The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, September 23, 1993 - 3 Laugh within city limits You don't have to drive to the Motor City for a good laugh By RONA KOBELL Second City may be revitalizing Detroit's comedy circuit, but you don't1 have to drive that far out of town to catch some great laughs. Both ama- teurs and professionals are gracing Ann Arbor's local comedy clubs these days, and the discounted prices are no joke. To catch some famous locals in the act without denting your budget, try these nearby favorites. Mainstreet Comedy Showcase(314 E. Liberty): The old stand-by is still the best and only professional stand-up comedy club within the AnnArbor city limits. Some of Mainstreet's more fa- mous recent visitors include "Saturday Night Live"'s Father Guido Sarducci, Judy "The Giver Goddess" Tenuta and Malone and Nootcheez, a duo who recently appeared on MTV, Nickel- odeon and A&E. Next month, Mainstreet will resume its open mike night, where students and other local amateurs are encouraged to perform. Shows usually cost $10 and begin at 8:30on Thursday andat8:30and 10:30 Friday and Saturday. Open mike night, of course, is free. For more information call996-9080. Laughtracks (University Club, the Union): Jennifer Davis, chairman of Laughtracks, believes that "there are a lot of funny people on this campus." Anyone who has people-watched in the Diag on a warm day, pondering the idiosyncrasies of our student body would have to agree. To prevent all this humor from laying dormant, UAC's comedy program encourages students to take their jokes to the U-club on Wednesday night for almost two hours of stand-up comedy fun. Every fourth Wednesday from 10:00 to 12:30, Laughtracks hosts featured comedians as well as informal open mike nights. The laughter begins on September 29 with headliner Bill Thomas, a Detroit DJ and veteran of Mainstreet Comedy Showcase. Laughtracks will also co- sponsor Dennis Miller's October 21 visit to Hill Auditorium - tickets are $10 and go on sale tomorrow. On November 10, Laughtracks will host a Letterman-esque night of stupid frat tricks. Other programs in the works include apseudo-Star Search for funny people on campus and a pissed-off women's comedy night. Seniors Jason and Randy Sklar will be emceeing the shows, and returning comedian Dan Abrams will also be performing. It only costs $3, a real bargain for the chance to laugh at your friends onstage. Those interested in performing should attend the mass meeting on Sept. 28 at 8:30 in the UAC office on the second floor of the Union. For more informa- tion, call 747-4113. Chaplin's (16890 Telegraph Road, between Five and Six Mile just off Route 96 in Redford): Although it's a bit of a trek from Ann Arbor, Chaplin's lures its fair share of students with popular headliners, group discounts and occasional complementary tickets. On September25, comedy buffs andmelo- dramatic mavens can look forward to watching the observational humor of Walt Willey, better known as Jackson Montgomery on ABC's "All My Chil- dren." Shows at Chaplin's run Sunday through Thursday at 8:30, and Friday and Saturday at 8 and 10:30. Monday night features Kirk Noland's Comedy Camp, a mixture of stand-up routines, video and improvisation. Tickets cost $5 per person Sunday-Thursday and $10 Friday and Saturday. For more information call 533-8866. What are you waiting for? If you haven't gone yet, go to Borders Book Shop and immerse yourself in literary heaven. 'Border rng on perfection By WILL MATTHEWS On dusky evenings in Ann Arbor, it is hard to walk along North State Street without being drawn to the golden lights that flow and pour like melted butter from beneath the mez- zanine at Borders Bookshop. Step in- side, the sounds of traffic and crowds on the street vanish, and warm silence abounds in yellow light. The options are numerous: catch up on current events and the First Family's hair- styles in the magazines and periodi- cals. Glance across the covers and spines of the bargain books. Look through the posters and artwork. Watch the horn-rimmed intellectuals gush about revolutionary politics of sym- bolism in the post-Freudian age. Or read a favorite chapter out of a favor- ite book - be it Danielle Steele's "Letters from Nam" or Thomas Hardy's "Tess of the d'Urbervilles." Regardless of your favorite Bor- ders section or pastime, it is clear to any Ann Arbor-rite that Borders Bookshop is, and has been for some time, an important fixture in the Ann Arbor cultural and social scene. Borders Bookshop began as the brainchild of two brothers, Lewis and Thomas Borders, who opened a used bookstore in Ann Arbor in the late 1970s. Lewis, a computer buff, de- signed in his spare time a computer- ized book inventory system that not only kept track of current titles and current stock in a bookstore, but also made ordering and restocking titles relatively easy and efficient. The com- puter program was developed and the Borders brothers began to sell new books, growing in size, inventory and fame. The book inventory system be- came known throughout the book- store world, and was marketed and sold to other, non-affiliated stores. The Borders Corporation was formed to meet the demand for the inventory system, as well as expand its own marketing base. The Borders Corporation itself has opened over 30 company-owned - . . -_ _- -- Io TV T« a.. C... "One of the things Borders is known for is customer service and having a highly trained staff and well- educated staff who is willing to go the extra mile to find a book for you," explained Dallas Moore, community relations coordinator for the down- town store. "[The staff will] look in Books-in-Print and our inventory, and beyond that. The special order depart- ment will go out of its way to find things, too." Borders works with European dis- tributors to attain foreign books and periodicals - a fact well-known to browsers who have noticed the col- lection of French, Spanish, British and Asian language books as well as European newspapers and magazines. "People come here to find things that they're pretty sure they couldn't find anywhere else," said Moore. "Customer service and the depth of our collection are what draw people to Borders. We have not just best-sellers but a lot of back-list titles from a lot of different publishers." This is what 'separates Borders from so many other bookstores who deal mainly in mass- marketpaperbacks and bestsellers, and whose customer service reflects it. Borders, in conjunction with the University of Michigan English De- partment, also sponsors the visits and readings of a wide variety of writers who read from their work. In recent years, Borders has hosted such big- name writers as Norman Rush, Gra- ham Swift, and most recently, essay- ist Annie Dillard, as well as sponsor- ing the readings of local writers and lesser-known national writers such as Sylvia Watanabe and Thomas Lynch. Borders will be making a move to the now dormant Jacobson's building at some time in the next six to nine months - a move which will provide not only increased space for a larger and even more comprehensive collec- tion, but for a music section as well. If it is possible to forecast the future by looking back on history, Borders Books and Music (as it will be called) will continue to be an important fix- ture in Ann Arbor's cultural and social life. _ i 4 a a r 9 I 5 6 1 r r 1 r r r r a r r r r r r r r 1 r r r r r r r r 'r r t r r ,o r r r r i i s r ' .t ' r r r r r r ,f 0