lNE-li UNlD E IW EN TY T 1111 Iii OF I IED4 Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, November 30, 2011 CAMPUS SAFETY LSAin process of Mcard switch System for new after-hours building access to take effect on Jan. 9 By RAYZA GOLDSMITH Daily Staff Reporter Come January, LSA students shouldn't leave their Mcards at home if they want to access cam- pus buildings after-hours. The University will complete its transition to the new Mcard system on Jan. 9, when after- hours access to all LSA buildings will be restricted to students and faculty who have the new smart Mcards. The new Mcards can be identified by the image of a key on the front of the cards. Diane Brown, spokeswoman for the University's Department of Public Safety, said only stu- dents, faculty and staff who need to enter certain buildings after- hours need to get a new Mcard. Many people, for example, only use their Mcards for access to Ann Arbor Transportation Authority buses, Brown said. "If (students) don't have any need for after-hours access to academic buildings, then they're fine with their existing cards," Brown said.'If they happen to be See MCARD, Page 3A michigandailycom STATE LEGISLATION Keg sales down at A2 stores since ew tag law Princeton University Prof. Cornel West speaks about race at Rackham Auditorium yesterday. West discusses issues of race in America In last month, retailers started attaching customer information to kegs By ANDREW SCHULMAN Daily StaffReporter State Rep. Mark Meadows (D-East Lansing) has received one e-mail since Michigan's keg tag law took effect Nov. 1. State Rep. Jeff Irwin (D-Ann Arbor) has not had to respond to a single comment from a keg retailer or a potential buyer - supportive or critical - over that time. Neither has Bob West, assistant city attorney of Ann Arbor. But in some Ann Arbor stores that sell kegs, owners have field- ed an overload of questions from customers unaware of the new law, which mandates that retail- ers attach tags with customers' personal information - includ- ing their state ID numbers - to all kegs sold. Angry customers and the loss of sales at some locations over the past month have caused some lawmakers to question the law's effectiveness. At Strickland's Market on Geddes Avenue, the drop in keg sales inthe pastmonthexceeded owner Eddie Galyana's expec- tations of a 10-to-15-percent decline. Galyana said he has sold about 10 fewer kegs this month than he did in October, citing customers' unfamiliarity with and anxiety about the new law. "People are still buying, but they're buying less," Galyana said. "And when they are buying they're thinking twice, like, 'I don't want to give my informa- tion .. to the state.'" Galyana added that though the law has not dissuaded any customers from buying kegs while in the store, most have seemed uncomfortable with the new purchasing requirements. At the same time, Galyana sus- pects some customers have chosen not to buy kegs due to unease about the availability of their information to state offi- cials. As part of the law, records of keg sales must be available for at least one year for police to inspect at random. See KEG, Page 3A Princeton prof. gives opening talk at Making Race Heard Summit By SABIRA KHAN Daily Staff Reporter As activist and Princeton University Prof. Cornel West told a crowd yesterday, talking honestly about race isn't easy. "Things have to get a little bit different. Things are going to get a little bit funky," West told a crowd of about 700 stu- dents and other University members gathered in Rack- ham Auditorium last night. West - who has written 19 books and has been fea- tured on CNN and The Col- bert Report - was invited to give the opening address of the 2011 Making Race Heard Summit, which was spon- sored by the University's School of Social Work Student Union. The event marked the beginning of a two-day sum- mit about racial discourse that will continue on Friday. In his address, West argued that discussions about race are both conversations about white supremacy and dia- logues about its effect on the way members of minority See WEST, Page 3A PLAYING FOR CHANGE UNIVERSJTY RESEARCH New coating by'U'researchers makes 3-D objects look invisible Carbon nanotube flattens appearance of matter By CLAIRE GOSCICKI Daily StaffReporter The famous invisibility cloak of the Harry Potter series may one day be a reality thanks to a new object-coating tech- nique developed by University researchers. The coating - a thin layer of carbon nanotube about half the thickness of a sheet of paper - can be applied to objects to render their three-dimensional properties invisible. Jay Guo, a University professor of electri- cal engineering and computer science, was the primary inves- tigator on the study, which was recently published in thesci- entific journal Applied Physics Letters. Guo explained that the coat- ing conceals objects in a way that makes them appear as black, flat sheets. "The carbon nanotube layer is a perfect absorber; it absorbs all light," he said. "All of the detailed structures of the object become invisible." While the ability of the carbon nanotube material to absorb light is well-known throughout the scientific com- munity, Guo and his research team - including Haofei Shi, a University research fellow of electrical engineering and com- puter science, and Rackham students Hyoung Won Baac and Jong Ok - discovered the most efficient way to space the tubes to achieve the highest degree of invisibility. The coating's suc- cess depends on the limitations of the human eye, Guo said. "Looking at an object, the reason you can perceive it is because of light, (which) is See INVISIBLE, Page 3A LSA senior Judah David deals cards at a World AIDS Week event yesterday at the Trotter Multicultural Center MiCHI ANdSTaU aNTlAb M LY More funding available for student groups Hillel aims to bring Israel fellow to'U' MSA resolution allocates $15,000 more for student - organizations By RAYZA GOLDSMITH Daily Staff Reporter Student groups could see a boost in funding with the budget amplification of the Michigan Student Assembly's Student Organization Funding Commission. The Student Assembly, MSA's legislative body, passed a resolution at the MSA meet- ing last night to transfer $15,000 from the Commission Discretionary account to the Student Organization Funding Commission, which is respon- sible for allocating money to student organizations. MSA President DeAndree Watson said he approves of the resolution's passing. " think that's great that we were ahle to find $15,000 in other places within the orga- nization to devote to funding student organizations, so I'm excited to see that that passed," Watson said. MSA's Finance Committee has approved the transfer, but LSA sophomore Christopher Osborn, Finance Committee chair, said he wanted to bring the resolution before the entire assembly to increase its trans- See FUNDING, Page 3A Jewish organization vies for $10,000 from local federation By KATIE BURKE Daily StaffReporter University of Michigan Hillel is looking to add a new member to the international community on campus next year: a fellow from Israel. But Hillel has to secure the funding to sponsor the fellow first. Hillel is awaiting the deci- sion of the Jewish Federation of Ann Arbor on a $10,000 grant proposal. The fellow would work for one year on campus and in the greater Ann Arbor area and would come from the Jewish Agency for Israel's Campus Israel Fellows program. The Jewish Federation will finance two grant proposals as part of its 2012 Impact Fund, which was started this year to help finance local projects. Ann Arbor residents have until today to vote for two of 23 proposal sub- missions. Davey Rosen, Hillel's assis- tant director, wrote in an e-mail See HILLEL, Page 3A - ----------- WEATHER HI: 39 GOT A NEWS TIP? SE AT al734-418-4115 or e-mail TOMORROW aO2 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. NIW wON MICHIh;ANDA.Y.-M LSA senior wins Marshall scholarship MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE WIRE INDEX AP NEW S...................2A ARTS ....................5A Vol. CXXII, No. 58 NEWS ..................3A SPORTS........ ......7A 02011TheMichiganDaily OPINION..........4A THE STATEMENT... ....1B michigsndailycom *1