6' Thursday, August 7, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, August 7, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com South Quad prepares to open doors in the fall Guardians' Renovations feature upgrades to dining hall, main floor By SHOHAM GEVA ManagingNews Editor After closing for renovations last year, South Quad Residence Hall is preparing to re-open, ending one of three currently ongoing construc- tion projects in the area, along with the Munger graduate dorm project and the West Quad Residence Hall renovation. Both other projects are expected to conclude in Fall 2015. In a media tour Friday with The Michigan Daily, University Dining and Housing officials showcased several of the changes to South Quad, most notablythe renovations to the dining hall, which have been the focus of the project, as well as several other structural changes. Construction is not yet completely finished on the building, but Peter Logan, University Housing com- munications director, said the Uni- versity is confident that it will be done in time for move-in Aug. 28 and 29. In the newly renovated and expanded dining hall itself, the clear focus has been on variety both in terms of food and design. The space ranges from semi- private dining rooms with low to the floor cushion seating, to tables made of wood reclaimed from bowling alleys near the grill station Wildfire, set to feature a different type of grilled cheese sandwich each day. Further back are groups of bright pink chairs and televi- sions mounted on the wall adja- cent to the Smoke station, which will serve food from an in-house smoker. To the left, there's a clear machine, detailed in bright orange, set to squeeze fresh orange juice for a station, Toast, that will serve breakfast all day. Above it all is an exposed clay ceiling, one of the few unifying factors present. Tom Smith, Michigan Dining associate director, said the goal was to make the separate stations distinguishable. "They tried to create some little nooks for seating, tried to make it different," he said. The facility is based on the same micro-restaurant concept that is also present in East Quad. In total, South Quad's dining hall will have 10 separate micro-restau- rants, including a Latin-inspired station, a vegetarian station, an Asian-inspired station, the Madi- son Street Deli, a Mediterranean- inspired station and Finale, which will serve desserts. A chef's area will additionally serve as a space for cookingclasses and demonstra- tions. The dining hall will seat 944 people at its full capacity, Smith said, down from an estimated 956, due to the removal of 12 seats to increase walkability of the space. 102 of those seats can be converted to general community space for the building, separate from the dining hall. Smith said during the first year South Quad is in operation, he expects that the section will be used mostly for community space due to the closing of West Quad across the street, which will reduce the number of students who eat there. After West Quad under- goes renovations and reopens next year, it will no longer have a din- ing hall, meaning many students may choose to use their meal plans across the street at South Quad. The facility will require 60 full- time employees, excluding top management, as well as up to 400 student employees. Similar to most other dining halls on campus, it will be trayless. Smith also briefly touched upon the subject of crowding in the din- ing halls, which has been a report- ed issue in the newly renovated East Quad and recently built North Quad Residence Hall. He said with the opening of South Quad, he expects the number of people eat- ing at campus dining facilities to spread out more, easing crowding concerns from the past few years. South Quad is the largest dining hall out of the new three - North Quad seats 190 and EastQuad seats about 400. "Maybe hindsight is 20/20," Smith said. "But [South Quad] is what made sense to do last." He added that a highlight of South Quad diningishoweasilyit's expected to absorb large crowds. "The nice thing about this facil- ity is that when we have a push of students - and we'll have a lot of people in here - you won't even feel it," he said. Along with the dining hall, sev- eral new community spaces for the building have also been a part of the renovation. Logan said over the past few renovation projects, Housing has typically found that when they ask for student input, the response is that students want more study space, a request which was incorporated into the South Quad changes in several areas on the main floor. Other additions include a game room, gender-inclusive restrooms and more music practice rooms for the building. LESUE PARK GOLF COURSE I W .A2G0LF.0RG 212O TRAVER ROAD I ANN ARBOR 1 734.794.6245 This coupon entitlesyou to: . Lesle eark WITH THE PURCHASE OF18 HOLES Must show valid faculty/student t. Thia coupon in not good " with othercoupons. Expires Aug. 1,2014. Cal today. !U of M faculty/students receive 15% off greens feesyear round. sant olikesr Bautista, Saldana and Pratt Marvel film focuses on humanity in deep- space setting By BRIAN BURLAGE Daily Arts Writer In Bill Watterson's classic car- toon strip "Calvin and Hobbes," one of the most intriguing of Cal- vin's many alter egos is Space- man Spiff. He, like Calvin, is a Guardiansof young blonde- haired kid. He the Galaxy travels the uni-R verse in his UFO- Rave and like spaceship, Quality16 fighting aliens, Walt Disney exploring aban- Studios doned civiliza- tions on desolate planets and venturing into distant realms of obscure galaxies. Many things terrify him, and he often doubts his heroic ability. In this fantasy, Calvin isn't a hero per se. He doesn't have infallible bravery; instead, he's just a human kid. He treks across the universe like any of us would. One of the early scenes of James Gunn's "Guardians of the Galaxy" reveals Peter Quill (Chris Pratt, "Her"), an orphaned kid from Earth now wandering around the remote planet Morag. His 'out- law' moniker, Star-Lord, poses the same cheesiness and faux-heroism as Calvin's. Crafty tracking shots reveal a mask-clad Quill picking his way through ruin, presum- ably a long-abandoned civiliza- tion on some planet far, far away. The planet's landscape resembles darker, more bizarrely colored Utah canyons - much like Wat- terson's. It's desolate. Quill's tiny figure appears like a speck against such an enormous backdrop. Eventually, he enters a large struc- ture draped in shadow. His gloved hand drifts down toward his belt, and when he pulls back his over- coat, we see a Sony Walkman attached to his hip. He presses play on "Awesome Mix No. l." As the music plays he starts to dance around the empty structure, slid- ing to and fro, kicking small alien life forms, singing along with the chorus. The scene is oddly con- vincing: if you found yourself alone in a strange building on an even stranger planet and you had your favorite music with you, wouldn't you let it roll? What makes this film so spe- cial is how so many scenes evoke this crazy yet very real sense of humanity. Quill, like Calvin, is so human in the way he reacts to aliens, statements and situations. Gunn's fusing of '70s pop songs with a space-adventure film mere- ly adds to its humanity. The alien characters are blue, green and red, they have bone-like objects pro- truding from their head, they wear human clothes, others wear no clothes, some speak English, some don't, they inhabit the severed heads of ancient celestial beings and they suffer from poorly orga- nized prison systems. But in spite of all the idiosyncrasy and inexpli- cable variation, the story remains believable. After all, it's not set See GALAXY, Page8 TheD By ERIKA HARWOOD Senior Arts Editor I remember first seeing the lineup for this year's Lollapaloo- za and being disappointed, yet again. I've been attending the festival off and on for the last six years and seem to get more and more discouraged with each lineup release, ultimately avoid- ing the event all together last year. This year there were a few acts that stuck out: Lorde, Blood Orange and Chance The Rap- per, along with mainstays like Kings of Leon, Eminem and the traveling Outkast reunion show, which I would have sold most of my limbs to see, but that's another 2,000 word article for another time. Unsurprisingly, I'm not gelling with the crowd of the enormous and at times over- whelming festival as well as I did when I was 16, and I still don't think I'll ever understand how Skrillex could headline anything past the year 2011. However, I was continually comforted by the presence of acts I've recently discovered along with longtime loves, and I refused to let some punk ass teens who've been at back-to-back EDM shows since 1 p.m. ruin that for me. Friday: It Rained I'm going to be honest. Going to a festival with a press pass, especially when you live in the city where it's taking place, hps made me lot more choosy with my selection of shows. As I was getting ready to leave my apart- ment in Rogers Park on the first day of the fest, it started to pour down rain. This was my fourth Lollapalooza, and if there's one thing I've gathered from my few years of festival experience, it's that it will always rain. Hard. But it will also always pass within an hour or so at most. So, I parked myself on my couch, cracked open a Rolling Rock and watched the previous night's "Colbert Report". The first show I was really eager about was Blood Orange, which wasn't until the late afternoon, and frankly there just aren't enough drugs in the aily at world for me to willingly g outside for extended periods o time while it's pouring rain. I'm assuming I've reached the apex of adulthood. When I finally arrived at Gran Park a little before 4 p.m. to meet up with a friend for the Blood orange show, I realized tha things had changed from the las time I was there. The line to ge in seemed to take forever, and i probably didn't help that I was in a rush while also being surround ed by drunk high schoolers. Afte finally breaching the gates,I made my way toward the pres Can a 21-year-old be too old for Lollapalooza? tent to grab a drink before the show. After wandering around aimlessly for a bit, I gave up and decided to go early and park i up front for Blood Orange. Afte swimming against the curren of Iggy Azalea fans consisting o way too loud bros and fucked-up 15-year-olds, the intimate, casu ally chit-chatting crowd waiting to see Dev Hynes was refreshing He took the stage with his girl friend/Cupid Deluxe frequent er, Samantha Urbani. The pai sported homemade T-shirts with messages against police brutality and both made statements durin the killer set to address the topic making it all the more disturbin when just hours later the couple accused security of physically assaulting them. I left the show a few song early, determined to finally make it the press tent per the origina plan. As I walked toward the south end of the park, I coul hear Iggy Azalea performing "Fancy." For all the think pieces that song has gotten, I still fee Lolla o little to no shame when I say f that I think it's great, albeit over- a played. That said, hearing it echo x through Grant Park really brings out the worst in people, myself t included. Elbowing my way t through the crowd that was high d off the ecstasy that comes from t seeing an Australian girl who is t "kill-yourself hot" rap a Top 40 t hit along with the actual ecstasy t they'd probably been licking off n of their muddy hands for the past - hour, I feltcompelled to call all of r their parents and tell them their I children are garbage. s But I persevered, eventually making my way to a place where I had room to move without risk- ing having other people's sweat form a layer over my own. I ran into a co-worker from my intern- ship and we decided to catch the last bit of Lorde together. On the way over, I convinced him that her album was great and she did, in fact, have more songs than "Royals" and "Team," yet the only ones we managed to see were those two along with "Ribs." Good looking out, Ella. e We headed back to get sta- d tioned for Eminem, which I ini- d tially planned on skipping for t Phantogram - I'm glad I didn't. T He came out and immediately t exploded with the energy he f seemed to be lacking the past few p years. During the set, someone - standing near us mentioned that g she heard Rihanna might be in . town. Lo and behold, Rihanna - showed up and I freaked the hell - out. In retrospect, it made per- r fecetsense; the show was the ideal h dress rehearsal/PR move for y Eminem and Rihanna's upcom- g ing The Monster Tour. Although it didn't morph into the strictly- g Rihanna set I secretly hoped it - would (they only performed the y songs they've recorded together), it was the detail the set didn't s necessarily need but undoubted- e ly cemented it as one of the best l shows of the weekend. e See the rest of Erika's Lolla- d palooza 2014 coverage, including g a thorough account of whether or s not it rained on each day, at michi- 1 gandaily.com/arts UPPER -The Olive Branch will be South Quad's Mediterranean station, one of 1( micro-restaurants. MIDDLE: The gluten-free room will be available by MCard access only toavoid contamination. LOWER: Tables in one of the many dining spaces are reclaimed bowling alley lanes. READY FOR SCHOOL TO START? WE THOUGHT NOT. But, since you have to come back, why not join the Daily? #rushTMD