4SPECIAL SECTION Moving on As seniors prepare for commencement, a special section looks back at the last four years at the University. 1C. e 1Mdigan0aIj ONE-tIUNDRED-SE\/ENEEN YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM Ann Arbor, Michigan www.michigandaily.com Monday,April 16, 2007 Seniors get nervous as art gets wet "We do not own this world. We borrow it from future generations." - Rep. John Dingell (D-Dearborn) discusses the need for legislation on climate change Sprinklers caused water damage to some final projects By JESSICA VOSGERCHIAN Daily StaffReporter A sprinkler set off by a fire in the Art and Architecture Build- ing on North Campus late Friday damaged the senior projects of r some School of Art and Design students. The fire started in a corner of a,.storage room attached to the Slusser Gallery at about 11:30 p.m. It was quickly extinguished by an automatic sprinkler sys- tem before it could burn the art projects, Department of Pub- lic Safety spokeswoman Diane Brown said. Although only the sprinkler head nearest the flames was trig- gered, water seeped into the gal- lery and damaged some of the projects, Brown said. Brown said it's too soon to estimate the cost of the damage. The fire also destroyed an equip- ment cart and several laptops in the storage room. Other items in the storage room could have been harmed by smoke, she said. The senior projects were the culmination of months of work and were meant to represent everything Art and Design stu- dents learned at the school, Art and Design senior Emily Peden said. "When I got a call about it, shivers went down my spine," Peden said. "We put so much time and effort into it - money and thought." Peden's project, a series of maps, was in the room but was not damaged. The fire was likely sparked by electric equipment being used in a student's project, Brown said. Students who were working in the building were evacuated after the alarm went off and were barred from the building until 9 a.m. Saturday, said School of Architecture senior Peter Shaw, who was in the building at the time of the fire. Shaw and other students working in a third-story studio ignored the fire alarm and the smell of smoke and continued to work until they heard someone yell that there was a fire in the building, he said. "We weren't about toleave," he said. "We thought someone had burnt some popcorn." See FIRE, Page 3A TOP: Children play during a rally calling for government action to fight human-caused climate change in front of Burton Tower on Saturday. BOTTOM: Rep. John Dingell (D-Dearborn) speaks during the rally. Dingell said he plans to begin drafting climate change legislation this summer. As. issue heats up, a rally on climate RELAY FOR LIF Hieftje, Dingell pledge to fight warming caused by humans By KATHERINE MITCHELL Daily Staff Reporter Two people in polar bear suits stood on the steps of Burton Tower Saturday to protest human-caused climate change. Ann Arbor Mayor John Hieftje and other rep- resentatives of local, state and federal govern- ment pledged to fight human-induced climate change in front of an crowd of about 200 on Ingalls Mall that afternoon. The crowd withstood bitter temperatures to attend the rally. Many demonstrators wore ski caps, winter coats and wool mittens, even though it was mid-April, as they called on Con- gress to cut carbon emissions by 80 percent by the year 2050. LSA junior Andrew Munn, the chair of the campus chapter of Climate Challenge, said he was impressed by the turnout because the weather was cold and several other major cam- pus events took place on Saturday. "Considering the weather, I'd say it was a good turnout," Munn said. "It's clear that it's a mainstream issue and people are taking it seri- ously." The rally was one of more than 1,400 held by members of the Step It Up grassroots cam- paign on Saturday - a day the group named the National Day of Climate Action. Rallies with attendance ranging from 20 to 1,200 people took place from coast to coast. The rallies came at a critical juncture in cli- mate change policy. A United Nations report issued in January said that global warming is almost certainly being caused by humans. Mean- while, the issue is garnering ever more attention from politicians and the press. U.S. Rep. John Dingell (D-Dearborn) told the audience on Ingalls Mall that he will begin drafting climate change legislation early this summer. He said he hopes the legislation will help mankind give the Earth to future genera- tions in better shape than it is in right now. "We do not own this world," Dingellsaid. "We borrow it from future generations." Other speakers at the rally included State Sen. Liz Brater and State Rep. Rebecca Warren, both Ann Arbor Democrats. Warren outlined three initiatives that were echoed by other speakers throughout the day: an emphasis on energy policy, improved environmental building codes and individual actions like replacing incandescent light bulbs with fluorescent ones to increase energy effi- LSA freshman Steve Bedford (center), LSA junior Jane Chung, (secnnd from right) and University staff member David Shin (right) try to buy their way out of jail by gathering donations at Relay for Life on Palmer Field on Saturday. a e e Relay participants ' run for research ciency. Hieftje ended the event by speaking about Ann Arbor's dedication to environmental issues, He spoke about Ann Arbor's Green Energy Chal- lenge, which stipulates that by 2010, the city government will obtain 30 percent of its energy from renewable sources. By 2015, the challenge aims to meet 20 percent of Ann Arbor's total energy needs with renewable energy. "Don't let anyone tell you we can't make the change to green energy," he said. "We're doing it." Event raises more than $267,800 By TARYN HARTMAN Daily StaffReporter Engineering senior Jay Trz- cinski spoke at his first Relay for Life in 1998, and attended one each year since he lost his father to non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Trzcinski's family has been profoundly affected by cancer. The disease claimed both of his M father's parents before Trzcinski was born. His mom's father is a survivor of prostate cancer. This past weekend, Trzcin- ski spearheaded his own unique fundraiser, a "tiki jail," at the University's fifth-annual Relay r for Life. From 10 a.m. Saturday to 10.a.m. Sunday, over 2,400 participants from 160 teams rep- resenting groups of friends, stu- dent organizations, fraternities and sororities circled the track at Palmer Field for 24 straight hours to raise money for the American Cancer Society. A self-described Jimmy Buffet fanatic, Trzcinski and his team, the Parrotheads, built a Margari- taville-themed jail,complete with bamboo bars and grass walls, next to the track. Relay partici- pants could pay Trzcinski's "Par- rothead Police" to "arrest" their friends and haul them to the jail in a red plastic wagon, where the captives were adorned with Hawaiian leis. Before they could be released, the prisoners had to match the donation that got them thrown in jail by asking passers- See RELAY, Page 3A TAKE BACK TH E NIGHT A m--arch against sexual assault, fear One hundred join rally through streets By ALLISON PINCUS Daily StaffReporter A group of mostly women weaved its way through the streets of Ann Arbor as the sun went down Friday night. As the crowd of about 100 turned from East Liberty Street onto State Street, a middle- aged man standing on the sidewalk flashed a thumbs-up sign in sup- port of the marchers. The participants in the 28th annual Take Backthe Nightmarch walked around the streets of Ann Arbor at dusk to assert their abil- ity to be outside at night without the fear of sexual assault, said Ariel Esterkih, a graduate student in the School of Social Work and See NIGHT, Page 3A cLiF REEDER/Daily Supporters march in the 2007 Take Back the Night rally on Friday. The event fea- tured speakers, music and a march around Ann Arbor. 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