16 Friday, April 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan Better restaurants . . . From page nine restaurant have been indicative of the fine Italian cuisine within. Spicy and exotic pizzas include smoked oyster, Portuguese Linguica and Toronto Delight. Even beverages and desserts have a touch of the exotic. Mau Mau, malt liquor with a twist of lemon or lime, and peanut butter are served here are unique in Lawrence. Store and panelled walls, two fireplaces, stained glass windows and lamps, hanging plants and drapping candles mimick an Italian café. Artwork, including oils, prints and watercolors, adds a cultural atmosphere to the restaurant. AZTEC INN, 807 Vermont-Mexican dishes worthy of a hat dance are found at the Aztec Inn, a restaurant that goes out of its way to serve more than the usual Mexican treats. A reliano, an amuse-like meal wrapped around green peppers, is one such item. All are moderately priced. These are a favorite among faithful regulators. The food is accented by a decor that features booths engulfed in Marian hats and headpieces. hanging wooden logs. Lively Mexican music completes the germine atmosphere The restaurant opens at 11 a.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. ROYAL PEKING RESTAURANT, 711 W. King Street, apportioned to *Good Chinese food in the area*. *Chinese folklore provides unique eating for Royal Peking customers.* The menu includes egg rolls, fried dumplings, Won Ton chicken and chicken and Buddhist delight vegetables. A Special President's Dinner, which costs $9 and features dragon phoenix soup, Peking duck, chicken with walnuts, royal fish, Peking dumping and toffee apples, is an authentic duplication of the royal dinner. The president Richard Nixon in Peking in 1972. Intricately decorated Chinese bowls are displayed in a glass case. Chinese lanterns hang from the ceiling and three large and colorful Chinese prints dominate the walls. CORNUCOPIA, 1601 Massachusetts St. — Cornucopia exists for the first time in its garden of its salad bar, which includes garnishes such as raw broccoli and cauliflower. sunflower and seame seeds, beets, bean salad, lemon garlic, sweet pickled medicks and cherry peppers. An equally impressive fruit bar has fresh melon balls, blueberries, strawberries, peaches, pineapple slices and raspberries. Cornuphia is a vegetarian's utopia with nine kinds of crepes and more than 20 kinds of omelets. A hot sauce omelet suggests the Cornuphia's ability to please even the most fussy customers. The 10 types of beril teas are more favorites of Cornuphia's regular customers. Cornacopia is open daily from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. VILLAGE INN PANCAKE HOUSE RESTAURANT, 821 Iowa—Appetites craving breakfast at the crack of dawn can go to the Villa Inn. The restaurant seats 200 and offers 16 types of pancakes, a complete menu of breakfasts and other meals. Swedish pancakes and good coffee are two of the many delicious treats. Broiled meat dishes and french fries appeal to many dinner and lunch customers. Although the interior of Village Inn is rather simple, it's bright and busy, a must for a restaurant that opens daily at 6 a.m. JACK'S GOAL, POST, 1909 Massachusetts St.—Pretty much a hangout for Haskell students, this place will soon be changing its name to "Trail's End." From page 14 Town taverns JAYHAWK CAFE, 1340 Ohio St. “Let's go to the hawk,” we take a phrase familiar to freshmen—especially GGS-Corbian for blunty, the Hawk is a place for a pickup. Usually an evening's worth of barbishing can be accomplished between the Hawk and the Wagon Wheel Cafe, if you don't mind. Don't miss the Count around Hallowen. JOHNNY'S, across the Kaw River bridge—The first stop in a true Mass. Street run, Johnny's is a sit-down bar for poolhouses, workers and rednecks. Occitement. "I Like Beer" is the jukebox favorite. casionally a Greek function finds its way to you, to the amazement of regulars who seem to have never seen so much ex-LONGBRANCH SALOON. 1009 Massachusetts St.-All has been quiet since December. The clientele is a recent resident. The clientele remains the same. Formerly the Voo Doo Hut, the Longbranch is carpeted but decor is run-of-the-mill. --and MARY RINTOUL Staff Reporters Bon appetit! LOUISIE'S WEST, 1307. W 7th St. - Happy hour here is from 3 to 3:30 p.m. The atmosphere is folky, included of courses are tennis, volleyball, disc golf and club shuffleboard, baseball and the usuals. THE LOUNGE, Ninth and Iowa streets—This is the bar at the Hillcrest Billiards, a popular place. A fair amount of students go there to drink and play on either quarter pool tables or those that cost 60 cents an hour. MOTHER'S, 2406 Iowa St. — This unique building, built in 1935 as a house, is one of the more attractive bars in Lawrence. A few isolated booths make it ideal for dates; the atmosphere is relaxed and laid-back. There's original artwork for wall decor, and two large windows provide for those wanting a few cold ones after a long day on their favorite Kansas skis slope. PURPLE pig, 610 W. 23rd St.-Female bartenders serve beer in this former Kawasaki motorcycle salesroom. Some customers, when interviewed, emphasized this was definitely the working man's place, since it looks like a man's face there are sandwiches and pecked turkey gizzards (40 cents). It's been open since December. Wooden floor slats, gungy sand walls and down home country music provide a more authentic atmosphere for the dheel cowboy. The quarter draws are gone, but there still is fresh popcorn and red beer. On Mondays, unpromoined QUANTRILL'S. 715 Massachusetts St.— STABLES, 1401 W. Seventh St.-Ol- din, and steeped in traditions of Bud- weiser, the Stables has a crowd that is young and semi-Greek, but it certainly can’t stereotype as such. However, it can be styled with crowds and crowded and boisterous and rowdy. VAN LUECK TAVERN NO. 6, 1830 W. Sixth St. - This pub just recently changed management. it's pretty much a redneck crow now, though some grad students hold "seminars" there weekly. High score on pinball for the week earns a free six-pack. WAGON WHEEL CAFE, 507 W. 14th. If you're a regular, you no longer go TGIFing on Friday's, but "to wheel and deal." Card play, an occasional Coors man with free beer and general celebration of the week being over make a Friday at the theater or the grocery store for a bathroom, the Wheel has had problems with customers who use people's yards. There now is a fenced-in courtyard, which keeps the natives from getting too restless. New menus tempting By JEWELL WILLHITE If you hate making decisions, don't get hungry in Lawrence. In the past two years 13 new restaurants have opened, bringing the total number of Lawrence restaurants to more than 50. While some of the new restaurants are dining in other locations, restaurants, others offer unique dining experiences in both food and atmosphere. OLD CARMENTER Hall Smokehouse, 101 Massachusetts St., is one of only two Lawrence restaurants featuring hickory smoked barbecue. It offers a complete menu of both sandwiches and dinners and another unique treat, frozen yogurt. If you want both atmosphere and barbecue, the Smoketown is for you. On one interior wall the original rough limestone tiled tables are located on three levels, the tuned tables are located on three levels, The Smokehouse is heated and airconditioned from shiny black exposed pipes near the ceiling. More than 100 old metal advertising signs decorate the walls. IT IS OWNED by Robert Schumur who also owns the Bull and Boar, the Massachusetts Street Delicatessen and the New Yorker. People fortunate enough to find the small unpretentious G's say the food is good and tastes good. To Mickey Galloway, owner of G's Barbecue, $30 W. 23rd St., good food means barbecue, hickory smoked the way his father did it back on a Mississippi plantation. G's Barbecue offers both sandwiches and dinners. For variety without meat, try St. Isean Kettle Cafe, 1347 Massachusetts St. St. Isean Kettle caters to vegetarians, especially the fish caters. For more information about under $1, the menu also includes vegetarian soups, salads, sandwiches and main dishes. Food is reasonably priced and the prices are reasonable. THE HARVEST, in the Marketplace at 8th and New Hampshire streets, has both sandwiches and full meals. The menu, posted outside the restaurant, shows reasonable prices. However, when ordering desserts at the sandwich, you won't get a meal. If you like Chinese food, try Cathy, located in Lawrence's newest shopping center, the Holiday Plaza at 25th and Iowa streets. Lunch costs $2.00 and includes soup, a choice of one of three entrees, fried rice and tea. The dinner menu is extensive and features 12 beef dishes, 12 poultry dishes, 7 pork dishes and 16 fish dishes. Prices range from $3.50 to $4.50. THERE IS also a vegetarian menu as well as dinners for two with five different foods for $7.50. Dinner for four features seven different foods for $15. If you want a sandwich and you're tired of hamburgers, Daqwudg's Sandwich Shop, 645 Massachusetts St., offers 300 com- mands, six hot plates and side orders including fried mushrooms. PRIVATE'S COVE, at 6th and Main streets, is a seafood place you'll want to miss. The batter fried fish is excessively hot and the round are round dals of fried mashed potatoes. The Malls Sandwich Shoppe and Dell at 23rd and Louisiana serves both hot and cold sandwiches with chips and pickle. They also sell assorted salads and desserts. Most customers order food to go, but there are several small tables. Restaurants in Lawrence are almost all located on four streets: Sixth, Iowa, 23rd and Massachusetts streets. No matter which area of town you are in, whether you want a sandwich or a meal, atmosphere or there's a restaurant to be discovered. The winning combination . . . You and fashions from Open Thurs. 6:30 8:30 the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts --for when you want to relax and really enjoy your meal Level2 (Closed Saturdav) BACK A WINNER! Refresh Yourself at One of Our Five Restaurant Facilities Team up with Another Winner The Kansas Union! THE DELI Hearty sandwiches made to order Level 3 THE CAFETERIA A complete menu featuring daily specials Level3 THE PRAIRIE ROOM Build your own lunch with our garden fresh vegetables and home-made soups. Level 3 (Closed Saturday) THE SOUP 'N SALAD BAR THE HAWK'S NEST Self-service for when you're in a hurry. Level 12 Browse at One of the Bookstores A bookstore and much more — Campus headquarters for the largest selection of official Jayhawk gifts and souvenirs. Level2 KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE OREAD BOOKSHOP Thousands of titles from fiction to philosophy, cooking to cooking Level 3 Weekdays 8:30 a.m.—5:00 p.m. Saturday, Apr. 23 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. See a Movie! THE STORY OF ADELE H. Fri. & Sat., Apr. 22 & 23 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. $1 (students only) Woodruff Auditorium Level 5 V Not crime deal jails. A count Lawr worst Wit of the were