w w w w w w w w w V V I Nw IW ,w w vw w _W w w I BEST BUSINESSES ~I C c C v '. CQe: o , Ished ' fed carcosti & priced right! b a ©hot p v leath 4 ' MAST'S Downtown Campus 'f,7 C Aft AiN Th6 T9 i EW ng )rey ,hite pink ther (Continued from Page :7) BEST BOOKSTORE Border's Servicing the diverse Ann Arbor community isn't an easy job; but Bor- der's manages to do just that with two expansive floors of books. Bestsellers are discounted. Hard-to-find books are hunted down. And the service is exceptional. Border's is the place for books that aren't "assigned reading." BEST USED BOOKS David's Besides having the best wall mural, David's also has the best used books. With its quiet atmosphere, friendly help, and roped-off girlie magazines, David's is a book hunter's delight. It was a close race however, as David's barely beat out such book store Goliath's as the U-Cellar and Ulrich's. The Dawn Treader Book Shop also sailed to a respectable showing. BEST CANDY STORE Drake's Home of the Martian Room, Drake's has dominated this category since the dawn of the BoA=, and will continue to do so as long as its doors remain open. There are many fine sweet shops in town, but it's hard to compete with Drake's dynamite displays, and the cheerful green-and- black decor. And if you haven't had a lime phosphate yet, you haven't lived. Don't let the color fool you-it only looks like antifreeze. Yum. BEST TRAVEL AGENT Conlin Conlin Travel is the choice of the Ann Arbor jet set. The agency didn't fly away with the competition however. Colin, Great Places, and Boersma all were in a dog fight for first place. But, in the end the Conlin line landed the most votes. BEST ARCADE Mickey Rat's Was it any surprise? Mickey Rat's has the look, feel, and smell of a real arcade. Cigarets, popcorn, leather jackets, high schoolers, video sharks-they're all there. And like any true pinball arcade, Rat's is on a second floor storefront, hovering just above civilization. Continued on next page couraging Rep. Carl Pursell (R- Michigan) to vote against aid to the Nicaraguan Contras. BEST MUD-SLINGING CAMPAIGN The Walls of the Michigan Student Assembly's offices were covered with verbal mud after this year's MSA elections. MSA candidates resorted as low as making accusations ranging from being Marxist to exploiting a penguin. The campaigning began when members of the Student Rights party decided to uphold the (copy) rights of Opus, the penguin in Bloom County. The Meadow party had used a picture of the penguin on their cam- paign posters, but their opposition argued that this had violated copyright laws. The Meadow party then received permission from the parent company to use Opus, triggering the next round of ac- cusations. The Meadow Party, seizing on signatures of Students Rights Par- ty candidates on a membership list of a Marxist study group, demanded to know their opponents political af- filiations. Students Rights candidates denied that they were members of the group, saying they only signed to give the group enough names to receive MSA funding. An MSA Vice- Presidential candidate, under the scathing pressure of these ac- cusations, finally admitted to being "Marxist," when he revealed a t-shirt depicting that great defender of the proletariat, Groucho Marx. BEST POLICE SURVEILLANCE OF PROTESTERS Students protesting a buildup of nuclear weapons are dangerous folk. V They have these signs, and you never know when someone might pull out a joint and set fire to campus. So when about a dozen students decided to go home, after protesting recruitment by Livermore Laboratories, a major defense contractor, police followed their bus back to central campus. The protesters got off the bus, walked through East Engineering building, through Angell Hall, across the Daig, and finally to University President Harold Shapiro's office - with a trail of Ann Arbor police and campus security officers in hot pursuit. Shapiro later issued a statement apologizing for the actions. BEST '60s RE-HASH When the Bell Tower bonged twelve this April Fool's Day, about 130 people turned out to light up a joint in honor of Ann Arbor's lenient $5 pot law. The crowd was the largest in three years for the annual celebration, known as the "Hash Bash." Lasy year, no one had shown up. "It's a return to ex- cellence," said "Barry," an LSA senior. Norm-andie Flowers 1104 S. UNIVERSITY 996-1811 Sweetheart WITH THIS COUPON (Good until 5/1/86)' "ne p"""m"p" GLASS: Including Solid Tints, O Pastic LensesandE Compare at $ $5C Your choice from a large selection Examination not included. Up to CONTA( Bausch & Lomb Sofspin Including Exami Compare at $ $ 9C Includes lenses, complete contac follow-up care and travel care AO Superthin and Coope EXTENI WEAR CON Including Examination C Includes lenses, complete contact follow-up care and delux (Excludes Hydro-curve and specialt ARBORLAND CONS 973-7035 Prior orders and other discount prog Single vision lenses only. This is a l and may end without nc 17 l . MAIN ST. 6v E. LD BETY CAN'T SLEEP? Count Copies at Kinko's. We're open 24 hours a day 7 days a week. Open 24 hours. 540 E. LIBERTY s =o =- CC o A z Z Q s No, the photo isn't sideways...the type is! REAGAN'S LATEST PLAN TO REDUCE THE FEDERAL DEFICIT Hittin a theSkids. SOI IU u', YWeek~end beI9ed tG COMUb .. over 50 different brews available Free Ashley's Beer Mug-Ask for Details - We/I, /;7n going to se/i ,/1 my used records to the bogs at Wazoo... - WE"RE For your records and tapes in good condition ( . £ M EsM.Ea . ANGELO' RA"W e're fam o us fo r a Homemade Bread' 3362 S. State belveen Ashley's nd Ann Abor Music Mart, ph.. 761-8686 Records MON. - FRI. 10-8 SAT. 10-6 SUN. 12-6 338 S. STATE 996-9191 1100 Catherine Rd. U F _ _ _ _ , r 8 Weekend-April 18, 1986 <, a /- /, r--- -- t ¢ . t . ; .: w