9 w q V U wr m mmm mmU m mmmm q I I 1 K R T LOOK YOUR BEST. BE YOUR BEST. SCRUPPLES. EWe use onlya IWave Nouveau SALON 555 East Wh amu G Perm and Relaxer products! A o r e 313 995 5733 hF=m ===mu===un=i===m ==.mm " Facials t Massage * Hydrotherapy r Body Wrap " Hair * Nails " Beauty Waxing e Gift Certificates See, Experience And Feel The Difference We Call It Beauty, Fashion And Wellness. EFFRE ICHAEL OWE S- BEAUTY SPA 996-5585 206 S. Fifth Avenue (net to the Ann Arbor Theater) O O I MAC l IR IA i-rAD o 12 MAGAZINE VULUME 0, NUMBER I UIJ.t.LIV I ,i~o I I FRIDAY "Why is the Bedroom So Crowded?" - 5 p.m. at the Frieze Bldg. Arena Theater; pre- sented by the Residence Hall Repertory Theater DMA Organ Recital - Hyeon Jeong; 8 p.m. at Moore Hall Piano Recital - E. Michele Mustert; 8 p.m. at Rackham Assembly Hall Opera Workshop - operatic scenes and arias; 8 p.m. a the McIntosh Theater Violin Recital - Charles Bing- ham; 8 p.m. at the School of Mu- sic's Recital Hall Voice Recital - Amy Thomas; soprano; 6 p.m. at the School of Music's Recital Hall UM Symphony Band - perfor- mance of works of this century; Hill Aud. at 8 "Winterworks" - a collection of songs, children's stories and more; 8 p.m. at Community High's Craft Theater; S4 for adults, S3 for children SATURDAY Clarinet Recital - Christopher Raifsnider; 2 p.m. at the School of Music's Recital Hall Horn Recital - Mary Krygier; 4 p.m. at the School of Music's Recital Hall Saxophone Recital - Harry Hassell; 8 p.m. at the School of Music's Recital Hall Opera Workshop - Operatic scenes and arias; 8 at the McIntosh Theater Violin Recital - Kazuo Seta; 6 p.m. at the School of Music's Recital Hall SUNDAY Piano Recital - Ming-Li Wang; 2 p.m. at Music School's Recital Hall Campus Band - James Nissen conducts; 4 p.m. at Hill Aud. Horn Recital - Dan Sweeley; 4 p.m. at the Music School's Recital Hall Violin Recital - Monica Diele- man Das; 6 p.m. at the Music School's Recital Hall DMA Piano Recital - Steven Gathman; 8 pm. at the Music School's Recital Hall Concert Band - Hill Aud. at 8 WAVES - The Digital Music Ensemble; 3 p.m. at the Rackham Lecture Hall Trumpet Recital - Julia Goldre- ich; noon at the School of Mu- sic's Recital Hall f '-- i n: Lf ....- So Long and Fa This is the last Weekend and the final one for our After four years of hanging the young turks have final: us out. We've enjoyed our you have, too. We hear th some changes in mind for n still be the high-quality n come to expect from the Mi A., 4 ... .. ° : v: , ,,. :. r. . .. ., , < R -NO w .......f I 0* r" r: The construction of Tally Hall- now Liberty Square- in 1985. Film Christmas Vacation isn't worth the trip. Records Tracy Chapman follows up strong with second LP. Books Sure of You: Life in San Francisco. Cover Story Ann Arbor ain't what it used to be. The List What's happening in and around Ann Arbor. 10 On the cover: A view of State Street in the late 1800s, and again this week. More than just Ann Arbor's architecture has changed over the years. See Cover Story, Page 8. Editors............................................................................................................ A ly ssa Lustig m an Andrew Mills G raphics Editor..................................................................................................... M ig uel C ruz Business Manager........................................................................................... David Edinger Sales Manager............................................................................................ Jennifer Chappell Special Sections Coordinator......................................................................Shelly Pleva EI E LJIIEIER 7L*m THE APARTMENT LOUNGE (769-4060) Friday: The Conqueroot Blues Band; local blues and blues-rock Saturday: Robert Penn Blues Band; blues and motown THE ARK (761-1451) Friday: Livingston Taylor, songwriter Saturday: Dick Siegel BIRD OF PARADISE (662-8310) Friday & Saturday: Information not available at press time THE BLIND PIG (996-8555) Friday & Saturday: Sun Mes- sengers; 10-piece big band plays blues and rock CLUB HEIDELBERG Friday: Junk Monkeys; a harder rock Saturday: Mol Triffid; hard rock CUB'S AC (665-4475) Friday & Saturday: dancing with a DJ THE EARLE (994-0211) Friday & Saturday: The Rick Burgess Trio, mellow jazz THE NECTARINE (994-5436) Friday: Boys' Night Out Saturday: Top-40 Dance Party RICK'S AMERICAN CAFE (996-2747) Friday: Lonnie Brooks; blues great Saturday: Ital; reggae band U-CI. UB (763-2236) Friday: New Music Dance Party Saturday: Reggae Night INSTANT ( We're paying up to $6 C) compact discs. More w Bring 'em in and we'll giv also records an BOUGHT -"SOLD 336112 S. Sta Ann pm rbrSAT 1 MON-FRI 10 am-8 pm SA T 10 am-6 FRIDAY Pet Food Round-Up - food bins will be placed in area pet and grocery stores for shoppers to con- tribute pet food items to the Hu- mane Society Bachelor Fine Arts Student Exhibition - 5 students display their work; at the Slusser Gallery 1oam-5pm Safewalk - Night-time walking service, Rm. 102 UGLi; 8 to 11:30 p.m.; 936-1000 German Club Happy Hour -6 p.m. at the U-Club Overeaters' Anonymous - noon to 1 p.m. in the 3d. Floor of the Union. Ukranian Poet Lina Kostenko - the poet reads from her works at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Am- phitheater Rudolf Steiner Institute - The advanced study group on Steiner's "Planetary Spheres..." Art and Holy Powers in the Early Christian House - an ex- hibition of Early Christian Arti- facts; 9 a.m.-4pm at the Kelsey Museum "Geologic Processes and the Distribution of Landscape Ecosystems in the Huron Mountains"~ - Tom Simpson, an SNR research assistant, speaks at noon in Dana 1046 "Can Black Nationalism Win Black Liberation?" - two Black student leaders from Washt- enaw Community College and Wayne State speak at 7 p.m. in the League Henderson Rm.; spon- sored by the Revolutionary Work- ers League "Yield Optimization in Batch Processes" - Prof. Costas Kravaris speaks at 4 p.m. in EECS 1200 The Student Workshop Tenth Anniversary Show - a sampling of student user andgUniversity af- filiate woodworking; 9am-6pm in Union 1209 Recycled Holiday Notecard and Wrapping Paper Sale - 10am-3pm in the Atrium of the Engineering School; sponsored by Recycle UM Kiwanis Christmas Sale - the sale of reusable items runs form 10am-7pm at the Kiwanis Activi- ties Center Michigan Leadership Confer- ence Registration - at the Stu- dent Organization Development Center in the Union; fee is S12 SATURDAY Pet Food Round-Up - food bins will be placed in area pet and grocery stores for shoppers to con- tribute pet food items to the Hu- mane Society "A Christmas Star" - the plan- etarium show about the mythical star's realities; showings at 2,3 and 4 p.m.; S2; at the UM Ex- hibit Museum (1109 Geddes) Kiwanis Christmas Sale - the sale of reusable items runs form 9am-noon at the Kiwanis Activi- ties Center BFA Students Exhibition Opening - 7 students display their work; 4-8 p.m. at the Slusser Gallery Art and Holy Powers in the Early Christian House - an ex- hibition of Early Christian Arti- facts;1.-4pm at the Kelsey Mu- seum Homeless Action Committee Picket - 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.; meets at the lot behind Kline's Dept. store SUNDAY "A Christmas Star" - the plan- etarium show about the mythical star's realities; showings at 2,3 and 4 p.m.; S2; at the UM Ex- hibit Museum (1109 Geddes) Pet Food Round-Up - food bins will be placed in area pet and grocery stores for shoppers to con- tribute pet food items to the Hu- Faculty and Stud( Ever need Packag Packing Supplies, Rental, or Fax? + PACKAGING AND SHIPPING I.PS Packages items, we use Foam-in-Place for fragile items, custom crating available. We ship via: UPS, Airborne, Profit, Emery, DHL, USPS, and others. + COMPLETE SUPPLIES Packing envelopes, boxes, tapes, tubes, bubble wrap, U.S. Postage Stamps, labels, and much more. 4 4 Left: Photo from Daily files. Right: Photo by Julie Hollman. INDEPENDENT 4 1756 Plymouth Rd. 747-7900 FAX 747.8519 P7 g~~'J 4 g ~ ~ ~ --~''V~kld oebi~,1~S9. ~rwa~~~ r 'i: iai~i ' '~~~ 1'": . l ma~n~s' .",;. u##$(!s~a. e-i~ :3';i A ed lra Weekend/Dedember 8.$1989