'M' seeks redemption after Saturday's debacle. SPORTS, PAGE 4b'l 0i ign BiI0 NEIIAJNDItEDSEA'ENTEEN OF EIT)1 O Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, September 7, 2007 michigandaily.com 'U': We're prepared for a crisis Officials say system in place to deal with Va. Tech-like rampage By MARA GAY Daily StaffReporter In response to the shootings at Vir- ginia Tech in April, a panel created by Virginia Gov. Timothy Kaine released a report last week detailing more than 90 ways universities and police officers can make college campuses safer. University of Michigan adminis- trators said the report's findings are important and there's always room for improvement, but they maintain that the University has developed its own crisis management system that is capa- ble of handling a similar crisis. The panel's recommendations focus on security, emergency preparedness and mental health. The suggestions include installing security cameras near the entrances to campus buildings, cre- ating a cell phone text messaging alert system to immediately inform students about a crisis situation and improv- ing the communication of information about troubled and potentially violent students between mental health servic- es and the school's administration. Diane Brown, Department of Public Safety spokeswoman, said the report is relevantbut the University faces differ- ent challenges because it's integrated into the city of Ann Arbor as opposed to being set apart from the city geographi- cally or with walls or gates. "We are an open campus," Brown said. "Can one lock down the Univer- sity? No." Brown said that some of the panel's recommendations are already in place at the University. Weapons are already illegal on campus, for example, and the University trains police officers to deal with active shooters. She said some of the other mea- See SAFETY, Page 3 A CA MPUS IN F LUX UNDER CONSTRUCTION Here's why the scenery on your walk to class has gone from bricks and ivy to fences and hard hats By Emily Barton I Daily Staff Reporter Chain link fences are like ivy on campus this year. They're everywhere. Several construction proj- ects dotting Central Campus are forcing students to take detours when walking to class.. Some of them aren't too happy about it. LSA freshman Susan Yang said she's sick of dodging the construction project in front of the Shapiro Undergraduate Library every day. "I think it's really inconve- nient," she said. "Sometimes I walk over there and it's blocked so I walk all the way back." Other students aren't fazed by the construction sites orsthe campus. "It doesn't bother me that much," said LSA junior Anna Miller. "I've gotten used to it." MUSEUM OF ART RENOVATIONt The 54,000 square-foot addition and the renovation of the original musesm building on the southwest corner of the Diag began in the fall of 2006, blocking the entrance to the Diag from the south. The museum will reopen in 2008 with three additional floors and more room for classrooms, exhibits and galleries. Diane Brown; the University's facilities and operations spokeswornan, said the project is on schedule. HIGHER ED IN CONGRESS BIlwould hi'ke Pell Grants Bush says he'll sign legislation that would also slash subsidies to student loan companies By DANIEL STRAUSS For the Daily After a summer of debate over how to relieve the pressure of student loans on college graduates, Dem- ocrats have proposed a compromise bill that would increase grants and impose limits on how quickly stu- dents can be forced to pay off loans. The bill would cut subsidies to student loan compa- nies by $21 billion and use that money to increase the maximum Pell Grant from $4,310 to $5,400 by 2012. It would also cut the interest rate in half on federal loans for middle-class and poor students and guarantee that low-income students won't have to spend more than15 percent of their monthly income repaying loans once they graduate. The bill is a toned-down version of two bills pro- posed earlier this year by Democrats. Although some Republicans voiced resistance to the bills, a spokeswomanfor PresidentBush saidyesterday that Bush would sign the bill ifit passes. About 5 million students have Pell Grants, which, unlike loans, don't have to be paid off. The loans are only available to undergraduates, and the amount awarded varies based on astudent's financial need. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) said in a written state- See GRANTS, Page 7 COLLEGE RANKINGS 'U' won't stop sending info for U.S. News list Coleman calls rankings flawed By EMILY BARTON Daily Staff Reporter Despite a growing revolt against the power of U.S. News and World Report's influential college rank- ings, the University of Michigan will continue to send information to the magazine. Several liberal arts colleges - including Sarah Lawrence College and Barnard College - announced in June thatthey would no longer provide data to U.S. NewsandWorldReportbecause theysay therankings' methodology doesn'tcfully reflect their strengths. Uni- versity President Mary Sue Coleman was critical of See RANKINGS, Page 7 HILL DINING CENTER The construction blocking much of Palmer Field and sidewalks on the Hill is due to the new Hill Dining Center, expected to open in the fall of 2008, when Mosher-Jor- dan residence hall reopens. The attached dorm will have air conditioning and updated facilities. The two-story dining center will have a cafe-style marketplace and 35,000 square feet of dining space. UGLI TUNNELS The hole in front of the Shapiro Undergraduate Library should be filled by spring, clearing the path toward the East Hall Arch. The hole was excavated so workers could rebuild tunnels con- taining heating pipes under the University. Students say the construction site is confusing because the fences are occa- sionally shifted around, adjusting the route pedestrians must take. Brown said construction workers have had to adjust traf- fic flow more than once to leave a pathway open for students. "The nature of having so many buildings makes it more chal- lenging," she said. Fourth in afive-part series AROUND COUNTRY, NEW LAWS ON BOOKS BANG-UP JOB Mich. lawmakers haven't tried to lower prices since last year By GABE NELSON Daily News Editor With the cost of higher education climbing, state legislators from coast to coast took aim at expensive textbooks this year. But the Michigan legislature hasn't made any effort to cut textbook prices for students since 2006. According to data compiled by the National Association of College Stores, a trade group of campus bookstores, 26 states have considered legislation on text- book prices this year, up from 19 states last year and 18in 2005. Some states have passed legisla- tion requiring faculty to take price into account when selecting textbooks. Oth- ers have mandated that professors must release their booklists early enough that students have time to shop around. Nothing has hit the Michigan state leg- islature this year, but the issue has gained momentum this year in part because of a push by the Student PIRGs, a national coalition of student-run public interest research groups. The group has no chap- ter in Michigan. Nicole Allen, the national group's affordable textbooks advocate, said she realized how important textbook legis- See BOOKS, Page 7 KELLYN JACKSON/Daily School of Music sophomore Jack Stratton beats the lid of a trash can while promoting Groove, a student group, at Festifall on th6 iag. TODAY'S HI: 83 WEATHER LO 59 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. ON THE DAILY BWG6 S Sen. Larry Craig's double standard MICHIGANDAILY.COM/THEPODIUM INDEX N EW S ........................ ......2 ARTS ....... .........................5 Vol.CXvIII, No.4 SUDOKU..............................3 CLASSIFIEDS............6 2007 The MichigannDaily OPINION .......... ....4 SPORTS .............................9 michigondaily.com