Opinion

Jin’s: Essential part of Madison

All of us have experienced it. The first day of class, the professor believes that by dissecting the name of the course, and together, as a class, defining each word in the class’ official title, we, the students, will somehow be left with a great understanding of what we are going to be taught in the coming semester. While some may feel this is a fine tactic, my personal experiences have generally left me baffled and confused as to why I just spent 75 minutes trying to define “history” or “writing.” I must, however, confess that just last week one of my professors began class by using this method, and I have been grappling with the word all week.

The word in the class title that sparked a long conversation was culture. At first I brushed it off, pulled up Dictionary.com, and found that culture is obviously “the quality in a person or society that arises from a concern for what is regarded as excellent in arts, letters, manners, scholarly pursuits, etc.” Unfortunately, soon after, I realized that I have no idea what any of that means.

So what is the culture of Madison, Wis.? The culture of Madison is so awesome that it gets an entire section on Wikipedia, but what is it really? Phrases that immediately come to mind are the Capitol, Farmers’ Market, State Street, Halloween, but possibly above all else, Madison’s culture is that of a college town. While many factors contribute to Madison being one of the greatest cities in America, arguably no factor contributes more than the fact that it is home to one of the nation’s foremost public universities. Realistically, the University of Wisconsin has been at the center of Madison’s culture since 1866, and yet it seems that over the past few years the city and the school have been trying to destroy elements of the university’s culture that have so influenced the entire city.

While no one can fault the university, or the city, for not wanting to be stereotyped purely as a “party school,” I think I speak for many people when I say that the party element was one of the appealing factors during my college selection process. The “work hard-play hard” saying that has always been associated with this school has always been a staple of pride for many Big Ten schools, including the best one, Wisconsin. But for years the university has made a point to fight that. And while not wanting to be a party school is one thing, at this point it seems as though we have gone too far, and we have begun to assault our very culture. I can live with more arrests at Mifflin, I understand a shrinking Halloween, and I don’t protest the seemingly increasing number of visits by the Madison police to local bars, but now the city is beginning to go too far.

Their next move could be the straw that breaks the camel’s back. With the new proposals to relocate, and possibly completely prohibit late night vendors on North Frances, Madison has yet again chosen to fight its unique and amazing culture. They can give any justification they want, about noise complaints or vendors fighting for spots, but when push comes to shove, this is just another example of the city fighting its reputation as the home to a “party school.”

The Badger Herald’s Jan. 29 article claimed that, “Problems have been associated with the late night stand Jin’s Chicken and Fish, especially noise complaints.” I get it, no one wants to be woken up at 3 a.m. on a Sunday morning to blasting music, but we live in a college town. If you want complete serenity, there are beautiful areas in Madison far away from the late night bar crowd. Anyone who chooses to live on North Frances does so knowing what they are getting themselves into; they have intentionally chosen to live in the heart of a college town, at the intersection of State Street, the Brathaus, the vendors and the university.

City officials have tried to quiet critics by saying that they are simply going to move the vendors. One possible scenario has them moving to library mall, but I wonder, while they’re at it, why they don’t just move them to outside the lakeshore residence halls. Who walks through Library Mall on their way back on a given Saturday night? All moving them to Library Mall would accomplish is to allow them to claim that they never closed the vendors entirely. Another possibility has them moving to Frances Plaza. Frances Plaza may maintain business for the shops, but it would completely eliminate the area as a hang out spot, or a place for local musicians to camp out. None of the prospective moving locations are sincere; they are all simply a means for the city to avoid having to admit that they destroyed a Madison classic.

Finally, it seems extremely odd that Street Vending Coordinator Warren Hansen would suggest that, “Ultimately, if there continues being problems with late night vending, I wonder if we should have it at all.” If the city is so concerned with noise complaints of residents, it doesn’t seem fitting that just last year they would be doing construction outside of two freshman residence halls (The Towers and Statesider) beginning at 6:30 a.m. with loud drilling. The city is not concerned with the residents; they are concerned with their image.

Culture is a wonderful thing, and we must embrace it as that. I’m not saying that we can’t try and erase negative elements that have become associated with our city and our university, but I am saying that a vibrant night life and a passionate student base is not a negative. Allow us to express ourselves. To some, a vibrant night life is synonymous with underage drinking and with violence, but to me, and to many students here in Madison, a vibrant night life is a crucial aspect of our college experience. Jin’s and all of the late night vendors have become staples of Madison; North Frances is part of our culture, and we must allow it to remain unchanged.

Jordan Soffer ([email protected]) is a sophomore with an undecided major.

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8 older comments

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Hmm, something tells me that such judgment on the residents of N Frances (of which I am one) must be reserved until the writer of this piece joins us in residence here…Just a thought.

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I lived on N. Frances my senior year, right next to the Red Shed. Jin set up shop right across the street. Granted, my roommates and I weren’t the early-to-bed type, but we were never affected by Jin’s location. Do people not look around when they are signing their lease? Do they not see that there is Brats, Wandos and the Shed all on N. Frances? Not to mention it is the major pathway to get from State Street to the SE dorms.

If people want a quiet living environment, they should look to live over by James Madison park.

The appeal of receiving and education in Madison comes from the seemingly endless amount of possibilities the city and school provide- on ALL facets. To start limiting these possibilities would lessen that appeal.

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Moving vending has nothing to do with all the vendors on Frances St. It’s due to Jeff Okafo, the owner of Jin’s. Here’s a history lesson for you, Sophomore Soffer:

About 8 years ago, when you were 10 years old, Okafo got kicked of Langdon St for the same reasons he’s getting kicked off Frances. The people complaining were the fraternities at Accacia House and TKE, among many others. Apparently they didn’t know they were moving into a college area and should put up with loud music, crowds, and the rancid smell of old fryer oil until 4AM all year.

As a result of Okafo’s behavior, including noise, garbage, blocking Lakelawn for emergency vehicles, and not following health and vending laws, the city passed an ordinance limiting late-night vending to 400 N Frances, 400 N Broom, and the Library Mall.

A few years later and Okafo is in trouble again for noise from his cart, garbage, and not following parking and vending ordinances. Here’s a breakdown for you:

He picked up so many parking tickets on his truck, over $250 worth, the city suspended his plates and was going to tow the truck. This was in addition to his driving license being suspended for multiple traffic violations.

Okafo physically confronted the parking officer to a degree that police were called due to Okafo’s threats and behavior towards parking.

Okafo then did the same thing to the police officer, saying he would physically stop the officer from towing the truck by fighting him. Okafo then was pepper sprayed and then tazered as he continued his disturbance and threats as he approached the police officer.

Okafo’s vending license was then suspended by the city due to the complaints, violations, and his behavior. Okafo was prohibited from working at the cart as he had no valid vending license.

Okafo decided the city had no authority over him or his business and continued to operate his cart as before, earning several citations for no vending license as well as multiple reports of other violations of city ordinances.

Once again, the city has to take action to move Okafo to another area or end late night vending altogether because he refuses to follow the rules all the other vendors follow. And once again, when a bump or ruffle intrudes into this little bubble of a world called college, some student starts whining about how his adolesent fantasyland should be left alone by the mean people who hate his fun.

Here’s the bottom line: Okafo is subject to rules. The rules apply everywhere in the city. There is no special dispensation in and around student areas. If he breaks the rules, there are consequences. No one is at fault for his problems but himself. He is one to blame for the possibility that all late night vending may be ended. Remind Okafo of that the next time you see him because he doesn’t listen to the city. Maybe you’ll have better luck.

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to 5:51: Good response, except you are a little off on your dates. Jin’s was fully operational on Langdon up to and through the 2004-2005 school year.

It was TKE that had complaints about Jeff and his chicken shack because of the amount of garbage that was being thrown on their lawn every weekend. In addition, there was the inevitable fight that would break out over someone’s spot in line, or just a simple dispute over the age old question: chicken or catfish??

Either way, I loved Jin’s as much as the next guy, but I would hardly say that it defined the “culture” of Madison.

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I understand that this article was to point out that if you choose to live on N. Frances, then you should be prepared for noise at all hours of the night. As a future resident of this very street, I am very prepared for that. However what I am not prepared for is my safety being compromised by the crowds that gather by these vendors. I currently live one street off of N. Frances and on many occasions I see people getting harassed just for trying to make it to the door of their apartment. I understand that I am giving up my right to a sound night of sleep, but I do not feel it is fair to have to give up my right to safety. I should be able to come home at any hour and not have to worry about whether or not there is a fight outside of my door, or whether or not I am going to get my ass groped by a group of drunken assholes.

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If Jin’s Chicken and Fish is the best in the way of “culture” Madison has to offer I sincerely worry for all of us…

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I live on North Frances, and 100% agree that if you live here, you should have known exactly what you’re getting into. It’s not, and never has been, a quiet neighborhood. I like my apartment for that reason; it’s right in the center of everything and about 6 inches away from bars and snacks.

I actually like the crowds of people around the food carts late at night, too. Personally, I feel safer walking home with all of them around, and would rather have lots of generally harmless drunks than a deserted street.

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5:51, please leave madison ASAP. soffer, the man.

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