Yellow Rose

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The "Yellow Rose" was submitted by Scott Ash some time ago. I am not sure where it will be placed, but it is a great example of a great submission, especially if you don’t want to design and detail an entire station section.

Yellow Rose Tavern

The Yellow Rose Tavern is the largest establishment of it's kind on La Salle Station, and the one place every resident visits at least once during their stay. The management prides itself in hiring only sapient labor. However, only humans have applied so far. Additionally, The Yellow Rose aspires to give every patron what it calls "true Texas hospitality." This has made it popular with AusCo employees from Texas and her colonies, as well as Texaphiles assigned to or visiting the station.

Occupying a 10mx15m segment of one of La Salle's residential and recration sections, The Yellow Rose can easily handle up to 600 seated patrons, and often has at least 200 others standing or dancing when popular musicians are on board. Using materials from Kwantung, the outside of the building is made to look like an old South Texas mission.

Inside can be found many articles of Texana, from neon Lone Star and Shiner beer signs of the late 20th century, to excellently- crafted murals showing scenes of Texas history and natural beauty from Earth as well as her colonies. All of the furniture within the tavern are made of woods shipped from Earth, and those portions of the walls that don't have murals have wooden siding sent from Texas' colony on Heidelshiemat.

Along the trailing wall beginning at the far wall of the interior office is a 10m long bar 1m from the wall. The human bartenders serve all the drinks from behind this bar, for either patrons at the bar or to waitstaff taking drinks to their customers at the tables. Drinks served at The Yellow Rose are not filled to the top, else coriolis effect will spill the upper centimeter of liquid onto the bar and the bartender's aprons. For this reason the management chose to place the bar to trailing, as opposed to spinward.

The back third of the tavern has a polished hardwood dance floor and 1m high stage for the various musicians that have played The Yellow Rose. Behind the stage suspended from the ceiling is a large Texas flag. This has kept many patrons from throwing drinks at the stage at unpopular acts, as Texans don't take very kindly to any desecration of their   national emblems.

The upper floor contains a small restaurant, VRcade, and meeting room which can be divided into three separate sections. Specializing in a diverse range of Texan cuisines, the restaurant offers customers choices including tex-mex, barbeque, and viet-mex, the latter developed into it's own style during the over three hundred years of Vietnamese influence in Texas, distinct from the foods of Indochina.

In short, for a true taste of Texas in the Tau Ceti system, La Salle Station recommends a visit to The Yellow Rose Tavern.

First Floor

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Second Floor

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Michael Lopez:
Mike Lopez has put a lot of effort into building the Yellow Rose Tavern into what it is today. He grew up in Round Rock, the center of Texas' information technology industry north of Austin, and attended the University of Houston's College of Hospitality. While at  UH, he excelled in his studies of hotel and restaurant management and gained a keener interest in the history and culture of his country. Following his graduation, Lopez took a position with America's GoodRest hotel chain, a Trilon subsidiary, and had in ten years worked his way into being the manager for the New Adolphus Hotel in Dallas. While under GoodRest's employ he set aside much of his salary, intending to build his own place, and waiting for the right time to do so. When AusCo announced the building of La Salle station, on a whim Lopez approached the station planners about the possiblity of opening a small bar/restaurant to serve the needs of the construction crew and management. It came as a surprize to him when AusCo not only accepted his proposal, but eagerly offered to support the venture. Therefore, among the first buildings erected within La Salle Station was Mike Lopez's Yellow Rose Tavern. His keen business sense and sincere like of people has made the Yellow Rose one of the highlights of a visit to La  Salle.
Motivations: Heart four, diamond 3. Mike Lopez genuinely likes people and enjoys what he considers a labor of love. This labor is also very lucrative for him, and he meticulously watches costs. However, Lopez also lives by the axiom "the customer comes first," and will happily bend over backward to make his customers happy.

 

 

 

Arleen Burnett:
Arleen is the newest waitress hired at The Yellow Rose, having recently completed her secondary education within the station. She grew up with her mother, a computer operator working for Station Authority's Computer Operations department, and has lived at the station since her mother was posted here from El Paso three years ago. With her  vivid blond hair, youthful and innocent personality, and eagerness to please at her new job, she has become the object of attraction for the young bachelors of the station. Burnett, however, is beginning to see the effect she has on young male patrons, and has chosen to wear more revealing clothing. Since that decision, her tip take has risen dramatically, and she fully expects to earn enough to return to El Paso and resume her education by the end of the year. Ultimately she hopes to become a teacher, and serve children in remote outposts such as La Salle.
Motivations: Jack Heart, diamond two. While it may seem that Arleen Burnett is an innocent young lady, anyone who converses with her will quickly notice a "wisdom beyond her years." Her desire to earn her way through college has become her paramount concern, however. This in no way detracts from her determination and foresight to carry through with her plans for life, and will not allow herself to deviate from that path, regarless of any offers made to her.

 

 

 

Robert Joseph Harris:
Bobby Joe Harris is the main bartender at The Yellow Rose, and the husband of the tavern's assistant manager, Katie Tran. Bobby Joe until his current job served with Texas' Army for twenty-five years, accepting retirement at La Salle Station. Wishing a quiet life, for the most part he serves drinks and advice to patrons, but seems disinterested in getting involved in anything himself. Harris does, however, take a hard line towards those who become belligerent, abusive, or obnoxious while he's on duty, and has on several occasions ejected patrons from The Yellow Rose using what some would consider excessive force. One thing patrons will notice right away: while he can pour a beer or a drink with unnatural skill, Harris will under no circumstances drink any himself. Unknown to all but his wife, it was as a result of a two-day bender on Austin's World that forced Harris to take retirement, in lieu of court-martial. It is rumored that during this time he placed two Texas Military Policemen in the hospital and less-seriously wounded three others in their efforts to subdue him. Harris stands nearly 2m tall, and masses 110 kg, not one bit of it fat. Since arriving at La Salle station, he hasn't consumed a drop of  alcohol, and intends for everyone's sake to remain clean.
Motivations: Club jack, club 6. Bobby Ray Harris is what can be considered a "violent drunk," who becomes a violent, abusive man once he begins drinking. Now that he's sober, Harris is a very kind, soft-spoken gentleman, who will still happily remind unruly patrons NOT to mess around on his watch, often with bruises. He knows his limits there,  however, and no complaint by ejectees has ever had an effect on Mike Lopez's confidence in Harris.

 

 

 

 

Kathy Tran:
Kathy Tran is the wife of Bobby Ray Harris, and a native of Houston's Little Saigon neighborhood. A city girl from birth, the wisdom and inner strength she gained as an Army wife is an asset that Mike Lopez uses to the fullest, which has helped in making The Yellow Rose the success it is. It was at her insistance Tran and her husband moved

to La Salle, believing a quiet, distant outpost in the Tau Ceti system would provide a peaceful life for the both of them. Tran loves her husband very much, and while she misses the excitement of the city, she has no desire to return to Houston, their common home town. Where her husband is large, she is small, a dimunitive Asian woman  standing no more than 1.5m high. However, her own adult life has given her a "thousand-yard stare" equal in intensity to that of her husband.

Motivations: Queen heart, diamond 4. Kathy Tran is utterly devoted to her husband, and will do anything to protect him, even from himself. Her greatest fear is that he will start drinking again, and does all she can to subtly remind him of his pledge to remain sober.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright 1998 by the La Salle Station Working Group
For problems or questions regarding this web contact redroach@flex.net.
Last updated: July 04, 1999.