NEED FOR SPEED Michigan players from Texas year's best albums -but and Florida debate whose u'll need Prozac for. home state has faster feet. ARTS, PAGE 5 SEE SPORTS, PAGE 8 F1jEffillianwail Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, September 15, 2009 VISITING CAMPUS How 'U', protects big names When dignitaries visit Ann Arbor, several agencies work together to make sure everything goes smoothly By TORREY ARMSTRONG Daily StaffReporter When U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and his entourage entered a Law School classroom Thursday afternoon, many in the room thought the Secret Service had just walked in. They were close, but wrong. The "big men in suits," as one student reported, were U.S. Marshals - federal law enforcement agents within the Department of Justice who pro- tect court officers and "ensure the safe and secure conduct of judicial proceedings," according to the agency's website. And like the Secret Service, the U.S. Marshals are one of several federal, state and local security forces the University works closely with when a high-profile visitor comes to campus. Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Diane Brown said -handling high-profile figures like Chief Justice Roberts entails precise coordina- tion of various law enforcement entities, like the Secret Service and U.S. Marshals, as well as DPS, state and local police, personal security and public relations staff. "Marshals, State Department officials, DPS offi- cers - each group has different responsibilities," Brown said. "Sometimes they're responsible for a particular geographic area, or a certain type of crime." While reducing the number of unplanned visits and limiting the volatility of the visitor's activities are among law enforcement's top priorities, Brown said things go awry more often with lower-profile See SECURITY, Page 2 FEASTIVITIES UNIVERSITY BOARD OF REGENTS Regents to handle $44M in proposals Campus safety, REGENTIAL MATH sports facility $9 MILLION ELECTRONIC LOCKS designs on to-do list $1.5 MILLION By KYLE SWANSON GERIATRICS CENTER RENOVATIONS Daily News Editor $4 MILLION UNVERSITY HOSPITAL POWER SYSTEM At its monthly meeting Thurs- day, the University Board of $23.2 MILIN Regents will take action on $43.7 CRISLER ARENA SCHEMATICS million worth of campus con- struction and renovations affect- +"O ILO ing everything from campus SOCCER FIELD safety to sports facilities to the $437 MILLION University Hospital .TOTAL AMOUNT TO BE CONSIDERED Among the items on their plate, the regents will consider two upgrades to campus medical facilities, two recommendations to alter planned Athletic Depart- ment projects and a new proposal to upgrade the locks on doors of campus buildings. Timothy Slottow, the Univer- sity's executive vice president and chief financial officer, will recommend upgrading manually locking exterior doors with elec- tronic readers that would lock and unlock the doors. The proposal, outlined in a memo released yesterday, would include replacing traditional key locks on exterior doors at more than100 buildings on campus and issuingnew, more technologically advanced MCards to all members of the campus community. Upgrading the locks would allow campus officials to better respond to emergency situations in which a building lockdown may be necessary because the doors could be locked from a cen- tral point. The project is expected to cost $9 million and is scheduled for completion by spring 2011. If approved, representatives from the University's Department of Architecture, Engineering and Construction will design the proj- ect. Slottow and Dr. Ora Pescovitz, executive vice president for medi- cal affairs, will seek approval from the regents for two new projects at University Hospital. The regents will be asked for approval of a renovation to the East Ann Arbor Health and Geriatrics See REGENTS, Page 7 The Muslim Students' Association hosted a free dinner in celebration of Ramadan last night at Rackham. MSA, faculty to teamup MIPs, trash citations and smoking ban on the table By STEPHANIE STEINBERG Daily StaffReporter In a robust discussion of the issues facing campus - including. trash violations on Football Satur- days, revising the Student Code of Conduct and the safety of Minor in Possession citations - student leaders and the top faculty govern- ing board promised to work togeth- er to find solutions. Michigan Student Assembly President Abhishek Mahanti and Vice President Mike Rorro visited the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs weekly meeting to raise their concerns and illicit faculty help. "Just us being here we realize that we've got friends," Mahanti~ said. "That's a really reassuring thing." The two sides offered to help each other accomplish their goals that included revising the Student Code of Conduct to make it more practical, using Ann Arbor and University Police more effectively JED MoCH/Oaily to protect students from crimes MSA President Abhishek Mahanti meets with the faculty's leading body yesterday. and avoiding possible fallout from and SACUA collaborate to revise to the statement. The addition a new smoke-free initiative taking the Statement of Student Rights would solve some of the problems effect in 2011. and Responsibilities, or the Student students encounter when a party Code of Conduct - which is meant goes awry, like refusing to call for MAKING STUDENT DRINKING to govern student behavior on cam- help for friends who pass out from POLICY MORE PRACTICAL pus. drinking for fear of repercussions This year, MSA is working on for themselves. Once every three years, MSA adding a "Good Samaritan Policy" See SACUA, Page 7 Natural History Museum to put away controversial exhibit Native American display to come down in Jan. 2010 By JASMINE ZHU Daily StaffReporter The University Museum of Nat- uralHistory'scontroversialNative American Diorama exhibit will be taken off display starting in 2010, pleasing those who have, for years, argued that the displays are inac- curate and overly simplistic. The exhibit places three- dimensional depictions of Native American life alongside fossils of dinosaurs and other prehistoric creatures as well as stuffed birds illustrating Michigan's vast wild- life. "Both Native and non-Native visitors have spoken out eloquent- ly" against the exhibit, according to a press release announcing the closure. In the press release, Museum of Natural History officials wrote that "Museums around the world are wrestling with questions about the representation of indig- enous people in museum exhib- its. Who decides how a culture is portrayed? Does context matter? What happens when members of the community speak out against museum exhibits?" To answer some of these ques- tions, the museum is creating JED MOCH/Daily LSA sophomore Sarah Rabinowe looks at Native American diorama exhibit. an overlay exhibit titled "Native American Dioramas in Transi- tion," which, the press release says, will explain why the dioramas are being taken down and moved into storage. "Scholarship and museum practices have changed since the dioramas were made almost 50 years ago," the press release reads. "Issues of concern include their context in a natural history museum and the stereotyping and oversimplification inherent in the diorama as a display tech- nique." The call to take down the exhibit ultimately fell on the shoulders of the museum's direc- tor Amy Harris with the support of LSA Dean Terry McDonald and the faculty in the Native American Studies Program as well as advice from the Native American Advi- sory Committee. But the move will not take place until the end of LSA's current theme year, called "Meaningful Objects: Museums in the Academy." "I decided to wait to remove the dioramas until the 2009-10 LSA Museums Theme Year, so that there would be many oppor- tunities for our audiences to learn about the issues of concern," Har- ris wrote in an e-mail interview with the Daily. See EXHIBIT, Page 7 WEATHER H i. 71 TOMORROW. LO:51 GOT A NEWS TIP? 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