8A - Monday, February 7, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com OXFORD From Page 1A lighting in the Oxford Road area in response to the recent crimi- nal activity. "My goal is to use the petition as a student voice to show the people that matter that students are really upset about this and that they're willing to do some- thing about it," Rosenberg said. She added that members of the Greek community have been vic- tims of the recent crimes. "So far in the last two months, the robberies have been on Greek students, so I think there has been an initial outcry from the Greek community ..." Rosenberg said. "Everyone is a little con- cerned, especially with the den- sity of Greek houses that are in that area." While many Greek commu- nity members have signed the petition, Rosenberg said it has also received interest from other students and Ann Arbor resi- dents, particularly those living in the Oxford area. Though there is no specific goal for a signature count, she said the petition is a way for the Greek community to unite and raise awareness about the issue. "(The petition) really got the word out to a lotof people that the Greek community is interested in doing something about this as a group," Rosenberg said. "I've had a lot of people contact me to get involved with working with the city and brainstorming ideas." As a result, Rosenberg said she plans to start a Greek hous- ing safety committee composed of Greek life house managers and other members in the near future.' At the meetings, members would brainstorm ways to pro- tect themselves and gener- ate ideas for improving safety, Rosenberg said. Public Policy junior Steve Zuckerman, a Public Policy rep- resentative for the Michigan Stu- dent Assembly and a member of Alpha Delta Phi fraternity locat- ed on South Forest, said when he heard about the Lighting Ini- tiative, he brought the issue to MSA. "My big thing with MSA is to address things that are a concern to the students, and clearly, this is a really strong concern," Zuck- erman said. However, not all residents in the area see lighting as the main issue. Billy Joe Evans, professor emeritus of chemistry at the Uni- versity, has lived in the Oxford Road area near campus for the last 40 years. He said he and his wife aren't concerned about the burglaries occurring in the area, and the lighting is not problem- atic for them. "I think the lighting is fine," Evans said. He added that increase in crime may be attributed to near- by fraternity parties that "bring in bad elements" since the frater- nities don't monitor who comes into their houses. Tom Bence, president of Delta Chi fraternity located at 1705 Hill St., said the house has been broken into twice during this academic year and since then, the residents have increased security measures. "We have taken preventa- tive actions like having better exterior doors, but the robber- ies have come through windows and during parties where people break into individuals' rooms, so we find it hard to defend against that," Bence said. Bence said though the burglar- ies may have occurred because the residents were "distracted" while parties were going on, the crimes didn't happen because there were unknown people in the house for a party. "It's as a result of us having a party, but it's not the people that we invite into our house that are robbing us," Bence said. Flocken said students should travel in pairs when walking home, especially between the hours of 11 p.m. and 2 a.m., since this is the time when most of the crimes have occurred. However, many students say they have instead opted not to walk in the area at all when it's dark outside. LSA sophomore Alexander Capobianco, a member of Zeta Beta Tau fraternity located on Oxford Road, said most people he knows now takes cabs or find rides from others, adding that he doesn't let friends walk home alone at night. The Zeta Beta Tau house has also added new locks to the doors and increased lighting around the outside of house. LSA sophomore Kathleen Metz, president of the Delta Gamma sorority, also located on Oxford Road, said sorority mem- bers who live in the house have also been avoiding walking in the area at night. "Pretty much every single girl in my house right now, after it gets dark outside, is afraid to walk home alone ... and I'm pret- ty sure it's the same for a lot of other sororities," Metz said. TOWSLEY From Page 1A House, said this is because Eng- lish is a second language for many of the children, and their language skills are still develop- ing. "Some (toddlers and pre- schoolers) speak two languages, some three," Blanchard said. "It's always astonishing how quicklythey learn English." Because members of the University community receive priority for their children's enrollment, Blanchard said the diversity of infants, toddlers and preschoolers is representative of University faculty, staff and graduate students. As Blanchard was talking, the pigtailed girl approached again, smiling and pantomiming an exaggerated shiver, her knees wiggling just below an orange- and-white flaring skirt. "It's just so cold. It's like polar bear winter," she said once again, running off as Blanchard responded with a smile. Blanchard pointed out the window to the spot where Vil- lage Corner, the longtime cam- pus convenience store, was recently demolished. "Children are loving watch- ing the construction," she said, adding that they take occasional field trips across the street to see the site. The pigtailed girl reappeared once again. "It's just so cold. It's just like polar bear winter," she said. "Good thing you have your hat on to keep you warm," Blanchard responded. But Towsley offers more than an early education for children. It also allows University stu- dents hands-on experience for research. University students from Psy- chology 307: Practicum in Child Development and Child Care assist Towsley teachers for first- hand, research-based experience in developmental psychology. LSA senior Amy Schoenherr is volunteering at Towsley this semester after working there in the fall as well. "The goal is to see themgrow," Schoenherr said, referring to the children she observes. Each Psych 307 student is assigned to a classroom to work with infants, toddlers or pre- schoolers ranging from ages one month to 5.5 years old. Schoen- herr assists professional teachers in a classroom of toddlers aged 15 months to 2.5 years old. I "Our class is very, very much about the children. What they want and what they need, we really try to fulfill," Schoenherr said. Nursing students and Uni- versity students in Alpha Delta Pi sorority located next door to Towsley also help out at the children's center. Kinesiol- ogy students occasionally teach physical education courses as well, Blanchard said. She added that because of the Psych 307 course, University vol- unteers are mostly psychology students. Schoenherr said the practi- cum course focuses on teaching University students about con- flicts in the classroom as well as the benefits of play and why poli- cies about child development and preschool programs exist. "What we see in the class- room, we put into (a) paper," Schoenherr said. Schoenherr said one essay she wrote for her psychology class addressed separation anxiety and the struggles young children have when their parents drop them off in the morning. "They're learning to play together, which is shocking because kids are egocentric," Schoenherr said. "It's something that is hard for them, but they've definitely come a long way." Play-based programs, Schoen- herr said, are often miscon- strued. "People think all they do is play, but they're really learn- ing a lot," she said, adding that play-based programs have been shown to benefit child develop- ment through the "very stimulat- ing" nature of the programs. "We teach gross-motor skills, fine-motor skills, language, the simple stuff like colors, numbers, the alphabet. They love music. They love to paint and color," Schoenherr said, adding that the kids also enjoy being read to. After taking the practicum last semester, LSA senior Alexia Simons, who works with the tod- dler age group, also decided to stick around this semester. She now works at Towsley for her paid work-study job. "It helps me to know that I do want to work with kids," Simons said Simons said caring for the children is structured but sur- prising. "It's something new every day," she said. "It's fun work because you don't know what to expect. There's a schedule, but there's different activities every- day." Projects from the Psych 307 students andthe youngsters cover the walls and ceilings of Towsley. Both Schoenherr and Simons said the children's learning motor and language skills are a vital part of the Towsley cur- riculum. Teaching the kids to walk and talk can be challenging, Schoenherr said, but it has really taught her the value of patience. "Language acquisition - how much they are able to express themselves and their wants - that's really most shocking," she said. Children entering the program typically aren't at ease around other children, Simons said. "Some of them didn'ttalk alot,. weren't that comfortable," she said. "A lot of them, this is the first time with students of their age." But With time and help from the practicum students, the chil- dren start to open up. "(It's) crazy in that we can get a group of 10 to 12 toddlers to actually sit and sing songs (together)," Schoenherr said. "It's just amazing what some of these kids are capable of doing and how young they really are." One afternoon before recess, three preschoolers march out in a single file line and sit on a bench in a hall of Towsley. A teacher ties their shoes. Bundled up in snow gear, they then march outside. A girl drags around a purple sled. A boy watches two girls swing. A bench shaped like a but- terfly remains empty, surround- ed by fresh snow. From the top of a mushroom-shaped fountain, a teacher reaches for an icicle for a child. A boy sits alone on a pile of snow, hands in his lap, watch- ing a teacher chase around three children, all three fighting to keep balance, toddling through the snow. SURVEILLANCE From Page 1A ports the idea behind the project. "(I thought) that at Ann Arbor Dems, we needed to be at the forefront of a progressive idea, and that was the reason why we decided to support (Leaf) and move this along," Hall-Thiam said. While the Ann Arbor Demo- crats have officially endorsed the ordinance, Cleveland Chan- dler, the chair of the Washtenaw County Democratic Party, said a conversation about the surveil- lance ordinance is on the agenda for his group's next meeting on Feb. 15. "We've discussed it, but we haven't endorsed it yet," he said. Leaf said the club also has to wait for the city attorney to fin- ish evaluating the ordinance and for the Ann Arbor City Coun- cil to vote on it before the ordi- nance could become a law. The city council process could take a while to complete, he explained. "We're going to have to talk to every city council person first to see where they're at and see what they feel about it, and then we have to get a sponsor on City Council, and they present it in the first hearing, and then two weeks later they vote on it," Leaf said. City Council member Sabra Briere (D-Ward 1) said she thinks it will be difficult for Leaf to get a City Council member to bringthe ordinance before coun- cil. Though she agrees with the idea behind the proposed ordi- nance, Briere said she thinks the wording of the proposal and bringing it up before City Coun- cil will make members choose to implement cameras in areas they wouldn't otherwise. "Personally, I don't want sur- veillance cameras anywhere in Ann Arbor, and I worry that opening a door to an ordinance of this nature would allow sur- veillance cameras," Briere said. The main challenge the group has faced, Leaf said, has been getting people interested in the topic because it is not heavily publicized or controversial. "The idea that there's no pri- vacy in public has just kind of been accepted by people and not really thought about," he said. "We're just really trying to change peo- ple's basic ideas about the subject and get people interested." He explained that American deserve privacy in public and all aspects of daily and recreational life. "It's really important to say that our public spaces aren't just the Times Square," he said. "Public spaces are also every park, every beach and every residential neighborhood. And to just give up all privacy in all these places would make our lives worse." Leaf, who grew up in Ann Arbor, said his passion about pri- vacy comes from his dedication to protecting the environment. "To me, there's no such thing as wilderness when every area in an entire city is under surveil- lance all the time," he said. Leaf attended Pioneer High School, which began using sur- veillance cameras while Leaf was a senior there. He said that was the first time he voiced his opposition to the cameras, and it has since been an ongoing battle. "For me, the biggest thing is just being able to walk around the city I live in without being under constant surveillance," he said. "And constant surveil- lance isn't in some science fiction realm, its already happening." - Daily News Editor Caitlin Huston contributed to this report. n- 'ita stc Fe bru ar y @ Un vers ity un ion s February 8, 15, 22 Gleek Out @ Pierpont - Glee watching party at Commons Corner TV Lounge 7-9pm February 9 MI Favorite Comic Finals - League Ballroom, 8-10pm February 11 UMix Late Night - Michigan Union, 10pm-2am February 11, 14 Special balloons and sweet treats to give your Valentine available in front of U-go's in the Union February 14 Share a Heart 2 Heart at Beanster's at the League - 2 Sandwiches or Salads, 2 Soups and 2 Beverages for $20.00! February 14-18 M Healthy Week at UU! Get in shape for Winter Break! Free healthy tastings from 11am-1pm and daily specials all week at Beanster's, Bert's, Mujo Cafd, Commons Cafd and U-go's. February 17 Performance Showcase - Images of Identity @ League Underground 8-11pm February 18 Open Mic Night - League Underground, 8:30-10:30pm UMix Late Night - Michigan Union, 10pm-2am SOLAR PANEL From Page 1A because he didn't have a source of light. "Growing up I didn't have any lighting. I had to actually study under kerosene lamps, using can- dlelight or sometimes just going to huddle around street lights to study," Traore said. "I knew that (education) was (the) only key thing for me because ... I came from a low class family and chanc- es are most of us wouldn't make it to college." Amin, who was born in Bangla- desh, said the solar panel project was partially inspired by a family friend who asked him to develop a lighting system for a village in West Africa. The friend, who vis- ited the village, told Amin about the need for a clean energy system to alleviate certain difficulties for the residents. Following his conversation with the family friend, Amin said he sought Traore's help, and they began working on the project. Traore and Aminsaid they worked on an initial design, but itprovedto be too expensive for the village. Traore said the idea for a por- table solar panel was motivated by an incident in which he had difficulty contacting his mother, who lives in Mali. Traore said his mother hadn't been able to find electricity to charge her cell phone when she went to a village to visit someone and was forced to travel to another village miles away. "That was very inconvenient, and I wasn't happy with that - so everything started coming together and I said, 'I would like to design a portable solar energy system for villages in developing countries,"' Traore said. When Amin entered the Uni- versity as an Engineering gradu- ate student, he and Traore began submitting their design to sev- eral clean energy competitions - many of which they won. "We were really excited and we thought ... this could actually work," Amin said. With the grant money they earned from the competitions, Amin and Traore proceeded to build a prototype of their design. "We had the money to build something, and so we built some- thing off the shelf (that) we could stick together using a wooden box and whatever we could find," Amin said. "It went from a con- cept to something that we could actually carry around. It could power your laptop, but it looked like a shoebox." Amin attributed some of his and Traore's success to their continuing involvement with the TechArb. They became involved with the TechArb - a partnership between the College of Engineer- ing's Center for Entrepreneurship and the Ross School of Business's Zell Lurie Institute - last sum- mer. The TechArb gives entre- preneurs 24-hour access to work space and opportunities to net- work with fellow entrepreneurs, according to Doug Neal, man- aging director of the Center for Entrepreneurship. What distinguished June Ener- gy from other companies in the TechArb was Amin and Traore's personal connection to their product, Neal said. "The June Energy team had a very compelling personal experi- ence with the target market that they're trying to solve the prob- lem at," he said. "The fact that they were devel- oping a very effective solution for customers ... through their own efforts and education is a very good story and very compelling proposition on how they would be successful during their time at TechArb," Neal said. Amin said though it was some- times difficult to balance school and the project, he still felt com- pelled to work on it. "I always put this company as my capstone project," Amin said. "It was the one project in school that I had to succeed at." June Energy plans to keep pro- ducing technology in Ann Arbor U because of connections with Uni- versity alumni, Amin said. "We're really focused on pro- ducing it locally in Michigan because there's such a strong net- work and relationships with local product manufacturers," he said. "We don't know in the future, but we definitely know one thing - Michigan is very good at man- ufacturing these things at high quality and at (a) very competitive cost." FACEBOOK February 25 - March 6 Winter Break! 'LIKE' THE DAILY ON