w w w w lqw W. w w IRW # mw mr w ABOUT CAMPUS ILLUSTRATIONS BY JOHN OQUIST Friending your professors University faculty decide where to draw the line for socializing with students on Facebook Secondhand history A decades-old bookstore prepares to pick up shop In 18 years, Jeffrey Pickell, owner of Kaleidoscope Books and Collect- ables in Ann Arbor, has amassed a dusty historical archive ripe with University nostalgia, 1960s memora- bilia and 16th century artifacts. Soon, though, Pickell will redis- cover all of his store's items one by one as he packs up for a smaller loca- tion much farther from campus than Kaleidoscope's current hiding place between Mr. Greek's and Urban Out- fitters at the State Street and Liberty Street intersection. Pickell said the upcoming storewide excavation was prompted by his landlord's decision to double the price of rent. It's "new gentrification," Pickell said. He said a cookie shop is taking the store's place. Though in no way as much of a student staple as its leggings-ped- dling and food-frying neighbors, Kaleidoscope has offered a between- class escape for the curious since its opening. Rackham student Elizabeth Everson snuck into the store to pick up three books from an old children's series for her mom for Christmas. Everson had witnessed her mother's descent into nostalgic euphoria after her mother saw the books in the store's window display during Home- coming weekend. At his post behind Kaleidoscope's front counter, Pickell almost disap- pears entirely among the clutter of Nixon bobble heads, Joe Camel col- lectibles and decades-old concert posters. Pickell spends the bulk of each day at his hobby shop, swapping news with regulars and acting as tour guide for the store's twisting mazes of bookshelves and cabinets. Pickell said he doesn't take vacation days off except for his son's birthday, which happens to be on Christmas. In the nearly two decades it has graced State Street, Kaleidoscope has been "a shop for collectors and nos- talgia buffs who want to feel positive about something in a complex and frustrating world fraught with adult problems," Pickell said. Pickell has a philosophy behind his dedication to knickknacks: There are two kinds of people in the world - col- lectorsandthepitiablerestofhumanity. The collecting-inclined are people who can connect to an inanimate object. They look at a used children's book and see a childhood friend. The other half of the population, Pickell said, sees objects as simplyutilitarian. Books in Kaleidoscope range from 50 cents to $5,000 - the latter being a first edition Bible from 1570. The organization of the store's book- shelves is a far cry from the Dewey Decimal system. The fiction section means a dozen stacks of books on the floor grouped as "horse story" fiction. Pickell is most proud of his well- developed collection of hardback first editions. He has the first editions of nearly every Philip K. Dick book, as well as former Michigan Daily edi- tor and famous activist Tom Hayden's first book, "Rebellion in Newark," which Hayden signed when visiting Kaleidoscope last year. "'ohshit, a hard cover copy!' Direct quote," Pickell said of Hayden's dis- covery of the rare book in his store. Hayden's visit was of particular interest to Pickell, who was himself a member of Students for a Democratic Society, the student activist group Hayden founded. Always willing to delve into the annals of history, Pick- ell will throw in a first-person per- spective on SDS's slide into violent radicalism alongwiththe vintage Jimi Hendrix poster you're trying to buy. Sprinkled among the books is an array of random odds and ends only a seasoned "nostalgia buff" like Pickell can make complete sense of. One cor- ner, though, holds a display no Univer- sitystudentcould miss - Pickellboasts the largest collection of Michigan foot- ball and basketball memorabilia in the country. The highlight of the collec- tion is a program from the first football game played in Michigan Stadium, against Ohio Wesleyan in 1927. Not far from the Michigan football homage is another University relic, a record album recorded by the Univer- sity of Michigan's Glee Club decades ago. The album, titled The College Spirit features a young couple gazing into the distance with expressions of inexplicable elation, proving that some things haven't changed much. Other things, though, clearly have. You can spend more than a few min- utes in Kaleidoscope without running into an item that sets off a "blatantly inappropriate" alarm. From "Little Black Sambo" books to stereotypical dolls, articles of the pop-culture rac- ism that permeated American culture for most of the 20th century now sur- vive in Pickell's store. But Pickell and longtime employee Bob Siegert make a point that it's important to preserve racist memorabilia so that the lesson that they were once allowed to exist isn't forgotten. "You can see the whole evolution of civil rights by looking in cases in this store," said Siegert. It's just a shame that next semester students will have to make it to 200 N. Forth Street to do so. -JESSICA VOSGERCHIAN A smoke-filled room Reigniting the pastime of cigar smoking For decades, the hazy atmo- sphere of Maison Edwards Tobac- conist has been the stomping grounds for the likes of musicians, chemists and actor Jeff Daniels and Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr. Patrons come to the store not only for the tobacco but also for the people and conversations that take place under the cloud of smoke. In an hour on Monday night, reg- ulars' conversation in the shop cov- ered more topics than a three-hour game of Trivial Pursuit. Politics, history and cigars, of course, were a part of the discourse. "The nice thing about this place is you can have a spirited political discussion," said Steve Bergman, tobacconist customer and owner of the defunct Schoolkids' Records. But these conversations rarely turn personal, because everyone See ABOUT CAMPUS, Page 11B PHOTOS COURTESY OF JJ PRESCOTT, SCOTT CAMPBELL AND AARON MCCOLLOUGH (From left to right) Law School Prof. JJ Prescott, Communications Prof. Scott Campbell and English Prof. Aaron McCollough in their Facebook.com profile pictures RANDOLPH COURT APARTMENTS. T6 2 Bedroom Apartment Homes - Ground Floor Ranch Style! Private Entrance! Patio! Spacious Kitchen! Air Conditioning! Laundry Facilities! 24-Hour Emergency Maintenance! Pets Welcome! And much, much more! Call today to reserve your new address! 734_971-2828 Equal Housing opportunity J Westlake wants to see "Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium," enjoys growing vegetables and is a second cousin to gay porn legend Leo Ford. West- lake is also an assistant professor in the School of Music, Theatre and Dance. All this information is avail- able thanks to Westlake's Facebook. com profile. That Westlake, a professor who is at least too old to claim member- ship to the online generation, has a Facebook profile isn't unusual. Ever since September 2006, when the previously college-student-only social networking hotspot opened its doors to anyone older than 13, professors and graduate student instructors have been trickling onto Facebook. As the trend spreads, that trickle is becoming a regular stream. Facebook's increasing popularity among the older set, though, means students and faculty members are rubbing shoulders through cyber society in a way they never would in real life. The foray of the middle- aged onto Facebook is resulting in heightened familiarity between professor and student that both sides are strugglingto negotiate. Aaron McCollough, a lecturer in the English department, joined because some of his former students created a Facebook group called "Aaron McCollough's Street Team." He wanted to see what the deal was, and now, over a year later, he's sub- merged in the Facebook scene. "Usually I just log in, look at the feed, see what the most recent sort of developments are," he said. The majority of McCollough's Facebook friends are fellow poets located around the coun- try. That's why one of McCol- lough's favorite functions is the status bar. He said that it's like a "really, really brief poetic form." "A lot of times people say really interesting things on there," he said. "It's like, 'What can people fit on that syntax?'" McCollough updates his own sta- tus bar relatively frequently. "Aaron is so bored with the U.S.A.," one of his statuses read last week. McCollough interacts - or "goofs around" as he describes it - with other poets on Facebook mainly through the Facebook mail feature. "Some days will be heavy Face- book days if I get one of those weird things that's almost like IM-ing, but it's not IM-ing," he said, referening to Facebook messages. McCollough said that his contact with colleagues at the University on Facebook is a bit sparser, but it still exists. He said sometimes he and other professors and lecturers compete via each other's Facebook applica- tions, like completing movie quiz- zes or playing a rousing game of Scrabulous. Many of McCollough's other Facebook friends are people at the University - 15 or 20 of them are his current or former students. "I don't 'friend' students, to me that seems like it might be a little weird - I don't know why," he said. "But students have 'friended' me. It doesn't bother me. I always accept." After receiving a friend request from a student, McCollough said he skims the profile but usually doesn't find anything he considers too crazy. "If I see something on there that I think is stupid, I just think 'Oh that's stupid, they might regret that one day,' "he said. McCollough thinks there's an untapped power to use Facebook as a tool to bridge the gap between professors and students. "I think that (Facebook) feels safe in a way. Maybe it shouldn't, but it does," he said. "People feel a little more comfortable asking questions that they need answered. That's why I think that it has poten- tial as a mentoring tool." He hopes that if students are comfortable using Facebook to interact with their professors, they'll be more inclined to come to office hours. McCollough said the main harm in professors and students interact- ing on Facebook is excessive famil- iarity, but that if the site is used properly, it shouldn't be a problem. Professors, he said, shouldn't join the site if they think they could lose respect from their students. "If an adultcan't manage to wield the respectable amount of authority over students, then that adult prob- and make observations," he said. ably shouldn't be on Facebook," he Campbell later clarified: "When said. I say I poke around, I don't mean I LSA junior Geoff Chiles, who is poke people," he said. "Would it be a student in one of McCollough's creepy?" Introduction to Poetry classes, said The answer is probably yes. McCollough mentioned he had a Campbell said the glimpse into Facebook account at the end of class students' private lives via pictures one day, so he looked him up. and profiles doesn't change his per- Chiles said that his perception of ception of them. McCollough improved after brows- "I haven't seen actually anything ing his Facebook profile. He learned that's outrageous or entirely inap- that his professor was "a pretty cul- propriate in terms of my relation- tured guy" and had graduated from ship with a student," he said. a prestigious fine arts school, The one of the biggest drawbacks Univesrity of the South in Tennes- of Facebook for professors, Camp- see. bell said, is confusion about how to "He plays Xbox, I saw. He likes to navigate all the site's features and use his treadmill," Chiles said. options. Chiles, who is a residential advis- "I think there's a lot of ambiguity er in Bursley Residence Hall, said he about what things mean," he said. wasn't concerned with how McCol- While Campbell doesn't friend lough would perceive his own Face- anyone or write on walls, he book profile. exchanges messages to keep in "I try to be as professional as I touch. can and keep as many embarrass- Like McCollough, Campbell said ing pictures or comments toa mini- that as professors become more mum, soI wasn't too apprehensive," active on Facebook, it could benefit Chiles said. the classroom experience. The most recent post on McCol- "I think it's a way you can maybe lough's wall is from Chiles. "I was help to erase some of the status dif- just interviewed by a fellow student ferences between professors and who writes for the Daily about stu- students," he said. dent-to-professor Facebook interac- Chiles agrees that the presence of tion. We're celebrities now, Aaron." professors and other older adults on Scott Campbell, an assistant Facebookhasgrowntothe pointthat professor in the communications it no longer engenders a "creepy" department, has a paltry five wall factor. Of course, professors using posts, no tagged pictures and only Facebook isn't weird on its own, the logs on about once a month. way they use it might be. "I'll occasionally poke around See FACEBOOK, Page 11B