Superman in lecture. Valentine's Day ninjas. An exterminator under attack from a giant fly. What's the deal with the UM Patriots? THE STATEMENT Ilk All" I1E ffiCid~ian4DaiIlj Ann Arbor, Michigan www.michigandaily.com Wednesday, March 14,2007 Avoiding a Greek tragedy PODCASTING LECTURES CLASS GETS PORTABLE With fires up, inspectors look to improve safety By TARYN HARTMAN Daily StaffReporter The morning of May 12, 1996, was full of promise at the Uni- versity of North Carolina in Cha- pel Hill. It was Mother's Day, and families were gathering to celebrate with their soon-to-be- alumni children on the day of the University of North Carolina's spring commencement. But it was also the day that five UNC students died in an early- morning blaze at the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house. In the aftermath, the city of Chapel Hill mandated that all Greek houses be fitted with life- savingsprinkler systems. Four years later, New Jersey passed a similar law for both off- campus structures like Greek houses and on-campus housing in the wake of a Jan. 19, 2000 fire that killed three Seton Hall Uni- versity students. The law, which covered the entire state, also pro- vided funding for the installation of sprinkler systems. Columbia, Mo., Lawrence, Kan. and State College, Penn. - homes to some of the largest Greek sys- tems in the country - have also required their Greek houses to implement sprinklers. Here in Ann Arbor, though, only four ofthe University's soror- ity houses and three of its fraterni- ty houses have sprinkler systems, Firstin a three-part series about fine danger in student housing according to Ann Arbor Fire Inspector Doug Warsinski. Two of the 18 student deaths that have occurred on or near college campuses since Aug. 1 have taken place in Greek houses. According to Ed Comeau, pub- lisher of the monthly newsletter Campus Firewatch and a former director of the Center for Campus Fire Safety, this academic year has been the deadliest for students since his organization began col- lecting data in January of 2000. Of the 107 total fire deaths that Campus Firewatch has tallied over the last seven years, 10 of them have been in Greek housing. Since 1971, there have been 71 fire fatalities in fraternities com- pared with just one fire death in a sorority house at universities around the country, Warsinski said. "Overall, they're not that com- mon," Warsinski said of frater- nity and sorority fires. "But when they do happen, they bring a lot of national attention from the press to the (fire) department, the uni- versity." Warsinski said fraternity fires typically cause multiple deaths, killing three, four or five mem- bers. Comeau said that there are two major insurance organizations that handle policies for Greek houses. Indianapolis-based M-J Insurance insures sororities and See FIRE, page 7A RE PILLOW-RIED For MP3si from MP3s part of Ove podcas ly becc the Un School podcas to a pr music Mor podcas produc ruary, averag Leasia launch casts o podcas ecorded lectures Thebusiness school's ChiefTech- nology Officer Ed Adams, though, catch on said the technology has yet to catch on with business school professors. Dentistry student James Skours- By JAKE HOLMES en said the recordings are a huge DailyStaffReporter benefit. He reviews recordings of his lectures late at night to help some students, listening to him keep on top of his heavy course in iTunes is a way to unwind load. studying. For others, those "I wouldn't pass school without have become an essential podcasting," Skoursen said. classes. Listening to podcasted lectures r the past year and a half, lets Skoursen pause and rewind sted lectures have increasing- sections of a lecture that he didn't ome a part of academic life at understand or wants to focus on. iversity. Since early 2005, the He said that making notes on a one- I of Dentistry has uploaded hour podcast can sometimes take sts of almost all of its lectures him over two hours. ivate directory on the iTunes While he admits it's no replace- store called ItunesU. ment for seeing the professor, Den- re than 125 LSA classes use tistry student Harold Anderson ting on CTools, said CTools said the podcasts give him the flex- :tmanager JohnLeasia.InFeb- ibility to learn the material on his LSA students downloaded an own schedule, without necessarily e of 2,500 podcasts per week, attendinglectures in person. said. The business school has Anderson said podcasts are ed a website to with video pod- "majorly beneficial" when he has f speakers and has purchased busy schedules and that he listens tingequipment. See PODCASTS, page 3A BY THE NUMBERS Approximate number of podcasts LSA students download each week, according to CTools product manager John Leasia Year the School of Dentistry launched a pro- gram to podcast lectures. It has since been joined by LSA and the business school. CAMPUS ACTIVISM Groups want to make 'U' a republic People participate in the first Great Diag Pillow Fight on yesterday. Organized on Facebook.com, this was the first of many pillow fights organizers are planning to hold. LSA sophomore Cayden Mack (not pictured) started the group after seeing a pillow fight in Union Square in New York City over Spring Break. More students paying to get work THE FIRST WARM DAY Company charges students thousands to set up internships By SARA KASE For the Daily Can't find an internship? Uni- versity of Dreams, an internship consulting program that claims to find internships for 99 percent of applicants, will help you out - for a price. Students pay between $6,179 and $8,239 as well as a $500 or $1,000 deposit if the company finds them a two-month internship program - about as much as a year's room and board at the University. One hundred and eight Univer- sity of Michigan students - more than from any other college in the country - have paid for the ser- vice. Amy Hoag, coordinator of internship services at the Universi- ty's Career Center, said the service isn't worth it. She said students shouldn't have to pay to find an internship, though she acknowledged that programs like University of Dreams are effec- tive. Hoag said the Career Center will help students find that perfect summer job - whether at a televi- sion show in New York or a wildlife organization in Nebraska. "We are willing to coach stu- dents," she said. Eric Lochtefeld, CEO of the See INTERNSHIP, page 3A SDS, BAMN, other groups band together By JOEY GOLDSHLACK For the Daily To protest what they say is a University administration out of touch with student concerns, six prominent left-wing campus activ- ist groups have united to form a coalition. The umbrella group, which calls itself Campus Unite!, plans to stage a protest Thursday afternoon out- side of the Fleming Administra- tion Building while the University Board of Regents meets inside, said Blase Kearney, a member of the MEMBERS OF 'CAMPUS UNITE!' Anti-War Action: Works to protest the Iraq War and the Patriot Act. Michigan Student Assembly Envi- ronmental Issues Commission: Requests that the University use renewable energy and encourages environmentalism Graduate Employees Organization: Graduate Student labor union. Asks the Uni- versity to offer benefits to same-sex couples. anti-sweatshop campus group Stu- dents Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality. - Kearney said the rally's location will ensure that University Presi- dent Mary Sue Coleman and the regents are aware of the group's concerns. "It's to scare them," he said. While SOLE has confronted University administrators at times - last year, several SOLE members cornered Coleman in a Fleming building stairwell and demanded a meeting - its public demonstrations haven't been well attended by people outside the organization. Kearney said he expects at least 100 people to attend Thursday's rally, though. See PROTEST, page 3A By Any Means Necessary: Focused on minority enrollment. Tryingto ensure protectionfor minority studentsafter the passage of Proposal 2. Students for a Democratic Society: A liberal group with a wide range of goals, like pushing for better working conditions for University employees to opposing military research. Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality: Pressurer the University to adopt certain labor standardsfor the productionof itsapparel. Aimed at eliminating sweatshop manufactur- ers. PETER sCHOTTENFELS/Daily Students sunbathe on the Diag yesterday. The nearby crosses were put up by the Veterans for Peace in memory of American soldiers killed in Iraq. TODAY'S WEATHER HI: 62 GOT A NEWS TIP? LO: 36 Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michgandaily.com and let us know. ON THE DAILY BLOGS Why Sunshine Week is as worthless as Earth Day MICHIGAN DAILY.COM/THEPODIUM INDEX NEWS...................2.............2A CLASSIFIEDS.. . ..........6A Vol. cyVIl, No. 113 OIIN. J2007TheMichganDaily OPINION 4A SPORTS I..........................:...A michigandaly com ARTS 5..................................5A T H E S TAT E M E N T..................18