2 Thursday, July 25, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, July 25, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4 ' S K A2 citizens voice concerns over Main Street proposal Lewan's diet and notes from Big Ten Media Days Football Saturday traffic and parking topics of discussion By AARON GUGGENHEIM Managing News Editor After announcing a proposal on July 15 to close Main Street between Stadium Boulevard and Pauline Boulevard during home football games, the University and the Ann Arbor Police Department held a meeting to address the concerns of nearby residents. The street would be closed for three hours before the game and likely open directly afterward, avoiding obstruction of post-game traffic. Six AAPD officers would help with the street closure. The Ann Arbor City Council is scheduled to vote on the proposal at their Aug. 8 meeting. The University and AAPD both said the closure, in accordance with a recommendation from a report by the Department of Homeland Security in 2010, would enhance the safety of pedestrian traffic traveling to and from the games. It would also decrease the likelihood of vehicle bomb threats by putting a 100-foot space between the stadium and vehicles. The streets surrounding the stadium have seen closures for events twice in the past: once when President Barack Obama spoke at the 2010 commencement ceremony and again during the 2011 Notre Dame football game. Two other collegiate football stadiums - at the University of Wisconsin, Madison and Ohio State University - have similar security measures. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com KATIE BURKE MERYL HULTENG Editor in Chief Business Manager CONTACT INFORMATION Newsroom Ofie h2urs 734-763-2459 opt.3 Corinasnun 5io,,, )5ih 5,,:,,yco LetterstothetEditor oth,,ea, :amich,,adYcor or visitmich gatndaily.com letters PhotDepartment ph " ". " "hga"d"l Arts Secto santiun ,,v a ,,5iy.on Editorial Page opini .,n m andailycom SportsSection spor ri;m n,1 il o Magazine statem ent:rn a ily cor Department d i!n ,!.i, Classifieds Phone:734-764-1557 Department clasif irhi andailycom EDITORIAL STAFF Elliot Alpern Managing Editor ttilentn hia aiy~ Aaron Guggenheim Managing News Editor aguggenhaoenn chigandaily coin SENIOR NEWS EDITORS: Amrutha Sivakumar, Tui Rademaker Eric Ferguson Editorial Page Editor opiiioneditors@michigatidailycom SENOREDTORIAL PAGE EDITOR: Mean Mcieonald GregGarno ManagingSportse ditor sportseditors@menin andaily.corn JohnLynch ManagingArtsEditor jplyn mechgandaiycom SENIOR ARTS EDITORS: Kendall Russ, Max Radwin Marlene Lacasne ManagingPhotoEditor eg.,n,@amashg,,ndaiv.o AustinReed Managing Design Editor des"ign dmnch gandaily.c Meaghan Thompson ManagingCopyEditor cope,,@d nihiganda acom BUSINESS STAFF LeahLouis-Prescott Sales Manager By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor CHICAGO - Taylor Lewan may have lied to Michigan coach Brady Hoke before the Big Ten Media Days on Wednesday, the coach says. The fifth-year senior NOTEBOOK left tackle has embarked on a strict diet. He went out for pizza in the city Tuesday night. He told Hoke he would get a salad, though. Temptation proved too much. Lewan's friends "order pizza and wings, I look at that and I'm salivating just looking at it, and I'm excited about it," Lewan said. "I go te Buffalo Wild Wings, and I order a salad and five chicken breasts." Pizza slipup notwithstanding, Lewan has followed his routine with zealous intensity. He eats 12 hard-boiled eggs every day. He eats six cans of tuna fish. He mixes in 12 tablespoons of olive oil. And he can count on one hand the num- ber of times he's broken the diet. "He doesn't eat like me, I could tell you that," said redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner. The All-American, who sur- prised many by returning to Mich- igan for his senior season, said that he has lost five percent body fat since January. In the past 30 days, he says he gained six pounds of muscle and lost one pound of fat. He didn't mention how much his diet is costing him, though. His routine goes like this: Each night, he boils a dozen eggs. He eats six the next morning before his workout, and mixes three with lunch and dinner. Some time after each meal, he eats two cans of tuna. He only eats carbohy- drates (whole wheat pasta) after workouts. And he mixes at least 12 tablespoons of olive oil with the meat and vegetables. Lewan cooks sometimes, but fellow fifth-year senior lineman Erik Gunderson assists. ("I don't know even know what he does, but it's like magic when he touches it," Lewan says.) Hoke confirmed Wednesday that Lewan "must have not been truthful" about the previous night's dinner. One reporter asked him to elaborate on the diet. "I can't," Hoke said with a smile. "Because obviously I'm not dieting." INJURY UPDATE: Michigan's three injured starters have shown encouraging signs this summer. Redshirt junior linebacker Jake Ryan, who has a torn anterior cruciate ligament, has been run- ning, according to Gardner. Ryan sustained the injury in a March 19 practice, and the team set a late-October target return date, which would be an unusually speedy return from an ACL injury. Hoke said Wednesday that he still expects Ryan to resume playing sometime in October. Redshirt sophomore corner- back Blake Countess, who tore his ACL in the first game of the 2012 season, has been cleared for Michigan's first practice on Aug. 5. Gardner said he has resumed nor- mal activities. \, ERIN KIRK.ANDio.ly Fifth-year senior tackle Taylor Lewan's diet would be enough to keep chef Guy Fieri busy, broke and lacking descriptive words. Ann Arbor resident George Feldman, who lives by the stadium, expresses concern about proposed road closures on foo game days this fall at the Ann Arbor District Library on Wednesday. University Police Chief Joe Piersante, who spoke briefly in response to resident's questions about safety concerns, said the proposal was in the best interests of both fans and neighbors. AAPD Police Chief John Seto, who spoke at the meeting and answered questions, said the AAPD supported the measure because of the enhancement of public safety and protection of the pedestrian traffic. "It is a balanced approach for public safety," he said. Seto added that the AAPD and the University Police Department would meet after every game to evaluate how the street closures worked, stressing that the measure would be reviewed after the first three games. He said concerns of opening the section of Main Street up to vendors and the street becoming part of the game day experience was unfounded. "That is not going to happen, we are going to maintain control of that," Seto said. Some residents, many of whom allow fans to pay to use parking spaces in their lots, voiced strong, often angry, opposition to both the process of the proposal and the proposal itself. Many argued that the disrupted traffic patterns would hurt those who parked on their lots. Ann Arbor resident George Feldman, who owns property near the stadium, said this same proposalwas brought up years ago. He said the Athletic Department only cared about the experience of the fans, not the homeowners who live in the neighborhood near the stadium. "It would inconvenience everyone. That's not really in anyone's interests," he said. "It is a better experience for their stadium and it is a worse experience for all of us." Feldman said the security concerns were simply a way to get the proposal passed by the City Council, citing numerous areas he thoughtwere still insecure despite the proposal. "My personal belief is that this is completely bogus," he said. Councilwoman Marcia Higgins (D-Ward 4) said a committee could be formed to represent concerned residents in the next year or two. But she said that she hadn't known the direct desires of her constituents until now. "I haven't had anyone write back and say this is something that (they) would like to see," she said. Gardner also reported that fifth-year senior running back Fitzgerald Toussaint recently beat him in agility drills. Toussaint broke his leg on Nov. 17 in a game against Iowa. "I guess that speaks for itself," Gardner said. "I feel like Fitz is ready to go." NO GARDNER GUARAN- TEE: Gardner refused to walk back his statement in June that Michigan would beat Ohio State when the teams meet in November. Appearing on the "Huge Show" on WBBL 107.3 FM, Gardner said this year's team is one "that will win in the Big House against Ohio State." Some commentators took that as a guarantee. "I never said the word 'guaran- teed' or 'promise,' " Gardner said Wednesday. He said the media had made a big story out of nothing, and added he wouldn't retract what he said. "I wouldn't expect any player from any team to ever answer that question differently," Gard- ner said. "And if they do they don't deserve to be on that football team." DELANYFAVORSINCREAS- ING SPENDING MONEY: Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany talked (and talked and talked) Wednesday as the last speaker of the day. His opening statement alone went 23 minutes - 748 words longer than the longest coach's press conference. He made news on two poten- tially controversial fronts. Delany called for more money in the stu- dent-athletes' pockets for expens- es and for a guarantee of free tuition for all scholarship athletes who leave in good standing. Delany explained that in his last year of college in 1970, he received $15 per month for laundry, in regards to the expenses. The NCAA cut the stipend in 1972 to save money. "But now that we're revisiting 45 years later, it's never too late to do the right thing," Delany said. Delany also introduced his vision for what he called an "edu- cational trust." Under his plan, any student-athlete on a full schol- arship who left a school in good standing would be guaranteed the right to finish school for free. "If you go professional, if you drop out, that we'll stand behind you so when you're ready to get serious or when you have the time, we'll support your college edu- cation degree for your lifetime," Delany said. INJURIES END ANTONIO POOLE'S PLAYING CAREER: Sophomore linebacker Antonio Poole is no longer with the team as a player, the team confirmed Wednesday. Poole will return as a student-assistant after battling injuries for the entirety of his col- lege career. SCORECARD: There are no winners and losers at the Big Ten Media Days, but that doesn't mean we can't declare winners and losers at the Big Ten Media Days anyway. Hoke wins for brevity at slightly less than 93 words per answer. The conference average was 171 words per answer. First-year Wiscon- sin coach Gary Andersen was the most verbose at more than 284 words per answer. Ohio State coach Urban Meyer said the most total words of any coach at 2,604. Delany's opening statement alone was 3,339 words. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published every Thursday during the disc versnew lang age spring and summer terms by students llu ~lre se a ch e rat the Utivensitp of Michigat. Ott copy ' U' researcher discovers new 1anguageEa Additionalcopiesomaybepickedupatthe O'Shannessy People rarely consider the Carmel O'Shannessy had been turn her investigations into a PhD teimy'staig o Se u ptn o s.omal history behind the languages in the Lajamanu community project. ane $tt. Winteteerm (vanuan thnough observes Australian they speak today. But when a new of northern Australia for four Warlpiri Rampaku, or Light April) is $115, yearlong (September language began to form right in years, where she was helping to Warlpiri, is a combination of throughApril)is$195.Universityaffiliates village's speech front of a University linguist's eyes, coordinate a bilingual education Warlpiri - a language spoken Oncampusutoraieductosufrfipll nterm she jumped at the opportunity tobe program. When she began to both in Lajamanu. and other are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. By ARIANA ASSAF one of the few people in history to hear children code-switching, or surrounding villages - Aboriginal The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Daily StaffReporter study the birth of a new language. switching languages within the English and Australian English. i Collegiate Press. Pssstt oinguistics trof. same sentence, she decided to See LANGUAGE, Page 7 1 .I i Ad HUNGRY? A2BELLYDEL.COM 784.68-8888 1317 S. 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