The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 8, 2008 0 S 0 0 r , ° t . L ,_ r X.. ------- ABOUT CAMPUS WI-. . If= Ii £ Ii W ednesday, October 8,, 20 8 - The Michigan DI y QUOTES OF THE WEEK "By the time he's 10 he will "W.r ipyptoln be a hardened criminal." our seas.aThink of us like a - REX NEINDORF, director of the Alice Springs Reptile Center in Australia, on a - SUGULE ALI, a pirate from Somalia, explaining 7-year-old boy who broke into the zoo and the pirates' motive for seizing a Ukrainianfreight spent 35 minutes maliciously killing 13 animals, ship carrying grenade launchers, tanks, artil- including turtles, bearded dragons, lizards and lery and ammunition valued at $30 million. In an goannas. CCTV footage shows him smashing interview with The New York Times, Sugule said rocks on the reptiles' heads and tossing small- the pirates only wanted money, and he also con- er animals into the crocodile den. - demned illegal fishing off the coast of Somalia "I am going to try and sell it." - JOANNE SMITH, a 30-year-old woman from Chicago, explaining what she plans to do with a house in Saginaw, Mich., that she bought for $1.75 on eBay. Seven other people also bid for the house, which appears to be an abandoned shack. A note on the door says that a foreclosure hearing is pending I - - - -------- - - ~ A little off the bottom A woman gets a cut from campus's dudeliest barber Ifyour coif isgettingshaggy, you might head over to any one of Ann Arbor's ubiquitous beauty salons. Or, if you're willing to skip the hand massage, scalp oil and every- thing else remotely luxurious, you can stroll through the swinging screen door of Coach & Four Bar- ber Shop on State Street, where they offer custom haircuts for men, women and children. To be fair, though, the womanli- estthingyou'll find there is a pants- less beauty queen giving a coy stare from a Michigan hockey poster. I walked in for the first time last Friday. But from the ambience, I thought I had walked into a bar. Besides the sexy poster, there were the walls plastered with sports cards, jerseys and taxidermy ani- mals, including a roaring, hat- wearing black bear holding a can of Labatt Blue in its claws. On the ceiling, fox pelts were draped over a rusty trombone and an old maize javelin. With his wire-rimmed glasses, tall, stocky build, trim white beard and casual button-up shirt, owner Jerry Erickson perfectly fits the atmosphere of his shop. Swiveling in the chair toward where I sat waiting in the park- style bench of his shop, he asked, "Are you waiting for someone, ma'am?" No, I said, I was there for a hair- cut. "All right, then," he said, with a chivalrous gesture toward the chair. "Let's get you over here." With 35 years of idle chat under his belt, Jerry's conversation was a welcome change from the forced small talk at the Aveda Institute. He seemed to actually enjoy talk- ing, so I asked him to tell me about his patrons. He said he owes his livelihood to local professors, lawyers and doc- tors, "bread and butter customers" who have come to his shop since they were children. Student customers come and go but are "dynamite," he said, some so loyal that they abstain from haircuts all summer until they can come and see him again in the fall. "When they come back they say 'Hey, I saved my hair for you, you know?'"he said. Erickson's celebrity clientele include Michigan basketball coach John Beilein and revered former football coach Bo Schembechler, whose signature adorns the poster on the back wall, a black-and-white aerial view of the Big House in the 1950s. "I get kids coming in here and saying, 'You cut my dad's hair in the 70s,' " Erickson said. "And I say, 'Well, I bet he had long hair then, eh?"' I told him my dad had an afro in the 70s. "Yeah," he laughed. He seems amused by memories. "But they'd be coming in with hair as long as, yours." 'Did they take care of it?' I asked. "Oh, yeah," he said. "We'd just trim it." I reassured myself that hippie wool would have been more of a challenge than what laid before him now - my shoulder-length yel- low mop I hadn't bothered styling. Unnerved by my feminine locks, Erickson began to squirt liberally with a spray bottle. "Do you have a lot of girls come in here?" Iasked. "Oh, a fair amount," he said, pulling and picking through my hair with a fine-tooth comb. "Not a lot. You know, 'cause we don't do perms, we don't use a curling av 40 f \jf ,p;c~ j #f* I N j z I'E /,, i iron. We do basic cuts, trims like yours." The shop was otherwise filled with men. Three, who looked to be over 50, bantered and laughed among themselves, making plans to go out drinking that weekend. A male student read a magazine while he waited on the bench. I asked Erickson if he befriends many of his customers. "Oh yeah," he said. "That's the only way to be in business. When it comes to politics you might be a little different... but politics and religion are something you usually don't talk alot about." "Especially when you're holding the scissors," I replied. He didn't laugh, and continued making seemingly random snips at the ends of my hair. We talked about where we're from. He grew up in Iron River, Wisconsin, a small mining town about 300 miles west of the Macki- naw Bridge. Every fall, he said, he "gets a kick" out of watching stu- dents on Hill Street waiting for their sports cars to be delivered on huge flat-bed trucks from their upscale hometowns. Looking out the window toward Hill Street, my eyes caught the postcards, photographs, tennis rackets and construction helmets on the wall. "Do you decorate this place yourself?" I wondered aloud. "Yeah," he laughed. "It's just, when somebody brings me some- thing... Hey, Bill!" Bill, a heavyset sixty-something, walked through the door to chat with Jerry about printing team sweaters for their beer league. "I've been on the team for quite a while. I'm the old guy out there," Jerry finally explained. "Those ILLUSTRATION BY ALLISON GHAMAN kids get schooled." A couple of minutes later, he hands me a mirror. "Well, I tell you what," he said, fluffing my hair politely, "This gave it a bit more body." The first glimpse of my new look was anti-climactic, but in a good way. It was bluntly trimmed a cou- ple of inches all the way around, with proportionate bangs and dis- tinguishable layers. I thanked him and went to get my wallet. "Now I got all you ugly guys," Erickson said to the men who had accumulated on the benches. "She came in here, and now I gotta work with you scruffy guys. She made my day." I don't know if he made a regu- lar out of me, but I tipped him 25 percent before I left. - SARA LYNNE THELEN TALKING POINTS Three things you can talk about this week: 1. The effects of the bailout 2. Space elevators 3. Bloomberg's third term And three things you can't: 1. Trust funds for pets 2Gordon Brown 3. Springsteen for Obama BY T HE NUMBERS Number of condoms taken from the "condom mobile," part of Mexico's Condomovil Program, last Thursday Number of condoms the program has distributed since it began in 1998 Height in feet of the giant inflatable condom that travels with the "condom mobile" Sou cCN YOUTUBE VIDEO OF THE WEEK A rap rumble on Wall Street In the financial district of New York City, massive egos are about to clash. "Ooh, a bunch of D-bag bankers, look," says a boisterous consultant from the firm BCG. Then a young banker retorts, "somesconsultants, ouch. Frobably got one suit, and they bought it from Men's Warehouse." With a beat reminiscent of 2Pac's "California Love," the video shows these two posses of young profes- sionals engaged in a musical sparring match on Wall Street - a hotdog ven- dor mediates the battle. "Work hard, play hard. Even your mom thinks you're a tool," the con- sultant raps. "Be a burnout, banker, teaching math in my prep school." The consultant says he abides by the "Three C's." Chicks, cash and Cris- tal. Meanwhile, the group of bankers stands by, appearing unnerved by the consultant's attacks. The bankers' out- sized egos are under fire. But then the leadbanker throwssoff his suit jacket and gives the consul- tants a piece of his mind. "Button collar? Kenneth Cole shit? Son, your Blackberry's like four years old," the banker says, as he gets in the consultant's face. "You try to add value," the banker says. "I straight create it. You get one shitty idea and take six months just to bake it." Under siege, the consultants flee, and the bankers christen their victory with a bottle of Grey Goose vodka. This video was created on Aug. 27. It seems likely that bankers might not be so pretentious now. - BRIAN TENGEL See this and other YouTube videos of the week at youtube.com/user/michigandaily THEME PARTY SUGGESTION Sweaterfest - It's October, which means falling leaves, colder weather and, of course, sweaters. Gather some friends and take a trip to Salvation Army, where you'll be sure to find plenty of $3 sweaters that will make you look hardcore indie. Try to branch out from the Kurt Cobain cardigan, though. And don't just buy any sweater whose colors match those on the cover of "The Catcher in the Rye." Come on, you're better than that. Throwing this party? Let us know. TheStatement@umich.edu STUDY OF THE WEEK Psychoanalysis may be an effective treatment Despite the fact that it has been overshadowedby modern drugtreat- ments and other care techniques, intensive psychoanalytic therapy may actually prove effective for patients suffering from chronic mental ail- ments like anxiety and personality disorder, according to a study pub- lished last week in The Journal of the American Medical Association. The study was conducted by Falk Leichsenring at the University of Giessen and Sven Rabung at the University Medical Center Hamburg- Eppendorf. Bothuniversities are in Germany. The researchers examined 23 studies with a total of 1,053 patients, all of whom were treated with psychoanalytic therapy. In these cases, the patients were administered therapy often as frequently as three times a week, and for periods sometimes as long as a year. Afterreviewingthe casesthe researchers concluded that the psycho- analysis had helped alleviate the symptoms more than did various forms of short-term treatment, like cognitive behavior therapy. - BRIAN TENGEL WHAT'S YOUR PERSONAL STATEMENT? E-mail submissions to TheStatement@michigandaily.com