16 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 12, 1997 Good t j FRIDAYFaCUS - JOHN KRAFT/Daily LSA sophomore Robert McPeak (left), his current roommate Jason Padley (right) and former roommate Brian Galvin (hidden), enjoy playing video games in their West Quad residence hall room. and t he \ s A djusting to campus life means more than buying books and find- ing classes. University students learn to live with their best friend or worst enemy when they accept the roommate challenge. The Odd Couple Many University students room blind during their first year, not knowing who they will live with. Some students said the experience was their most difficult on campus, but taught them how to handle personal differences. The story of LSA sophomore Stacey Weber's roommate could have been taken from "The Odd Couple." Her roommate wouldn't take down phone messages, Weber said. "No one believes me when I tell them about her, that someone like that existed," Weber said. "The whole experience was a nightmare." Selective message taking became a method of control over her social life, Weber said. "If she didn't like a guy I was seeing she wouldn't tell me he called," Weber said. "She did everything you could possibly do to be a bad roommate." Weber said her friends were hesitant to visit her dorm room because the room was literally in shambles. Her roommate never unpacked her belongings. "You really can't picture the mess," Weber said. "I had friends down the hall, and I would often sleep over their room so I wouldn't have to deal with my room- mate." Weber said that after two weeks of liv- ing with this roommate, she knew she had a problem. "Things went downhill fast," Weber said. "You can't believe someone like this existed." Weber's former roommate brought a cat as an unwelcome addition to their room. She added that the roommate Was not a bad person, but they just didn't get along. "I really think she is a good person, but she wasn't a good roommate," Weber said. Weber said she should have taken action earlier in the year, but feared it would create tension between them. "I should have laid down the law from the beginning," Weber said. "No beating around the bush." Lookiig back, Weber advised present roommates to communicate and talk about their problems. "Communication is key," Weber said. "Talk to your roommate and put down ground rules of what you need, however difficult." Weber said there were many issues that should have been discussed. "We were angry with each other and never discussed it," Weber said. "Part of being at school is about learning to get along with people." LSA sophomore Daniel Serna remem- bers his previous roommate as having very "weird ideas on society." But Serna and his roommate didn't resolve their differences, and went sepa- rate ways after a fight last November. Serna and his friend were playing an Internet game when the roommate walked into the room and demanded to check his e-mail. "I told him to just wait until I left and he could have it," Serna said. "He went to try and unplug my computer, and I put my hand out to stop him." The two then exchanged words and began to shove one another. "(My roommate) fell down, and then he got up in a karate stance," Serna said. "He ended up calling the Ann Arbor police. They came over and he filed a report." Serna left for a crew team race that weekend. When Serna got back, the room- mate had left and moved into another room. "I don't know the exact detaik of it. hut I think he had consented (to leave)," Sema said. Serna said his roommate was disliked by most of his hallmates. "(My roommate) didn't think women should go out in public or wear bathing suits," he said. "He was constantly ram- bling before he'd go to bed. I'm a Catholic and I'd didn't appreciate the way he expressed himself against my beliefs and my religion," Serna said. This year, Serna said he was displaced from his first room choice, but given lee- way to live with two other friends in West Quad residence hall. Serna said he enjoys the new living situation and bonds with his roommates by watching Monday night football together. But not all situations end as dramatical- ly as Serna's. "We had personal clashes," LSA sopho- more Crystal Johnson said of her former roommate. "I didn't really respect her - our morals were very different." Johnson said her roommate was an "Internet addict." "She stayed up on the computer until 2 a.m. every night," Johnson said. Johnson and her roommate eventually spoke with their resident adviser, but noth- ing "really got resolved", she said. Eventually, Johnson moved into a differ- ent room with someone she knew. Johnson now lives with two friends and said she's much happier with the arrange- ment. RAs are advised to tell students to work out their problems, said West Quad RA Jordan Stylogout. "We ask they try to deal with their prob- lem before coming to us," said Stylogout, an LSA junior. "It's really hard to get a room change, especially with the over- booking this year." Stylogout said most of the disagree- ments are over little things. "A lot of students transgress cultural and racial differences," said Stylogout. "But their problems come from inherent differences and personalities." The Phantom While roommates can constantly battle each other, some students live together in a more quiet atmosphere. They hardly see their "phantom roommate" - someone who keeps all their stuff in the room, but rarely stays there. LSA sophomore Rob McPeak said his phantom roommate had strange idiosyn- crasies. LSA sophomore Brian Galvin lived down the hall from McPeak and his quirky roommate. "He would come home late at night and blast Metallica," Galvin said. "During the day, he would turn on Metal lica as loud as he could, and then leave for class while leaving the music on." McPeak said he liked his roommate's odd quirks, and he was a good person at heart. "I knew from the beginning he was a lit- tle different," Mcpeak said. "The second day of classes, he pulled an all nighter.... He is goofy." He is the nicest guy you ever want to meet.", Galvin said McPeak's roommate had a lot of character, despite somne odd traits. "He was the greatest guy," Galvin said. "The fact that hewas different gave him ing in Ann Arbor. "He would fill five glasses of milk at dinner and take a sip from each one," Mcpeak said. Brody said he also faced an unusual roommate situation. His former roommate kept a cloth bag hanging from the loft, which he never allowed anyone to rum- mage through. "No one was allowed to look in the bag," Brody said. "We used to gather around it. I never found out what was in the bag." Ironing out diffrences Not all roommate relations resemble the makings of a Saturday Night Live sketch. Some actually like each other. LSA sophomore Andrea Lipps said she considers her former roommate. LSA sophomore Lacey Hillman, to be one of her best friends. "I loved my roommate," Lipps said. "We just clicked from the very begin- ning." Lipps said first-year students have to take in consideration that their room- mates may come from a different back- ground. "You have to be tolerant of those differ- ences," Lipps said. "We are even talking of living together again." For Engineering first-year students Matt Liston and Nikhil Shoorji, coming to cam- pus brought them together. "I didn't think (Nikhil) would be much of a partier, but he stays out later than me," Liston said. Both Liston, a Michigan native, and Shoorji, who recently moved from Bombay, India, decided to room blind. They said they were somewhat sur- prised about having each other .for roommates. "I just had to get to know (Matt)," Shoorji said. "He's quite friendly and I didn't expect that." LSA first-year student Nicholas Yu'also lives with Shoorji and Liston in South Quad residence hall, and moved to the U.S. from Hong Kong in 1983. Yu said he had a chance to speak with both of his roommates before meeting them. "Nikhil said he was from Bombay and did not come to America that often,'' Yu said. "I talked to Mart alot, and I thought he was cool guy before I really met him." Despite their differences in culture, the roommates said they enjoy similar pas- times. For example, all three agreed that "Mallrats" is their favorite movie. "We have a lot of common interests," Liston said. "The same taste in movies and music." 0 0 0 I