*. 0 *. S 6 A* 1 U0* q 0 0 q Th ihgnD W dedaNvme 920 Wensdy Nvmbr29 006. Te- ic iga al Cl , vE4R S T 0RY you seole ithe m 'dnigh'oil "The people Bunn you see doing gmna ao manual labor The silent staffs who keep the 'U' running wround campus A photostory by Emma Nolan-Abrahamian lassrooms have long been vacat- ed for the evening. It's still hours before the Uni- versity wakes from its collective slum- ber and once again fills the campus with a continuous flow of students and pro- fessors. But at this late hour, a relatively unknown key cog in the operation of the University emerges from the shadows. Armed with leaf blowers, rakes, brooms, cleaning fluids, chain saws and driving a Green Machine, the Grounds and Waste Management Department, housing staff and custodians work shifts that start anywhere between 9 p.m. and 7:30 a.m., cleaning the hard- scape - which includes sidewalks and plazas - removing leaves, and clean- ing classrooms, lecture halls and dor- mitories. As you wander through campus after a late night of studying or party- ing, or are on your way to an early class, you might a glimpse of staff members on break, see closets full of vacuum cleaners and cleaning supplies and find "careful wet floor/cuidado piso moja- do" signs, all remnants of the previous night's work. These three departments are respon- sible for everything from forestry, inte- grated pest management, irrigation, recycling and trash removal to dormito- ry cleanups and a salt-reduction initia- tive, which take place at all hours of the day. And despite the seemingly simple nature of these tasks, the people who complete them are far from ordinary. "There is a lot of hidden exper- tise," said John Lawter, the director of Grounds and Waste Management. "The people you see doing manual labor around campus may have degrees rang- ing from B.A.s to Ph.D.s." Some work in the middle of the night because they don't mind the ho-s. Some work in the dorms because of the inter- actions they have with students. Others choose to work outdoors because they love being outside. Art Grissom, the head forester in the grounds department, doing tree trim- ming and maintenance 70 feet in the air is a continuation of a childhood spent on a farm, during which he grew to love the outdoors. While he works with his crew members, all of whom are certified arbists, to keep campus trees healthy, other employees prefer to have their feet firmly on the ground, cleaning the Uni- versity's interiors. At 4 a.m., Sharon Bailey starts work, usually on the first floor of Angell Hall. A 15-year employee, she has worked in Mason, Tisch and Haven Halls and has students tell her that the building looks "really nice." "That just makes your day and boosts us up," Bailey said. As Bailey starts work, Fred Voss' workday begins to wind down. The twenty-year University employee loves the leaves on campus and spends his nights - from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. - driving a sidewalk sweeper known as the Green Machine through campus. Voss and his Green Machine pick up leaves, cigarette butts and small pieces of glass while making a few interesting acquaintances along the way. "Working here at the University of Michigan is pretty interesting," Voss said. "You never know who you're going to meet." In the two decades that he has worked at the University, Voss has had his fair share of unusual and unexpect- ed encounters. These meetings include bicyclists dressed as gorillas and a man walking through the Diag wearing slip- pers and a bathrobe. More than the con- tact he has with many different people and characters, he is proud of the role he plays in making campus both clean and safe and about the advances grounds has made, especially their efforts "to be a green as we can." As the end of his shifts nears, Voss drives away into the night, saying to him- self "lions and tigers and bears oh my" as he passes through the dark, deserted campus -just one of many University employees working behind the scenes.