c1E 13dEEYan 0 aij OIN ) I, 1 N I)1I1 1)--1 1 'I'N IY-\ I hI I \I jII jY II )1 1 1 U ITRI FHO N Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, September 23, 2013 michigandaily.com iis V -. RUBY WALLAU/Dai TOP LEFT: University of Virginia sophomores Marisa Readdy (left) and Rolph Recto (right) participate at the hackathon at Michigan Stadium Friday. BOTTOM LEFT: Illinois Institute of Technology senior Abed Arnaout and junior Tameem Imamdad (second and third from left) plan with teammates at the Hackathon at Michigan Stadium Friday. RIGHT: Engineering junior Michael Christen looks out over the field at Michigan Stadium Friday. At Big House, innovations abound MHacks moves to Michigan Stadium for largest student hackathon in U.S. ByAMRUTHA SIVAKUMAR Daily StaffReporter It wasn't game day, but the Big House was bustling. The MHacks hackathon, a competitive weekend of non-stop programming, is a collaboration of Michigan Hackers and MPow- ered, an entrepreneurship group, where "hackers" from universi- ties worldwide filled the stadium - a location chosen after the 2012 hackathon outgrew Palmer Commons. At MHacks, students collaborated to churn out innova- tions between Friday night and Sunday morning. The rules are simple: The hackers are be given exactly 36 hours to create an application programming interface - which specifies how some software components should interact with each other - and present it at an expo for the chance to win a series of prizes. With nearly three times the number of participants as the 2012 hackathon, the 2013 event surpassed world records for hackathon attendance, as 1,700 tickets for the event sold out in less than 24 hours. The previous record was set early September at PennApps, the annual hackathon hosted at the University of Penn- sylvania that boasted a record 1,000 attendees. Though much of the partici- pants' time was spent developing apps, they were provided with ample food and drink, and were even able to watch the Univer- sity's football game against the University of Connecticut on the stadium screens. As it neared closer to 11 p.m. Saturday, a class of student par- ticipants turned to sleep and social media after failing to effec- tively debug failed applications. Others, however, inched closer to finishing and implementing last- minute functionalities - Bing- hamton University senior David Lui included. "You are competing against the others here, butI don't think of it that way until the end," Lui said. "Right now it's more of a social collaborative event." Lui created an application that would determine a user's inherent biases through a per- sonalized series of questions. He said being able to participate in a hackathon hosted in the Big House was a perk. At the expo following the hackathon, application develop- ers had the opportunity to com- pete for a total of $23,000 in cash prizes. While the overall best applica- See BIG HOUSE, Page SA GLOBAL OUTREACH " Wallenberg fellow works to sustain Earth, human With $25K grant, student studying how conservation affects Kenyans By MICHAEL SUGERMAN For the Daily Even after University alum Zachary Petroni explains in native Kiswahili that he is a student researcher, locals from the small Kenyan town of Gede question his intentions. To them, Petroni is like any other mzungu, or white person, pass- ing through - there as a tourist rather than as a student. Petroni said withstanding this reaction has been his big- gest adjustment - other than the "tropical heat" and "de-indus- trialization" of his diet - while working as a Wallenberg fellow on the northern edge of Kenya's Arabuko-Sokoke Forest Reserve, where he has been researching "the relationship between con- servation governance and human rights rights" for a month. Over the summer of 2013, he worked as a research assistant for the School of Natural Resources and Envi- ronment. Petroni, formerly a student in the Ford School of Public Policy, is the inaugural winner of the fel- lowship, which grants $25,000 to a graduating senior each year to pursue an independent learnings or exploration project anywhere in the world. He wrote in an e-mail interview that his overall objective is "interrogating the linkages between how conser- vation spaces are constructed and governed ... and the conse- quences of this decision-making on the socio-economic, cultural and political well-being of people living in close proximity to such efforts." Each school on campus can select up to two nominees, whose applications are then forwarded to the Wallenberg Fellowship Selection Committee. The com- mittee comprises representatives from various University units and colleges. See WALLENBERG, Page SA Students transform a parking space on State Street into a temporary park Friday for International PARK(ing) Day. Rolling out the green carpet to spark urban-space debate ANN ARBOR City council reconsiders crosswalk regulations Council members concerned about ambiguous law By WILL GREENBERG Daily Staff Reporter In light of the death of a stu- dent early August at a Plymouth Road crosswalk, Ann Arbor's current crosswalk ordinance has raised questions among the pub- lic and City Council as many leg- islators are working to revise or repeal the ordinance. When the current law was passed in 2012, it was considered an improvement over the previ- ous ordinance, which required drivers to stop for pedestrians "approaching" the crosswalk. Some considered the wording too ambiguous to follow or enforce. Today, Ann Arbor has an ordinance that is distinct from the Michigan Uniform Traffic Code. A memorandum to coun- cilmembers from Nick Hutchin- son, manager of the city's Project Management Unit, illustrated the differences in the word- ing of the two laws. The MUTC See CROSSWALK, Page SA Students make mini-park out of parking spaces By MICHAEL SUGERMAN For the Daily From a rolled-out strip of bright green AstroTurf span- ning a couple of parking spac- es on South State and East Liberty streets, Rackham and Public Health student Arielle Fleisher invited a passerby into her makeshift "park." On Friday, Fleisher and Rackham student Jenny Coo- per created a "parklet" as a part of PARK(ing) Day 2013, an annual program that cre- ates temporary green spaces in an attempt to spark discus- sion about how to use urban space. The duo received permis- sion from the Downtown Development Authority and the South State Street Cor- ridor Authority to use the spaces for free, setting up at 11 a.m. Local businesses even contributed to the parklet's creation: Downtown Home and Garden donated furniture and potted plants, the Pro- duce Station donated one park bench and the Lunch Room provided lunch for the group. Other expenses were cov- ered by a $315 grant from the Student Sustainability Initia- tive, a University program. "We're not just passively sitting here today, but we're also making a statement," Fleisher said. "We want to ask the question, 'How do we value urban space, and what if See URBAN, Page 5A WEATHER HI 68 TOMORROW ^LO:48 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. NEW ONMICHIGANDAILY.COM The Podium: Fall and federal fiscal crises MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS INDEX NEWS.........................2A SUDOKU...................3A Vol. CXIIIII,No.136 OPINION.....................4A CLASSIFIEDS.A......6A ©2013TheMichiganDaily ARTS......................5A SPORTSMONDAY........1 mchgondailycom rands like Lysol, French's 23rd. learning about RB careers HEALTH ,,HYGIENE ,HOME b