10A - Wednesday, April 2, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michiganclaily.com ENERGY From Page 1A Michigan, which supports the renewable energy bills in the state Legislature, said job opportunities would only become available after Michigan actually passes the legis- lation. "We're looking at places like Illinois and Wisconsin that have started to pursue renewable ener- gy strongly, and they've already started to see those job benefits," she said. "But our options are more forward-looking because we haven't made that strong commit- ment yet.", A study released by the Blue Green Alliance - a joint effort between the United Steelworkers and the Sierra Club that focuses on global warming, creating. environ- mental jobs and reducing toxins - said renewable energy fields could offer almost 35,000 new jobs for the state alone. Wind energy would provide 24,350 jobs, according to the study, The study said bio-energy from plant and animal material, includ- ing crops for fuel, could offer 2,281 new jobs while geothermal energy, which uses heat from the earth, could offer about 1,500 new jobs. Solar energy could create 6,644 new jobs. But considering its long winters and reputation for cloudy days, the outlook on solar energy in Michi- gan is bleak. Lauer said solar energy isn't cost effective because "the sun just doesn't shine enough here." But GregKeoleian, co-director of the Ceoter for Sustainable Systems in the School of Natural Resources and Environment, said Michigan has potential to use solar energy. "East of Detroit, the solar radia- tion is about 3.8 kilowatt hours per meter per day, and just for compar- ison, Phoenix gets 5.7," he said. "So in terms of solar energy, it's not as low as people might think." In 2003, SNRE installed a 30- kilowatt solar panel on the roof the Dana Building. Keoleian said the energy output for solar panels depends on the weather and time of day. "Our building load for Dana is about 142 kilowatts, and right now the output is 3.8 kilowatts," he said. The percentage of the building's energy generated by the solar panel varies, he said. In the past it has been as high as 34 percent. Keoleian said the greatest chal- lenge for solar energy is the cost. , Energy from sources like power plants costs about 10 cents an hour, wind generation costs about 12 cents an hour and solar energy runs about 20 to 45 cents an hour. According to a report in the sci- ence magazine Wired, Germany, which has fewer sunny days than Michigan, has increased its solar energy output fourfold since 1999. Korpalski said Germany's suc- cess with solar panels should be a call to action for Michigan. "People are saying, 'How do we know solar panels will work? It's not even that sunny.' But we can point to a place like Germany and say that it's a very viable option for energy in Michigan," she said. Rackham student Keri Dick, who does research in the Center for Sustainable Systems, Michigan could take advantage of the solar panels that operate best during cloudy days. "There's energy coming through even if there are clouds," she said. "The sun is still shining on the Earth." Dick said there's no telling what type of impact the plan could have on the state's job market. ABSTINENCE From Page 1A affiliated. - An organization at Princeton University, called the Anscombe Society, is similar to TLR in its viewpoints and activities. On Valentine's Day, the group put an advertisement in the school's newspaper, listing the group's reasons for promoting chastity. The group's success at Princeton inspired an offshoot at Massachu- setts Institute of Technology. Chinyere Neale, a health educator with the University of Michigan's Health Services, said she has found that high school students are more likely to make abstinence pledges than college students because they're told more frequently told not to have sex. While the group welcomes both males and females, TLR's mes- sage is mostly directed toward women. In, addition to viewing ahstinence as an "empowering" act for women, the grouip says there are emotional benefits to waiting to have sex until mar- riage. LSA junior Amanda Grigg, an executive board member of the campus feminist group F-Word, said there should be a cam- pus abstinence group, but that it shouldn't mislead students - something Grigg accuses TLR of doing. "(Fredell) tried to suggest that it was a means for empowering women. If your goal is to attract men, that's not empowering," she said. Grigg said she disagreed with the way the organization por- trayed safe sex as "unhealthy and dirty." She cited a forum the group is hosting this month called "Smart Sex:'Finding Life- Long Love in a Hook-up World." "Instead of emphasizing the neutral benefits of abstinence, it's emphasizing the bad things about sex," she said. LSA senior Ashley Wynne, a member of Campus Crusade for Christ, said she thinks a group promoting abstinence would serve campus well by provid- ing an "intellectual perspective" about saving oneself for mar- riage. There might not be one on campus already,she said, because students from the Midwest, a region thought to be more reli- gious than the East Coast, are tired of hearing about the nega- tive consequences of premarital sex. Wynne, who's been in a com- mitted relationship for more than a year, said she abstains from sex in order to follow the first two of the Ten Command- ments, which instruct believers to put God before other objects of worship and to not make false idols. "Sex could easily become an idol," she said. "It's about loving God and showing your love for him by living your life in the way he tells you to." Neale said some students choose to remain abstinent for religious reasons like Wynne, but others wait for different reasons. "A lot of students aren't ready to be sexually active and it's not necessarily for religious or moral reasons," she said. Bush running out of time to fix economy WASHINGTON (AP) - The most sweeping overhaul of the nation's financial system in seven decades has at least one thing going for it. It is occurring in the midst of a crisis, which often is the only thing that prompts Congress to act. But the administration also has some timing factors working against it - namely that President Bush has 10 months left in office, making it easier for the powerful forces arrayed against the plan to simply run out the clock.. Even with time running out, Treasury Secretary Henry Paul- son can't be blamed for a lack of ambition in putting forward his 218-page blueprint on Monday. The plan would create three super agencies with power over the financial industry, abolishing a patchwork of overlapping jurisdic- tions that were created in response to the biggest financial crisis of the last century, the 1929 stock market crash and Great Depression. The crisis this time around is a severe credit crunch that has been roiling markets since last August, resulting in billions of dollars in losses atsome of the nation'sbiggest financial firms. The crisis claimed its biggest victim last month with the forced sale of Bear Stearns, the nation's fifth-largest investment bank. The crisis on Wall Street is also hitting Main Streets across the country with the threat that 2 mil- lion households could lose their homes to a rising tide of mortgage defaults, further lengthening an already severe housing slump that has depressed home prices and sales. In this atmosphere, some finan- cial industry officials are worried that there could be a rush to leg- islate - much like what was seen in response to the last financial crisis on Wall Street when a wave of accounting scandals at Enron and other big corporations pushed Congress to swiftly pass the Sar- banes-Oxley Act in 2002, tight- ening up on corporate accounting rules. In the view of many business executives, Congress in its haste to pass Sarbanes-Oxley included provisions that made U.S. compa- nies less competitive in the global economy. Nq 7tI /SN'or4 r K htoM INrrxKvIFW CRAMMING IS FOR FINALS, NOT STUDENT LOANS. 4 4 BANK Open 7.Days&A 4 b 4