The
Proper Plate
By Alan Cohen
When Rev. Roger Teel, minister of the
Mile Hi Church of Religious Science in Denver, was a shy and
awkward-feeling high school senior, his father encouraged him to take a
date to the senior prom. Roger’s dad even offered to pay for a corsage
for a young lady as well as dinner at a fine restaurant. Nervously,
young Roger asked one of his classmates to the prom, and to his happy
surprise, she accepted.
Finally the big night came and Roger
picked up the girl at her home. She looked ravishing! He took one look
at her bare shoulders graced by a spaghetti-strap dress, and his knees
grew weak. Somehow Roger maintained his decorum and the two drove to the
restaurant, staring straight ahead, speaking hardly a word. Apparently
the girl was as nervous as he was!
At the restaurant, the young lady ordered
scallops and Roger ordered a steak. When the entrées arrived, Roger,
still feeling uptight, reached to cut his steak, and something horrible
happened his knife slipped and the steak flew off the plate, right past
his date’s spaghetti-strapped shoulder, and onto the floor! (It was
one of those events one watches in slow motion, with just enough time to
think, "I can’t believe this is really happening!") Young
Roger, of course, felt completely mortified, at an utter loss about what
to say. Here he is on his first big date with a knockout babe, and he
blew it right out of the chute!
Before he could think of what to say, the
maitre d’, who had watched the entire episode, dashed to the table.
"I am so sorry, sir," he blurted out, terribly apologetically,
with the errant beef, now napkin-covered, in hand. "The chef placed
your entrée on the wrong kind of plate. It would have slipped out of
anyone’s hands. Please accept my apology. I’ll get a replacement for
you immediately." A few minutes later a waiter returned with a new
steak — on a different colored plate — and made a big deal about the
order now being on the appropriate "steak plate."

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