U U U AM A -W -0- -0- 0 JAB - gq t; ensa, Deembr-S,200 ! ! ! tL t ABOUT CAMPUS ILLUSTRATIONS BY JOHN OQUIST going green The soundtrack to our lattes An employee's rebellion against coffee shop music Making a music playlist to play over the loudspeakers at Espresso Royale seems pretty simple. For the servers who compile them, the ingredients usually involve indie rock (Radiohead and Broken Social Scene are common at both the Espresso on State Street and on South University Avenue), perhaps some punk and a sprinkling of pop - all of which is played softly while customers sip their lattes, hold office hours and do homework. Matt West, a barista at the Espresso on State, eitherdidn't get the memo or didn't want to read it. When he works, his playlist veers toward the hard rock end of the music spectrum, and not all the customers are thrilled about it. Last weekend, heavy rock waft- ed through the otherwise tranquil atmosphere of the caft as West explained his unconventional choices. "AlotofthemusicthatIplayhere, it's more on the heavy rock sort of psychedelic rock side of things, it's not really metal," he said. "It's bands like Black Sabbath, and a lot of the bands that they influenced, bands like Witchcraft, who are a Swedish retro-rock band, and The Sword," he said. "I'd call it sort of atoner-rock." West has long red hair that falls down past his beard. He sported a worn leather jacket, matching worn black jeans, a belt composed of bul- lets and a small hammer around his neck - the symbol for Thor, the Norse god of thunder. It was cold outside, so he wore a red scarf that matched his hair and glasses. He could have easily blended in at a Wolf Eyes concert. West makes drinks at Espresso Royale's State Streetlocation,where the servers choose music from a vast iTunes library in a backroom. When that isn't enough, some staff- ers also bring in their own iPods and CDs. At first, West was cautious about his soundtracks. "For a long time I didn't bring any of my own music in and I just built stuff out of what I had," West said. That didn't last long. The one list of acceptable songs West would assemble was fairly short and ended before his shift did. "Iwantedtobringinsomemore," he said. "Just so that the playl- ist was longer than the amount of time I'd be working every shift so it wasn't the exact the same songs over and over again." Indeed, monotonous is the last thing West's work soundtrack is. Green living is a catchy but vague tagline for environmental conciousness. Here, Natural Resources and Environment Prof. Don Scavia talks about what it actually entails. - As told to Jessica Vosgerchian r v / Responses to his disc jockeyin vary. Sometimes patrons come u and ask to turn the music downc change it. "A lot of people think it's too lou even when we think it's too quiet he said. On past weekends, students hav been observed grumbling that th RANDOLPH COURT APARTMENTS ~6 2 Bedroom Apartment Homes Ground Floor Ranch Style! Private Entrance! Patio! Spacious Kitchen! Air Conditioning! Laundry Facilities! 24-Hour Emergency Maintenance! Pets Welcome! And much, much more! Call today to reserve your new address! 734-971-2828 Equal Housing opportunity ig serious rock is unfitting for a cof- p fee shop. But West says sometimes or he'll see patrons' heads begin to slowly bob. The manager regulates d it, keeping the louder stuff mostly for the weekends. But even West's weekday ve soundtrack, laden with songs like le "Black Sabbath" and "Seat Leaf," is a little bit louder than the songs you'd typically hear at a caf6 that targets the studious. In the end, though, West says he reconciles his taste for bass with patrons' preferences. "Basically, the music is supposed to be for the customers and not for us, so we just do what they want us to do," he said. "People have their own stuff going on and we're all pretty much happy for it to not be just dead silence." -DANIEL STRAUSS Interfaith bowling Muslim and Jewish engineers take to the lanes In an age of ever-mounting inter- faith tension, progress is being made on some unlikely fronts. Last week, on a wintry Saturday night, members of the Jewish Engi- neering Association and the Muslim Engineering Student Association traded their calculus and mechanical engineering homework for bowling