The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4B - Thursday, September 6, 2007 LEADING MEN From page 3B almost-unanimous return to the aggressive, dominant male charac- ter, a role of commercial and cultural empowerment that defined some of the greatest movie stars of all time. True, the notion of a Hollywood machine fueled primarily by name male actors in roles that tout them as much as their egos is hardly new. But these are major movies led by the most visible movie stars in the mod- ern industry, and if not quite a bona fide cultural moment, they are cer- tainly a minor cause for celebration. Witness Clive Owen having sex during a gunfight in "Shoot 'Em Up," which opens tomorrow (seriously, YouTube it). A few weeks later he'll even infiltrate the new Queen Eliza- beth movie, "Elizabeth: The Golden Age," as a dashing Sir Walter Raleigh in a role said to give an explosive Cate Blanchett (who reprises her role from "Elizabeth") a scene-swiping challenge. For a guy who starred last year as a disenfranchised alcoholic in "Children of Men" and held a sup- porting part in "Inside Man," that's not bad. There's no single face of the American action hero, and in many ways you could argue Owen's role in "Children of Men" is exactly the type of hero that befits this generation. We're inclined to agree, but this fall it's nevertheless an amusement and somewhat of a comfort to see Hol- lywood's top actors do the old-Hol- lywood playboy act. Crowe and Pitt have established that they can stomp their way into the art house whenev- er they want, but we hope they retain the same power to make the movies that made them famous. In a season rightfully marked by films that dig into Iraq and the ballooning anxiety that envelopes it, escapist cinema in the name of our biggest stars sounds to us like the most agreeable prospect we've heard in a while. Adiner 1 M^C f¢ w ith class State's newest spoon isn't so greasy By KIMBERLY CHOU, ABIGAIL B. COLODNER and ANDREW SARGUS KLEIN Daily Arts Editors For those familiar with the area, 211 State St. is a bit of a black hole when it comes to restaurant turnover. (We all know what happened to Pita Pit.) But after a pretty good $4 cheeseburger, sev- S v s eral pierogies and a heart-stopping fried ice cream at the new Sava's Caf6, it looks Cafe/Restaurant as if that the shop-front's destiny may be changing. Sava, the namesake and proprietor of the cafe, is the diner owner of our sitcom something of an identity crisis going on dreams. The restaurant itself boasts a here. great first impression as well. The food matches the price, but the Kimberly Chou: It's like Isaac Miz- atmosphere and the presentation are rahi for Target decorated a diner - in working on a different impression. a good way. You know those menacing ASK: Tell me more. cartoon vegetables from Pita Pit? Gone. ABC: I'm feeling a post-apocalyptic, Instead the walls are painted a warm nuclear-singed age ... And somehow, the yellow, with cool substitutions like an only things that survived were paninis. Ypsilanti Building & Loan safe in place of ASK: And cream cheese. There's a regular cabinet for napkins and condi- cream cheese on my Buffalo chicken ments. sandwich and on the cheeseburger - but Andrew Sargus Klein: It's cozy in a $4 cheeseburger is a great deal no mat- here. The prices seem just right for both ter how you slice it. These portions aren't medium and large meals. A $4 cheese-, so bad. burger? So baIler. ABC: The pierogies are terrific. Per- Abigail B. Colodner: It has this feet with sour cream. So good, in fact, industrial cafe vibe, but I think there's I'm going to eat straight sour cream. 4 I Cheap Modfrate Pri: Specialties: Cafe/diner/grub fare Located at: 211 S. State St. KC: I think she slipped us an extra. The pickles, however, were subpar. They tasted like cinnamon, though I'm not sure why. ABC: Maybe it was the brine. It's always a brine thing. PHOTOS BY BENJI DELL/Daily ASK: The place also does breakfast in TOP: Our lovely hostess - and the cafe's name- the morning. And they have corned beef sake - shows off some cheap eats. ABOVE: The fabled $4 cheeseburger, plus a side of fries. hash! Again, baller. Can't go wrong with that/ There's only one dessert on the menu so far - Here's what we ordered: ABC: The ice cream fried with corn- Pierogies: $4 flakes and egg whites. Classy presenta- Cheeseburger: $4 tion for a deliciously crunchy ice cream Buffalo Chicken Sandwich : $6.50 ball, very classy. Onion Rings: $2.50 KC: It's a complete mystery to me how Veggie Panini: $5.50 they make it. Grilled Veggie Wrap: $5.50 ASK: But it's a nice end to the meal. Sweet Potato Fries: $2 I MILLER From page 1B did not know whether or not he survived his father. Danielbecame a person unacknowledged for so long - nearly four decades - that there was no longer reason even to suspect or question his existence. Andrews's story caught the majority of the reading public off- guard. But rumors about Miller's fourth child have circulated for years. Published accounts have been in the public domain since at least 2003, in books penned by Martin Gottfried and English Prof. Enoch Brater. Six weeks before his death in 2005, Miller altered his will to make Daniel a true heir to his father's fortune, equal with his three siblings. But people do not cause uproars over, or even notice, quietly pub- lished biographies. They do when something becomes a Vanity Fair- worthy scandal. Both commentators on the left and right have reacted strongly. Bitter conservatives and those who have seen too many com- munity-theater productions of "Death of a Salesman" crow that they "never really did like Miller," that the man who refused to name names in front of the House Com- mittee of Un-American Activities is being rightfully shown as ahyp- ocrite, albeit after his death. "Perhaps we should not be sur- prised that a man who never failed to express his concerns for suffer- ing humanity had so little human- ity to spare for his own family," suggested the U.K.'s Daily Mail. The central accusation is sim- ple. How could someone do this? The man Kenneth Tynan called "Lincoln in horn rims" tried to cut his son out of his life, and now we are the ones doing the moralizing. "You want somebody else to act moral for you," said Brater, the English department's acknowl- edged Miller expert. "What peo- ple are really asking with this question is 'What would Jesus do?' And he didn't do what Jesus would have done." The discovery of Miller's choice - calling it a "mistake" simplifies the actual events - hurts because we expected more from him. But until actually faced with the same circumstances, it's easy to say what you should or could not do. In 1966, when Daniel was born, more parents were raising babies with conditions like Down Syndrome at home. The Miller- Morath family caught the tail end of the institutionalizing trend, but such action then was not entirely uncommon. The Independent noted that 1966 was only seven years after the cause of Down Syndrome was discovered; at that time, the term "mongoloid," if not completely politically correct, was still acceptable. Today, science and social stan- dards are different. Advanced pro- cedures like amniocentesis and chorionic villus sampling make it possible to test for fetal complica- tions and conditions during preg- nancy. Parents have the option to terminate the pregnancy if results show something that might com- plicate the baby's life - and their own lives - in ways that would make having a child not worth the overwhelming heartbreak. The choice maybe no less painful. But it's certainly easier to hide. Abor- tion, after all, comes without the physical evidence of giving up your baby to an institution. But the science that would have detected an extra 21st chromo- some wasn't available when Dan- iel was born. It's unfair to impose contemporary cultural standards on a decision made during an era when doctors often recommended institutionalization. "We don't live in a world of saints," Brater said. "People don't have their pluses and minuses in neat order - they have them any- way." Still, it's disappointing to find out that those we put on pedestals are, in fact, real people. Especially when the subject is the Universi- ty's most famous alum. Whether admitted or not, many students and alumni have a subconscious chip on their collective shoulder. The University is one of the top in the nation in academics, sports . and post-college networking - but it's still not an Ivy. It doesn't matter thatthe quality of education rivals the East Coast schools. We're not one of them, and it bothers us. To make up for it, we need to be extra proud. We lay claim and hold on dearly to our most notable alumni - the 20th century's most famous Ameri- can playwright, the state's only American president - though, to be honest, Gerald Ford was fairly average. But Arthur Miller was an icon, and unlike Ford (who was perhaps best loved by Michigan), he was idolized across the board. Peer Edward Albee famously said that Miller was the writer who held up a mirror and told society, "Here is how you behave." The importance, the credibility and the fame we all wanted? Miller brought that. But in the case of one his chil- dren, Miller showed he was just as human as the rest of us. L ta0 uaS t 5v 'oe -D trj~ed.s0p - dea Yeti'e b°Ce COt '~ ~9~e e ,t p se tem% dgWeSat te nd es Et Oe~ee ONE ON ONE $159 for the 1st semester 129 for 3 or more students for 1St semester $279 for both semesters Mon-Thurs: Open 24 hours Fri until 10pm Sat-Sun: 8am-8pm www.1 oni club.com . 2875 koardwalk Dr. a g