European Stars and Stripes (Newspaper) - November 17, 1985, Darmstadt, Hesse Sunday november 17, 1985 the stars and stripes Page 9 club management class gets cooking 42 of army s Europe Sfax ers get Fife Bene ifs of Gar Mistri course by Charlie Bowden Munich Bureau Garmisch Germany army clubs in Europe will soon Benefit from the first exported version of the army s club management course being attended by42 club surfers. The course is usually taken in residence at fort Benjamin Harrison ind. But it was boxed up and brought to Europe at the request of senior army offi Cial m Europe. Maj. Richard Kubiak course director brought nearly a ton of course materials for the course. Arc s american Steak House became the student Laboratory and the old sport shop became the class room. It was hectic for a while Kubiak said but it Al worked the indent All civilians and most relatively new to club management were greeted at the Start in october with some so pounds of reference materials. Subjects include customer relations financial management menu development nutrition food controls and marketing. The highlight of the classroom work is a computerized simulation exercise developed by Cor Nell University where students manage on computer n restaurant. Most go broke Kubiak said. But they learn from their mistakes and rarely repeat in the fourth week of the nine week course the p is split into two groups. One group enters the enhancement program an intensified introduction to the culinary arts while the other group continues with the academic portion of the course. It is during the food enhancement phase that Stu dents Don White apron and hat or White shirt and Bow tie and practice what s been preached about food preparation table setup and customer service. It also gives the prospective club manager an appreciation of what the staff goes through in both the Sis Pawlo by Charllis Bowin Charlemagne Tertulien slices elites for exam front and Back end operation of a club. The goal is not to make them Good Cooks chefs or waiters said Sec. Edward Boda who handles instruction on the front end operation of an Ideal club. The manager needs to know what the people working in the club go through in their particular during the 11 Days of the food enhancement pro Gram students prepare 13 meals from soup and Sand Wiches to mongolian Barbecue. The dining room is set up 13 different ways. The dining room must look Good the atmosphere must be just right or people won t come Back body said. Often it s Little things that make the difference and Boda stresses that Point to his student waiters and waitresses As he rushes from one table to another and passes along hints or instructions shortly before a Stu Dent prepared meal is served. Don t handle glasses except by the Stem he tells one student. You ii get fingerprints All Over them. Make sure the fluid Levels Are All the same he tells another who is filling glasses. Food preparation the Back end of club operation is guided by chief warrant officer John Mclean with 25 years experience managing clubs around the world. Mclean wearing a chefs hat guides the Stu dents like a Maestro waving first one Way then another As he conducts the Kitchen symphony that will soon Grace the restaurant s tables. Students arc tested daily. In food enhancement the test is the noon meal. To spice it up and to get a better idea of the results Kubiak invites guests from the Garmisch Community. By graduation about Iso out siders mostly enlisted soldiers will have dined on the students meals. The idea Kubiak said is to get an outside critique on the effectiveness of the course. Final exam is what Kubiak described As a seven course Fine dining experience Complete with Candle Light soft music and non alcoholic red and White wines. And guest diners sgt. Patricia Davis and spec. 4 Mike Wendel thought it was just that Fine dining. I just wish something similar was available in All the clubs Wendel said. If these students have their Way when they return to their clubs it will be. Meese accuses High court of Chameleon jurisprudence Washington a firing another Salvo in a growing debate Over now the supreme court should interpret the Constitution attorney general Edwin Mcnese has decried Chameleon jurisprudence Chang ing color and form in each Meese who has been pressing for greater judicial restraint in interpreting the Constitution on the basis of its words and the intentions of the founding fathers renewed that pitch Friday despite criticism directed his Way from some judicial Legal and con Gressional quarters. La a speech to the District of Columbia chapter of the federalist society lawyers division he said it is amazing How to much of what passes for social Ana political Progress is really the undoing of the old judicial occur when the principles of specific constitutional provisions such As those contained in the Bill of rights Are taken by some As invitations to read into the Constitution values that contradict the Clear language of other provisions Meuse said. Any True approach to constitutional interpretation must respect the document in All its parts and be faithful to the Constitution in its he maintained. Launching his Campaign in a july 9 speech to the american bar association Meese said the Reagan administration would press for a jurisprudence of original intention meaning it wanted justices to follow the original meaning of Constitution Al provisions As the Only reliable guide to interpreting the Constitution. In his latest speech Meese said an activist jurisprudence one which anchors the Constitution Only on the consciences of the jurists is Chameleon jurisprudence changing color and form in each while the attorney general acknowledged the Constitution is not a legislative code bound to the time in which it was written nearly 200 years ago he also said neither however is it a Mirror i ply reflects the though who stand before that Sim its and ideas of those Meese however seemed to be trying to deflect attention from himself As a principal player in the hotly contested debate. Caricatures and Straw men As one customarily finds even in the greatest of de Bates have made appearances he said. There is a great temptation among those who View this debate from the outside to see in it a clash of personalities a bitter Exchange. But we and our distinguished opponents carry on the old tradition of free uninhibited and vigorous Mcnese reiterated the administration s View that the proper role of supreme court justices is to interpret the Constitution not to make new Law or Law which the founding fathers never contemplated under the Guise of making the document adaptable to changing circumstances. The framers intended the legislative Branch with its authority to make Laws to carry out that responsibility he said. Meese set off the current debate Over constitutional interpretation in his july Aba speech when he argued that justices must hew closely to the intent of the founding fathers in interpreting the 10th Amend ment. That amendment reserved for the states Powers not specifically granted to the Federal government. Some took that to mean Meese was advocating that the Bill of rights should not be applied to the states. Terry Eastland Meuse s chief spokes Man said the attorney general has never advocated such a position. Eastland said the attorney general has said Only that the doctrine of incorporation of the states into the Bill of rights has been expanded in recent times. Although Meese has said the doctrine rests on a shaky foundation he has never advocated its repeal Eastland said. Meese s statements have triggered a controversy in the Legal Community and Indi rect criticism by supreme court justices As Well As accusations from some in Congress that he is trying to reshape the Constitution. Fugitive nazi suspect reportedly arrested in Argentina Buenos Aires up one of the world s most sought after suspected nazi fugitives has been Mied in a Luh Srb of Bueno varies a High ranking official of the Argentine Federal police announced Friday. The 72-year-old suspect believed by police and Diplo Mats to be former is Gestano officer Walter Kutschman reportedly uses the name of Pedro Ricardo Olmo. Kutch Minn is accused of taking part in an operation that lulled hos jews Poland ask dirt of a plan to exterminate 5 000 University professors and intellectual Leaden. Naturally he denies his real identity and says he i Pedro Ricardo Miguel Angel fre Guisa. Chief of investigations of the Argentine Federal police said. He denies it but he is Kutschman. It took a Long investigation to find him and several times he escaped changing his Deguisa said that Kutschman was arrested thursday in the Buenos Aires suburb of Florida on the request of inner pol the International police. West Germany has asked for Kutschman s extradition on charges of War crimes. Diplomatic sources have Long contended that Olmo is in fact Kutschman. The suspect was detained by authorities in Miramar Argentina on nov. 18, 1983, but he was released after convincing judge Enrique Carlos sch excl that there was not enough evidence to show that his real identity was Kutschman. At the time of ourm i release Argentina was in the closing month of military Rule. A democratic government was installed on dec. 10,1983. Olmo to prove his identity carried a Spanish passport dated nov. 29, 1950, but he disappeared after his Miramar arrest. A diplomatic source said the interrogation of Olmo by Schlegel was perfunctory and added we think Olmo is really nazi Hunting specialist Simon Wiesenthal a decade ago pointed to Argentina and said there at the end of the world you will find the criminal press reports say that Kutschman born in Dresden commanded an is execution squad that killed 20 jewish professors and 18 other persons in Poland in july of 1941. He subsequently became commander of the Gestapo in Tarnopol and Bryn Zeny both now cities in the soviet Union. At the end of world War ii Kutschman is believed to have fled to France and later to Spain with the help of Odessa the underground nazi escape organization. He became an Argentine citizen in 1950
