9) The Battalion Thursday - July 17, 1997 £jC(irn'in<£ tAc AtirA When it comes to weekend activity, students put down the books and pick up the bottles 'offii levi By Keith McPhail The Battalion t is no secret that some Aggies like their liquor. And none is more popular than bourbon. While the amount of booze consumed in Bryan-College Sta tion is hard to quantify, one thing is certain — a lot of Iquor bottles are emptied in Aggieland. Bobby Lee, a local bouncer and senior accounting major, said he believes the popularity of liquor in Col lege Station is related to is soothing effects and the lack of alternatives in the Brazos Valley. “It’s a way to relax,” he said. “It’s pretty much the only way to chill out in College Station when your not work- ; or studying. There’s not a hell of a lot else to do — is, it is fun, if you take it in a moderate amount.” Brooke Eoff, a College Station self-described social g and senior accounting major, enjoys the "57 Chevy” at Fitzwilly’s. “I like it because its a big-ass drink with a lot liquors it I can enjoy slowly,” she said. “And I love margari- — I am the margarita queen.” Another popular Aggieland drink is the “Flaming Dr. Pepper.” Jason Kempenski, a bartender at the Ptarmi gan said they sell 250 on a good night. It is difficult to add up the number of shots people take on Northgate, but it is considerable, claims Corey Dukes, a Dry Bean bartender and senior health major. “There is no way of telling how many we sell — there’s so many,” Dukes said. “I can sell 30, 40 or 50 shots in five minutes.” “We spend at least $2,000 a week ordering liquor in the summer. In football season, that number is double.” Few know more about hard liquor consumption in Aggieland than J.J. Ruffino, owner of J.J.’s Package stores and class of ’73 marketing student. January will mark the silver anniversary (25 years) of Ruffino’s entrance to the Bryan-College Station liquor business. “Crown Royal is by far the biggest seller in College Station,” Ruffino said. “Bourbons are our number one distilled spirit.” Bourbons comprise 37 percent of the total liquor sold at J.J.s stores. Crown Royal takes 11 percent of the total bourbon market, almost double its nearest com petitor Jack Daniels, which finishes second with only six percent. While Bacardi rum has led the United States in sales, Crown outsells Bacardi three to one in Aggieland. Other spirits that are popular liquor store pick ups in College Station include Jose Cuervo Gold, Smirnoff Vodka, Tanquerey Gin and Bacardi rum. Ruffino feels that most college students are pre mium buyers. Over the years, he has noticed that people tend to buy what is well-marketed, and that, he said, tends to be the premium brands. At the liquor store people tend to buy image. The image as sociated with a certain spirit plays a significant role in selection. Buyers tend to choose a bottle that is line with their image of themselves, and the image they would like others to perceive. “It’s a lifestyle thing,” Ruffino said. “I think it’s the way most people think.” Recent months have seen a rise in the popularity of premium “trade up” liquors. This trend is especially strong in tequila and whiskey. Selections include the upscale tequila Sauza, small-batch bourbons and sin gle malt scotch. This trend goes hand in hand with the rise of premium cigars. Or in most cases, goes in the other hand. Well drinks seem to be more popular at the bars, claims Mike Moore, a bartender at Shadow Canyon and senior marketing major. “I think it is just a money thing,” Moore said. Some of the most popular well drinks include Bourbon and Coca Cola, Bourbon and Sprite, and Vodka and 7-Up. While well drinks are more popular, when Aggies go premium at the bar, their spirit of choice is again Crown Royal. Moore said he also gets many requests for Jack Daniels, Jim Beam, Absolut, and Jose Cuervo. “We sell quite a few shots of straight tequila,” Moore said. ‘“Sex with an Alligator,’ a shot invented at the Dry Bean, and margaritas are very popular.” Students may be found draining a bottle of Crown Royal at home, sipping a Vodka and 7-Up at Shadow Canyon, slamming a Flaming Dr. Pepper at the Ptarmi gan or sucking down Liquid Cocaine at The Dry Bean. When the books are down, bottoms are up. 52,m Percentage of alcohol sales in the Brazos Valley 3 7 c Vo 7% 17 % 20% Ei# :ente' * tCv, <;i^ Vodka M m C Scotcm «#K « Is sg ftaxm. ; f, J : Source: J.J. Ruffino TE0U11A Graphic: Brad Graeber and Tim Moog Making Contact Star-studded science fiction thriller lives up to viewers' expectations By James Francis The Battalion I magine spending a lifetime in search of life outside Earth. As a child, you would make continuous efforts to communi cate with people miles away on a short wave radio. This small step in your child hood would prepare you only for bigger and better dreams — to one day send a signal outside the realm of Earth and have a mes sage sent back. This would be the greatest achievement in science and technology ever document ed. So you stretch out on the roof of your parents’ house, sleeping bag secure around Contact Starring Jodie Foster and McConaughey Directed by Robert Zemeckis Rated PG-13 Playing at Hollywood 16 ★★★★ 1/2 (out of five) Wmm jggljftf your body and eyes staring up into the night time sky. You focus on constellations and dream about life beyond the black-shadow atmosphere. Then you close your eyes and count: three ... two ... one ... Contact. Summer always is the season of science fiction and special-effect films. Rarely do we see a film as intelligent and thought-pro voking as Contact. In the film, Jodie Foster portrays Ellie Arroway, an astronomer whose love for the stars and galaxies beyond leads her to the discovery of a radio message sent from the star Vega. After her ground breaking discovery, Contact takes a truthful look at the battle between science and tech nology and religion. The message received contains instructions on building a trans port. But the question remains: Where will the machine take the individual lucky enough to embark on the historical journey? Please see Contact on Page 4. m m ill Ull; m m Mi Matthew McConaughey and Jodie Foster star in Robert Zemeckis' Warner Brothers film Contact, based on the book by Carl Sag; Anderson movie sets offer Hope for Humanity By Wesley Brown The Battalion R esidents of Anderson may still be feeling the impact of Hope, the made-for-TV movie that Goldie Hawn recent ly filmed there. Though the makers of Hope were only in Anderson for eight days, they left quite an impres sion, according to Grimes Coun ty Judge Bud Haney. “They brought a lot of visitors, who just came to watch, and they brought a real spirit to the commu nity,” he said. “We were quite excit ed that they were going to film here.” Of course, there were more practical advantages to having a film crew around. There were about 175 people working on the movie and spending money in Grimes County. The film production includes some big names. Hawn is at a ca reer apex after her performances The First Wives Club and Every one Says I Love You. Also starring was J.T. Walsh of Breakdown and Nixon. Hawn’s live-in compan ion Kurt Russell was not a cast member, but was nevertheless a constant present on the set. The film may have already es tablished its legacy in the Brazos Valley. Paradise Pictures, that is producing the film, has donated all the lumber used in set construc tion to the local chapter of Habitat for Humanity. Donations such as these are extremely helpful, espe cially for training efforts, according to Habitat organizer Jim Davis. “There are city ordinances in Bryan-College Station preventing us from building homes with used lumber, but we can use this lum ber as part of our training pro gram,” Davis said. “It will save us a lot of money and translate direct ly into more housing in this area.” Most of the donated lumber comes from a large theater that, in the script, is burned by arson ists. In reality, Davis said most of the structure was left intact. “They used jets of propane gas, and they had a tin roof on it that they cut all up,” he said. “Flames were shooting up into the sky, no doubt about that. It appears in the movie that the place was destroyed, but in real ity, 95 percent of it was un touched by the flames. It’s sur prising what they do to create an illusion like that.” The theater was tom down with help from inmates at the Navasota PAC One prison, and the lumber will be used to build forms and small, portable buildings on which Habitat volunteers can practice. Hope is the story of a southern teen-age girl in 1962 who watches as racism tears her town apart. The name is taken from Hope, Mo., the town in which the movie is set. The film is Hawn's directoral debut; she now becomes the third prominent feature film actor to make such a debut on TNT. The first two were Arnold Schwarzenegger (Christ mas in Connecticut) and Tommy Lee Jones (The Good Ole Boys). Bryan-College Station got a closer look at the stars involved with Hope when the entire pro duction stopped off at Bullwin- kle’s Bar and Grill for a wrap par ty. Owner Charlie Cain managed to accommodate his guests while keeping his business open. Filming will go on for several more weeks in other locations, Haney said, but a great deal of footage was shot in Anderson. “They had an entire court room scene to film here, and they did a lot of shooting on the streets. And, of course, they burned down the movie theater. That sort of thing attracts some attention, and we were happy to have had this experience.”