TheMichigan Daily-Saturday, June5, 1982-Page 11 It's all there, in the California Senate race SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - claim rarely mentions the name. There's a Reagan family feud, cracks MAUREEN Reagan goes out of her about a Goldwater's intelligence, and way to talk about her own accomplish- swats between Democrats over fruit ments, usually referring to her father flies. as "a relative of mine living in gover- This, voters, is a California Senate nment housing in the East." campaign. When the president's brother, Neil, WITH INCUMBENT Republican Sen. signed on as Wilson's statewide co- S. I. Hayakawa retiring form office, the chairman, he accused his niece of at- early GOP frontrunner for next tempting to "ride on her father's coat- Tuesday's primary seemed to be Rep. tails,' draging a family feud into public. Barry Goldwater Jr. But his bid to join Their battle flared again when Neil his father in the Senate has wanted Reagan filmed TV commercials saying somewhat in the wake of a gang assault "We Reagans endorse Pete Wilson," a on his brainpower. reference to himself and his wife Bess, It started when Goldwater refused to and not to the president, who is neutral debate any of his GOP rivals. At one in the race. point, he even refused to release THE DEMOCRATIC primary cam- schedules of his campaign appearances paign, meanwhile pits novelist Vidal in to the press. a longshot effort against Gov. Edmund San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson said Brown. They crossed paths only once - Goldwater was afraid to expose his at a convention of editorial and comic limited grasp of issues. Democrat Gore strip cartoonists. Vidal said Goldwater's "IQ matches Brown was armed with a green fly room temperature." swatter. GOLDWATER rejoined that "there's A reporter who asked Vidal whether no requirement that to be in the his live-and-let-live view of Congress of the United States you have homosexuality has affected his cam- to be an intellect. Some people are paign got this reply'; smarter than Iam. Some not.' "I think, all in all, this comes up He hardly improved matters with about me. Of course, it comes up about garbled grammar and references to Jerry Brown. I think you have to this things as 'physical policy" instead remember that Gov. Brown and I are of its "fiscal policy." middle-aged bachelors and I would Then there's the Reagan factor. think that any right-thinking, moral While contenders such as Wilson, person would assume that each of us is Goldwater, McCloskey and Dornan a virgin. And may the most im- daily stress their ties to the president, maculate win." the candidate most entitled to that Price of '69 textbooks prompted studentrun store (Coninued fro Pagel2) Cmite frthebooktore mroement 1 t i Tired already Courseworkers in Detroit yesterday arrange tire barriers on the Grand Prix racetrack trying to finish in time for the drivers to practice. For a race up- date, see Page 15. Cellar to leave today (continued from Page 1) The chairwoman of the Cellar's board Negotiators for U-Cellar said the of directors, Mary Anne Caballero, said store could only afford such an increase the Union will suffer without the store. if the Union guaranteed the Cellar ex- "Surveys have shown we draw 60 per- clusive rights to sell a long list of items. cent of the people (to the Union). How THE CELLAR has always been canl they possibly make up for the lost restricted from selling Michigan in- traffic?" she said. signia items, and Cianciola remained Frank Cianciola, director of the firm throughout the negotiations that Union, saidan "unfortunate set of cir- such a restriction would stand. The cumstances" prompted the U-Cellar to Union director argued that to allow the move out of the Union and wished them Cellar to sell insignia items would mean well in their new location a significant decrease in revenues for the Michigan Union Shop, the Union's newsstand. In addition to the rent increase, the, Cellar was being asked to pay for ap- proximately $300,000 in Union renovations. y The Cellar would have been forced to pass those costs on to its student customers, said John Sappington, the Cellar's assistant manager. The Cellar Student on bicycle assaulted was set up "to establish lower baseline A 19-year-old male University prices for the other competitors to student was injured when he was follow," he said, and moving out of the assaulted by a passenger in a moving Union was in the best interests of car, police said. The student was riding students. a bicycle on a sidewalk on Hubbard PROFITS FROM the sale of Street near North Campus when a car, Michigan insignia items at the new travelling between 40 and 50 miles per location should enable the store to offer hour, jumped the curb and drove up better prices or at least keep them at behind him. A man on the passenger present levels, Weinberg said. side of the car opened the passenger Some Cellar employees this week ex- door and knocked the bicyclist to the pressed feelings of animosity towards ground. The bicyclist suffered some the Union's management over bruises and the car sped away. Police negotiations. "We were pushed out," said the incident was apparently un- said Ann Rankin. provoked. t Government Council organized a massive rally in which more than 1,000 students supporting the student-run discount bookstore marched on the LSA Building. It was a dramatic affair. More than 500 students took over the building and remained there until the evening when then-University President Robben Fleming warned the students to leave or he would seeka restraining order. By 10:30 that evening, more than 1,500 students surrounded the building, preventing policemen from entering the building and arresting the students who had remained there against Fleming'sorders. The demonstrators would not budge until Fleming agreed to meet with a representative. The 117 students in the LSA Building sent a representative to tell Fleming that the sit-in would end only if a Regents meeting was called within 24 hours with the clear understand- ding that there would be favorable ac- tion on the bookstore proposal. Fleming left after a brief period of fruitless negotiation. More than 100 Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department and Michigan State Police Officers stormed the LSA building and arested the 107 who had refused to leave. Seven people were in- jured as police used force to restrain hundreds of students who rushed for- ward the building after being ordered to disburse. The protest was effective in publicizing the bookstore issue. A general strike was organized and backed by the Student Government two days later. The Strike Coordinating. called a general strike to picket classroombuildings during the day. In the first week of October the student government negotiated with the Regents, who finally accepted a plan allowing for student-faculty control of the store. The bookstore would be fun- ded through a $5 fee assessed against all students and faculty members and refunded when they left the University. The active effort by the students had paid off. The details and legal plans were laid in the following ten months. In June, 1970, the Union agreed to sublet a space to the discount bookstore. It opened in the fall of 1970 but didn't begin selling textbooks until winter term, 1971. SohiwLren wins parole CASERTA, Italy (UPI) - Sophia Loren won parole yesterday on the remaining 14 days of her tax-evasion sentence and "almost definitely" will leve her pink cell Saturday, her at- torney said. Vincenzo Sepe, the actress's lawyer and cousin said parole Judge Cinzla Simonelli approved a request to free Loren under a new law permiting "special leave" for defendants serving, less than six-month terms and needing to attend urgent family or business matters. 7