Page 2-Sunday, November 12, 1978-The Michigan Daily RAMBLINGS/sue warner The Michigan Daily-Sunday, Noverr IWAS IN Georgia several years ago and nonchalantly informed an inquisitive gas station attendant that I was from Detroit. "Murder City!" exclaimed the wide- eyed youth. "Yeah," I said with a calculated shrug, "it ain't so bad." I could tell he was impressed. Un- doubtedly he pictured me staving off robbers, rapists, and murderers with a baseball bat while going about my business in the heart of Murder City. I'm sure he thought I was extremely "cool." I must, however, confess that I stret- ched the truth a wee bit. To be com- pletely correct, I should have said I was from the Detroit area, but I guess I just got, caught up in the excitement of the moment. I couldn't help myself. You see, it's boring to be from subur- bia, which is my true home. I am ac- tually from Dearborn, Michigan - a five-minute drive from Detroit which may as well be a five-hour flight. Frankly, I have no idea what it's like to be from Detroit. I seriously doubt I could find the Cass Corridor even if I wanted to. And I have no idea where, or what, the "New Center" area is. Yet like so many other suburbanites I like to pretend that I am in some way part of Detroit. There is an adventurous flavor intertwined in the city's mystique. And those of us who were raised with car pools and cocker spaniels feel we have missed something. So, we make the most of our tenuous ties to the city and bore acquaintances with stories of our down- town escapades. Stories of subur- banites' encounters with the Detroit Police Department; either drag-racing on Woodward or annoying prostitutes are plentiful these days. Perhaps the most tedious per- petrators of this fraud are those who ac- tually did live in Detroit at some point in their lives. For example, an in- dividual may have moved to suburbia when he was around six years of age, but have retained a surprisingly vivid memory of desperate poverty, in- sufferable racial tensions, and the Supremes. B UT REGARDLESS of one's back- ground, nearly everyone can exaggerate their experiences in Detroit. I often pretend that I have4 some sort of comprehension of Detroit's ethnic purity. However, I have never been to Hamtramck and certainly, I've never spent much time on 12th and Clairmont. My ethnic experience in Detroit centers primarily on family visits to Riverfront ethnic festivals where we would eat kielbasa or baklava, watch some hyphenated- American children dance, then pile in the LTD and head home. In order for any city to survive, it needs economic stimulation which we self-righteous suburbanites fancy we supply Detroit. As a child, I made the annual pilgrimage to Hudson's San- taland where I would marvel at snow that didn't melt and the Santa Claus who was black. After I told Santa what presents I expected Mom and Dad would usher me down the aisles and out the revolving door. Later, the "real" Santa would slip off to Westland where there was a heavy trade in Milton Bradley. My mother often voices the suburban appreciation for Detroit's cultural ad- vantages. Any family discussion of art eventually culminates in praise of the automotive-oriented Rivera frescoes and my mother's observation that "we" are so lucky to have such a fine art institute here in Detroit (of all places!). But the last time Mom and I visited the museum, I was a member of Brownie troop No. 386 and she was our leader. In later years, I became interested in the music of Detroit. No, I did not frequent jazz clubs, but I did catch Elton John at Olympia and Bob Seger at Cobo. Ironically, even musicians seem to have fled to the suburbs and are now more likely to appear at Pine Knob or the Pontiac Silverdome - which also serves as the home of the Detroit Lions and the Detroit Pistons. Perhaps the most integral component of Detroit's makeup is the auto industry which also evokes its share of feigned familiarity. Everybody thinks they know just who Henry will promote or where AMC will build and they speculate hour after hour. Meanwhile, the companies are so big that high-level promotions have relatively little effect on the average employee, but, like the city, we want to personalize them somehow. Of course, there's no real harm in suburbanites enjoying the tourist-type pleasures of Detroit. The danger arises, however, when these rather superficial experiences are taken to represent the city and its problems in their entirety. I m sunday mIngazine FiirnSiic PLIZZLE I-I- A 14 2 15 F 16 35 R 36 N 37 56 K 57 58 R 59 N 79 K 30' 1 s 17'I 181 T 380 39 I 19 {B 20 E 004 Gi 55 F 77V 78 K 100 D 101 122 123 r 60 L 61 , z 8z v 3 W107 J 62 F 63 F 85 N 86 MW 108 S 12 J 103' R15146V1471 J 104 D 105 F 106 C 126 P 127 V 128 K 148 L149 A 169 J 170 H 171 H 191 J 192 U 193, T 129 K 130 W 131 M 150 R 151 W 152 166 1 1671 168 186 K 187 H 198 N 189 C 190 BY S TEPHEN J. POZSGAI Copyright 1978 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 previous puzzle Each new epoch enters upon its . career by waging unrelenting war upon the aesthetic gods of its immediate predecessor. Yet the culminating fact of conscious rational life refuses to conceive itself as a transient enjoyment, transiently useful. (Alfred N.) WhiteheadI Process and Reality Schlesinger in defense of Bo A. Film industry gamble_ 28 169 138 94 14 B. Degenerate gamblers' dreams _ turn into this 12 20 174 24 119 C. Popular casino betting- circle 3175 67 84 91 99 1608117 158 126 139 142 (2 words) 9 190 D. Infringe; permeate; raid 22 167 95 105 134 101 E. Instrument for indicating- electrical resistance 2 54 40 122 58 81 96 9 F. Posteboards_ (2 words) 85 16 34 98 106 143 164 116 77 153 181 178 G. Share of the Universe that Hades won in the first crap _ _._ _ - _ - ! _ game ever(Greekmyth) 50 32 42 55 112 173 133 184 156 87 H. Moves with a loud low_ hum or buzz 171 166 183 188 113 . Periodic table element with _ atomicnumbereight 6 64 19 132 146 72 J. Beach landing credited with reversing- the tide of the Korean war 31 62 103154 170 192 K.Commoncomplaintof people - under stressor seeking 25 .27 51 57 70 '80 130 100 110 179 148 187 pain relief (2words) 115 141 18 L. Casino manager's .second-in-command (2 words) M. "-spirits"-cheerful; lively (2 words) N. Builder of the Flamingo Hotel Bugsy Siegel who asked to be paid at the end of every working day (Full name) 0. Vespers 1 52 162 89 149 61 137 144 165 65 71 109 191 33 150 37 86 97 69 79 29 189 4 23 41 45 68 155 163 186 ROBERT KENNEDY AND HIS TIMES By Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. Houghton Mifflin Company 1066 pp. $19.95 "The year 1961 was a damned long time ago. For perhaps the /ast time in their h7story, it was possiblefor A mericans to feel as if the world were young and all dreams within grasp. " Arthur Schlesinger, Robert Kennedy and , His Times W E ARE NOW NEARLY into the 1980s, living in what Tom Wolfe has called the "me decade," characterized by tax revolts, "small is beautiful," and the "job generation." The spirit surrounding the coming of the Kennedys in 1961 (and the enusing era) somehow seems quite foreign to today's young adults, although we are a product of that generation. Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.'s book Robert Kennedy and His Times was written to resurrect and communicate the spirit of that bygone time period. Schlesinger sees Kennedy as a "representative man . . . one who embodies the consciousness of an epoch, who perceives things in fresh lights and new connections, who exhibits unsuspected possibilities of purpose and action to his contemporaries. " Underlying these themes is Schlesinger's unstated purpose of using this biography to challenge the rampant historical revisionism surrounding the Kennedys, epitimozed by David Halberstam's Vietnam classic, The Best and the Brightest. This type of reevaluation is actually a more factual examination of events, to put the Kennedys in proper historical perspective, devoid of the emotions that pervaded earlier works about them.- Schlesinger's book benefits from his unlimited access to the private papers of RFK and the entire Kennedy family. Initially, he uses this minutely detailed documentation to portray RFK's youth as Dan Weiss is a member of the Daily Arts staff By Dan Weiss P. New York State operation r gis 5a4 7 2- suspended because of irregularities 5 63 46 140 73 127 157 Q. Dreadfulness; impressive solemnity R. Good marksman S. Swears affirmatively (2 words) T. Quite; sufficient U. Britain and America's leading industry V. Loathe fresh killed game (2 words) W. Biggest casino money maker (2 words) 15 44 90 114 136 161 177 124 135 10 11 36 48 145 59 76 88 121 125 151 176 13 49 17 75 102 123 93 8 38 66 127 26 82 21 39 182 168 104 159 180 193 18 35 47 60 74 78 83 92 111 118 128 147 7 30 43 53107 56 120 131 152 160 172 that of an unassuming, rather ordinary child, living in the shadows cast by his older brothers Joe and Jack. RFK desperately sought approval from his father by trying to measure up to the man's standards of self-reliance and toughness. In these chapters, Schlesinger belabors his case by including such irrelevant documents as RFK's letters to his father about the circus. Throughout the book, Schlesinger seems to use his numerous sources to flaunt his mastery and knowledge of the Kennedy story. Schlesinger uses his access to previously unpublished papers to create an illusion of objectivity. He systematically explains, exonerates, and "proves" RFK's innocent intent for nearly every misdeed committed by RFK in his public life. For example, although RFK was not involved in the character assassination aspect of Senator Joseph McCarthy's reckless pursuit of the ever-elusive communist conspiracy, RFK's search for Communist threads within the shipping industry, during his tenure as committee counsel for McCarthy, was rife with paranoia and fanatic zeal. Schlesinger excuses RFK's participation in one of the most sordid periods of American history with a quote from RFK stating his belief that at the time McCarthy was the only one doing anything about the so called "internal security threat." Schlesinger furthers his pardon of RFK with a simplistic, rationalizing description of McCarthy as an "affable fellow. '. who did not expect his victims to take it personally." Schlesinger tries to turn RFK's following of the Pied Piper of Demagoguery into a positive trait, as Schlesinger relates that it showed RFK's "great capacity for the underdog." Schlesinger proceeds along this search and destroy mission for every RFK's actions during his va predominantly on his pre-Sei RFK's single-minded pur; during RFK's days as chief Rackets Committee by clai abuses were due more t vindictiveness (never mind long effort to jail Hoffa). RFK's zealous attempts to o' Castro's regime in Cuba du claiming that at least h participate in the planning the CIA and the Mafia. About the Kennedys and says very little, except to a doubts about the Unite commitment to South Vietna withdraw U.S. troops afte Schlesinger ignores the actio the military bureaucracy a fatal path of escalation. Hov proficient in portraying RFK Lyndon Johnson's war policy RFK's numerous, often tr: director J. Edgar Hoover whipping boy) are docui demonstrate RFK's notoriou with evil-doers, even if they a own administration. What Schlesinger describe from history is often his defenses of RFK's transgre Despite his research, Schlesi historical, academic biograp pervasive, "in defense of Bob Despite its academic fa friendship with RFK enables personal memoir. As the boc flushes out more and more a multi-dimensional personalil getting to know the man. chapters dealing with the See KENNEDY,