NEWS The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 7, 2004 - 9A MUSEUM Continued from page 1A University's natural history museum to retrieve sacred relics and ancestral remains. Now, as the museum leadership recognizes the importance of cooperation with the Native American community in developing its exhib- its, both sides have begun altering the displays together. But despite these measures, problems over the museum's depiction of Native Americans still lie in some of the exhibits that are still on display. Recently changes have been made to alter the messages of the dioramas by including labels with the names of the tribes they are depicting and also adding information which tells visitors what the specific tribe is now doing, said Amy Harris, director of the museum. Rackham student Veronica Hutchinson, who is from the Ojibwe tribe and is also helping to update the exhibits, said highlighting this issue are the dioramas which she says are remnants of outdated exhibits that misrepresent Native life and should no longer be on display. "Sometimes they give (people) the impression that we are gone. But they also give them the impressions that those are the real Indians, that modern Indians are not descendents of the real Indians," she said. "We have taken some intermediary steps, but I don't think it addresses the issue," she said. "We really want to emphasize this message, that Native people are still here. But dioramas are really a controversial subject and a lot of Natives don't want them here." How to resolve the diorama issue is still unclear. While Harris said it is possible that in the future they will be put into storage, she also added that dioramas could be used to attack the issue of historical Native American stereotypes, by displaying them as dated exhibits of Native American people wrongly portrayed in the past. In spite of their flaws, completely removing the dioramas would be going too far, said Lisa Young, museum research scientist. While in the past, the dioramas have construed a mispercep- tion of Native people, the dioramas do accurate- ly portray what Native American life was like in the past, she said. "We recognize that when we did the labels it was a Band-Aid on the issue. ... But to contextu- alize them, to have a larger exhibit around them, rather than have them (displayed in a block) together, that would be better." Still, Hutchinson said their anthropological accuracy does not offset the misperception they create. "I think they don't present how Indian cul- ture really is. They still represent a concept that Indians can't change, they always have to be the same. It's cultural stasis," she said. Besides the added label to the dioramas, the museum has also recently added a Pow Wow exhibit as an example of how the Native Ameri- can culture persist and is very much alive today, Harris said. But underlying this issue is the fact that Native Americans are depicted in a natural history museum, where museums have always held an image of depicting cultures long gone, Hutchin- son said. The problem is "putting (Native American) in a museum with dinosaurs, dead animals and plants and not having any way to explain why they are in there - the idea that Native Ameri- cans are all gone, that's what they are going to pick up," she said. And the long-term effect will influence gen- erations, she added. "Whether we like it or not, museums are used very heavily as teaching tools by public school teachers. We sent out generations of children with stereotypes in their minds." Regardless of their strategies to remedy the issue, money and time have added to the obsta- cles in revising the museum exhibits. So far all the changes made to the exhibits have been through volunteer work Young said. "With budget cuts all over the University, to redo the exhibits the way we would like too, it would take thousands of dollars," she said. Yet for Hass, money should not be an issue. The University should create a museum solely for Native American people, she said. Not only would it help alleviate a problem American museums have wrestled with for centuries, but it would also demonstrate to Native Americans how indebted this University is to them. "It would be great if there was a museum for itself, since the University is built on Indian land. It would be wonderful." POWER Continued from page 1A displaced residents into lounges in South Quad Residence Hall. Overton said they planned to move the students into alternative spaces should the outage extend into the night. LSA sophomore Jenna Tocco said after the power went out, hallway lights stayed on for a while. "And then all the hall lights went out and it got real scary," she said. She added that RAs and DPS officers went door-to-door, telling people that they would be fined if they did not leave. Overton said while students were encouraged to leave, they were not evacuated. She said that anyone who was found wandering the halls was encouraged to go back to their room or leave the building, for their own safety. Sgt. Gary Hicks of DPS also said he had not heard of a move to evacuate the residence hall. He said they were being asked to "just go to sleep and stay out of trouble." Some students found their last-minute home- work efforts hindered by the outage. Engineer- ing sophomore Sara Zak said her roommate was Frieze to be replaced with new residence hal HOUSING Continued from page 1A studios, classrooms, seminar rooms or a small audi- torium in the same building. Residential suites and academic offices would be separate, but they would most likely share a marketplace-style dining hall. These common spaces are meant to facilitate random or "serendipitous" interaction between students and faculty, Harper said. The new hall would not be restricted to film and video majors, Harper said, but it might attract students with similar interests. As for the departments currently housed in the Frieze Building, their fates will vary. The theater and dance departments will move in 2006 to the Walgreen Drama Center - still in construction - and Arthur Miller Theater on North Campus. The University administration was considering this move before it chose the Frieze Building as the site of the new hall. By moving the two departments to North Cam- pus, they will be closer to the School of Music, their umbrella college. The Provost's Office will make relocation plans for the other affected units: Film and Video, Communication Studies, The Center for Judaic Studies, Near Eastern Studies, Asian Languages and Cultures and Linguistics. There are no definite plans yet to replace the smaller, intimate theaters in the Frieze - both the Arena and Trueblood theaters - but some administrators have mentioned having a similar space in the new hall. University Housing Director Carole Henry said the administration is now remaining flexible to a number of ideas. But Coleman's task force of residential life will meet Sunday to discuss some preliminary concepts. "We're building not just for today but for the future," Henry said. The new hall will be paid for by University Housing and the central administration, both of which operate as separate entities. Housing will pay for residential portions and the administra- tion will fund the academic spaces. The University considered several locations in choosing the new hall, including the parking lot between West Quad and Blimpy Burger and vari- ous spots on North Campus. But Coleman said the Frieze Building was ideal because of its proximity to the shops on State Street and academic buildings. It was meant to signal to students that expand- ing housing is an important issue in her presiden- cy, she said. ALGER Continued from page 1A Alger said he is looking forward to his new position. "This is a great opportunity to go to Rutgers and to lead a legal office at a large public uni- versity." He said he will be the head of the university's legal office and he will also be a member of the president's cabinet. Alger's colleagues said they will miss his presence at the University, but they also said they are happy for him. "It's our loss and Rutgers's gain," said communications Prof. Anthony Collings, a former CNN court report- er, who helped handle communications for the lawsuits. University President Mary Sue Coleman said she acted as a reference for Alger when Rutgers was consider- ing him for the position. "I admire him so much, and we'll really miss him. I'm so pleased for him," Coleman added. G REEKS Continued from page 1A versity to help implement future pro- posals and get students involved in the new phase of relations between student organizations and the University. "He really distinguished himself in the Supreme Court cases," Peterson said. She said it is common for fac- ulty members to show their excellence at the University, making them more appealing for other positions. "I'm extremely happy for him," Marvin Krislov said, vice president and general counsel, who holds the same position here that Alger will be taking at Rutgers. "I think he's done a spectacular job here from everything from affirmative action to intellectual property to his teach- ing. He's been incredibly effective in his work on campus, and he'll be missed," he added. Krislov said the General Counsel's office has not yet begun to search for a replacement. "We're still digesting the news," he said. Alger said Rutgers has many simi- larities to the University of Michigan, particularly in that it is a large pub- lic university with a commitment to diversity. "And their football team is getting better," he added. "I think this is one of those opportu- nities that students and the administra- tion are working successfully together to make life easier on student groups that have consistently demonstrated the ability to follow the rules," said MSA President Jason Mironov. . n . Jcl l. Islay7 U w16m vlgm