The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS VOTE From Page 1A WASHINGTON ton, a co-chair of the event, said Lawmakers, W hite she hoped the event's abstract Ho s m v format would encourage students H1ouse move closer not to pick a candidate because of aid agreement his or her name recognition. to a"We hope that the event will open people's minds to vote for Pushing deficit concerns aside, the issues that they think are Democratic and Republican lead- important," she said. ers moved closer to agreement with LSA sophomore Jasmine Rob- the White House yesterday night erts said the eventhelped take the on emergency tax cuts and benefit emphasis off the leading candi- increases to jolt the economy out dates who receive the most media of its slump, including opening new attention. financing windows for some home "The candidates were repre- loans. senting a point of view, which I Congressional leaders were to think is better because the media negotiate into the evening with sort of chooses our candidates for Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, us," she said. underscoring the urgency of the effort. Lawmakers learned during the day that the government's deficit REPORT already would swell to $250 billion From Page 1A this year because of falling corpo- rate tax revenues - then they sig- of resources used by each cam- naled they were willing to balloon pus building between 2004 and it higher by more than $100 billion 2007, along with the Universi- with a stimulus package. ty's total carbon footprint. The report found that the University's LANSING carbon output decreased from about 430,000 pounds in 2004 to Legislation calls for 390,000 pounds in 2007. Andy Berki, manager of the more renewable University's occupational Safe- ty and Environmental Health energy by 2016 department, said the University has increase the use of materi- Within eight years, 10 percent of als and technology that conserve the electricity sold to Michigan con- resources in both new construc- sumers would have to come from tion and renovations to old build- renewable energy sources such as ings. Those energy saving devices wind under bipartisan legislation include the installation of more passed Wednesday by a state House efficient lighting and wiring, as committee. well as motion sensors that shut The standard would nearly triple off lights when rooms are vacant. by the start of 2016 the amount of Berki said the University also renewable energy now being sold by plans to improve conservation utilities and other power producers efforts on campus. In order to in the state. determine in which buildings Because renewable energy can practices can be modified to save be more expensive to produce, the resources, the University created standard could cost residential cus- Wolverine Teams consisting of tomers an extra $36 a year, com- engineers, environmental experts mercial customers an extra $199 and marketing representatives and industrial customers an extra who evaluate campus buildings $2,250. and make recommendations. The teams try to reshape how WASHINGTON building occupants use resources. . They start at a basic level, telling EPA: California occupants to turn off comput- ers when they're not being used, greenhouse gas Berki said. He said the teams plan to track 30 buildings a year waiver was justified and teams have already been dis- patched to 17 campus buildings, EPA officials told the agency's he said. administrator that California had one concern Wolverine Teams "compelling and extraordinary con- have is that occupants will return ditions" to justify a federal waiver to wasteful behavior once the allowing the state to reduce green- teams leave campus buildings. house gas emissions from vehicles, Berki said adesignated personwill accordingto excerpts of documents periodically check each building released yesterday. to prevent occupants from back- Yet when Administrator Stephen sliding. Johnson denied the state's request The report also calls for indi- for a waiver in December, he said viduals to increase their own con- the California standards were not servation efforts. needed to meet "compelling and ex- The Graham Environmental traordinary conditions," one of the Sustainability Institute, part of criteria in federal law. the School of Natural Resources The excerpts from Environmen- and Environment, is teaming up tal Protection Agency documents were released by Sen. Barbara Box- er, D-Calif., whose environmental committee is investigating John- son's decision and has called him to (. testify at a hearing tomorrow. RAFAH, Gaza Strip Thousands of from t Gazans cross into Egypt to shop On footin cars and in donkey carts, tens of thousands of Gazans flooded into Egypt on Wednesday through a border fence blown up by militants - puncturing a gaping hole in Israel's airtight closure of the Gaza Strip and giving a boost to Hamas. In a shopping spree that was both festive and frenzied, Gazans cleared out stores in an Egyptian border town, buying up everything from TV sets to softdrinks to cigarettes. To play: Complete the grid As waves of people swarmed and every 3x3 box Con. through the destroyedbarrier- some estimated the crowd in the hundreds of thousands - Egyptian security There is no guessing forces lined up on one side of the bor- just use logic to solve. der and Hamas forces lined up on the other side. None of them interfered Difficulty: Easy in any way, and it appeared Hamas militants actively participated in the 5 border breach. - Compiled from 6 Daily wire reports 6 9 9 4 0 i 6 1I 3,931 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated 2 3 Press. The following service mem- bers were identified yesterday: - 7 Cpl. James M. Gluff, 20, Tunnel " Hill, Ga. Pzlbystf Sgt. Michael R. Sturdivant, 20, Conway, Ark. After the mock election, Hinton and Nwachukwu discussed the importance of the black female vote in the upcoming election, saying it will play a large role in determining the winner between Barack Obama and Hillary Clin- ton for the Democratic Party nomination. Although the focus of the event was on understanding issues important to the election, event organizers also tried to explain to students the voter check-in pro- cess. In order to receive a ballot, attendees had to present a valid form of identification -like their MCard - in a simulation of actual voting procedures. During elections, voters must show ID or sign an affidavit con- firming their identity. with campus activists to develop a public forum for students to address environmental concerns at the University. Although the forum is still in the planning stag- es, Berki said he hopes that it will encourage more student input in University policy-making. Chris Detjen, president of the Michigan Student Assembly's Environmental Issues Commis- sion, criticized the University for failing to garner student input on environmental policy decisions. "Not enough efforts were made to incorporate students' interests and efforts into this report," he said. "I wish there had been refer- ences made to what students have been doing with environmental issues on campus in past years." Detjen said he appreciates the work put into the report but thinks the University has a long road to sustainability ahead. Currently, about 45 percent of the energy used on campus is gen- erated at the Central Power Plant on East Huron Street. The rest is purchased on the grid from DTE Energy, which uses carbon-pro- ducing coal for much of its elec- tricity production. So while the campus power plant burns relatively clean natu- ral gas, campus buildings still contribute to greenhouse gas emissions. Jonathan Bulkley, co-direc- tor of the Center for Sustainable Systems in the School of Natural Resources and Environment, said he thinks the report shows the University's increasing commit- ment to environmentalism. He said since the report's first issu- ance seven years ago, the Universi- ty administration has consistently supported of its development. "The information is there and can be acquired reasonably," Bulkley said. "The challenge now is to plot a course and say where we'd like to go." Bulkley was also optimistic about the public's increasing interest in environmentalism. "There's a sea of change taking place among young people who are mindful of achieving sustain- ability," he said. MPAA From Page 1A should focus its anti-piracy cam- paign elsewhere. He said college campuses are "among the most responsible Internet service provid- ers" because they educate their users on the legality of file sharing. "Before the MPAA had this research conducted, the University was thinking about how to help edu- cate people about peer-to-peer file- sharing," Bernard said. "We think there's a better place for Congress to spend its time," he added. Bernard said he was skeptical of the original statistic because the data used to estimate the figure were never made public. "When those numbers came out, we questioned them because they seemed so high," he said. "Clearly the MPAA has come out and said they've made a mistake interpret- ing their data, and we're glad they came out and are trying to correct the record." s GROUPc From Page 1A t that may think student govern- S ment doesn't do anything," he t said. s The Multicultural Commit- tee hopes to attract students who t belong to organizations outsideu the Greek system. When asked how many LSA- SG members belong to campus fraternities and sororities, Miller E-MAIL From Page 1A sages, which can slow the mes- sages down. "Routine messages are designed for traffic flow, so they move through the system as expeditiously as possible without interfering in other traffic," he said. Tom O'Leary, vice president of sales in North America for GroupMail, an e-mail software company, said there is no clear answer for how quickly e-mails can be sent out to a large group of people. "There are so many factors involved, like size message, server capacity, Internet connection rate and anti-virus software," he said. For 72,000 people on one serv- er, he said, "10 hours sounds about right." Laura Quinn, director of Ide- alware, a company that reviews software, said spam prevention aid the assembly is "heavily" Greek. "The main thing we're doing o increase the diversity in LSA- SG is going out to student groups hat are traditionallyunderrepre- ented on campus," he said. One such group, Miller said, is he Office of Lesbian, Gay, Bisex- ual and Transgender Affairs. - Daily Staff Reporter Andy Kroll contributed to this report. Thursday, January 24, 2008 - 3A software might slow the mes- sage's flow. But even if that were the case, Quinn said, the amount of time it took for the emergency alert to reach all of campus still seemed long. "Ten hours, even for such a large database, does seem like a long time," Quinn said. Levy agreed, saying that the University needs carefully craft mass e-mails so they're not fil- tered as spam. The way the Uni- versity sends mass e-mails is standard, but after last week's incident, he said, there will be discussions about making the process much quicker. He said emergency e-mails could be sent out more quickly if the University uses different pro- tocols like expatiating emergency e-mails using upgraded software. "The University has excellent email infrastructure," he said. "The issue in terms of the deliv- ery of the mass email last week had to do with the specific way in which it was sent out." WANT TO JOIN THE DAILY? Come .to our mass meeting. Sunday at 7 p.m. 420 Maynard St. The Fr. Gabriel Richard Lectures Calling us to examine current issues in light of our faith War,. Politics and Ethics: Choices for the Country and the Ciry in an Election Year Monday, January 28, 2008 4:00 pm - Weill Hall Annenberg Auditorium 735 S. State St. Speaker: Rev. J. Bryan Hehir Parker Gilbert Montgomery Professor Practice of Religion and Public Life Kennedy School of Government Harvard University Co-Sponsored by: Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy President's Initiative on Ethics in Public Life, and St. Mary Student Parish fI o 4