Owner of Tice's may not reopen after fire The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, August 13, 1980-Page 7 By JOYCE FRIEDEN building - the loss was "superficial, just the building's con- Bill Tice, owner of Tice's grocery store which was gutted tents," he said. by a fire last Friday night, said yesterday he is not sure However, there was evidence of smoke damage to. the whether he will rebuild the business. building's interior as Tice and other employees waited amid "I just don't know at this point (whether I'll start over)," the shop's charred remains for liquor inspectors to destroy he said. "It depends on many things." any liquor bottles which had survived the fire. TIce estimated his monetary losses at $25,000-$30,000. He Tice explained that the owner of the building was insured said he does not carry insurance because "the cost of in- and would be able to pay for restoring the walls and doors to suring a liquor store is quite prohibitive." their original condition. ACCORDING TO Ann Arbor Fire Department Inspector Tice, who was away on vacation when the blaze broke out, Ben Zahn, the fire was caused by some "waste material" ina appeared calm about the fire and its effects. "It's just one of wastebasket underneath the front counter of the store. "The those things that happens," he said. "No one was injured, fire started in the wastebasket and just spread right on up to I'm thankful for that. The money is not important to me - the counter," he explained. it's just a means of putting the kids through college. You have Zahn added that there was no structural damage to the to set your priorities." DISTANT MICROBES RICH, COMPLEX: Ancient microscopic life found LOS- ANGELES (AP) - An inter- med from a swirling cloud of dust and UCLA paleobiologist J. William Schopf, national search into the distant past gas in space. who conceived the 15-month program revealed a surprisingly rich and com- AND SCIENTISTS SAID those oldest based at UCLA, said Monday. plex world of microscopic life that ruled known fossils - chains of cells that look "There have been some major Earth billions of years ago, researchers like tiny strings of beads - were so discoveries that made a tremendous say. unexpectedly complex that the first, impact in the field. We found that things They said the project has proven the far-simpler living thing must have ap- were a lot more complex a lot earlier existence of fossilized microbes that peared many millions of years earlier. than any of us had suspected," he said lived 3.5 billion years ago - scarcely a "I think the project resulted in a good Monday as the program wound up with billion years after the Earth was for- deal more than we had expected, " a two-day symposium. The $300,000 Vietnam vets lobby at convention Veteran Jim O'Leary said the (Continued from Page 1? mittees. veterans have received support from a deformed. He was thinking of killing VETERAN/LOBBYIST Andrew number of delegates and politicians. himself after that." Hooks said the veterans are at the con- The veteran's lobby group doss not There is currently a bill in the U.S. vention this week because "we want plan to initiate any demonstrations. House which would require the more precise language written into the "That's not a realistic way of doing it," Veterans Administration to list and platform in regard to Vietnam veteran said Kennedy. "We're going to go treat disabilities from Agent Orange concerns." He said the platform's through the system. We want to en- exposure as a "service-connected language is ambiguous and does not courage veterans and their families to disease," entitling exposure victims to spell out exactly when and how the write their congressmen and push for extensive medical benefits. The bill is government is going to help veterans write throgeshe andsus b N i,,, h wt t r. changes through the legislature." veing revieweu y seveahos cm- aeai witn their proes.- Percy'sfaulty novd (Continued from Page 6) this time she had made a mistake. She had thought (and her mother had expec- ted) that she must do something ex- traordinary, be somebody extraor- dinary. Whereas the trick lay in leading the most ordinary life imaginable." And so she embarks on the most prac- tical of tasks: Repairing the greenhouse, feeding the dog, hoisting the. stove, nursing Barrett back to health. BARRETT CLEARLY comes out of a different mold, given over as he is to grandiose musings. The man of ideas disillusioned with ordinary life meets the strange talking young woman, to whom questions of the meaning of life take a back seat to more pressing everyday concerns. From the beginning, Will understan- ds Allie's odd, rhyme-laden speech when no one else can. They fall in love rapidly, each one forsaking their respective extreme ways of living. Barrett, the widowed millionaire lawyer, becomes a law clerk, bequeathing much of his fortune to the building of low-cost log cabins for the elderly and the young. Allie sees life has and should have its extraordinary moments. God, Barrett comes to un- derstand, may not need to manifest Himself overtly: "His heart leapt with a secret joy. Is Allie a gift and therefore the sign of the giver? Could it possible be that the Lord is here masquerading behind this simple silly holy face? Am I crazy to want both, her and Him? No, not want, must have. And will have." With this the book ends, happily, with a sort of second coming. This is an all too reductive synopsis of the novel. But my omissions do not ex- cuse Percy's faults. Will Barrett comes across as a man clearly obsessed with the "big questions," the. meaning of life, the existence of God. A thin line separates the chronicling of an ob- session and dull, repetitive prose. Per- cy's imagination appears limited; he inexcusably repeats without variation. HIS RELIANCE on cliche, too, is disheartening: "Not once had he been present for his life. So his life had passed likea dream. How can it happen that one day you are young, you marry, and then another day you come to your- self and your life has passed like a dream? They passed in the halls like ghosts." Another danger that can beset a writer of "ideas" is a disproportionate emphasis on quasi-philosophical discourse rather than recounting per- sons' experiences as examples of philosophical problems. Percy's failure on this count is difficult to understand, for his mastery of dialogue throughout the novel proves he need not overin- dulge his philosophical bent out of an inability to write concrete detail. As if Percy himself is conscious of this, the thematic concerns of the novel address this problem. Barrett, perhaps like Percy, must accept the virtues of workaday life, of everyday realities. Barrett's exodus from the cave because of a toothache brings together apocalyptic vision and trivial pain-and the toothache proves more urgent than verifying God's existence. Not so coincidentally, then, the last half of the novel suffers less from imbalan- ce, as Percy himself learns right along with his protagonist. PERCY'S OPTIMISM doesnot mean that modern life escapes unscarred. Satire permeates The Second Coming. Popular religion, middle class leisure, the 'new' self-indulgence, marriage, and much else are found wanting under the author's scrutiny. Unfortunately, so is Percy. Satire has become all too easy in recent literature and writers' irreverent jabs have become un- necessarily predictable. Using an am- nesiac, obviously unfamiliar with the hip jargon of the seventies, makes Allie an interesting character,-much more interesting than- Barrett-but the ploy seems too frequently contrived only for satiric purposes. To Percy's credit, the satire, good or bad, is not left to stand on its own. He has faith in some people. And the narrative hops with enough wit and pace to dilute the ponderous discussions of Life and Death. Walker Percy asks all the questions; sadly, though, at the expense of an invigorating humanization of the issues they raise. Percy keeps telling us something is happening rather than simply letting it happen. project was funded by the National Science Foundation and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. BESIDE EXPANDING on the previously reported fossils, the team revealed evidence Monday that photosynthesis - the energy source of modern plants - may have begun 2.8 billion years ago. That's an especially crucial point in the history of life, since photosynthesis changed Earth's poisonous primordial atmosphere by releasing the oxygen that lets animals and humans exist. "We've gone beyond just saying these things existed," Schopf said. "Now we're trying to say something about the nature of these micro-organisms that once had the Earth all. to themselves. This is the first good, hard data that go back that far." The 15 top researchers, gathered from the United States, Australia, Canada, Germany and Puerto Rico to represent a variety of scientific disciplines, added at least 400 million years to the confirmed history of life. "A 2IASTERPIECE." 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