'a h l 1, "1 1 am . Alb Aft 1 - The Michigan Daily - eekend, etc. Magazine -Wursday, December 2.199 U a 0 0 a a The Michiga aily - Weekend, etc. Mag ne' Thursday, DecembA , 1999 - 78 BANDS back in terms of musical tastes than Continued fromPage51Detroit, where he's used to playing. Contnuedfro Pag 5BUnger aaid the atmosphere haa varied "There's so much good talent that's throughout the different campuses, not recognized. You have to have ranging from 1500 people on Friday money," Ramadan said. Lott added that night shows to 40 people on nights like in such a commercial industry as today's the one in the U-club. music business, there are "a lot of "It all balances out, though," Unger unsung heroes" that can only be discov- said, providing another perspective. ered with support of events such as this "When people are drunk and trying to tour. get laid, they can't really focus on what Pianist Ben 'onas of amb. who e're handing out or saving," he said, organized engith Messenger the main focus of the tour is to Records by contacting the mix of lcal get out there and communicate with bands and lending most of his equip- bands and students about self-promo- ment to the musicians, said that -he tion. University does not help much in tens Messenger Records has also released of supporing live music. a compiion"rlbum inncojncin "The U frowns y u ch withthouri "Wouldn'I Be as this because hy -ik smpnies B htTs: sip syricS will try to setrfis off iTudens;' <7,_ nd msic ofn Adam Elk's track, "No Yonas. "But the reason for the event is One Gives a Damn (AboutYifur Band ' self-promotion, to help local music" is iot only te tour mon o, bit can he Yonas added thtteU, we s An sad to b hrceitco h opl- Arbor, is "seruggbing fo nue: p-s a sf A n-fri s vreyf orally forthe -.rmaz /hi-hop fusian ! ,.?e ":You car-'- _iefarnhe siiidstyin oCcai'n"a '"'w;iningand spoulting bcats school," said the Schoni of Music and of rock And po to the arongof folk Economics senior, voi cg C pints lrics pic or7yic, the coimpilation on the lack of %opp jmmities the U pro- alum serves'as an appr priatE'comLe:i?- vides. "The U-Club has horiTe ment to the tour. acoustics, hut it's the only place we Variety is the goal, with no single could have the concert. Also, the lackof track framed for destiny as a hit. Chis a bar thing is also Yonas said of Whtlev, whose Messengeralu old the policies on alcohel in University mor C; piestan his Sonyalbur, also buildings afer 8pr, s ggsting It a live recording frm the would be a;mach busier a=Mospe if mki ttig Factoryin NYC. The album students of age could get a dnnk or two opens with an intro from Timothy while listening to the bands. "Speed- Levitch, blurting out sarcasm Cowal also added that colege towns tingled with foodfor thought, such as "I seem to like listenng to "anythig you just want to be the grandeur ofall onni- can drink beer to" saying that Ann scut uselessness in this society gone Arbor also seems to be a bit more laid mad withcon"e Gathered from the response at the U- Club the Sunday evening before Thanksgiving break, U students as both RTRO THR EADS musicians and audience members seem to think that the "No OneGivesaDa n A E. About Your Baad" tour and its message NEW LEATHER JACKETs s-S isa ing e " .ethet. Movies of the Decade - #2 DetsLinked to Medical Errors - Stephen King's story finds Redemp tion' as classic film Washington Post As many as 98,000 Americans die unnecessarily every year from medical. mistakes made by physicians, pharma- cists and other health care professionals, according to an independent report released vesterday that calls for a major SverahSn of bow the nation addresses Yet hercreas dOf the U.S. econ- aks withn fve eat , Aa _acsdel'. r AIDSt accoringe. the repo rt .hs e ofM deaths Sear ra edicabl a cApyr hafctienesrThat sste aid ms 9 organizatiy hae canress siuf oer- in. aresergroa sinccshe ldely repoed e ife Bothe eath o.lemn oy haorandhoadiaedy frogrms a co w hanpyovle dhient,1995. su inpuge ot a rc ulerratr Seveald edt, iwcrashsdp dbliclicy orisatins, hedess eth izdsseof frkpias nmedical errors sicahnidl eotd deasuhhof sstnGem welthncplumnt "ets ehsmnighy iefraofm a- chmoteamipy uoveprdose in 995.d-u experts said the prestige of the National Academy of Sciences, and in particular its specific proposal to create a federal office to oversee medical accident trends and devise strategies for prevention, could spur real change. "There's not a controversy here," said David Eddy, a senior adviser to the Pasadena-based health maintance orga-. nization Kaiser Permanente Southern California and an expest in evidence- based medicine. "It's an ideal opprtuty to increase quality and decrease costs." Me dlcaerrors can range from a si- pIe misc1mmunication about a drug's name a telephone call between a do r anda nurse to the erroneous pro- grammng of a complex medical deice at the end of a busy hospital night shift. They :inc_'?ude wrong diagnoses fr-: mislabeled Mood tubes,mistak treat- ments because of poorly labeled drugs, improperdosing becauseoffaalty caleu- lations and a simple lack ofcomunica- tion as a patiesnt gets passed from one providerrto the next. To address the wide range of prob- lemsthe report calls for -ana t fed- eral reporttng requirements for serious medical accidents. And it calls upon Congess tocreate and fund a nin patient safety center -within the Department of Health and Human Services, which would be charged with developng better systems for tracking and preventing patient injuries. The report also suggests that minor medical errors that have not resuted in serious injuriesor death be colected in a confidential database, not available for public review. The hope is that by reduc- ing health care provider'slegal expose and the risk of lawsuits, doctors, hospi- tals and others may be more open about their errors, and thus give theation a chance to learn from their mistakes. "Safety is a cultural nater and unless you create a cultural emiroment in which it becomes safe to talk ab" errors and near misses, you can't get to work on the root causes of error," said Donakd M. Berwick, a Harvard professor of health care policy and president of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, a not-for- profit educational and research organiza- tion, who was one of 19 experts who worked on the report. . "You can't use-fear or blaming of indi- viduals as a foundation for safety improvement," Berwick said. "We want to set up an environment where more CiTors will be revealed."? The report concltides that most errors are not the result of flagrant recklessness but occur because of the cumulative opportunitles for huaneorIal arise in today's complex medical system. Most a~r mdicaion e r,7- wik said. "People can get the wrong drug or thec wrng dose, or they e. i_'02 $ief w orit's gi ngn o the Part of the problem is that many new drg aesmlarnamie, whcar1es- Shfused n -drarge y vo rae handwrten W . -;'.;*;Z'.~ poy nart be ehn g thQ ,,a tcas ben FIDA has crested a "miedicalroers group" with the explicit job ofprevent- in iication errorshey aitetegien new package designs and proposed namaes for new drugs to mnake sure the air not trao similar to existing ones. In somre cases, companies are also address- ing the problem, Hong said. Recent ads in medical journals from the makers of the arthritis drug Cellbo, for exmpe warn doctors not to confuse their jwod- uct with the anti-seizue drug Cerebyx or the aniepesatCelexa. Most serious mstaakes occur in busy settings such as emergency rooms and intensive care units, according to the report. In some cases they occur because medicines are kept in stock at concent-a tions known to be toxic, when they p - abNy should be stared in the diluted forms in which they are intended to be given. .a v Of i By Laura Flyer Daity Arts Witer "These walls are funny. First you hate them. Then you get used to them. After time passes, you get so's you depend on them."You can almost see the actor who spends these thun- derous yet indulgently simple phras- es without even knowing for certain. Who ele but Moan Freeman, Nog here taking on the roe of Red the exemplary inmate of Shawshank prison. Red only grows wiser as the time sweeps by through his inter- minable stay in jail. Forty years locked up can, as he learns, turn the w aito an addictive drug where coming "clean" seems frightening and, in some cases, unbearable. That is the central tesion in diec- tor Frank Darabonts moving 1994 film, "The Shawshank Redemption" Ellis Redding (Freeman), nicknamed "Red" by his fellow inmates "maybe because I'm Irish," narrates the film. Freeman places his pars to some degree in the background of a rore auspicious character, Andy Dufresne (Tim Robbins). Andy comes to rep- resent the stitch of hope Red can cling to when his impending "fear" becomes an inevitability "Te Shawshank Red e t"s soaked in sentimentality and self- righteous characters, but that's acceptable, even en hisie, as the lvr Hesses. In fact, the viewer, bfraows the same internal crisis Freemn points out: herejiect the overdone hercism, then we start to forget about it, until finally we become so engaged in the actiondtt we pray the film ifesnences unde and unusurpable morality to new heights. Receiving the bulk of our cheers is the fre vice-president fre of a large Iortead, hMie bank, Andy Dufse, who is wrongly convicton- of having uderedhis wife and her lover. He actually wanted to kil her, but refrained at the last moment. His weakness of character here is forgiv- able, only because we learn that it is a very brief lapse of judgment on his part. He is sent to Shawshank with two consecutive life sentences under his belt. Andy refuses to mope around his cell and let his soul harden in jail Instead, he progresses through vari- ous stages of projects, from recon- structing the prison library to usig his business expertise to advise and consequently appease the guards and warden. Finally, of course, because what prison movie would be com pete without it, he devises a phito READ THE MICHIGAN DAILY. You ALREADY MAY BE OUR NEXT WINNER.1 Tia Robins dewa ftmiess pnifu-nce as Andy Duftesne, a banker wrongly accused of killing his wife, In "The Shawshank Redmption." escape. More than just any old hardwork- ing do-it-yourselfer, Andy becomes a messianic icon in the prison, which is, as Red ruefully smirks, "full of innocents-" His profound yet inno- cent nature makes him stand out from the rest of the louses, and even the non-louses, the ones who really are good people. Red's strategy for keeping occu- pied in Shawshank is to obtain what- ever "black market" items the inmates desire, even the Rita Heyworth poster requested by Andy. He's proud of his gopher job and of the revered reputation it has built up for him over the years as a result, He says himself, "Yes sir, I'm : regular Sears & Roebuck." Both Robbs and Freeman give nearly infallible performances in "The Shawshank Redemption." Their dialogue may reek of statements that make that of Moses to his people seem unassuming, but it's all part of the pseudo-grandeur in this filar, a grandeur veins us over inexorably. Besides, the actors and director are so spellbinding here they rarely remind us of it anyway. Certain mome.pts in the film are undeniably touching, particularly the few instances Andy risks being caught for disobedient acts. He's a quixotic hero for being the guy who does nothing for himself, which seems ludicrous in a prison where people routinely have to deal with misfortune and discomfort. When Andy gives financial advice to a menacing guard, he asks in return for beers for his buddies. Not that Andy himself drinks any of it, though; he gave up drinking after entering pmson. When a shipment of books and records arrive because of Andy's grant request, he manages to hustle a Mozart opera over the loudspeakers. The inmates, outside at recess, come to a standstill and silently imbibe the most melodious sounds they've heard in years. The guards have to break through the glass pane on the door to stop Andy from playing that record. At its minimum, "Shawshank" has some beautiful sights to offer us, even during its bleakest of moments. '0EWt-C 0 M E s s e' Shamn Colvin . Arlo Guthrue Great Big Sea I Beth Nielsen Chapman Hot Club of Cow town.eAnne His Fred Faglesmith. David Barrett Matt Watroba & Robert Jones Community E-DAu Cinesses .Z pat- t. % V4m4 I I_._ ....--- uth.. Student- Atkdtl o te. Lots of Food, S onsored by M-PACT (Michigan " p ja PeerAdviso Creating Tuist), the Michigan Department ofAthletics adGiveaways ad the studentAlumni Counci. Friday, December 3rd 10:30 prn - 1:30 $to.t-4 wt 0 ts f I I1 yu p ledge uto)]Lsoker