Page 2-Sunday, January 15, 1978-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily--Sunday; Jan RAMBLINGS/ jay levin I 'M DECLARING war "Waitress," I beckoned recently in a restaurant which will maintain its anonymity. "I've a few complaints about my breakfast." "Yes, sir?" "Well, for one thing, it says here on the menu that these eggs would be 'country fresh eggs cooked the way I like them in creamery butter.' " The waitress looked at me quizzi- cally. "Waitress," I said, "these eggs are not cooked the way I like them. They're too loose and runny for scrambled eggs." The waitress stared down at the lum- py yellow mountain, the object of my disaffection. "Sir, I can take them back to the kit- chen and have the chef tighten them up for you." "That won't be necessary. Rsesides, they aren't country fresh." "Sir?" "Country fresh! These eggs are nothing of the. kind. Did you really go this morning to a truck farm in New Jersey and pluck these eggs from under a hen? Or did you get a shipment in last week from Kroger?" "Sir, I really don't know ..." "Of course you don't. And these are surely not cooked in creamery butter, now are they? Tell me the truth. You grease your pans with Parkay because butter's too expensive." "Sir, I can assure you that our eggs ..." "And the bacon. What have you to say about the bacon? It says here that breakfast comes with 'three crisp rash- ers of Virginia cured bacon'." T HE WAITRESS curled her lips as she looked down at my plate. "Sir, I can have another order cooked up for you." "Don't trouble yourself. Whatever you do, you're not going to get this bacon crisp. Crisp bacon is burned bacon. As long as you don't overcook it, you'll never get it crisp. Crisp, edible bacon is a myth. Besides, is it really Virginia-cured? Didn't you accept this bacon from your supplier regardless of its origin? For all I know, waitress, this bacon was probably cured in some warehouse in Hamtramck, rather than the lush hills of Virginia ..." "Hold it, please. I've a few words about my fruit cup. It says here that the blueberries and strawberries in this fruit cup are "fresh-grown Oregon ber- ries, selected for firmness and ripe- ness." Now, number one, do you really get these berries all the way from Oregon? That's a long way, you know. And if you did get these from Oregon, are the berry-growers there so discriminating that they would exclude a berry whose firmness did not measure up to the norm? And what's with the fresh-grown? Is that opposed to stale-grown? Everything that grows, waitress, is fresh, up until the time it sits for days in the supplier's warehouse. This fruit cup, my dear, is one big farce." The waitress fidgeted with her cap and wiped her -sweaty palms on her bright-white apron. Poor dear, I thought to myself as I stirred my piping-hot, fresh ground Colombian cof- fee. Destined to serving up meal after meal of adjectives! Country-fresh breakfasts, light 'n-slim lunches, char- broiled dinners. Mounds of succulent dishes, grilled to perfection and topped with clouds of dairy-fresh whipped cream! We don't order food anymore. We order adjectives. Scrambled adjec- tives, adjectives on whole wheat, adjec- tives dripping with down-home good- ness. We're ingesting lists and lists of adjectives, being tempted by vocabulary, and we don't even know it. "Waitress," I said, trying to put her at ease as she fumbled with her order pad. "I'm sorry I was harsh with you. Surely it's not your fault. You don't write the menu nor do you control what comes out of the kitchen. You could not care less if the eggs weren't country fresh, or if the berries didn't come from Oregon. You're just doing your job." SHE STOOD THERE with a sad face, looking down at my breakfast. now cold and unappetizing. "I'm sorry about your meal," she said apologetically. "I'll take it away now. Can I get you anything else? "Well, since breakfast didn't work out, I'll try some lunch. Do you have fried scallops?" Her face broke into a smile as she grabbed for a nearby menu. "Oh, yes sir, we do have scallops and they're very good. Look here, they're tendersweet. I mean, oh ..." "Thanks, but I'll skip it." Daily Ph T he latest encore for sundad mdmgazine iGHDSTE! PUZZLE A. S.__. beof one mind: think alike (3 words) B. Endowment C. American artist, one of the leading figures of Pop Art 0. American sculptor (1896-1976) famous for his mobiles (Gull name) E. American painter (b.1925), one of the foremost representatives of Neo-Dodalsm F. _Violet, a garden plant with spotted leaves and purple flowers (Comp) G. American painter (b.1923) noted for his enlarged comic strips and blown up images H. Overturning; destroying I. Bulgariansculptor known forthe gigantic environmental scale of his works J. Counterfeits: artificial likenesses K. Digression; diversion:;act of wandering away L. Aimed with a gun; able to se 3 7 92 121 162 110 61 179 15 136 193 79 39 124 43 13 26 30 64 156 18 191 169 8 153 111 159 1 138 9113 2126A 41 51 70 62140161 169148 95 176 192 17 55 167 764 98 123 125 155 144 171 31 116 27 35 67 78 96 139 150 157 183 6 46 36 .0 66 88 105 120 129 142 is4 166 145 101 24 54 7 106 118 131 152 135 45 69 127197 25 97. M. German pointer and sculptor, one of the founders of Surrealism (Full name) " N. Equilibrium or stability due to equality of pressure 0. Mexican dish made of a tortilla fried in oil and covered with various combinations of meats. fish, sauces, chiles.etc. P. French pointer (1669-.1), one of the creators of Fouvism (Full name) Q. Immediately at or just after the time that (3 words)S R. Belgian painter (1898-1967).one of thedistinguished representatives of Surrealism (Full name) S. Title by which the shogun of Japan was described to foreigners; businessman of extraordinary wealth and power T. Former name of the British Admiralty building (2 words) U. History or science of development of individual being V. Kandinsky's first name 93 6 172 112 73 163 185 22 37 47 57 3 164 99 156 10 1 12 49 44 151 141 194 BY STEPHEN J. POZSGAI Copyright 1977 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 the Puzzle of Dec. 11 "On the surface the tape might not sound so bad ... but the tape proved that the president had lied to the nation, to his closest aides, and to his own lawyers for more than two years. Even' if the tape did not prove legal guilt, it would cer- tainly mean impeachment and conviction." (Bob) Woodward, (Carl) Bernstein (The) Final Days N 1885 GEORGE STAEBLER appeared in Ann Arbor with his six sons, determined to make his fortune. Staebler built a red brick building his ads called "Ann Arbor's only first class German hotel:" And it was no ordinary hotel-aside from guests, the Germania housed a saloon, a lobby, some business offices, the clubroom of a German society, and Staebler's coal and implement shop, marked by a ten-ton chunk of coal placed on the street in front of the building. A decade passed, and the Staeblers added a fourth story to their hotel, painted it, and, probably in an ef- fort to attract a broader clientele, rechristened it the American House. Fifty years later, Earl Milner of the midwest Milner hotel chain leased the place and the name was changed once more to The Earle. In 1971 the old hotel was condemned by the city's safety inspector due to fire regulation violations. ' But the relic has not seen 'its last metamorphosis. Casting about for a building large enough to host his band, Rick Burgess and five partners found The Earle-abandoned and stuffed with old t.v. equip- ment left behind by a television repair shop that had installed itself on the first floor some time during the hotel's demise. They bought it. Owners Ernie and Torry Harburg, Dennis and Mary Lou Webster, David Rock and Burgess invested four years in renovating the place: stripping the paint and restoring the exterior to its original red brick character. When they were done they reopened Elisa Isaacson is a Daily staff writer. the building as a nightclub, but they retained its name, The Earle. HE MAIN ATTRACTION of this bar/restau- Trant will probably be the music: "twentieth- century music in a nineteenth-century base-_ ment" is the way Ernie Harburg character- izes it. Burgess's house band ("Changes") is set up on a large, sunken dance floor flanked on three sides, By Elisa Isaacson The E The house band plays fou nesday through Saturday-a $1 cover charge. The menu fe chopped liver to cheese people's whims from luncht satisfy one's hunger, howeve to empty one's pockets to the small portions. The interior design of The plan of the original baser secluded seating situated aw, The interior construction, doi tisans, took fifteen months tc old brick was used, and original stone was retained in HE LIGHT FROM lo the tables is low, convenience of loca devous at The Earle Music and conversation coe not so loud as to force one to s In contrast to many bars i University area which attra Earle, located downtown at peals to a wider section of the The nightclub opened late las of the semi-annpal mass sti Arbor. Yet The Earle had no 1 of patrons who seem to 'postulations and the unique pinball at Dooley's. by wooden tables, and the music is an innovative departure from the sound of most traditional Ann Ar- bor bars. Although the band plays many standard jazz tunes, the style is not strictly jazz. "There's no word to describe it," says Dennis Webster. The owners talk of bringing other regional bands to The Earle, and perhaps even nationally known per- formers. The musical range promises to be fairly broad, though disco music will be decidely absent from the scene. "Right now," says Harburg, "we're experimenting with different sounds in listening as well as dancing to find out what people want." During the band's first few performing nights the dance floor was rather sparsely populated, but such die-hards as Shaky Jake were not daunted, and spent the evening jigging their way around the floor. stevenson 2 36 42 53 75 100 115 122 130 133 149 160 20 29 34 50 84 89 102 174 21 52 56 71 109 117 132 143 165 175 162 91 11 19 187 65 160 177 5 62 61 114 134 66 181 166 176 184 4 65 16 32 170 94 106 40 59 147 36 90.196 190 33 (Continued from.Page 6) .up a steady exchange of personal messages with admiring women of letters and politics (who wrote things like "resign your destiny to higher powers" and "To me 'Hail to the Chief' is still your song") both before and after his decaying marriage broke up. Stevenson also had a chance to see some of his "New America" issues like disarmament, medicare, and the decline of U.S. prestige abroad used by his successors in the "New Frontier" and the beginnings of the "Great Society." His acumen as U.S.. representative to the U.N. during such trying times as the Cuban missile crisis and the Bay of Pigs (when Stevenson was made an unwitting defender of the CIA-Ken- nedy cover story) was well-recog- nized at the time. But the burden of pain and loneliness that Stevenson carried after having two national elections, one party nomination, and the expected Secretary of State ap- pointment under Kennedy slipped through his hands also comes through well in Martin's book. A warning to liberals hoping to trace their political roots back to Stevenson: times have changed. According to Martin, it was Steven- son who adopted the "domino" theory of Southeast Asia, thereby contributing to involvement in Viet- nam. In 1956, he shifted to a 'moderate' position on integration, but there was never any urgency to his messages of conciliation between the North and South. Despite his world travels and awareness, he would not "question the good faith" of the authorities in South Africa, nor their "concern for the well-being of the natives." And aside from his superlative prose, Stevenson's 1954 "Call to Greatness" could be used as a Barry Goldwater position paper today. From start to finish it is a polemic against the -Russians and Chinese. And though it would have been impossible to get along in Illinois politics in the late sixties without the blessings of Chicago's notorious late mayor, Richard Daley, Martin writes a mawkish eulogy to Daley at one point in the book, as though to help absolve Stevenson of any un-' clean dealings." Yet, taken in the context of the stag- nant Eisenhower years that spawned the career of son's foresig unique qualit a convincing man. At a tin grateful to "bland but o lines, Mary N Star colunt Stevenson's choice of adj part of the ho people." Adlai Stev might be re lesson that c have to lear precision, th the local aud ciate-as SI urging - i today's politi - I 23 198 46 74 80 87 103 107 119 126 14 63n 104 137 146 173 186 195 0 I