.4- et . . 4,. .4 -4 -.. 9A 4- '-J 4' - On et iquette: Wereyoubrought up in a barn, or. what? Are pflie spellng the1 end ofpat. 5s Kerth Srhi 1, I uroC RA 4i ()° n P ART @1 MMY Carter's presidential job description icludes b* leader @o the den oratic party. But during his three ad' e #half year tenure in thi office, Carter has been having a hard time keeping the troaps in line. The rift between the president and the Democratie Congress - was iluminated particularly last summer. In the space of a few months, Congress rejected two of Carter's prepasals to deal with the alleged psoine setage, whi several coa reumen forased a co 11 .tton to rei'u SatoM dwiN K mmy as an altoenatve to Carter on the 1 Presidential ticket. On the ad- ministrative side, the president in- stituted a mass cabinet purge, during which time he fired and hired several cabinet secretaries. The split in the Democratic party that resulted during Carter's presidency is at least somewhat a product of our relatively novel method of selecting the presiden- tial candidates, the primaries. The president's differences with Congress over such strong statements of ideology as energy policies might be better understood, even anticipated, when one remembers that Jimmy Car- ter was never the protege of the Democratic party, but rather the hero of the popular vote. "Jimmy Who?" became a household word during the 1976 presidential primaries, a system that allows more for popular opinion than for the old party die-hards' in- house wisdom. Carter is a political fluke, a stepchild of the decade's presidential primary reforms. Once upon a time, the Former Daily editor Keith Rich- burg has spent the past two months covering thepresidentialprimaries. { ' " i Dy'Katie Herzfeld HETHER spent alone or with oth- er people, mealtime has always functioned as the core of our personal and political lifestyles. Eating alone may be a chance to think about and establish yourself; sharing a meal with a family, whether one of friends or relatives, allows for diffusion of ideas and feelings about the day; dining in a dorm cafeteria. may make you inten- sely aware of your individuality in the mainstream; filling up at a fast food chain may confirm your conformity. When I was very young, my family lived in an apartment complex. A woman named Mrs. Tallas, who had lived alone for several years since her husband died, lived above our apar- tment, and we befriended her. Once she said to my mother, "Even if you eat alone, set your table as if you were en- tertaining royalty." That philosophy was consistent with her general outlook on life; Mrs. Tallas treated herself and others well. That respect for self and others has always, and will always, be the key to good etiquette. And while I grant that being respectful has meant a great variety of different things over the years, it is only recently (in the past ten years), that significant changes have Katie Herzfeld is a member of the Daily Arts Staff. occured, and eating has become a more preserves in it, which I never had relaxed, appreciable occasion. before with peanut butter." Or: "This In Fifty Courtesies of the Table, quiche has too much nutmeg for my perhaps the first book to deal solely taste, but I really like all the with table etiquette, Bonvicino da Riva mushrooms." wrote, "Do not scratch yourself in any foul part while eating ... Do not cross W HEN EATING in a restaurant, your legs on the laid out table . . ." His why hesitate to cr ticize your book, published at the end of the thir- meal? Tell your service peon - that teenth century, also said that "Guests is if you feel s/he will be open to such should be given the choice portions; an conversation - what you enjoyed about invitation to dine should be followed by your meal, and what could have made it plenty to eat and drink; and guests better. If waitri, chefs, and managers should never criticize the food they are discuss customer feedback and critique served." themselves regularly, then restaurants Esther Aresty's 1970 book The Best may improve. Behavior, claimed these latter rules to And please, say please and thank you. be "timeless and changeless." But Speaking from experience, those wor- treating guests like royalty makes ds, or the lack of them, can. make or hosts and guests both uncomfortable. break a waitperson's day; refrain from What one person considers the prime calling female wait people any of the ribs, another may consider hamburger, following: "girl,'' "sweetie,","baby," What's wrong with a simple, unpreten- "dear", "pretty girl", "waitress", tious, even small-portioned meal? And "lady", "miss", "young lady", if food isn't criticized, will it ever im- "honey", "ma'am", or "pretty lady". prove? These names are derogatory in that In proposing alternative etiquette they are intimate or sexist terms. Using ideas, the suggestion of critiquing what them denies a waitperson you eat is of major import. The word professionalism, and respect for. "criticism", I think, is one of the most her/his job. While "waitperson" is misinterpreted in our language. Given somewhat awkward and formal, it's the and taken constructively, criticism most appropriate term we have in our (whether of a rock concert, a friend's language - at this time. idiosyncracies, or a casserole) allows Tipping 15 per cent is a must. for enhancement. Anything less than that is cheating. A What is offensive about saying;"I don't wait person's rent check depends on like this peanut butter and jelly san- that money - and therefore your dwich because it's got raspberry honesty. On the other hand, I have had f r 44 . a e b4 5 , to s,, customers whisper to me over a coun- ter, "I can't afford to tip you right now. I'm real sorry." And that meant more to me than the whole day's earnings. When eating at a friend's home, or if you are having company over, I think it's important .that everyone contribute to the meal; whether that contribution be flowers, dessert, wine, or helping with the dishes. Several months ago, after a lengthy meal with a new friend, my guest of- fered to help me clear the table. "Oh, no, no," I said. "You are my guest tonight." But I have always offered, when I am the guest, to help with washing dishes and other mundane chores involved in serving company. Actually, I enjoy working in other peoples' kitchens - even mundane work. (I must wonder is that because of my socialization, because I simply like to be helpful, because "it's the thing to do"?.. .) Sin- ce realizing this, I even ask my guests to help clean up the mess. Call it. feminist perspective, a desocialized style of "entertaining," or just dif- ferent, I feel much more comfortable this way, and I think my company does, too. So before fast food chains completely chain our eating habits, or a commit- ment to 600-year-old manners obstructs the culture of 1980, perhaps we can slow down our dinner hours, and enjoy our- selves and food. .4 b a- tshow i the national co ietlons were te State party maders, the tber union bosmes, ai tha oltime etin offcials. The rut o ,he day required state delegations to vote as a bl', for a single candidate. They would go to the conventions encom itted, and they would choose a nomiee to represent the party through hard bargaining bet- ween delegations, backroom polities, and some of that old political give-and- take. The turmoil of the ouS convention, however, resulted in a sweeping review of the old nominating system. New rules were authored by a commission headed by Senator George McGovern (who would later become their chief beneficiary). The new rules eliminated some of the former elitism, opening up the caucus process to blacks and women. But the Democratic National Committee feared this would mean ac- tivists, particularly from the party's volatile left wing, would dominate the caucuses. So they urged states to in- stitute presidential primaries. For the 1972 election, 23 states held Democratic primary elections, which selected 63 per cent of the national convention delegates. Once the rules were in effect McGovern realized, just as Carter would realize four years later, that when over half the convention delegates are selected in primaries, candidates could - for the first time in U.S. history - win their party's nomination solely by entering them. A candidate could win enough convention delegates for a first-ballot convention nomination by securing over 50 per cent of the committed delegates before the convention even esgeed. The swnxmer prty eenventies could become, in of- fect, merely for as to ratify what ad already been esta lished in the prinary season, January through June. Nineteen seventy-two thai, for all practical purposes, saw the death of the political party. Party regulars could no longer control the selection of a nominee. And for the candidate with presidential ambitions, it became more ijrportant to build a grass-roots organization that wod. vote on primary day than to have the support or endorsement of the establishment politicians. Literally anyone could become the party's nominee if he went into enough primaries and won enough delegates. In 1976, literally anyone did. James Earle "Jimmy" Carter, Jr. was about as outside the Democratic political establishment as they come. He was a former one-term governor of Georgia, a former Georgia state senator, and a peanut farmer and businessman by profession. He was relatively inexperienced, largely unknown. No one knew who he was, and, being a southerner, his credentials as a Democrat were in question. Jimmy Carter would not have been the choice of the regular party leaders, if they had anything to say about it. Unfortunately, under the new rules, they didn't have anything to say about it. HEN CARTER TOOK of- flee in January 1977 the Democrats enjoyed a 2-1 ad- vantage in both houses of Congress. But the party was, undisciplined, full of young, idealistic, and fiercely indepen- de." newi either theI their pre" ai affect posite. Jir behind ma congresn they felt n! posed part Rep. Tat example I reelection ticut's lib district wi Jimmy Ca district to] Ford's 52sp his second nothing to more popu was the pre Last ye squabbling as we ente whether J govern ef months of] kind of par kept Carte From early May, Cart party in Cc emergency and repudi domestic c Democrats committee presidenti "democr Massachus nedy. The mut Jimmy Ca television I persuasion, that he wou domestic Congress t panies' exp+ On May give Carte gasoline in 4 . v# 4