-ThM hgn Dily Ul Sui V Vol. XCVI - No. 10S Cops fighI By MARY CHRIS JAKLEVIC she Editor's note: Daily Reporter the Mary Chris Jaklevic accompanied ente Officer Dan Waites on patrol in the base campus area Tuesday in an attempt Tue to learn more about life behind the Arb wheel of a patrol unit. This is the seat first of two stories recounting what man Studenta may sue over contract By KAREN STRUFFERT A possible lawsuit, if vindicated, could force the University's Housing Division to reimburse present and past dormitory residents for hundreds of meals they paid for, but missed because they were either absent or " only allowed to eat only two times a day. University student Michael Sutherland filed the complaint and is planning to sue the University, claiming that he has not received the 13 meals per week guaranteed in his meal contract, which did not specify the number of times he could eat perf dy. "Last Friday I walked into dinner and they told me that I could only have two meals a day, although thatr was not in the contract," said Sutherland. He thinks he could potentially have a class action suit, representing hundreds of students who have used the University's food service program in the past. "The University han greatly profited from the surplus See STUDENT, Page 10 Mich-an tMania marks AMER street fairs dish; the unblinking willingness to By LISA POLLAK pay three bucks for a Coke; and "We all have Art Fair madness. hallucinations as you confuse an That's what Bay City's Jan overpriced pewter dog with the corn- Dannesberger said as she leaned dog you bought for breakfast. wearily against a pottery booth and The side effects include forgetting surveyed the masses of visitors why you came - "I don't really pushing their way down State Street. know why," shrugged Charissa n n yr ed a l r It was Wednesday morning; the 1987 Raleigh, 16, of Huntington Woods, Ann Arbor Art Fairs had been open as she sat on a curb chewing a Big for business one hour. Mac. "But I tag along and sit But she was right about the waiting for my grandma and mother madness - the highly contagious, every year." irresistible syndrome that will have The madness can also make you spread from South University to forget what you bought. "I don't Main Street and affected 500,000 really know what it is," said Chris saw on the beat. during the course of a shift. This is visitors by the time the fair ends Cooper, 20, of Jackson, holding up Dozens of briefcases - that was something I never noticed on Hill Saturday night. For 28 years the a plastic baggie. "One's a wallet, but first thing I noticed when I Street Blues. madness has filled the streets; for 28 that wooden painted thing, well ..." red the police locker room in the Passing the shelves of briefcases years no one has been immune. The Art Fair madness ment of City Hall at 3 p.m. and lockers, Daily photographer The symptoms are obvious and overwhelms the brain and warps the sday. Every police officer in Ann Scott Lituchy and I made our way to many: 90 degree-heat-induced sweats; memory. After a few minutes of or keeps a briefcase in the back the squad room, which resembled a the sudden urge to kick baby weaving through the crowds it of the patrol car to carry the small classroom, with tables and carriages out of the way so as not to See SIDEWALK, Page 4 y forms an officer must fill out See ON, Page 11 miss out on that favorite ceramic Garbage truck heads to sister By JIM VANA About 100 people gathered at a rally in front of the Michigan Union Sunday to watch The Ann Arbor Sister City Task Force dedicate a garbage truck donated to the residents of Juigalpa, Nicaragua - Ann Arbor's sister city. The rally marked A the eighth anniversary of the Sandanista takeover of Nicaragua's former government controlled by U.S.-supported Anastacio Somoza. The truck left yesterday morning and the 4,000 mile journey i s expected to take about 10 days. The Juigalpans will use the truck to improve their sewage situation. Juigalpan mayor Candido Vall illos ~r I said the truck is his first priority for " Fythe sewage cleanup. The city has very few septic tanks and no sewage system, which burdens an already depleted water system. Although the University did not give the group official permission to DailyPhoo by scoTT ITUCHY assemble in front of the Union, no Art Invasion DiyPhtbyCTTTUH measures were taken to stop the Hundreds of artists have set up booths to sell their works on State Street this week. The State Street Art Fair, gathering, which featured speakers the Ann Arbor Street Art Fair, and the Summer Arts Festival continue this weekend. See TASK, Page 10