- - 0 V V V 1 j w 1w, Aw M- AI Page 4 -The Michigan Daily, Thursday, September 10, 1987 .....................................v........x B 0 0**SBO O K S TR E S The Michigan Daily, Thursday, .. , .......................................... .......... ":: ; 5:': %i ii iSS i"Si sS i iyi iS . %%i%%i!%i i'iti : . i i .:: : 'S 'i i s : : . iSS i i !i! l r !i! ! ! ! sil !i! .:i! b!:!:":!:!:!:!:!:!:!i!:!:!::! 'ii'i'i'i'i i 'i i i i' %iS %i% i i'e'i' 'i i'ii'i ' i'. ' 'i ii'i i 'i' i i i % 's'i i'i' ' 'i'i'i'%i i ' 'i'i'i'i' i'i'i %i' i' 'i'iLf 'i' 'e'i %i'%%i %i i'i% ' 'i'i'ii' i ii .ii i i'i i'i '.'%i % ' i'i % i ' 'i%' i' ' 'iS .: 4'.L ::':.':::b i ... i i i .... i i' ii' iO s i i ' i ' i ' O'i'i' L'.. +s! !S. .T ! % i !Q ii! . By Arlin Wasserman As college students, we have an image to maintain; after all, we are trying to get our degrees in good small talk. The best way to do this aside from sipping coffee out of little plastic cups in down and.out restaurants, is to read a lot and then tell people about what you've read. So after a long hard day of lectures and hours of sensory depravation in little cubicles in the library, it's time to escape the grind and work on your intellectualism. Go pick up a book. Ann Arbor has a lot of places to get books. Here's some places you're probably better off going to. If you want used books... There is David's Books at 622 East Liberty. You have to walk up a bunch of narrow stairs to get to this one. David's Books has lots and lots of novels from the late, great 1970s. You can find ten copies of Love Story or every issue of Playboy printed between 1972 and 1979. You can also find every textbook written between these times too. David's Books special - izes in the works of Henry Kiss - inger and Jimmy Carter, but they won't admit it. The will admit to having one of the largest selection of paperback novels and romances in the used book store scene. Also, they have a pretty good selection of mysteries and westerns and a bunch of pop psychology that'll let you leave smiling even if you don't find what you want. As is tradition with all used book store employees, the dude sitting behind the, big wooden desk at David's Books knows every book in stock. The one thing David's Books really lacks is a children's book department but they have a bunch of Hardy Boys books and other junior high school books more appropriate for college students. But, if you don't feel like, walking upstairs, you can walk downstairs to Dawn Treader Books. In fact, there are two different outlets of Dawn Treader Books and you have to walk downstairs to get to both of them. The one at 1202 South* University specializes in children's books and horror books. They have a big science fiction section and a mess of paperback novels from the early 1980s. They also play cool music on their stereo. In the back is the map room where you can go look at antique and autographed maps that are often a hundred years old or more. The other Dawn Treader, at 525 East Liberty, doesn't have many autographed maps, but as any used book store does, they have a bunch of autographed books. The hardcover novel selection is amazing and you can get one's signed by their authors if you really want. There's also a great selection of poetry collections here and a whole room full of books on world history. There's also a little dusty room off to the side where you can find books on linguistics, guns, sex and raising children and whatever else they throw in there. Another room is chock full of science fiction paperbacks. Now if when you think of used books, you think of those big dusty tomes of Gothic stories that you read by candlelight with a raven perching on the top of your armchair, then Ann Arbor has two really excellent rare and used book stores. You have to walk up three little steps that lead off the sidewalk to get to them. There's the State Street Store at 316 State, which has really old, really rare books and the West Side Books Shop at 113 Liberty, in Ann Arbor's Old West Side. Okay, so maybe the rare books people aren't so good at making up catchy names, but the people in these stores know everything about every book ever written. Sometimes they can even tell you what store has the book you're looking for if they're out of it. Now, without going up and down stairs, you can go up in price and buy some new books. there is really friendly and you can order any book in print at no additional charge. There's also a few tables of discount books in front of the store and you can always find good By Cathy Joliffe Drama&Personae Bernardo and Francisco, two campus security officers Ghost of 1987 graduate Hamlet, new student to the University Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, two sophomores living on Hamlet's hall in South Quad Horatio, roommate and friend to Hamlet Ophelia, lovely woman in Ham - let's English 125 class The scene: The University of Michigan Act One Scene One. Ann Arbor, the front doors of South Quad. , Bernardo and Francisco, on their nightly rounds. Bernardo: Ah, yes, another peaceful night at the Quad. Most students are tucked securely away at Rick's or Charlie's or ordering piz - za from Dominos. Francisco: Things never change, do they? Year after year, students are stuck in the same old rut. They never think of anything new to do. Bernardo: But what else is there? The only thing U-M has to offer is beer and pizza, isn't it? . (Sound of someone humming The Victors, off-key. Enter Ghost of 1987 graduate.) Francisco: Hark! Who's there? Speak, I pray thee! Ghost: 'Tis I, a graduate of the University of Michigan. Four long years did I toil here, and what have I to show? Ink poison of the hand, resulting from cover stamps, in lieu of Opening Night Tickets! A pizza gut have 1, when I could have fed my knowledge of Brecht. Bernardo: What nonsense is this? Stumble inside, you drunkard, and babble your message to others. Act Two Scene One: Hamlet's room, South Quad, 7:30 p.m. Hamlet, Horatio, Rosencrantz and Guild - enstern, discussing the evening's plans. Hamlet: To see or not to see, that is the question. Whether 'tis nobler to purchase a ticket to the R.C. Players, or... Rosencrantz: (interrupting) Enough of this absurd talk, Hamlet. Quarter beer night lurketh at Dooley's, and we must be off. Hamlet: But the fair Ophelia wanted to view the East Quad theater, an outgrowth of the Residential College in which she is enrolled. Guildenstern: Four dollars, sixteen beers, or a ticket to a student written and directed play? C'mon, the choice is easy! Enter Ghost Ghost: There is no debate. Four years was I at Dooley's, with nothing to show for it now, save stamp cancer and cirrossis of the liver. Hamlet shall embark for the East Quad theater, at once! Horatio: Is there no alternative? Rosencrantz: A woman's mind is quick to change. What if the fair Ophelia wants not the R.C. Players? Ghost: Many options in theater still remain. The University Activity Center's MUSKET stages one or two large productions a year. It is sponsored by the University, and welcomes student talent. Last year MUSKET produced Oklahoma! and always receives rave responses. Horatio: Do other such options exist, if the call of the almighty Bar ... H.M.S. Pinafore. Doily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Ann Arbor resident Theresa Geisler browses through a selection at Dawn Treader book store on S. University St. There's a pretty cool discount book store at 219 South Main Street called Afterwords where you can save lots of money on a few new novels, some nature books and just about every children's book ever written. There's also a back room full of damaged books that Afterwords practically gives away. If you have patience enough to go back a few times, you can find any recent book you want for only pennies. If you have more than pennies to spend and no time to waste, there's Border's Book Store at 303 South State Street. Tommy Border has a dream of selling every book in the world. So far he's doing pretty well. Border's has about 80,000 titles in stock. The walls and tables are covered with books, and the ceiling and the people who work in the store know where every book is. They have books on everything. They even have a humor section that's as big as a dormitory double. Everyone reading there if you're in the mood. Border's also discounts hardbacks and bestsellers. If you want something a little more unusual, check out the Crazy Wisdom book store at 206 East Fourth Ave. for all your Holistic health needs. The Shaman Drum book store at 313 State Street satiates any counterculture or revolutionary cravings you might have. Shaman Drum also has textbooks for many University classes and they sell some of them cheaper than Ulrich's and Barnes and Noble. You do have to walk up stairs to get to Shaman Drum. See BOOK, Page 15 does not sound? Ghost: If Hamlet is headed towards East Quad, he may consider the Brecht Company, based also in that institution. Specializing in the epic theater of the German playwright, Bertold Brecht, they combine both traditional perfor - mance methods and innovative musical and juxtapositional tech - niques. An interesting diversion for Lady Ophelia, indeed. Guildenstern: Why would Hamlet choose the theater over a night out with the guys? Rosencrantz: Why would ANYBODY give up familiar weekend rituals to sit in a stuffy theater? Ghost: In answer to your questions, gentlemen, the college education is not complete without discovering the little known entertainments existing within Ann Arbor. All theaters, Rosencrantz, are not stuffy the Performance Network, located past Main Street, PE T1 re w Pf PI gi VI th ai sa of st di T ra tc 6 R N B ct m U E T PI 0 at sc m e: a tr ki c4 of m tl 1( h ti 9 tt THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 the Mandarin %,01NESE RESTAURANT Specializing in SZECHUAN " HUNAN " PEKING Cuisine Come in and see the cleanest & most beautiful Chinese restaurant in town. We do not use MSG. We use only 100% pure vegetable oil. 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