Ty AThe Michigan Daily michigandailycom IThursday, March 18, 2010 weekend essentials Mar. 18 to Mar. 21 CONCERT Randy Weston's father used to tell his young son he was "an Afri- can born in America." It's an aesthetic that figures strongly into the grown Weston's sound, a fusion of New York jazz and African music. This Saturday, the Kerrytown Concert House hosts his trio in a concert spon- sored by the Center for Afroamerican and African Studies at the 'U.' Tickets $10, show starts at 9 p.m. ON STAGE Use your money for a good cause and sup- port a charity aiming to stop domestic violence. Yoni Ki Baat is present- ing its 5th annual mul- ticultural monologue show, "Lips Unsealed," featuring original piec- es by University stu- dents. "Lips Unsealed" will feature pieces that tackle "domestic vio- lence, sexuality, culture and relationships." Shows are Friday and Saturday at 3 p.m. in East Quad's Keene Theatre. Tickets from $5, available at MUTO. How the 'U' Ballroom Dance Team creates a championship squad out of students who have never danced before. takes a ragtag group of students with T here's an organization on campus that limited experience and turns them into a team of champions. The Uni- versity's admissions process is brutal, its athletic teams recruit vigorously and its artists are tal- ented, but most have been honing their craft for years. It's only the University of Michigan Ball- room Dance Team that turns complete novices into world-class competitors. On a Saturday afternoon in the CCRB, you're likely to stumble across the usual sights and sounds: people running on treadmills, lifting weights, sweating it out and feeling the burn on various complicated exercise contraptions. In the CCRB's mirror room, however, you'll find something unique, something that initial- ly resembles an awkward middle school dance but upon further observation is clearly much more. It's here that the Michigan Ballroom Dance Team hosts its weekly newcomer lessons. The room is lined with people shedding their win- ter boots for dance shoes, while a few brave couples casually dance to the loud music blar- ing through the studio. Some watch their arms or hips in the large mirror, repeating a move over and over until they're satisfied with how it looks, while others are simply killing time before class begins. An older couple dressed in all black takes the center of the room and begins class. The room is almost instantly divided by gender as about 30 women line one side, and 30 men take the other. The coaches start on the Rumba, slowly breaking it down, explaining and demonstrat- ing the quick Latin dance. Each dancer watches intently, moving his or her feet along with the instructors', trying to match each step. That reminiscence of pre- pubescent dances completely dissipates as the British man in the center yells, "Men, grab a woman!" The crowd follows his commands - "quick, quick, slow, slow" - and the room of 60 men and women becomes a room of 30 couples moving in unison, surprisingly seamless for a beginner class.- In this class, the team was working en Rumba and Foxtrot, but there are many more dances the teammembers mustlearn. Ballroom competitions are divided into two categories, Latin and Standard, and each category consists of five dances. Rumba, Jive, Paso Doble, Samba and Cha Cha make up the Latin dances while Standard consists of Waltz, Foxtrot, Quick- step, Tango and Viennese Waltz. Not only do the dancers have to be proficient in each and every one of these dances, they have to be able to perform them unchoreographed, on the fly. Though most team members have never partner-danced before joining the team, the Michigan Ballroom Team is one of the best in the country, having won seven national cham- pionships - the International Team Match in 2001, 2002, 2007 and 2008; and the American Team Match in 2001, 2003 and 2004. Many of the members, like Engineering freshman Ryan Pollard, had never danced before joining and got involved on a whim. "I had four other friends who decided to join at the same time, so that was pretty much all (the persuasion) I needed," Pollard said. Business junior Daniel Lian joined in a simi- lar fashion. He and his partner, LSA junior Sofia Yokosawa, have been dancingtogether for almost three years now. They found each other using the dance team's partner search, an event the team hosts to help newcomers find someone they're compatible with for ballroom competitions. See BALLROOM, Page 4B at its very roots and when you really learn a deeper side of ballroom, it has to be a form of expression and it has to be very personal. -Alex Rowan, Ballroom Dance Team President FILM This Saturday, gather up all your droogs for a midnight showing of Stanley Kubrick's 1971 masterpiece "A Clockwork Orange" at the State Theater. Though notorious for its extremely graphic depictions of sex (it's not for the faint-heart- ed), the film is a fasci- nating examination of free will and authori- tarianism. So brush up on your Nadsat and get ready for a bit of the old ultra-violence. AT THE MIC The Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning will be hosting "Future of Urbanism." It boasts acclaimed speakers who will discuss top- ics like "New Public Spaces" and "Cities as Theaters for Conflict." The panels and lectures will take place at Rack- ham Auditorium on Friday at 4:30 p.m. and Saturday at 9 a.m. Free. IGN BY ANNA LEIN-ZIELINSKI I