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Page 20 text:
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C ARDED hecking the birth: date of an AS( student, Bouncer Chris Menai works the door at The Dash Inn. Bouncers worked guests kick rowel) keep general order and kk out any SHOTS elping a customer, Earth t mixes a rum and the latest club to offered a variety of music and featured a ssl splattered David dance I Maxis 919 eaters people, ecked with wall- 0 it a t 0 F r a variety ty nightsjam o f . hour, while on Wednes- to the days crowd with alternative music. Layout by David Kesel Night Life
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Page 21 text:
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10 Dan Wilson, an undeclared liberal arts major and a deejay at Club UM in Old P.M. Town Tempe, said the club attracted the trendy types. It has always been an alternative club, but now the manage- ment wants a more mainstream crowd, Wilson said. They are pre-yuppies, or whatever that group will be called in 10 years. Wilson said he enjoys his job and believes he possesses insight into other clubs. For instance, Wilson said that many people didn ' t realize the deejay helps sell drinks also. I ' ll play four or five songs I know will pack the floo r. Then I ' ll play something so no one wants to dance, and drink sales will increase, Wilson said. Art Bascomb, an advertising student at ASU and also a Club UM bouncer, called the crowd well-dressed, carefree and looking for a good time after a hard week of sch ool. The club called Asylum at- tracted a crowd characterized as extremely progressive by bouncer doorman Phil Ag- new, an ASU business ing management student. The men look like Robert Smith of the Cure--hair dyed black, black eyeliner, black shirts buttoned up to the neck, and black pants, he said. The women have platinum white or dyed black hair, wear fishnet or black stockings with black skirts or cutoff jeans. And lots of makeup. I mean, you could dig it off with a butter knife. But Agnew emphasized approaching the people rather than stereotyping. They ' re all beautiful people on the inside, no matter how they ' re dressed or what they look like, he said. A long-standing favorite, the Sun Devil House, attracted a more diverse crowd than Asylum. Debbie Raycoske, a physical therapy major and bartender at the Devil House, said that the crowd was hard to classify, except that most were college students. The Devil House also helped contribute to the diversity of the crowd by offering a teen night on Sundays and Tuesdays, Over and Under Night on Fridays, and over 21 on Saturdays. Different nights also attracted different crowds at Max ' s 919 at 919 E. Apache. The crowd is not typical, said barback Gavin Borowiak. It depends on what night it is and what specials are offered? ' On Friday nights, Max ' s offered a jazz happy hour with Diana Lee singing until 9:30 p.m. Then Max ' s deejay Jerry Moran spun Top 40 dance records until 3 am. Classy people come here on weekends, especially for the live jazz, said waitress Mimi Crowder. The weird people come in on Wednesday nights. Wednesday nights, Max ' s was transformed into Six Feet Under, with canvas cloths painted in neon draped from the upper floor and over the walls. Alternative music added to the underground feel. No matter how they were perceived from the other side of the bar, students forgot about their academic lives and got caught up in the rush of night life. 1-taa.„...,a S. 11:30 P.M. 12:30 A.M. 2 A.M. YOM CAN!, DWI ME Night Life 11 IS NO TYPICAL PER- SON WHO COMES TO THE DEVIL HOUSE. I THINK THE VARIETY OF MUSIC ATTRACTS PEOPLE WHO ARE NOT INTO ONE SPECIFIC KIND OF MUSIC. ROSE HABISCH BARTENDER SUN DEVIL NOOSE
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