Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, May 23, 1974 Connie Bassik Ann A rbor's By JUDY RUSKIN There used to be a sign in the window identifying the small corner store as "Lucky Jim's." But now all that's left is a large neon "OPEN" sign. "People just refer to it as "open" now, says Connie Basil, the slightly eccentric, British proprietor of the city's original fish 'n chips restaurant. "They ak if 'open's' open." LUJCKY JIM'S, located at 1232 Packard, is not your convention- al restaurant. It hardly looks like an eatery at all, but rather like a quaint "front parlor" in some old victorian mansion. .iA 'ong, white couch lines one wall of the shop. A small table F, nestles in a corner, decorated by a tiny lamp and a picture of one of Connie's three "gorgeous" children. Union Jacks and pic- tures of the Queen grace the w all. Inthe five years since her store opened, many things have changed in Ann Arbor. When Lucky Jim's first opened in the :° late sixties, it was the only fish n chips restaurant in the Mid- west. "WHEN WE STARTED no- body had ever heard of fish 'n chips," Connie says. "The health department inspectors had a very worried look on their face. That's why they made us get this enormous sink," she adds, pointing to a huge chrome sink Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI and counter that occupies al- CONNIE BASSIL, founder of Lucky Jim's fish 'n chips store most the entire rear wall of the on Packard, sits in her shop last week. Connie brought fish shop. Now, however, fish 'n chips is 'n chips to the city when the delicacy was virtually unknown virtually a household word. Ar- to the Midwest. thur Treacher has spread his fast-food fish 'n chips emporium across the country, including a franchise here on Jackson Rd. But after five years behind the counter, Connie is giving up the fish 'n chips business. "I've been doing this a long time," she explains, "and if I don't stop doing it now I never will." "IT'S BEEN FUN," she says in her pleasing British accent. "It hasn't been a great money spinner. I had hoped to make a bit more." Staring causes us to drop the fish and put our whole hand in the hot fat and have huge ner- vous attacks," one message reads. "Anyone caught cliffing paper, ketchup things, napkins etc. about in the street will get a big bum smacking administered by the management," another sign says. LUCKY JIM'S prices are quite reasonable. An adult portion of fish 'n chips costs only $1.60, Her hand-made signs are mini-lectures on customer etiquette. 'Please don't stare at the people who work at this shop. Staring causes us to drop the fish and put our whole hand in the hot fat and have huge nervous attack,' one message reads. 'Anyone caught cliffng paper, ketchup things, napkins etc. about in the street will get a big bum smacking ad- ministered by the management,' another sign says. She continues half-joking, half- seriously, "I wanted a body transplant. My body's gone you know, from all that standing and serving." "This is what you call an el- bow job. It's very physical and not very creative. It's creative as far as creating an ambience is concerned," she adds. CONNIE HAS created quite an ambience. The shop is lit- tered with plants, tiny knick- knacks, and hand-lettered signs. She is quite proud of her bowl of yellow cowslips, small flow- ers that vaguely resemble but- tercups. A friend of Connie's took the root from an English meadow and brought it back to the United States. Her hand-made signs are mini- lectures on customer etiquette. "Please don't stare at the peo- ple who work at this shop. "tax and poison included." The menu offers fresh Icelandic fish, either cod, perch or haddock, in addition to "gorgeous" tossed salad and homemade slaw. And the store has developed a very dedicated clientele. "All my customers are bright, not thick," Connie says of Lucky Jim's clientele. "Some of the University people are rather thick. They don't come in as much as the intelligentsia, who are the workers. "It's a very large and satis- fied clientele," she adds, "be- cause they know a good thing when they see it." CONNIE PRAISES the hon- esty of her customers. "It's so gratifying," she says. She tells the story of a man who came in a month ago and ordered fish 'n chips. "The bill came to $5.90, but I didn't have enough change JAMES MILLER President, University of Louisville (formerly Director, MHR) "LIVING SYSTEMS: LET'S HAVE LESS TALK AND MORE DATA" TEA: 3:15 P.M. room 2059 MHRI SEMINAR 3:45 P.M. room 1057 MHRI "IT CAN BE SAID, SIMPLY AND u ' VWITH THANKS, \ THAT IT IS AN \ aABSOLUTELY TERRIFIC MOVIE" f Joy Cocks Time Magazine TE MUSKETEER0S TECHNICOLOR ' PRINTS BY DE LUXE STARTS FRIDAY ART I CINEMA Double Feature ends Thursday-"POLICEWOMEN" and "SUPERCHICK" Double Feature starts Friday Tom Laughlin as Billy Jack in "BORN LOSERS" and Richard Widmark in "WHEN LEGENDS DIE" 33 N. WASHINGTON, YPSI LANTI-482-3300