- - -~--w-- w w - -- Page 2-Sunday, October 22, 1978-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily-Sunday, C RAilBLINGS/elizabeth slowIk A T 17, I bought a plant with the promise that it would photosyn- thesize near the doorway of my first apartment. My mother, an ambitious amateur horticulturist, said the plant would grow into a sturdy tree. Now, almost four years later, that plant has more than doubled its original six inches. It remains in my mother's living room. Not that I have no space for it - it's just that, well, my first apartment is simply. not a place a healthy plant would want to live. I thought it wonderful, ten months ago, to plan on decorating and cooking in my own apartment. My roommates and I had grandiose ideas. Then we moved in. As college apartments go, ours is not bad. Sure, it's on the ground floor, and our wall of living room windows looks out on a rock-lined pit. Even though the curtains are falling off the rod, we did get new carpeting. And we ignore the flimsy curtain rod in one bedroom - the rod held up by books wedged again- st the casement - in hopes that the bathtub drain will be unclogged. Welcome home. L AURA, PEGGY, Norene and I spent one evening moving fur- niture around. The couch, which at first sat on two piles of bricks, now has legs and can be propped up against any wall. After an hour of shoving, pulling, twisting, and laughing, the arrangement finally suited our tastes. The crowning touches: a 20-year-old trunk, which has visited more colleges than the four of us combined, as a cof- fee table; and three blue Farm Maid milk crates as a TV stand (courtesy of the West Quad cafeteria). The living room has a certain flair, now, I think; it's decorated in early modern college. Once we exhausted our interior decorating skills, we launched into another domestic area: cooking. Our culinary talents range from gourmet to Banquet frozen dinners. After a month and a half of enduring grilled cheese sandwiches and canned soup every Monday, my roommates have developed a preference for McDonald's on my days to cook. I would like to clarify one point about my cooking. There are rumors across campus that I burn bacon and toast. However, Peggy's boyfriend can testify that I make a mean BLT. I have also become adept at producing panful after panful of pop- corn on Thursday nights. On Thur- sdays, 10 of our friends, some refugees from West Quad, and others who have forsaken the dorm life, gather around our nineteen-inch black-and-white TV to watch the latest episode of Soap. The show has become an object of worship in our circle, and our Soap parties are its weekly ritual. During commercials, conversation revolves around Kareen, Bobby, and Chester, Bert's reaction to Jody's blessed event, and who really is in the basement. But as soon as the show is on, silence is broken only by popcorn-crunching and beer-slurping. The UGLI is never that quiet. Only once was a Soap party close to disaster. The manager of our apar- tment building called early one mor- ning and said the painter would begin to work in our living room that afternoon and would we please remove our drapes and pile furniture in the middle of the room. Laura was the only one home at the time, so, according to orders, she tore apart the room we had worked so diligently to arrange and waited. When I came home at 6:00, she was still waiting. B UT SOAP wouldn't wait for a fresh coat of paint on our walls. We put everything back in its place; and, like phases of the moon, the soap gang trooped in at 9:30. The painter trooped in at 7:45 the next morning. Mornings have become another ritual in our apartment. We have developed a schedule for use of the bathroom. Our medicine cabinet looks like a rummage sale. One morning I opened it, bleary with sleep and blind without contacts, and out tumbled four tubes of tooth- paste, three jars of Noxema, three sets of contact lens cases, two boxes of band-aids and a tube of eczema cream. As I picked up the mess, the hair dryer dropped into the toilet and I knocked the shampoo all over the floor. Once a week someone takes a shower without tucking the shower curtain into the bathtub. It's our closest attempt to wash the floor. Bathroom aside, though, I like our apartment. Even the fact that we live on a much-used ambulance route doesn't bother me anymore. No matter how many things go wrong in our place, it's still home. Home is where my frien- ds are. Living in the student ghetto ain't. so bad when you've got friends. Now, if only we could get that peeling bathroom ceiling repainted ... IN OTH T HE TROUBLE with economics, as I see it, is that none of our economic theories or plans seem to be solving any of our problems. It may seem perverse to you for an English professor to demand of some other discipline that it solve problems, since surely neither literature nor the study of literature has ever managed to do so. But that's another argument. Two of the biggest economic problems facing us are, perennially, in- flation and taxes. I have a solution to the inflation problem, and an idea for a simple new tax scheme which should both work and keep us taxpayers hap- py. Let me present them to you, briefly, and solicit your thoughtful response. If you agree as to the worth and prac- ticability of my ideas, then perhaps you can persuade me to devote more of my energies to such problems. Maybe I could even be talked into accepting a professorship in economics. Stopping inflation is a logical im- possibility, so we might as well quit trying. Once we invented the number 2 - once we let it out of Pandora's box - it was all over. Numbers tend naturally Bert Hornback is an English pro- fessor and an authority on Dickens. FER WORDS! to reproduce, to proliferate, to rise. The Greek root, nemo, has connotations of spreading, multiplying, increasing. Once we develop a culture which values things in terms of quantity, we have in- flation. As soon as we invent price, we cause inflation. It can't be prevented, and it can't be stopped. We can, however, redirect inflation - and redirection is what I propose to solve the economic problem inflation causes. If we can redirect inflation from cost or price of the product to measure or size of the product, inflation will no, longer be a problem - will in fact become a blessing for us all. Suppose, for example, you paid eighty-five cents for a dozen eggs yesterday. In a normally inflating economy, you might expect to pay ninety cents next week for your eggs. If, however, we can redirect inflation - from price to size - next week you'll pay eighty-five cents still, but the size of a dozen will have inflated enough to give you thirteen eggs. If under the current system, you pay $100 a month rent for your apartment, you must ex- pect to pay more - maybe $120 a month - next year; if, however, we redirect inflation, you'll pay the same monthly rent next year, but either your apar- bert hor tment will be larger or your months will be longer! All right? Now then: on to taxes. "Tax" is a word that comes to us from Greek and Latin roots, and means to "take" or "take away." What I propose is the abolition of all our various and variously deceptive or par- tial taxes, and the institution of a new triennial tax to replace them. This new tax will be a simple and utterly straightforward one: it will be a one hundred per cent tax on excess. Every three years, the new tax will reclaim all excess wealth, whether in money or real property. Every three years the administrators of this tax will collect - for redistribution, of course - all ex- cess money stored away in banks or socks, all the extra cars and television sets, individual overstocks of suits or sweaters or shoes, extra copies of books, etc. The triennial one hundred per cent tax on excess will redistribute our national wealth every three years, but without interfering with either the economically useful motives for hard work - profit, gain - or the psychologic complishme first status were taxed how much they hit me and a milli say, braggi The ultima will probabl have been I have anyth: at all; and boast of urn all the way The cont possession', all, natural that the cap efficient tha will ever be partial tax the effici economic a triennial ta will be regi the tax itse efficient. What mo: sundav mddzine ORMTC PUZZLE BY S TEPHEN J. POZSGAI CopyrightI178 INSTRUCTIONS Guess the words defined at the left and write them in over their numbered dashes. Then, transfer each letter to the cor- responding numbered square in the grid above. The letters printed in the upper-right-hand corners of the squares indi- cate from what clue-word a particular square's letter comes from. The grid, when filled in, should read as a quotation from a published work. The darkened squares are the spaces between words. Some words may carry over to the next line. Meanwhile, the first letter of each guessed word at the left, reading down, forms an acrostic, giving the author's name and the title of the work from which the quote is extracted. As words and phrases begin to form in the grid, you can work back and forth from clues to grid until the puzzle is complete. Answer to Last Week's Puzzle The problems of arms may be more complex and their control more difficult than the layman might at first imagine but the ordi- nary citizen is right in think- ing that the arms trade, like narcotics or slavery, is dif- ferent from other trades. Anthony Sampson (The) Arms Trade FOOD/ken parsigian and ren6 1b A. Human disease transmitted by bite ofmosquito characterized by chills _ _ _ _ _ and fever (periodic attacks of) 1 76 106 140 96 188 165 B. Disease characterized by severe _ _ - _ - - - gastro intestinol symptoms 3 26 39 130 180 189 111 C. Flexible rod of cells forming the primitive basis of the spinal---------------- _- - --- column in vertebrates 21 24 38 42 66 81 105 181 186 D. Excessively prevalent; affecting many-----------4----9----- persons at once 17 128 13 59 147 159 65 87 E. Human respiratory infection- 11 58 40 68 89 102 117 75 131 F. Deadly disease first appearing in _---- Nigeria in 1969 (2 words) 16 9 83 86 95 115 142 30 158 166 G. Places for those suffering from __- __ _ Hansens disease 48 116 60 4 88 120 124 70 171 183 H. Question persistently - - _ - 6 129 173 149 1. Inside facts: dope - _ - 32 61 43 113 155 143 80 J. Mosquito that serves as carrier for yellow fever (scientific name) - _ _ _ _ - _ _ _ - (2 words) 2 27 28 44 191 67 92 71 56 126 141 160 K. Types of measles- 22 139 8 15 167 146 L. Extreme; most remote___-_---_ 47 53 64 119 93 123 134 151 170 M. Action of expelling a person by legal-process N. Single term or datum in a collection 0. New World inhabitants decimated upon contact with Old World diseases P. Man of great wealth or prominence Q. Highly infectious disease marked b the formation of a false membran especially in the throat R. Sycophant; one who lives off another without giving in return S. Unrestrained expression T. Characterized by development along straight luoes U. Press one's suit (2 words) Take to the limit V. Game of chance W. Occurring in the inner ear X. Disease that wiped out the Aztecs for Cortez 29 187 20 110 156 '63 69 99 10 23 54 77 84 118 154 133 161 7 35 114 138 52 73 153 169 177 185 .193 37 82 103 163 176 y 19 50 94 101 132 144 152 162 182 184 34 18 55 72 136 104 179 192 31 46 175 122 172 74 107 135 5 45 85 121 127 108 145 90 98 178 41 190 168 157 109 100 51 33 12 91 79 36 125 25 150 92 78 137 Best of AILURE TO EXPLORE Ann Arbor is a great F tragedy of nearly everyone's first two years at the University. Ann Arbor has much to offer if you are willing to venture beyond the confines of cam- pus. Few students discover the real Ann Arbor before their junior year, and fewer still partake of all its delights. Especially for the gastronomically inclined, the city stretches far beyond McDonald's and Domino's, if you take the time to search. We'll point you in the right direction with the first part of our modest list of some of our favorite spots. Soon you'll find that you have compiled a list of your own. Wine stores The midwest is generally considered a desert when it comes to wine. Even Detroit is virtually void of good wine stores, save one on the east side which adequately serves the fanciful tastes of the rich in Grosse Pointe. This is why Ann Arbor is a delightful surprise to the oenophilist. Several stores here have at'least a few interesting wines. But one looms above the rest, surpassing even the best in Detroit. Though most of its patrons are oblivious to the treasures which lie between the Crisco oil and the Campbell Soup, Village Corners offers the best selection of Californians, French, and German wines for literally hundred of miles. You might want to investigate V.C's collection of Beaujolais. The '76's-the kind of year we pine for but see only several times a century-abound at V.C., par- ticularly the Fleurie, the queen of Beaujolais, of which we have availed ourselves often. Cheese French Brie is often described as the cheese of kings and the king of cheese. A Brie merchant must be an artist. He or she must know exactly how long to store and just when to cut into the chalk-white disc-too soon means too immature, and once cut the cheese stops maturing. Although many stores, including Krogers, sell Brie, the place where the merchants handle Brie, and other cheeses for that matter, like artists is Dunham-Wells at Kerrytown. Rene Becker is the editorial director at the Daily. Ken Parsigian is a Daily managing editor. Ann Arbor: Part There are places in Detroit that are better and cheaper than Dunham-Wells, but for most occasions it will suffice. Its selection, although not huge, is always interesting; it carries the standards such as Brie, Camembert, Jarlsberg, and Havarti, but they often bring in lesser known but excellent cheese from France. Big Ten PartyStore should also receive mention for its cheese department. While not as big as Dunham-Wells, Big Ten does have a nice selection but unfortunately the cheese is not as well cared for as at Dunham-Wells. Just a passing note: we think the finest cheese available at either of these stores is Boursault, a creamy French cheese with a taste somewhere between Brie and butter. Decadent, very decadent. .' Bread The best compliment to good wine and cheese is bread. It would be nice if Ann Arbor had several, or even one, good bakeries, but the sad truth is that almost anyone can make better bread than can be ...:.. bought in Ann Arbor. We strongly suggest that everyone purchase or borrow a book entitled Beard on Bread, by James Beard, America's premiere food expert. There are 100 recipes for bread in this excellent book. We have tried many and have been pleased with all of them. However, if you desire authentic Parisian bread that can be made at home, and if you have the time and patience, we recommend the French bread recipe in Mastering the Art of French Cooking Vol. II. The first few times may take you upwards of seven hours but every minute is well spent. Per- suade a friend to skip classes one day or to miss a football game and stay home to make bread. That's. the only way you will eat good bread in this town. Liquor Most liquor stores can appease the average taste with little difficulty. But if your tastes, as ours do, lean toward more aesthetically pleasing liquors and liquers, then the number of places in Ann Arbor where you will find gratification are limited. Although its wine selection is just short of astoun- ding, Village Corners does not give its liquor selec- tion equal attention. It is better than adequate but See FOOD, Page 8 - 14 49 57 62 112 164 174 148