a w w w w vV GARDEN Restaurant BEST NEWS rpt: PA )NI SZECHUAN, HUNAN & PEKING CUISINE Best Chef A ward Winner in Washington, D.C Rated #1 in carryout service among Chinese restaurants in this area by The Ann Arbor News. C c t c s 4 C C t i{ t 1 r F t c t t BEST DAILY FOUL-UPS, BLEEPS, AND BLUNDERS The Michigan Daily is the vanguard of truth. the guardian of accuracy But sometimes we mess up. After the space and shuttle Challenger blew up, the Daily ran a picture of a giant smoke svan on the iront page; :U'aiing smoke as it plummeted to the sea - sided ays. Another tine. in a store about a speech by business t ycoor, T boone Pickens. our reporter descr bed a speaker introducing Pickens as having a big vs ad of tobac- co in his mouth We later learned that. i was a birth defect. Whoops. BEST BOOST FOR THE UNIVERSITY'S EGO At dawn on the Diag last October, a man sat beside University President Harold Shapiro. Before them was a television camera broadcasting their conversation to the country, and around them were throngs of en- thusiastic "Go Blue" types. Some of them even dressed up in grass skirts, so they could stand next to a fat man with a mink coat talking about the weather.The Today show had come to campus, and it brought with it a University publicity orgasm. The University even painted the M on the Diag blue and posted a security guard to watch it all night. Officials also roped off the Diag to keep less-than- enthusiastic Wolverines from tar- nishing the luster of the University's ivory tower. BEST '60s FLASHBACKS In a year that saw the return paisley, the University also witnessed a return of student activism. On the Today show when the University' marching band played *Hail tc tht Victors."Woverines could not help but tc shed a tear foi the of 'U But outside the roped-off confines of the Diag, students tried to out-shout fine broadcast journalism of Bryant Gumble. Protesters opposed NBC's lack of coverage of the U.S. aid for El Salvadorean government. An ever bigger embarrassment for the University occurred when demon- strators protested a speech by Vice President George Bush - the whole country's Vice-President for Christ's sake - On the steps of the Michigan Union. Bush spoke about the Peace Corps, but the protesters didn't think Bush made such a swell advocate of peace. The students angered other students who couldn't hear Bush speak about protests not being possible "over in ole Lening Square" in the Soviet Union. But these protests didn't bring about arrests - which makes a protest exciting. Back in Oc- tober, 29 students were arrested over two days for opposing the Central In- telligence Agency's recruitment on campus. And last month, over a hun- dred demonstrators, mostly Univer- sity students, were arrested while en- 3035 Washtenaw Avenue, Ann Arbor, Open7]Days A Week11:30 a.m.- 10 p.m. 971-0970 a ' Fm.e Park' s Moderate Price. s Parfe Welcoms MI 48104 25 -50% OFF ESPRIT, IN-WEAR/MATINIQUE GENERRA, EDWIN, BIG JOHN, UNION BAY LEVI'S -501's - g18" B 761 -6207 OPEN SUNDAYS! 330 S. State Street 12-4:3 ******************************************, DOOLEY'S HAPPY HOUR jri 41N 1L?r 1 __"- f - Q -4-8 p.m. Monday thru Friday DANCING NIGHTLY Pizza - Subs - Hotdogs Private Party Accommodations 994-6500 20 Weekend-April 18, 1986