magazine editors: tony schwartz marty porter contributing editor: laura berman sundiay YflgaGzime inside: books-page tour dope thief-page five the news in review-page five Number 3 Page Three INSIDE BIMBO'S: September 30, 1973 The mai By MARTIN PORTER MATT CHUTICH CAN'T recall why he was pegged with the nickname Bimbo. Nonetheless, the nickname stuck and this is the way most of his friends and employes refer to him. He's the kind of guy who doesn't take pride in some pretentious title. He points out that he is not above helping out by cleaning tables -when he is needed. But he makes no bones about the fact that they are his res- taurants. Matt Chutich is the owner and founder of the five Bimbo's now in operation. He is rarely to be found in the naughahyde - furnished, wood-pan- eled office above the Bimbo's on Washington street. He is constantly shuffling between his restaurants in Ypsilanti, the Hill, and. Ann Arbor- fixing ovens, ordering steaks, berat- ing or encouraging a manager. The restaurants in Pittsburgh Pa. and Coons Rapids, Minnesota are distant but they are just as tightly controlled. BIMBO LEANS BACK in his chair, puffs on his gargantuan cigar and reflects: "I 'started the business with the idea of giving the people what they wanted . . . good food, good music, good service. I have put in too much work to let it all go down the drain." This is a philosophy weathered by time and.experience. Chutich traveled a rocky road before he opened his first restaurant in Ann Arbor back in 1962. Originally trained as a barber, he got into the pizza business while he was a student at the University of a behind Minnesota. After graduating he open- ed, a series of pizza and pop palaces in college communities ranging from Marquette to Kalamazoo. With a number of financial failures left behind he arrived in Ann Arbor planning to go to law school. Instead he ended up opening his first restaur- ant. "'I don't know what happened but somehow I ended up in another busi- ness venture . . . I just totally forgot about law school and took a gamble, this time it paid off," he notes. BUT HIS SUCCESS story has not been a creation by some fairy "I had. the right form- ula .: . I created an All A m e r i c a n atmosphere the name ford to laugh. He has five restaurants in operation and three more expected to open within the next year. Once. upon a time it meant tightening the belt ; . waiting for someone to sell him their license. AND THEN THINGS started to click. "I had the right formula for Ann Arbor . . . a formula that would at- tract the young and the old alike ... I created an All-American atmos- phere, people could escape to times when life was, simpler." But . this formula doesn't always -work. In Ypsilanti, for example, the plucking of 'banjos and the tenor moaning the woes of his Wild Irish Rose have been silenced by hard 50s' rock and roll. "We found out that we sold more beer with the type of music . . . I am not stupid, if something doesn't work I try something else." He is sure to mention that "we are not solely after a youth crowd. We have learned that the kids aren't drinking any more, that is why we need adults." Between the two Bimbos in Ypsi- lanti and Ann Arbor alone, over 3000 gallons of Schlitz on tap is con- sumed per week. IT WOULD SEEM that with a set up like this Chutich would retire more frequently to his comfortable office. Not so. Restaurants like the 300,000 ddllar venture in Dearborn will be opening. soon. And he has plans for moving further east. "I am hoping to open somewhere between 15-20 restaurants that appealed about everyone. to just godmother. Chutich has built his business on a series of mistakes and a lot of hard work. After spending most of his money on college banners and the other elaborate decorations that create the "olde tyme salloon" atmosphere at Bimbo's, he learned that he couldn't obtain a beer license. "I made the stupidest mistake of my career, I didn't realize that the restaurant was within 500 feet of a church, the Saltation Army is right up the block," he says with'a sly grin. Now eleven years later he- can af- Mat "Bimbo" Chutich and I plan to sell them; to some big corporation. That is the way things are done these days," he says. But until that time things won't change much for Matt Chutich. "I have found that in business you just can't let up one bit. You can be king oe .day and floating down the river the next," he explains. "There is more then just the restaurants at stake. Remember that's my name that's over the doorway." r 1 J ..:q r;v:r!::"'r iG""':?4"~i". "li 5""d'" r*.:r:{Y+y..~";~,r.:". 'Y"dRi "sg:>"":i 'i".a"r. ":"^.:+.+ .. v4"' THE SALVATION ARMY By RICK STREICKER IF YOU CAN coax the. women at the Ann Arbor Salvation Army into talking, they will ramble for hours on end. While sitting around a table fash- ioning Christmas decorations for the Veterans Hospital, they recall stories about the days when the Salvation Army was over a bakery on the north side of town. They recall the homey touches: the smell of bread baking during the meetings, the brass bands, the days when there were still hitching posts along Washington Street. Those were the days when the Salvation Army played an integral part in the com- munity life of Ann Arbor. MRS. VIRGINIA TREVITHICK, sec- retary of the Salvation Army in Ann Arbor, was born a block away from the Salvation Army building. Now they're tearing down the build- ing she was born in. She sits in her They remember the days of brass bands and hitch- ing posts on Washington street. Those were the days when they played an integral part in the com- munity. office filled with China figurines and Bibles, writing letters and talking. Much of the time no one else is there -the most frequent visitors are a gang of young black kids who sneak, down the stairs and try to steal her purse. Now Mrs. Trevithick leaves an empty purse on the counter. But after sitting in the Army's of- fice for awhile, you're bound to see some action. TWO GIRLS COME in. Dressed in blue jeans and work shirts, they explain that they're passing through on their way out west. They're hitch- hiking and they need a meal. Mrs. Trevithick adjusts her pince- nez and 'begins questioning the girls. Name? Age? Home Address? Destina- rbors old THIS IS JUST the right question to slide s] ask Mrs. Trevithick. She responds spun with pride, "We're a Protestant de- service; nomination. Our members are called Ladies' Salvationists. And we believe in help- the St ing." camp. Curidusly, the girls stay around for of thin a slide presentation put together by girls h: Colonel Harold Crowell, the Army's Talki time how with the Colonel's home- narration, telling about the s of the Salvation Army: the Home League, the Girls' Club, unday Services, the summer Good works, but not the kind g to turn on nineteen-year-old itchhiking to California. ng to Captain Paul Wilson, the r in Ann Arbor, is like taking re liglon a short course in the evils of man- kind. "The Salvation Army isn't like the welfare department -- it has no set of rules or qualification which al- low it to turn people away," he says. People come to the Captain with any kind of problem: alcoholism, broken or breaking homes, unwanted preg- nancies. And it's up to the Captain to do something . . . anything. BUT THE SALVATION Army is as notable for what it hasn't been able to do as for what it has. For the Salvation Army building at Fifth and Washington gets less and less, use as the years roll by. People no longer live within walking distance. Students from the University seldom find their way over to receive the Army's blend of old-fashioned charity and old-time religion. The tradition- public relations man. It's a homemade minist6i b sR: ii: xx: KI, XXI The more you eat,. the highryoug By JODY JOSEPH 1 cup sugar Today's lesson is entitled: An 2 eggs, unbeaten Introduction to Consciousness-Ex- 1/2 cup all-purpose flour panding Cookery. Before we begin, pinch of salt however, let us outline and discuss 1 teaspoon vanilla a few basics designed to encourage 1/2 cup walnuts healthy attitudes towards culinary the mnarijuana crafts. some raisins some jimmies (Jimmies are thos A few basics little candy things used to decorat The A-number one rule of cook- cakes and stuff like that - yc ing is: Food is fun. Remember that know, those hard silver balls. an and you can't go wrong. Let's take red-hot balls and tiny colore a simple example: Whip up a batch sprinkles. The last few things ar of chocolate frosting (packaged va- the key to masking the marijuana riety wiflfdo nicely). Get drunk and aftertaste. Use lots of them). get somebody else drunk with you. Now, spread the junk in pan (9 Now, get naked and finger paint x 9"), which, being farsighted cook on each others' bodies with the -you have already buttered. Bak frosting.' (For variety and color, until dry on top and firm to th try mixing up some white frosting touch - somewhere around 30-3 too. Divide it up and add food col- minutes.. Cool, cut up and ea oring - great stuff to have around; (Helpful Hint No. 2 - Don't stuf try green mayonnaise on your next your face just because you don' sandwich - for different colors.) get high right away. It takes abou Fun huh? So, that's just an exam- an hour or two to ge off.) ple. Use your imagination and re- member, good things to eat don't You say you're thirs always come off a plate. Good cooks always include In case your imagination isn't thirst quencher on their snac taking you very far, here's a recipie menu. Here's a sure crowd please] that will take you places you never ECLECTIC KOOL-AID dreamed you could go. I call it my T-Group Special - something You will need: light and just right for your next Some psychedelics (LSD, mesca encounter (especially recommend- line, etc. This is a good chance t ed for.Psych 192 Weekend T-Group. get rid of all your leftovers. So, fe What to make and How to do it 14 free to throw in that organic mes ALICE B. TOKLAS BROWNIES you have left over from last Ne To start with, you will need to Year's Eve together with that ha] preheat the oven to 3000. Do it now. tab of orange sunshine someon Next, you will need: laid on you at the Blues and Jaz 1-2 lids of medium good mari- Festival). juana (the .more, the better). Pre-sweetened Kool-Aid - you juan (te .mrefavorite flavor (Also, you can us Baking with marijuana is a deli- fanoite fr(Atju cas). cate art and there is raging con- any of the fruit juices). troversy over just how to deal with Now, the important things to re the stuff. So, use up your crumby member here are: 1) Watch you dope and save that bomb Jamaican proportions. Remember the numbe for smoking. For best results, strain of people and plan accordingly. 2 your dope twice. (Kitchen strainers You must make sure the drugs ar work nicely, of course, but for those in complete powder form. Don of you stuck in the dorms, your just try to dissolve them - it won window screen will suffice.) If your work. Crush up tabs (before yo have particularly dirty dope, strain mix your drinks) with a mortar an until all the garbage is gone. (Help- pestle or any other ingenious wa ful Hint No. 1 - Don't throw away 3) Mix everything well and divid the garbage. Smoke it.) equally. Remember, drink absolute the arbae. Soke t.)ly all the Kool-Aid - waste nol Okay, here's where your prob- wantenot, lems start. Aside from its other vir- want no. tues, marijuana, as we. all know, The end poses one major problem to cooks -it tastes terrible. Thus some eat- Well, that's ill for today. Wat er-users suggest frying up the dope for future columns with such ex before baking. If you believe this citing features as: Cooking Fles old head's tale, just be careful- The Oy Vay Dinner, The Mamm burnt dope is bad business. For you Mia Munchers, Hamboggieburge ;+ .mn .. fX row Your Own V te and man ;e, e u d a CS e e 5 t. f t t If a ;k r. 4 r0 el w f e r ;e1 it 't i? y. e t, a r, v. "We've got to go where the . people are . . . We've got to reach out to more people," Captain Wilson explains. r ally white Salvation Army is now running several programs for black children, but the tensions are show- ing and instances of vandalism are frequent. The Salvation Army still has its own congregation made up mostly of lifelong members from old Ann Arbor Salvationist families. They still field a brass band. But the congregation has dwindled in recent years. As a result, the Army is considering a new church and social center in a more residential part. of town. "We've got to go where the people are . . . We've got to reach out to more people," Captain Wilson explains. IT WOULD BE a new experience for the Army, leaving the old estab- lished part of Ann Arbor and reach- ing out to the people in the housing subdivisions. Colonel Crowell puts it another way: "You have to realize that we're talking about the glory of God, not imet aohut frPP mea Von cn't , ........: r.; ... .iiY .; : ' " ii: i::::::": iii:. tr. ,t '