THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDA Stops Centering Vegetables by Drawing Cart( LY, MAY 27, O)Ofln MEe f l and Chris Kruger watch Mrs. hr pt hcartoon-bedecked menu of the day. nan r u s a boy up to the East Quad desk nd sa wants to sn his room contract." Hu Of~)O1L'r Ltf T A~~£ I I lij f ._ . tjj Lr'. By NORMA SUE WOLFE "You get awfully tired of cen- tering vegetables," the vivacious, dark-haired clerk at the south desk of East Quadrangle explained. "It got to the point where I knew how many letters there were in imashed potatoes' and this bothered me." So. Mrs. Richard Krachenberg, known to the boys in Eat Quad as simply "Liz," started "uncen- tering." She drew cartoons on the top, sides and bottom of daily menus. While the reporter thumbed through her accumulation of menus for the past two years, Mrs. Krachenberg told ab'out how she got her laughing start. Majors in Art "I was an art and sculpture ma- jor at Washington University in St. Louis," she reminisced. And there was an emaciated boy running up the side of the menu and holding a coffeepot in one hand, a cup in the other, say- ing, "One more blue book and I'm going to die." The summer after graduation was eventful for Liz. First she landed a job in a toy factory. "We made puppets," she said. "It was uproarious all day. I laughed and laughed and laughed." Gets Fired She was fired after two weeks. Next she worked in a depart- ment store and assumed a secre- tarial post at a maternity hos- pital. "With no experience whatso- ever, I had to make up the pay- roll," she complained. "I left." "'Scuse me, please," a young man interrupted, as he walked up to Mrs. Krachenberg in the quad- rangle lounge, "but I have brought my own sleeping bag and will need no linen for my cot. How much cheaper will it be?' Teaches Children That fall, she taught children about art; she "just loved it." And then she found a full-time career--marriage. After the passage of the East Quad Frisbee Ruling this year, Liz used it as a basis for her car- toon the following day. A dejected boy stood in the courtyard-fris- bee in hand, head bowed - and said, "Bet the Kappas will let us play in their yard." "We most have looked like 'Okies,' " Mrs. Krachenberg said, describing her family's arrival in Ann Arbor. In the back seat of their car were a diaper pail, flow- ers, a bird cage and young Krach- enberg. 'K: /: /r2 a+ f ... z .. DQ f t . , 7._: . I!r ,s S a -- - ---- -- - - -- ------- ---- A picnic for University students fr m New Jersey has been ar- ran"ed for June 20 at 3 p.m. in Rolling Meadows Echo Lake Park in Westfield. The University Club of suburban Now Jei soy will provide coffee. Current lists of New Jersey stu- dents on campus are available in the Alumni Secretary's office in the League. Vt ;y . } s , i _ _ j 4 _. 1.'..__ -_ . . i. _ _'' . _ ___ --w BEFORE, AFTER AND CONSISTENTL--In the upper right-hand corner, superimposed on the background of a January breakfast, is a Quadrangle resident with typical before-final blues. After the panty raid on the Hill this March and along with a breakfast menu for cereal or fried eggs, the men in East Quad gat a taste of soap flakes and a washing machine. A Quad resident is seem rinsing out his booty-that is to say, panties: On the left is the perpetual problem-raiser, with his same old song and dance. O bvtf2 Imors rom 0 SWorld _ U ~J { 330 Mynard O 2-3640 1 Liz doesn't do all the art work on the menus. After posting them, she's 'found that she often gets replies, such as, "The person who draws these pictures should be an artist, not a cook." Or someone crosses out her de- scription of a vegetable juice as "tomato" and inserts "blood clot." Krachenberg started school and his wife started work. The job of East Quad deskclerk was suddenly work in a laughing manner. Shortly after getting the job, Liz filled by someone who took her stopped serious centering and started mirthful menus. "I think most people are funny, but they worry about things more. Also, there are complaints like "Still no pizza? How come?" "Oh hi, Fred." , There was a girl, standing on the menu and frantically pulling her hair. The caption read, "Four wrong buzes from Tyler." Recalls Problem "That's when girls lived in East Quad and we had a faulty buzzing system," Liz recalled. "If we rang room 328, then the phones in 228 and 428 would also ring: "And all the girls would come flocking down to the desk, looking for their callers." She laughed. "There was one girl whose phone rang by accident almost contin- ually. She had a sore foot and lived further from the desk than anyone." The girl left that February. "I don't kiow if they're very funny," Liz said about her menus. "They seem to appeal to the fel- lows, though. "But really,, I can draw." Then what does she call the cartoons? "Just strictly scribbles," she said. Several East Quadders said they thought the menus were "cute." Evidently, they like Mrs. Krachen- berg, too; she was just initiated as a Quadrant. A boy came into the lounge to play his scales on the piano. An- other walked by and gave her a great big smile. Liz pointed to a menu covered with bearded students. "Everyone had beards then. Makes you won- der if stock in Gillette has gone down," she said. And how about the future? "I love it here, but I really want to carve-do woodcuts," she an- swered. And then there's the droopy- eyed, sickly-looking student, with many small circles arranged in rows on his cheek. The caption (see cartoon) reads, "It is NOT contagious!-I feel* asleep typing." L KROSSWORD No. 27 - - . - . - . - . a II 2T 3 4 5i 61 7 8F 9 10 1l ,I __ m I