Monday, June 11, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, June 11, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com ARBORETUM EXPLORATION Famed author imparts life lesson 'Fahrenheit 451' mation on the internet, t9 becom- ing the most enthusiastic and active leaves behind web users I know; headlines are far less read than tweets. burning questions Ray Bradbury, as far as I know, did not have a Facebook or.Twit- By STEVE ZOSKI ter account. Maybe he was too old Daily Arts Writer for it; maybe he considered his remaining time on the Earth too On Tuesday, the world- precious for liking, poking and renowned science fiction writer, Farmville invites. Or maybe, he Ray Bradbury, died at the age of just wanted to spend more time 91. I learned of Bradbury's death with his beloved books. through Facebook statuses and Born in 1920, Bradbury had seen Twitter posts. Like many, I knew many mediums - newspapers, Bradbury because I was required vinyl records, 8-tracks, cassettes to read his most well-known and DVDs - rise to the top like a novel, ."Fahrenheit 451" (named hot new band, enjoying popular- for the temperature at which ity and then receding until cooler, paper ignites) in high school. My better groups come along. News- 10th grade English class read it papers have given way to online in the spring of 2007, just a few news (which studies have shown months before I would use Face- are more skimmed over than print book for the first time. articles) and Vinyl enjoys a small Life was simpler then, and resurgence only out of nostalgia instead of spending time on Face- and hipster-fetishes. Popularity is book, I spent time reading books. fleeting. Instead of status updates or Wiki- Printed books are less popular pedia entries, I would read hun- thanever, and people seem to prefer dreds of pages. television adaptations and movies. Now, five years later Facebook Most of my friends choose to watch has become a more integral part "Game of Thrones" over reading of our lives than I could ever have "A Song of Ice and Fire." Optimists imagined. In those five years, like to think that even if printed parents, uncles, aunts and grand- books go, there are e-readers and parents have all gone from being tablets that literature can thrive hesitant about putting their infor- in, but more cynical readers feel MANDATE From Page 1A the state of Michigan held simi- lar rallies on Friday, according to Thomm. He said these rallies were in reaction to the Obama administra- tion's unwillingness to compro- mise. "We have a significant threat to our religious liberty," Thomm said. "There has been an inflex- ibility on the part of the Obama administration to even hold dia- logue with the U.S. bishops or other faith groups." According to their website, Stop HHS is a project of Ave Maria Radio - a Catholic radio station - that is "committed to reversing the deci- sion of the Obama Administration to force Catholic organizations to provide sterilization, contracep- tion, and abortifacient drugs in their health care plans." LSA junior Joe Lipa, vice presi- dent of Students for Life, reserved space on the Diag for the rally on behalf of his organization, which was a co-sponsor of the event. "It's tough always in the sum- mer, where everyone scatters and goes home, because maybe 5 per- cent of students are taking spring classes," Lipa said. However, Lipa said he saw a large amount of young people he recognized in the crowd. Though Students for Life's con- stitution deems itself "non-sectar- ian," Lipa said the group's beliefs are aligned with those fighting for religious freedom. "Pro-life and religious freedom are not contradicting in any way, especially when the violation of religious freedom requires the providing of abortions," Lipa said. "That directly impacts our club." Considering that the HHS man- date would require hospitals to provide abortions, Lipa said any member of Students for Life is also a supporter of religious freedom. LSA senior Carmen Allen, for- mer president of Students for Life, attended the rally and said it reflects the open nature of dia- logue in America. "The beauty of the United States is that when the govern- ment does something that the people aren't OK with, the people have the power to make a change to make an influence in that gov- ernment," she said. "I think (the rally) is a testament to that, and I want to be part of it." Rackham student Kevin Dahl- berg also attended the event and said it follows in the rich history the University has of social activ- ism. "I think the University of Mich- igan ... has a wonderful tradition of protests, of standing up for what is right, for what is reasonable," Dahlberg said. Actors perform in Sunday's production of "The Merry Wives of Windsor." See full article, page 11. I IR MKO/A Ray Bradbury dies at age 91. something is lost in this transition. Tablets are not a pure book-reading experience. Can anyone get the same experience reading a book on an iPad where distractions thrive? Our generation of television watchers and internet surfers may be just as dangerous to printed books as the firefighters who burn books in "Fahrenheit 451" are. Critics, teachers, readers all like to believe the novel is a warning against the censorship of books but Bradbury spent the last few years of his life trying to convince everyone "Fahrenheit 451" wasn't about censorship. Rather, he was adamant the novel was a caution- ary tale against the potential evil of television, or "quicker" ways of getting information. Bradbury worried about a society where people gave up books because they had easier, faster forms of enter- tainment and knowledge. An LA Weekly article by Amy E. Boyle Johnston from 2007, the year Bradbury received a Pulitzer award, elaborated on Bradbury's fears and highlighted Bradbury's insistence the book wasn't-about censorship. "Unlike Orwell's 1984, in which the government uses television screens to indoctrinate citizens, Bradbury envisioned television as an opiate," Johnston says. Johnston's article notes that Bradbury feared that formats like television took people away from enjoying literature. "Useless ... they stuff you with so much useless information, you feel full," Bradbury said of televi- sion. Johnston includes an excerpt from a letter Bradbury sent to another writer, Richard Matheson, in 1951 about how he feared radio would take away from literature. "Radio has contributed to our growing lack of attention ... This sort of hopscotching existence makes it almost impossible for people, myself included, to sit down and get into a novel again. We have become a short story reading peo- ple, or, worse than that, a QUICK reading people," Bradbury wrote. Bradbury's fears about radio and television could just as eas- ily extend to the' internet and technology. People like to utter the phrase "this is so 1984" when they feel the society they live in is becoming like the one George Orwell depicted in "1984," but when I read about the end of Ray Bradbury's life in a mere two-sen- tence status update on Facebook, I couldn't help but think "this is so Farenheit 451." And there is my favorite passage from the book - where the main character and another firefighter discuss why they don't need books: Cram them full of non- combustible data, chock them so damned full of 'facts' they feel stuffed, but absolutely 'brilliant' with information. Then they'll feel they're thinking, they'll get a sense of motion without mov- ing. And they'll be happy, because facts of that sort don't change. Don't give them any slippery stuff like philosophy or sociology to tie things up with. That way lies mel- ancholy. Any man who can take a TV wall apart and put it back together again, and most men can nowadays, is happier than any man who tries to slide-rule, measure, and equate the universe, which just won't be measured or equated without making man feel bestial and lonely ... I just like solid entertainment." So much of Bradbury's book seems tobe coming true. We aren't burning books yet, but it doesn't seem like it will take long for them to seem more useful as kindling for the camp fire than something to crack open. Bradbury will be remembered because he left us with so many burning questions: "Who will need books when we have kindles and iPads? Who will need litera-° ture when we have movies, video games and the internet? Who will need truth when we have enter- tainment?" RECORDS From Page 1A below UHS's target satisfaction rate. "Our goal is above 90 (per- cent)," Winfield said. "We don't want one out of seven people say- ing this sucked. We could live with one out of 10 or one out of 12, but our goal is higher than that." Other universities have already started the trend eliminating walk-ins, including Michigan State University, which transi- tioned away from a walk-in-only system 15 years ago when it wasn't uncommon for students to wait over an hour for service during flu season in particular, accord- ing to Kathi Braunlich, marketing and communications manager for Michigan State University Stu- dent Health Services. Braunlich said MSU uses a hybrid system where walk-in ser- vices aren't advertised, but time is set aside every day to facilitate students' immediate needs: "We try to start the (begin- ning) of each day with at least 70 percent of our appointments open," Braunlich said. "We don't advertise it as being a walk-in clinic ... we want people to call ahead of time." Braunlich added that forc- ing students to schedule their appointments while still leav- ing time throughout the day for students to be seen as needed shortens average wait time for students at.the clinic. When asked if UHS ever con- sidered a hybrid system similar. to MSU's, Winfield said while the option was discussed, it seemed "too confusing" after looking at the extensive data as well as tak- ing habits of students into consid- eration. "The message is complicated," Winfield said. "We've also got a lot of experience with the student life pattern, and we have to be respectful of that." Winfield also said part of the reason for the change to appoint- ment-only is that Epic - the new software UHS is implementing that UHS will refer to as MiChart - is difficult to use. "We don't know how to use (the software), and I think it's going to slow us down," Winfield said. However, instantaneous com- munication between UHS and the University's medical center once they get used to the pro- gram is just one of the advantages it will bring to patient treatment, Winfield said. "Anything we do is going to be visible at the medical center," Winfield said. "If I see you and you have abdominal pain, and we do a blood count and an x-ray, and I tell you, if you get worse, (to) go to the emergency room ... they'll have all of our results, right there, at their fingertips." Winfield estimated that it will take the staff six months to a year to get back to their standard operating speed based on consul- tation with other clinical settings with the same software. "We are planning to give clini- cal staff double time for visits for 6 weeks, and then reassess," Win- field wrote in an e-mail. Winfield explained that this is a $170 million project that will affect about 200 clinics in the University medical center. As a result, during the UHS staff's transition, patients should expect to wait longer for treatment. "This is really, really compli- cated, and we're a pretty simple place," Winfield said. "For the first few weeks, every visit's going to get 30 minutes so we can learn how to do this." But he added that after the staff has gained familiarity with the software, UHS might rethink its current position on walk-in appointments. "I'll consider anythingto make service work. I am not one of those people who sticks to some- thing that isn't working," Win- field said. In August, UHS will introduce the "patient portal," allowing patients to access their medical records online with a personal sign-in code. The reason certain changes have already been put in place was to avoid a major backlog of patients once students return for the school year, according to Kathleen Miller, operations manager of the UHS Clinic and a member of the lead team for MiChart implementation. "We're hoping that with going live in June, people should become pretty proficient by August," Miller said. Managing Editor Giacomo Bologna contributed to this report. .5-UMi-