time from a dispenser. Then came butter chips, littlesaucers a tad larger than silver dollars, on which a patof butter was placed, and endless like the creamers.She plated dozens of sweet rolls and placed them in thepie case where they remained until pie replaced thembefore lunch. From blocks of ice she chipped hunks to fillthe ice chest, and then rolled over a hundred service setsin paper napkins, storing them on trays under the counter.By the time she got the restaurant ready for business, shefelt ready for a nap.Gus’s Taverna restaurant was near the Illinois CentralRailroad yard, but it was not the typical greasy spoonfound in industrial neighborhoods. Considered aninstitution on Halsted Street, it was a haven for loversof Greek cuisine as one sniff upon opening the doorrevealed. Bouquets of herbs and spices used in Greekcooking drifted over patrons along with the odor of anisefrom ouzo. If anyone doubted they were entering a Greekplace, a picture of a line of male dancers in fullThracian
Foustanella
greeted patrons.For Eva it was a blast working there. The people weregreat, and the patrons fascinating. In Chicago’s Greek townit was hard to get a job if you weren’t Greek, so she was3
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