- _-9- 68 The Michigan Daily Wednesday, January 16, 2008 Wednesday January 16,2008The Michigan Daily QUOTES OF THE WEEK _.... f. Binding passion An esoteric alternative to graduate school The Bessenberg Bindery is easy to miss. It's a squat brick building tucked between two big houses on Fifth Avenue in Kerrytown. But the unexceptional factory acts as a second home for Jon Buller, the owner, and houes all the tools of the trade that has become his life pursuit: bookbinding. Buller has been binding books since 1974. He got started "by accident," he said. "I answered an advertise- ment that said,'hand binder want- ed, no experience necessarv,' and I had always been very good with my hands, so I went there for an audition." He's been binding ever; For most, the binding c seems unremarkable. It's j glue holding a pile oftpape er. But for a small group o a book's binding is a piet The cratt mnay draw tew ti its tools, but when it does adherents it can suppla more conventional caree Imagine a future lawyei out law school applicati sending a letter of intere Ann Arbor branch oftthe A Academy of Bookbinding scenarios have happenedI After his itroductini craft, Buller rebound of part-time for collector he worked on an under degree in engineering at University. But he dropp' school just a few classes graduating to pursue b ABOUT CAMPUS since. ing full-time, "because I had a six if a book month backlog of work and two ust some part-time employees and a rented r togeth- space, and it just seemed a whole f people, lot more fun than doing engineer- ce of art. ing work." o pick up Buller said the craft has suf- convert fered in recent centuries. He said nt much when he moved his bindery opera- ar paths. tion to Ann Arbor in 1982 there r tossing were three other binderies in the ions and city, but Buller saw all of his peers st to the close up shop. Today, Bessenberg kmerican is the last commercial bindery in . Similar Michigan to do the full range of before. bookbinding work, from sewing to n to the typesetting to embossing - all by Id books hand. s while But the skill of fine binding, graduate as Buller calls it, is coming backf Oakland into style. "There's a whole lot ed out of more interest being shown now, in short of (bookbinding), than thirty years ookbind- ago," he said. At that time, you were "darn lucky" if you found strewn wit someone to teach you to bind metal impler books, he said. But now classes in spine of an o bookbinding arc conmmon. "how to be a Students here at the Univer- put it, On he sitv can dabble with the craft in a her down at t class called "Book Arts," offered of a book o in the School of Art and Design. °grandparents The class, which has about 25 knife, a need] students, is led by localbookbind- was a little sc er Jean Bartlett, and provides an who is 30, h introduction to basic hand-bind- for four mor ing techniques. restore an e Buller has taught about 40 each day's f people himself since coming to territory hol Ann Arbor. Although his students Even as an have varied in age, he attributes perception o bookbinding's comeback primar- since she tool ily to young people becoming bindery. Now interested. Their youthful ideal- a bookstore, ism compels them to breathe life differences b into a craft often overlooked, he ible to most,] said. techniques a: Janie Brynolf is one of Buller's deckle was le employees at the bindery. Book- The sames binding never occurred to her as more than a potential career while she was books apart a studying fine arts and graphic together, he I design in college, or even when of their stru she saw it in the course catalogue thing that a for her study abroad program in whenever the Florence, Italy. said. Maybe o "I looked at it, and I'm like, this understa 'Who the hell would want to do most fhely-b book restoration? How boring!' " glass in libra she said. "So I went over and took lections, he s a painting class, and then five If you ask years lar or sormething, I took est book he's i uipsii Lkinrdeg ar] I'mIke, 'Oh, pull iiu a sa ai tat ss i E CCMatthew knew he shouldn't be taking his AK-47 to the 7-Eleven." - LAURA ANDERSEN, a Las Vegas homi- cide detective, about Matthew Sepi, a veteran of the war in Iraq who experienced mental trauma after serving there. When Sepi left the store, he opened fire on two gang mem- bers and later said his trauma made him snap v LAW TALKING POINTS Three things you can talk about this week: 1. Huck's Army 2. Driverless vehicles 3. Celebrity scientologists "There should be an end to the occupation that began in 1967." - GEORGE BUSH, during his first visit to the West Bank city of Ramallah, referring to the war in which Israel seized the Gaza Strip, West Bank and Golan Heights. Bush used the trip to renew calls for a peace agreement between Israelis and Palestinians And three things you can't: 1. Michigan's dismal economy 2. Graduation at EMU 3. Hannah Montana's body double h medieval-looking ments, sewing up the Ad book that outlines good Catholic," as she r first day, Buller sat he same table in front lder than her great- s and handed her a le and some thread. It ary, she said. Brynolf, as worked for Buller nths and has yet to ntire book herself, so oray into uncharted ds an allure for her. avid reader, Brynolf's f books has changed k up the scalpel at the , when she walks into she notices minute etween books, invis- like various stitching nd whether or not the ft on the pages. goes for Buller. After 25 years of taking nd putting them back has an intuitive sense cture. "That's some- ll bookbinders have ey pick up a book," he only bookbinders have anding these days, as ound books are under iries or personal col- aid. Buller about the old- evr worked on, he'll hands a few times, it isn't hard to imagine a University student fol- lowing in Buller's path - dropping conventional career goals to take up the craft. - SCOTT MILLS The year in words Linguistists sum up 2007 The Googleganger experienced connectile dysfunction with the vegansexual when he showed up with a subprime strike beard. In other words... There are no other words, atleast according to voters in the Ameri- can Dialect Society's 2007 Words of the Year nominations. In a din- ing room of a Chicago hotel over the weekend of Jan. 4, the society called together linguistic aficio- nados from across the country to debate which words and phrases best defined, or were best defined by, the happenings of 2007. The results of the nominations provide a window into the hopes and fears of the collective consciousness in 2007, but they also sanction the composition of that first sentence - something that could make you worry about the devolution of the English language. VIDEO OF s THE WEEK Don't tease Baby Charlie In an attempt to amuse his father, the older brother of the clip's star, a baby named Charlie, proclaims in his already well-developed British accent, "Charlie bit mylfinger!" After the father convinces the brother to show just how it all went down, the boy forces his finger in Charlie's face. The boy's true motives are unclear, but it appears that he intends to make a fool of Charlie on But it is Charlie, not his older brother, who shapes the rules of the game. For a moment, the boy seems to be kidding when he talks about how painful Charlie's bite is, but after a few seconds, the smile is wiped clear off his face as Charlie continues to latch onto the finger. "Ouch, Charlie," he yells. "OUCH!" Charlie finallyletsgo,butnotwith- out getting a chance to gloat. After a moment of silence, Charlie throws his head back, laughing maniacally. As his older brother fights back tears, Charlie continues to laugh. It's tooearlyto tell whatthebroth- ers will grow up to be, but perhaps a violent future is in store for young Charlie. - BRIDGET O'DONNELL See this and other YouTube videos ofrthe week at youtube.com/useit/nichigandaily "I felt really, really scared inside the coffin and also thought a lot about my mom." - LEE HYE-JUNG, a 23-year-old South Kore- an student, on her country's mock funerals, during which people are nailed into coffins for 15 minutes in order to reflect on their lives BY THE NUMBERS People who died of a prescription drug overdose in western Virginia in 2006 Percentage increase in overdose-related deaths in the region from a decade ago Dollars one coal miner apent on prescription painkillers over a span of two years THEME PARTY SUGGESTION Primary cool down - Michigan's primary was confusing. What was the point of casting an uncommitted vote? What's the situation with Michigan's Democratic delegates? We recom- mend you get together with some friends and hash it out. It'll be too late to do anything about it, since voting happened -Tuesday, but it'll feel good to finally have it figured out. Throwing this party? Let us know. TheStotementa-umich.edu STUDY OF THE WEEK International survey finds 15-year-olds have sex A "substantial minority" of 15-year-olds worldwide h-a aged in sexual intercourse, according to a study published this month in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine. The researchers surveyed 33,943 15-year-olds from 24 countries in Europe and North America in an attempt to gauge sexual activity and contraceptive use among adolescents. The data were gathered in 2002 from a questionnaire administered to students in their classrooms. Percentages of students responding that they've had sex varie Iin Croatia, 14.1 percent of students said they've engaged in sx cw'il in England 37.6 percent reported they hav. tie Uniteci tate ama tio included in the study. Tle crce'acs disci I tt. at fi t st t wIa se'ml ctive c indro a/ ri irt 1to l duin thers