The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April " 00" - , __ ___,_F__, ---_ _ .- -_ w w V M QUOTES OF THE WEEK ABOUT CAMPUS SN ILLUSTRATIONS BY JOHN OQUIST I IT t!"I 1 I ti 1 " K "I don't see how we could have dispersed the crowd without tear gas." - TOM WILBERT, the East Lansing police chief, on attempts to quell quell a riot that erupted at a party near Michigan State University's campus early Sun- day morning. Police said that 3,000 to 4,000 people were at the party. Fifty-two of them were arrested. "If it's not Parley, we certainly don't want to move anybody else." - ROBERT J. GROW, an attorney in Salt Lake City, on potential complications in removing the remains of his great-great- great grandfather, Parley Parker Pratt, who was a prominent Mormon leader 151 years ago. Pratt is bured in Arkansas,but it was apparently his dying wish to be interred in Salt Lake City Familiarly offensive Quickie Burger logo just can't get a break A few weeks ago, LSA senior Kelsey Gall was procrastinating doing schoolwork by typing random subjects into Google image search. Gall, a member of the Stonewall Democrats who helped circulate a petition against a new State Street restaurant Quickie Burger, let her concerns color her inquiries. One search - "cartoon burger" - was spurred by her disdain for Quickie Burger's logo that depicts a busty blonde straddling a burger. Gall didn't expect to find that logo in her search results. And she didn't. She just found an image that looked suspiciously similar. In June 2004, the cover of a Canadian magazine called Vue Weekly featured an image of a busty redhead straddling a burger. From the flame-shaped hair to the spill- ing beer mug, the resemblance is remarkable. "It was a completely random search," she said. "I never expected to find anything." Whether or not the Quickie Burg- er logo isoffensive is subjective, but what about whether it's plagiarism?' After discovering the original image, Gall's first thought was to contact the artist who drew it. Ifa petition wouldn't convince Quickie Burger to change their logo, maybe the threat of a copyright lawsuit would. But the artist, Stephen Notley, wasn't interested in taking legal action. "It's clearly a redrawing of my image - but a little worse," Notley said. "I'm more just flattered that someone would rip off my image than angry." Also, he said, it's unclear how the claim would hold up in court since Quickie Burger's logo is at most a redrawing, and the likeness of Notley's image isn't trademarked. While Disney can demand that day- care centers paint over wall murals picturing big-eared mice in over- sized gloves, it seems babes riding burgers are fair game. Kerope Arman, who owns Quickie Burger, said the similarities between the images are just a coin- cidence. PHOTO BY SAM wOLSON/Daily; IMAGE COURTESY OF VUE wEEKLY (LEFT) The sign of Quickie Burger, a new restaurant on State Street. (RIGHT) The image on Vue Weekly's June 2004 issue. "That's not similar at all, the way I see it," he said. "Maybe it is. I don't know." Arman said the Quickie Burger logo was developed over the past year or more through the collabora- tion of ideas of the owners' friends and family, as well as strangers shown the image to gauge public reaction. He described the thought pro- cess behind the logo this way: "Usually, in a typical bar setting there is bull riding... we did,a burger because it's indicative of the business were in." Arman said he hadn't seen the image before, but wouldn't say who drew the original draft of the logo and whether he or she could have seen the magazine cover. "We drew it. We did," he said. "I've never seen it before." Perhaps after being put on edge by the Stonewall Democrat's peti- tion, Arman was quick to return to the question of the logo's offensive- ness. "I know it doesn't offend anybody because when your mother walks by and she looks up, she's not offend- ed," said Arman, who does not know this writer's mother. "My wife's not offended. My mother's not offended. No one's offended." Ron Garth, editor of Vue Weekly, likewise wanted to stress the appro- priateness of the image that ran on the magazine's cover. "You know, we're alternative press," he said. "If it gets attention, it gets attention." An image of the cover, which teased a "Hot Summer Guide" to Edmonton, Canada, canbe found in Vue Weekly's online archives next to a column in the issue about gay interests in politics - which Garth said made the-Stonewall Democrat's concerns ironic. "It's actually counter to their argument because it's juxtaposed to this gay-friendly rant by a columnist on our website," he said. Although, Garth said the maga- zine's editors aren't able to control which article from an issue gets displayed with the cover in the web- site's archives. But Gall said the context of the Vue Weekly image makes it less offensive than the Quickie Burger logo. "I personally believe the different contexts change the offensiveness of the logo," she said. What's the difference? Here's a conjecture: While the magazine cover pres- ents riding a giant burger as a fun summer activity, the Quickie Burger logo, juxtaposed with the restaurant's motto "Come in for a quickie," compares women to fast food - cheap, fast and brainless. But whatever the interpreta- tion, it stands that offensiveness is a subjective and personal affair. Just as Notley found when he was offended after reading The Michigan Daily's article about the opposition to his image's dopple- ganger. "I was like, 'Well, that's what you think, buddy,' "he said.Michi- gan Daily's article about the oppo- sition to his image's doppleganger. "I was like, 'Well, that's what you think, buddy,' "he said. -JESSICA VOSGERCHIAN TALKING POINTS Three things you can talk about this week: 1. The plight of Morgan Tsvangirai 2. Polygamist ranch raids 3. Mark Penn's demise And three things you can't: 1. Beyonce and Jay-Z tying the kn ot 2. Two-faced babies 3. Your football seating : standing BY THE NUMBERS Number of jobs the U.S. economy lost in March Number of jobs the economy lost in the first quarter of this year Current unemployment rate, up from 4.8 percent Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics YOUTUBE VIDEO OF THE WEEK Wacky weatherman The weather doesn't have to be boring - just ask AccuWeather.com meteorologist Jim Kosek. Kosek, the subject of a Slate.com profile called "Weatherman Gone Wild," does dozens of local weather reports each day. The job could be repetitive, and he didn't want his reportstobeboring, so Kosek started adding a little flavor: a spastic dance, a funnyvoice, an off-color joke. There's something alluring about the wayKosek makes the weather his own, sometimes calling out errors on the projection behind him. "I don't buy this for one iota," Kosek yells, gesturing at a map of State College, Penn. "Not even a see- ond!" Sometimes it seems Kosek has gone mad with power, acting as if he controls the weather. "Roanoke," he sings eerily. "Hey, Roanoke - I'm gonna put you through pain," he yells, clenching his fists like Zeus preparing to send down lightning. It's a strange style, but it appar- ently keeps viewers coming back. "You can get your weather any- where," says Bernie Rayno, Kosek's executive producer. "But if you can get someone that's entertaining as well, you're going to come back to the entertaining person." Well, unless all you really want is tomorrow's forecast. - GABE NELSON See this and other YouTube videos of the week at youtube.com/user/mrchigandaily FRESHMAN, SOPHOMORES, AND JUNIORS... Ele lMicdigan aitl ONLINE is HIRING Account Executives for 2008-2009! We are searching for friendly, dedicated, and hardworking students who have an interest in advertising and sales. Working for The Michigan Daily's Online Advertising Department will help you to: - Expand your resume - Impress future employers with your knowledge and experience - Improve your networking connections - Further develop your communication and business skills . Make money!!! Fo more information you"cn"comepick "p anApplication a" The Daily, 420 Maynard Street, call us at 734-615-0135, or E-mailI us at tmdonline@gmail.com "I still haven't decided how to split the cow." - BRANKO ZIVKOV, a farmer from Serbia, explaining how he has tried to comply with a court order mandating that he share all of his property with his former wife. Zivkov purchased a grinding machine to slice in half his farm tools and machines, including a sowing machine and cattle scales THEME PARTY SUGGESTION Tibetan prep party - With the Dalai Lama's visit to campus fast approaching, it's time to get prepared - you only have 10 days to become an expert on Tibetan Buddhism. We recommend you get your friends together and research the Dalai Lama on Wikipedia. Educate yourselves on his background, views and awards. Maybe even try to learn some Buddhist rituals. The more you know, the less you'll look like an ignorant Westerner. Throwing this party? Let us know. TheStatement@umich.edu STUDY OF THE WEEK Great sex lasts between three and 13 minutes The optimal length of sexual intercourse is three to 13 minutes, according to a survey of sex therapists that will be published in May in the Journal of Sexual Medicine. The survey was conducted by Eri Corty, an associate professor of psychology at Penn State Erie, The Beh- rend College and one of his students, Jenay Guardiani. The researchers surveyed 50 members of the Society for Sex Therapy and Research in the U.S. and Canada, using questions that were gender neutral. This optimal sex time does not include foreplay, and the therapists said that sexual intercourse that lasts from one to two minutes is too short, according to the researchers. Dr. Irwin Goldstein, editor of the Journal of Sexual Medicine, defend- ed Corty's findings by citing a 2005 study of 1,500 couples that discov- ered the median length of sexual intercourse was 7.3 minutes. In this study, women wore stopwatches to gauge the time. - BRIAN TENGEL