Student extras gooff Camp us and on the set CSU, ON BAC f TO P Pld5' I '7seand /d iTs5sil e L 1 /4' / 'I C S. C JOHANNA TOMKIEL, . CSU, LONG BEACH BY WENDY RUTHERFORD UI. OF TEXAS, AUSTIN '94 GRAD THOUSANDS OF HOPEFULS FLOCK to Hollywood every year, praying for a big break. What they don't know is that today's students are finding a little fame (with even less fortune) mere blocks from campus. And although they might not get a star on Hollywood Boulevard, movie or television extras can start the clock on their 15 minutes of fame. "A lot of actors don't like doing [extra work], but since I'm in college, I need all the money I can get," says Rob Evors, a sophomore at Syracuse U. Being an extra won't make you rich - pay ranges from $30 to $75 a day. Posmitive that Sly and Arnold's next adventure won't be on location in Kansas? Don't be too sure. Filmmak- ers found The Bridges of Madison County in Iowa, a Tombstone in Arizona and A Perfect Worldin Texas. "Absolutely every state has a film agency," says Carol Pirie, communications director for the Texas Film Commission. The state agencies provide hot line recordings to give out production information on movies being filmed in the state, including when to show up for casting. "A friend of mine was doing [extra work], and it looked like fun," says Johanna Tomkiel, a senior at California State U., Long Beach. "I went to a local casting agency, gave them my $20 and got my pic- ture taken. You tell them what talents you have - everything from riding a bike and waitressing to what kind of costumes you own." Tomkiel has appeared in movies (The Net, Showgirls), TV series (Chicago Hope, Party of Five, Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman) and a Soul Asylum video. V .Exl "The worst was when I was on Dr. Quinn," Tomkiel says. "I had been out late with my friends the night before and had to get ready at 3 a.m. I had to stay in a long, hot skirt and bonnet until 2:30 the next morning." Quiet on the set! So let's say you're hired as Joe or Jody Average to play the part of background activity on a busy street corner. What can you expect on the set? "Sometimes the crew treats you like dirt," says Andrea Lewis, a grad student at CSU, Northridge. But Lewis remembers a time when, while shooting an episode of Blossom, the late Bill Bixby took all the extras aside. "He said, 'Without you, there wouldn't be classrooms full of people or crowded streets. Not only are you all actors, but you're also people, and don't let anyone tell you that you're worthless,"' Lewis recalls. The days can be long (often more than eight hours), and it's often a hurry-up-and-wait situation, but sometimes the wait is worth it. "The best set I've ever been on was The Net. It was on location at the beach in Palos Verdes," Tomkiel says. "I got to put on my bathing suit and hang out with the extras all day." Seth Zachary Nagel, a senior at Ohio U., met his current girlfriend, a fellow extra, on the set of The Great White Hype. He has played everything from a computer nerd to a rich teenager. "While I was working on Heat, [Robert] De Niro was making faces at me over Al Pacino's shoulder." Lewis took extra work to the next level as a stand-in for The Brady Bunch Movie and Clear and Present Danger. "I actually got to read lines with Harrison Ford. Interacting with a professional actor was such a high. It's been two years, and I still haven't got-J ten over it," she says. Being an extra can be an easy segue for students from the college world to the film world. "You meet a lot of con- tacts," says Kareem Ferguson, a senior at the U. of Utah who has appeared in Class Act, Army of Darkness and Love Kills and on Beverly Hills, 90210. "I've used it as an opportu- nity to get to know the busi- ness better, and it's great expe- rience," Ferguson says. "I've stayed in touch with actors, and they let me know about unpublicized movies and who Being an ex to send my resum to." every stude "I'm ready for my close-up, Mr. DeMille." Is extra work the solution for stardom-starved students? Maybe, maybe not. But it's definitely the answer for starvingstudents. Extras are often treated to a sumptuous meal. "Being a college student - I'm stoked on the food!" Tomkiel says. "They cater on location, serve halibut, steak and sushi and have stuff for you to snack on all day long." Some students may use extra work to pay the bills, but Lewis advises potential extras not to quit their day jobs. "The pay isn't worth it unless you're bored and have nothing to do that day," Lewis says. "It's a fun experience - when you know it's not your sole income." Nagel advises would-be extras to be daring and take risks. "If you want to do this professionally, show them that you want to work. Impress them, and they'll call you back." Wendy Rutherford desperately wants to be an extra in the next Star Wars trilogy. " AaronJ. Kearns, U. of California, Davis, contributed to this article For Mercy's Sake TTENTION PROFESSORS. ATTENTION ALL PROFESSORS. Mercy College is having a midnight madness Y clearance sale. Enroll and retain a few students, get a raise. But hurry -- students are going fast. $ It sounds like bargain basement tactics, but administrators at Mercy College, N.Y., are serious about their offer: More students at the col- lege means higher salaries for facul- ty. Fewer students, however, means a salary cut. Last spring, when state and fed- eral funding for financial aid was reduced by about $2.2 million, the school had to make up for the loss. Administrators feared that if they couldn't, they would have to eliminate approximately 70 admin- istrative positions. Instead, Ben- jamin Weisman, chair of the busi- ness and economics department, proposed that the university deter- mine salaries according to admission and retention goals. Depending on enrollment figures, faculty salaries could be cut or increased by as much as 7 percent. According to Weisman, 85 per- cent of the faculty voted for the plan, but some worry about the impact it might have on the quality of higher education. John DiElsi,.director of academ- ic computing, says the plan will encourage grade inflation. If profes- sors are rewarded for retaining stu- dents, the temptation to give higher grades to keep students will increase, he says. Weisman counters: "The plan is not about the faculty actively recruiting students. They don't work on a commission basis." DiElsi's primary argument against the plan is that it shifts the focus away from academics and toward the busi- ness of running the school. "Faculty shouldn't have to think about bringing in students," DiElsi says. "Faculty should think about providing the proper educational atmosphere for the students that admissions brings in." As the only school in the coun- try with such a plan, Mercy College is sure to be monitored carefully by other schools, says Joy Colelli, dean of admissions at Mercy. With 500 more applications than last year, the faculty is expecting a 7 percent raise - but only final enrollment figures will tell. KarinDavidson, Bucknell U., Pennsylvanial Illustration by Chad Mansfield, Colorado State U. Students Study Webonomincs S ENIOR VICE PRESIDENT FOR HOME PAGE CREATION and programming. Ah, no. Programmer and designer in chief Ick. How about Webmaster? Mmmm, now there's a job title - a bit pretentious, but it's got moxie.... When you start free-lancing, you've got to have a title. And it seems that the new breed of designers on the World-Wide Web is going for the direct approach. So, Webmaster it is. Web junkies got dollar signs in their eyes when Brian Pinkerton, a grad student at U. of Washington, became an instant millionaire by selling WebCrawler - the sophis- ticated search engine he created - to online giant America Online. AOL isn't the only mega- company seeking out student Websters. Huge companies like Hitachi and AT&T are scouting for college Web enthusiasts to create their Web sites - the new-age corporate business cards, plus. "Students seem to know a lot about the Web because they're the ones who have the time to play around on it and learn how to use it," says Jeremy Hylton, a grad student and Web designer at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Students are doing more than just playing around - they're turning their websessions into jobs. "I started off doing my own home page, which is the way a lot of people start out," says Thomas Karlo, a junior at MIT. Karlo's home-page mastery has earned him Web gigs with NewMarket Ventures, a Boston-based comput- er company, and National Public Radio's Car Talk. Hylton now earns an hourly wage - most Webmasters cur- rently make $10 to $65 an hour, depending on their experience and the complexity of the project - and is working on the upcoming Columbia House site. One of our very own Webmas- ters, Cabel Sasser (no, of course this isn't a sly plug for the U. Web site at http://www.umagazine.com), is making his mark on the Web. After his personal home page was award- ed Cool Site of the Day in April, 1995, Sasser started getting calls from companies looking for a Web designer. His hit list now includes sites for Fox Television, KIIS-FM radio and the city of Los Angeles. "The thing about the Internet is that it's so easily accessible," says Sasser, a sophomore at the U. of Southern California. "I can do it from my room. If I had to show up at an office from eight to five, I wouldn't make it." Of course he wouldn't. A man has to get his education. Tricia Laine, Assistant Editor/ illustration by Josh Wilkes, Murray State U., Ky. Bits& Bytes! Hooking up with professors Remember when notebooks had wire spirals and snagged your sweaters? How we know then as the little computersyou can take anywhere. And for a pilot group of freshmen this year at Northwest MissourilU., they're constant com- panions. Professors and students both have the notebooks so they can communicate directly. It's being used for speech, health and well- ness, math and English classes in specially designed classrooms. The 95 freshmen paid an extra$395 to be in the program and were only allowed one elective ina conven- tional classroom. Northwest hopes to implement complete campuswide notebook use by spring 1998. Now, remember to raise your mouse if you have a questlon.... Where do we keep the candles? The firststep is to admit you have a problem. U. of Minnesota stu- dents realized just how dependent they are on the Internet this summer when a fire destroyed the fiber-optic cable that links the school tothe international Internet. Christopher Hyde, a senior, said the shutdown put his life in perspective - "Like when the lights go out and people realize how modern we've become. We still need to write and read and interact one-on-one." Yeah, but you can't download gamesfrom a piece of stationery. Hold thy tongue After almost 10 months of acade- mic turmoil, Brian Evenson, author of the controversial book Altmann's Tongue, took a one-year leave of absence from Brigham Young U. to work in the English department of Oklahoma State U. this year. Administrators at BYU, which is owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and operated in accordance with the Church's stan- dards, questioned whether the book violated the school's honor code. At the time concerns were raised, president Rex Lee and provost Bruce Hafen met with Evenson to discuss his upcoming third-year tenure review and how the controversial book might affect the outcome. "If his future work follows the same pattern of, for example, extreme sadism, brutality and gross degrada- tion of women characteristic of Alt- mann's Tongue, such a publication would, in our view, not further his cause asa candidate for continuing faculty status," Lee wrote in a memo after the meeting. The book of short stories has been deemed "brilliant" by his editor at A. A. Knopf Publishing and "a showcase of graphic, disgusting, pointless vio- lence" in an anonymous letter written by a student to a member of the board of trustees. But Evenson defends the violence in his book. "[I wrote the book to] work against this kind of violence-for-pleasure phe- nomenon that I think our society is caught up in," Evenson says. Although some students back Even- son, others like Ryan Nelson, a senior who took critical interpretive writing from Evenson, sees the controversy ina different light. "If we have to choose between aca- demic freedom and support of the Church, then I think we havea duty to support the Church's standards if the two are in conflict," Nelson says. For Evenson, the choice between his position at BYU and his work is clear. "There are a lot of things that make me want to stay," he says. "But at the same time, the freedom for me to write [the way I'd like to write] seems to be something that will be denied tome here, and that for me is the most important thing." Shea Nuttall, Brigham Young U. The new Lois and Clark? Student extras are flying high in Metropolis. tra brings out the beast in rnt. 18 U. Magazie * November 1995 November 1995 " x R 11