iA2 Last chance to see 'Hamlet' at the Michigan Theater. Got four hours to kill? Check out director Kenneth Branagh's full-text adaptation of this Shakespearean tragedy before it leaves Ann Arbor for good. Discover all the drama from Shakespeare's stage on the Michigan Theater's big screen at 7 tonight. $5 for students. - Monday March 10, 1997 iapper killed ii ,yugene Bowen pThly Arts Writer N otorious B.IG. became the second prominent hardcore rapper to be gunned down in a six-month period ealy Sunday morning in Los Angeles. Christopher Wallace, better known as the Notorious B.IG., was fatally shot outside Petersen Automotive Museum, wehere a private party was being held in celebration of Friday's I Ith Annual Soul Train Music Awards. "Someone just rolled by (the car in *ich Notorious B.I.G. was sitting) and started shooting," witness Kevin Kim told The Associated Press. According to Los Angeles Police Department sergeant Willie Guerrero. Notorious B.I.G. i.A. shooting the shooting occurred after fire ment officials had broken up t due to overcrowding. 'It appears that the suspect along the side of a Chevrolet s and fired several shots into the striking Mr. Christopher W Guerrero said. "Mr. Wallace wa ferred to Cedars-Sinai Medical in a private car, and was pron dead at the hospital:" Guerrero would not say hou times or where on his body Wall shot. However, at least five punctured the parked car in Wallace was sitting. The shooting occurred short midnight Pacific time, and Wall depart- pronounced dead at 12:30 a.m. He was he party 24 years old: "There were hundreds of people when s drove the shooting occurred, so detectives from uburban the Wilshire division (of the LAPD) are vehicle interviewing a lot of people," Guerrero allace," noted. "We're hopeful we'll have a is trans- description of the assailants soon." Center At press time, LAPD officials had nounced not disclosed any suspects in the case. "We have no leads and no eyewit- w many nesses yet," said detective Raymond ace was Futami, who is in charge of the ongoing bullets investigation. "We're still interviewing which people." But Futami said that the interviews ly after have been unpromising so far. ace was "We're not getting a lot of coopera- tion, and that's a problem," he said. With the murder of rapper Tupac Shakur almost six months ago, specula- tion of the correlation between Shakur's death at the hands of gunmen in Las Vegas on Sept. 13, and Wallace's recent death is sure to abound. Both rappers made public their extreme dislike for each other which was magnified when Shakur boasted last year that he was having an affair with Wallace's wife, R&B songstress Faith Evans. Evans denied the allegation. Guerrero warned against making any assumptions. "There are similarities in the ways they were murdered," he said. "But it's still early in the case, so it's premature to speculate." But it wasn't too early for University senior Eugene Williams to let his opin- AP PHOTO ion be known. Notorious B.I.G. and Sean "Puffy" Combs at a private party in celebration of the Soul' Train Music Awards. AP PHOTO "I think Notorious B.l.G.'s death had everything to do with Tupac," Williams said. "Machiavelli faked his death and then killed all his enemies. Now Makaveli (Tupac Shakur's name change on his post- mortem album "7 Day Theory") is doing the same. And this makes sense since I don't believe Tupac's dead." Problems between Shakur and Wallace, who also went by the moniker Biggie Smalls, went beyond charges of marital infidelity. Shakur accused Wallace of involvement .in a 1994 rob- bery, which left Shakur with multiple gunshot wounds and the loss of more than $40,000 in jewelry. Both men also had a checkered past with the law. Shakur was released from prison last year pending an appeal of his sexual assault conviction. Wallace, an admitted ex-crack cocaine dealer in Bedford-Tyuyvesant, a tough Brooklyn neighborhood, was ordered in January to pay $25,000 to a man whom he alleged- ly robbed and assaulted in May 1995. PolyGram Records college represen- tative D'Andre Boldon also had conjec- tures of Wallace's recent death. "It's probably a money thing," he said. "First Tupac, the top money maker for Death Row Records, is killed. Now Notorious B.l.G., the top money maker for Bad Boy Entertainment, is killed. "But it could also be some sort of retaliation, since many people argue that Notorious B.l.G. had something to do with Tupac's murder. You do have some folks so deep into the East Coast'/ West Coast thing that they're taking matters into their own hands. Either way, though, I think that it's very sad that the lyrics of the hip-hop culture are being realized on a serious tip." Don Cornelius, executive producer and creator of the "Soul Train" dance program, said that the party was neither sponsored by nor had any connection with the show. Wallace, who won the Rap Artist of the Year award at the Billboard Music Awards in 1995, did not win anything at this year's Soul Train Awards. Shakur posthumously won the Best R&B-Soul or Rap Album award for "All Eyez on Me." Five bullets hit the Chevrolet suburban in which Wallace was sitting. Stem's 'Private Parts' exposes human side first film's pure honesty allows Stern to let it all hang out See Howard Stern's 'Private Parts' for free teordy Gantsoudes For the Daily When Howard Stern first arrived in New York, Don Imus was the king of Newi York talk radio. Since his arrival on' New York radio, however, Stern has buried Imus in the ratings and never Ooked back. Just like every other radio host Stern has crushed, he has held a funeral for inus, commemorating the feat. That is just a small part of the charm that has niade Stern one of the most unique pub- li figures in America. The self-proclaimed "King of All Media," Howard Stern successfully branches out from radio, books and television into film with "Private Parts." Although Stern tends to come off as an unfeeling; sexist, racist pig, "Parts" delves into what made him the wonder- fully blunt shock jock. The audience finds out that he is actually human underneath his thick skin. The movie opens a few years back. following Fartman's debut at the MTV Movie Awards. Stern's worry that everyone thinks he's a moron sparks memories of his youth - specifically, the first time Stern realized he wanted to be a disc jockey. Loyal Stem listeners will recognize the tirades and rants of Stem's father. Shouts of, "Shut up, you moron!" and the like are sound bites that long-time fans may recognize from tapes capturing Stern at work with his father. "Parts" is not an inside look at Stern's radio show. Instead, the film traces how his show came to be, and more impor- tant, his relationship with his wife. Alison (Mary McCormack). Actors por- tray Howard from age seven through high school gradua- tion. However, once R Stem enters Boston University to study communications, it is pure Howard. Even though Stern AtE looks a bit dry B behind the ears to portray a college stu- dent, the voice-over lets the audience know that it's his movie, and this is how it should be done. The documentary style is what makes this movie seem like one is actu- ally seeing Sterm's life through his eyes and those of the people closest to him. Robin Quivers, Stern's co-star both on and off the screen, offers plenty of insight as to what exactly drew her to Howard when they first met. Jackie "The Jokeman" and Fred, both loyal members of Stern's radio show and life, also appear in the movie, and they are. wonderful to watch. The core cast, though not made up of actors, really lets the audience know Stern, the man who picks on himself throughout the movie by saying that he. is an ugly dork with small genitalia. Actors certainly would not have been as convincing as Stern and his sidekicks. The funniest bit in the movie is the crew's rendition of George Carlin's "Seven Words You Can't Say on Television." One can tell that the cast is really enjoying themselves telling Stern's story. The pure honesty of "Parts" gives the film its charm. How can Stern have any charm, you ask? Those who have ever listened to Stern can most likely testify to turning him off at times because of his vulgarity. However, the listeners are all drawn back to him again and again - not because of the show's writing. but because of its spontaneity. A fantastic scene in the movie occurs when one frustrated radio executive asks a pollster why the average Stern ._ _ listener listens, on E V I E W average, 70 more minutes to Stern ?rivate Parts than to any other radio show. The pollster's response: riarwood and Showcase "They wanna know what he's gonna do next." Even 'Stern-haters', who listen, on average, 120 minutes more to Stern than to any other show, also tune in to hear what he'll do next. Not knowing what he will do is what makes Stern so exciting to behold. From having radio sex, to the Lesbian Dating game, to constantly toying with the FCC, Stern only promises to be unpredictable. The movie takes an unpredictable turn itself after about an hour, and it focuses on Stem's relation- ship with his wife, taking the audience away from the more interesting laughs during the radio flashbacks. Although it is easy to hate Stern for whathe says, one cannot dispute that he is one of the most powerful men in show business. He is respected not for what he says, but for what he has accomplished. Stern has two No. 1 best-sellers, he is the biggest radio per- sonality in America and his New Year's Special grossed over $40,000,000 last year. His listeners do not necessarily even like what he has to say all the time, but they continue to read, listen and watch to find out what he will do next. Stern's "Private Parts" successfully reveals this truth. Haven't had a chance to catch a glimpse of Howard Stern's "Private Parts" yet? Never fear, The Michigan Daily has you covered. We have 10 passes for two to see The King of All Media's first foray onto the big screen at United Artists Briarwood Theater. The passes are good for as long as the Paramount Pictures film is showing. Just stop by the Daily Arts Office In the Student Publications Building on 420 Maynard St. after 1 p.m. today. Be one of the first 10 people to tell us what city Howard worked in before wreaking havoc in New York. Good luck! XTT ORDER NOW AND RECEIVE BY GRADUATION SEE YOUR JOSTENS REPRESENTATIVE TODAY!!! MONDAY-WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10-12 11:00 A.M.- 4:00 P.M. JOSTENS MICHIGAN UNION BOOKSTORE tern bares his heart, soul and much more in "Private Parts." 4': : 4. Recycle the Daily. 3 EE mEEK HEWEI - l _1 1997 CLASS ACT -- i tl I'O19 Uy h mr at ri 9 t'9i 1 :. o' { r fdere's the straight scoop.. Front desk staf - summer '97 I I EI