0 9 9 a The week the world ended twice Mind if I step inside for a mo- ment? See, there's this nomadic pack of cannibals outside, and... Thanks. Hey, love what you've done with the place. Me, I'd prefer a few old refrigerator boxes to a burned-out warehouse - more mo- bile, you know - but I guess we can't be too picky now that civiliza- tion has collapsed, right? You seem confused. I can't blame you; who could have seen it com- ing? Hadn't we just made peace with the Russians? Weren't we just about to get HDTV? Well, we've got a lit- tle time to kill, so why don't you throw another rat on the fire for me and I'll explain to you how the whole mess got started. I actually wrote this on Sunday, Oct. 15, but everyone knew by then that the world was going to end the next morning at precisely 8 a.m. That was when the stock market opened, after dropping 190 points the previous Friday, and the global economy collapsed. As I wrote this column, carpenters were busy in- stalling diving boards on the win- dows of skyscrapers around the world and financial analysts were advising their clients to sink their stock money into something more stable and predictable, like lottery tickets. No one was quite sure why the economy was collapsing. But by then, nobody was quite sure why the economy did anything. That was be- cause money had become a "con- cept," kind of like "love" or "God," only much more abstract. We happily embraced phrases like "revolving credit," "prime lending rate," and "Excuse me, I'm here to repossess your car." Money became like your pineal gland - you knew you had it, but damned if you knew where it actually was. Thus, by 1989, most of the world's money existed in the imagi- nations of about 30 bank presidents and CEOs. There wasn't enough ac- tual cash left for the world to go in on a pizza together. Remember when you played "grown-up" as a kid, and you'd go to a pretend office, and your pretend boss would give you a handful of air and say, "Here's fifty gajillion dol- lars"? Well, you didn't know it then, but that's exactly how the economy worked. The status of the economy was no longer gauged by silly things like whether or not anyone had any money; it was judged by the "Leading Economic Indicators." The IZI WON Leading Economic Indicators were three old men who met every month in a Manhattan office, got really, re- ally drunk and had conversations like this: (Sound of a quarter bouncing off glass) Leading Economic Indicator #1: Damnit! Is this table slanted? LEI #2: Ha! You've gotta drink and raise the prime rate another half percent! LEI #3: OK, new rule - if any- body says a word starting with the letter "C," gold drops $20 an ounce... Of course, somebody had to do the day-to-day work of running the economy. It says somewhere in the Book of Revelations that, just before the Apocalypse, "the princes of the Earth shall render forth control of their kingdoms to dorky stockbro- kers in three-piece suits who ate paste in grade school." This is ex- actly what happened. The lifeblood of Western civilization was placed in the hands of people who had spent most of their formative years getting swirlies in public bathrooms, and hence were, well, excitable. There- fore, if, say, "Roseanne" dropped two spots in the Nielsens, Wall Street would conclude "Good Lord! Marx was right! Capitalism has failed! SELL! SELL!" Last Friday the Dow Jones col- lapsed because of a hitch in the sale of United Airlines. Now it might make no sense to you and me that an airline company's troubles could have an effect on Kellogg's, but when you consider that the trans- portation industry impacts the fossil fuel business, which in turn affects the precious metals trade - well, it still makes no sense to you and me. But then, that's why we're are now using our CD certificates to toast ro- dents and getting plutonium poison- ing instead of drinking Beaujolais in an underground bunker. r Because, you see, the world ended again the next morning. That's when NASA launched the Galileo probe. Galileo was intended to fly into space from the space shuttle and ex- plore Jupiter. Without it, we stood in danger of falling behind the Sovi- ets in the area of Having Lots Of Cool Color Photographs Of Other Planets To Show On The Nightly News, but some activists tried to stop the launch because Galileo con- tained plutonium, which has a scary- sounding, five-dollar-word name and therefore must be dangerous. The issue of Galileo's safety was a complicated and technical one, but commendably, NASA and the ac- tivists explained it to the public in objective, rational terms: 1) "Quiet, you foolish mortals; we're NASA", and 2) "Plutonium! AAAH! Pluto- nium! Boogaboogabooga!" Anyway, the world ended again, either because the shuttle exploded or because the activists won a court in- junction to have the planet contami- nated with plutonium anyway, argu- ing that NASA "just got lucky." Nobody was sure which, because we were all too busy trying to figure out in what year Columbus ordered the Bay of Pigs invasion. Or some- thing like that. You see, they had released an- other of a series of studies showing that America's youth have the col- lective intelligence of a nine-piece See Poniewozik, Page 13 :x:;. WEEKEND/DOUG USHER Jacques Cr oissant of dreams -' '1 p EKENh SINCE 1989 4LMAN N I q oj Eight Years ago... October 20, 1981 "Oh sure, the Daily has always been a haven for typos and factual errors. But the problem is especially acute this year. And the Daily's editors are to blame... "...taken as a whole, the Daily is a shoddier newspaper than most. Everything you see in this paper has been reviewed by two editors - that's about the saddest comment I can make..." [From an article by a Daily columnist] Forty Years ago... October 20, 1949 "(AP) - A student rebellion against regulations at Bowling Green State University began fizzling late yesterday as a strike by part of the student body died down. "The protesting group had been pressing for sale of 3.2 beer, more tolerance toward students by the campus police and the abolition of a rule which prohibits unmarried coeds from riding in automobiles." Eighty Years ago... October 20, 1909 "...a large number of University students are disregarding the custom of saluting the highest officials of the University and the deans of their respective departments. There is nothing servile in the raising of one's hat to these men as it is but a recognition of honored position which they occupy and a deference to their ability. The military salute given a superior officer in the army is not so much a mark of obedience as a symbol of loyalty and respect and the saluting of the president of the University or the dean of a department should mean the same to a student." [From an unsigned editorial] Items in Weekend Almanac are culled from past issues of the Daily on this date in history. All articles are taken from Daily files which are open to public perusal in the Daily's library. OFF'tHlE WAILL A fool and his calculus are soon integrated How can any student at U of M claim to be liberal? How bourgeoise. If mom and daddy pay your tuition, you are not the protester you think you are. Send your tuition $ to South Africa, famine relief, etc. Come back to reality, you're all capitalists at heart or you wouldn't be here. Ask your parents about it. They were probably hippies before they were materialistic doctors, lawyers, CEOs. (In response) You can do more for a cause with a college education than without! Q: What's the difference between an atheist and a dyslexic? A: A dyslexic doesn't believe in Dog. -East Engineering SKLTCLWAt V.ZINN By Alex Gordon I first heard the voice whisper to me freshman year. "If you eat there, he will come," the voice would say to me as I left my Psych 172 lecture in MLB 3. Returning to the pre-neon South Quad cafeteria for some Canadian Cheese Soup and shrimp jambalaya, the voice would get louder. "Eat what!" I'd shout, much to the dismay of my friends who were beginning to think I was crazy. Then one day I had the vision. I was star- ing at my chicken patty topped with Cheez-Whiz when, for an instant, before me was a majestic looking chicken salad sandwich on a fluffy croissant. It finally occurred to me: all these days I had been passing Jacques Patisserie on North University on my way back to the cafeteria and the voice was trying to tell me to eat there. For the ne:at weeks I was ob- sessed with trying all the different sandwiches at Jacques. I worked hard day after day eating the turkey, the tuna salad, even the ham and cheese on those fresh-baked croissants. My friends told me I was insane to waste my money while I had free meals at the dorm, but I obeyed that voice. By the end of my first year "he" still had not come. I was deeply in debt and about to lose faith. Sitting at the outside tables, staring at my "Special Sandwich" (cream cheese, avocado spread, and veggies) one day, I looked up and suddenly sitting across from me, ready to eat a shrimp salad sandwich, was "Shoeless" Joe Jackson. I could barely hold in my excite- ment. I had a million questions to ask him, but he just nodded at my sandwich and indicated he would like a bite. We ate, and then he just got up, thanked me, and trotted off to the Diag. Shoeless Joe came more and more often after that. He finally ex- plained to me one day during my sophomore year why he enjoyed re- turning to Jacques so much. "The whole Black Sox thing - well I was innocent, Alex. The rest of the guys, they got money. Me, I got nothing, except one day by my locker there was this box of crois- sants. I ate those croissants and went out and hit a home run that day. Next thing I know, I'm in court in the middle of this great big hulla- baloo about fixing the series. "All I did was eat a couple of croissants, and they banish me from baseball. No Hall of Fame, no records, no .357 lifetime batting av- erage... no nothing." "Not anything," I said, correcting my friend's bad grammar. "Anyways Alex, I got some friends who'd like to join us for lunch from now on. Is that o.k.?" he asked. "Sure, as long as you don't bring Ty Cobb." So it went, all sophomore year. Every day I'd spend hours and hours eating lunch with Shoeless Joe and other old-time greats. My school buddies would come by, but they wouldn't see my new friends. They didn't believe. But I knew they were real. All was fine until junior year, when I heard the voice again: "Ease his pain." Ease whose pain? Who did I hurt? I was stymied again. Sitting in my Core I class one day, writing the phrase out over and over again on my copy of Paradise Lost , it came to me - John Mil- ton. I was to ease John Milton's pain. But he was dead. Another im- passe... until I had a dream. In the dream I drive to Chicago and take not John Milton, but Cubs Broadcaster Harry Carry, to Vie De France in Northbrook Court. We both order croissant sandwiches, and then I wake up. Immediately I left for the Windy City and found Caray loitering at Wrigley Field. Wooing him into sharing a lunch with me at the North Shore's croissant capital was easy: I told him they had beer. Amidst the mothers and daughters clutching Neiman-Marcus bags, we settled down for lunch. "Go the dis- tance, try the shrimp ziti salad," said the voice again, but Harry heard it. "Holy Cow! Alex, we have to go back to Jacques and try that wide ar- ray of salads they have and not forget to wash it down with a cold Bud. But first let me mention that Mr. and Mrs. Rob Mantuse from De- cataur, Illinois are eating lunch here today," Harry struggled to say. We hopped back into my Olds Fierenza wagon and hightailed it back to Ann Arbor. Harry pointed out the entire trip how the names of the towns would be pronounced backwards: "Wap wap, Oozamalak, Noibla, Robra nna." Thankfully, we were back at Jacques in no time and we could join Joe and the gang for tubs of fruit salad, sesame chicken salad, seafood pasta salad, tuna twist salad, and crunchy orzo salad. There was only one trouble now as I headed into my senior year. I was deeply in debt from all my eat- See Alex, Page 13 WATICH DNE~ CMASH ~54 4IR %OWN4M MRENTc" 10 OSIR GLW.. T- two 7A)Cn(S..A MESS A i14a5N*ws IKES. STme trTSi VRT M 10P C Q. LR SUWt.. .Io- AW STP 84tAA~FEt[ bt ostx. O L t 01 ..A6LAsca Page 10 Weekend/October 20,1989 Weekend/October 2Q 1989