The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, February 4, 2010 - 3B Ending mindless eating David Merritt's inspiration came from the camaraderie of the Michigan men's basketball team. Hardwood to runway Former 'M' basketball captain David Merritt's fashion line promotes community service By KRISTYN ACHO Daily Arts Writer At Sunday's IMU photoshoot, LSA sophomore Courtney Cox took a brief break from tweeting giveaways to describe her unique internship expe- rience. Like many Michigan students, Cox had been hopelessly looking for internship opportuni- ties in merchandising, until she came across the Facebook fan page for I Miss You, Inc. (IMU), a brand founded by David Merritt, former captain of the Michigan men's basketball team. "Have you ever had someone tell you that they miss you?" Merritt asked. "It makes you feel spe- cial. It makes you feel valued." David Merritt is not the typical self-absorbed all-star-athlete-turned-fashion-designer. If you're looking for an entourage or the arrogant swagger that comes with leading a team to the NCAA tour- nament for the first time in 11 years, you won't find it here. Instead, Merritt is so admirably humble, it's almost frustrating. He just keeps it real - and stylish. He has everything you'd hope to find in the . president and CEO of one of Ann Arbor's hottest up-and-coming fashion lines. But how did the former hoops player combine his two seemingly disparate interests of basketball and fashion? According to Merritt, he never had any inten- tions of getting involved in fashion. But his expe- riences playing basketball with selfless teammates like School of Public Policy graduate student and former captain C.J. Lee ultimately became his inspiration for IMU. "As a captain, I learned the importance of self- lessness and giving of yourself to reach team goals - goals that are bigger than you personally." Mer- ritt said. "Like watching C.J. Lee come in every day just to motivate people in order to make the team as good as it could be. These types of goals are what's really behind IMU as a brand." The IMU brand sells T-shirts which combine the urban style with joy and color. The shirt designs serve perfectly to illustrate the meeting point of style and service. And the IMU brand isn't just a fashion line; it's a mission statement. Merritt wants each customer to feel a sense of belonging, value and, most impor- tantly, community. "We want to make people happy, we want to make people feel special, but at the same time we want them to realize that they are unique as indi- viduals due to their experiences and the communi- See IMU BRAND, Page 4B Now that it's a new year, the CCRB is humid with the sweat of resolution- ers. Because the holidays are about family and add- ing another layer of warmth for the coming .4s winter months, we seem to eat more than usual. Is it because a new year means CHRISTINA a fresh start, and ANGER the holidays rep- resent that one last chance to ride a sugar high before hitting the ellipti- cal? Or does mindless eating really stop with the flip of a new calendar? And how could the start of a new semester at school possibly encour- age a new outlook on food, when cheap pizza joints like Backroom and Diag Party Shoppe lurk around every corner? Mindless eating is everywhere. It's a TV dinner on a couch; it's a plateful of good food while reading the newspaper. I am a culprit, and it seems that when I'm at home and away from my apartment kitchen I tend to hit the cookie jar. A 2000 study in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that Ameri- cans gain about a pound between Thanksgiving and the New Year, and rarely shed it. During my holiday break I picked up a book, grabbed a sandwich and learned what I was doing wrong. "Peace Is Every Step," by Bud- dhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh, is all about regaining touch with the peace every moment offers. It has a section about eating mindfully, which suggests that "the purpose of eating is to eat." I had to quickly swallow my bite of sandwich to try and understand this. I eat for ener- gy, for enjoyment, for camaraderie, and cannot fathom eating just to eat. Ho goes mu into my, ness resi Mind ing abou from an doesn't: for 10 m the proc manufa' a momei thing w and give has food used to are star thing th hands a meal, bu is make, So for mindful T y InS( breakfa and it w felt full. eaten. It tend tht in the d came di you hav Of co best ofn best of t I ate can les durh what to a sectio you're f Psychol articlea never, Hanh's explanation eating. Perfect. .ch deeper, and fits very well There will be mindless eating, distrust of New Year's fit- perhaps even more during the holi- olutions. days and weekends due to stress, ful eating means think- parties and those Oreo-peanut-but- at our food, where it came ter-chocolate-covered bites of heav- d what it will do for us. This en. Dr. Susan Albers, author of the mean staring at our plates Psychology Today article as well as inutes, slowly imagining ' her own book "Eating Mindfully," ess from vegetable seed to proposed a coping mechanism that cturer. It means taking just offers a glimmer of hope in trying nt to understand that every- buttery times. My favorite is to "get e eat comes from the earth some perspective." How big of a s us strength. Not everyone deal is this in the overall scheme of Ito eat, and when Grandma life? Learn your lesson, and move say that children in China on. ring, maybe she had some- As Thich Nhat Hanh put it, peace ere. We don't need to hold is every step. We won't always eat nd sing kumbaya at every mindfully. But being aware that at enjoying food for what it mindful eating exists is the first s it real. step. The holidays are just days on r a while I tried to eat the calendar, and we should treat ly, and it was hard. I ate them like it. Eat to eat, not to sup- press stress. Now that school is back in ses- sion, we've all returned to our old eating habits, for better or for ubuy that worse. If the new year means a OU bu h t strict exercising regimen and the amnnia Cookie. end of sugar, think again. For me, it means trying to be happier with what I'm eating, not necessar- ily decreasing the amount, even st by myself, without a book, though they seem to go hand-in- as boring. But afterwardI hand in most resolutions. I knew exactly what Ihad That isn't to say exercising takes t was a bit difficult to pre- a backseat - everyone knows bikini at the processed sugary bits season is only six or so months ining hall's Lucky Charms away. Hopefully, we'll still be fre- rectly from the earth, but quenting the gym, seeing as it's e to start somewhere. February. January is unstable, urse, the holidays got the much like the mentality of getting me, because they are the back on track in the new year. So imes and the worst of times. cheers to a new semester and a ndy at the movies and cook- healthy, food-tastic year, and may ng familial arguments. So you learn to un-multitask and sepa- do now? Hanh didn't write rate homework from eating. n about what to do when eeling mindless. Luckily, ogy Today published an sbout coping with mindless Anger is renouncing all her cooking possessions and moving to Tibet. To stop her, e-mail steena@umich.edu. were honored by the LSA theme MUSEUM STUDIES semester "Meaningful Objects: From Page 1B Museums in the Academy," which officially turned into a theme year due to continued interest in muse- I'm watching UMMA trying to um-themed programs. become a center for the arts," The theme was originally cre- Munn said. "So we have this muse- ated to celebrate the re-opening of um really serve as a place where UMMA and the Kelsey Museum people can come to many free per- of Archaeology, in addition to the formances and readings and lec- launching of the Museum Studies tures. That definitely relates back minor. to topics we discussed in class." "One of the reasons we're doing Though Fournier and Munn this museum theme year is to have unbridled enthusiasm for the draw attention to the really rich undergraduate program, they faced museum sources we have here," a major challenge for its maiden Silverman said. "It's not only insti- voyage: How to accommodate tutions that have 'museum'nin the graduating seniors who only have name - there's lots of units on one year to complete the minor. campus that have spectacular col- "One of the challenges we had lections of all sorts of things." in this surge with the number of "Many of these collecting insti- students taking the intro class was tutions students aren't aware of at that many of them were seniors all," Taylor said. who needed to finish the require- "Not only the students, but the ments, including an internship," faculty," Silverman added. Taylor explained. "So, in October, According to UMMSP Stu- I started visiting the museums on dent Services Specialist Heather campus and the collecting insti- Piezga, a University alum, the tutions, trying to set up as many University is the ideal institution internships as I could. We ended for students to pursue a Museum up with a total of 55 different Studies minor, because the oppor- internship opportunities on cam- tunities on campus and in Ann pus and in greater Ann Arbor." Arbor are abundant and among The results of this internship the best in the country. scramble show how well the new "(The internship opportunities minor and the existing museums are) comparable to (those at) the on and near campus complement Smithsonian because of the collec- each other. tions the University has. Not just "(The museum staffs are) really in natural history or in art, but ... excited for the undergraduate stu- if you know anything about man- dents," said Taylor. "Since most uscript collections, the papyrus graduate students go abroad for collections are among some of the 0 their internships, there's been best in the world, and the fact that interest in interns for a long time students are able to work on these - they want interns, we've got things is amazing," Piegza said. interns. It works out." "And the thing is, when you "It's a love-fest," Silverman say 'I worked in the Maps Library added. at the University of Michigan,' maybe someone on the street A BANNER YEAR won't think that's important as something done at the Smithson- The new minor program has ian, but people in the field know also found camaraderie with the how important it is," she added. museums on campus, as both "Some of our collections, like DAILY FILM STAFF IS ZARAON PLACE HIRING . THE BEST APTS IN TOWN WWWZARAGONPLACECOM i" 10 SECONDS FROM DIAG S CAN YOUAPRTMENTS M A KE~EN THM47HG EN FITNESS MAKE THECENTER FINAL CUT? N E-mail join.arts@umich.edu for information on applying. The Museum Studes program covers more than just conventional art museums. It includes theme parks, zoos, arboreta and casinos. the rare book collection, are just unparalleled." APROMISING FUTURE As for the future of the Museum Studies minor, there are no cur- rent plans to expand the program into a concentration. Silverman believes that as "soon as you start forming a major, you start building walls around it," as only certain students with specific aims will take the courses. However, Silverman and Taylor both agree that if a significant stu- dent interest in a Museum Studies concentration should form, they would consider creating a program. But until then, Taylor assures inter- ested students that they "have plans for further developing the minor." Piegza, who also feels if should remain a minor, elaborated on what some of these developments may be. "I hope that maybe in the future we'll be able to offer more classes, but it's all based on interest and that's something that you can't necessarily predict," she said. "But I'm extremely optimistic." Despite the overwhelming response from the student body, Silverman and Taylor don't plan to cut down the program to fit their original projections. Only 25 students were expected to take Museums 301 last semester, but 70 enrolled. Thirty declarations for the minor were expected in a five year trajectory, but this goal was reached in the first year. Nor do Silverman and Taylor intend to mirror the competitive- ness of the graduate certificate program, which only admits 13 to 15 students per year. "The onlything thatwill limit the number of students we can admit would be our resources," Silverman said. "And so far, the college has been quite generous in supporting the unanticipated interest." But one thing is certain - the. program will remain as fluid as its field of focus. The minor will accommodate the kaleidoscopic viewpoints that students and pro- fessionals have concerning the museum world: "This is a great time to study museums and work in museums. It makes you think, 'What could I do to change the field?' because it's so open," Malzahn said. "It makes me feel like I can actually do something because there's so much going on." "I think (museums are) a way to promote intellectual curiosity, which is something very impor- tant and that maybe gets over- looked in formal education," said LSA sophomore Laura Mason. "(Museums') relevancy to soci- ety is not only based on their col- lections and their physicality and their preservation, but also acting as a cultural touchstone where you can get a sense of your identity," Fournier said. "But, in the end I think we're all just huge museum dorks" 'U Tr V=-E F N A L 512 E. 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