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Along with Dylan, a folk music icon, and Osbourne, a heavy metal pioneer, other scheduled music acts include Kid Rock, Motley Crue and ZZ Top. The lineup "is the biggest and best so far," said Rod Woodruff, who owns the nearby Buffalo Chip campsite that has hosted concerts for 29 years. The machines also have changed over the years. A $150,000 custom-built bike was a rarity a decade ago, but now the flashy choppers are common, said Ben Lopez, who moved to Sturgis from California about 20 years ago after a stint in the Air Force. "Every year they get bigger, better and fancier," the 49-year-old said. Which might explain the more reserved atmosphere. Today's hardcore rally-goer is grayer and better behaved than when Sturgis police Chief Jim Bush began patrolling in 1978. The department made about 1,500 arrests back then, but last year "had contact with about 500 people
-- and 300 of those were for parking tickets," Bush said. Drugs, drunkenness and nudity have dwindled, he said.
"There used to be a lot more young, single males, riding not quite the caliber of bike, who where involved in outlandish activity," Bush said. "Now they've reached the more middle-age bracket in life, and probably as responsible as they're ever going to be, and successful as they are every going to be, riding a $25,000-plus toy." Harley-Davidsons rule the rally but motorcycles of nearly every make are represented. Parked next to Lopez's Harley was a vintage lime green Honda scooter with a Kansas license plate that was photographed as much as the meanest of bikes along Main Street. "Ten years ago, somebody would have probably run over that," he said. Other longtime rally-goers agree that things have become more tame. The Hells Angels motorcycle gang even have a booth. "We're not out here selling drugs and killing people," said Mike Hutton, 41, of Riverside, Calif. "We're selling shirts and calendars." Proceeds help fund motorcycle runs, Hutton said. "Gas is not cheap these days," he said. Steve Dille, 53, of Denver first attended the rally in 1988, riding a Harley-Davidson
-- and never would have considered anything else. This year, he and his 17-year-old son, Keaton, rode in on Hondas. "It's a little more sanitized now," he said. "A lot more police and a lot less bike gangs. It was a lot rowdier back in the day."
[Associated
Press;
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