4B - The Michigan Daily Weekend Magazine - Thursday, March 27, 1997 04 0 0 The Michigan Daily Weekend [] A.out Town Spring signals outdoor dining despite unstable A2 weather Gangsta rap speaks to teens as rock spoke to baby boomers By Kelly Xntaris Daily TV/New Media Editor Welcome to spring in Ann Arbor - a time when all four seasons can pass through town in one week. Recent weath- er may have been cruelly unpredictable, but Treetowners need not fear. Soon, the sun will make its comeback, casting an invigorating glow over this 'place. Some people will dust off the old Rollerblades, and some will turn the Diag into a cement beach. Some will go for a long drive, and some will frolic through the Arb. Other signs of celebration will be much less obvious. Some students will stop huddling like mice in University cafete- rias, and some will quit ordering deliv- ered food. In fact, many will take their revelry to the streets - and dine outside. After years of witnessing this annual spring fever, Ann Arbor restaurant and cafe-owners are ready and willing to cater to a sudden demand for outdoor seating. Tony Bonino, general manager of Good Time Charley's, has already taken out the patio furniture. Last Friday, the campus restaurant had tables outside from 2 - 10:30 p.m. The sidewalk section, complete with a white picket fence, is slated to officially open April 13. According to Bonino, the warmer temperatures brings more business, and a different, "much more relaxed" crowd. Could the resort-like transfor- mation of the place be the cause? "We Good Time Charley's ~ Where: 1140 S. University. V When: Weekdays, 11 a.m.12 a.m.; weekends, 11 a.m.-1:30 a. M_ ~ Phone: 668-8411. just need a canal or a river nearby," Bonino joked. Outdoor dining at Charley's began back in 1979, when the drinking age was 18. These days, sidewalk seating allows 21-year-olds an intriguing privi- lege. They can publicly drink alcohol outdoors without breaking the law. Ironically enough, the Department of Public Safety is located nearby, right on Church Street. When asked about deal- ing with problem drinkers, Bonino said, "We have our moments." Charley's customers might also be interested to learn the history behind Count Sticks, a popular menu item. The restaurant used to include an upper-level pizza place called Count De Antipasto, which is now Wherehouse Records. Further down South University Avenue past Church, The Brown Jug, a virtual campus landmark, has been serv- ing customers since 1938. Co-owner Jim The Baltimore Sun relative to a very violent society, the What is it about popular music that music of Biggie or Tupac or some of lends itself so readily to a culture of vio- the other artists today has to rise above lence? just ordinary violence to be extreme." Parents have pondered that question For decades, young people have been since the mid-'50s, when teens drawn to music that is harder rioted to the strains of and louder, more aggres- "Rock Around the sive and in-your-face Clock." But this ques- than what their par- tion has become ents (or even their. especially pertinent older siblings) lis- in recent months. tened to. For In rap, fans instance, when have been shaken Detroit'rock leg- and critics dis- end the MCS turbed by the was developing drive-by shooting its sound in the deaths of Tupac mid-'60s, its Shakur and Biggie members wanted Smalls, a.k.a. the to make music Notorious B.I.G. In with such rhythmic rock, parents have 4drive that the been so upset by the Motown sound paled in sexual content of Marilyn comparison. Manson's act that there "The Motown stuff was ROB GILMORE/ Uily Dominick's has lots of outdoor seating - a balcony and a garden. reflection of what is going on," he said. "The barbaric violence that was prevalent in 'Braveheart' still exists today," said rapper Chuck D, from his home in Atlanta. "Society is still run by this concept of, 'If you can't get what you want, kill 'til you get it.' And I think it trickles down to kids, to what they think is exciting, as opposed to what they think is corny and boring and too regular. "In this society, violence gets project- ed, whereas normal, day-to-day living gets downplayed. When a murder hap- pens, that's front-page news. When something positive happens in the com- munity, it's tucked on Page 38;' he said. That's very much the case with cov- erage of hip-hop. Gangsta rap gets loads of attention from the mainstream media - even though it represents just a small portion of a billion-dollar busi- ness - because the shootings of Shakur and Small and the thuggery of Death Row Records chief Suge Knight make good copy. These days, even those who never listen to rap hear about the "war" between East Coast and West Coast rap contingents. But apart from a few rap- oriented magazines, there's been almost no coverage of those rappers who have called for unity within the community and an end to this sectarian Paron said that the outside tables in the spring are part of "a continuing attempt to serve customers." The option first became available back the Ann Arbor Art Fair. Just around the corner on Church Street, the Backroom of the Brown Jug doles out that late-night hot commodity, pizza. Rumor has it that inhaling a slice in the wee hours, during sub-zero weather, is an in 1960, during ' The Bro ~ Where: 1204S V When: Monday 7:30 a.m.-2 a.m. Saturday, 7:30 a Sunday, 9:30 a.m ~ Phone: 761-33 "Spring" Break, boasts an outdoor capacity of about 500. Customers can choose from seating at its balcony, "beer garden" and picnic area. With all the outdoor dining possibili- ties available, it's no wonder that the wn Jing weather definitely affects business at S. University. Dominick's. -Thursday,. "Our business ; Friday- runs opposite to .m.-3 a.m.; farmers and taxi .-2 a.m. drivers," manager 55. Richard DeVarti said. Last autumn, the restaurant opened for the home game against Ohio State, which was during its post- Thanksgiving off-season. Venturing toward the downtown area, down East Liberty Street, meal-seekers See SIDEWALK, Page 16B have been attempts in sev- Rapper Chuck D. unwritten graduation requirement. - Yet another campus institution, Dominick's, has been serving up home- made Italian pasta dishes, sub sand- wiches, and pizza for the last 38 years. The restaurant, which re-opened after I I a little tame for me," MC5 eral states to stop the group from performing - including a well- publicized effort on the part of Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating. Popular music hasn't seemed this alarming in eons. Nor has that aura of danger been detrimental to the artists' popularity. Last year, Manson's million-selling "Antichrist Superstar" entered the charts at No. 3, while Shakur's posthu- mous, double-platinum Makaveli album, "The Don Killuminati, debuted at No. 1. And industry insiders are already certain that the Notorious B.I.G.'s last album, "Life After Death," is guaranteed to top the charts after its release next week. All of which leaves many observers wondering what on Earth is the appeal of such violent, repellent music. But as any teen-ager could tell them, the edgy, anti-social aspects of these acts is the attraction - and always has been. I don't know what it is within youths that propels rebellion against their par- ents;' said producer Bill Stephney, pres- ident of the New York-based hip-hop label StepSun Entertainment. "Whatever it is psychologically that produces that rebellion probably pushes them toward rebellious music. "But rebellion is relative to the larg- er society," he added. "If even 'Dancing in the Streets' had a tone of anarchy to it, relative to its day, then guitarist Wayne Kramer told author Fred Goodman in the book "Mansion on the Hill." "We started working on this concept of drive - the music had forward power. I think it came from the kind of adrenaline you have when you're 16 or 17, when your hormones are pumping so fast that you're almost insane," Kramer said. SoCIe Although hormonal runabythi changes remain the same, of, 'If yo& today's teens .y have far differ- What you ent social con- , cerns than til you 54 those of previ- ous genera- tions. "Part of the problem is' that this genera- tion, across the board and irrespective of race, doesn't have parents," said Stephney. "It has the adults that bio- logically produced them, who are around somewhere, but the reason some of these messages and images are so extreme is because these kids are growing up in a vacuum, in their own moral environment, with their own values - twisted and skewed, and much of it because they're self-creat- ed. "If the music is violent, truly it is a t3 ei violence. "I've been say- V is Still ing for the longest ,time s c ncethere's no such thing as an East cantCL get Coast/West Coast thing;" Wan , kit, said Chuck D. ,,A?7 "You have a cou- ple of artists Chuck D from L.A., and a couple of artists Rapper from New York - do you signify a whole coast? People have to be careful when attach- ing a term to anything, and calling this a conflict is concocting something out of thin air. Phife (left), a member of J is not in place, anyone is the fray," he said. That has changed quit the way the culture operat music was still in its fore MCs built their reputation bal combat, belittling the while showing off their skills. Veteran rappers sh such fights. "The MC ba definitely dead now," sai the rap group A Tribe Cz few months ago. "Because if a brother c structive criticism, then think he's going to take battle? I'm not trying to no rhyme. I'll be damne< some hip hop, you know ing?" Let's Go L ichugana '97 at Rick's po0nsore d y: "And when you fantasy escalating,; have this kind of a and people's reality A E Pi AEPhi Greek Jewish Connection D Phi E Theta DZ SDT Sigma Kappa A Chi O Phi Delt Delta Sig Theta Chi TKE TEP ATO Theta Xi and door prizes from... 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