20B -he Michigan Daily -, e. - Best of Ann Arbor - ursday, April 18, 1996 0 0 The Michigan Dai-- Wu4e, 4. - 7 ~- ~ 1' - -x.K-- The Best of Ann Arbor? Could it be the proletari Best Records: Tower Records Corporate record companies die! But they've sure got a lot records. This place has more discs in its Cajun section alone than most places have in their entire store. Check out the listening stations as well, because there's nothing worse than buying a record after hearing one song on the radio - and finding out that the rest of the album is crap. Best Used Records: Wazoo Records They seem to have an abundance of Poison and Damn Yankees records. I wonder why. Wazoo Records hasAnn Arbor written all over it - it's wild, it's wacky, it's cool. Look at the vari- ous wall decorations around the store. Best Men's Clothes: ;- Urban Outfitters But what about those shattered win- dows? Someone probably attempted a drive-by after hearing of all the red- hot men's clothing. If it's new, trendy and hip, you know Urban Outfitters has it (probably before everyone else, too). Best Women's Clothes: Urban Outfitters Again, the shattered windows. But what better place to buy used jeans at new prices? They have neat-o plastic and vinyl dresses in addition to the usual stuff. Best Thrift/Used Shop: Value Village (Ypsilanti, actually), Light Wraps (Ann Arbor) Bell-bottoms, corduroys, flannels, etc. - you name it, they've got it. Pretty inexpensive, too. Just goes to show that looking chic is often cheap. Pick up some vinyl Shaft-esque gar- ments at low, low prices. If you can leave the confines of Ann Arbor, make the venture into Ypsi to see Value Village. Best Bike Sales: Student Bikes And they even will lend you tools at a nominal fee. All right! Lots of bikes, lots of parts, and helpful ser- vice. You can even buy used bikes there - if you've ever wondered where your stolen bike ended up ... Just kidding. Best Books: Border's Books and Mu- sic This place has claimed more lost people than the Bermuda Triangle. But if you love books, you'll love to get lost here. They've got everything from Asimov to Zola, as well as more non-fiction than is known to man. Be sure to look at the sale tables out in front - where else can you get hard- covers for $0.99? Best Textbooks: Ulrich's By far the most competitive pric- ing of the three major textbook stores on campus. Honest. And, it sounds like it's family-owned; how nice. Let's hear it for that orange, can- cerous glow. If you want to die of cancer, however, why don't you just drink, and smoke yourself to death? That's much more fun than cooking sunny-side up on some flourescent light ridden bed. Best Haircut: Charisma Just a little off the top, please. Wow, what a name - very swanky. We hear that RuPaul is a regular, along with Bob Barker. Bob Barker? The price must be right. Best Tanning: Supertan I For some reason, the flowers-in- their-hair artsy types who put out this section insist on calling it The Best of Ann Arbor. To them, I would ask this: What exactly is The Best of Ann Arbor? Oh, sure: They sport The Best of This and The Best of That, The Best Place to Take a Date and The Best Place to Get an Overpriced Pastrami Sandwich After Playing Racquetball. Conspicuously absent, you've probably noted, is The Best of Ann Arbor itself. I don't mean the superlative specimen in some ill- defined category; I mean the very best thing in all of Ann Arbor. Perhaps our artsy types have excluded The Best of Ann Arbor because such a category is a bit broad, a tad abstract. However, because I am a political science major, and because political science majors spend all day thinking about difficult questions like "How did Bill Clinton get elected?" and "How can the Republicans not find a candi- date who will make me vote for someone other than Bill Clinton?" - because, frankly, poli-sci majors are trained to think about Tough Stuff, I have taken it upon myself to divine just what it is that deserves to be called The Best of Ann Arbor. At first I fancied the wooden fire escapes attached to most of our houses as The Best of Ann Arbor, but then I thought, um, duh, wood burns, and I realized that wooden fire escapes were indeed not The Best of Ann Arbor. For a while I thought my friend Dave Fisch's dad (to whom I will refer, in order to protect the innocent, simply as "Dave Fisch's dad") was The Best of Ann Arbor, simply because he flew in from New Jersey for two consecutive football games and, when presented the choice between the NCAA hockey finals and Dave's graduation, chose graduation only because it was being held in Michigan Stadium. Alas, though, "Dave Fisch's dad" is not The Best of Ann Arbor. Dave Fisch's only friend (besides me; hereafter "Dave Fisch's other friend") told me that The Best of Ann Arbor was "women - wherever I go, women are the best thing." I considered this briefly, then decided that "Dave Fisch's other friend" was just being sexist, and since I work for the Daily - which is accused of racism, never sexism - I should not consider women The Best of Ann Arbor. Of course, for saying women are not The Best of Ann Arbor, the women of Ann Arbor will probably say I am a "misogynist." Fortunately, I am a political scientist and not a sociolo- gist, so I don't know what "misogy- nist" means. So I guess it really doesn't bother me. Then I finally realized what it is exactly that is The Best of Ann Arbor. Without further ado, The Best of Ann Arbor is ... student seating practices at Michigan Stadium football games. Bear with me, 0 Sports Haters! I know that right now thousands of Sports Haters are turning to Page 14B, eagerly searching for some- thing that doesn't relate to Barbaric Sports. Relent, O Sports Haters! For I shall soon show you that student seating at football games is not simply about choosing seats - it is, at its most basic, a bald-faced revolt against the capitalist super- structure that is oppressing us proletarians. Students, you see, ignore the seat designation inscribed on their tickets. They sit where they choose - a perfect example of commu- nally shared property being allocated harmoniously, as Com- rade Marx predicted. There is rarely an argument over seating, unless a non-student - who bought some student's ticket and doesn't understand the system - intrudes. Then chaos ensues. The non- student (read "capitalist") usually calls in the maize-jacketed guys (read "representatives of The Man"), who enforce reserved seating (read "exploitationist property rights"): And a confronta- tion no doubt follows, like this one I secretly recorded while Maize Jacket Man tried to move my younger sister out of the senior enclave. Maize Jacket: You're going to have to go to your correct seat. My Cool Sister: Sure, but can you move afat guy out of my seat? Me: While you're exploiting us, U r...- m - ...m - ==m -== m."iE 1 s991 1 1 1 1 I 1 * MEDIUM PIZZA WITH CHEESE AND ONE TOPPING.1 I Hand Tossed or Thin Crust, Deep Dish extra. Expires 4/30/96. Not valid with" " o her offers. Customer pays I sales tax where applicable. _____1 1 Delivery area limited to ensure 1 safe driving. Our drivers carrynt 1 less than $20.00. I 0 1996 Domino's Pizza, Inc. 1 S -.. ............ .... i I' 1 1 I I IOtt sl *De 1L. 1 could you move afat guy for me too? I could see the cogs turning in his head: If I re-seat these two and have to re-seat someone from each of those seats, and someone from each of those seats, and ... 84 repetitions later ... by God, I'll have to re-seat every student, all 15,000 of the little rodents. And that would take ... some math here ... a really long time, like longer than it took me to get my So he let us sit in our < nally distributed seats an capitalist to screw off. A ended another gloriously chapter in the chronicles struggle against the bour academia and snooty alu Deep, huh? The Best c Arbor? It's probably the wom Thank You Ann Arbor. Voted Best nidiganilu Readership Poll Michigan 1993, 1994, 1995 Items BEST OF ANN A RBOR 1993 1994 1995 a 441% I ..-I STOP IN AND MEET 2 ADDITIONS TO OUR "FAMILY": U U c 4'r'aw s' MARGARET MYERS/Daily We've expanded into our back room to give you more... it's quality active wear and it's exciting! UAU I Urban Outfitters won big for men's and women's clothes. ~ORO cii:-V re_11 cnt4 l 9 t Gr IN Graduation Week Hours 4/29-5/5 M-W 9-7 Th-Sat 9-9 Sun 9-5 ** lea * %1tke 812 South State Street 769-5650 711 N. University 6 A-lanta9 68-6915 mlmw