The Michigan Daily - Monday, July 11, 2005 - 3 Vlchigan Theater receives- DAMAGECONTROL ;rant, Soundfall unfunded . , Justin Miller ily News Editor The Michigan Theater will purchase digital cinema projectors and video plays with a grant given to it by the te in an effort to lure college gradu- s to Ann Arbor. fhe city applied for the grant as part Gov. Jennifer Granholm's Cool Cit- .itiative to make Michigan cities >re attractive for college graduates live and work in. The city asked for 0,000 for theater improvements an art display to be built on the e of the Maynard Street Parking ucture, but the grant was only given the theater. They said that they were looking for Jects with one focus. They preferred Michigan Theater project," said andt Colutas, chair of Ann Arbor's ol Cities taskforce. he theater will purchase two high inition video projectors, each worth s of thousands of dollars for its the- r and screening room. This equip- nt will keep the theater up-to-date accessible to small, independent amakers. "It's not going to be too long before luloid film is the exception, instead of the rule," said Russ Collins, execu- tive director of the Michigan Theater. "This will allow us to exhibit all kinds of digital cinema. A lot of smaller, inde- pendent filmmakers do their formats only in digital" Theater patrons will not have to be in their seats to watch films, with the addi- tion of a "micro-cinema" gallery in the lobby. Like an art gallery, people will be able to walk along the flat-screen dis- plays and watch short films. This added diversity of film will help the theater live up to its role as an arts organiza- tion, Collins said. Collins said the city would alsobenefit from the theater improvements because of the theater's reputation for showing rare films. He also said he hoped that the digital cinema would turn the theater into a magnet for filmmakers when the improvements are finished next year. Yards away, the Maynard parking structure will not see its "Soundfall" project come to life, after the state rejected the Cool Cities grant. The Soundfall plan would have fea- tured a set of LED and aluminum tubes that would form different colored pat- terns of light in response to pedestrians on the street below. Art and Design lecturer Bill Bur- gard headed the three-semester class where his students explored what pub- tic art should look like, crafted a design proposal for the Soundfall project and presented it to the state. Burgard said that he did not think the Soundfall and Michigan Theater were competing. "I don't feel it was us going against them to get the money. I feel that the state - the Cool Cities people - who decided on the grant weren't ready for our project," Burgard said. "I'm very disappointed that we had felt strongly that we were going to get the grant." Burgard said he heard that the Soundfall proposal was rejected because the state felt it was too "risky" and abstract. While the project was not funded by the state, Colutas said that he hopes the Soundfall can be complet- ed with community fundraising. "We have not given up on the Sound- fall project," Colutas said. Burgard said that the project has the advantage of already being designed, saving future investors time and money. The Soundfall project costs an esti- mated $90,000, but it could be more expensive if Maynard St. has to be shut- down for construction. SA adds new department Jeremy Davidson News Editor The University Board of Regents roved the reorganization of the Film ts and Cultures program at their May eting, a step that recognizes the evols- nature of the discipline and gives ependence to the program. Starting all, the University will put the new partment of Screen Arts and Cultures hin the College of Literature Science Ithe Arts. Richard Abel, Interim Dean for the apartment of Film Arts and Cultures, d people pushed for the name change cause of the department's specificity. "We were becoming dissatisfied with rame because it was tied to the tech- egy. We wanted to come up with a ne that encompassed all aspects of the cipline,"Abel said. Associate Dean for the Humanities partment Michael Schoenfeldt said that new name acknowledges that media expanded beyond film and video over last 10 years. 'The new name is a sign of a rapidly evolving field," Schoenfeldt said. In a recommendation to the Board of Regents, LSA Dean Terrence J. McDonald wrote that while film stud- ies has always been an interdisciplin- ary field, they are not interdisciplinary in the same way as the other programs within the college. McDonald argued that "the Pro- gram in Film and Video Studies is more on the order of the Department of the History of Art as an intellec- tual discipline," and as such, the pro- gram requires the title of department according to the University's own criterion. Schoenfeldt agreed with McDon- ald's recommendation. "Over the last 10 years the program has grown from an adjunct depart- ment of English where a few people taught film to a powerful independent program with a clear sense of inde- pendence and its own disciplinary protocols," Schoenfeldt said. Nick Tanis, an Associate Professor of Film and Television at New York University, who has had 30 years of experience in the field, said film pro- grams should be kept independent of established departments, like English. "An English teacher may be able to analyze a screenplay, but they don't necessarily know how to write one, or to understand what challenges a writer of screenplays faces or how to market a screenplay once it is pro- duced. Nor can we ask them to be fluent in film. What will work on the page will not necessarily translate to the screen. A screenwriter knows the difference," Tanis said. Abel said that the change from program status to departmental sta- tus could result in more funding, but that this was not a given. Regardless, Schoenfeldt had an optimistic outlook on the future of the department. "It is certain to become the pre- miere program in the Midwest," Schoenfeldt said. The program will begin to move into new facilities over the next few years, and hopes to offer a Ph.D. program starting in 2007. Hey, Sophomores and Juniors... ORRECTIONS In the article 'Court limits student pub- ing freedom,' (7/5/05) Megan Ganz's me should not have been spelled with graphic on page nine of last week's per should have said that Bollinger vs. -atz was a 6-3 loss for the University. Please report any errors in the Daily corrections@michigandaily.com. F XlargePizza. 01 Cheese & 1 Topping $10.99 Onl 2nd XLarge Pizza $8 99 ...iS youK b simply not c n g You've got the business savvy, but things aren't challenging. Well, come join the Business Staff at the Michigan Daily and become an Account Executive. You will sell advertising locally and nationally, manage your own account territory, create ad copy, and earn commission based pay. We're talking big time experience here. So, if you're the ambitious, creative and highly motivated type, then stop by and pick upan application. Deadline is Wednesday, July 13th. The Michigan Daily Student Publications Building 420 Maynard Street, 2 Floor or call 17341 764-0662 for more info ther great specials vailable for delivery y $ I delivery charge Hours: Icoupoper uomer 2111: Packard S St SnThurs ttomt12om Not good wihanyothe roffer l c d Fr-Sot tm-om Limited time oniy (34}662-5100 Fri-Sat llam-lam