4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 28, 2000 iuosbwde S id~igFan & ilg For a good time, call 414-466-MIKE 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 daily. letters@umich.edu Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan MIKE SPAHN Editor in Chief EMILY ACHENBAUM Editorial Page Editor Unless otherwise noted, unsioned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All'other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. Advising blues LSA Office is ineffective Lately there has been an outreach program taking place in cinema. It moves beyond Websites with static content about the facts of a film. Those are old hat in our eBay-addled world. I'm thinking bigger. I'm thinking of expanding the fun to be. had through supple- mental materials long after the movie is over. I'm thinking of Mike Schank.£ Mike Schank is a real person. He is a sup- porting presence inM "American Movie," which will soon be available on home video. Although it's a Erin documentary, it is to the genre what "The Blair Polsky Witch Project" is to fic- You W111 tional film: So outra- S geously real you refuse y to believe it's true until you're faced with hard facts proving that, yes, Mike Schank and his wannabe-filmmaker pal Mark Borchardt (the main subject of "Ameri- can Movie") do indeed exist. What drives the reality of "American Movie" home is www americanmovie.com. Here not only can you track Borchardt's sales of "Coven," a low-budget horror flick he moves heaven and earth (and palimony) to make under the watchful eye of the "Ameri- can Movie" crew, but you, can check back each day to see how many days Mike Schank has been sober. By the time you read this, he'll have been on the wagon for 1699 days. Despite being interesting, especially when you've seen Mike Schank in all his Min- nesotan glory, this is not interactive. The inter- activity, the edification, stems from Mike Schank's availability to me, the consumer. His phone number is right above where the Web- site updates his sobriety-meter. 414-466- MIKE. There he is, Mike Schank, available to the world at large for questions of small and large importance. The next time I need to make meatloaf. I could call Mike and ask for advice. Want to know who's going to win the Superbowl next year? Call Mike Schank. Trouble with your girl?.Call Mike Schank. Obviously this only works for a documen- tary, and it would be pretty tough to swing if it were an expose of, say, some telephoneless tribe in Namibia. But Mike Schank's phone is the beginning of something big. I can feel it. You see him in the movie, and then you can actually talk to the guy if you so desire. Reach out and touch someone, indeed. "Magnolia," also recently in and out of theatres, has an associated phone number much like Mike Schank's. It's just an outgoing message. In the film, Frank T.J. Mackey (Tom Cruise) does infomercials for his "Seduce and Destroy" sex seminar series. The phone num- ber flashes on the screen-within-a-screen sev- eral times during the course of the film. It is not, as the grand majority of phone numbers shown in the movies are these days, the non- existent 555 exchange. That would not be suf- ficient for the Mackey lady mack. The number? 1-877-TAME-HER. On a lark, I called the number. I didn't expect it to pick up. But it did; it picked up and suddenly Frank T.J. Mackey, or Tom Cruise, or whatever you want to call him, was talking in my ear. To me. Telling me he guaranteed, money-back guaranteed, to get me "that naughty sauce," the "yum-yum" I deserved. After several minutes of "Seduce" spiel, the line dumped to a voicemail box that claimed to be full. I didn't care. I was laughing too hard. I called back about once a week over the next few months, and each time the message was different. Sometimes it was just a snippet of the "Seduce and Destroy" banter, some- times the seminar attendees roaring, "Respect the cock and tame the cunt!" Sadly, the phone number is now dead. I'd like to think it was running out of writer/direc- tor Paul Thomas Anderson's house, with the impresario changing the message ever few days to entertain his most devoted fans. People say the telephone is a dying tool of society. I used to agree. There's something simpler, less intimidating about text on a screen than an actual human voice. But sometimes words aren't enough. They're are all well and good, but they can't replace the echo in my head when I imagine a line from a movie. "It's the one that says 'bad motherfucker."' Try reading that without hear- ing Samuel L. Jackson taste those words like fine wine in "Pulp Fiction." I dare you. Maybe these two auditory incidents will come and go as their screen counterparts did at the box office. Maybe it's just one more way that Hollywood is trying to get me to buy something, anything, their manufactured dream, their soft-sold crap. I'd like to think it's not a fluke. Mike Schank is real. But he's got real needs, too, as I discovered when I called him and got his answering machine. "Hi, this is Mike Schank from 'American Movie.' Please leave a message. And don't forget to buy a copy of my audio cassette on americanmovie.com with 11 original songs by me plus all the songs in "American Movie" for only $6. Bye!" Sigh. Even Mike Schank is selling some- T he recent proposal to merge under- graduate School of Natural Resources and the Environment into the College of Science, Literature and Arts has caused some debate amongst SNRE students. This merger is intend- ed to combat the declining enrollment and budgetary problems SNRE is fac- ing. But why is this merger putting SNRE students in such opposition? They are worried about losing the per- sonal attention and smaller, more focused quality of SNRE - and with good reason. One need not look further than the Office of LSA Advising for an example of alienation. The problems with advising range from lack of individual attention to not enough staff. The vast majority of LSA students do not have a relationship with a regular advisor who can cater to their personal needs and has enough back- ground knowledge to help advise on important issues. LSA advising seems to think that this is not their role -- and such an attitude makes it very easy for students to fall through the cracks. Students can be faulted for not seeking out advisors, but advisors should be more aggres- sive. It should be their job to check in on the students they are assigned with some frequency. The lack of an advisor can make CRISPing an especially stressful time. When it hits a few days before registra- tion, hell breaks loose in the advising office. This chaos can be blamed caused on the walk-in policy, which in theory should be helpful, but students - who have odd schedules by nature - can find themselves waiting an hour. The amount of time spent with the advisor does not always prove worth the wait, considering students are hur- ried in and out of the office as fast as possible. It is not the quality of the advisors that is the problem, but more like a quantity issue. There aren't enough advisors on duty to serve the needs of the students on a daily basis, and especially days before CRISPing. The lack of staff also leads to prob- lems in making appointments with advisors during the school year. If the advisors are supposed to be there to help the students in time of academic stress and turmoil it is imperative that the advisors are accessible. But stu- dents find out very quickly that their problems better be able to wait at least a week because the advisors are always booked full. Advisors are also giving open-ended advice. College is a time of indepen- dence and becoming an adult, but the University can be overwhelming and confusing. We need someone who knows the endless rules and require- ments of LSA and can understand its red-tape frustrations. In all honesty, a little hand-holding is needed. This does not only apply to first-year students. There is a reason some juniors don't have a major and seniors have no clue whether they should go to graduate school. All LSA students want is a place where one per- son knows their name and will take a chunk of time to speak with them when they walk in. Advising must increase their staff and their involvement in student's lives. Too much attention is far better than too little. 0 thing. - Erin Pbdolsky can be reached via e-mail at oppsie@umich.edu. CHIP CULLEN GR.NDNG THE NIB iiea terenson Tor MSA President '01! To THE DAILY: We have just gone through another MSA election season, and as usual, scan- dals and meaningless campaigns have marked the process. The allegations regard- ing Wolverine Party misconduct come as no surprise to me. I suppose that the rest of the nation didn't get out to vote for DAAP either; I thought it was a matter of "nation- al importance"? Apparently not. In future election seasons. I suggest my fellow stu- dents join me in voting for Red Berenson for MSA President. If two national champi- onships and the fourth-most victories in NCAA history aren't enough, he could at the very least run MSA without scandal. Berenson and his assistant Mel Pearson had my votes for MSA President and Vice- President last week, along with Northern Michigan hockey mascot Wildcat Willy and New Hampshire hockey mascot Wild E. Cat for Engineering representatives. LARRY HARVILLA ENGINEERING SOPHOMORE Halperin's course right step for 'U' To THE DAILY: Right now I'm embarrassed to call myself a conservative. Writers like Mike Carrier are making us all look bad. In par- ticular, Carrier's viewpoint, "Homosexuali- ty is a 'learned' lifestyle," (3/24/00) is about as bigoted as they come. Carrier is 100 percent correct that homosexuality is 0 ' t LiANTE9 Ira Re MAE '' AT 4.30 lp e..... . of8"c o +4rc4Q~e% Qca 4e " ow Izzol smart move Students should be encouraged not to riot Consider this scenario: After a bas- ketball game, thousands of fans and other students in a college town gather in the streets and cause serious damage. Police come and use tear gas while frustrated people are injured or damage property. Think this describes the riots one year ago at Michigan State University? True, but it also serves as a description of last Friday's riots at Iowa State University, Universi- ty of Wisconsin and Purdue University. Campus rioting should not be tolerated - by the police or by the students themselves. It is not the proper way to celebrate an athletic victory and it reflects poorly upon the university involved. After last year's embarrassing disas- ter in East Lansing, Michigan State basketball coach Tom Izzo issued a statement to all MSU students encour- aging them to be the "sixth man" on the team by supporting their school in a positive manner. The respected coach's message seems to be working - although the campus is crawling with cops, East Lansing has remained burn- ing-couch-free as their the Spartans inch towards the championship and "we're a sixth man" banners can be seen hanging from the porches of stu- dents' houses. Izzo and the MSU administration know the worst effect of campus rioting is the cloud it leaves over a university. The University of Wisconsin, Purdue University and Iowa State University will be misinterpreted by the public due to the actions by a minority. All students need to remember that their actions reflect not only upon them- selves, but upon the school as a whole. One might think college students nationwide would learn from last year's rioting that destructive behavior is not the proper way to celebrate a team's victory. But this was not the case. Eleven students were arrested - seven at the Ames, Iowa campus of Iowa State, four at the West Lafayette, Indi- ana campus of Purdue. Crimes ranged from public intoxication to theft. Like the latest Woodstock, crowds, alcohol and frustration combined to cause trou- ble. Aggression reigned over common sense. Like the debatable actions by law enforcement last year in East Lansing, this year's riots have been handled with excessive force: The 40 officers at Pur- due used tear gas on students. With competitive bracket pools and amazing upsets - hello Gonzaga - March Madness is a lot of fun. But it does not have to mean lunacy at the expense of a school's reputation or student safety. If the students were true fans of the game, they would demonstrate their appreciation for the team in non-vio- lent ways and be a "sixth man." As police continue to investigate the insti- gators of last year's MSU riot, students at colleges across the country - not just those remaining in the NCAA bas- ketball tournament - should consider how their behavior affects public per- ception of their university. learned to an extent; however, I am sure that Carrier did not venture forth from his mother's womb intrinsically knowing the history and cultural practices of the Irish people (to quote his ludicrous example) without someone teaching him; this does not make him any less Irish. Gay men do not typically have the oppor- tunity to learn about gay lifestyle from their (heterosexual) parents; furthermore many parents for some reason feel the need to "pro- tect" their children from the "bad influence" of gay men - usually their neighbors, co- workers, cousins or siblings. Others claim that Prof. Halperin's class will recruit and ini- tiate teens into homosexual lifestyles. I ask, what is wrong with that? If their aim is to protect teens from "dangerous" lifestyle choices that have come to be associated with homosexuality, then they should be glad that these teens will have an opportunity to learn about cul- tural aspects of being gay in an enlight- ened, intellectual University setting instead of having to go it alone on the mean streets, as it were. I'd rather see a gay- or bi-curi- ous teen learning about gay lifestyles in a college classroom than a dance club bath- room (how I hate to invoke stereotypes ...). The dangers of being gay are largely a result of the fear, loathing and oppression that the LGBT community has experienced his- torically. Halperin's course is another step in the right direction to correcting those wrongs and helping gay men to feel comfortable with themselves. If others don't like it then they shouldn't take the class. I applaud the LGBT community for all the work they have done on this campus and I urge them and the rest of the University community to get angry and fight bigots like Carrier. I'm a straight guy who normally finds campus activism a bit annoying, but you'll find me standing beside you, yelling and screaming or what- ever it is we need to do. DAVID JORDAN ENGINEERING SENIOR 0 Note to campus liberals- Look on the bright side George Will recently wrote that one major difference between liberal and conservative citizens of the United States is that, in the end, liberals focus on negative aspects of the nation, while conservatives tend to stay positive. This statement is, among other things, a bit too simple and generalized at the same time to merit too much attention. But it is worth a passing thought, and my own passing thought on the $ matter produced a ,,< small admission. Liberal messages are, more times than not, criticisms of peo- J ple or policies. Con- Josh servative messages are Cowen often beliefs - in E pai God, in country, in small government, and Mine so on. A person can- not believe against something, but rather in something - a right or a wrong. A belief is, therefore, inherently positive, however nega- tive the outcome (and it often is). So, along these lines, I offer this column And that building still stands. It stills shields its citizens from the horrors of war and despotism. It's health keeps us fed and edu- cated. It is a system implicitly designed for constant self-evaluation, which means it gets better every day. Be happy. You live in a nation that allows freedom unheard of. Republicans Generally a spiteful bunch, in your eyes, and it is difficult for me to disagree. But even their message carries tones of tolerance and inclusiveness today. Anyone can learn. Have faith! Democrats An imperfect group of varied interests- teachers, labor unions, minorities, women, academics and such-somehow keeps its eyes on the prize: Commanding the issues of the day. On health care, the environment, educa- tion, gun control, to name a few, Democrats hold majority support. Many of the most active students actually hatenthe Democrats because they believe the party has "sold out." "Sold out" is the naive way of saying someone was being practical. Practicality is the first step toward accomplishment. The University The intellectual vitality of this communi- ty exists in a few clusters spread sporadical- ly across the planet. Its faults are protected and improved upon. But he knows that takes time. Lee Bollinger is the captain of this ship, and the responsibility for its direction lies :n his hands. But we're going the right way, I'm happy to say, despite a few rough waters. Give the president a break. He's a good man and the best friend you have. The Armed Forces A favorite target of student liberals. But those that make our military into devils miss the crucial point. We do not live in a peace- ful world. I believe we will someeday,sbut until that day comes democracy needs an arsenal to protect itself. Our men and women in uniform may someday be called upon to give their lives to protect your right to stand in the middle of the Diag and criti- cize them. If you can't see that bright side, you won't see anything. Human Beings It seems silly to mention, because liber- als who fight for peace and justice do so to better humanity, which means they love it. But they don't often trust it. This mistrust is the root of negativity. To help people, you must trust them. You must know your invest- ment in them will pay off. Humanity is a wonderful and unique entity. If you believe in a higher power, you have to see humanity 0 0 0 t a