Ulbe £ibign Dailg MICHAEL ROSENBERG Roses Are Read yzetotert- t'sthattime of the seester again, t's thattdtkee whn students take their final exams - called, appropriately enough, "Fi- nal Exams." With a mountairof work in front of them, most students sit down and plunge full-force into the act of com plaining about their exam schedules. No one is ever happy about their exam schedule, because these schedules al- most always include actual exams, which students tend to dislike on the grounds that they are uninterrupted hell. The time, really, is irrelevant. If it involves something unpleasant, no time is good. No one ever says, "You know, 2 p.m. Tuesday would be just perfect for my root canal operation. Really, that's just great. I couldn't be happier about it." But like street signs and beer para- phernalia, exams must be taken by college students. And so, as a public service, I now offer you advice on how to pass all your exams. This advice maybe difficult for some of you to listen to, because students tend to assume that people in their majorknow more than anyone else and therefore shouldn't listen to others. But listen to me anyway, because as an English major, I know everything. So here it is, with a special section for every major, except some ... The Portable Guide to Passing Ex- ams History. This is tough because it requires exact dates. But here's a hint: The correct date is always in the past. So when faced with the following po- tential answers: A) Oct. 4;,2004 B) April 11, 2211 C) Sept. 28, 1998 D) 1642 ... be assured that the correct answer is D. When writing an essay, always throw in a random war. "And then the Ger- mans, bored with their own country, invaded the French, who were unable to fight guns with baguettes, although they did manage to kill a number of Germans through guerrilla rudeness." Engineering. (lfyou have any friends who are engineers, please read this to them.) The best advice here is to write down some complicated formula, fol- lowed by 14 more complicated formu- las, throw in random numbers, and some more numbers, and some more numbers, without ever indicating what your actual answer is. Then, write your professor a note next to the question: "This is so obvious. I'mwasting my time with this easy nnsense" English. Always use the phrase, "As we discussed in class :;."It doesn't matter what comes afterthat.the pro- fessor, who has not paid attention to a single class discussion, will be hard- pressed to deny that your theory was not discussed. English majors often have to do pa- pers instead of taking exams. As a result they spend hours in computing centers. The first 90 percent of this time is nothing but useless, mindless procrastination - surfing the Net, e- mailing, reading this column, etc. PoliticalScience. Question everything. The more conspiracy theories, the better. "In all likelihood, the atomic bomb was built by Stalin, who is still alive and living next door to a certain Poli Sci TA. He owes me a favor, by the way." Music. To be honest, I have no idea what music students have to do for finals. Do they even have finals? How does this work, exactly? Please, some- one tell me. I'm kind of curious. Art. Remember, all artists are tor- tured and all art is a struggle. Thus, a bad answer would be, "I think the brilliance of this painting can be attrib- uted to the cockiness of the artist. Van Gogh was all that, and he knew it." Pre-med. Whatever you do, don't rule anything out. An ideal statement would be, "While it could be the man's heart, lungs, pancreas, brain or ankle, it would be smart to check out his gizzard as well." Communication. This department apparently is not important enough for the University to keep it after this year, fpts tie/ac/ in cl assical music SiI'C/ri(iiiS ((~S' Ils NC iNC /l~lil(i lease. Call him Gil. The 24- year old violinist who will play at Hill Auditorium tomorrow night does not respond as well to Mr. Shaham. In fact, sometimes he doesn't respond to calls of "Mr. Shaham" at all. "No, I'm sorry. You can't speak to Mr. Shaham this morning," he said last week when I called at our scheduled interview time. "Oh, wait. Are you look- ing for me? I thought you were asking for my father." "I think it's so weird," he said of the more formal title, which Shaham, an internationally respected violin soloist, seems deserving of. "Oh please," he said, embarrassed at the thought. You could almost hear his eyes rolling. "Oh puh-leez." If there is a stuffy stereotype sur- rounding classical musicians, rest as- sured that Shaham does not fit the mold. The dreamchild of every publicist, Shaham sometimes practices in front of the TV and has cartoon characters on the lining of his tailcoat. The modest violinist has been known to, on more than one occasion, casually sneak in with the last row of the violins after soloing with an orchestra. And he's still thrilled by the excitement of perform- ing. "I always get nervous. Now, if I don't get nervous, I get nervous be- cause I'm not nervous." Jaded, he's not. "I feel really lucky to be doing what I'm doing now," Shaham said. "This was sort ofal ways my dream, to be a violinist and make some sort of living at it." If Shaham was just looking to make "some sort of living," he must be pleased. His dream has come true ten- fold. He debuted with the Jerusalem Symphony and the Israel Philharmonic at age 10, and played with the New York Philharmonic two years later. At 17, he was called out of a high school English class and flown to London to substitute for an ailing Itzhak Perlman. Shaham has also performed with the Boston Symphony, the Cleveland Or- chestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Berlin Philharmonic and I'Orchestre de Paris, among others. A tour with the Moscow Philharmonic brought him to Ann Arbor last March. Arrogance might be excusable, cer- tainly expected, for one with such a resume - but Shaham shatters all ex- pectations. "I really do feel I've been very lucky," he said. "I know that there are lots of great musicians out there who maybe haven't had the opportunities that I have. I just feel very grateful to be doing what I'm doing." Shaham was born in Illinois in 1971, while his Israeli parents were visiting professors at the University of Illinois. The family returned to Israel in 1973 and moved to New York when Shaham was 10 years old. There, as a scholar- ship student in the Julliard Pre-College Division, Shaham studied with Hyo Kang, Jerns Ellerman and the esteemed Dorothy DeLay. The son of a physicist and a geneti- cist, Shaham was not a pre-programmed child prodigy. Music was a self-chosen profession. "I think music was sort of a rebellion against the science thing," he explained. His parents were supportive but in- sisted that Shaham keep his options open. He attended a local high school in New York, and took classes at Colum- gradually, at first, as he earned recogni- tion with every concert. He signed with ICM, a major management agency, around age 16, and records exclusively on Deutsche Grammophon. "I think I (play the violin) now for a different reason than I did 10 years ago," Shaham suggested. "When l was really young it was like a sport, it was a challenge. I wanted to learn new pieces and to play better and better, and I just wanted to be the best at it." The music has taken on more'mean- ing for Shaham. "When you feel that it's going well, it's the best feeling in the world," he explained. "When it's not going well, it's about the worst feeling in the world." There are many times when he doesn't play as well as he would like to. This comes as a surprise after reading re- views of his concerts, in which critics applaud his style, technique and musi- cality with abandon. He was once com- pared, in one sentence, to the great violinists Itzhak Perlman, Nathan Milstein, Isaac Stern andJascha Heifetz Shaham has received rave reviews nearly across the board, though a dis- senting opinion came over a year ago from Bernard Holland of The New York Times. "Mr. Shaham is in grave danger of being taken over by the world of entertainment. I hope music can get him back," Hlolland wrote. "Sometimes I really feel that in the classical music world, people have lost a littlebitofthe fun," Shaham remarked cautiously. "And I've noticed that people treat music like it's porcelain china, saying 'oh yeah, we know it's beautiful but we don't want to touch it cuz it'll break...' "Sometimes I think, especially for us young musicians, that we need to shake people up a little bit and start with ourselves. We'll wake ourselves up a little bit and bring a little more sense of adventure to the concert hall." The shaking has begufi. Earlier this year, Shaham released his first music video. Directed by Jem Cohen, director of several R.E.M. videos, the clip was an audio-visual recording of Shaham and the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra playing "Winter" from Vivaldi's "Th Four Seasons." In the v ideo, images of- Shaham and Orpheus are intercut by stark, artsy black and white shots of New Yorkers braving a brutal storm and reciting the poem on which Vivaldi's composition is based. Shahanm- outdid his promoters by suggesting that the "Four Seasons" video air, appropri- ately, on the Weather Channel. The video generated a slewofpublic- ity for Shaham, including an appear- ance on NBC's "Today" show, an inter view in People magazine and a guest appearance as a weatherman on a New York newscast. Not everyone appreci- ated Shaham's sense of artistic adven- ture. Alex Ross of the New York Times called this unorthodox alliance between classical-music and popularmedia"pro- motional hysteria." Sales of "The Four Seasons" recording, which comes with the video single on CD-ROM, are high.. The Weather Channel stint put Shaham in the public eye and on 58 million television sets. Too old to be a child prodigy any longer, Shaham's an exuberant stand-out in today's growing field ofyoung violinists, which includes Midori, Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg, Joshua Bell and Sarah Chang. The greatest challenge facing young la