend. “There were about 25 compromised campus email accounts (this past weekend) that the school knows about,” Policy and Complaints officer for Information Services Mary Schaffer said. “Generally the

purpose is to send more spam emails using the hacked account, there has never been any identity theft as a result from these emails that we know of.” Schaffer said universities are often the target of these spam emails; they generally occur at times when a large introduction of new students is expected, such as when a new school term begins or ends. The last time a large number of campus accounts were compromised was August, Schaffer said. “A lot of the time they won’t

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even realize that we are on the quarter system,” she said. “This might have been, in their minds perhaps, the start of the spring semester.” Cal Poly users will never be asked to report their email, password or any personal information to a non-calpoly.edu link or website, and students should be aware of messages containing links to click on that claim to be from Cal Poly, Schaffer said. According to Schaffer, the body of these emails will commonly display a link that says “click here” or appear to be from

GO ONLINE What happened at yesterday’s ASI meeting? Find out online.

a Cal Poly address — but if you hover the mouse over the link, it shows a different URL. The false addresses claimed to be from various campus services such as Cal Poly Security Support, Cal Poly Email Support, California Polytechnic State University, California Polytechnic Support, warning@calpoly.edu, notification@calpoly.edu, System Administrator, Admin, Webmail Technical Support / Fraud Prevention Unit, Webmaster see SCAM, pg. 2

Tomorrow’s Weather: high Sunny sunny

79˚F

NHA HA/MUSTANG DAILY

Cal Poly will never ask for your password or personal information in an email, according to Cal Poly ITS.

INDEX

Opinions/Editorial..............6 News.............................1-3 ClassifiedsComics..............7 Arts...............................4-5 Sports..................................8

low 46˚F partially cloudy

cloudy

foggy

windy

light rain

rain

thinderstorm


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