Wednesday, July 16, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com CSG president-elect talks student voice, future initiatives Wednesday, July 16, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com FILM REVIEW ALBUM REVIEW New 'Masters -of Sex''orldPeace' x By ADAM DEPOLLO his compelling character stud- Online Arts Editor ies of society's underclass. All Upcoming plans include Night Owl, more focus on campus mental health By WILL GREENBERG Daily News Editor In case you didn't know, last year was an incredibly busy pair of semesters for the Central Student Government. Maybe it was something in the air, maybe it was just a high demand for involvement from a restless student body, but the activity was electric.' Admittedly, not all of the action was particularly cheery. Fall 2013 saw students voice their displea- sure with the football student tick- et policy, incidents like the Theta Xi racist party and the University's refusmal to allow students onnthe presidential search committee. From there, the winter brought social movements like the #BBUM Twitter campaign, which incited a response from University admin- istrators. CSG also conducted its own investigation into sexual mis- conduct, prompted by The Michi- gan Daily's exclusive story on Brendan Gibbons' permanent sep- aration from the University. There was also the #UMDivest campaign to divest funds from companies that hold contracts with Israeli militia, led by the Students Allied for Freedom and Equality. Public Policy senior Bobby Dishell, newly-elected CSG Presi- dent and last year's vice presi- dent alongside president Michael Proppe, this coming school year should be a chance to continue his work from last year. Dishell said he has been work- ing primarily on two projects over the summer. The first is con- tinuina wor non at vear's Niaht Owl bus route, which had success in helping increase safe evening transportation for students on the weekends. The second, new men- tal health program the Wolverine Support Network, which looks to supplement the University's Coun- seling and Psychological Services office, comes from Dishell's presi- dential campaign, He said he is in the midst of dis- cussions with CAPS and several student organizations, though he declined to state who he's worked with until plans are more final. The plan is for the program to be staffed by student volunteers trained by CAPS. Dishell said the current CAPS offices fail to cre- ate an ideal space for discussion, something that a student-run pro- gram would better facilitate. He added that the program would be funded by CSG and be up-and- running by the Winter Term at the latest. "Peer sunnnrt - it's hen dem- onstrated at the high school level and also on a few different college campuses - is an effective way to help foster mental health," he said. As the incoming president, Dishell also takes on the position in the fall with both previous suc- cesses and previous shortcomings from lastyear's assembly. The handling of the #UMDi- vest campaign was the most con- troversial issue from last year. It started as a proposal from Stu- dents Allied for Freedom and Equality that encouraged the Uni- versity to divest from companies working with Israel. The resolu- tion received neither approval nor disapproval from the assembly; the CSG assembly instead chose to indefinitely postpone the reso- lution, which then-CSG presi- dent Michael Proppe said was an unprecedented action at the time. The result was a sit-in staged by SAFE and their allies in the CSG chambers.ceatinga ntenseca m- pus conflict, where threats were exchanged between students on either side of the issue. The reso- lution was eventually voted down the following week at the most highly-attended CSG meeting of the year. The incident was largely consid- ered a failure of CSG to give a voice to the student body by postponing the vote instead of taking a stand on either side. While Dishell was not a voting member of the assem- bly as vice president and will still not be as president, he acknowl- edged that he could have done a better job of reaching out to both sides and facilitating conversation. He said he expects this year's representatives are prepared to properly represent the student. body but that he would have to work on a case-by-case basis to decide if any other action would be needed in the future from the executives. Sa CG Paze 1; ..ailin Fitzgerala an MicnaelS hneen Season premiere is light on spectacle and heavy on pathos By CHLOE GILKE DailyArts Writer All puns aside, the season pre- miere of "Masters of Sex" does not disappoint. After an impressive freshman season, "Masters" seems to have matured during its hiatus, smoothing out some plodding A plotlines and making better Maste use of its emo- S tional appeal. The most Sewon 2 consistently Premiere engaging part of the first sea- Showtime son was the Sundaysat10p.m. relationship between star- crossed co-workers Bill Masters (Michael Sheen, "Frost/Nixon") and Virginia Johnson (Lizzy Caplan, "Party Down"), and season two wastes no time in answering the question of their romantic fate. The episode is creatively' struc- tured like a parallax, with each reminiscing about the aftermath of Bill proclaiming his love for Vir- ginia. First, Bill waits quietly in the bed, lying nearly motionless as he overhears half of Virginia's phone call with Ethan. Later, when we hear Virginia's conversation from her point of view, we realize the full extent of what Bill was fearing. After the will-they-or-won't-they of their sex study in the first sea- son, something about this round is different. It isn't just the absence of wires and non-clinical setting. Bill and Virginia are bringing their affair into the real world, where it has real consequences. Virginia finally calls it off with lovesick puppy Ethan, and stoic Bill can't escape the guilt of betraying his lovely wife and new baby. With the formulaic sex study out of the way, "Masters of Sex" can explore the real consequences of intimacy. These are the same characters we met last season, but each seems to be injected with an unapologetic new vigor. The writers are practi- cally daring viewers to continue liking Bill. When Libby (Caitlin FitzGerald, "Newlyweds") leaves baby Johnny home with daddy as the babysitter, Bill blasts The Everly Brothers instead of attend- ing to his wailing child. When his own mother comes to rescue the kid, he berates her. He lies to Libby about his whereabouts, driving all the way to Illinois for an anony- mous night with Virginia. Now, he doesn't have the cushion of his .sex study to act as an excuse for his behavior. He's even anxious to terminate his professional rela- tionship with Virginia, refusing her help as a secretary and leav- ing her to supplement her income by selling diet pills. But, somehow, it's impossible to hate him. Despite antics that would make Don Drap- er shake his head in disapproval, Michael Sheen plays Bill as a deplor- able (but sympathetic) asshole. This is hardly half of the amaz- ing pathos that "Masters of Sex" squeezes from just two episodes. Scene-stealer Margaret Scully (Allison Janney, "The West Wing") continues to deal with husband Barton's homosexuality. Barton (Beau Bridges, "The Descendants") undergoes electric shock therapy for his "condition," and in a heart- breaking scene, tries to prove he's cured by seducing his wife. When he asks her to turn over, Margaret delivers the ultimate gut-punch and says, "There is only a shred of me left that still feels like a woman. You can't take that from me. I won't let you." After a close call with Bar- ton, Janney brings her already-fan- tastic performance to another level. The season's second episode, "Kyrie Eleison," is a return to normalcy, but the relationship dynamics have shifted so much that it hardly feels familiar. Bill is back to seeing patients (a sex- crazed teen this time), Virginia deals with a creepy research part- ner and Libby once again tries to bridge racial boundaries with little success. While certainly qui- eter, this episode is another pow- erhouse. "Masters of Sex" is easily the best drama of the summer, perhaps up there with the greats airing dur- ing the rest of the year. Though the title might be a turn-off for some, the show actually focuses com- paratively little of its energy on sex and spectacle. It's compelling, pathos-driven drama at its finest. Whatever might be said about Steven Patrick Morrissey, there is no doubt that modern pop culture would not exist as it does with- C out him. The antipodean cul- World Peace tural politics suf- fusing his music is None - both with the of Your Smiths and in his later solo work BUsineSS - paved the way Morrissey for countless anti-establish- Harvest ment musicians to achieve suc- cess, while his ability to craft an enigmatic, yet profoundly relatable identity both on and off the stage made the very idea of larger-than- life pop stars like Bono, Madonna and even Kanye West a possibility. While traces of that looming presence are visible on Morrissey's latest album World Peace Is None Of Your Business, close inspection reveals the cracks in the fagade of the singer's sphinxlike persona. Fans of the British rocker - of which there are many of the die-hard variety - praise him for his melancholy lyrics tinged with shades of dark humor, his subversive political songs and for three of those elements are pres- ent on World Peace, and a few of the album's tracks are as troubling and beautiful as any of the singer's work. The soaring choruses of "Istanbul" explore the tortured psyche of a failed father over bit- terly resonant guitars while, on "Smiler With Knife," Morrissey wallows in suicidal longing over dissonant melodies, meditating on the realization that "Time has frit- tered long and slow /All (he is) and was will go." Unfortunately, those momentsof brilliance are few and far between. More often than not, Morrissey crafts songs that incorporate all of the elements that his fans adore, but in a watered-down, incoher- ent form that stands in stark con- trast with the singer's finest work. The title track, a '60s protest song- inspired ballad, is the mostblatant- ly political song on the album and also one of the most clunky and dis- jointed, with Morrissey cobbling together a smattering of vaguely 99-percenter sentiments without taking any particular stance on the subject. A number of his lyr- ics are simply indecipherable, like the jumbled rhymes ("Babies full of rabies / Rabies full of scabies" or See MORRISSEY, Page 12 LESLIE PARK GOLF COURSE I WUW.A2SULFU 2120TRAVERROAD I ANN ARB I 7 3&7'9245 s cp yleslie park GoT 1hGO PUFCNAOMOE Mustshowvnaolldcukltle tW Ths coyonsponotgood ' " witls othercom rs xo w EplAug~ . L20M ~Call lodlayl U oflM $art fsacslaltadenls receive s t5 off gaseensfe year roswmi