Fun, fun, fun with Mikh and Ge President George Bush 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue Washington, DC Dear President Bush: I recently read that you and Mikhail Gorbachev are planning to have a summit meeting early in De- cember, aboard warships in the Mediterranean. I'm writing in hope that you will avoid making the biggest mistake of your presidency- not counting the time last summer you allowed your- slf to be filmed swimming at Ken- nebunkport in a swimsuit slightly too big, inadvertently treating the world to a view of a national politi- cian that most people don't get without becoming a congressional page. The problem with these summits is that nothing ever really happens. The U.S. and Soviet leaders stand around and get photographed a lot, wearing the World Leader Paparazzi Smile - the smile, similar to that of Mayor McCheese, that world leaders are so adept at making that they will maintain it, as long as there's a photographer within 50 miles, even if you dip their hands in a bowl of moist, warm octopus parts - then issue cryptic statements like "We feel that significant progress has been made in the areas on which we have had differences, and we be- lieve we have made a great step to- ward reducing our differences in the area in which we have made progress," which roughly translates into "Messrs. Bush and Gorbachev were too busy being photographed to actually talk to each other." The problem, I think, is that summits just aren't that fun. Manag- ing the affairs of nations which have enough nuclear firepower to destroy Jose Canseco's automobile collec- tion several times over is no church picnic, so when you're whisked off to a tourist paradise like Reykjavik, Iceland and forced to spend long evenings eating tasteless veal medal- lions, you're probably too damn cranky to accomplish anything. What you and Mr. Gorbachev need isn't a dull weekend aboard the U.S.S. Nimitz; you need to unwind, have a good old-fashioned debauch. So I'm inviting you to hold your summit at my house. I've enclosed a copy of our itinerary: Friday: 4 p.m.: Air Force One lands at Metro Airport in Detroit. I pull up to the runway to drive you and Gor- bachev to Ann Arbor, with a con- cealed blank pistol in my coat. Stage fake double assassination, after which we moon the flabbergasted in- ternational press corps. 4:10-4:30 p.m.: Deliver im- promptu speech to air traffic con- PN JIM ZIK trollers, muttering "mass firings" under your breath every few sen- tences to unnerve them. 4:30-4:45 p.m.: Hastily down several bourbons in airport lounge; afterward, challenge Gorbachev to a race up the "down" escalator in the international terminal, betting him a warm-water naval port against a case of Beluga caviar. 4:45-5:30 p.m.: Drive to Ann Arbor. Worry aides by taping "Shoot Me" signs to the sides of vehicles in the Presidential motorcade. 5:30 p.m.: Arrive at my house. Spray LASC members staging protest on the sidewalk outside with Silly String. 5:45 p.m.: Call White House switchboard and have operators order pizzas in Mike Dukakis' name from every pizzeria in Boston. 6-6:30 p.m.: Treat Gorbachev to dinner at White Castle. Sign legisla- tion in front of stupefied workers raising minimum wage to $6.50/hour, then "accidentally" spill ketchup on it and toss it in the trash. Laugh uproariously. Force secret service agent to stand still as you, Gorbachev, and I blow straw wrap- pers at his face. 6:45-7:45p.m.: Hang out in liv- ing room with Gorbachev and aides and play "Drink or Dare," an elabo- rate drinking game in which you watch CNN Headline News and, when the anchor mentions a domes- tic or foreign crisis, you have to ei- ther take a decisive stance on the is- sue or shotgun a beer. Get stinking drunk. 9-11:45 p.m.: Make the rounds of fraternity parties. Amuse yourself by offering obsequious poli. sci. ma- jors State Department internships if they strip naked and do a chicken dance. Saturday: Midnight-2 a.m.: Attend Rocky Horror Picture Show at Briarwood. Have bodyguards pounce on and pummel members of the audience who throw rice during the wedding scene. 2 a.m.-10 a.m.: Return to my place. Watch videotape of 1972 Olympic basketball finals, to the embarrassment of the Soviet delega- tion, until everyone passes out. 10:30 a.m.: Have secret service agents turn on all hot-water taps in the house while Eduard Shevardnadze takes his shower. 11-11:30 a.m.: Pin The Tail On James Baker tournament. Noon-2 p.m.: Visit, U-M cam- orge pus. During VIP luncheon, coax James Duderstadt into doing his Bette Midler imitation. Offer next Supreme Court opening to winner of Law School Faculty wet T-shirt con- test. Gorbachev and aides trade filthy Uzbek jokes with heads of U-M Slavic Department. 2-2:15 p.m.: Mmm, mmm! Fruit Roll-Ups Break! 2:15-3 p.m. Visit Domino's Farms to sacrifice live babies with Tom Monaghan. 3-5 p.m.: Conference with Gor- bachev. Conclude cultural exchange pact, in which the U.S. agrees to have John Hughes direct a series of movies about angst-ridden Soviet teenagers who hate their parents and listen to hip new-wave bands, in ex- change for which KGB agents will kill Yakov Smirnoff. 5-6 p.m.: During tour of Ann Arbor, freak out Mayor Jerry Jerni- gan by insisting that you are actu- ally five years old and visiting Dis- neyworld, calling him "Uncle Max," and crying because he won't buy you a Sno-Kone. Have FBI agents threaten to manufacture doctored videotapes showing him in com- promising positions with famous cartoon characters if he ever, ever mentions this to anyone. 6 p.m.: Closing ceremonies at See Poniewozik, Page 13 A Cliff Notes' guide to Silverman's Deli* Growing up in the Si) Catching up in te ...... I YEKENb ASINCE 1989 1 Seventy-five Years ago... November 10, 1914 "Plate glass windows were smashed and some quantity of goods taken by a riotous crowd partly composed of students, which stormed the store of "Joe" Reinger, on State street, about 11... last evening. The action came as a result of exposures showing that Reinger had plotted to bribe members of the football team, in order to benefit himself financially by wagers. "Plans which are supposed to have been aimed at bribing two members of the Michigan football team, to "throw" the Cornell game, were an- nounced at the athletic office last night." Sixty Years ago... November 10, 1929 "Two place kicks after touchdown from the reliable toe of Joe Gembis gave a fighting Michigan team victory over an equally determined Harvard eleven, 14-12... A crowd of 88,000 spectators watched the rejuvenated Wolverines conquer the Crimson for the first time in football history..." Twenty-two Years ago... November 10, 1967 "Student Government Council last night by a 7-5 vote abolished all Stu- dent Vehicle Regulations except those pertaining to bicycles. SGC... Vice ~President Mike Davis... said, "This means that any student - regardless of class year - may keep and drive an automobile in the Ann Arbor area with- out fear of punishment." Items in the 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. Page 10 OFF 'THE WAL Ode to Dave: There once was a boy named Dave Who many a woman he did crave He cared for them not And now he will rot From the depths of his sorry-assed grave Bo is God (In response) If Bo is God, then Bo lost to Notre Dame. Any irony there? The appetite of war is the entire planet Ever feel as if life is completely meaningless, like you are no more than a pebble on the beach? (In response) Only while waiting in line at CRISP or at the computing center. - Grad library SKETCRAb F ZINN #6. 1WErtY ONE, Df. G -D 't A This column is not a substitute for the dining experience itself. Stu- dents who attempt to use the column in this way are denying themselves the very education that they are presumedly giving their most vital years to achieve. A Late Night Meal at Silverman 's Characters Debbi - Our irreverent waitress and hostess. Zog - A patron. A business school senior who has a digestive system made of steel and an adamant fan of TV's The Golden Girls. Sarge - Another patron. An LSA senior and local haberdasher with impeccable grooming habits. Alex - A patron and the narrator of the column. Alex has never eaten Spam. Other patrons Plot Summary The three patrons arrive at Sil- verman's, a new deli open 24-hours a day, on Carpenter Road. The pa- trons are very hungry. Sitting down in a booth, their waitress hands them the infamous bill of fare, with "more than 500 menu items." The patrons are momentarily dismayed by the staggering amount of choices, but through tenacious work they finally decide what to order. Once they order, the patrons get down to the important business of completing the many puzzles and About Town games on the place mats. While Zog and Sarge play a game of dots, Alex folds the menu into a ill-fitting hat. The food arrives and the patrons eat rapidly. Their waitress asks if every- thing is okay. The waitress then spills an entire glass of water on a patron at another table. The patrons muse at the irony of this situation. They pay their unusually high bill and leave, satiated. Analysis Chapter One: Silverman's on Carpenter is the newest outlet of a local Michigan chain. The restaurant prides itself on the great variety of its menu and the lengths it goes to satisfy its customers. Staying open 24-hours a day is an automatic boon for any restau- rant, because the protagonists often find themselves hungry and bored at odd hours. On this particular evening, the patrons find themselves in a particularly goofy mood. The first key passage in the evening comes when the patrons are con- fronted with a choice between smok- ing and non-smoking. The conflict is easily resolved when all three pa- trons realize that since they do not smoke, they probably should sit in the non-smoking section. The patrons are at first surprised by the wide array of the menu. Ear- ber inthe evening, the three had mused that the over 500 items must mean, "one egg, one egg with salt, one egg with pepper, two eggs... Confusion reigns the day, however, in a complete breakdown of order, reminiscent of the forest scenes in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. The patrons delay their des- tinies by asking their waitress to come back because they have yet to decide what to order. Already the waitress can be seen as the character which frames the meal, though at this point her darker side has yet to be revealed. Omi- nously, she leaves this scene saying "I'll be back before the cob webs set- tle." The next several passages follow the characters as they deliberate be- tween the over 500 items. Zog, the one with the strong stomach, debates between the chili and beans and a macho chimichanga. Sarge and Alex cringe at the thought of Zog trying to digest these foods in his sleep. On several occasions Sarge jokes, "I'm not going to clean it up in the morn- ing." Chapter Two: The rising action begins as the waitress returns to take the order. Zog, taking the initiative, orders the "Bea Arthur," a chicken breast sandwich without a bun with cottage cheese and a pineapple ring on the side. At this point, Zog can be seen as a Christ figure, sacrificing See Alex, Page 13 "" HE' BRO) I row 1 C 4#S5 WOK ,i " A w/ YE S9TERI A riveting adult drama about five talented, succ who must face the when a friend's to r1 S I I a I I Nc Tic 'ii University Players Directed by Charles Jackson Weekend/November 101989 "V Weekend/November 10,1989