4B - Thursday, October 23, 2014 the b- side The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4B - Thursday, October 23, 2014 the b-side The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 9 NICHOLAS WILLIAMS/Daily The Feminist Forum at East Quad led a discussion on sexual assault of Native American women this week. Passion drives RC F m Frum sos East Quad groups have the potential to make a difference By ADAM THEISEN Daily Music Editor When they were living togeth- er sophomore year, Residential College students Talya Nakash, Emily Preuss, Alia Raheem and MariannaYamamoto would sit in their living room and talk about women of color in the media - race, gender and the portrayals that they saw. Now as seniors, they're doing the same thing every week, but dozens of people showup with them to take part in the conversation. "We thought this would be so cool if we could expand this and put it in a more structured envi- ronment so that everyone in the RC and people who were interest- ed could have the benefit of gain- ingaspace likethis," Nakash said. As co-leaders and co-found- ers of Feminist Forum, the four head up a discussion every Mon- day night in East Quad, covering a wide variety of intersectional social topics. Several of these types of groups meet weekly underthe RC Forumumbrella, whether they're discussing social issues like Fem- inist and LGBT*QA Forums, or they're more focused on artis- tic expression like Poetry and Creative Writing Forums. RC Forums can be anything, so long as they're substantive and have passionate members. The forum system was origi- nally proposed during the final years of old East Quad by an RC senior who had gone to Ann Arbor's alternative Commu- nity High School, where their version of "homerooms" were "forums" that brought together 9th through 12th grade students. "The main impetus for the RC was 'let's find a way to bring upper-level students and lower- level students inthe RC into clos- er contact,"' said Jennifer Myers, associate director for Curricu- lum and Director of Academic Services. "Because when the upper-level student moved out, it was hard for them to maintain those ties." . A 1974 study of Community High School by the University's School of Social Work describes the alternative learning facility as having "maximum individu- ality within maximum commu- nity," but that motto could be applied just as accurately to the RC, a part of the University where faculty insist on being called by their first names and, back in the '70s, didn't even give out grades. "The history of the RC has been one that supports a lot of student autonomy," Myers said. "I had always pictured myself in an environment closer to a small liberal arts college, but I also really wanted the resources of a large university," said RC junior and co-leader of Food Forum Amanda Nelson, which is now in its second year. "I can walk through the halls and know most of the people and know that they share certain interests." In their first year, the variety of forums also included faculty members. Since then, they've been entirely student-run affairs, with little-to-no interference from the college itself. "It became quickly clear that wasn't the way to go," Myers said. "Because when you have a faculty person in the room, it's easy to revert back to the faculty person leading discussion and driving things, and we didn't want it to be that. So the faculty stepped out, and we left it to the students, and it's been that way ever since." While there are no profes- sors present, students can still earn class credit for participat- ing in a forum. Once an RC club has existed for a semester, it can be approved to become a fully- fledged forum, at which point its regular members may elect to receive credit for attending. This leads to an environment in which the forums can feel like a much more casual classroom, or an educational discussion among peers. "It's academic, but not peda- gogical," Nelson said. At this week's Feminist Forum meeting,Nakash,Preuss,Raheem and Yamamoto led a discussion on sexual assault of Native Amer- ican women in a circle of over 30 students. While Nakash takes the lead by introducing the topic and providing facts, the leaders make a conscious effort to let the unas- suming members speak first if they have input on the subject. In that way, the forums really paral- lel RC classes, in which profes- sors often moderate discussion, but usually step back and let the students carry iton their own. Myers says that enrollment seems to have gone up since East Quad has been renovated, but there are still challenges facing the RC in this new building. This year's RC senior class has expe- rienced old East Quad, a year in West Quad and now two years in the new, renovated East Quad, which some say has hurt the com- munity aspect of the college. "It was weird, because our RC classes weren't even in West Quad," said RC senior Danielle Leonard, who was co-leader of LGBT*QA forum during her sophomore year. "The forum meetings were in South Quad sometimes. But I feel like we've restored it a lot. I feel like last year was kind of 'getting the RC back into East Quad' and figur- ing all that out, and this year it's finally like a community again. The new East Quad hasn't been without criticism though, with many saying that the updated building is like a hotel, compared to the run-down old building that they say was full of character. The demise of the autonomous, student-run Halfway Inn, a basement per- formance space/caf6 for RC stu- dents, seemed symbolic of these changes. Last year, the "Take Back The RC" group protested the changes by painting murals on empty East Quad walls (a tribute to the days of Old EQ), leading to a revamped RC art policy. "Some of the alums have come back, and this is almost like you left your house, and somebody redid your whole house. You approach the house, and from the outside it pretty much looks the same, but you walk in and it is completely different. It has to be stunning," Myers said. "On the other hand, though, the new students coming in, this is what you know as what the RC is, and students have not been dissatis- fied." The question is, then, how will the RC put its stamp on New East Quad? Myers talks about how as programs change, she wants to open up more EQ space specifically for RC students, but for the moment, the forums are now one of the few ways to see the community aspect of the RC on full display. You can walk into East Quad at lunchtime and hear French, German, Russian, Spanish and even Latin being spoken by large groups as part of the RC's intensive language program, or you can wander the dorm and perhaps try to pick out the more eccentrically dressed people, but the forums where often what brings students together the most. With the constant turnover of leaders and members, it can be difficult to keep a forum running strong. "It's hard to keep a new forum going, because when it's new, everyone wants to join it, but then everyone kind of flocks to the new forums," Leonard said. "It takes dedicated leaders (to keep a forum running), people willing to assume responsibil- ity," Myers said. "Sometimes when you don't have that person ready to step up, it can really fall by the wayside." This makes it imperative that older forum leaders train and groom younger members to take over when they graduate. And while on a week-to-week basis the socially conscious forums may just be reaching out to people who already agree with them and won't necessar- ily change anyone's mind, they do provide a safe, open space and can raise consciousness in people who care about pressing social issues. "Obviously people who have (anti-LGBT*QA beliefs) aren't going to be the ones joining our forum ... so we definitely try to make it a safe space," Leonard said. "I think more than anything it can act, just like a very safe, enclosed space where everyone can just be open about anything. As much as a zone can be judg- ment-free it's definitely a judg- ment-free zone." Forums also have the potential to make a larger difference on campus, though, as lastyear Fem- inist Forum hosted a talk by Jim DeRogatis in a large-scale event that was practically unprecedent- ed for an RC forum. The leaders are looking to do a similar, even larger event this year. However, despite a possibility for expansion and more events, the forum leaders still also want to focus on sharing their passions with other members. "I learned that if you don't feel like you have a space on campus, to just go and create your own," Raheem said. "If you think that there's something out there that you care about, most likely there's going to be someone else who cares about it as well and is just as passionate and you should get out there and shout it out." By YARDAIN AMRON . Daily Arts Writer Hi, my name is Skyler and I'm a music pirate addict. I'm kinda nervous to be here to be honest. I heard about this group from my old friend Ronnie who's also a recovering addict - actu- ally come to think of it, just yesterday Ronnie called me all giggidy with some great news while I was mid-shift at the hospital (I'm 'a year into my residency). He said he had just bought, with money, like real dollars, his first song in over 10 years. Big deal, I know, and I was super excited for Ronnie and while I probably shouldn't have picked up the phone while inserting my first- ever IV drip, I was so super happy for Ronnie like I said, and couldn't help myself - and a blood transfusion later, Ms. Henderson was conscious again, so no big- gie. Claps for Ronnie! Anyway, I think I'm sup- posed to tell my own story about how I got here so here goes. It all started back in junior high school, when exchanging iTunes libraries was as ordinary as dying of dysentery in Ore- gon Trail". All you did was hand over your iPod to that friend-with-great-music- taste for the night and the next day you had a thou- sand new songs - no cost to you, no cost to your friend. So amazing! Soon enough, I had stockpiled a library 5,000 songs strong, of which maybe 200 were original- ly mine, of which all were from my father's embarrass- ing CD collection, of which contained the soundtrack to Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, of which I know every fucking word ... But there was also all the music I wanted but could never actually ask my friends for because that would be like, straight social suicide. Like omg, if Ronnie knew I owned all six Kelly Clarkson albums, or that I not only own but have mem- orized the tracklists for Now 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 12 - just kill me. So I did the sen- sible thing and downloaded LimeWire, which I'm sure you all know about because anyone who's an addict knows about LimeWire, a service that fostered illegal downloading. Life on LimeWire was mojitos on the beach, but like forever. I could down- load virtually any song I desired - Sheryl Crow's whole discography, the "Pokemon" theme song, you name it! - and all for free. It quickly progressed from a weekly thing to the point where I was downloading almost constantly, I'm talk- ing a few times a day. And when LimeWire didn't have what I wanted, I tried Nap- ster, Ka-zaa, Gnutella, what- ever might get me the song I was craving. I will say I bought an external hard drive for my 20,000-song library, so I didn't complete- ly steal everything if you think about it philosophical- ly or whatever. Also, I once went into a record store and bought a poster of the Dark Side of the Moon album cover because it's my favorite (I have Pink Floyd's whole dis- cography), so that counts too I think. Those were the days, before all the bullshit gov- ernment regulation that made stealing music less convenient. Then Big Broth- er cracked down on Nap- ster, LimeWire, Ka-zaa, all the peer-to-peer file shar- ing services, and ruined my fun. So I, being the innova- tive person I am, discovered BitTorrent, pirate-bay.org and other sites like it, which made it possible to steal movies and soft-ware too! But then Jammie Thom- as-Rasset happened - you know, the woman who got sued by the Record- ing Industry Association of America (RIAA) for $220,000 ($54,000 for each of the 24 songs she down- loaded illegally). When Ron- nie told me about the suit, and the 18,000 others filed by the .RIAA against simi- lar individuals, I pissed my pants, changed into a fresh pair, did some back-of-the- napkin math that concluded my own suit would add up to $1 billion and change, and then pissed my pants again (Do you know how much debt med students have already?!?) I'm fucking scared, guys. That was a few days ago, and I'm fucking, scared guys. I got my Locs on and keep the oven on now in case the FBI shows up so I can destroy my hard-drive. I've been trying to lay low, get this addiction under control, but dependence is real. Like last night, I downloaded every song by Beethoven and Mozart just because I can. I know it's wrong, but it's just so easy. I'm not a bad per- son guys, I just want to be a gynecologist. This is a work of fiction. Yardain can be reached at amron@umich.edu. MUSIC NOTEBOOK Music Pirates Anonymous 0i SINGLE REVIEW Friday, October 24, 2014 9 AM to 5:30 PM 1225 South Hall University of Michigan Law School lawumich.edu/FinReform I #UMFinReg Gwen Stefani's highly antici- pated comeback -you know, the one that we've been asking for since 2006's The B Sweet Escape, since No Baby Doubt's much- Don't Lie welcomed (yet ulti- Gwen Stefani mately under- Interscope whelming) 2012 comeback and since she announced thatshe'd be a coach on this fall's cycle of "The Voice" - is finally happening. It's a thing, you guys. On Saturday she released the firstsingle fromher upcoming third studio album and it's anything but disappoint- ing. Upon first listen, "BabyDon't Lie" isn't a total home run; it's not a songthat you impulsively buy on iTunes after listening to it for 30 seconds and it doesn't scream "firstsingle" right away. Like, on a scale of one to Taylor Swift's "Shake It Off" breaking the Inter- net, "BabyDon't Lie"... didn't. But that was to be expected - Stefani hasn't released newsolo material in eight years so, much like Fergie's recently released "L.A.Love (La La)," there wasn't ever going to be much universal fanfare around this release. It's simply been too longsince she's connected to us through her music. Though she never lost her pop culture relevance, Gwen Stefani's extended absence from music gave her something to prove. After a few more listens, "Baby Don't Lie" becomes more of the single we were hoping to hear from Stefani - one that gets stuck in your head, one that doesn't sound like everything that's already out there, one that is inherently Gwen. Its reggae- tinged beat pulsates more and more and itslyrics have some actual meaning. Asking for more from Gwen would've been asking too much; "Baby Don't Lie" isn't a disappointmentand, considering she wrote the song with Benny Blanco and Ryan "Halo" Tedder, KEYNOTE SPEAKER 12:30 PM Richard Cordray Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau that shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone. Gwen Stefani's resurgence has been a reassuringly feeltgood one - not that there was ever any doubtthatshe was stillthe impossibly awesome and one-of- a-kind person she was when she was a teenager in No Doubt, but her presence on "The Voice" this season let us witness it first-hand. As the only female coach, Gwen Stefani isn't just "one of the boys," she runs the whole show and doesn't take any shit fromher INTERSCOPE comrades. Together with fellow- newcomer Pharrell Williams, Gwen has given Adam Levine a run for his moneyin swaying the best contestants to join her team and it'sbeen a joyto watch. "Baby Don't Lie" may not end up being a chart-topper for Gwen Stefanibut it sure as hell is a solid comeback single that retains everything it means to be a Gwen Stefani song. Now I'm just waiting for her to perform it on "The Voice." -GIBSON JOHNS 4 t~