U-Cellar recalls its radical conception By THOMAS HRACH Hundreds of students stage a sit- in at the LSA Building,, all because they want cheaper prices on their textbook purchases. One hundred and seven of those students are arrested while 1,000 rally outside to support their cause. The entire campus becomes engulfed in the controversy which pits students against the administration. Certainly this didn't happen in the 1980's. The year was 1969. This week commemorates the 15th an- niversary of that sit-in which spawned today's University Cellar bookstore. The formation of a student-run and non-profit bookstore in Ann Arbor has its roots in those tumultuous times of the late sixties and early seventies. THE SIT-IN and subsequent out- cry from the community after 'During that school ear there were rallies on the Diag at least four times a week over the student bookstore issue.' -Former student Bruce Wilson President Robben Fleming or- dered the demonstrators arrested 15 years ago is remembered today in the form of the modern store on Liberty Street just off the main campus. "During that school year there were rallies on the Diag at least four times a week over the student bookstore issue," said Bruce Wilson, a student at the time who helped post bail for those arrested. "There was going to be a Univer- sity-sponsored bookstore, but the sit-in occurred over who was going to control the store." Students of that era refused to accept control of the impending bookstore by the University. This set the stage for the confrontation 15 years ago. THE ORIGINS of a student-run textbook store that would sell books at a discount dates back to even the 1920's. According to Bruce Weinberg, manager of the store and an employee of the original store, issues of a University-spon- sored book distributor arose as a campus issue every several years. In July 1969, the regents voted down a proposal to form a store using a fee tacked on to tuition bills and later refunded to the students upon graduation. This set the scene for a major confrontation over the issue when students returned in the fall. "The University's argument against opening the store was that books lost money, and the regents didn't want to be in the business of competing against local merchan- ts," said Dennis Webster, manager of the U-Cellar until 1977. "On the other side there was a real misun- derstanding on the part of the students who envisioned major reductions in the costs of tex- tbooks." See U-CELLAR, Page 3 Sheriff's deputies approach the LSA Building in 1969 during the demonstration which led to the creation of the University Cellar. -Ninety-five Years - i ~n~j~j Lugubrious Of 1 1I A general downturn in today's Editorial Freedom t ic t t weather. Variably cloudy, chan- ce of showers, highs near 80 degrees. Vol. XCV, No. 16 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, September 23, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Battered Badgers fall, 20-14 Six turnovers key Wolverine triumph By MIKE MCGRAW If you ask Bo Schembechler, he'll say his defense made the big hits. Wisconsin's Larry Emery will tell you Michigan was lucky. WHATEVER the cause, the differen- ce in the Wolverines' 20-14 victory over a tough Wisconsin squad was six points and six turnovers. Yesterday's matchup was a game of give and take, with the Badgers doing all of the giving. In the first half, Wisconsin fumbled four times. Two of those miscues resulted in 10 Wolverine points and the others stopped Badger drives inside the Michigan 10-yard line. "I feel they were lucky," said Emery, who battered the Wolverine defense for 185 yards rushing. "We gained more yards on the ground. We ran the ball better. I think we're a better team than Michigan." BUT Schembechler refused to let the Wisconsin mistakes take away from his own team's performance. "We were lucky this week just like Washington was lucky last week," he said. "Nobody felt sorry for me when we turned the ball over (five times against the Huskies). We did hit them fairly hard today and some of them came up." The biggest hitter of the day for the Wolverines was sophomore cornerback Garland Rivers, who led the team in tackles with 12 and caused two of the fumbles. Rivers revealed that making the big play was part of the defensive game plan all week. "(The coaches) talked all this week about hitting with the top of the (shoulder) pad,' said the Canton, Ohio native. "'We visualized it and went out and got some turnovers." Wisconsin's generosity began on the opening kickoff. Michael Jones caught the ball for the Badgers, then fumbled it when hit by Tim Schulte. Al Bishop recovered for the Blue at the 10- yard line. The Wolverine offense couldn't move the ball, so Bob Bergeron came on and hit a field goal of 27 yards to give Michigan the lead just four plays into the- See WOLVERINES, Page 7 Sparkplug orris beats up Badgers By KATIE BLACKWELL The Michigan football media guide lists him as a mere 5-8, 179 pounder. But Bo Schembechler admitted that his brightest freshman recruit is really a mere 5-6/4, 175 pounds. JAMIE MORRIS is barely big enough to support his shoulder pads, yet the eighteen-year-old speedster proved that size is not all-important in the Big Ten. He gobbled up 138 yards on 28 Sef JAMIE, Page 7 Michigan tight end Sim Nelson celebrates in the endzone after scoring a second-quarter touchdown to give the Wolverines a 10-0 lead over Wisconsin. Doily Photo by DAN HABIB Michigan went on to beat the Badgers, 20-14. Linebacker Jim Melka is the Wisconsin player.° Ferraro Says GOP organized bn-aament NEW YORK (AP) - Democratic vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro said yesterday that if the Reagan-Bush campaign is or- chestrating efforts to harass her, "Why don't they come out and fight like men?" Ferraro declared there is clear evidence of an organized ef- fort to attack her with slurs that she says are "devastating." WHILE ADMITTING that she does not know whether the Reagan-Bush campaign is organizing the attacks, she said: "If all this stuff is true and they are organizing from the White House, why don't they come out and fight like men? We have a lot of issues to discuss." She made her remarks in a sidewalk news conference out- side her home in Queens before a day of campaigning in New Jer- sey and Washington. She had the campaign trail to herself yesterday, with President Reagan and Democratic challenger Walter Mondale both in Washington and Vice President George Bush at his private home in Kennebunkport, Maine. REAGAN DID take a verbal slap at Mondale in his regular paid weekly radio talk, defending his own refusal earlier this week to impose import quotas on steel and contending that such quotas would be "the wrong policy" of his Democratic opponent. "That kind of protectionism is my opponent's policy, and just like his tax increase, it's the wrong policy," Reagan said. ' He said his plan -to seek See FERRARO, Page 2 U.8. won 't leave Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - As the U.S. ambassador stood next to him with one arm in a cast, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Richard Murphy said yesterday that the suicide bom- bing of the U.S. Embassy annex will not scare the United States into pulling its diplomatic corps out of Lebanon. "We are not going home," Murphy told a news conference at U.S. Ambassador Reginald Bartholomew's heavily guar- ded residence in Yarze, an eastern suburb of Beirut. BARTHOLOMEW, injured in the bombing Thursday, ap- peared with his left arm in a cast and cuts visible over his left eyebrow and on his cheek and upper lip. Bartholomew told reporters danger is part of being a U.S. diplomat. "I think all of us, particularly all of here in Beirut, understand that," he said. At least nine people were killed in the bombing, including two American servicemen, when a suicide terrorist drove a van packed with explosives around widely spaced concrete speed barriers and through a volley of gunfire to within 20 feet of the annex, where it exploded. Sixteen Americans were wounded. "THE TERRORIST attack on Thursday morning did not succeed in what I consider to have been its intent and goal, which was to demolish the embassy and through destruction and killing, to so sap the will of the American government that we would decide it was no longer in our interest to main- tain a relationship, an official relationship, and an official presence in Lebanon," Murphy said. The bombing Thursday of the U.S. Embassy annex in east Beirut is seen by many as the latest proof of America's inability to play a positive role in Lebanon. It followed an embassy bombing last year, the destruction of American military headquarters last October, the withdrawal of U.S. Marines in April, and escalating battles between Druse and Shiite militiamen. By showing again how vulnerable Americans are here, the latest attack on the U.S. Embassy facility in east Beirut fur- ther lessens Washington's influence and underscores the inability of U.S. diplomats to function freely here. TODAY- Mirror mirror... GVEN THE CHOICE, ugly is probably not what the men of Indiana University of Pennsylvania would choose to be. Nobody asked them, however. But ce "Lisa Burnbach's College Book" handed out the ugliest men urize to UP, the campus has learned "but if this ugly label is what it takes for us to be known in California or Colorado, so be it. "If a potential applicant in New England hears of us only because of the ugly man and decides to look into the school further, I would say that is a positive thing," he said in a telephone interview. The university's budding "most ugly" craze also is popular among off-campus businesses in Indiana. At Calico's, an off-campus bar, manager Olam Pantalone held a Ugliest Male on Campus contest. Pantalone set up ballot boxes around campus and ran advertisements in The Penn, the student newspaper, announcing the 12 apple strudel today. Made from two tons of dough, sugar, cinnamon, and apples and baked in a 100-foot portable oven, the strudel will be topped off with 200 gallons of ice cream. The project is part of the seventh Culinary Festival, which also has produced the largest popcorn ball and lasagna, organizers said. Louis DiRubba, chairman of the Westchester and Lower Connecticut Chefs' Association, and Seymour Arkway, a construction com- pany president, will supervise volunteers who will mix and beat batter, spread apples and cinnamon, and watch the strudel bake for six hours. It will then be cut up and high and lines long, however Burghoff is only selling 31 of Radar's cuddly mascots from the long-running TV series. The bears are being sold in a fundraising and public awareness campaign for the Paralyzed Veterans of American, which works to research a cure for spinal core injury. Burghoff's brother is a Veteran confined to a wheelchair due to a spinal injury. I i i