Kresge Grant To AidIn Harper RenovationDavid TravisHARPER LIBRARY: The University has received a $1 million grant to renovate thelibrary. The grant is conditional upon the University's raising another $1 million.THE MAROONVolume 78, Number 60 The University of Chicago Tuesday, May 19, 1970University Closed Down for MemorialUniversity activities closed down Fri¬day night and Saturday morning as a me¬morial to what President Edward Levicalled “the tragedy at College.” Students atthe Lutheran Theological Seminary votedto strike yesterday and today in protest ofthe killings.Police gunfire outside a Jackson, Mis¬sissippi dormitory Friday killed two stu¬dents and wounded nine other blacks.Libraries and other University facilitiesremained closed until 11 am Saturday, fol-ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL: Site of Sundaymorning's memorial for the studentskilled at Jackson State College. lowing a University memorial service inRockefeller.Speakers at the service, attended byabout 200, included Allison Davis, professorof education, and divinity student HomerAshby.Davis, who has studied the plantation“system of intimidation and exploitation ofblack workers,” compared the Jackson kill¬ings to thousands of lynchings of blacks inAmerica.He also compared the growing repres¬sion in the country to 1933 Germany, inAt a Mandel hall meeting yesterday, abody of approximately 75 persons voted toendorse a proposal which would declarethem on strike for the rest of the quarter.The proposal, introduced by the strikesteering committee, also included provi¬sions calling for the transformation of IdaNoyes Hall, which they have renamed“Fred Hampton Memorial CommunityCenter,” into “a community action centerso that the political action generated by thestrike may be continued until the demandsare won.”Yesterday’s meeting began with a reportfrom Judy Feinberg, a member of thestrike steering committee who had attend¬ed a week-end national strike meeting inNew Haven, Connecticut. Besides callingattention to the activities of other strikecenters, Miss Feinberg announced that afourth national strike demand was adoptedby the national strike committee.The fourth demand, as it was passed atthe national meeting, endorsed the wom¬en’s liberation movement and stated thatliberation could not come about until theUnited States ended policies of repressionand. neo-colonialism.The motion to adopt the demand was de¬feated.Two previously submitted proposals wereunder consideration, one introduced by thestrike steering committee and another au-‘ By Mitch BobkinThe University has been awarded a $1million grant from the Kresge Foundationof Detroit for the remodeling and renovat¬ing of the Harper library-Wieboldt com¬plex. The entire project will cost slightlyover two million dollars.The grant is conditional upon the Univer¬sity’s raising the balance before March 15,1972.The remodeling of Harper, currentlybeing planned by a faculty committee head¬ed by Mrs. Loma Straus, assistant profes¬sor of anatomy and assistant dean of under¬graduate students, calls for a Collegelibrary on the third floors of Harper, Busi¬ness East, and Wieboldt, College class¬rooms and offices in the rest of Harper, andthe expansions of the humanities divisionoffices and classrooms into space in Clas¬sics and Wieboldt.This space will be available after the ma¬jority of the librarys’ collections are movedinto the Regenstem library over the sum¬mer.Basic plans for renovation have been ap¬proved by the University committee on fa¬cilities headed by Julian Goldsmith, profes-which he witnessed book burnings and theclosings of universities. “One can begin al¬ready to smell the smoke . . .” hs sa“We the universities of this country arein the same boat, faculty and studentalike,” Davis added. “The common enemyemerges.” He urged all to stand up to “thebig lie of terrorization and the movementtoward fascism in this country.”Ashby expressed sorrow and anger at thedeaths of James Green and Phillip Gibbs.He also spoke of “America’s racism, evenContinued on Page Fivethored by International Socialists (IS).Unlike the steering committee’s proposal,that submitted by IS called the strike a“failure” and called for its discontinuation.In line with a policy of “revolutionary real¬ism.” the group endorsed additional actionsaside from the national demands. These in¬cluded free medical and child care, univer¬sal free education, and open admission toContinued on Page FiveMASS MEETING: Students vote to continuemunity action center. sor of geophysical sciences, by UniversityPresident Edward Levi and by the board oftrustees’ committee on campus planning.The plans for the Harper complex arebeing sponsored by the offices of the deanof the College, the dean of the humanitiesdivision and the director of the Universitylibrary.Michael Claffey, University vice-presi¬dent for development, said he expected toraise the remaining money within theterms of the grant. He said that a challengegrant such as this is not unusual.Roger Hildebrand, dean of the College,saw the new College center in Harper as aplace for facilities that are not currentlyhoused in Harper or in the plans for Re-genstein library. “We now have a good op¬portunity to realize our plans for a Collegecenter with a first-class library. TheKresge grant is particularly heartening atthis time of great financial difficulty,” hesaid.It is hoped that sufficient work can bedone on the new undergraduate library fa¬cilities to put them in use for part of au¬tumn quarter.Hildebrand emphasized that both Harperand Regenstein will be open to all Univer¬sity students. He hoped, however, that theundergraduate library in Harper would becomplete enough that most College studentswould not feel the need to go to Regensteinexcept on special occasions.The committee headed by Mrs Straus hasbeen “very active” according to Hilde¬brand. He said that they are meeting withthe architects and with College students todecide where specific offices and class¬rooms would be placed in the complex.The college reading room will occupy thepresent social sciences modern language,and Business East reading rooms. It willhouse over 60,000 books, including thosethat are most often used by students in Col¬lege classes.Space in the Harper complex that is notspecifically mentioned in the plans but thatwill be vacant after the move to Regensteinwill be left unplanned pending the out¬come of the decisions of Mrs Straus’ com¬mittee. Included in these areas are thebasements of Harper and Classics.The plan submitted to the Goldsmithcommittee, the President and the board oftrustees, states “By its size and location,Harper is ideally suited to meet the needsof the College ... The first and secondfloors would be used for classrooms, for ad¬ministrative and academic offices and forcommon rooms. The third floor would bepart of the College library and the towerswould be used for faculty offices and pos¬sible seminar rooms.”In its section on the humanities division,the plan calls for the undoubling of facultyoffices, the placing together of faculty of¬fices within the same department, the crea¬tion of common rooms for English and Ger¬man students to meet informally, meetingrooms for each department (five needed)Continued on Page Fourthe strike and make Ida Noyes a com-75 Vote To Continue Strike,Ida Noyes Renamed as CenterBILLION DOLLAR ROBBERYCASH AU U S SAVINGS BONDS AND TEH YOURPARENTS TO $44 BIILION WORTH HELP FINANCE WAR ACTION GROUP FORMING NOWPHONE 955 9505 600 Protest Near BaseFor Armed Forces DayBy Steve CookA demonstration sponsored by the NavyTimes Are Changin’ underground news¬paper forced the closing of Great LakesNaval Training Center last Saturday.Great Lakes was one of 21 military basesin the country ordered closed due to anti¬war protest.All gates to the Navy base were lockedduring the day, apparently in fear of thedemonstrators. The base is usually open tocivilians on Armed Forces day.Some 600 demonstrators, including threebusloads of University students, attended arally in North Chicago’s Foss Park, locateddirectly north of the base.After the rally, the demonstratorsmarched around the three-mile perimeterof the base, chanting “Free Bobby,” ‘‘Pow¬er to the people,” and “Put the Pig in thebrig.”Many of the sailors confined on basepeered out of barracks windows at the dem¬onstration. A Shore Patrol guard was sta¬tioned at each of the base’s main gates asthe marchers passed. North Chicago policekept the demonstrators to one half of thestreet.“We’re here to show solidarity with ourbrothers in the Navy,” said one student. Several off-duty sailors participated in thedemonstration.Speakers at the rally included represen¬tatives from the Navy Times are Changin’,the Chicago Peace Council, the AmericanServiceman’s Union, and Women’s Liber¬ation.Roger Priest, the first serviceman to facea court martial for statements in his under¬ground paper, Om, was the featured speak¬er.“The most revolutionary thing a man inthe military can do,” said Priest, “is tostand up for his constitutional rights. Themilitary does not follow the constitution.”Priest said that the Navy had spent thou¬sands of dollars on his conviction, but wasforced to settle for a discharge.A speaker from the Great Lakes under¬ground paper said that the demonstrationwould not be violent.“We must wait for the men inside to teardown those walls and open the gates them¬selves,” he said. “We are not here for vio¬lence.” There were no incidents of violenceduring the rally and march.After the march, which continuedthrough a cold rain shower, a rock bandperformed for the demonstrators at FossPark.UNIVERSITYSYMPHONY ORCHESTRAEugene Narmour, ConductorMozart: Overture to The ImpresarioMcKinley: Grcular Forms for Grand Orchestra(First performance: Commissioned by the College)Dvorak: Symphony No. 8 in GMANDtt HALL SAT., MAY 23 8:30 p.m.Admission Free2/The Chicago Maroon/May 19, 1970.,..... FalE.t;iff Brewing Corporation, St Louis, MoSHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $10.00 dailyTwin A doubles from $14.00 dailyW eekly and monthly rates on requestRooms available torparties, banquets, anddances for 10 - 500. Please call H. FingerhutPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveARMED FORCES DAY: Troops march past reviewing stand Saturday. Mayor Rich'ard Daley (hand over heart) is visible on the stand.i! ' /»Veace CandidatesCONTINUING ACTION PROJECT: Students work in Ida Noyes to organize can¬vassing efforts in support of anti-war legislation. By Carl SunshineSix hundred University students have al¬ready signed up to work for peace candi¬dates through the summer and fall.Founded only a week ago, the UniversityNew Congress (NC) chapter is coordinatingcampus and statewide efforts to elect peacecandidates to Congress with national head¬quarters at Princeton University.Students can get involved immediatelythrough several activities.Peace candidate James Aboursky is chal¬lenging a South Dakota hawk in a June 2primary. Details will be discussed at ameeting in Ida Noyes west Lounge at 7:30pm Tuesday. Transportation to South Da¬kota and modest living expenses will beprovided for interested University students.Training in precinct work, organization ofpolitical campaigns, and public relationswill also be offered at the meeting to thosewho cannot go to S. Dakota.Workshops in effective campaigning willbe held at Northwestern University May 25through May 28 in Harris Hall 107 at 7:30pm. Adlai Stevenson’s campaign managersand other experienced workers will speak.Gala Features Carillon and Fireworks Sign-up sheets for students willing towork in peace campaigns are available inSoc Sci 119, Ida Noyes 306, or the bookstore.More students are needed to collect nameson campus in a mass recruitment drivebeing planned. Contact the NC office at ext3576 for more details on all projects.At a meeting Friday, NC representativesfrom 12 Illinois schools planned visits toother schools in an effort to contact all ofIllinois’ college students before they leaveschool for summer recesses. University ofChicago students have already helped startchapters at 20 midwest schools.The meeting opened with a minute of si¬lence for the two students slain at JacksonState University. Marshall Bouton, gradstudent in political science and member ofthe group’s steering committee, soundedthe keynote saying American society faces“the worst crisis since the Civil War.”Bouton noted that this may be the lastchance to try to make the system work be¬fore those who want completely to drop outor tear it down prevail. NC hopes to givestudents “a nationally coordinated focusthrough the summer and beyond.”Citing increased difficulties in a non-pres-idential election, J. David Greenstone, as¬sociate professor on political science onNC’s steering committee, noted that therewas no easy focus of a single candidate likeMcCarthy in a single race.The 1970 Gala Performance of the Festi¬val of the Arts (FOTA) was held Sundaynight in front of Rockefeller Chapel afterbad weather postponed the Friday perform¬ance. The program was attended by some1500 students and community people, andfeatured seven musical selections for caril¬lon and brass followed by a fireworks per¬formance.The carillon pieces, played by RobertLondine, included works from Handel’s“Water Music” and Hart’s “Sarabande.”Among the brass selections were three can- zonas from Gabrielli, Mozart’s “Fugue”,and works by Bach and Hindemith. Thebrass played to the crowd from the heightsof Rockefeller Chapel.Following the fireworks, a Chicago ArtsQuartet jazz concert was held in HutchCourt.Student reaction to the gala was mixed.Though most of those asked enjoyed thefireworks, several felt this year’s perform¬ance suffered by comparison with those ofpast years. “The different parts of the pro¬gram were poorly integrated,” one grad student said. “The • fireworks weren’tworked in with the music, and the musicwas too subdued — last year they had amoog synthesizer and a secondary carillondown on the grass to give it some variety.”Another student felt that “The brass andcarillon made a good ensemble in the tow¬er, but they were too far away from thecrowd.” As one observer pointed out, “Thecute tricks they’ve used before — like hav¬ing President Beadle come out in headdressto address the crowd — were missing thisyear.” Welcoming a proposed University recessbefore November elections Larry Sherman,grad student in social science, remindedrepresentatives that much work must bedone now and through the summer as well.A veteran of the successful Metzenbaumsenate primary campaign against JohnGlenn in Ohio rose to tell students “You dohave the power to change the system” ifyou devote as much time and effort to it asto your studies.NC’s next general planning meeting willbe Wednesday at 4 pm in Ida Noyes Hall.YearBox is coming!YearBox arrives one week from todav- Mav 26. The strike has distracted us a little hutnow everything is in production. We are making 2000 yearBoxes, but at the rate weare going now, thev will all be sold bv Mav 26. Reserve your Box today, so you don’tmiss: the fantastic University of Chicago game, the 32-page Hyde Park Cook Book, the16-page section about the vear and the strike, The Red Herring Statement (theauthorized manifesto of S.V.N.A.,) the beautiful photography portfolio. Little Lester’sfunky version of Mack The Knife, the senior stamps, the bust of Mr. Levi, and all therest. Send $5 to yearBox, 1212 Last 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Tell yourfriends!Name 1Address City, State, Zip IIPIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd 643-2800^ WE DELIVERELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E 53rd St288-2900 Straight TalksYour diamond is atr3JUUSJUJJLFlNf <{WElE«S FO* 59 YEARS119 N. 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Oak St — DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St —779-6500May 19, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/3pMSHTA Vote Begins Lease NegotiationsBy Audrey ShalinskyThe Married Student Housing Tenant As¬sociation (MSHTA) designated a leasenegotiating team to discuss a new leasewith management during a meeting Mon¬day night.The action was taken as a result of areferendum in which tenants could vote ei¬ther to discuss a new lease or to continueworking for a collective bargaining agree¬ment. However, referendum votes are stillbeing accepted.The referendum was proposed andadopted May 4 after the MSHTA received a“report to the University on the new pro¬posal for a collective bargaining agree¬ment.”The report by Alex Elson, who was origi¬nally employed by the University to rewritethe lease between University Realty Man¬ agement and the married student tenants,concluded that a collective bargainingagreement was unnecessary.MSHTA members present at the May 4meeting designated Warren Copeland, pres¬ident of the organization, to express dis¬satisfaction with the report. According toCopeland most tenants at the May 4 meet¬ing “felt MSHTA had neither the will northe power to take effective action toward acontract since rent increases had been can¬celled.”Basically the MSHTA proposal would pro¬vide for recognition of that group as solecollective bargaining agent for its membersin the buildings to be listed in the agree¬ment.Bargaining subjects would include allareas of the landlord-tenant relationshipand especially rents, terms and conditions of leases and grievance procedure. Provi¬sion is made for binding arbitration on mat¬ters which cannot be resolved by negotia¬tion.The proposed agreement also providesfor a check off of association dues whenauthorized by tenants, authority to inspectbuildings covered by the agreement and aspecific right to inspect units prior to thetime they are rented.Elson’s report stressed that the Univer¬sity-student relationship is not a typicallandlord-tenant situation. ’“The Universitydoes not operate the buildings occupied byits students for commercial purposes. Theopportunity for students to have housing atrents they can afford to pay may be essen¬tial to their remaining as students,” the re¬port states.According to the report the principal is-EvictionsTwo students, members of the tenantsunion on rent strike at 5330 Blackstone, willbe evicted from their apartments in 20 daysbecause they refused to promise that theywould not strike again.Renee Goldstein, graduate student in psy¬chology, and Robert Hoge. graduate stu¬dent in anthropology, are two of 16 tenantunion members who answered evictionssummonses in circuit court this week forthe second time in a month.The union, part of the Tenant Union Or¬ganization of the Hyde Park-Kenwood Com-mun:ty Conference (HPKCC), began thestrike in April. It has placed rent in escrowto protest building code violations and arent increase of 15 to 18 percent in allapartments.Sixteen earlier summonses were quashedin court April 21 on the grounds that theywere not personally served to tenants. Fourdays later a deputy sheriff arrived to servenew eviction summonses.In court Thursday, Judge Burton Palmerquashed nine of the 16, again on groundsthat they were not personally served.Palmer ordered the seven who wereserved properly to pay back rent and topromise not to rent strike again. Five ten¬ants agreed to the conditions, but MissGoldstein and Hoge refussd because it was“morally impossible” to stay, according toone tenant union member.The right to strike is the basis of the ten¬ ant union project movement, and thesepromises deny that right, he added.Palmer extended the usual 15-day evic¬tion deadline by five days, and offered tolet students and landlord use his officesto work further negotiations.Tenants refused to merely discuss griev¬ances unless their rental contract is nego-BULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, May 19TWELVE-THIRTY ORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mon"-dello, University organist and guest organists. Rock¬efeller Chapel.MEETING: Graduating seniors. To discuss graduationspeakers and renting caps and gowns. Reynoldsclub south, 1:00 pm.MEETING: College Council, Swift Common Room, 3:40• pm.COLLOQUIUM: James Franck Institute, James L Kin¬sey, Visiting Associate Professor, TheoreticalChemistry Institute, University of Wisconsin, "Mi¬croscope Reversibility in Chemical Reactions: HowTo Get Something for Practically Nothing." Re¬search Institutes 480, 4:15 pm.TRACK: Bradley, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee,Stagg Field, 4 pm.FOTA FILM: Shirley Clark, Director, Law School Audi¬torium, 7:30 pm.LECTURE SERIES: NCD and Committee on SocialThought: Kinds of Knowledge. Michael Polanyi,Willett Visiting Professor. "Representative Arts."Kent 107, 8 pm.FREE MARSHMALLOWS: Marshmallows will be givenout at a campus-wide, cook-your-own-toarbeque inthe main quadrangles at 57th St and Etlis. Therewill be lots of hamburgers, hot dogs, and lemonade(cheap), and entertainment. Watermelon will bethere, and so will Phil and the Fastbacks (you'vegot to hear them to believe them). Hitchcock-Snellis sponsoring this event in a last, final effort toraise money for an all campus dance. The raindate for the barbecue is May 21. 5 pm.PUBLIC MEETING: The park belongs to the people.End military influence in community. Disciples57,h.' 8 pm■ A Pr°iect of UC strike."’FETING: Training in precinct work, grass roots poli¬tical action, public relations. INH west lounae7:30 pm.MEETING: Primary campaign for S Dakota candidateJames Aboursky who needs workers. Free trans¬it a ip.°Ca,ion t0 s Dak0,a- INK west lounge. -7:30 pmRALLY: In support of CBL, Federal Building, 10 am.4/The Chicago Maroon/May 19, 1970 Wednesday, May 20TWELVE-THIRTY CARILLON RECITAL: Robert Lo-dine, Carilloneur, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.LECTURE: Department of Medicine, John Hope Frank¬lin, James Mathews Manly Distinguished ServiceProfessor and Chairman, Department of History."Black Studies: Shadow or Substance." BillingsHospital P-117, 12:30 pm.FILM SERIES: Civilization (College). "The Worshipof Nature." (belief in the divinity of nature) SocialScience 122, 8 pm.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances of the British Isles,Ida Noyes, 8 pm.FOTA FILM: Shirley Clark, Director, Law School Audi-torium, 7:30 pm.DOCTORAL LECTURE: Department of Geography.Peter Goheen. Assistant Professor, Department ofGeography. "The Social Geography of the LateNineteenth Century City, The Case: Toronto, Onta¬rio." Rosenwald 38, 3:30 pm.MEETING: CAP group on repression of Universityboard dissent. Hutch Court, 12 pm.MEETING: CAP group on elections, lobbying, peacecampaigns. 4 pm, INH west lounge.SVNA MEETING: Open, all invited, Ida Noyes Theatre,9 Dm.ART OF THE SHORT FILM: 90 minute program of 15exciting and award winning shorts: computer madefilms, time capsules, new animation styles. BlueGargoyle, donation $1.00. 7:30 and 9:30 pmThursday, May 21TWELVE THIRTY ORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mon-dello, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.LECTURE: Department of Biochemistry, Daniel EAtkinson, Department of Chemistry, University ofCalifornia, Los Angeles. "Metabolic Stoichiochem-istry and Control." Abbott 101, 12:30 pm.GO CLUB: Ida Noyes, 7 pm. tiated: “Previous discussions of the typesuggested had come to nothing,” said BobAnderson, graduate student in anthropol-The union’s proposed draft contract setsout recognition of the union as collectivebargaining agent for conditions; buildingand maintenance repairs; inequitableleases; retaliatory evictions; unfair rent in¬creases; and grievance and arbitrationprocedure between the landlord and tenantsto resolve future problems.Action ProjectsGroup one of the continuing action proj¬ect (CAP) is sponsoring a meeting tonightin Ida Noyes west lounge at 7:30. BarbaraO’Conner, a veteran of local and nationalpolitical organizing, will speak to students.She is interested in training students to bea cadre of political activists to work incampaigns this summer and next fall.The CAP lobbying project, now in Wash¬ington, is compiling an information file toaid future lobbying efforts. The file will in¬clude legislators’ voting records, their posi¬tions on Cambodia and the war, specifcoffices in Washington capable of providingcurrent information, accommodations inWashington, and outlines of argumentsagainst the war. When the groups return onMay 24, the file will be available to othergroups going to Washington to lobby.Other activities for this week sponsoredby CAP include two workshops Wednesday.For further information, call extension2994, or contact the CAP office, Soc Sci 119.Editor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editors: Mitch Bobkin, Con-HitchcockNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: Steve AokiFeature Editor; Wendy GlocknerAssociators: Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula(Features).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsoform, Paul Bernstein, EllenCassidy, Nancy Chisman, Allen Friedman,Sarah Glazer, Pete Goodsell, Gordon Katz,Susan Left, Gerald Leva), Joseph Morris, TomMossberg, Janet Pine, Audrey Shalinsky, CarlSunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Monty Futch,Jesse Krakauer, Bruce Rabe, David Rosen-bush, Leslie Strauss.Founded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. student‘MSHTA.constructivesue is the relationship between the Univ*.sity and MSHTA. MSHTA, a student accredited group, was created by the Universitym 1961. It temporarily disbanded in 1964 butreformed by the University in 1967 Ther?are approximately 1000 married 6tenants. The report states thehas on the whole played arole.”The report recommends against the creation of an agreement between the University and MSHTA separate from the leas^with each tenant. “MSHTA purportedlyrepresents approximately 55 percent of thetenants. What happens to the remainingtenants who do not wish to be representedby MSHTA?” Elson wrote. “Obviously, theUniversity cannot discriminate betweentwo groups of student tenants.”The report states that all aspects of thelandlord tenant relationship which need tobe reduced to writing should be in-corporated in the lease.The report considers the determination ofrents a non-negotiable item. It recommendsthat the operation cost and capital in¬vestment be released to the tenants annual¬ly to “support the University’s position forrent increases when a rent increase is in¬dicated.”The report comments on the resentmentof personnel of the University Realty Man¬agement by concluding that “The Univer¬sity should not condone or permit employ¬ees to adopt attitudes typical of outside realestate management firms.” However, thereport notes that “undoubtedly there is ex¬aggeration in the complaints and in all like¬lihood some of the students may be pro¬vocative in their own behavior.”The student complaints discussed in thereport include termination of lease obliga¬tion, decorating, security, deposits, heatingand garbage removal. A grievance proce¬dure is outlined.The procedure which is similar to the oneproposed by MSHTA includes four steps:the reduction of the grievance to a writtencomplaint taken up with the area officemanager, if not settled a discussion withthe manager of married student housing atthe central office, if not settled a jointmeeting with the manager and a dean ofstudents representative, if not settled arbi¬tration.Copeland’s criticism of the report in¬volves four points. He questions the objec¬tivity of the author of the report. “It is un¬believable that the representative ofmanagement should presume to decidewhat the needs and concerns of tenantsare and to tell the Teants Association whatrole it should play,” he states.Secondly, he quotes a management studythat shows rents in the system are onlylower in proportion to the tax break theUniversity sets on student housing.Copeland feels that the idea of a Univer¬sity financial statement to explain rent in¬crease needs would not be workable.Copeland questions the “benevolence andgood will” of the University toward its stu¬dents. “Those with economic power havetraditionally preferred to deal with thosesubject to that power individually ratherthan collectively and they have alwaysbeen certain that they had the best inter¬ests of those individuals at heart," he said.Copeland concludes that sooner or laterstudent tenants will act collectively. TheUniversity has merely refused to recognizethe legitimacy of such action.”Classrooms To RelocateContinued from Page Oneand added classrooms for humanitiescourses, and the placing together of the of¬fices of the dean of the humanities divisionand the dean of students in the humanitiesdivision to prevent staffing inefficiency.The College will continue to occupy thespace it currently uses in Cobb hall andGates-Blake halls.Other members of Mrs Straus' committeeare: Norton Ginsburg, professor of geogra¬phy; Stanley Gwvnn, associate director torservices in departmental libraries of theUniversity library; George Metcalf, profes¬sor of Germanic languages and literature;ard Reuben Smith, assistant professor ofhistory.AmNUC Sit-in After DanceAsks for Opened BuildingDAY CARE CENTER: Children being cared for in Ida Noyes Monday.50 Protest Killings by Picketing LTSContinued from Page Onein death.”Other blacks have been murdered beforeJackson, he noted. “If there hadn’t been aKent, would we be here today?” he asked.“Did the tragedy at Jackson State have tobe legitimized by the tragedy at KentState?”Ashby noted that whites, too, are now be¬ginning to know “unwarranted and suddendeath” that blacks have known for years.Some 50 students in the Lutheran Schoolof Theology picketed the school for twohours yesterday in protest of the killing ofstudents at Jackson State college last Fri¬ day. At a meeting yesterday afternoon, thefaculty voted to strike class yesterday andtoday. They met again last night to consid¬er continuing the strike.“The tenor of the campus is in favor ofusing class time for other uses during therest of the week,” said Lutheran studentGary Schenk.The demonstration began when black stu¬dents in the school announced they intendedto do something about the killings of eightblack people at Augusta, Ga. and Jacksonlast week. The black students began thepicketing, and were joined by white stu¬dents and faculty. By Paul BernsteinSome 60 persons staged a sit-in in IdaNoyes Hall Saturday night, following adance sponsored by Gay Liberation. Theaction, organized by members of the NewProposals To EndStrike DefeatedContinued from Page Onethe University with “no tuition; no flunkouts.”A third proposal was introduced from thefloor by Barbara Foley of SDS. Miss Foleysuggested that the strike be directed at theUniversity. Among demands of her propos¬al were the expulsion of the Adlai Steven¬son Institute for International Affairs fromthe campus; a thorough investigation of thesociology and political science departmentsfor “imperialistic connections,” the firingof “imperialist professors;” an across theboard one dollar wage increase for all Uni¬versity employees; and free meals fordietary workers.A fourth resolution was proposed whichwould simply declare the failure of thestrike and call for its end.During debate, Rosario Levins of thestrike steering committee, declared, “Weknew we would never shut the universitydown ... we should now try to get to¬gether instead of dividing on factionalizingproposals.” ,Shortly afterwards all proposals werebrought to a vote with the steering com¬mittee’s resolution passing and the otherthree being defeated. University Conference (NUC), was held insupport of NUC’s demand that the facilitiesof Ida Noyes be open to the community.The demonstrators, mostly students, re¬fused to leave the building at 2 am whenthe dance ended. Most of the demonstratorsleft at 4 am, and the remaining ten at 8 am.Twelve University policemen stayed withthem, along with James Vice, assistantdean of students.NUC is demanding that the building,which they have renamed the Fred Hamp¬ton Memorial Community Center, be usedas a center for the implementation of thethree national strike demands.Planned NUC activities at the center in¬clude the establishment of a Right OnTraining Center (ROTC) for continuing lib¬eration classes directed towards ongoingpolitical action; the use of the building’srecreational facilities (gym, swimming,pool and meeting rooms) by all members ofthe community; a Panther Defense Officefor organizing the South Side around thetrial of Panther leader Bobby Seale,scheduled to start in Chicago June 8; a daycare program, initially for the children ofthose engaged in the activities of the cen¬ter; and a crash pad for all those needing aplace to stay.The NUC proposal has been endorsed bythe strike steering committee. Petitionssupporting the use of recreational facilitiesby the community are being distributed bystudents from Kenwood High School.A schedule of this week’s liberationclasses has been released. For information,students should see the ROTC table, locatedin the Bandersnatch from 6 to 7 pm.IdeasFOR YOUR CHILDREN'S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J Wood. Jr., CIUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2 2390 — 798 0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SI IN T j FR OF CANADAWE'D LIKE YOU TOJOIN OUR RAPIDLY GROWING FAITH AS ANORJDAJNffO M/NISTCR*^ WITH A RANK OF~ oPOCTOR PIN/IKHTV-We want men and women of all ages, who believe as we do, to join us inthe holy search for Truth. We believe that all men should seek Truth byall just means. As one of our ministers you can:1 ■ Ordain others in our name.2. Set up your own church and apply for exemption from propertyand other taxes.3. Perform marriages and exercise all other ecclesiastic powers.4. Get sizeable cash grants for doing our missionary work.5. Seek draft exemption as one of our working missionaries. We cantell you how.6. Some transportation companies, hotels, theaters, etc., give reducedrates to ministers.GET THE WHOLE PACKAGE FOR $10.00Along with your Ordination Certificate, Doctor of Divinity and I.D. card,we II send you 12 blank forms to use when you wish to ordain others,four ordination is completely legal and valid anywhere in this country.Your money back without question if your package isn't everything youexpect it to be. For an additional $10 we will send your Ordination andD D Certificates beautifully framed and glassed.SEND TO: MISSIONARIES OF THE NEW TRUTHBox 1393, Dept. G8, Evanston, III. 60204NameAddress-City. State- Zip. $10 incl. □(no frames)$20 end. □s (deluxe frames) art of theshort filma 90 minute program of 15exciting and award winningshorts: Computer-made films,time-capsules, new animationstylesNeighbors WednesdayMay 207:30 and 9:30 p.m.Blue Gargoyledonation $1.00Norman Maclaren's classic(1952 Acad. Award) pixillatedBy Charles Braverman.film that compresses Americanhistory into 1,300 imagesshown in only 3 mmThe Sixtieshis latest filmPLUS FIVE ADD TI0NAL FILMSMODERN DANCE CLASSES4,30*0 6,00Monday • SaturdayBalia*, Rod, A Jazz tough*.Allison Theater Dame Center17 N. StateStevens BuildingRoom 1902332-9923 Ton don't needinsuranceprotectionfor your car(if von liveunder a rockand don'tplan to move).But if you do go out you’llwant auto insurance that’llreally protect you. YourSentry man wants to sitdown with you and helpplan your auto protection.Call him today.JIM CRANE238-0971SENTRY^INSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organization "D> ->Cgood-looking sport shirtsFOR THEUNDERGRADUATE'S SUMMER(left) New University button-down sport shirto f cotton gingham in a blue, green or redminiature plaid pattern. Short sleeves, $9.50(top ) The always-poptdar mcck-turtle pulloveris oj cotton lisle knit and comes in solid navy,maroon or yellow. Short sleeves, $6(bottom) Our new long-pointed collar knit shirtoj Dacron polyester and cotton blend comes innavy or green stripes on white grounds, or redon navy. Short sleeves, $ 7ESTABLISHED IBIS. C (bpMens v'Soys furnishings. $nls echoes74 E. MADISON ST., NR. MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL. 60602ATLANTA • BOSTON • LOS ANGELES • NEW YORKPITTSBI RGH • SAN FRANCISCO • SCARSDALE • WASHINGTONMay 19, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/5LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONj»,;J 'Death Throes'What ever happened to the old non-parti¬san University of Chicago, which remaineddisinterested no matter how controversialthe issue and allowed all students, faculty,and staff to freely propound their views ina peaceable manner? The University’s re¬cent actions bear no trace of this in¬tellectual atmosphere.First the administration closed down theUniversity during the strike, obviously in¬dicating that it sided with the strikers andconsidered the opinion of those of us wish¬ing to use University facilities for studyand research as invalid. Last Saturday theUniversity again closed down the libraryfor two hours, coercing anyone interestedin study either to attend a University-spon¬sored memorial service or sit around untilit ended. Obviously the University has be¬gun to decide for us which activities are “best” for us to engage in, and consequent¬ly to suppress any non-approved work oraction.The University excuses its actions bycalling them “memorials.” Since it doesn’thold a “memorial” for everyone that diesin the US, it is choosing certain politicalevents to express an opinion on. The mostdistressing point is that the University istrying to force everyone to take part inthese “memorials” by halting other activi¬ties stemming from viewpoints varyingwith that of the administration.The final death throe of the “free” in¬stitution will come if the administration de¬cides to close down the University for tendays next November, and start the aca¬demic year two weeks earlier than antici¬pated. No plans have been released byeither the administration or the special-in¬terest groups it seems to represent to com¬ pensate any student for the $200-$300 insummer earnings each will be compelled tolose if classes begin early. Certainly, it willbe impossible to get a full-time job for tendays in November, so the earning periodhacked out of summer or Christmas inter¬ims will be lost.Thus the University is deliberately takinga stand against scholarship students andanyone interested in study, and once againsiding with those students not interested inlearning or academic disciplines. Wouldn’tcampaigning )e a much more meaningfulactivity for political groups if they sacri¬ficed their (and only their) study time and,perhaps, better grades to further their po¬litical beliefs? The integrity of the Univer¬sity is lost if it now must discriminate infavor of one group or opinion and stifle anyactivity disagreeing with that opinion.Lawrence Rice 73 Peace StatisticsA little over four percent of the total pop.ulation of Cook County (pop. five million)has signed the petition supporting theMcGovern-Hatfield Amendment to End theWar.Analysis of the city-wide results so farindicates that at least 40 percent of thepeople of Cook County are ready and will-ing to sign the petition. Why the dis¬crepancy in the two figures?Put simply, there are not enough warmbreathing bodies willing to go out and takethe petitions to the people of Cook County.Anti-war feeling is at an all-time highright now; a crucial opportunity is beingneglected. Come to Ida Noyes 217 (9 am to4 pm) and volunteer to canvass now!Lucy Arimond 72Bob Blacksberg 72THEECOLOGY MAJORSAIDCONSERVATIVELY:MILLERMAKES IT RIGHT!SEND USYOURADJECTIVEPUNS ABOUTCOLLEGEMAJORS. IFPUBLISHED.WE LL SENDYOU AREFRESHINGREWARD.COLLEGE BOX 482) MILLER BREW. CO.MILW., WIS. 53201 You own the sunChild of Aquarius. Sun worshiper...Coppertone takes you back to nature with adeeper, darker, richer tan... faster.And there's a Coppertone tan that's justnaturally right for you. Eleven fabulousblends. Make Coppertone a part ofyour bag... beachbag, that is.Products of Plough. IncCoppertoneP.5./For a totally different sunexperience try new CoppertoneTanning Butter (cocoa butter andcoconut oil). Wild!6/The Chicago Maroon/May 19, 1970(Maroon Cliaslffod Ada)YOU ARE EITHER A VICTIM OR A REBELSCENESrrpd of Getting Served "MysteryMeat" On Planes? Eat Real Foodr Real Airline. Call AmericanAirlines Campus Rep. Jim Sack 684-6667 For Info.7eilo Recital — Sunday 24th — IdaNoyes Library - 8:OOPM - WorksBy Bach and Beethoven andBrahms.Mr lecher will be giving readingcourse in introductory macroecon.(Econ282) 1 of 3 qtr in 1970-1.Others who want to ioin me intaking the course, call Birni —Birnberg — at 752-4081PAN-INDIAN MUSIC FESTIVAL.Friday evening, 8:30P.M. Dr. Lal-mani Misra, foremost exponent ofthe difficult and unusual vichifravinam a fret-less vina played bysliding a polished glass cylinderalong the strings. With Jnan Pra-kash Ghosh, outstanding teacherand tablaist. Saturday, 8:30P.M„V Ranganayaki will sing in Carna¬tic recital. With the well-knownteacher and artist T. Ranganathanplaying mridangam and L. Shankaras violinist. Both concerts in theLaw School Auditorium. Tickets onsale now in Foster Hall 106. Stu¬dent price, $2.00 each concert, bothfor $3.50. General admission, $3.00each concert.FREE MARSHMALLOWS! AN ALLCAMPUS BARBECUE — Cook YourOwn Hamburgers, Hotdogs (Cheap!)Tues, May 19, 5 To 8:30, In TheHitchcock Courtyard. Zero Population Growth — TONITE-5600 Woodlawn — 8PM. All Wel¬come.SVNA MEETING 4-Double Beds, Bunk Bed, Washer8, Dryer, Extra Long Sofa andMore. 538-8487 or Gene at MU 4-6100 x5068 after 7:00 P.M.Where do we go from here? Openmeeting, all invited to discuss pastand future history of SVNA. Wed.9 PM, INH theatre (3rd floor).Faculty, staff: Do you like SVNA?Come tell us why not, INH 9PMWed. Bring suggestions.MUSICIANSTONIGHT: Phil and the FastbacksWill Slide Over To The HitchcockBerbeque On Their Own Grease andBring Back Paul Anka, Ricky Nel¬son & The Everylys With PathosTo Touch Your Heart. Marvy Philand The Fastbacks Are Just TooKeen To Be Missed. See All YouCool Teens There.The Legendary Pepperbande isAlive and Fueling The RevolutionWith Their Incendiary Spirit, ThusKeeping Them Away From TheirThrongs of Gushy Admirers. PeaceAnd The Power Of The Pepper WillCome To The People When All isProselytized And The PepperbandeShall Return.METAMORPHOSIS955-9347, 5638 S. Woodlawn.BRECHT in Hutch Court!!! Threeone-act plays, directed by StephenJaeger and Peter Jansen. Fri-Sat-Sun at 8:30. FREE.Israeli Folk Dancing Thurs Eve7:30-11. Teaching 8. Requests. Re¬freshments Free Hillel House. AN UNBELIEVABLEBARBECUEFree Marshmallows, Food (Cheap)Watermelon (For Music). Tues,May 19, Quads at 57th 8. Ellis, 5Till 8:30. Be There.REVOLUTIONSee Shirley CLARK, undergroundfilm maker with her flick. TheConnection at 8:OOPM in the LawSchool. May 21.CHESS, simultaneous matches at3:30 with International Grand Mas¬ter in Ida Noyes and lecture/dem¬onstration at 8:30 PM in Quantrell.May 21 (The REAL thing, none of thishanky-panky). Three plays by BER¬TOLT BRECHT will be presentedfree-for-the-people Fri, Sat, Sun(May 22, 23, 24) in Hutch Court(Reynolds Club Theatre if it rains).THE EXCEPTION AND THE RULE,THE ELEPHANT CALF, and THEMEASURES TAKEN. Extraordinar¬ily topical. 8:30 pm.KEN KELSEY — May 22 — 8:00 —Breasted Hall. *Writers' Workshop (PL 2-8377).Israeli Folk Dancing Thurs Eve7:30-11. Teaching 8, Requests. Re¬freshments Free Hillel House.Assistant concertmaster of the Chi¬cago Symphony, Francis Akos andEloise Polk will perform in anevening of Music for Violin andPiano on May 22 at 8:30 in Mandel. YOUTH PASSPORTTWA's New Concept in YouthTravel Regular Discounts OnDomestic Carriers ButMuch More!Discounts On Auto Rental AndPurchase In Europe ReducedRates At Hotels HospitalityParties In London andAmsterdam. Come In To StudentCharter In Ida Noyes and PickOne Up It Only Costs $4Mother Would Want You To HaveOneSENSITIVITY TRAINING with TheMaster Pro—Dr. Jack Gibb—June12-14—$25. 684-1121 or 643-8538.CRAFT CO-OP now open Mon.-Fri.1-5, 3rd fl. Blue Gargoyle.Marco Polo Travel. 2268 S. KingDrive, Chicago, III. 60616.FOUND: Rational evidence that"The Emerging Republican Major¬ity" doesn't exist. Sen. Fred R.Harris sees it more as wishfulthinking than political fact. Andasserts that the Republican Partycannot maintain an openly conser¬vative line — turning its back onblacks, urban crises and poverty —and still justify its existence. Orwin elections. And he tells why in"The Making of a Majority." Inthis month's special issue of HAR¬PER'S MAGAZINE, America's firstmonthly. On Sale Now. ,Phonographic Literature Free!!!Good Sound for Your Phonographat MUSICRAFT Also Tuners AmpsReceivers 8. Tape Decks Save$$$on Campus Bob Tabor 363-4555.This Thursday 8< Every ThursdayIsraeli Dancing at Hillel. FREE.7:30-11. FOR SALERegretfully must sell my 1960 Mer¬cedes 220Sb. Leather interior; bodyvery good, to fair in spots; mechan¬ically excellent. $700. 324-9358.SALE!! Shure M91E Cartridge Reg$50 Now Only $25 With Trade ATMUSICRAFT. For Lowest Priceson all Components. Call CampusRep Bob Tabor 363-4555 Save $$$.FOR SALE: din rm table plus 6chairs, desk, twin bed, dressers,rugs, lamps, end tables. All exccondition. Call 363-3534.4-Track Stereo Pre-Recorded Tapes8> Records, Classical, Pop. Cheap!Sell or Trade 667-0903.ASSORTED JUNK for sale pt brokncouch, dining rm table, TV, air-conditioner, other stuff too. Call955-4261 ev.'65 Chevelle for sale to the highestbidder. AC, Sta Wag exc cond.74,000. 493-4426.Air Conditioner 11,000 BTU CarrierExc. Cond. $180. 493-4426.PSST! — special - 9 only - YAMA¬HA steel-string guitars w/minorproblems 60% off. The Fret Shop.Harper Court. Foimcha — a gigantic apartmentfull. We have beds, desks, couches,(even a Freudian one) chairs,dressers, a secretary, lamps, table,mirrors, a TV and stand etc. etc.What a chance — get it beforeParke Bernet grabs it. 363-1352.Kingsize Mattress, 5000 BTU AirCond., Table plus 6 Chairs, Desk,Books, Clothes plus Many OtherItems. HY 3-8127. 5473 Everett #2N.OLD tbl, 6 high back chairs, 2huge barrel-back chairs, desk, van¬ity, reclining chair, CHEAP dys-X3251 ngt 324-3205 Rosmann.Girls bike, excellent condition, din¬ette set, desk, couch, Hi-Fi (com¬ponent parts), lamps, cinder blocksReasonable. Call 538-2907.64 VW for Sale-Very good enginenew brakes 8. carb, snow tires.30,000 miles-$550-Call: 324-5856.2year, Queensize BED, wonderfulcondition — $85. Call: 3245856.WANTEDMailing Address 684-7837 LARRY.HOUSE FOR SALE4 bedrooms 2 full baths 2 car ga¬rage large garden. 955-5916.House near campus for summer forfamily. DO 3-3710.SPACEWanted — Fern Rmmt — Sum Ltr.,25+prf Ige apt $65/mo 55+Univ.667-2530.Fern. Roommate to share largesunny luxurious apt. own rm +bath $55. Summer w. opt. fall. 752-0316.REWARD for info leading to ac¬quisition of 2- or 3-bdrm apt. be¬tween 55th and 59th best. Call324-6048 eves.Very bright and airy 3’/2 rm apt.1 block from Co-op and 1C, $140incl all util, avail June 1. Call D.Eisenbuc Skdays NO 7-4700, x2743,Wkends 955-1360,2 female roommates wanted forJune 1st ccupancy. Beautiful Apt.53rd Dorchester. 363-7932, x3447.Available June 1, Very Lorge 4Rm Apt Hyde Park Day DO 3-6700Ext 307 Even: 324-1117.Avail June, IV2 rm bsmt apt, furnbright, sep entrance $105/mo nearUniv, 288-3197 or 324-9444.For Rent 2 bdrm apt. 137. 5443 S.Cornell 955-5871 Ju. 1.Furnished Rm. 493-3328.7 Rooms S Shore $145 Avail July1. Furnishings For Sale Too. Call721-6638 Evenings.Fern Rmmt Wntd. $60/Mo. 924-4691.or 644-2055 x64. 9AM to 5PM.South Shore, 1 Bdrm Apt. largerooms, on 1C, campus bus avail.June 7 $125, 731-4145.Lrg 5 rm apt 53 8. Woodlawn. June1 thru Sept. Opt. After $165/mo.288-2236.For Rent. Avail June. Basement,3 Rooms Furnished. Exc Locationnear the Point. Call BU 8-3216.Live in Friederika's Famous Build¬ing. Now, June, and October. Near¬by unfurn 2, 3 Rm Apts. $95 up.Free Utils. Stm. Ht. Quiet. Light.Pvt. Ba. 4-6PM. 6043 Woodlawn. 955-9209, or WA 2-8411, ext. 311.SUMMER SUBLETSummer Rmmt(s) wanted to sharelarge inexpensive Hyde Park Apt.3 Bedrooms. June-Sept. 643-7219Eves. 8. Wkends.Male Grad Wanted To Share AptIn S Shore 'Furnished On Lake ForSummer Qtr. 734-4324.MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNname, address, phoneCHARGE: 50' per line, 40‘ per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75‘ perline, 60' per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are fre^.— ! i — — —■— — h-f— —i— -— — ~~ -——j“ + • h H— —1— — >-■■■4 ■■ —— - — — — -4L.— —— — — ■ ——_ “L —i— r—i— —„ L——. 1. 4Vi ’■'.ms, 1 Bdrm S. Shore Near 1C,Campus Bus BIG! Garage avail.Really GOOD Place July-Sept. CallBob 667-8863.Spacious Air-conditioned Apt 7 Rms,4 Beds June-Sept X2345, 643-6607.Sublet 6/15 to 9/15. Own Bdrm InLarge Super Nice Apt — Plants,Dishwasher, Sun. Fern. 6674526.House w/ideal location near campusfor summer for family. Call DO 3-3710.Fern roommate wanted for summersublet at 56 8, University to mid-Sept; Call 955-4182 or 288-6610, rm1308.4 Rooms one block from Admin¬istration Building. $T50/mo., or $300for entire summer. Ph. 955-9810,9:30am, 7pm, or 10pm.Rmmates wanted for large apt.Mid June-Mid Sept. Call 363-3997.6/15-9/30 Sublet $200. l'/j rm Apt.Furn 55th 8< Greenwood. 667-6798.Apt or Room Wntd Hyd Pk orClose Jun Only. Call 955-7061.Rmmt Wntd — 5Vi Rm duplex Nr1C & Harper Ct Avail 6/1 w/optfor fall $45/mo. 324-1768. Libs &pig-dogs need not apply!!!Summer sublet: 5 rm (3 bdrm) apt54 St. 8, University Av $120/mo.Call 288-8665 evenings.1 Bedroom in 3 bedroom, Quiet AirConditioned Apt. Male Pref 6/10 to9/25 $67/Mo. 5114 S. Harper, 752-1469.Bossass apt. sublet thru Sept 3bed prime location balcony likenew/ cheap 955-3971.SMR SBLT 2Vj Rm Unfurn $100 UtlInc. 6/15-10/1, X3995, 493-3643.Ju-Sept w option for next year. 2bl campus $48/mo. 643-9894.Rmt For Beeutfl 10-Room 2 FloorAttention! Special Opportunity. Sub-Smr Sblt 5738 Maryland 684-7994.Beautiful Apt to Sublet 2 Bedrooms,Kitchen, LR, and Foyer 53rd8,Ken-wood June Thru Sept $135/Mo 324-3623 Windows, Porch Etc.Roommate Wanted for Summer Sub¬let. Mid-June to Mid Sept. One Blkfrom Campus Own Room. Possoption for Next Year 493-3037.3Bedrooms 2 Bathrooms, Sunporch,Furniture, 4 Blcks From Campus$150/Mo. Possible Fall Option, 363-3436, 53rd8iGreenwood.Apt to Sublet Summer 8 Rooms 8.Sunporch 51 8. Kimbark $200/Mo752-5416.Make Love June-Sept in great 6Rm. Apt. 58 8. Maryland. 363-0551.Sublet-Own Room In Lrg. Apt. Air-Condit. Thru Late Sept. $50/mo.Call Ml 3-6000, Rm 314.4rms June 20-Sept 1. $200 total.Ideal for Couple. 684-0753 Eves.Summer Sublet 3 bdrm apt modernkitchen bathroom near campusshopping adjustable rent. 363-3990.2 Blks Off Campus June-Sept RoomBathroom-Cooking-Ext 8165 Karl.Summer Sublet: 5428 Kimbark 4rms. $104/mo. Couple Preferred ButNot Necessary. Phone 324-9303.Dee-luxe sublet 3 bedroom aptfurnished $130/mo. 288-4234..3Vi Furnished Rms 6/15-9/15, $135/mo. 955-8874. E. Hyde Park.Sub-Lease 6/24-9/19, 1 bdrm. Sunporch, 57 8. Dor. 493-4426.Lg furn 3 bdrm apt in So. ShoreJune 15-Sept 15, $100/mo. eves: 731-4188.6V2 Room apt-4 Bed rms-Near Cam¬pus — 150/Mon-Sublet Sum-Opt ForFall Lease — 3632383 6PM.5rm. furn. apt. near campus. (5712S. Maryland ave). Call 363-5029.Sum Sublet: June 15-Sept 20, 3-4bed. Near Lake $200/Mon. Furn.324-7148.R MMT. Wntd. Summer, Poss. NextYr 1400 E 57. $65/mo. 288-4595.4'/i Furn. Apt. 54 Cornell Sublet7/20-9/11 for $240. PL 2-7999.Sublet 4 rms furnished $125 or bestoffer 6/15 to 9/15. 54th 8. Green¬wood. 955-3865.2 bdrm apt to sublet, July 8, Aug,SS, unfurn. Option to renew lease.$140. 731-3337.FAC APT — Summer Quarter orpart thereof. Prefer married couple— references. Lowish rent. Close tocampus. 752-7045.4 RM Apt 53rd & Kenwood Avail.June, $140/mo. 955-2418.Summer Sublet — 4 rms. clean onmidway near Law School. $100/mo.324-6871.Summer sublet: large, clean 3Vjroom apartment at 58th and Black-stone. Completely furnished, rentreasonable. 643-3088.Wow, Here's your chance to live ina huge, palatial, 3 bedroom apart¬ment in South Shore with anothercouple. South Shore is infinely cool¬er in the summer than Hyde Park,and this place is right near thelake. Hurry and call Jane after 6pm. 752-3914. Sublease June 1-October 1. SouthShore Area. Large Spacious 2 bed¬room apartment. Enclosed backporch with sun parlor. Good trans¬portation near 1C and Jeffrey Ex¬press. $150. 752-3025 evenings andweekends, 726-0157 days.SERVICESDesire Eve Clerical Work. Exc.Skills. M-W-F 6-9 PM. 548-4251.Experienced Governess Prefer boysHarriet Marwood 363-1164.3rd year undergrad In generalstudies in humanities needs summeremployment. Would like to do re-serch Call x3777 Room 501 Pleaseleave Message.1 CAN TYPE! Manuscripts, termpaper, confd'l, proofread and cutstencils. Can pick up after 6 PM,326-4745, Mrs. Adams.PEOPLE WANTEDWanted — Help in Literary ModernDrama — Gen. Reward — CallCO 4-5213.Girls or married couple for 3 rms.Kenwood, 3rd floor in return forbaby sitting. Start June or fall;373-0454.We saw these little kids, and theyreally are adorable. Look at theireyes, especially.Starting Fall Quarter, baby sittingneeded in exchange for room andboard; call 288-5174.2 f lawst seek 1-2 rmmates DCtnhse Summer 493-4830 ; 955-8472.Deliveries 8< errands for HydePark publishing firm. Must knowChicago area, have car, 8< be avail¬able approximately 20 hrs/wk. Sal¬ary 8, expenses. Call Mr. Carney,493-2020.Great Opportunity! Bright businessstudent needed to hetp develop ex¬cellent business prospective. CallMitch 667-1072.Need Student for Consumer Market¬ing project. Call Mitch 667-1072after 6PM.PART-TIME SUMMEREarn Big $$. If you are staying inHyde Park this summer and needto earn some extra cash, work forthe Maroon. We need salesmen orwomen to work in our large andexpanding Ad Dept. Generous com¬missions and mileage allowance.Call Joel at X3263.BANKINGPART TIMETELLERSNeeded for late afternoon hours.We will train. Some Related Ex¬perience preferred.Call Personnel Department HydePark Bank. 752-4600 LOST AND FOUNDLost Square Tortoise Shell GlassesReward. Helen, 667-3531.LOST — Prescription Sunglasses InBrocade Case. Call Jini 324-4457.Lost, Strayed or Borrowed — 3Plate-sized Gongs. From UC orch¬estra. Call 955-2875 or X2615. RE¬WARD.RIDESWntd — Rde Oberlin graduationMay 22, 23. 667-2530.PERSONAL- NEED NEW HOMESFREE KITTEN MALEGrey/White Hsebroken 10 Wk Old.We Pay For Shots. 955-7281/Nite. Staying in Hyde Park This Sum¬mer? Reconsider Your Decision Un¬der the Arizona Sun. Fly ThereOn American Airlines. Call CampusRep. Jim Sack 684-6667 For Info.KEN KESEY — May 22 — 8:00 —Breasted Hall.Happy Birthday to BOOBOO TheBear From Your Brussel Sprout!We Need a 3rd Person To InvestIn a Small Catamaran (Aqua Cat)For Summer Sailing. RequiredBread is $300 Per Person. Logisticswould be simpler if you had a carand some muscles. Will Teach YouTo Sail. Call 363-6405 or 324-9219.THE ELEPHANT CALF is one ofthe funiest things Brecht everwrote. See a Moon, an ElephantCalf, an Elephant Calf's Mother,and a Banana Tree in person, Fri¬day, Saturday, Sunday at 8:30 pmin Hutch Court.KEN KESEY — May 22 — 8:00 —Breasted Hall.What happens when a Young Com¬rade gives way to pity and hindersthe Revolution? THE MEASURESTAKEN, Hutch Court, Friday, Satur¬day, Sunday at 8:30.Some Sound AdviceSave $ On Stereo Components atMUSICRAFT. Save $20.00 On Gar¬rard; Save $170 on Scott Receiver;Save $50 on AR 3A Spkr. On Cam¬pus Bob Tabor 363-4555.George Volsky I Love You.Multi-Media Rock Cantata by theFREE theater May 22, 8:30 IdaNoyes.Author of Walk on the Wild SideNelson ALGREN, will be here onMay 24 at 8:00 in Breasted Hall.Mystical Story teller, Reuven GoldMay 23, Ida Noyes 8:30PM.Shirley Clark and her flick, TheCool World May 21, 8:00 Law School.Outdoor Classical Music ConcertMay 20, noon Hutchinson Ct.BRECHT BRECHT BRECHTFREE FREE FREE FREE FREEREVOLUTION REVOLUTIONHUTCH COURT HUTCH COURTFRI SAT SUN FRI SAT SUN FRIEIGHT THIRTY EIGHT THIRTYEVEN If YOU DON'T LOOK THE PART.the Maroon is willing to train and pay you well to beASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER for next year. Yourduties would include handling some simple book¬keeping chores, some simple typing, answering thephone, and assembling the paper.This is really a fantastic opportunity to put off goingout into the real, ugly world. Stay in the womb-likewarmth of the University community - yet have all theadvantages of engaging in a full time, cop-out job.Submit a resume to the Maroon office in Ida NoyesHall - or call Joel for information at x3263.May 19, 1970/The Chicago Maroon/7FOTA EVENTSMay 19 - May 26SHIRLEY CLARKwith her underground film. Portrait of Jason* *May 198 P.M.Law SchoolOutdoor Classical Music ConcertBach's Brandenburg Concertos 1,3, 4, and 5May 20noonHutchinson Ct.8 P.M.Law School SHIRLEY CLARKwith her underground film, The ConnectionMay 213:30 P.M.Ida Noyes Simultaneous Chess Matcheswith Robert Byrne, International Grand Master8:30 P.M. Chess Lecture/DemonstrationQuantrell with Robert Byrne8:00 SHIRLEY CLARKLaw School with her flick. The Cool WorldMay 22,23,248:30 P.M.Hutchinson Ct.May 228:00Breasted Hall58th & University8:30Mandel8:30Ida Noyes Gym Three Plays by BRECHT"The Exception and the Rule""The Measure Taken""The Elephant Calf"Directed by Professor Stephen JaegerKEN KESEYauthor of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and former head of the Merry PrankstersAn Evening of Music For Violin and PianoFranic AKOS, violin, and Eloise POLK, piano.Mr. Akos is the assistant concertmaster of the Chicago Symphony and the conductor of theChicago Strings.Eloise Polk studied with Casadeseus, Hozowski, and Serkin.Multi-Media Rock Cantata"The Civil War" by William RUSSO. Presented by the FREE THEATER of the Columbia CollegeCenter for New Music.May 238:30Ida Noyes&3CMandel REUVENGOLDmystical story tellerU. of C SymphonySpring Concert: Overture to Impressario bv MozartWorld premier of Circular Forms by Professor McKinley commissioned by the college for thesymphonyDvorak's 8th SymphonyMay 24 NELSON ALGRENBreasted Hall Algren is the Chicago author of Man With a Gold Arm. A Walk on the Wild Side and Chicago:8:00 City on the Make.This is the official, up-to-date schedule. AH events free unless otherwise specified.* * listen to WHPK for confirmation of Shirley Clark’s appearances iTAKSAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. 10 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.tf.Orders -:o take out PlArCCrS ALL-NIGHT SHOWPfMOtMANUS <810AT t UTMDAT HXIOWING iAST BIGU1AR <UfUfitMay 15 May 16Bela Lugosi - Boris Karloff k*DRACULA & FRANKENSTEIN BATTLE OF ALGIERSMay 22 May 23Peter Sellers - Ringo Starr ** Aria GathrieMAGIC CHRISTIAN ALICE'S RESTAURANTDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 May 29Sharon Tata in Roman Polanski'sFEARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS May 30Min Farrow - John CassavetesROSEMARY'S BAITJune 5Loo Marvin - Am BrawnTHE DIRTY DOZEN June 6John Wayne - Glen CampbellTRUE GRITJune 12Terence Stamp-Samantha EggarTHE COLLECTOR June 13Cliff Robertson-Clair BloomCHARLEYTICKETS St.SOPLAYBOY T Vi™EATeF,iUiN 0» t>B »«. CHECKERTAXIHASTHE IDEAL JOBFOR THECOLLEGE STUDENT• WE CAN ARRANGE AWORK SCHEDULE TO FITANY C L A S SROOMSCHEDULE• WORK ANY NUMBER OFDAYS 1 TO 6 PER WK• WORK CLOSE TO HOMEOR SCHOOL AT ONE OF 9GARAGES• WORK DURING SUMMERVACATION, SEMESTERBREAKS AND HOLIDAYS• EARN AS MUCH AS FULLTIME WORKERSMALE OR FEMALEMINIMUM AGE 21APPLY841; WASHINGTON8:00 to 4:30 DAILY8:00 to 11:00 SAT.CALL 421-1314I 8/The Chicago Maroon/Mey 19, 1970 MALE OR FEMALEIF YOU HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEAPPLY NOW FOR SUMMER WORKDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.