The selling of a scandal By JEFF RISTINE W ASIILNGTON - BACK IN TIlE DAYS when one could mention the space program with- out eliciting a yawn or a scowl from most Amer- icans, every business with any connection to the man-in-space projects, no matter how tenuous, tried to claim a slice of credit for the success of NASA's moon landings. Advertisements in news- papers and magazines heralded the companies' role in the missions ("Write with the pen used by the Apollo 11 astronauts;"), as orange drink mak- ers and wrist watch manufacturers all tried to boost sales by linking themselves to a popular milestone in U.S. history. It may have worked. I remember eating Pills- bury's Space Food Sticks, probably the most vile, distasteful concoction of calories outside of saw- dust and water, for no better reason than their name and the rather dubious impression that Armstrong and Aldrin gobbled 'em down like popcorn at a movie. It's not just celebrity endorsement, a fairly common phenomenon of the Madison Avenue scene. It's the feeling that you're enjoying a product that made a Great Event possible, and that through some after-the-fact transference, you've helped make that event take place, too. It boosts your ego, maybe. Thus, it's only natur- al that the advertisers set their beady little sights on another newsmaking target for commercial exploitation: Watergate. 'N A SPECIAL MAGAZINE published by The Washington Post in honor of our 200th birth- day, nestled between a tribute to the transistor's role in the Bicentennial and a discussion of the atomic bomb's impact on U. S. scientists' public image, there's a half-page ad for the "Report- er's Note Book," an indispensible item of the journalist's trade, as any cub who ever pounded the police beat will tell you. The notebook, says the ad, has been "the ac- cepted standard for The Washington Post for many years" (a celebrity endorsement if I've ever heard one) and "played a supporting role in the movie 'All The President's Men'." There it is, folks. Now you can write in the the same spiral - bound notebooks Woodward and Bernstein needed to topple the Nixon admin- istration. Put pencil to pad with the same con- fidence and air of authority Robert Redford has assumed. You're using a notebook that helped change the course of modern history. And lest there be any doubt about it, right there on the cover is the official seal: "Reporter's Note Book". Can't beat that. With only a minor stretch of the imagination, one can envision the ways other businesses could exploit their favorable relationship to the na- tion's most embarrassing political scandal. The makers of the masking tape which the Cubans used to cover -the door lock at Watergate could claim they helped start the whole investigation -for what would have happened if there hadn't been enough tape to cover the edge of the door twice, the clue that brought the police in? A ND IF ONLY BOB Woodward would reveal where his midnight conversations with his mysterious source took place, the management could rename its structure "The Deep Throat Underground Parking Garage," and business would boom. Watergate - watchers would wallow without end if the makers of the carpet in the Lincoln Sitting Room of the White House would point out that you can kneel on it, pound your fists on it, and cry on it til your face turns blue. I've even got a motto for them: "Please don't ever tell anyone that we are not strong." It could all become rather tasteless, of course, but most commercials and advertisements are already insulting beyond comprehension. And until Richard Nixon hits the talk show circuit to plug his memoirs, it may be the only Water- gate we have to kick around. Daily Managing Editor Jeff Ristine is a Wasi- ington based intern for the Knight News'pair chain. The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Tuesday, July 13, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Stalling toward a strike IT IS HIGH TIME that the University and the Gradu- ate Employes' Organization (GEO) get down to the business of serious bargaining and resolve their contract dispute before the beginning of the fall term. The cam- pus hardly needs another convulsion like the strike of February, 1975. The sides have quibbled all summer long like two neighbors trying to decide who had the right to sit in the shade of whose tree. Trading salty language, neither side has shown willingness to approach the compromise it knows will be the inevitable result. The GEO. of course, would like nothing better than to stall the summer away until its rank-and-file returns to town to put pressure on the administraton. The longer it waits, the better its position. But the University has dragged its feel as well, playing its cards cautiously. Both sides are maneuvering for the best possible advantage, while ignoring tie fact that the fa ncy footwork, if con- tinued, will soon leave the undergraduates out in the cold. The GEC mist think of its members as well. A strike is the supreme tactic, no doubt, and the one most likely to win a favorable settlement. But the University's GSAs are paid little enouih now to get along in inflationary Ann Arbor: a strike several weeks long would be crip- pling for many. On the affirmative action dispute. the University is refusinz to put into the contract a matter it agreed to in the 1975 contract. It areues it does not want its hiring practices dictated by a labor contract. But why was Rob- ben Fleming willing to sign the 1975 Memorandum of Un- derstanding that agreed to exactly that sixteen months ago? On non-discrimination, the GEO claims to be hold- ing ot for a widening of the contracts's sexual prefer- ence clause. The clause s:ems sufficient already, and it is likely that the maneuver is a "bargaining chip," a token which the GEO will later give up with apparent great sacrifice when it had never counted it as very im- portant in the first place. Come now; move on to constructive bargaining be- fore the students suffer. A r y'~ * :lsi u{r9' ( w 0 141 uL 1HMILWAUKEEJOIUR Al 'Yoo hoe., evervbody.! Look at the starting; new :> discovery I just made~' -- - - - - ' .-,. - - - - - -