! UUw wUU w W MICH-ELLANY Sometimes not-so-nice is better FILM Say a 'Prayer' for the viewer Photo by ANDI SCHREIBER Dominick DeVarti INTERVIEW Local restaurant owner contributed to the formation of Domino's Pizza, served four decades of students. Dominick DeVarti, owner of Dominick's restaurant, came to the University after leaving the Air Force in 1945. After running a landromat while in the College of Engineering, DeVarti found he was more suited to entreprenaurial than engineering work. He operated a travel agency and contracting company before opening his Monroe St. restaurant, which became a favorite hangout of students from the nearby Art, Business, and Law Schools. He has seen four decades of students come and go through his cafe. DeVarti's youngest son Dave is currently a member of the Ann Arbor City Council. Dominick recently spoke with Week'end Editors Rebecca Blumenstein and Alan Paul. Daily: Over the years you have become a sort of Ann Arbor institution. How did you start out? Dominick: Well, I never thought that I would reach that point, because when I first started here in 1959, I just thought I'd clean up the place. Since this whole area was looking kind of deteriorated, I decided to pick this place up, work on it, get (it) going, put a business in, and move on to something else. D: Did you go to school at the University? Dominick: Yes, and after I got an Engineering degree I started work in the industry. It seems like with a big corporation, you come out with fresh ideas, "I can save you $100,000, why don't we do it this way?". But you always get the answer - "Don't rock the boat." So if things don't want to happen from the bottom, things have got to come from the top down. If someone can see that something should be done, they should do it. I was always independent anyway. D: Were you primarily a pizza parlor or a bar when you started out? Dominick: Just strictly pizza. I put four units in - one in Ypsilanti, and two in Brighton, and the one here. The one in Ypsi is the one where Domino's started. I turned that over to him and he sold that. I was going along with the pizza places, but... I had to make a choice, and with the family and kids I decided to unload the other two, and turn the other over to Jim Monaghan for about $500. Jim worked for me and was a hell of a nice kid, and... he went along and did it. D: Is Tom Monaghan Jim's brother? Dominick: Yeah, Tom kicked Jim out. Tom. . . had some rough things happen to him. He was a little bit hard-nosed about getting in, and since Jim didn't want to have a family feud, he stepped out and Tom went in. Tom supposedly says that he has given Jim this and this, but all he gave him is a beat-up Volkswagon that couldn't even get him to the junkyard. In Tom's mind he thinks he has done a lot,,but he really hasn't given Jim a thing. That might not be what you read in the' book, though.r D: When was it that you turned the business over to Jim, then? Dominick: That must have been 1960 or 61 - something like that. D: How did it go from Dominicks to Dominos? As a typically tacky family birthday party in her honor drew to a close, my grandmother described the. event in words which have, in a sense, become my credo: "You know, I don't think I would have enjoyed myself any more if it had been nicer." "Nice" gets boring. This is probably because nice is fairly common in America. And most of the things in America which aren't nice, are trying to be, or if they aren't trying, pretending that they are. This is not to say that nice doesn't have its place, but the combined innocuous cheerfulness of USA Today, PM Magazine, McDonald's, Miss America, Ziggy, Hallmark Cards, the Osmonds, Casey Kasem, and Tally Hall becomes numbing, and oneneeds the faint hint of mildew, clutter, and flirtation with health c o d e violations. Newcomers to Ann Arbor have been inundated with guides, many of which are attempting to be nice to potential advertisers, and therefore talk about how nice the included establishments are. But there are many establishments in Ann Arbor which would't be any more fun if they were nicer, and deserve to be OFF THE WALL Finally a place where they have not scrubbed all the graffiti from the walls. cherished because they aren't. One such establishment is Bell's Pizza. The "dining area" is not at all nice. Customers fetch their own ice from a large machine which contains ice cubes that have been touched by everyone who purchased a drink earlier that day. The pizza is terrific, and extremely inexpensiveb(buck a slice, two items!), probably because Bell's doesn't waste money on interior decorators and waiters. David's Used B o o k s wouldn't be any better if it were nicer. The store always seems neatly poised on the brink of chaos. Books line the stairs. A roped-off section features nasty magazines. Alphebetization has b e e n compromised. The best part is the table of bargain books on the sidewalk in front of the store. David's doesn't seem to really care whether you trudge up the stairs and hand them a dollar for their copy of Howard Cosell's "Telling It Like It Is." Drake's decor, featuring the startling color combination of black and spore-green, is probaly the main thing keeping it from being nice visually. The wood is nifty, and the clutter has a certain appeal. But the real thing that keeps Drake's from niceness is the presence of two consumables--the lime phosphate and halvah. The lime phosphate is the precise hue of anti-freeze, and halvah...well, it's...halvah, and that scares me for some reason. Nonetheless I pray that every future University of Michigan first-year students is given the opportunity to see Drake's either just as it is, or perhaps as it was, with dancing in the Martian Room, and "M-Burgers" in the far right corner. The Ypsilanti Flea Market isn't in Ann Arbor, but since it is nowhere near as nice as Treasure Mart, The Salvation Army, St. Vincent's, or V a l u e Village, it is chosen as the representative thrift-o-rama. Never- ending linoleum floors that I would challenge Divine to eat off of harbor a staggering series of non-sequiturs. Harley-Davidson banners give way to counterfeit walkmen. A palm- By Daniel Rosenberg A Prayer for the Dying could be euthanasia. Dying is the story of an IRA terrorist (Mickey Rourke) who decides to quit after accidentally killing a schoolbus of innocent children. He soon finds out that "retiring" is not as easy as he imagined: the police are out looking for him; the IRA wants him dead because he knows too much; even the mob wants him dead due to atbotched assasination. Through all of this, Rourke's only friend is a priest (Bob Hoskins), who protects him from the police only after Rourke confesses to his sins and promises not to kill again. It all sounds like a pretty good idea for a movie. However, with just one solid character in the film trying to support 11 flimsy ones, one quickly loses interest inPrayer. The film is guilty of seven deadly cinematic sins: a miscast lead, no motive, non-threatening villains, gratuitous violence, unexplained characters, poor writing, and poor direction. No film can succeed with a miscast lead, and this one proves to be no exception. Despite a good bottle of red hair dye and a crash course in Irish Accents 10 1, Mickey Rourke could not leave behind the "American Cool" which has brought him success in earlier films. The hand gestures and facial expressions which made Rourke a star in9 1/2 Weeks and Angel Heart work against him here. The character calls for paranoia and Rourke just doesn't deliever. However, Rourke is n o t completely to blame for the failure of his character, as the writers never gave him any motive for being part of the IRA. The writers never once even attempt to justify why these men are willing to sacrifice their lives in this modern day Holy War. Director Mike Hodges tries to compensate for lack of a substantial story by using the shock value of excessive violence in order to maintain the attention of the audience, but he can't even do that. It's bad enough to have to witness a stake being driven into a man's left hand, but there is absolutely no reason to have to sit through such treatment of his right hand as well. All that is left is to hope that the scene will end and the film will improve. Unfortuantely, it never does. Bob Hoskins is the picture's lone bright light, proving that he deserved an Academy Award Nomination last year with a stellar performance as the priest torn between the British Police and his theological duty to uphold a confession. In today's torn Church, it's easy to overlook some of the fundamental virtues the religion is based on. But unlike Catholicism, where a dying man may be forgiven of his sins by a prayer of confession, a dead film cannot be saved by a prayer in the form of Bob Hoskins. r _-_ p n I ~LY' " Ef al I IYPSILANTI PLASMY 1 1 with this c 1 WMcg earn$1 U- " earn up h ater Tower . open fc " wN t Wed.,ca E Thurs.1 - 3 E I Mich. Ave. CPlec I Located on bus linetake Bs6to 18 a I 1813 W. Michigan Ave. Let Them Kn How You Fe( DAILY PERSONALS Was it revisited? the summer of love This form of education is as obselete as the Reagan administration. (in reply) AND YOU'RE PAYING FOR BOTH OF THEM. Bo is God. This state of unconscious awareness is appaling. (in reply) I'VE THOUGHT THAT MANY TIMES. The next person to tell me that "this summer I made a lot of friends, had a lot of fun, and learned a lot about myself' ... DIES. All the above graffiti was found on the walls of the Graduate Library. K N~RFiR'fl ?A~TME~Tr LET CHPAD N.--- . ABC ALPHABET CITY FEATURING WHEN SMOKEY SINGS THE NIGHT YOU MURDERED LOVE KING WITHOUT A CROWN MEN. JOHN~ UC ________ SOME u URNG 'EE *B" -1A I UISTY KILLED THE C AT KE YOUR DISTANCE FEATURNG FIT DWN 0 EARTH -ORDINARYDAY 67 -2. NMI I I i , s u- . w Y mrn:nry wwra -1. a_.. - THE FAT BOYS - CRUSHIN' INCLUDES THE HUGE HIT FALLING IN LOVE PLUS WIPEOUT" SFEATURING THE BEACH BOYS - I ~l2' %a-- *FEATURING: "810DE 3 AND "SWAMP' MOTION .CISION" c rror" -w A N N A R 6 G n 523 E. Liberty " 994-8031 Mon.-Sat. 10-9, Sun. 12-8 Now carrying largest CD selection in town. For classical music visit SKR Classical, 539 E. Liberty. -U o ...... I FT j N~tO FH~H - u 7-- I F PolyGram Records ( -1 PAGE 8 WEEKEND/SEPTEMBER 18, 1987 WEEKN D1 OtEMBER 18, A981