4B - Thursday, February 25, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com MUSTACHE-A-THON From Page 3B cessful, he wanted to find a way to give back to the community. In 2002, he opened 826 Valencia in San Francisco. According to Uhle, Eggers "wanted to take away the stigma of getting help for kids. So he made the name just the address instead of something that would make the place feel less fun." Since Eggers opened 826 Valencia in 2002, 826 National has started seven chapters across the country - 826michigan is one of them. Every.826 writing center has a different theme. At 826 Valencia, there's a pirate ambiance, and 826michigan is all about robots. Uhle says the theme immediately resonates with children when they come into the 826 building. "It's fun and different and it engages them in a way that their homework cannot ... it just brings the community to our doorstep. It's a way for us to recruit new donors, new volunteers and new mustache growers. It's a commu- nity portal," Uhle said. Many Ann Arbor residents walk into the store without know- ,.ing what to expect. Brubaker, who works the store shift four hours a week, explains how the process typically goes down: People ask about the robots, he gives them a straight-laced answer and then lets them know what 826 is really about. "People get really excited when they know kids they can bring in, and (they bring) money to help support our program, so it's kind of a community liaison type of thing. You draw them in under Not only do the winners have mustaches, so do their trophies. one pretense and once they find out what you're doing, they're even more excited about it," Bru- baker explained. Mustaches and robots aside, 826michigan's literacy pursuits are pretty astonishing them- selves. 826 has more than a thou- sand volunteers, many of whom are Michigan students who tutor children ages six to 18 in every- thing from math to English. The team also goes to public schools in the Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor area to hold writing workshops. What surprises most people about the organization is that it is completely volunteer-run and all programs - tutoring, workshops, field trips - are free. 826 Execu- tive Director Uhle and Executive Director Amy Sumerton are the only two paid members on staff. "It's a volunteer army of people that want to help," Brubaker said. 826 even makes young creative writers into published authors - whether it be through their own zine or a specially composed book. "Kids get super excited when you publish their work," Brubaker said. "Just the look on their faces when they realize, 'You want to put something I wrote into a book and people want to read it?' It's a big deal ... And to be a published author whether you're six or 15? That's a big deal." If helping an organization as admirable as 826 isn't enough of an incentive to convince anxious gents to put their follicles to good use, maybe these accolades will: Every Mustache-A-Thon partici- pant gets a thrift store trophy for his commendable pursuits - com- plete with its own stylin''stache. BODY ART From Page 1B traguses - the triangular flap of cartilage toward the front of the ear - and guys prefer eyebrows), potts stressed that it's ultimately impossible to predict who has what. "There's way more people that look like you that have genital piercings than people that look like me," he said. "Like, what do you think the percentage is of people that work here that have genital piercings?" It's 50 percent. Potts is one of them, but "you wouldn't be able to guess (the other)," he said. Finding acceptance According to potts, Ann Arbor is a fairly tolerant place for the heavily modified. "If you want to stand out here, you have to cut your hair and wear a suit and tie, and listen to Rush Lim- baugh," he explained. "But if you want to go alongwith the mainstream then you get some dreadlocks, you get your nose pierced, you go vegan." In a town where so many of the residents are stu- dents, it's not surprising that attitudes toward body modification would be relatively liberal. Morris was particularly gratified by the University's response when she had to go to UHS last year for a skin allergy. "I was really, really impressed that (the doctors) were so friendly to me, that they didn't give me some sort of parental speech of 'What are you doing to your body?' "she said. "That was really reassuring to me." However, Morris has had her share of bad reactions to her body modifications, both in the University and the outside world. "I think campus is accepting. I think campus still judges," she said. During her seniorcritique in the art school, one pro- fessor, upon seeing her hand implants, accused Morris of self-harming. It's a charge often laid on people with more unorthodox modifications. "It's not like I'm doing my scarification work with a razor blade on my arms," Morris explained. "I don't want to makelightof situations where people are cutting, because that's a very serious issue, but it's not something that I deal with ... There's a big difference from when you do it to yourself, by yourself, than when you find a tattoo artist and spend six months designing something, and then spend a year of your life working with that person for hours every other week to finish something." Morris clearly doesn't do her modifications on a self- desecrating whim. She is extremely picky aboutcleanli- ness, recovery time and the state of her health before she gets each new modification. But she recounted an incident in a grocery store, when she saw a motherscold her misbehaving child, " 'Stop being trouble, you're such trouble.' "And then (the mother) looks atcme, 'She knows what trouble is."' Morris didn't just let the comment pass. "I looked at her, I'm like, 'Actually, ma'am, I'm put- ting myself through the University of Michigan, I'm completely drug-free - I've never smoked anything - I lead a vegan lifestyle for myself, I'm active in different political organizations, I work with all these different things, I'm on ResStaff, I hold multiple jobs at a time while being a full-time student. If you'd like to know about trouble, Ican direct you to some other groups, but I'm not (in) them.' "And she was dumbfounded." Parental reactions to students' modifications are often the stickiest to deal with. Like Ross, whose moth- er still doesn't know about her small tattoo, Morris doesn't announce her new work to her family. Students often let their parents find out about their modifications when it comes up - in some cases, literally. LSA sophomore Christina Daniels had a tree tat- tooed on her hip when she turned 18. Her mother found out when she was driving back to school from fall break last year. "I was laying down in the car and my shirtcame up a little bit and she waxlike ... 'What is that?' " Danielsasaid. "'It's my tattoo, buh-bye Mom, I'll see you at winter break."' Remaking the temple Perhaps more reassuring to parents are the motiva- tions behind tattoos and other modifications - in many cases, it's a particular fusion of the artistic and the spiri- tual. "I got (my tattoo) because of a Bible parable," said Daniels, who has been religious all her life. The tree, which spreads over nearly a foot of her right hip, is a "metaphor for faith and how it can grow and become a big thing." More than a spiritual outlet, Morris sees body modi- fication as "a whole process of, really, adding to your- self." "It's a freeing process, it definitely helps me feel more comfortable with myself," she said, but "it's never something you need." Marchese agrees that modifications shouldn't be necessary to feel atchome in one's own skin. "I have my two or three piercings because I care about them, because they mean a lot to me. I didsuspen- sion because it was meaningful to me.... I don't feel like my piercings complete me; ina sense, it's just my way of expressing myself at this point intime." In doing piercings, potts deals directly with how to turn this self-expression into art. He described his work as "more of a craft," in that he turns other people's concepts into artistic reality rath- er than directly engaging with his own ideas. He sees himself as an employee of his customer, the real artistic visionary. "It's art for you when you're sitting and they're mak- ing over your body," he said. "You're remaking your temple ... we just help." For potts, body modification is all about decorating the earthly temple. His own piercings and tattoos are an exercise in "try- ing to make the outside look like what I think the out- side should look like - curb appeal, as it were." Potts sees eye to eye with many of the Students for the Appreciation of Body Modification crowd on-their reasons for getting into this particular form of art. He described LSA senior Amanda Badger, a co-founder of SABM and frequent visitor to Pangea. "She's not a weirdo. She just likes her temple and wants to decorate a little bit. And she's not sad or self- mutilating or anything likethat. It's about a celebration of her life.... It's a very empowering thing." Modified bodies in the student body Badger founded SABM last year as a place for stu- dents to get together and have an open conversation about body modification. "I enjoy body modification and body modification accessories, and I noticed that there wasn't an actual U of M student group that was involved with (that)," Bad- ger said. Though only the five officers attended the suspen- sion-themed first meeting of the semester, Badger hopes to expand the group. She echoes the sentiments of many modified students in her worries that others sometimes judge them or fear their differences before gettingto know them. "Anything that you don't know about is scary, and I don't want people to just chalk (me) off as some sort of freak, because I'm the same as anybody else," Morris said. Even Daniels, whose tattoo is only visible when she wears a swimsuit, said her friends are "always really surprised when they find out I have it." "They're like, 'Oh, you don't seem like the tattoo type,"' she said. Clearly, the idea of a "tattoo type," the standard ink- covered and metal-spiked delinquent, is a myth. The body-modifiedcanmbe anyone; their art is just as likely to be a purely personal expression as a loud public state- ment. "It's not weird ... it's not unacceptable," Badger said 'of body modification. "We're not mean, and we're not elitist, and -" "Speak for yourself!" Morris joked. Morris mused that with her split tongue, pop-up flowered hands and countless tattoos and piercings, she is "probably the most heavily modified student on cam- pus." She has traveled across the country to find just the right artists or craftsmen to do her work. But in Ann Arbor, Morris still admits to a discrepan- cy between her community at the 'U' and her modifica- tion community. "Some of my friends ... see meas a novelty," she said. "I always have this weird feelingthat people see me as, 'Let's live vicariously through her, because she's willing to make these choices for her life' ... I think that some people are afraid to step out of their little comfort bub- bles." The spiritual and artistic outlet of body modifica- tion is an essential part of Morris's life and the lives of many modification practitioners. And, Morris confessed, "I really want to have more friends that IScan share that with." 0 The "stuff" referred to in the store's tagline includes figurines, T-shirts, manga and a giant Uglydoll. VAULT From Page 3B If anything else, it was extreme- ly fortuitous for Vault of Midnight to open when it did. It was able to ride along the wave of the indus- try's return to prosperity. Comic books have blown up since the global successes of comic book movies - "Spider-Man," "The Dark Knight" and "Iron Man," to name a few. These film sensations have definitely led to more awareness and readership of comic books in general, but to attribute the 'suc- cess of Vault of Midnight merely to this phenomenon would belittle the hard work done by the store's owners and employees. "I think we've been able to thrive because of genuine appre- ciation and enthusiasm for what ANGER From Page 3B we're doing," said Silbereis. "At the heart of it we just really loved comic books," added Sul- livan. "I would talk people's ears off, I would get them to buy comic books 'cause I was totally all about them. And that's real." For newbies who may worry about being overwhelmed by Vault of Midnight's mammoth collection, fear not. The store's employees are extremely knowledgeable and passionate about what they sell - they've been reading comics since they were kids. And the only thing they love more than the comics and games themselves is the chance to introduce others to them. "(What we sell) coincides with what we like, that's pretty much how we do everything," said Sul- livan. "It's got to be the marriage of both of those things ... we have to like it, not (be) selling for the sake of selling. We could have every kind of gaming thing imag- bloggers don't always know the taste of each other's dishes, and will hail the aesthetically beau- inable but we'd spread ourselves too thin and we wouldn't know a lot about (the products), and knowing a lot about (what we sell) helps us do well. "It's so easy if you don't have to bullshit," he continued. "I just think you'd be miserable trying to sell stuff that you weren't really into, it seems like a worst night- mare." Although Vault of Midnight has a large selection of mainstream Marvel and DC comics today, the owners haven't forgotten their origins. The store has a significant selection of independent comics - nearly half of the store's main floor is dedicated to titles from smaller publishers including Dark Horse ("Buffy the Vampire , Slayer"), image ("Invincible") and Dyna- mite ("Red Sonja"). In many ways, this symbolizes a universally held dream - the ability to achieve suc- cess without sellingyour soul. There are quick, easy meals out there begging to be cooked, and once personal qualms are over- looked, the blogs are a round-trip ticket to dinner tables around the world. When lengthy lists of weird ingredients in cookbooks without pictures stifle the desire to become the next Julia Child, the blogs are the place to go. Anger wants to cook 524 of your recipes in 365 days. To send her von rlst. e-mail steena diumich.edu. tiful efforts of another home cook. Trust me, I've made some will often post pictures from very pretty dishes that were just food made from the latest cook- impossible to swallow. books, but not the recipe itself. Food blogs can amplify con- And before you go blog-happy trol issues, but also record diet in your kitchen, be warned: A transformations and help out dish can look amazing with the with what to make for dinner. right plating, lighting and angle, I would encourage people to without tasting like anything scour food blogs not only for more than a cardboard box. Food their recipes but for inspiration. S 0 JOINING DAILY ARTS. IT'S WHAT'S FOR DINNER. E-mail join.arts@umich.edu 0 for information on applying.