Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of the author. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1972 News Phone: 764-0552 Plastic food fiasco- "They paved paradise and put up a parking lot." -Joni Mitchell WITH THE RECENT renovations and "improvements" in the basement of the Union, the campus community has once again seen the fruits of the same tasteless and moronic mentality that razed a civil war landmark to build a contemptable plastic Geno's on the corner of State and Washington. In the name of progress (and incidently profit) the old Union cafeteria has been replaced with a shiny new hamsburger stand of the McDonald's and Geno's genre. The management of the Union has allowed Manimart Co. to construct the "Union Station" in the cellar and use the space to rip-off the community with poor quality food at outrageous prices. I At a time when the Union is slowly moving toward student management this is surely a serious step in the wrong direction; especially considering the fact that the Union put up $20,000 of the costs of the remodeling. Not that the old cafeteria was all that great. But it did provide a quiet, tasteful place to go, wih a variety of good food (not just burgers and fries) at reasonable prices. The Union Station with garish decor, Geno's-style production line service, sky-high prices and burger stand cuisine however, makes its predecessor quite desirable by comparison. A private enterprise like the Union Station has no place in a building which should concentrate on service to the campus community, rather than exploitation. STUDENTS AND FACULTY members should boycott the place in disgust but they probably won't. They won't because its easier to allow yourself to be exploited than to protest. That's what happened with Geno's and it's what allows places like that to survive. It's kind of sad. -CHRIS PARKS Today's Staff .. . News: Jan Benedetti, Dan Biddle, Carla Rapoport Editorial Page: Alan Lenhoff Photo technician: Denny Gainer Summer Staff EDITORIAL STAFF Da. Biddle, Jan Benedetti, Meryl Gordon, Jim Kentch, Lorin Lab.rdee, Alan Lenhoff (co-editor), Diane Levick Maynard, Chris Park, Carla Rapoport (co-editor) Marilyn Riley, Gloria Smith, Paul "'ravis, Ralph Vartabedian. 0 SPORTS STAFF Bob Anirews, Dan Borus, Elliat Legow. BUSINESS STAFF Andy Golling, Business Mgr.; Sherry Kstle, Circulation Mgr.; Karen Laakko, Classified Mgr.; Fran Scherger, Display Mgr.; Diane Carnevale, Supplement Mgr.; Elliott Legow, Deborah Whit- ing, Carol Wieck, Assistants PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF Denny Gainer. Rolfe Tessem, Gary Vilani, Jim Wallace. f II I l " o c e n "And now, back to the carmpaign ..-,-" Rumors inside the news ... as compiled by The Daily staff Aiming to please In the past, no political cam- paign has been complete with- out the voter pleasing "ethnic food tour". The smiling candi- date would trip from one neighborhood to another gob- bling pasta with the Italians, bagels with the Jews baclava with the Greeks, etc. But these are modern times, and George Sallade - Demo- cratic candidate for county prosecutor - has shown him- self to be the living refutation of the' old sying that "you can't teach an old dog new tricks." When his campaign rounds brought him to a Michigan Marijuana Initiative party re- cently, Sallade - a former Re- publican State Legislator - obligingly stepped up for a toke from a foot-long marijuana ci- gar. Sports grow, students pay Sports is big business, but none of your business dept. In an attempt to boost their season ticket sales above last year's 53,000 level, the Michigan Athletic Department has taken out ads in national magazines in- cluding Sports Illustrated, Time, Newsweek, U.S. News and World Report and Business Week. In addition, as the campaign gets in to high gear, ads are ap- pearing in Detroit area news- papers, and leaflets are being mailed to residents in Michigan's high-income suburban areas. Meanwhile, Don Canham, Uni- versity Athletic Director, contin- ues to act as if the athletic de- partment were a separate cor- poration that has no obligations to the University community. "User fees" are Canham's euphe- mism for saying that varsity ath- letic facilities just aren't for stu- dent use. The result is that students must The Sun By DAVID SINCLAIR YESTERDAY edition of The Daily contained an ad run by Sheriff's candidate Fred Pos- till to which we feel compelled to re.,ply. Sn essence, Fred Postill accuses the Sun and the Rainbow Peo- ples' Party, its publisher, of lying to its readers in order to "smear" Postill and thereby repay an al- leged debt for favors done by Harold Moon, a bailbondsman who is also a candidate for sher- iff in the Democratic primary. This is a serious charge, and one which se do not take lightly. Postill refers to an article its our July 21 issue which reports an incident wherein Postill as a Washtenaw County Sheriff's dep- uty fired several so-called "warn- ing" shots at a fleeing black AWOL. In his ad, he denies fir- ing these shots, attributes them to his partner Roy Couch, and ac- cuses the Sun of teaming up with Couch (who is now, we are told, a Harvey campaign manager) to distort the facts and lie to its readers. Our information consisted of a complete report of the incident, filed by Postill himself, not Couch, and given to us by a re- porter for another area newspa- per. In his report, Postill says he fired several shots, calling them 'warning shots." There is no mention of Couch emptying his pistol firing at the fleeing AWOL. Since the report is supplemented by follow - up reports detailing citizen complaints of ground-level damage in neighboring buildings caused by these "warning shots," we concluded, and continue to conclude, that the liberal Mr. Pos- till was trying his damnedest to nail the AWOL with his "warn- ing shots." Postill also says our article has him radioing to another deputy while giving chase. Actually, it reported that Postill radioed from his car while chasing the AWOL pay to use the University's ice rink, swimming pools, and golf course. The Michigan Stadium is open otnra very limited basis to intra-mnural teams, but only be- cause its Tartan Turf was in part purchased with student funds. But the real slap in the face is the operation of the University's Hoover St. tennis courts. During the summer the courts are oper- ated as a private tennis club. For $35 per season, you can use the courts, and you can take lessons from Varsity Tennis Coach Brian Eisner for $10 per half-hour. Ap- parently, no one seems very con- cerned that Eisner is using Uni- versity-owned courts for per- sonal profit. Canham claims the Athletic De- partment can do these things be- cause they are financially inde- pendent of the University. That's simply not true as the entire op- eration is based on the prestige gained by using the University's name to promote Canham's ex- pensively recruited varsity teams. In addition, Canham likes to for- get the $314,135 in student lees that the Athletic Department re- ceived last year. Onion and Orchids Onions go to The Detroit Free Press for its glaring nonsensi- tivity to the lettuce boycott sponsored by the United Farm Work e r s. Wednesday's Food Guide section was plastered with recipes, pictures and stor- ies on the leafy vegetable. Not one sentence in the nearly full page spread was devoted to the boycott. UFW supporters in Detroit probably wish the Free Press food editors would drown in their lettuce soup. Orchids go to Henry Johnson, new University VP for student services, who, in his other iden- tity as an Ann Arbor School Board member, has strongly supported the reinstatement of Forsythe Jr. High School Prin- cipal Fred Leonard, above the loud objections of many of his fellow board members. Sudden departure Don Tucker, McGovern's Michi- gan campaign director has been transferred to Connecticut. Some in the McGovern Camp are view- ing the action as a demotion, while other point to the standard practice of post-convention shifts. Leave a campaign director around a district for too long, they say, and he makes too many promises and too many enemies. Who's listening? Now that grand jury investi- gations of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War have begun in Detroit and other cities, local VVAW members fear their phone is tapped. Small beeps heard in the background dur- ing phone conversations have kept some of the group's straighter "professional-orient- ed" members away from the of- lice, sources claim. China scholars in vogue Being a professor can mean more than just teaching. For many University professors the job's main attraction may be a shot for a glamor position in the "big time" of the federal govern- ment. Perhaps the most handy at landing those big government jobs have been our highly touted China scholars. Political Science Prof. Rich- ard Solomon is currently plan- ning to return to campus follow- ing a one-year stint with Presi- dential globe trotter Henry Kis- singer. And colleague Alan Whiting, rumor has it, is on the inside track to be Secretary of State if. George McGovern wins in No- vember. responds to Postill in another car, enjoining depu- ties up ahead to fire on the flee- ing AWOL. Postill's lying in the Daily ad just reinforces our view of him and of his candidacy. Postill's al- legations about the Sun's honesty and motivation in reporting his past history indicate he will stop at nothing in the way of pole- cat politics in order to promote himself to a position of power. AS A POINT of fact, the Sun and the Rainbow Peoples' Party have viewed Postill with suspi- cion since he asnounced his can- didacy. His liberal mouthings, seen in light of his two solid yearstas a good Harvey deputy, si- lent to ansy wrong-doing except those issues addressed by the un- ion question, did not ring true anid prompted us to investigate. The results tend to confirm the deceit we suspected: that Pos- till was, and remains, a typically Harvey - styled aggressive, racist, inhumane cop who has to settle with Harvey, his former boss, a big personal grudge that has ab- solutely nothing to do with the rights of citizens, equal enforce- ment of the laws, or anything like that. And that grudge will be settled, according to Postill's plan, by duping liberals and young peo- ple with a cynically-contrived platform based not on conviction but on what looked most likely to appeal to liberals and newly-en- franchised youth. WE WOULD LIKE to point out that "Fred Postill's Reply to the Sun" was received by the Sun In the form of a letter, without the desperate accusations Postill makes in his ad, and that it does, ,in fact, appear in its 'entirety in' issue No. 37 of the Sun, which will be out tomorrow (August 41, along with our response to it. We would also like to point out that we have received additional reports, pone of which came from Mr. Couch, that Postill brutally beat a handcuffed prisoner near a deserted gravel pit, that he fired his pistol again in a brawl at the Schwabin Inn, and that he used to boast of carrying two blackjacks while on duty at the jail. Finally, we owe nothing to Har- old Moon, and Postill's report of remsarks to that effect msade by our representative is a lie. Moon is a bondsman who has made money bonding people out of jail, among thenm members of the RPP. We, like lots of friends and oth- ers like us, have paid for our bonds. OUR SUPPORT of Harold Moon is based on his platform, which is progressive to the point where we can endorse it enthusi- astically, and on the fact that Moon's history, unlike the other candidates including Postill, is not one of brutality and arro- gance, but rather that of a small capitalist who has at least done continuous business with youth and minorities in a manner be- speaking some respect for human rights and dignity. We have sup- ported him as the best candidate in a race that demands the un- seating of Harvey by someone other than a rubber-stamp rep- lica in disguise. David Sinclair is Chief of Staff for the Rainbow People's Party, the publisher of the Ann Arbor Sun. The Editorial Page of The :Michigan Daily is open to any one who wishes to submit articles. Generally speaking, all articles should be less than 1,000 words. A