0 :4 Ip 4. Alf j Page Eighteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, December 6, 1970 Sunday, December 6, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE NEW 'GOOD OLD DAYS' Death, taxes and Christmas By ROB BIER In these days of modern times, when change is perhaps more certain even than death and taxes (what with transplants and tax dodges for those with the cash) Christmas seems to be an encouraging island of solidar- ity in a sea of chaos. However, even the Yuletide's time-honor- ed traditions are taking on new forms while old ones disappear. And not the least of these is that seasonal bit of nostalgic journalism-The Old-Fashioned Christmas Story. Springing primarily from such bulwarks of American folklore as Good Housekeeping, Family Circle and The Reader's Digest, these tales of kindling wood and peculiar relatives (such as Aunt Prissy who always slept in a north-south orientation to take advantage of the Artic current) are rapidly losing their original appeal. The reason for the decline of The Old-Fashioned Christmas Story can be detectd in the sub- titles. Whereas it used to be "Christmas When Mom and Dad Were Kids," it has now become "Christmas When Grandma and Grandpa Were Kids." Barring a sudden and dramatic change intheaver- age life expectancy, much of the personal psychic appeal will soon be lost. What that means is that in 10 or 15 years no one, aside from a few devotees of back copies of Family Circle, wilremember the God Old Days at all. Stor- ies about hitching the horse to the sleigh and going out to chop down a tree or making fruitcakewfromtscratch will be nearly as anachonistic as de- tachable collars. But the editors of our nation's glossy magazines must h a v e something to wrap around their ads (or vice versa, if that's of- fensive). And being conditioned by all those previous Old-Fash- ioned Christmas Stories, t h e genre is bound to survive - in some form. In the multi-colored mas of the not-awfully-distant future, the reader may find tender re- miniscences of sitting around the television watching (for the Some more goodies from Maynard St. Continued from page 17 enough. Chill dough in refriger- ator until filling is made. Turn your oven up to 550F orI very hot. Mix cream cheese, sug- ar, flour, grated orange and le- mon rind, vanilla extract inI large bowl. Beat until mixture is smooth and well blended - use your electric mixed if you have one. Now drop in the eggs and extra egg yolks one at a time and stir lightly after each addi- tion. Mix in cream last of all. Assemble spring-form pan with baked crust on the bottom (still in the pan of course) and the unbaked pastry around the sides. Pour in cheese filling and bake 10 minutes at this high temper- ature. Then reduce heat to 200F or very, very low and continue baking 1 hour longer. Cool on cake rack until completely cold, Release sides of pan, remove and serve without removing bot- tom of pan. 'If you really want to be snaz- zy you can add a strawberry or cherry or blueberry or almost any kind of berry glaze you want simply by purchasing they appropriate package, following its directions for making t h e glaze, and then applying the finished product to the top of the cheesecake. The frozen pro- ducts seem to work the Ibest. umpteenth time) "Miracle on 34th Street," "Amhal and t h e Night Visitors," and some three or four different versions of "The Christmas Carol" by Dick- ens. Then there could be glowing descriptions of one of our really solid traditions, Christmas shop- ping. Talles of moth-eaten San- tas and K - Mart specials would evoke times gone by. And should someone recall how he always drew the name of the class par- iah to exchange presents with in grade school; and how the 25 cent budget limit was even in- sufficient to honor that unfor- tunate soul -- hardly a reader would be left with dry eyes. The miasma from the p a s t could go on and on. Driving over salted roads in the station wag- on to Grandma's, where a turk- ey, thawed out the night before, is already in the self-cleaning over. Finally finding batteries for toys which proceed to break in two hours or less. Calling long distance to relatives spread over fives states around t h e country. Obviously, such recollections lack something which the cur- rent crop possesses. Although some may call it the "true spirit of Christmas," a better phrase is "psychic distance." The Good F POTTER'S GUILD SALE December 6, 1970 9 A.M. to 3 P.M in the tent 201 HILL ST. Old Days were not all T H A T good. In fact, a recollection then of Christmas Present probably seemed as bland and evoked as many painful memories as a de- scription of Christmas in the '70s does now. No doubt 40 or 50 years from now, magazine readers (and writers) will view our Christ- mases with the same warm glow which we accord Yuletide at the turn of the century. That leads one to wonder whether nostal- gia is a permanent part of the human condition, or whether Christmases deteriorate progres-, sively, making earlier ones look better and better. Since t h e .latter augers ill for f u t u r e holidays, and it is Christmas- time, the first is easier to take, and, in truth, more likely. JOIN US FOR $ DISTINCTIVE DINING after Cocktails while enjoying ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY, Sfrom 9-1 a.m. 319 S. 4th Ave. M on. th r Fr i 11 a.m.-2 a.nt. ° 761 548Sat. & Sun. 5 p.m.-2 a.m. Mon. thru Thurs., no minimum charge . i.4g4 A te.4£l k4.4 By JONATHAN MILLER The lights of Regents Street, garish red reindeer and fat Fa- ther Christmas, mistletoe and bells, all in neon, splash light on the late-night shoppers in the West End. The pavements are crowded with hordes of shoppers, small children gaze up at the lights on the institutional Christmas trees and zillions of tourists, speaking every imaginable lan- guage and comprising the entire population of the sidewalks, are doing their last minute shop- ping before embarking on their planes at Heatliro wand Gat- wick to return home to Newark or New York, Chicago or De- troit. Every now and again a strange voice, a cockney, can be heard, probably a bus driver coming off shift at Marble Arch or a shop assistant waiting for the tube back home The plat- forms of Bond Street and Pica- dilly Circus are crowded as the red and silver trains shoot into the stations past the Christmas time multi-lingual ads for Lon- don. Over the crowded platforms of Oxford Circus (Bakerloo and Central line trains to all parts of London) the lights of Car- naby Street, modish and garish, cast a sheen over the crowds of Xmas in London: A foreign i young and middle aged Ameri- cans, buying up all the cheap rubbish they can lay their hands on. There are no Britons here, beyond the reporter doing his story on Americanization of Christmas -and the runaways from iverpool working the counters at John Stephen and Male, Kleptomaniac and Gear. Rock music blasts out, its Taste, the super new group on CBS and Tree's., They were on Radio One the other night. The signs read easy: American Dol- lars Accepted Here. The cash registers are bilingual and multi- national. Out on the "dilly," Picadilly Circus, the junkies laze around waiting for midnight when they can fill their scripts at the all- night chemist. Girls lie in waiting for unsus- pecting tourists and givesthem small cards promising free en- trance to one of London's fab- led, and notorious, discoteques. They don't tell that the free en- trance is only free after the pur- chase of a membership-for two quid ($4.80). But the tourist will go home, and Londoners will be able to relax, for about three days be- fore Christmas. The planeloads of tourists begin again after Boxing Day, the day after Christmas. For a glorious few days we are wick to return home to Newark cast a sheen over the t~rowds of Circus, the junkies laze around II I NEED A GIFT IDEA S Vonl AN AUDIOPHILE? Come in and choose from a wide selection including: * Stereo Headphones * Digital Clock Radios J Carridge Carriers * Portable Cassette Recorders " Gift Ta pePackages 9 Pre-recorded Tapes * Cassette Storage Cabinets * Tape Cleaning Kits FOR A MORE COMPLETE LISTING OF OUR GIFT IDEAS CALL BABS AT 769-4700 AND ASK HER TO SEND YOU OUR CHRISTMAS CATALOGUE HITFI BUYS5 618 S. MAIN 769-4700 "Qua lity Sound Thru Quality Equipment" A broad selection of classical music on records, open reel tapes, and cassettes at the lowest regular prices in town. MiIJSI C qofh 0 NdOPl 717 North University ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN i TA u IVJ90YuJJ VJU YU8 30 TAy{ n 1 iwDa am~ 122 E. Washington ,y > TOO TIRED TO COOK? Pick up your pizza for the holidays from Ann Arbor's oldest rizza parlor. also lunches, dinners, snacks, Greek pastry Santa Cla *and Welatt Help him out by selecti our vast collection of h L1 Ma jg Here a Old He! me at the with Red Cabbage A Neweg Bold G rman D nner 2.75 9 BriledFilet Mignon 3.95 Grilled Pork Chops 2.50 Apesuce ihWiener Schnitzel 2.75 Smoked Center Cut 1.8 5 Pork Loin with Red Cabbage London Br il d 250 Tendestrips with I., Try th It Siexc 211 N. Main serving dinne COTTAGE INN 512 E. WILLIAM ST. 10 a.m.-2 a.m. (Fri. & Sat. until 3) 663-3379 or 663-5902 Subscribe to The Michigan Daily '. w IG - ,,, ++ % wiue' uI IG t + +' ' :;L~ _ .':2 rY r 't _w tr1' - - r .'rt _IA '.zlr rktr'r1! r iC:: u< ii 71:a.. i ; .. 'L '7j:- A , I, ;; I s. .. .. .. . *.~ * , *y .* ' ~ *. y~---. WHEN YOU CARE (and you don't have much money) - Come toa3 Campus Bike and Toy FOR YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFTS 514 E. William NO 2-0035 I I I I I * - . S S S 5' ' . . - S - - - S S S S S - *S S a I