0; 0 Resumes: The story of my life Socrates once said that an unex- amined life is not worth living. He examined his own life deeply - perhaps more deeply than anyone who ever lived. Then he killed himself. There are those who will find this fact difficult to understand. Those people have probably never tried to write a resum6. Most of us early adults - and beyond - are in some way dissatis- fied with our lives. There are things we've wanted to achieve that we never will, and we can't kid our- selves anymore. People younger than you have won Wimbledon and you'll never be able to hit a back- hand without looking like Big Bird. You never went out with that cute kid in your 2nd hour American His- tory class and there aren't any more proms left. You still can't reach that top shelf and you will never get any taller. The little engine can't. But we manage to ignore it. We hold on to the little triumphs as consolation ("OK, so maybe I'll never be elected president - but I drank eleven beers last night without throwing up!"). The fun ends, though, when you work your last job for which the only hiring requirements are things you don't have: namely felony convictions, leprous scabs on any part of your body which you use to handle food, and a predisposition toward putting bodily secretions in the french-fryer. This is where the resum6 comes in. Resumes shatter the illusion. Like Kafka's prisoners having their crimes burned onto their flesh in In The Penal Colony, a resum6 is ac- tual physical proof of how little dif- ference it would have made had you never been born. The life of Christ, set down onto paper, filled hundreds of pages, has been translated into every major language on earth, changed millions of lives, and ended millions of lives. My life, set down on paper, fills one page of 8.5 x 11 paper - if I use New York instead of Palatino font and 13 point type instead of 12 - and altered the course of history for hundreds of pounds of hamburger and refried beans, during the summer I worked at Taco Bell. The realization that summing up your life requires less surface area of paper than it takes to line the aver- age bird cage is, to say the least, disheartening. Even more disheart- ening is the amount of imagination it takes to comes up with even that much. Traditional folk lore holds that the Face of Death is a skull wrapped up in a black cowl. A PN JIM OZIK resum6 writer knows that it is actually a blank Macintosh screen. Inside that robin's-egg blue rectangle is The Void. And as you stare into it, trying to devise a way to make your summer working the Frosty-Kone machine at Dairy Queen sound equivalent to a seat on the board of a Fortune 500 corporation, it changes. It becomes every TV screen you spent hours drooling in front of when you could have been earning vital brownie points in Junior Achievement. As you stare jealously past it at the geek across from you at the com- puting center (who you just know spent last year as the deputy U.S. consul in Algiers and will beat you out for this job, and the one after that - but not the one after that, because by then you'll be too busy drinking yourself into oblivion on cheap hootch to apply for jobs), it becomes every Automatic Teller Machine that will ever be "tem- porarily unable to complete your transaction" because you ain't got no funds to transact, pal. And the slot you dejectedly remove your disk from becomes the mail slot where you'll ship your finished resume off to the next prospective employer, who, like the devil dog Sylvester met in Hell, will laugh uproariously at what a ba-a-ad puddy tat you've been all your life and light a cigarette with it. So is there any hope? Of course not: life is merely a series of disappointments leading to a pathetic and anticlimactic end. Ha, ha! Just kidding! Well, actu- ally, I'm not, but if word got out that anybody offed themselves be- cause I was too depressing, I'd prob- ably lose the column. But you can at least keep in mind that your resume is judged, like many things, by form rather than content. Remember when your gym teacher told you you weren't there to learn to hit a ball, but to learn character? Well, in the same way, your resum6 shows not how much experience you have - it shows whether you're enough of a contemptible, unscrupulous bastard to make it in the real world. Sound complicated? Let me make it simple. L. I. E. Have you ever wondered why they call every distasteful job you've ever shuddered at the thought of doing "honest work"? Because that's where people with the bad fortune to be honest get stuck. The people with "diligence" and "sticktoitiveness" get to take their electroplated gold pocket watches to their early graves. Of course, there is a place for those with genuine talent and intelligence - riding on public transportation systems, muttering conspiracy theo- ries to themselves. But the well-fudged resume is the true key to the executive washroom. Does your resume sound phony? Good. That's the whole point. The truly talented, brilliant applicant is the one who'll steal your job within five years. But the brown-noser who lists the job description for "pool cleaner" as "maintained chemical balance of aqueous biosphere" will be your MVF (Most Valuable Fib- ber) when the Securities and Ex- change Commission starts asking suspicious questions. Ditto for references. A list of three people who can honestly say what a hard worker you are is your ticket to mediocrity. But a list of three people willing to lie for you - creatively - is a valuable business asset. Just ask Ollie North. See PONIEWOZIK, Page 13 wJ HINGTON f SIPE __ Bring in this cartoon and get 2 for 1 on AL PLUS downtown's BEST HAPPY HOUF EVERYDAY-from 4:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., DRAFT BEER $1.00, HOUSE WINE $1.5( LUNCH 663-0070 * DINNER * LATE R PASS sports in the Dick Vitale Garrulous basketball guru and media superstar offers his thoughts on the game he loves 114 E. WASHINGTON i921 69 Winter Sale INTERVIEW I A I r7 - Ooo),f ILr\ SINCE 1989 4LMA L 1 10 years ago... January 20, 1978 University regents lash out at an agreement with the Department of health, Education, and Welfare to monitor the University's afirmative action policy as meddlesome. "We need to get our own house in order," said Regent Sarah Power at the monthly meeting. In the world of music, Johnny Rotten announces that the British punk rock group The Sex Pistols will break up. The news apparently took Pistol bassist Sid Vicious by surprise, as he took an overdose of alcohol and pills on a Los Angeles-New York flight. 75 years ago... January 20, 1924 "The work of dismantling the shrine in the tomb of Tutankhamen is making good progress. Howard Carter was able today to remove the roof of the third shrine to the ante chamber." "I'll admit that the (Ku Klux) Klan is organizing in Ann Arbor but the Klan is not for working out individual spites and is not primarily a destructive organization as The Daily always seems to try to prove but is constructive, working as so many other fraternal organizations for what they consider the best interests of the country." -From a letter to the editor, signed "H.J.K." OFF THE WALL There is no youth culture, only masks they let you rent ''' Good graffiti is a rare thing 12-13-88: Beautiful campus (In response) Shut up & get out of here! ... Dudes of the Universe unite! The Battle Hymn of the Republican: "As he died to make men holy Let us kill men to make them free While Ron is marching on" (In response) Battle Hymn of the Democrats: "Duh, let's raise taxes." It's amazing what people will write on doors when they're anonymous; -Graduate Library A ., y 1 T PP{ /y 7 owe Kn a act, kkAWiNG k cu ING ..yip r KnA Ifyu tno-N-1N KTCA IN s e o TAKE 1C7 Lt WIAT F" f ° (,A, i.tNtc MawusGEIL, " SOM ON& SWW 1111 TT I P y I f 1 Q 00 u AYE SKETCR?Ab E ZINN Dick Vitale has been covering college basketball on ESPN for the past ten years and, more recently, he can also be seen on ABC. Prior to moving into broadcasting, Vitale served as athletic director and basketball coach at the University of Detroit, and coached the Detroit Pistons through their 1977 season. Vitale, his wife, and two teenage daughters currently reside in Bradenton, Florida. Vitale's new book, Vitale: Just your average bald, one-eyed basketball wacko who beat the Ziggy and became a PTP'er, recently moved into Sports Ink's Top 5 list. During a recent trip to Ann Arbor, Vitale discussed his book, issues confronting the game he loves and this season's Michigan basketball squad over dinner with Daily basketball writers Steve Blonder and Adam Schrager. Daily: You have strongly criticized Michigan's non-conference basket- ball schedule. Why is that? Vitale: Michigan is a Rolls-Royce school. The fans deserve better in the month of December. I have nothing against playing the Easterns, the Centrals, the Westerns, but I think you ought to alternate the state schools and sprinkle in there a Syracuse or a UCLA, because you're on the same level. I say this out of great respect for the Michigan players. I know the quality of players you have in Ann Arbor, but games against South Dakota St. and Grambling are booooring. It's an embarrassment, a humiliation. Nobody likes that day in, day out. Frieder always jokes about my schedule at U-D, but at U-D we didn't have the luxury or the ability to schedule who we wanted. The thing I've been trying to compare is my looks and Frieder's looks. He is the one guy in America I am better looking than. D: What is the main problem you see in college basketball today? V: I think you have to look first at Proposition 48. That bothers me dearly. (The player) carries the sign of a stigma around his neck. It's like telling everyone 'I didn't get a 700 on my SAT.' If a player sits out a year, he should be able to practice with the team, and should be allowed to play a fourth year. Athletes in most other sports have five years to play four. A Rumeal Robinson or a Terry Mills, if they are making progress towards a degree, should be able to get that lost year back. It's just not fair. Proposal 42 is absolutely ludicrous, and will open up a whole Pandora's box. It is just discriminatory. There's no question in my mind it discrimi- nates against Black kids. Ninety percent of the people affected are Black. They should have the chance to fulfill their dreams, too. And the way it is now, there are just too many negatives in that respect. See VITALE, Page 12 Our Winter Sale is now in progress and as yc is quite an event. You will save 20 to 50 per( finest clothing, furnishings, and shoes*. Pla? this winter tradition while the selections are al - SALE ENDS JANUARY 28 *Women's shoe sale in our Ann Arbor StorE P Ann Arbor * Clothing - 326 S. State 665-7228 * Shoes - 17 Nickels Arcade 665-7240 9:00-5:30 Mon.-Sat., Fri. 9:00-8:00 D "c 2 9E 9 RAGE 10 WEEKEND/JANUARY 20;1989 WEEKEND/JANUARY 20,1989