Shakedown Street: A Great Local Hang Out Laurel Norwod, Contributing Writer Looking for a low-key place to eat with friends? Or maybe you want to find a new bar close to home with exciting, new local artists. Shakedown Street combines both of these aspects at one great location. Their slogan, “Food - Drink - Music - Good Vibes”, is a true representation of their estab lishment. Shakedown Street is also close to Meredith College. It is located at the site of the old Marrakesh Cafe at 2500 Hillsborough Street, just past Five O’clock Sports Bar. Parking is avail able on the side of Hillsborough St. or you can take the bus or maybe even take one of Meredith’s new Zipcars. Shakedown Street is open from 8pm to 12am Sunday through Wednesday; on Saturdays they extend their hours and are open until 2 am. These hours are just right for the college student who needs an early evening or late night break. Shakedown Street offers a grill menu including pitas, burgers, and hot dogs. It offers great vegetarian options as well, such as veggie burgers and hummus and sprouts. My personal favorite is their 420 Special: they offer a quarter-pound burger or hot dog with chips and a drink for only $4.20. Nothing on their menu is above $6, which makes eating out with friends easy and fun without breaking the bank. One of Shakedown’s best features is their ability to bring in great local art ists. This combined with their compre hensive drink menu makes Shakedown a great place to go out with friends. Every Wednesday is Open Mike Night, when anyone can show off their talents. On Sundays, they have Sucker Free Sun days, when young rap artists come and battle it out on the stage. Every other day, they have artists such as Dirty Feat, Allies Emerge, and Wide Eyed Mischief perform, all new bands that are up-and- coming in the Raleigh music scene. The mood is always relaxing since an eclectic group of people come to listen to brand new music, move to the hip beats, and enjoy drinks for a reasonable price. Shakedown’s drink menu is affordable and has something for everyone. Bottled beer, draft beer, wine, mixed drinks, malt beverages, water, and soda are all avail able, and draft beers can be purchased by the pitcher. Local beers are also offered, including Bad Penny and other Big Boss Brewing Company beers. After a long day at school and work, relaxing at Shakedown Street is an enjoyable way to end the day. Come relax and enjoy the great music while support- ing local businesses, bands, and beer. 30 Americans: Bridging the Generationai Gap Ashleigh Phillips, Staff Writer The most recent traveling exhibition to stop through North Carolina Museum of Art is 30 Ameri cans presented by the Rubell Family Collection of Miami. It arrived on March 19 and will no doubt draw visitors until it leaves on Septem ber 4. This popularity is because the collection features 31 contemporary African American artists that are working to usher in a new movement. The collection of seventy five works includes painting, drawing, photog raphy, video, sculpture, and mixed media from established artists and the up-and-coming artists inspired by their predecessors work. 30 Ameri cans is exciting because the influence of an older generation of artists on the current generation is clearly seen and validates the new movement. When the up-and-coming artists were asked about artists they admired, Carrie Mae Weems and Jean Michel Basquiat were on many lists, so, while not contemporary, Weems and Basquiat were included in the exhibit. Weems’s contribution of monochromatic color prints focuses on the effect of slavery on the African American identity. “Descending the Throne” presents the viewer with the stereotypes African American men and women faced before and after the Emancipation Proclamation. While race is clearly a theme in Weems’s works, Basquiat’s abstract paintings offer conflict in another way. “Bird On Money” pops with happy blue and yellow, but a bombardment of squiggled peace signs and arrows suggest turmoil. Modern artists such as Glenn Ligon, David Hammons, and Xaviera Simmons also offer up their interpreta tions of what it is to be African Ameri can. Ligon has ten pieces in the collec tion including a neon sign that shines “America” and two paintings that depict narratives of African Americans at tempting to reconnect with their Afri can roots. “Gold Nobody Knew Me #1” asserts the detachment African Ameri cans have with Africa, and “Gold When Black Wasn’t Beautiful #1” explores the misunderstanding in the older Afri can American community for younger generations to strive for that attach ment. Hammons takes a nontraditional approach to African American identity with his installation of “The Holy Bible, Old Testament” which is a black leather bound Bible. Xaviera Simmons uses the traditional medium of photography to capture evocative subjects in her six contributions to 30 Americans. In “One Day and Back Then (Seated)” and “One Day and Back Then (Standing)” Sim mons juxtaposes the darkness of Black skin against light wheat fields, calling at tention to the African American physical appearance. In 30 Americans, all-American nationality is a matter of fact, but racial identity is a question. The multi-gen erational and diverse-media exhibition offers fresh perspectives on past and contemporary racial issues in the United States. Crossword Answer Key: Across Down 1. MASON 2. FLAN 4. TALES 3. SAM 5. CRAZY 5. CRICKET 6. LAKES 7. FRATERNAL 8. RINGO 10. MECCA 9. CURIE 13. PAX 11. FATALE 14. SUSAN 12. ALMA 16. TSETSE 15. TENNIS 17. PYRE 17- POP