The Battalion • Page 3 to be ernmental perhighwa] ‘n to the. iot firm in ation su] rai l system;, 'emment ' ae railroads J f is misli business, ent in devi raining its oing tobe. d, butbyil, must be a, ‘ will become' fanyon dances into Northgate scene By Michael Landauer TJhe Batfalion 93-7^ 00 ia e here was one motivating factor in Don Ganter’s mind when he bought the Campus Theater in 1 “I bought the place out of sheer terror,” I said. \ Ganter, who also owns the Dixie Chick- i and the Dry Bean Saloon, opened orthgate’s first country dance hall two peks ago. He said he was worried that pmeone might open a place that would pnipete with other Northgate bars. I But Ganter and his wife, Angela, both id that Shadow Canyon has actually ought business for the other bars. “We hope to get the crowd that normal- leaves the Chicken to go dancing just to ime over here,” Angela Ganter said. I The Ganters said they have gotten a Dsitive response. Shadow Canyon has id a capacity crowd for three of the six ghts that it has been open. ! “So far, everybody’s just loved it,” An- ila Ganter said. “The people like the bal- iny where they can go up and watch peo- je dance below.” [ The interior of the club took eight pnths to finish and uses generous inounts of cedar to create a rustic at- psphere. The building was built in 1939 and lowed movies for 44 years. Angela Gan- [r said she remembers being a student *fhen the theater, which showed pomo- 1 ■tophic movies in its later years, finally ut down in 1983. The original stage is in place, but the or has been leveled to make dancing sier. Everything from the high ceiling to e balcony and walls is covered in cedar. There are two fully-stocked bars and, e the Chicken, customers who aren’t ncing or playing pool are expected to sit d carve their names into tables while [aying dominoes. Sharia Vaughn, a senior education ma tt’, said she likes the new club and ex- cts it to be successful at bringing more ople to Northgate. “It’s kind of like transplanting the Dix- Chicken into a dance place,” she said, it’s an entertainment spot. It’s not just mewhere to go and sit. If you don’t ink, it gives you something to do.” Vaughn, an Aggie Wrangler, said the iusic and the atmosphere make her el at home. “It’s not your glitzy, sequin, smoke lachine-type atmosphere,” she said. It more a relaxed, home town, coun- ^ jy-type place.” While the dance floor is not as large as ose at other local dance clubs. Shadow wr 4 iV' 1 jl( Canyon offers a different appeal. Ryan Gotten, a freshman environmental design major, said he likes not having to drive to Bryan just to dance. “The atmosphere’s different from all the other places,” he said. “There’s a close- n6ss iyh.0T© 19 With over 400 CDs and a $20,000 sound system, Angela Ganter said Shad ow Canyon is equipped to play whatever music is requested as loud as the crowd wants it. They play a mix of old and new country as well as some rock’n’ roll, but she said they always stick to danceable music. The Ganters said they hope to bring a few big-name performers to Shadow Canyon’s stage in the fall. For now, they are counting on their location and word-of-mouth advertising to keep the dance floor full. Don Ganter said having a dance place on Northgate keeps people from driving across town to go dancing after hours of drinking at the Chicken. It also makes it possible for northside residents to walk to a dance hall. “It’s shorter to get to the Canyon than it is to get to their vehicle,” he said. Although his initial investment was a defensive move by Don Ganter, he said he is happy with how it turned out. “I’m really glad I bought it,” he said. “It’s turned out really beautiful inside. If it’ll do what it’s done in the last six days. I’ll be very happy.” Eddy Wylie / The Batfai ion Coffee and death provide unique Lazio s vibe By Jay Knioum The Battalion A fter three months of hell. Dead Lazio has finally been given life at Northgate. Crammed into the small space left empty by the late Condom Station, Dead Lazio’s Coffee Fkib has finally opened its doors — three months late, but better that than never. Dead Lazio’s is the brainchild of Aaron and Matt Brown, the owners and founders of Sweet Eugene’s House of Java, a popular hang-out for cap puccino aficionados of College Station. In order to reach a more-ready stu dent crowd hungering for coffee and baklava, the brothers Brown teamed up with an old college buddy from Cal ifornia, Dave Atkinson. Running a cof feehouse was a dream of the three, and they now own two of them. Atkinson said that chronic lack of funds and higher California start-up cost kept Eugene’s from opening on the West Coast. So, the operation has moved to College Station, where both Aaron and Matt had attended Texas A&M. Coffee lovers accustomed to the at mosphere of Sweet Eugene’s are in for a different vibe from Lazio’s. The motif for this place is, well, death. Atkinson said the name for the place came from an episode of the “Laverne & Shirley” sitcom. In the show, the character Squiggy has an uncle named Lazio who owns a restau rant called Lazio’s Place. “Squiggy’s uncle Lazio died, and willed the restaurant to Squiggy and Lenny,” Atkinson said. “They wanted to keep the name, but wanted to change it and honor him dying, so they changed it to Dead Lazio’s Place. We all thought that was kind of funny.” Thus, the whole vibe of Dead La zio’s is dark, but without the depres sion. “It’s kind of taking a joking look at death — it’s not serious by any means,” Atkinson said. Atkinson said the feel of this coffee house is rougher than Eugene’s. Dark colors, concrete floors, ultraviolet lights, a couch imported directly from the Playboy Mansion and a giant, eight-ton concrete bar all make Lazio’s a unique Northgate hideout. Possibly the most striking feature is the metal 1930s-era casket that serves the back of the place as a sort of “cof fin-table,” in Atkinson’s words. Atkinson said the coffin came from a former A&M student in Houston who owns a casting company. This man had a metal coffin from the ’30s laying around, and was happy to do nate. At the moment, the casket is empty. But not for long. “We haven’t got a body for it yet, we’re working on that,” Atkinson said. “We’re gonna get a mannequin, and dress him up in a tuxedo.” The crowning achievement will be the “corpse’s” head, which will be a full-size model of the human head, cased in clear plastic so one can see all the gory details. It was probably this slightly twisted sense of humor which got the Lazio crew through the past few months. Faced with setbacks, construction de lays, nonstop work and little sleep, the raising of Lazio was a grave matter, indeed. Troy Brown, a Lazio’s employee, said the work was nothing but chaos. Brown listed such problems as dead beat contractors that left the work hanging for three weeks, problems with constructing handicapped-acces sible bathrooms, and virtual 24-hour work by the whole Lazio’s crew. The Lazio’s staff agrees that the support from students and nearby Northgate businesses has been a big help. “We’ve had probably 50 to 60 people a day stopping and asking us when we’re finally gonna get open,” Atkin son said. “Our answer is a running joke right now — ‘Next week.’ We’ve been saying that for two months.” Atkinson said that Northgate fits the mold for the Lazio’s‘vibe perfectly. He said the coffeehouse can become a haven for students who either aren’t into bar-hopping, or for those who are into it a bit too much. “I like the bars around here,” Atkin son said. “But this is another place for people who don’t drink, or who have been drinking and want to take some time to sober themselves up.” “Obviously coffee doesn’t sober you up, but it can give them time away from it.” Atkinson said some visions of the Lazio’s motif got out of hand. “Dave and I started getting a little carried away when we first started do ing this, getting a little morbid,” Troy Brown said. Two of these “little morbid” ideas that were scrapped were regular obit uary postings in the bathrooms, and a “Wall of Fame” depicting great deaths in history. “We wanted to take a Barbie doll and torch it. After it was all burnt, we could put in on the wall and write ‘Joan of Arc’ under it. Also, a bloody glove on a plaque, which says ‘Nicole Simpson,”’ Brown said. “We didn’t want it turned into a haunted house, and that’s kind of where it was going.”