Monday Juty 6, 1998S The {Mich~igan Daily - 7 RIDING SHOTGUN By Rick Freeman e Daily Staff Reporter door to Yost Ice Arena stands open, and it's shortly before I1 on a Sunday night in June. Department of Public Safety Officer Mark West stands outside his cruiser waiting for another officer sent by dis- patch to arrive. "You better stay here" West told me. But he's not concerned - burglars rarely prop open doors with orange cones. When the other DPS officer arrives, he cracks a joke, and then they peer into the old barn's cavernous inte- rior. The other officer rests a wary hand on his gun. Sometimes, things aren't as quiet as an empty ice arena in June. Like this past September when more than 25 calls flooded the DPS dispatch- er's board. "I think he's killing her." "She's trying to get up, she can't." Those were just two of the calls that came in from the 2200 block of Stone Drive in the early morning of this past Sept. 23. Kevin Nelson, an Ann Arbor resident, was stabbing his girlfriend, then LSA senior Tamara Williams. A DPS officer arrived in less than three minutes and called for him to stop. When he did not, the officer fired twice, fatally wounding Nelson. Williams, too, died in surgery at University Hospitals. "I don't think there was a police offi- cer in the area whose parents didn't call," West said. Most nights, though, are nothing to write -- or call - home about. The tragedy on North Campus was the first time a DPS officer used dead- ly force in the line of duty. There were protests in 1990 when the University DPS Officers Mark West (right) and Orlando FeatherStone (left) converse with each other. The two officers often patrol the cl y' together. Board of Regents voted to deputize the Oh. "We just checked in" she back of a police cruiser. But it was too department. Protests that a full-fledged replied. late, so she could only laugh and offer police force could cause violent clash- West gave them directions, but a bet- her thanks once again. es. Those protests are long gone, but ter thought occurred to him. Not every encounter with the public not everyone West meets is exactly "You know, if you want I can give is so painless. thrilled to see him. you a ride," West said. "I don't care if you're Joe Homeless People aren't always as happy as the The trio piled in the back of his who just peed down your leg or the trio that flagged him down one night. cruiser, repeating their thanks. When president of the University, I'm going "Can you tell us how to get to the the couple and their teen-age son - to treat you the same," West said. "With Bellflower Hotel?" one asked. visiting the University - were let out respect." "Do you mean the Bell Tower?" West of the back, the mother realized that Even if he has to put up with the rude said. she was returning to her hotel in the treatment that all police officers some- times face. Whether it's a baby-faced 21-year-old miffed at having to prove his age or a sullen teenager sputtering epithets as stale as a week-old donut, "You can't take things personally," West said. "Once you start to take that personally, it's time for you to get out of there." As he passes a group of teenagers piling out of a car in the Church Street parking structure, one does a quick double-take upon spotting the maize- and-blue cruiser. "That's the 'I've got mom's car tonight, and I hope I don't have to tell her that this cop just towed it' look," West said. West gets different looks from dif- ferent people every time he works. He recalled a time when University President Lee Bollinger could not look at him without breaking out in laugh- ter. West was new to the force and Bollinger was new to the University. A newspaper photographer had requested access to the roof of Mason lall to take some pictures of the new president standing atop his new domain. DPS sent West to unlock the stairs to the roof and take Bollinger to the site of the shoot. ""He was being really patient." West said. The photographer made Bollinger stand on a chair and strike all sorts of poses. "And then it started to rain," West said. "But he was a great sport. Here's the new president of the University standing on a chair on the roof of this building in the rain. "And every time he looks at me, he starts to crack up." West said. That's worth writing home about. Pick up the ie ffidbign 4a ft at these drop spots: Fleming Bldg., Rackham, Athletic Dept., ISR, Law Library, Student Publica- tions Bldg., Michigan Union, Angell/Mason (2 sites), Pierpoint Commons (N. Campus), EECS (N. Cam- pus), E. 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