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Parking<br />
deal nets<br />
$2,500-3,000<br />
for AA<br />
'<br />
'<br />
••<br />
Gray says Nixon was warned<br />
WASHINGTON, DC. (AP ) —<br />
Former FBI acting director L.<br />
Patrick Gray HI said Thursday<br />
that he warned President Nixon<br />
last summer "that people on your<br />
staff are trying to mortally wound<br />
you."<br />
Gray made the disclosure before<br />
a closed session of a Senate appropriations<br />
subcommittee and<br />
was quoted by the subcommittee<br />
chairman, Sen. John L. McClellan,<br />
D-Ark. -<br />
Additional Watergate stories are<br />
on pages 2 and 3.<br />
Gray told the subcommittee, according<br />
to McClellan, that he spoke<br />
to Nixon last July 6 after agreeing<br />
with Lt. Gen. Vernon Walters,<br />
deputy CIA director , that confusion<br />
had arisen about the investigation<br />
of Mexican aspects of<br />
the Watergate case.<br />
Former CIA Director Richard<br />
Helms has said that last June 23,<br />
White House chief of staff H.R.<br />
Haldeman instructed Walters to<br />
tell Gray that the FBI should quash<br />
its Mexican investigations for fear<br />
of uncovering covert CIA<br />
operations in Mexico.<br />
Gray testified Thursday that the<br />
message was delivered and the<br />
FBI investigation was curtailed for<br />
a time, but that he went to Clark<br />
MacGregor, director of Nixon's re-<br />
UGSA receives loan<br />
from student fund<br />
By MARK FERGUSON<br />
Daily Mini Staff Writer<br />
Undergraduate Student Association<br />
( UGSA ) steering committee<br />
member Scott Colky said .Thursday<br />
UGSA has received a $2,000<br />
loan through James Hampton,<br />
associate dean of studen t programs<br />
and services, from the student<br />
activities revolving fund.<br />
Colky said the money would be<br />
used to reduce the current UGSA<br />
debt, which he had estimated<br />
earlier as "more than $4,000."<br />
The debts which Colky's<br />
estimate included were $2,000<br />
owed to the UGSA refrigerator<br />
damage deposits account, $1,000 in<br />
unpaid Legal Service salaries and<br />
$1,000 owed to the <strong>University</strong> Programs<br />
Company (UPC) for the<br />
sales of regrigerators.<br />
Colky said he discovered a $1,000<br />
error in the previous steering committee's<br />
bookkeeping, "which<br />
means we have the $1,000 for<br />
UPC."<br />
Colky also said Thursday UGSA<br />
"has the money for Legal Service<br />
salaries and we will pay them Friday."<br />
Colky said he has obtained<br />
$700 from "personal loans" and the<br />
additional $300 in donations from<br />
Campus Chest and Illini Tower student<br />
government.<br />
"That means," Colky said, "we<br />
how have only the $2,000 loan to<br />
repay to the student activities<br />
fund, which we agreed to pay by<br />
September 15."<br />
Colky said "about $1,800" would<br />
be repaid "with the Globe Life Insurance<br />
Company money if and<br />
when we get it."<br />
Globe signed a contract with<br />
UGSA last year agreeing to pay<br />
TODAY PARTLY SUNNY and<br />
warm " with showers and thunderstorms<br />
likely, especially in the<br />
afternoon or evening. Highs today<br />
73 to 78.<br />
Tonight , showers and thunderstorms<br />
likely with lows in the<br />
50s.<br />
Tomorrow cloudy and cooler<br />
with showers and thunderstorms<br />
likely and highs in the 60s.<br />
The probability of precipitation :<br />
50 per cent both today and tonight.<br />
' ¦<br />
' . . .<br />
'<br />
«• :<br />
,<br />
By LARRY INGRASSI.Y<br />
Daily Illini Staff Writer<br />
The <strong>University</strong> Athletic Association mL WwPmlr] ^£aBS8*!i9ff i.-*" c'<br />
~r*r. . ,. . : .< . ¦<br />
for any event, unless thegroup rents the hall<br />
itself. In that case, the lots are included with<br />
the hall.<br />
Tom Parkinson, Assembly Hall director,<br />
defends the arrangement, which he said was<br />
in existence for 10years.<br />
He denied last week that the Assembly<br />
Hall could operate its own lots at the same<br />
cost of having mutual operating expenses<br />
deducted by the AA.<br />
"We would have to devote our time and<br />
supervisory power to do something we are<br />
not now concerned with if we wanted to handle<br />
parking," he said.<br />
He said he considers the rental<br />
arrangement an opportunity for the Assembly<br />
Hall to get something for no effort.<br />
Parkinson added, "If I were in competition<br />
with them, they could logically ask<br />
me to pay for supervisors and such."<br />
However, the Assembly Hall already pays<br />
indirectly for supervisors, police and<br />
parkers through the expenses its lot is<br />
charged .<br />
Parkinson also claimed it would he hard<br />
to coordinate efforts if two different groups<br />
, handled parking.<br />
However, Vern Kores. acting police chief;<br />
who oversees traffic control during games,<br />
said the traffic control would have the same<br />
efficiency no matter who handled parking.<br />
The AA hires about 40-45 <strong>University</strong> police<br />
to direct traffic before and after football<br />
games.<br />
The AA has already determined that the<br />
Assembly Hall lot should be charged for the<br />
services of 11 police each game.<br />
Richard P. Tamburo. associate athletic<br />
director, said he thinks the arrangement is<br />
fair. "If it weren't for the football games,<br />
they wouldn't be getting any parking money<br />
on those days."<br />
• . ¦;,. -¦ ¦¦¦<br />
;•;<br />
¦ -• - -.* -. ¦ . **» ¦¦ ;• ^, ¦¦<br />
~xo:c-t^tsi**:.. ¦
Barker sought Cuban liberation<br />
WASHINGTON . DC. (AP ) -<br />
Bernard L. Barker said Thursday<br />
he broke into the Watergate "as a<br />
matter of national security" to<br />
look for documents showing leftist<br />
or Cuban contributions to the<br />
Democratic presidential campaign<br />
.<br />
He said he found none.<br />
. "I considered it duty for my<br />
country." Barker told the Senate<br />
Watergate committee. He added<br />
he has not changed his mind.<br />
Foremost in his mind—and that<br />
of the three Cuban-Americans<br />
arrested with him—was to gain<br />
support in high places for another<br />
operation to liberate Cuba from the<br />
Communist government of Fidel<br />
Castro.<br />
"I am part of a team with which<br />
I am very proud to be associated,"<br />
said Barker in a choked voice.<br />
"We'll have to live with the word<br />
'burglar.' But we resent, very<br />
emotionally, the words that we<br />
were hired.<br />
"There was no need to buy our<br />
silence. We were not for<br />
sale...We're just plain people who<br />
very truthfully believed that Cuba<br />
TODAY'S STAFF<br />
Editor Barb Roth<br />
Sports editor Ray Murphy<br />
Photo editor . . . Maria Edelman<br />
Asst. editor .... Chris Johnson<br />
Layout asst Jane Fritsch<br />
Ad manager Nancy Olson<br />
Wire editor G.P. Labedz<br />
Assistants Don Yarling,<br />
Randy Epstein, Jim Gehring,<br />
Brian Alexander, Bob Hykan,<br />
Mark Ferguson, Chip Shields,<br />
Ed Epstein, Don Berowski,<br />
Rick Pope, Fred Eisenhammer<br />
THE DAILY ILLINI<br />
Volume 102<br />
Serving the <strong>University</strong> and the<br />
community for over a century<br />
. MEMBER OF THE<br />
. ASSOCIATED PRESS<br />
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use<br />
for republication of all local news printed in this<br />
newspaper.<br />
RICHARD SUBLETTE Publisher<br />
WILLIAM SHAW - Director of Advertising<br />
JIM GEHRING ' Editor-in-chief<br />
ED EPSTEIN Managing Editor<br />
KAREN GOODMAN Business Manager<br />
PAULA GARRY Assoc. Business Manager<br />
TOM HARM IPC Photo Chief<br />
PHYLLIS CLARKE Circulation Mgr.<br />
NICHOLAS LOIACONO Head Carrier<br />
Staff Editors: Rick Vacek. SPORTS; Bob Hykan,<br />
CAMPUS; Don Yarling. FEATURE; Michael Rosenbaum,<br />
PUBLIC AFFAIRS; Rick Pope. SPECTRUM;<br />
Sharon Watts. COPY.<br />
Managers: lleene Turovitz, NATIONAL ADVER<br />
TISING: Gary Montalto. PROMOTION; Kim Watts<br />
OFFICE<br />
Bob Glick. MAILING SUPERVISOR. Janice Hoffman,<br />
CLASSIFIED.<br />
For The Illini Publishing Company<br />
Jacquelin McClellan Office Mgr.<br />
Almario Salonga Accounting<br />
The Daily Illini is a student publication of the Illini<br />
Publishing Company and does not necessarily represent<br />
in whole or in pa»t. the views of the <strong>University</strong> of<br />
Illinois administration, faculty or students.<br />
DAILY ILLINI SUBSCRIBERS<br />
If you are to receive The Daily Illini by carrier and your<br />
paper hasn't arrived by 8 a.m.. please call 333-3730 by<br />
10 a.m. so that we may get a paper to you.<br />
Office hours Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to S p.m.<br />
Phone 1217) 333-3730.<br />
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Lexington Avenue, New York. NY 10017.<br />
Midwest representative: N.E.A.S.. 307 North Michigan<br />
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Second class postage paid at Urbana, Illinois.<br />
Published daily except Sunday and Monday in the fall<br />
and spring semesters at the <strong>University</strong> of Illinois. Not<br />
published during summer school, on days following<br />
holidays, nor when the <strong>University</strong> of Illinois is not in<br />
session. The business and editorial offices of The<br />
Daily Illini are located in Gregory Hall. Urbana. Illinois.<br />
and in the basement of Illini Hall. 620 E. John St.,<br />
Champaign, Illinois. The public office is in the latter<br />
location. Subscription price $10 per year. $6 per<br />
semester mailed or delivered anywhere in Illinois. Outside<br />
state of Illinois (U.S. & Canada) $12 per year, $7<br />
per-semester. Outside U.S. & Canada $19 per year,<br />
$11 per semester.<br />
has a right to live ."<br />
He denied suggestions from the<br />
Senators that he was engaged not<br />
in a national security operation ,<br />
but in political espionage.<br />
Barker received limited immunity<br />
from his appearance. He<br />
was preceded on the stand by<br />
Gerald Alch, former attorney for<br />
convicted conspirator James W.<br />
McCord Jr.<br />
Then the committee Called<br />
Alfred C. Baldwin , the former FBI<br />
agent who monitored the wiretapped<br />
conversations from<br />
Democratic Party headquarters.<br />
Baldwin said he had asked no immunity<br />
for his testimony, that he<br />
relied on government promises not<br />
to prosecute him if he agreed to<br />
testify.<br />
Barker , whose parents are<br />
Americans, was born in Cuba and<br />
spent half his life there—part of the<br />
time in the pre-Castro Cuban<br />
police.<br />
He was one of five men arrested<br />
inside the Democratic offices last<br />
June 17 and one of five who pleaded<br />
guilty to conspiracy, burglary and<br />
illegal wiretapping.<br />
"What sort of documents were<br />
you primaril y looking for?"<br />
Barker was asked.<br />
A. Documents that would involve<br />
contribution of a foreign nature to.<br />
the Democratic campaign,<br />
especially to Sen . George<br />
McGovern and possibly to Sen! Ed-<br />
"Happy is the house<br />
ward M. Kennedy.<br />
Q. Were you looking for<br />
documents reflecting a contribution<br />
from any particular<br />
foreign government?<br />
A. Cuba<br />
Barker said that—like James W.<br />
McCord Jr., a co-conspirator—he<br />
received money from Mrs. E.<br />
Howard Hunt , the now-deceased<br />
wife of a third conspirator.<br />
He said he participated in three<br />
operations with Hunt last year, all<br />
on Hunt's word that "this was<br />
national* security and above the<br />
FBI and CIA."<br />
"The original operation was the<br />
Ellsberg operation," said Barker,<br />
one of the team that rifled the<br />
psychiatric files of Pentagon<br />
Papers figure Daniel Ellsberg.<br />
"It was explained to me that this<br />
was a matter of national security,"<br />
Barker said.<br />
that shelters a lriend ,, ...Raiph waido Emerson<br />
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have a lot to offer to help keep you happy next year, including our:<br />
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Recreation in an Pies and Dinner Rolls<br />
Adjacent City Park Laundry Facilities<br />
Color TV in Lounge Rec. Room with Pool Table " " t^^ K<br />
Convenient Campus Location . .^' ^^^i- ,<br />
We are a <strong>University</strong> approved, Co Ed house so don't sign any other contract until you<br />
have contacted us-<br />
Neil and Linda Fotiler phone 344-7818 or 344-4260<br />
ARMORY HOUSE<br />
1010 South Second (Corner of 2nd & Armory) Champ.<br />
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BROMLEY HALL 910 South Third St. Champaign. Illinois 61820 Phone (21.71 337 5000<br />
Coming this Sat. May 26 In The Weekly<br />
Encounter Groups<br />
The Daily lliinT<br />
*
Congressman commits suicide<br />
EASTON. Md. (AP ) - U.S. Rep. William<br />
0. Mills, R-Md , was found shot to death in<br />
an apparent suicide Thursday after newspapers<br />
reported he had failed to disclose a<br />
$25,000 campaign contribution from the<br />
Committee to Re-elect the President .<br />
"At the present time, it appears the cause<br />
of death was the result of a self-inflicted<br />
gunshot wound in the chest, although the investigation<br />
in the matter is continuing,"<br />
Talbot County State's Atty . William S. Horn<br />
said.<br />
Horn said a caretaker found Mills' body<br />
with a 12-gauge shotgun beside it.<br />
Mills, 48, had called Easton radio station<br />
WEMD Wednesday night with a statement<br />
denying any wrongdoing in connection with<br />
the 1971 campaign contribution .<br />
Rep. Bob Wilson , R-Calif., said in<br />
Washington Thursday that Mills was upset<br />
about articles appearing Sunday in the<br />
Washington Star-News and Wednesday in<br />
the Washington Post reporting the $25,000<br />
contribution .<br />
Wilson sajd he asked Mills if he was telling<br />
the truth in a statement he issued Tuesday,<br />
denying any wrongdoing. Mills assured him<br />
it was the truth , Wilson said.<br />
DeVan L. Shumway, press director of the<br />
Committee for the Re-election of the<br />
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Committee hears fund requests<br />
\By ART DRAKE<br />
Daily Illini Staff Writer<br />
The Champaign County Board's<br />
special Revenue Sharing Committee<br />
heard six more requests for<br />
money from four different groups<br />
in its second meeting Thursday<br />
night. -<br />
Les Monk, Champaign County<br />
Soil and Water Conservation<br />
District Conservationalist, presented<br />
that group's request for<br />
$176,000 to conduct a soil survey.<br />
The purpose of the survey would<br />
be "to determine the best possible<br />
use of the soil," Monk said.<br />
Some beneficial results of such a<br />
survey would be a "fairer basis for<br />
tax assessment on farm lands...and<br />
to determine where to<br />
build and where not to build" large<br />
structures.<br />
Sharon Lindsay of the Office oh<br />
Aging presented two requests, one<br />
of which would pay for a<br />
"specialized transportation service<br />
for the elderly and nan1<br />
dicapped in rural areas" where<br />
public transportation does not<br />
exist. " . • .<br />
Lindsay proposed a "minibus<br />
kind of vehicle" which would<br />
regularly go into all areas of the<br />
county. Lindsay said such a service<br />
would cost $28,000 at most.<br />
The other request for the Office<br />
on Aging was for $35,000 per year<br />
for continuation of that office,<br />
whose funds will be gradually cut<br />
off beginning July.<br />
Dr. Fred Krause, Director of the<br />
Juvinille Rehabillitation Program ,<br />
asked for $240,000 to "separate the<br />
detention arid treatment of aspects<br />
now at the Champaign County<br />
Youth Home."<br />
"Something should be done to<br />
seperate youngsters.who are there<br />
for two totally distinct reasons,"<br />
Krause said.<br />
John Laird of the Champaign-<br />
Urbana Community Union said his<br />
organization needed $5,000 to conduct<br />
a one year study "to determine<br />
the feasability of communitybased<br />
health insurance."<br />
There are many people who have<br />
no health insurance at all." Laird<br />
said. The money would include<br />
correspondance with foreign<br />
nations to see how their community<br />
health insurance programs<br />
operate.<br />
Joe Hardin , another member of<br />
the Union , asked for another $6,000<br />
"te investigate new ways to<br />
recycle solid waste" and find<br />
another way to dispose of waste<br />
that cannot be recycled.<br />
Woodwork plans<br />
used book service<br />
By MARK FERGUSON<br />
Daily Illini Staff Writer<br />
Woodwork, a newly formed student service organization, has announced<br />
plans to begin a book referral service next semester, which will<br />
"provide an alternative to selling used textbooks back to the local<br />
bookstores."<br />
Bob Fioretti , a Woodwork member, said Thursday the organization is<br />
hoping to open the service during new student week next fall.<br />
The book referra l, according to Fioretti, will give students the opportunity<br />
to exchange their old textbooks for books they need forthe next<br />
semester.<br />
-"Students would call the service number and tell us what books they<br />
wish to sell or exchange," Fioretti said. "The book title, the name of the<br />
owner, and his telephone number will be recorded on index cards and<br />
placed in our file."<br />
People wanting to buy books could then call the service, according to<br />
Fioretti, and would be given the names and numbers under those titles in<br />
the file.<br />
"Hopefully buyers and sellers could then settle on the prices," Fioretti<br />
continued. "When a student sells a book which he has listed in our file, he<br />
would notify us and the card would be removed from the file."<br />
Fioretti said the main purpose of the service is "to provide sellers with<br />
buyers who would pay what the books are worth, as an alternative to the<br />
bookstores which buy books for a maximum of half the original price."<br />
Woodwork has not yet gotten a telephone or office to use for the service,<br />
but member Bob Johnson said they are "hoping to get space in the Illini<br />
Union."<br />
Fioretti said Woodwork would definitely have persons available to answer<br />
telephones from nine a.m. to five p.m. during new student week and<br />
the first 10 days of class. He said the service would "probably" be open<br />
sometime in the evenings during that period .<br />
The service would also be open throughout the rest of the semester, according<br />
to Fioretti, but only a "few hours each week. The 10-day period at<br />
the beginning of the semester, is the time when students are most in need<br />
of the books."<br />
UIUC Offical Notice<br />
SPECIAL<br />
EXTRA<br />
BLOOD DRIVE<br />
TODAY<br />
This special drive is being held<br />
to avert a potential blood shortage<br />
over the Memorial Day weedend.<br />
APPOINTMENTS: VIP at 333-1020<br />
(Staff nhntn hv Chris Wnlker)<br />
FLOYD BAUMAN, R-6, chairman of the Champaign County Board Special Revenue Sharing<br />
Committee, presided over Thursday night's meeting. The board heard six more propsals<br />
for.projects to be funded with the county's revenue sharing money.<br />
Snack bar closing early<br />
By BOB COSE.NTINO<br />
Daily Illini Staff Writer<br />
Due to a shortage of student workers the !RH<br />
Snack Bar began closing daily at 2 a.m. last weeK instead<br />
of staying open 24 hours a day, according to<br />
Patrick Conlin, manager of the <strong>University</strong> snack<br />
bars.<br />
The early closing will be in effect for the rest of the<br />
semester.<br />
Conlin said the snack bar has lost eight or nine student<br />
employes in the past few -weeks because of<br />
"freakish accidents."<br />
"One of our students got poison ivy, another got<br />
mono, and another student broke his leg," Conlin<br />
said.<br />
"Help wanted" signs in the snack bar have been<br />
put up to solicit more student workers, but "students<br />
don't really want to work now," Conlin said. "It's too<br />
close to vacation time and students are more concerned<br />
about final exams."<br />
I<br />
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Although Conlin said students have not complained<br />
about the early closing, some students in the MRH<br />
complex said Thursday they have been somewhat inconvenienced<br />
by the situation.<br />
Rob Little, junior in engineering, who said he considers<br />
himself a late-night person, said the snack bar<br />
has previously been crowded well after 2 arm.<br />
"During exam week I usually keep pretty weird<br />
hours and Iwould like some place to get a doughnut or<br />
a cup of coffee late at night," Little said.<br />
Because of the employment shortage at the snack<br />
bar, some student employes have worked as much as<br />
12 hours a day since the 2:00 a.m. closing became effective<br />
May 18, according to Conlin. The snack bar is<br />
now open from 7:30 a.m. to 2 a.m.<br />
The snack bar will close June 5 and will be<br />
reopened August 20.<br />
"We hope to have the snack bar open 24 hours a day<br />
when it reopens in August," Conlin said.<br />
¦—¦ —— ¦<br />
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Nixon attacks tactics<br />
of stealing secrets<br />
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Nixon told a cheering, applauding<br />
audience of former American POWs Thursday that it is "time to stop<br />
making heroes out of those who steal secrets and publish them in<br />
newspapers."<br />
Nixon spoke to about 450 former Vietnam prisoners and asked them to<br />
help his administration in keeping America's military strength high.<br />
The POWs were here for a special homecoming salute from the<br />
. President . A gala black-tie tent dinner on the White House lawn was one<br />
of the features.<br />
Without mentioning the Watergate scandal , the President nonetheless<br />
touched on the matter of secrecy in and by his administration.<br />
Nixon said we would not have made the progress toward peace in the<br />
first years of his administration if there had not been secrecy.<br />
"Had we not had the secrecy , had we not had secret negotiations with<br />
North Vietnam , had we not had secret negotiations with the Soviet<br />
Union...there would have been no China initiative , no limitations on arms,<br />
no summit." Nixon said.<br />
Without his policy of secrecy concerning national security. Nixon told<br />
the former prisoners, "you men would still be in Hanoi rather than<br />
Washington today.<br />
"We have to stop making heroes out of those who steal secrets and<br />
publish them in newspapers."<br />
This remark brought the military men to their feet, cheering and applauding.<br />
, The President spent most of his 45-minute address, which he seemed to<br />
deliver completely spontaneousl y without notes, dealing with what he<br />
said was the need to maintain American strength.<br />
Rain put a damper on the elaborate preparations for the dinner Thursday<br />
night.<br />
"It's making things a little soggy," a spokesman lamented as plastic<br />
sides were dropped around the huge orange and yellow striped tent on the<br />
White House's south lawn.<br />
It wasn't exactly the weather the commander-in-chief would have ordered<br />
for his special homecoming salute to the former POWs, their wives<br />
and family members.<br />
- Heaters and blowers were rushed into action to keep the big tent dry<br />
and warm for the 1,280 or so guests, all in formal attire.<br />
The 128 tables with yellow cloths glittered beneath specially made<br />
gilded chandeliers. The White House staff estimated some 35,000 items<br />
were placed on the tables.<br />
Derailment spills corn<br />
Four Norfolk & Western railroad<br />
cars derailed near 200 W. Griggs<br />
St. in downtown Urbana early<br />
Thursday morning, spilling approximately<br />
500 bushels of corn .<br />
A spokesman for Norfolk &<br />
Western said the crossings from<br />
Green Street to Lincoln and<br />
V<br />
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PROFESSIONAL BUSINESS FRATERNITY<br />
Proudly Announces<br />
Its New Members For Spring Semester 1973<br />
Pete Capos<br />
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v Roland Maye ~<br />
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Adam Zakrewski<br />
GUARANTEED QUALITY I<br />
THESIS<br />
<strong>University</strong> Avenues were blocked<br />
for over two hours.<br />
Only one of the derailed cars<br />
overturned . Damage has not yet<br />
been estimated .<br />
The cause of the accident is not<br />
known.<br />
I'm seeking a cherished<br />
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and stud y. Step<br />
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Open 7 am — 1 am Mon.-Fri. . .. .<br />
10am —"2 am Sat.; 10 am-1 am Sun.<br />
Plenty of Free Parking<br />
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OFFSET PRINTING OR XEROX I<br />
I "««" . „.„ I tkhungPeittt I<br />
mon-thur 8:00-9:00 - - r , - r ^ ¦<br />
fri 8:00-7:00 \7* ^1 I<br />
sat 9:00-5:00 MI 0174
Champaign to get bike traffic study<br />
- . - By CHRIS JOHNSON<br />
Daily Illini Staff Writer<br />
The Champaign County Regional<br />
Planning Commission (CCRPC ) is<br />
conducting a study of bicycle traffic<br />
in Champaign, to be completed<br />
and presented to the city by July 1.<br />
The first stage of the study wiil<br />
be a telephone survey of students<br />
and non-students during the next<br />
two weeks, to determine the most<br />
heavily traveled routes, frequency<br />
of travel and volume of traffic.<br />
Bicycle counts at various<br />
locations will also be taken.<br />
The study is being funded by a<br />
grant from the U.S. Department of<br />
Housing and Urban Development.<br />
Champaign officials asked the<br />
CCRPC to conduct the study to<br />
assist the city in the development<br />
of any future bikeways system.<br />
There have been suggestions<br />
that Champaign and Urbana<br />
establish a bikeways system coordinated<br />
between themselves and<br />
the <strong>University</strong>'s existing system.<br />
However, the CCRPC, which would<br />
be logical agency to conduct such a<br />
study, said it has not been ap-<br />
BEEDY PARKER, chairman of the Community Bikeways<br />
Committee, presents a bicycle light to Urbana Mayor Hiram<br />
Paley Thursday. Paley beat Champaign Mayor Virgil Wikoff<br />
and Chancellor J.W. Peltason in a bicycle race on the experimental<br />
bike path on California Avenue.<br />
Borchers hits<br />
gay funding<br />
By RICH CAHAN<br />
Daily Illini Staff Writer<br />
^<br />
Despite objection from Rep. Webber Borchers, R-Decatur, it is<br />
probable that Illinois State <strong>University</strong>'s ( ISU ) Apportionment Board will<br />
once again appropriate revenue to the <strong>University</strong>'s Gay People's Alliance.<br />
Mike Schermer, chairman of the Apportionment Board, said "if they<br />
(Gay Alliance) can prove they are providing campus wide programming<br />
open to all students, they will not be excluded from the funding." A<br />
decision by the board is expected next week.<br />
Borchers' resolution to condemn the board's appropriation of $1,405 last<br />
year was defeated 4-2 in the House Committee on Higher Education last<br />
Thursday.<br />
Borchers said he was contacted by several ISU students protesting that<br />
their student fee money was being used for the support of the Alliance.<br />
"The appropriations were against the wishes of a large number of students,"hesaid.<br />
Borchers contended that his personal feelings about the Alliance had no<br />
connection with the resolution. "I just wanted to draw attention to the<br />
people of Illinois what stupid things are going on with their money."<br />
"I don't condemn them (Gay Alliance) for their actions, but if funds<br />
from a state university go towards their promotion, we are recognizing<br />
them. It's just not normal to suck another man's cock," Borchers added.<br />
Phil Steffen, member of last year's apportionment board said the<br />
board's allocations does not depend on the nature of petitioning<br />
organization. "As long as they contribute to the educational betterment of<br />
the community, we consider their requests," he said.<br />
Steffen said the board funded the gay organization because its leaders<br />
promised they would present a series of lectures, movies and newsletters<br />
throughout the year. "As far as I can tell, they have done just that." he<br />
added.<br />
According to Steffen, student fees are not' part of the state's general<br />
revenue. "I fear when people in the General Assembly scrutinize our funding."<br />
Indians blockade road<br />
in fishing rights dispute<br />
SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich.<br />
(AT) — More than 100 Indians armed<br />
with rifles blockaded the only<br />
road into the Bay Mills Indian<br />
Reservation Thursday in an apparent<br />
dispute over fishing rights,<br />
Chippewa County sheriff' s<br />
deputies said.<br />
Deputies said two Indians from the<br />
reservation were arrested earlier<br />
Thursday on charges of violating<br />
state hunting and fishing laws.<br />
The men were -arraigned .and./<br />
released on bond, they said.<br />
The Indians have contended that<br />
19th century treaties with the<br />
federal government give them<br />
unlimited fishing rights.<br />
Authorities said officials from<br />
the reservation , Michigan Slate<br />
Police and the FBI began meeting<br />
about 7:30 p.m .. EDT in an effort to<br />
resolve the dispute.<br />
The reservation is about 15 miles<br />
west of this Upper Peninsula city.<br />
proached to do this.<br />
Assisted by students from the<br />
<strong>University</strong>'s department of Urban<br />
and Regional Planning, the city of<br />
Urbana has been conducting its<br />
own bikeways survey since March .<br />
Carl Patton, assistant professor<br />
of urban and regional planning,<br />
said Thursday that students are<br />
now finishing the report on the<br />
results of the survey, and hope to<br />
present it at the June 12 meeting of<br />
the Urbana Public Safety Committee.<br />
Of about 600 questionnaires sent<br />
out to randomly selected Urbana<br />
residents, 50 were addressed incorrectly<br />
and returned by the post<br />
office. About 57 per cent of the persons<br />
who received the question-<br />
naires responded.<br />
William Lienesch. instructor in<br />
urban and regional planning, said<br />
the 57 per cent response rate is "a<br />
bit better than normal."<br />
"Pass the butter, please!"<br />
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Daily Illini Notices<br />
Special notices<br />
LAMPOON<br />
Persons interested in selling the<br />
Illini Lampoon for five cents per<br />
copy commission may sign up at<br />
the Undergraduate Student<br />
Association office. 297 Illini Union.<br />
OFEMIOl'SE<br />
Persons may observe the planet<br />
Uranus through the 12 inch refractor<br />
at the Observatory following a<br />
lecture, at an open house at 8<br />
tonight in 103 Mumford Hall. Linda<br />
De Moyer. research associate in<br />
astronomy, will speak on "How<br />
Big is the Universe?" and discuss<br />
the ways astronomers measure the<br />
size of the universe.<br />
FREE TUTORING<br />
Alpha Lambda Delta , women's<br />
honorary society , offers free<br />
tutoring in most freshman and<br />
sophomore subjects. Persons<br />
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didates and steering committee<br />
members at a coffee hour from 1-3<br />
today at the GSA office, 299 Illini<br />
Union .<br />
COOKING CONTEST<br />
The first annual co-op cook-off<br />
contest will be held Tuesdav at<br />
Alpha Delta Phi. 310 E. John St..<br />
Champaign.<br />
A copy of the recipe must be submitted<br />
before Saturday and the<br />
deadline for entry is Saturday.<br />
Each entry must be made from<br />
scratch, feed at least 20'people and<br />
each contestant must be from a<br />
member house of the Illini Co-op.<br />
RUMMAGE SALE<br />
Housewives Involved in<br />
Pollution Solutions will hold a rummage<br />
sale from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.<br />
today in the Urbana Civic Center.<br />
Baked goods, plants, household<br />
items, children's clothes and toys<br />
^^B JK^SHRHSI^IKSL ^^VSSfl^r WHP «/!&«&&' ? .-> ji?^t^B' tfftjtfc^ ^^^\ ^^ ^ ^^ H<br />
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House vote on school board bill postponed<br />
SPRINGFIELD, 111. (AP ) - The<br />
Illinois House Thursday refused to<br />
pass a Democratic-backed<br />
measure to create an elected<br />
r>DAmiATiKio » ' " '<br />
'<br />
school board for the entire state.<br />
THfe measure, however, was kept<br />
alive when its. sponsor, Rep.<br />
Robert Brinkmeier, D-Forreston,<br />
asked that a final vote on the<br />
measure be postponed.<br />
The House earlier this week- approved<br />
a Republican-sponsored<br />
• ' ' ls,n "P nnmhv Ken Hl',dr«th|<br />
GRADUATING SENIORS lined up in the. Faculty Lounge of the Illini Union Thursday afternoon<br />
for the last day of cap and gown measurements.<br />
DR. ELI B. MANDEL<br />
Optometrist<br />
509 E. Green Street<br />
"On The Campus"<br />
Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted Contact Lenses<br />
Phone 344-8566<br />
;. All examinations, contact lens fittings, and dispensing done personally<br />
by Dr. Mandel.<br />
We now offer same day Laboratory Contact Lens Polishing.<br />
Office Hours Mon.-Fri. «.a0-S & Sat. 8:30-2:30<br />
Lenses Duplicated • Frames Replaced • Optical Repairs<br />
We have the finest photography instructors<br />
and equipment of any school in the Midwest.<br />
And we can prove it.<br />
If you are serious about photography, we'd like to invite you to<br />
visit our facilities.<br />
You'l see things like a fully equipped studio, 15 of the finest<br />
professional enlargers, the latest in lighting, backgrounds, props, and<br />
more.<br />
You'l meet instructors like Philip Smith who holds a Masters<br />
degree in Photography, has taught at several colleges, held many one<br />
, man exhibits and had his work published in five different photographic<br />
reference books.<br />
We offer a wide variety of courses at all levels that encompass both<br />
still and motion, and lab courses in printing and developing. Classes are<br />
offered weekdays, evenings, and weekends. <<br />
These next three weeks, visit our school:<br />
Monday - Thursday (7 P.M.-10 P.M.)<br />
Saturday - (9:30 A.M.-5:30 P.M.)<br />
Sunday' (11:30 A.M.-5-.30 P.M.)<br />
If you cannot visit, call or write for our free brochure.<br />
If you are interested in learning photography, it pays to learn from<br />
professionals.<br />
_<br />
studio school of PHOTOGRAPHY JI| |<br />
2942 w. devon ave., Chicago, ill. 60645 U| I<br />
235-4444 764-0100 "v\<br />
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Grand jury indicts<br />
2 St. Louis firms<br />
DANVILLE. 111. (AP ) —A federa l grand jury Thursday returned an indictment<br />
against two East St. Louis construction firms charging conspiracy<br />
and bid fixing. . . ;.. • ,; , .s --'••> •"¦' "<br />
The Finas P. Ernest Inc: firm and the Modern Asphalt Paving and Construction<br />
Co. are accused ofconspiring to fix bids on two urban renewal<br />
projects in August 1971.<br />
Filed under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, the indictment names only the<br />
firms and no individuals. However, the indictment refers to "persons not<br />
made defendants in this indictment" who "have participated as coconspirators<br />
in this offense."<br />
U.S. Atty. Henry Schwarz, who handled the investigation , declined to<br />
identify the co-conspirators.<br />
Finas P, Ernest III and Andrew F. Kelley, both of East St. Louis, are<br />
owners and presidents of the firms.<br />
The Ernest firm got contracts totaling about $515,000 on two urban<br />
renewal projects let by the city but paid for them with federal funds.<br />
Modem Asphalt gave what Schwarz called "complimentary bids" that<br />
were "a sham" totaling about $6,000 more than Ernest .<br />
Daily Illini Notices...<br />
I( toitiii itrtl train /w/
Skolnick may testify<br />
on O'Hare crash<br />
WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP ) - The National Transportation Safety<br />
Board ( NTSB) will seek information from a Chicago legal researcher on<br />
the crash last year of a United Air Lines jetliner near a Chicago's O'Hare<br />
Airport, a board spokesman said Thursday.<br />
The researcher, Sherman H. Skolnick , has charged that the plane was<br />
sabotaged as part of efforts to cover up the Watergate scandal.<br />
The spokesman said board members indicated they would be willing to<br />
talk with Skolnick after they received a letter from E. O. Fennell, a senior<br />
vice president of the airline.<br />
In the letter, Fennell requested that the board give Skolnick the opportunity<br />
to present any evidence he has on the cause of the accident.<br />
Fennell said Skolnick has gained wided»ssemination in the news media<br />
for his theories on the crash.<br />
But he said the theories have not been directly refuted, by the investigation<br />
into the accident.<br />
"...there is absolutely no factual basis for the statements made by Mr.<br />
Skolnick with respect to accident causation," said Fennell, "and no attempt<br />
has been made by Mr. Skolnick to support his position other than<br />
with rhetoric."<br />
Fennell said United was reluctant to respond to Skolnick because the<br />
board has not yet issued a formal report on the accident.<br />
"Therefore, United requests that the board grant Mr. Skolnick the opportunity<br />
to present to it any evidence which might be of aid in determining<br />
the cause of this accident, or, in the alternative, require Mr.<br />
Skolnick to present any such evidence," Fennell said.<br />
Earlier this year the NTSB held a series of public hearings in Chicago<br />
on the crash, which killed 43 persons aboard the aircraft.<br />
Among those killed was Mrs. E. Howard Hunt, wife of one of the<br />
Watergate defendants. In Mrs. Hunt's purse was found 100 new $100 bills.<br />
Skolnick's request to testify at the hearings was turned down by the NT-<br />
SB, and he subsequently filed suit protesting that decision.<br />
In the suit Skolnick alleged that the plane was sabotaged to kill four<br />
persons, including Mrs. Hunt. He "charged the four had information<br />
relating to either the Watergate incident or an alleged bribe connected<br />
with the dropping of a government anti-trust suit against a southwest<br />
pipeline company.<br />
The NTSB spokesman said no decision had been reached on whether<br />
Skplnick would be requested to formally testify before the board , or<br />
would be asked to provide his information informally.<br />
Strikers in Bloomington<br />
ordered back to work<br />
BLOOMINGTON, 111. (AP ) -<br />
City officials filed a petition in Circuit<br />
Court Thursday to get striking'<br />
public service workers to return to<br />
work.<br />
The city council said Wednesday<br />
that they wanted the workers to<br />
return voluntarily, and if that<br />
failed they would seek an injunction<br />
ordering them back to<br />
work.<br />
The union, seeking higher wages<br />
and fringe benefits, have- been<br />
striking since May 1. _<br />
~ v<br />
Benjamin Boyd, McLean County<br />
Chief of Sanitation , said that<br />
because of the strike a serious<br />
health hazard is imminent.<br />
Residents have elected to let their<br />
garbage pile up, hoping the strike<br />
would soon be over.<br />
Sixty-eight men, including garbage<br />
men and park maintenance<br />
men, are involved in the strike.<br />
They are members of Local 699,<br />
AFL-CIO of the American<br />
Federation of State, County and<br />
Municipal Employees.<br />
M TODAY'S SPECIAL ¦<br />
[ (1 P.M. -6 P.M. ) J<br />
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707 S. 6th St ... Room 206 Ph 3444)063<br />
over the Donut Shop<br />
open 8 to 5 Mon. thru Fa; 8 to 1 Sat<br />
UIUC Official Notice<br />
POLICY RELATING TO THE<br />
SHOWING OF FILMS IN<br />
UNIVERSITY FACILITIES<br />
the policy statements that follow apply to film showings in <strong>University</strong> facilities for<br />
which an admission fee is charged or a donation is sought. These detailed provisions supplement<br />
the policies and regulations as stipulated in Section 21 of the General Rules on<br />
<strong>University</strong> Organizations and Procedure, and in the Code on Campus Affairs.<br />
\ 1. Films shown in <strong>University</strong> facilities are to be shown for the benefit of students, faculty<br />
and staff, and their guests. All publicity and notices relating to any film showing shall contain<br />
the following statement: "U. of I. students, staff, faculty, and their guests ; only'."<br />
2. All requests for reservations of space for film showings should be accompanied by<br />
the title of the film, its length, and the print size (16 or 35mm) if known. The Office of Organizations<br />
and Activities will maintain a listing of all films for which space has been approved<br />
showing (a) the name of the sponsoring organization, (b) the name of the-film, (c) the<br />
running time of the film, (d) the print size (16 or 35mm), (e) the date upon which the showing<br />
of the film was approved, and (f) the date upon which the film is scheduled to be shown. If<br />
the above information is not known at the time of the reservation, the sponsoring organization<br />
must report the data to the Office of Organizations prior to four (4) calendar weeks of<br />
the scheduled film showing in order for the reservation to remain in effect.<br />
3. The collection of admission fees or donations at film showings shall be in accordance<br />
with the provisions of Section 21(a) of the General Rules and the Code on Campus Affairs.<br />
The Office of Organizations shall provide and audit all tickets used for film showings.<br />
4. Since space for the showig of films is limited, the following principles shall apply to<br />
the Auditorium, and Lincoln Hall Theater:<br />
' ¦<br />
• ," a) Each month, two week-end nights (Fridays or Saturdays), in each of the<br />
above auditoria shall be set aside for other than film showings. One additional<br />
date may be set aside in each auditorium in months involving<br />
Homecoming, Da* 3 Day, Mom's Day in order to accommodate events<br />
relating to those special week-end activities,<br />
b) The Office of Space Utilization shall decide which dates for each of the<br />
'/" above shall be reserved by the eighth week of the second semester for<br />
v the following academic year.<br />
,c) If within two weeks of the open dates no activity has been planned, the!<br />
facilities shall become available for film showings.<br />
d) Illini Union Student Activities shall enjoy the first option for film<br />
showings in the Auditorium on both weekdays and week-end evenings,<br />
except as noted in 4 a) above and 8 below. To maintain priority consideration<br />
I USA must report title of film to be shown to the Office of Organizations<br />
at least four (4) calendar weeks in advance of the reserved<br />
date. ,<br />
e) Cinemaguild and its successor organizations shall enjoy first priority for<br />
film showings in the Lincoln Hall Theater, except as noted in 4 a) above<br />
and 8 below. Cinemaguild must report title of film to be shown to the Office<br />
of Organizations at least four (4) calendar weeks in advance of the<br />
reserved date.<br />
5. First priority for the showing of films in facilities other than Lincoln Hall Theater and<br />
the Auditorium shall be given to groups other than IUSA, Cinemaguild, and their successor<br />
organizations.<br />
6. No registered organization may simultaneously sponsor more than one film showing.<br />
7. In the event that more than one organization wishes to use the same facility on the .<br />
same night, the following shall apply:<br />
a) For film showings in the Auditorium and Lincoln Hall Theater, the<br />
organization with priority access shall receive preferential consideration.<br />
b) In conflict or dispute between a film showing and a concert, play, or<br />
- other cultural-artistic performance, in any facility subjecfto the jurisdic-<br />
. ~<br />
tion of the Committee on the Use of Facilities, the latter shall receive .<br />
preferential consideration.<br />
c) However, no displacement of a scheduled film showing for another<br />
event can occur within the eight (8) calendar weeks prior to the film *<br />
showing without the mutual consent of all parties involved.<br />
8. Given the situation existing at the time of the adoption 'of this policy, Cinemaguild<br />
shall enjoy priority consideration for the use of the Auditorium for "midnight" movies. Given<br />
that two mpvie showings might well be scheduled on the same night by two different<br />
groups, the evening showing will normally begin at 7:00 p.m.<br />
9. This Policy shall be considered in effect as of May 25, 1973.<br />
Note:1) In the event of a duplication in title of films, the Committee on the Use of<br />
Facilities is of the opinion that duplication is in fact permissible. The purpose in '<br />
asking for film titles is to limit insofar as possible such duplication without<br />
having a policy or regulation which speaks to that issue.<br />
Note: 2) Simultaneous film showings in Paragraph 6 means no organization may sponsor<br />
film showings for which admission fees are charged in two different<br />
facilities during the same time. '<br />
Note: 3) Free film showings in residence.halls or the Ilini Union or elsewhere.are not<br />
subject to this policy.<br />
^ -<br />
Committee on the<br />
Use of Facilities<br />
To Place Your D.I. Classified Ad<br />
Phone 333-3730
Free Otto ?<br />
Collector finds S.O.S. note in toy tank<br />
WASHINGTON. D.C. (AP) —'-Phillip A. Karber<br />
found a note inside a scale model oP^ tank which he<br />
bought to add to his collection . He said :\<br />
"It was like some note you find inside a doughnut,<br />
which says. 'Help. I'm being held prisoner ins*i
Brandt; US-USSR<br />
meeting will affect<br />
troop reductions<br />
BONN, Germany (AP ) — Chancellor<br />
Willy Brandt says the future<br />
of East-West talks on troop reductions<br />
in Europe depends in a large<br />
respect on next month's meeting<br />
between President Nixon and the<br />
Soviet Union's Leonid I. Brezhnev.<br />
In an interview with The<br />
Associated Press, the West German<br />
government chief also predicted<br />
that world monetary reform<br />
will triumph over the currency<br />
unrest that is pushing the dollar<br />
down and sending the price of gold<br />
up. Brandt discussed these and other<br />
issues in an interview in his office<br />
Wednesday on the condition that it<br />
be released Thursday.<br />
He also said he made progress on<br />
Berlin in his talks with Soviet Communist<br />
party chief Brezhnev. He<br />
added that this would clear the<br />
way for inclusion in the future of<br />
the status of West Berlin in cooperation<br />
agreements between West<br />
Germany and the Soviet Union .<br />
Brezhnev and Brandt agreed<br />
Monday that Berlin should not be a<br />
stumbling block to the development<br />
of German-Soviet ties.<br />
They agreed that the 1971 four<br />
power Berlin pact was essential to<br />
the relaxation of tensions in cenr<br />
tral Europe.<br />
The pact, signed by the United<br />
States, Britain, France and the<br />
Soviet Union as World War II victors,<br />
recognizes non-political ties<br />
between West Berlin and Bonn, but<br />
it underscores that the Western<br />
sector is part of the, old German<br />
capital and not a part of West Germany.<br />
Thus it cannot be ruled by<br />
Bonn.<br />
On the troops reduction issue,<br />
Brandt said the conferences with<br />
Brezhnev left him with the impression<br />
that the Kremlin would<br />
agree to continue with<br />
preparations for the talks but<br />
would not begin them until after<br />
the conference on European<br />
security in Helsinki, Finland .<br />
Ford to meet demands<br />
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina<br />
(AP) — Ford Motor Co., agreeing<br />
to terrorists' pay-or-die extortion<br />
demands, said Thursday it would<br />
start distributing $1 million in aid<br />
this week to slum children ,<br />
hospitals and poor people.<br />
Members of the leftist People's<br />
Revolutionary Army shot and<br />
wounded two Ford officials Monday<br />
and the next day threatened to<br />
kill or kidnap Ford executives in<br />
Argentina unless protection money<br />
was paid.<br />
The company bowed to the<br />
demand Wednesday, then went into<br />
telephone negotiations with the<br />
Trotskyite guerrillas.<br />
In addition to giving away<br />
medicine, hospital equipment, ambulances<br />
and school supplies, Ford<br />
agreed to distribute powdered<br />
milk, chocolate and cocoa to slum<br />
children.<br />
Ford announced Thursday at its<br />
international headquarters in<br />
Dearborn, Mich., that the company<br />
would donate $200,000 in<br />
medicine to the Children's Hospital<br />
of Buenos Aires and $200,000 in instruments<br />
to the Children 's<br />
Hospital at Catamarca.<br />
Twenty-two ambulances will be<br />
distributed throughout Argentina,<br />
one for each province, the company<br />
said. About $180,000 in food<br />
will be distributed among poor<br />
areas of the capital, Buenos Aires,<br />
and $300,000 in school supplies will<br />
be provided for needy children in<br />
the greater Buenos Aires area.<br />
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Deserter: Amnesty will ease bitterness<br />
WASHINGTON. D.C. (AP ) - An Army<br />
deserter came out of hiding Thursday to tell<br />
a-group oi Congressmen that unconditional<br />
amnesty will help erase a decade of bitterness<br />
over the Indochina war.<br />
Edward Sowder, 25. of Detroit , appeared<br />
before an unofficial House panel discussing<br />
amnesty to men who fled the draft , deserted<br />
or resisted.the war while in the service.<br />
His statement followed emotional<br />
testimony by his mother, Lori , who said her<br />
working-class family could not afford<br />
college for him to get him a deferment.<br />
She said he went into the Army against<br />
her wishes and that she told him the "onlv<br />
Guild strikes<br />
against<br />
Consumers<br />
Union<br />
MOUNT VERNON (AP ) — Some<br />
300 members of the Newspaper<br />
Guild went on strike Thursday<br />
against Consumers Union ,<br />
publishers of Consumer Reports,<br />
in a dispute over wages and other<br />
issues.<br />
A spokesman for Consumers, a<br />
leading noncommercial producttesting<br />
organization , said the<br />
operation here and at a plant in<br />
Orangeburg. N.Y., was functioning<br />
with management personnel.<br />
He said the July issue of the<br />
magazine Consumer Reports was<br />
due to go to press in a few days and<br />
would not be delayed by the strike.<br />
The spokesman added that when<br />
lengthy negotiations broke off ,<br />
"everything on the table was<br />
negotiable."<br />
A spokesman for the Newspaper<br />
Guild of New York. Local 3, said<br />
the Guild, which represents<br />
engineers, chemists and other<br />
technical workers as well as the<br />
magazine's writers, was seeking a<br />
10 per cent pay increase.<br />
He said job security protection<br />
against automation and pensions<br />
also were unresolved issues.<br />
$1 million<br />
suit filed<br />
after raid<br />
SPRINGFIELD, 111. (AP) — A<br />
couple whose home was<br />
mistakenly invaded by federal narcotics<br />
agents filed a $1 million<br />
damage suit Thursday in federal<br />
court.<br />
A lawyer for Mr. and Mrs. Herbert<br />
Giglotto of Collinsville said<br />
the Giglottos * charged that they<br />
were "assaulted, battered , falsely<br />
imprisoned...frightened, upset and<br />
caused to become severely ill."<br />
Named as defendants in the suit<br />
are the United States government,<br />
the Justice Department, four agents<br />
of the Drug Abuse Law Enforcement<br />
Agency, seven St. Louis<br />
policemen and a number of agents<br />
who were also involved in the April<br />
23 incident.<br />
The Giglottos said that 15 agents<br />
carrying guns invaded their home<br />
without a warrant, held a pistol to<br />
Giglotto's head , handcuffed the<br />
couple, used abusive language and<br />
ransacked the house before they<br />
admitted they conducted the raid<br />
at the wrong address. Another suit<br />
has been filed based on another incident<br />
on the same night at the<br />
nearby home of Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Donald Askew . The Askews are<br />
seeking $100,000 in damages.<br />
SUBSCRIBERS<br />
If your paper doesn't<br />
arrive by 8 a.m. CALL<br />
333-3730.<br />
If you call before 10 AM<br />
we will do our best to get<br />
your paper to you.<br />
Thank You<br />
thing he could accomplish was to get<br />
killed ."<br />
Sowder then entered the hearing room<br />
and told the panel when he volunteered for<br />
Vietnam he supported the war.<br />
"I was assigned to an evacuation hospital<br />
where we received fresh casualties direct<br />
from combat areas. Many of these victims<br />
were Vietnamese civilians, mostly women<br />
and children hit by U.S. artillery and bombing.<br />
"Many had been severely burned by<br />
napalm and white phosphorous, weapons<br />
used only by the U.S."<br />
-He said those scenes and the attitude of<br />
some of his fellow GIs led him to decide to<br />
desert.<br />
"In April 1970, I made my decision ... I<br />
went on strike against the war. For the past<br />
three years, except for a period in Canada,<br />
I've lived underground in America, cut-off<br />
from my family and friends.<br />
"I make no apology for my act of resistance.<br />
I could do nothing else at the time. But ,<br />
underground life has become so intolerable<br />
to me, so, I'm here today, to draw attention<br />
to the true facts concerning my case and the<br />
cases of tens of thousands just like me.<br />
"We are not criminals to be hunted and<br />
I A Df^l f l*C Brings you the CUBS on WCi* ch.<br />
|||ftHVua<br />
3<br />
^-<br />
I '<br />
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imprisoned.<br />
"Only by winning a universal, unconditional<br />
amnesty for all categories of<br />
war resisters can we begin the long process<br />
of changing our country and learning from<br />
the decade of blood and bitterness in Indochina,"<br />
Sowder said.<br />
Later, he turned himself over to Capitol<br />
police, who took him into custody and who<br />
finally told him to turn himself in to military<br />
authorities.<br />
The hearing was called by Rep. Bella Abzug,<br />
D-N.Y., who is the author of a bill which<br />
would grant unconditional amnesty.<br />
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Aristocrat admits<br />
to 'casual affairs'<br />
LONDON (AP) — A second British aristocra t with access to allied<br />
defense secrets resigned from Britain's Conservative government Thursday,<br />
admitting he had "some casual affairs" with prostitutes<br />
The sex and security scandal is Britain's worst since the Profumo affair<br />
10 years ago.<br />
Earl Jellicoe, government leader in the House of Lords, conceded Thur-<br />
sday ^ in a public resignation statement that his actions were "a grave em-<br />
barrassment" to Prime Minister Edward Heath's administration.<br />
Jellicoe, 55, has long been a close personal friend and trusted adviser of<br />
Heath. As a senior Cabinet minister he had full access to top secret government<br />
papers.<br />
Jellicoe's confession came 24 hours after similar admissions by Lord<br />
Lambton, who resigned as air force minister, a sub-Cabinet post. Lambton<br />
said "some sneak pimp" had photographed him with a call girl.<br />
The prime minister acted swiftly to avoid any suggestion of a cover-up.<br />
He told a hushed House of Commons there will be an independent inquiry<br />
into security implications of the scandal.<br />
Both Jellicoe, former minister for the royal navy, and Lambton denied<br />
that their links with call girls had involved lawbreaking, blackmail or<br />
security leaks;<br />
And Heath told the Commons, "On the information available to<br />
me—and I have been kept fully informed—I can tell the-House that there<br />
are no grounds for supposing that any other minister or member of the<br />
public service is involved."<br />
He left open the possibility that others outside government service were<br />
involved. British newspaper reports have said a duke is among those<br />
linked with call girls, but have not identified him.<br />
The prime minister reported to the Commons only hours after<br />
Jellicoe's resignation was announced. His voice cracked slightly when he<br />
mentioned "my right honorable friend Lord Jellicoe."<br />
Opposition legislators sympathized with Heath's' difficulties. Harold<br />
Wilson, the Laborite opposition leader , told Heath : "All of us recognize<br />
how deeply painful it has been for you to make this statement:"<br />
Wilson and others praised Heath for promptly ordering an inquiry .<br />
Butchers ask Congress<br />
to change subsidy law<br />
CHICAGO, 111. (AP) — The<br />
nation's largest food workers union<br />
called on Congress Thursday to<br />
change the farm subsidy law to<br />
prevent "future food price<br />
disasters and to fully remedying<br />
the current one."<br />
In a union policy statement the<br />
Amalgamated Meat Cutters and<br />
Butcher Workmen , AFL-CIO, said<br />
new farm legislation is needed to<br />
"reward growers for producing the<br />
maximum food they can, instead of<br />
subsidizing untilled acres" and food<br />
scarcity." ~<br />
The union's executive board ,<br />
meeting at the organization's<br />
national headquarters in Chicago,<br />
said the United States "can grow<br />
incredible amounts of food to<br />
provide inexpensive nutrition for<br />
all of its people" and can raise<br />
enough surplus ,food products "to<br />
nourish the hungry abroad. .<br />
.without harming domestic consumers."<br />
•<br />
The statement added , "new<br />
farm legislation must and can<br />
assure this production without<br />
economically hurting farmers. . .<br />
.Growers deserve a reasonable<br />
return for their capital and labor<br />
and should be assured of it."<br />
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I PMEL FOR FINALS ' THE DAILY ILLINI I<br />
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I ~— „-T BJ ¦<br />
FOR SUMMER! I<br />
I Because of the Memorial Day holiday. The D.I. will not I<br />
I publish Tuesday, May 29. the Display office will be I<br />
I closed Memorial Day. I<br />
I All display ads for Wednesday, May 30 must be in by I<br />
I Friday, May 25. I<br />
I The last paper of the spring semester will be Saturday I<br />
I Display copy for the Registration Edition, Friday I<br />
I June 15, is due Tuesday, June 12. I
$196 million April trade<br />
surplus announced<br />
WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP ) The<br />
United States had a trade surplus<br />
of $196 million in April, the first<br />
time exports have exceeded imports<br />
in 18 months, the government<br />
said Thursday.<br />
Secretary of Commerce<br />
Frederick B. Dent said the<br />
devaluations of the U.S. dollar apparently<br />
are having "a stimulating<br />
effect" on sales of U.S. goods<br />
abroad.<br />
The government was so pleased<br />
at the surplus that Dent called a<br />
news conference to release the<br />
figures 24 hours ahead of time "for<br />
the benefit of the American people<br />
and the American community ," he<br />
said.<br />
The early announcement also<br />
seemed designed to bolster the<br />
dollar, which is under pressure<br />
again on world monetary markets.<br />
U.S. trade deficits of the past two<br />
years have been cited as a major<br />
reason for lack of confidence in the<br />
dollar.<br />
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Alleged<br />
vote fraud<br />
spurs<br />
indictments<br />
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP ) — Disclosures of<br />
alleged vote fraud in Chicago have spurred<br />
federal indictments and remedial laws in<br />
the Illinois Legislature, a Pulitzer Prize<br />
winner said Thursday.<br />
George Bliss, who directed the investigative<br />
reporting for the Chicago<br />
Tribune in 1971 and 1972, called it a "team<br />
effort." He said it included Ihe newspaper's<br />
lour-member task force and 20 other staffers.<br />
"We found massive fraud, just about<br />
every violation in the book," Bliss said,<br />
noting that 81 indictments have been handed<br />
down to date and more are expected.<br />
Bliss was one of six current Pulitzer winners<br />
or representatives who. appeared at a<br />
news conference and a program explaining<br />
background of what work went into winning<br />
the awards. It was part of the World Press<br />
Institute Annual Forum at Macalester<br />
College.<br />
The Tribune was cited for local reporting.<br />
Other winners in journalism who were on<br />
Thursday's program include:<br />
Robert Boyd, Knight newspapers, for<br />
national reporting ; Paul Williams, Sun<br />
Newspapers of Omaha , Neb., special local<br />
reporting; Brian Lanker, Topeka , Kan.,<br />
Capital-Journal , feature photography ; and<br />
Ronald Powers, radio-television critic for<br />
the Chicago Sun-Times, criticism.<br />
Carl Robinson , photo editor in The<br />
Associated Press (AP ) Saigon bureau,<br />
represented Huynh Cong Ut, AP staffer who<br />
won a prize for spot photography. It was for<br />
a picture of a Vietnamese girl running from<br />
a napalm bombing .<br />
Bliss said Tribune reporters, without identifying<br />
themselves as newsmen, kept tab on<br />
the March primary last year as election<br />
judges or poll watchers. Later, a staffer<br />
worked as a clerk in the election com-<br />
missinnpr 'e nff'ma f« ,.„««,.„.. „n<br />
violations.<br />
Williams , managing editor of the Sun<br />
Newspaper, said a team of reporters also<br />
worked to disclose, financial and other<br />
operations of Boys Town, Neb., the home for<br />
wayward youngsters.<br />
He said the weekly's articles disclosed<br />
Boys Town had a net worth of some $209<br />
million last year; that it had grossed $25<br />
million but spent only $4.5 million on<br />
operations.<br />
Boyd, along with Clark Hoyt, disclosed in<br />
the Knight papers the history of psychiatric<br />
therapy given Eagleton, who was bounced<br />
by Sen. George McGovern as the<br />
Democratic presidential candidate's running<br />
mate.<br />
Lanker won his Pulitzer for a picture<br />
series on the birth of a baby, concentrating<br />
on the reaction of the mother and father and<br />
their joy when the child was born.<br />
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! IC- ^ff lBmAmmm^ J Wjnt To H
We are gravely disappointed<br />
with the actions of Illinois Rep.<br />
Paul Stone, D-Sullivan on bills that<br />
deal with student needs.<br />
As a member of the House<br />
Higher Education Committee,<br />
Stone voted against bills that would<br />
place student representatives on<br />
the <strong>University</strong> Board of Trustees.<br />
And this week, Stone was instrumental<br />
in killing a bill which<br />
would have allowed the sale of<br />
liquor in the Illini Union. In the first<br />
committee vote , the bill was<br />
defeated six to five. One legislator<br />
was going to change his vote, which<br />
would have allowed the bill to pass,<br />
but Stone called for a quorum.<br />
Some committee members had left<br />
the committee chambers since the<br />
first vote, so a quorum was not<br />
present and the bill failed.<br />
Although Stone was technically<br />
correct in asking for a quorum<br />
count, there is a long-standing<br />
custom that the proper time for a<br />
quorum count is when a bill is first<br />
voted on, and committee members<br />
may later change their votes even<br />
Stone's record disappointing<br />
if a quorum is no longer present.<br />
Stone's action kept the vote from<br />
reflecting the true sentiments of<br />
the committee, and resulted the bill<br />
being killed through parliamentary<br />
trickery.<br />
The reason for Stone's actions on<br />
these two issues is clearly the opposition<br />
of the <strong>University</strong>, which<br />
strongly opposes having liquor sold<br />
in the Union (although it has a<br />
special-interests bill pending in the<br />
General Assembly to allow it to be<br />
sold at the Levis Faculty Center )<br />
and wishes to keep students off the<br />
Board of Trustees, preferring to<br />
deal with them through powerless<br />
committees and professional flak<br />
men.<br />
We would remind Stone that<br />
many of the votes that elected him<br />
last fall came from the large<br />
student population in Champaign-<br />
Urbana, and that his primary<br />
responsibility is to his constituency,<br />
not the special interests<br />
located in his district.<br />
And we would warn students to<br />
take note of this example and not<br />
follow the habit of blindly voting<br />
Democratic in local elections, as<br />
they have shown a distressing tendency<br />
to do in recent elections.<br />
Although we do not condemn<br />
Stone completely as a state<br />
legislator—we support, for example,<br />
his bill to increase the financial<br />
aid benefits made available in<br />
Illinois—we suggest he compare<br />
the number of votes the <strong>University</strong><br />
administration can cast with the<br />
number students control the next<br />
time he considers taking a stand<br />
like those he's taken in the last two<br />
weeks.<br />
Ed Epstein /On Nixonian gobbledygook<br />
I promise to try to be fair , to respect the<br />
man's lofty position and all that.<br />
But , still I must confess that President<br />
Nixon has me confused. I have subjected<br />
myself to the ordea l of wading through his<br />
two most recent statements on the sordid<br />
Watergate affair and find- myself left with<br />
more questions about who did what and<br />
when than before I started .<br />
The President's first statement on April<br />
30, in which he axed his Prussian guards<br />
Wright<br />
We are glad to see that Joe Blaze,<br />
director of parking and transportation,<br />
has agreed to reconsider<br />
his plans to build a bicycle<br />
parking lot on the south end of the<br />
Quadrangle, and we hope he will<br />
make a sincere effort to find<br />
another location for the lot.<br />
The Quad has already been<br />
greatly reduced in size by the fencing<br />
off of the north end to allow<br />
grass to grow back, and is now<br />
barely large enough for the number<br />
of people who wish to use it during<br />
good weather. We would think that<br />
Haldeman and Ehrlichman and excommunicated<br />
John Dean, was a masterpiece<br />
of political mumbo-jumbo. In his little<br />
speech "from my heart" Nixon placed the<br />
blame on everyone else, but graciously accepted<br />
the responsibility for himself.<br />
Now, you may ask, and you should, just<br />
what does this mean? Well, if you did ask<br />
you wouldn't get an answer because, you<br />
see, the President has more important<br />
things to do, like rehearsing the Marine<br />
* iWJtl HWS TO SC05B HM/KWte TH^I^<br />
Keep bike lots off the Quad<br />
maintaining the quality of one of<br />
the few pleasant places on this<br />
campus would take priority over<br />
building another parking lot . \<br />
A number of alternative<br />
locations have been proposed for<br />
the parking lot. Even if none of<br />
them prove to be completely<br />
suitable, we strongly urge that they<br />
be used instead of the Quad. The<br />
<strong>University</strong> will always need space,<br />
particularly in the central Quad<br />
area, and if the principle of using<br />
Quad space gets started now, we<br />
Band in the "Internationale" in preparation<br />
for Big Leonid's big visit.<br />
At the time of that speech Nixon left the<br />
impression with his audience that this was<br />
his final, definitive statement on the matter<br />
that "has claimed far too much of my time<br />
and my attention."<br />
But, things being what they are in the U.S.<br />
of A. the President recently found it<br />
necessary to issue another, longer tract ,<br />
which (will surprises never cease ) actually<br />
can easily foresee the day when it<br />
will be completely used up by<br />
parking lots , sidewalks, and<br />
buildings.<br />
At an institution as enormous,<br />
complicated and impersonal as the<br />
<strong>University</strong> of Illinois, a line has to<br />
be drawn between fulfilling the<br />
physical requirements of the institution<br />
and fulfilling the spiritual<br />
requirements of its students. We<br />
feel that line should, be drawn<br />
clearly and irrevocably around the<br />
Quad.<br />
said something. It told us that at heart<br />
Nixon is really a junior G-man and J. Edgar<br />
Hoover, in his closing years, was something<br />
of a civil libertarian.<br />
It seems Nixon wanted to improve<br />
domestic intelligence operations just after<br />
the college campuses blew up over his invasion<br />
of Cambodia . His plans included<br />
authorization for bugging and "surreptitious<br />
entry," or breaking and entering, or<br />
how about just plain burglary, which Illinois<br />
law says is good for not less than one year in<br />
prison. It also seems that Old J. Edgar, who<br />
according to some recent* reports, was<br />
slightly gaga during the last few years of his<br />
omnipotent rule of the FBI, regained<br />
lucidity long enough to kill off the plan.<br />
And, as we travel along the twisting route<br />
of Nixon's pronouncement, we learn that a<br />
special group was formed in the White<br />
House to stop leaks to the press and that<br />
other nasty group, the public. Cleverly<br />
called the "plumbers," these fellows undertook<br />
the patriotic effort to burglarize<br />
Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office. Apparently<br />
President Nixon wanted to convince<br />
the public that Ellsberg was not only a<br />
traitor but also a screwball.<br />
All these are pretty minor when compared<br />
with another revelation from Nixon.<br />
"Elements of the early post-Watergate<br />
reports led me to suspect, incorrectly, that<br />
the C.I.A. had been in some way involved,"<br />
his speechwriter wrote.<br />
Now as an innocent, young American I<br />
would like to know why on earth the CIA, the<br />
FBI, the Committee to Reelect the<br />
President, the Women's Christian Temperance<br />
Union, the Audobon Society or the<br />
Marching Illini should bug and burglarize<br />
the headquarters of the Democratic<br />
National Committee. And I would like to<br />
know why the President thought the CIA<br />
might be involved in such a crime.<br />
These questions might even provide Nixon<br />
with enough material for Phase 3 of his explanation<br />
of his. involvement in his<br />
Watergate affair.
TV column lacks knowledge<br />
To the Editor :<br />
This is in response to Rich Cahan's article<br />
in the Saturday Daily Illini in which he attacks<br />
local TV stations for their policy of not<br />
presenting editorial opinions.<br />
Mr. Cahan expresses concern that local<br />
newsmen and broadcast managers have no<br />
opinions. Well, I hold the strong opinion that<br />
Mr. Cahan doesn't know what he is writing<br />
about.<br />
He presumes to conclude that local<br />
stations do not editorialize as a way of<br />
denying the soapbox to those who might<br />
demand the chance to express opposing<br />
views in response to station editorials. How<br />
Machiavellian!<br />
He characterizes local media as<br />
unresponsive because they don 't<br />
editorialize. But, it can be shown that broadcast<br />
editorials are frequently counter to the<br />
public interest.<br />
Many local stations across the country<br />
present editorials. But those expressions<br />
have been universally criticized for their<br />
lack of depth and awareness of social<br />
programs. Why is this?<br />
It is because persons such as Mr. Cahan<br />
demand local editorials from broadcasters<br />
ill-equipped to handle such topics effectively.<br />
In cities the size of Champaign and Urbana<br />
, the normal procedure is for some<br />
copywriter to bat out an editorial, which is<br />
then read on the air by some unsuspecting<br />
schmuck from the executive wing. These<br />
"expressions of management opinion"<br />
usually lack any depth or thoughtfulness,<br />
but they usually keep people like Mr. Cahan<br />
quiet.<br />
The news department of such a station<br />
can offer little help. It rarely has the staff to<br />
spare, nor is its obligation to the expression<br />
of opinion . It's obligation is to balance and<br />
fairness, and it should not be used in the<br />
public expression of editorials.<br />
Another accurate scenario sees broadcasting<br />
management using editorials as a<br />
way of presenting their narrow pbint-ofview<br />
or vested interest. This raises a larger<br />
question. Is broadcasting management,<br />
noted for its adherence to profit and the<br />
status-quo, any more suitable a public<br />
opinion leader than the plumbing or funeral<br />
industries?<br />
What is required to serve the public interest<br />
through editorializing is a separate,<br />
autonomous editorial department, in whom<br />
management is willing to place its faith, and<br />
which is able to devote the time-and manpower<br />
to produce thoughtful and documented<br />
editorial expressions. Stations the size of<br />
those in this area are understaffed to meet<br />
the primary responsibility of producing<br />
local newscasts and programming, let alone<br />
devote much precious manpower to such ancillary<br />
functions.<br />
Despite criticism such as Mr. Cahan's,<br />
stations locally have recognized this<br />
problem, and have determined not to do the<br />
job if it can't be done well. To do it poorly is<br />
worse than not to do it at all.<br />
Mr. Cahan also fails to note that stations<br />
who have committed great amounts of time<br />
and manpower to their editorials frequently<br />
fail to have those editorials elicit any viewer<br />
response whatsoever. That great crowd of<br />
opposing spokesmen Mr. Cahan seems to<br />
think lurks just outside the studio door is<br />
largely non-existent. Stations who try to<br />
fulfill their fairness doctrine commitments<br />
recognize how hard it is to find even<br />
nominally qualified spokesmen for various<br />
social issues.<br />
As an examination of broadcast editorials<br />
locally, Mr. Cahan's article is pretty<br />
shallow. He completely ignores one major<br />
TV station, WILL, and no mention is made<br />
of editorializing on local radio. Such lapses<br />
give the lie to the articles authority.<br />
At the risk of pettyfogging, I might also<br />
mentjon that Mr. Cahan misspelled my<br />
name in the article, also misspelled the<br />
name of our program director Ken Ladage,<br />
and misquoted Mr. Ladage twice. Suffice it<br />
to say Mr. Cahan doesn't know what he i&<br />
writing about, and I hope his readers will<br />
make their own determinations as to his articles<br />
accuracy.<br />
PERRY REED<br />
News Director WICD<br />
Women sports coverage lacking<br />
To the Editor :<br />
A couple of weekends ago, Burma West<br />
broke a national record in the 440 yard dash<br />
for the Illini's women's track team at the<br />
national meet in California. The entire team<br />
took sixth in the nation. The Daily Illini's<br />
coverage included a full three sentences appearing<br />
on the second to the last page. Fred<br />
Eisenhammer , however , had recently<br />
Soapbox<br />
By A. BELDEN FIELDS<br />
This week Lou Gold received letters first<br />
from Vice-Chancellor Morton Weir and subsequently<br />
from Chancellor J. W. Peltason<br />
informing him that since the files were<br />
"confidential" neither he nor his chosen<br />
counsel would be permitted to see his file in<br />
order to prepare for appeals procedures.<br />
These letters from the top academic administrators<br />
on the campus reaffirm the<br />
position taken earlier by both the dean of<br />
LAS and the acting head of the political<br />
science department.<br />
The "confidentiality" of the files and the<br />
whole area of personnel matters was the excuse<br />
used by the dean and the LAS<br />
Executive Committee to evade the question<br />
of why Gold was being denied promotion<br />
and tenure (i.e. dismissed) and the lack of a<br />
Ph.D. cited as the reason when at least one<br />
other person was so rewarded without a<br />
Ph.D.<br />
Given the inequality of application of standards<br />
if the Ph.D. issue was the determining<br />
one in the Gold case, I proposed a resolution<br />
at the LAS faculty meeting which would<br />
oblige the LAS Executive Committee, of<br />
which the dean is chairman, to explain<br />
themselves. They ducked the issue,<br />
claiming that they could not discuss the<br />
specifics of the case because that would<br />
violate the rule of "confidentiality" in personnel<br />
cases. This is our own little version of<br />
Executive Privilege, a concept which<br />
almost served our national leader so well.<br />
Bureaucratic behavior shows remarkable<br />
similarities across institutional boundaries.<br />
Let us examine this concept vof "con*,<br />
devoted eight articles including pictures to<br />
his own personal problems in-men's track.<br />
It seems to be obvious that women's sports<br />
are not being covered adequately, but this<br />
sexist attitude displayed in the coverage of<br />
this last track meet and Burma's performance<br />
was the supreme example.<br />
PAM KINNARD<br />
A community forum<br />
Tenant supports landlord<br />
To the Editor:<br />
Recently, much publicity has been given<br />
to the "dispute" between tenants and<br />
management of Norrick and Morrow apartment<br />
buildings. Although I do not represent<br />
the management, as a current tenant,<br />
perhaps I can clarify their position.<br />
About 60 per cent ( 159 residents ) of the<br />
three apartment buildings signed the circulated<br />
petition demanding free August<br />
rent. Tenants were told that the petition was<br />
to unite all tenants so they could effectively<br />
realize their demands. Tenants had nothing<br />
to lose by signing, which may account for<br />
the relatively high number of signatures.<br />
However, it is hard to understand the underlying<br />
motives behind the petition. Tenants<br />
are not being forced to vacate their apartments<br />
on August 15, but the option is open to<br />
them and by doing so each tenant will save<br />
$35-$40rent.<br />
Another main concern of the tenants is<br />
that ads being run by the respective<br />
buildings for summer sublets say "Summer<br />
Sublets at Reduced Rates." Tenants are<br />
complaining because they feel the ads keep<br />
them from subletting at full rental rates,<br />
which is virtually impossible under any circumstances<br />
in the summer. Tenants are<br />
fidentiality" more closely. First, let us<br />
change the term to what I contend is a more<br />
honest one—secrecy. "Confidentiality"<br />
might be taken to connote that the subject of<br />
the file is being protected. This is obviously<br />
not the case here. The subject is being fired.<br />
The subject is seeking to gain access to his<br />
(or, under the present rules, not-his-butabout-him's)<br />
file for himself and his counsel.<br />
This is what is being denied under the<br />
rule of "confidentiality." While Gold has absolutely<br />
no objection to the whole file being<br />
made public to anyone who is interested,<br />
this is not what he and his counsel, the AFT<br />
local, are asking.<br />
So who is protected by this secrecy? A<br />
faculty colleague argued at the last LAS<br />
meeting that secrecy (he said "confidentiality<br />
") protects the authors of<br />
documents which appear in the files. The<br />
argument here was that being so protected,<br />
the authors of letters and other documents<br />
will be more honest. It is interesting to see<br />
how this kind of argument is accepted by so<br />
many of us without reflection. It can surely<br />
be argued that the authors of such documents<br />
would be more honest if the subjects of the<br />
documents were aware of their contents and<br />
could refute contentions which they felt <<br />
were unfair or untrue—contentions which i<br />
can and do destroy careers. Arguing for ]<br />
secrecy on the rationale of securing more <<br />
honest appraisals is like arguing that better <<br />
trial procedure could be attained in the<br />
courts if the testimony of witnesses were <<br />
.withheld from the defendant and his counsel'.<br />
. - ¦ - ¦ to those who do not have the courage to confront<br />
others with what they believe to be<br />
honest assessments. But I do not believe<br />
that protection from embarrassment of<br />
those lacking such courage should override<br />
the right of people to know what is being<br />
placed in their files and to be in a position to<br />
refute what are felt to be untrue or unfair<br />
statements. For under such conditions appellate<br />
and review procedures are rendered<br />
totally inneffective. The subject and counsel<br />
have no way of knowing what they are<br />
defending against. Being placed in this<br />
Kafkesque position is the essence of what is<br />
referred to as "absence of due process."<br />
Aside from protecting the authors of<br />
documents, secrecy further protects administrators<br />
and administrative bodies, like<br />
deans and executive committees. It gives<br />
them great leeway and control. Again, it<br />
serves the same function that "Executive<br />
Privilege" and "National Security" serve<br />
for the national governmental bureaucracy.<br />
In effect they can do as they please since<br />
they are not accountable to anyone else and<br />
no one can gain access to the information<br />
necessary to challenge them . Monopolistic<br />
control over information is perhaps the<br />
single most important factor in administrative<br />
control and irresponsibility .<br />
How can one accuse the administration of<br />
discriminating on the basis of politics or life<br />
style if one does not know what is in the file?<br />
I strongly suspect that this latter function<br />
of secrecy is the crucial one in Gold's case. I<br />
am familiar with Gold's work and with the<br />
'<br />
materials prepared and submitted by the<br />
:¦<br />
' .'Indeed, - anonyjmty is >l iess,! . ^mbjarras^ingi )v;<br />
• „, , • ',. , • - . - • ¦¦¦<br />
, -¦<br />
,<br />
•.'. ••' . '<br />
'<br />
>' •'• • '-!¦ . :¦' ». ' ¦;• < '<br />
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' . . 'IV J . ' *: ' i :<br />
also upset because they cannot offer a fall<br />
option and feel that these factors make<br />
subleasing "impossible." The manager has<br />
sublet several apartments through these<br />
ads. I doubt that an ad saying "Summer<br />
Sublets at Full Rates" would have gotten<br />
any response but a laugh.<br />
Subleasing is far from "impossible." After<br />
running an ad, we had no trouble<br />
subleasing our apartment—mainly because<br />
the shortening , of the lease allowed us to<br />
charge a lower price. Even more puzzling is<br />
the fact that the people who are complaining<br />
about subleasing are the same people who<br />
would rather occupy their apartments until<br />
August 31 than take the reduced rent for half<br />
of August.<br />
I have been a tenant in Norrick and<br />
Morrow's apartments for two years and<br />
have always found the management to be efficient<br />
and cooperative: It is my opinion<br />
(and many others') that they are being<br />
more than cooperative in regard to summer<br />
leases. Tenants seem to be trying to rip<br />
them off for all the free rent they can get by<br />
degenerating this "legal residency" issue<br />
into a type of public relations blackmail.<br />
KAREN WALKER<br />
Ad insults Jewish readers<br />
To the Editor :<br />
It is my belief that professional journalism<br />
dictates that The Daily Illini be open<br />
to public forum concerning whatever is<br />
carried within its pages. This is true<br />
whether it concerns newswriting or advertising<br />
in the newspaper ; it is a particular<br />
advertisement which I wish to comment on<br />
now.<br />
Wednesday's Daily Illini carried a paid<br />
advertisement entitled "I Couldn't Find Any<br />
Jesus Freaks." One such personal story<br />
related by a girl on the page I believe<br />
shamefully and purposelessly insulted<br />
many Jewish readers, myself included. The<br />
need to relate within the story of the way she<br />
no longer regarded her Jewishness as a<br />
Letters policy<br />
The Daily Illini regrets that it does not<br />
have the space to publish all the letters it<br />
receives, but it attempts to publish as many<br />
letters to the editor each year as possible.<br />
Letters should be limited to a maximum of<br />
350 words, should be typewritten and double<br />
spaced, and must be signed by hand. The<br />
religion but only as a "cultural heritage" as<br />
well as maintaining that her Jewishness<br />
was used as an "excuse not to investigate<br />
this man Jesus Christ" is a tasteless affront<br />
to all Jewish readers.<br />
If the Key 73 movement (which of course<br />
has the right to print what they wish ) on<br />
colleges campuses is so intent and dedicated<br />
to personal religious principles, great—but<br />
perhaps the movement should concentrate<br />
on attempting to redeem fellow Christians<br />
rather than to attempt to make Jewish<br />
youth feel filled with "guilt, sin and remorse"<br />
as Key 73 would have us believe they<br />
should be.<br />
MIKE BELLOWS<br />
writer should include his or her address and<br />
phone number. Signatures will be withheld<br />
upon request, but preference is generally<br />
given to signed letters. The Daily Illini<br />
reserves the right to reject any letter which<br />
is libelous and to delete portions as may be<br />
necessary for copy fitting.<br />
political science department to the college<br />
in justification of its recommendation for<br />
promotion and tenure. It was an outstanding<br />
dossier which could neither embarrass a<br />
referee nor warrant a negative decision by<br />
the Executive Committee. Unless negative<br />
references were added to that file after it<br />
left the department, the executive committee<br />
made its decision not on the evidence<br />
submitted but despite it. If such negative<br />
pieces of evidence were subsequently added<br />
unknown to Gold and his colleagues in the<br />
department, they should be communicated<br />
to Gold and his counsel. But I doubt that<br />
they exist because in the college's communications<br />
with Gold over the decision it<br />
has constantly been the absence of the Ph.D.<br />
which has been cited as being of overriding<br />
concern to the Executive Committee. If<br />
Gold's file is exceptionally strong in his<br />
favor, if others are promoted and given<br />
tenure without a Ph.D., what does that leave<br />
as the true basis of the decision?<br />
Far from encouraging truthfulness and<br />
fairness, secret files are a cowardly evasion<br />
of responsibility. They can and do destroy<br />
lives and careers without any possibility of<br />
self-defense. They are antithetical to the<br />
principles of an open society and elementary<br />
due process. They have no proper place<br />
anywhere in our society and particularly not<br />
in our university.<br />
The time is long past due that we as<br />
faculty members exhibit enough courage to<br />
assure ourselves of fair and honest treatment<br />
.
Doonesbury<br />
Miss Peach<br />
Dooley's World<br />
Kelly ; ^<br />
Tumbleweeds "<br />
v ¦ ' ¦ '<br />
i<br />
' ¦ ¦; ' ¦ ¦<br />
Today's<br />
TV<br />
listings<br />
Time Channel .. Program<br />
6:30 a.m. 15 Agriculture U.S.A. .<br />
6:50 a.m. 15 Closer to God<br />
6:55 a.m. 3 Farm Feature<br />
7 a.m. 3 CBS News<br />
15 Today Show<br />
17 Consumer Report<br />
7:30 a.m. 17 Timmy and Lassie<br />
8 a.m. 3 Captain Kangaroo<br />
17 ¦ ._ " . Tennessee Tuxedo<br />
8:30a.m. 17 Space Angels<br />
9 a.m. 3 Joker's Wild<br />
15 Dinah's Place<br />
17 New Zoo Revue<br />
9:30 a.m. 3 . $10,000 Pyramid<br />
15 Baffle<br />
17 Living Easy with Dr. Joyce<br />
Brothers<br />
10 a.m. 3 Gambit<br />
15 Sale of the Century<br />
17 Love, American Style<br />
10:30 a.m. 3 Love of Life<br />
15 Hollywood Squares<br />
17 Bewitched ' .<br />
11a.m. 3 Young and the Restless<br />
15 Jeopardy<br />
17 Password<br />
11:30a.m. 3 " Search for Tomorrow<br />
15 Who, What or Where Game<br />
17 ^rvlit QonnnA<br />
Noon 3 News<br />
15 - News<br />
17 All My Children<br />
12:25 p.m. 3 Town and Country<br />
12:30 p.m. 3 As the World Turns<br />
15 Three on a Match<br />
17 Let's Make a Deal<br />
1 p.m. 3 Guiding Light<br />
15 Days of Our Lives<br />
17 Newlywed Game<br />
1:30 p.m. 3 Edge of Night<br />
15 " Doctors<br />
~ 17 Dating Game<br />
2 p.m. . 3 Price Is Right<br />
15 . Another World<br />
17 General Hospital<br />
2:30p.m. 3 Hollywood's Talking<br />
•15 Return to Peyton Place<br />
17 One Life to Live<br />
3 p.m. 3 Movie: "Zorba the Greek"<br />
15 Somerset<br />
17 MOvie: "Nine Hours to<br />
Rama"<br />
12 Sesame Street<br />
3:30 p.m. 15 Dick Van Dyke<br />
4 p.m. 15 Gilligan's Island<br />
12 Misteroger's Neighborhood<br />
4:30 p.m. 15 Petticoat Junction<br />
12 Electric Company<br />
5 p.m. 3 Flintstones<br />
15 News<br />
7 \<br />
¦: ' ]<br />
5:30 p.m.<br />
17<br />
12<br />
3<br />
ABC News<br />
Sesame Street<br />
CBS News<br />
. , •<br />
%<br />
15<br />
: 17<br />
6 p.m. 3<br />
NBC News<br />
I Dream of Jeannie<br />
News<br />
15 To Tell the Truth<br />
17 News<br />
6:30 p.m.<br />
12<br />
3<br />
What's New<br />
Let's Make a Deal<br />
15 Sanford and Son<br />
17 Hogan's Heroes<br />
12 News<br />
6:45 p.m. 12 Holiday<br />
7 p.m. . 3 Baseball: Chicago Cubs v.<br />
Cincinnati Reds<br />
15 Movie: "Tribes": A non-conforming<br />
hippie draftee<br />
clashes with his Marine drill<br />
instructor and eventually<br />
reaches a partial understanding.<br />
Jan-Michael Vincent,<br />
Darren McGavin^, Earl<br />
Holliman. (1970)<br />
17 Brady Bunch<br />
7:30 p.m.<br />
12 '<br />
17<br />
12<br />
Washington Week in Review<br />
Partridge Family<br />
June Wayne<br />
8p.m.<br />
8:30 p.m.<br />
9 p.m.<br />
17<br />
12<br />
17<br />
15<br />
Room 222<br />
Masterpiece Theatre<br />
Odd Couple<br />
Hooray for Hollywood<br />
17<br />
.12<br />
9:30 p.m. 3<br />
12<br />
10 p.m. 3<br />
15<br />
Love, American Style<br />
Antiques<br />
Death Valley Days<br />
Wall Street Week '<br />
News<br />
News<br />
,<br />
¦<br />
17 News<br />
10:30 p.m. 3 Movie: "Topaz": Alfred Hitchcock<br />
tale of a security leak<br />
during the 1962 Cuban<br />
missile crisis. Frederick Stafford,<br />
John Forsythe, Dany<br />
Robin. (1969)<br />
15 Tonight Show<br />
17<br />
Mignight 15<br />
12:50 a.m. 17<br />
Movie: "Spirits of the Dead"<br />
Midnight Special<br />
In Concert ** ¦ -'
How to get through finals week—see a movie<br />
¦ Bv DONALD S. YARLING<br />
Daily Illini Feature Kditoi<br />
Finals week is upon us and many students<br />
(those of us who have not given up com 1<br />
pletely, right Bob? ) are getting ready to<br />
bear down and read those novels or solve<br />
those problems before the great test comes<br />
up. Even though finals in many departments<br />
have dwindled in importance, students<br />
still spend a lot of time studying for them,<br />
sometimes to their own detriment.<br />
One of the best ways to get through finals<br />
week is to see a movie. I once had' an<br />
economics professor who told the class that<br />
movie attendance rises rather sharply<br />
during finals week. Then he, gave the hardest<br />
damn final I ever flunked .<br />
Almost any Psych. 101 instructor will tell<br />
you that cramming lor an exam is not<br />
useful. After the exam is over , you will soon<br />
forget what you have learned . Of course,<br />
that doesn't matter , so the tool of movie at-<br />
Today's<br />
Crossword<br />
Puzzle<br />
Thursday's answer box<br />
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tendance comes in handy.<br />
Studying all night is a pain. But if you can ,<br />
take breaks, throughout Movies rarely<br />
reflect the real world and are an excellent<br />
way of escaping a dorm room or slum apartment<br />
reality.<br />
To help you escape, some of the theaters<br />
have brought some flicks especially for us:<br />
Silver Screen<br />
Five Easy Pieces—Jack Nicholson and<br />
Karen Black in a classic from a couple<br />
years ago. Friends have told me that seeing<br />
this movie today is totally different from<br />
seeing it in the era of student involvement.<br />
Whatever the case, it's still worth seeing!<br />
Auditorium Friday and Saturday.<br />
The Thin Man—A detective classic made<br />
back who knows when. William Powell as<br />
Nick Charles and Myrna Lov as his wife<br />
( lopr. '!'<br />
ACROSS<br />
1 Rage;<br />
6 Stray child.<br />
-10 Ball of thread.<br />
14 Electrical pole.<br />
15 Whenever.<br />
16 Word with<br />
mouse or rat.<br />
17 Baptized.<br />
18 Sea : Ger.<br />
19 Relative of "<br />
"etre."<br />
- 20 Boxer's<br />
handicap : Slant:.<br />
22 Proficient.<br />
24 Bewilder.<br />
25 Man of the hour.<br />
26 Part .of Luzon.<br />
29 Language of<br />
India.<br />
33 French pronoun.<br />
34 Hale.<br />
36 Repose.<br />
37 Let in.<br />
' 39 Last mo.<br />
40 Divide.<br />
41 Well : Sp.<br />
42 Tacit.<br />
44 Blunder.<br />
45 Precisely.<br />
47 Famous Annie.<br />
. 49 Tense.<br />
¦ > Gen t Features O>rp.<br />
50 Evergreen. ¦<br />
12 Besides.<br />
51 Validate. 13 Do a gardener's<br />
54 Mere nonsense. job.<br />
58 Type of jar. 21 Tall, stately<br />
59 . Fisher's need. woman.<br />
61 River in ^ 23 Common suffixes.<br />
Venezuela. 25 Swiftness.<br />
62 Snug.<br />
26 Gossips.<br />
63 Lively tune. 27 Accountant's job.<br />
64 Adjust, as a 28 Kitchen gadget.<br />
clock.<br />
29 Tarnish.<br />
65 Brink.<br />
30 "Bolero"<br />
66 "Little" Dickenss<br />
composer.<br />
character. 31 Department in<br />
67 Word with sun SE France.<br />
or evening. 32 Kind of cloth.<br />
35 Established.<br />
DOWN 38 Set going.<br />
1 Tooth of a sort. 40 Norm.<br />
2 Not twofold. ¦¦<br />
42 Trip.<br />
3 City on the 43 Knot of wool.;<br />
Tevere.<br />
46 Auto.<br />
4 City in the 48 Guardian.<br />
Ukraine. 50 Puff paste shell.<br />
5 Fly-catching 51 First-class.<br />
warbler.<br />
52 Ran off.<br />
.6 Lib member. 53 Old Glory.<br />
7 Once again. 54 Occupy;<br />
8 Dessert.<br />
55 Trick.<br />
9 Glowing.<br />
56 Greek god.<br />
10 Type of rose.<br />
57 Rents.<br />
11 Deprivation.<br />
60 Design.<br />
Nora team up in the thriller. Look for Asta<br />
the dog, a rea l ham-. By the way. the butler<br />
didn 't do it. Auditorium Sunday.<br />
thrillers will also be on hand through the<br />
week, with Sisters showing at the Co-Ed One<br />
and The Invasion of the Body Snatehers at<br />
the Auditorium Sunday night only.<br />
Man of I.a.Mancha—One of the most acclaimed<br />
musicals ever to hit Broadway<br />
comes to the screen. In what form , we don 't<br />
know. We'll find out,when it opens tonight .<br />
Virginia.<br />
Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid—Sam<br />
Peckinpah is the master of screen violence<br />
( The Wild Bunch and Straw Dogs most<br />
notably ) and we suspect this western is no<br />
exception. Two musical greats , Kris<br />
Kristofferson and Bob Dylan should be interesting<br />
to watch for.<br />
Also in the classic Western tradition is<br />
High Plains Drifter with Clint Eastwood .<br />
Orpheum.<br />
Hitler: The Last 10 Days—The nostalgia"<br />
craze has lept back from the Fifties into the<br />
Forties. The life and insanity of Germany's<br />
greatest mistake is being delved into with as<br />
much ardor as the case of Richard Nixon<br />
and our own Waterbuggers (one of the<br />
biggest mistakes this country ever made).<br />
Alec Guinness and Simon Ward star. See<br />
review on page 24. Fox.<br />
Correction<br />
It was incorrectly reported in Thursday's<br />
Daily Illini that the deadline for applying to<br />
summer school is June 1.<br />
There is no official deadline for undergraduate<br />
applications for summer<br />
school . However, the Office of Admissions<br />
and Records prefers to have applications by<br />
June 1 so that they may be processed . Also,<br />
late .applicants run the risk of their college<br />
being closed .<br />
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54 DAYS<br />
leave Washington<br />
June2for<br />
London<br />
,<br />
return from<br />
London to<br />
New York on<br />
July 26<br />
-<br />
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THREE WEEKS<br />
leave Chicago<br />
June 15for .<br />
Paris<br />
return from<br />
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July 6<br />
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Round trip fare<br />
54 DAYS<br />
leave Washington<br />
June 28 for<br />
London<br />
return from<br />
London to<br />
New York<br />
Auqust s 21<br />
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for reservations contact<br />
ASSOCIATED STUDENTS TRAVEL SERVICE<br />
298 Illini Union/Urbana. IL 61801<br />
(217) 333-635? SOON/SOON/SOON<br />
,<br />
Round trip fare:<br />
$183.00 tax inc.<br />
$243.00 Round trip fare:<br />
$183.00 tax inc.<br />
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'Hitler': 'Megalomania turns into melodrama'<br />
By CIIIPSIIIKXDS<br />
Daily Illini Heviewer<br />
The skull of Hitler's aide Martin<br />
Bormann. exhumed earlier this<br />
year beneath a railroad bridge in<br />
Berlin seems by morbid coincidence<br />
to symbolize the revival of<br />
interest in Hitler , his personality<br />
and his circle. On the heels of<br />
Albert Speer's Memoirs, a smattering<br />
of films about Hitler have<br />
appeared, the most commercial<br />
being a remake of G.W. Pabst's<br />
1948 version of "Hitler : The Last<br />
Ten Days," this time with Alec<br />
Guiness in Der Fuhrer s shoes.<br />
Movie review<br />
Showjng at the Fox. Rated R.<br />
' CAST<br />
Alec Guiness . . ^<br />
Hitler<br />
Simon Ward<br />
Officer Hauptmann<br />
It's accurate, understandable<br />
and decently photographed ,<br />
though I doubt anyone will be able<br />
to take the film seriously.<br />
Why "Hitler : The Last Ten<br />
Days" comes off as melodrama is<br />
due, I think, to two intriguing<br />
things and one ordinary one: the<br />
film Is in color. Hitler's career is<br />
already on film and. as might have<br />
been predicted, undependable Alec<br />
Guiness hasn't the needed presen -<br />
ce or power .<br />
The psychological difference to<br />
an event between black and white<br />
and color photography was<br />
•cleverly used in the last two<br />
minutes of another film about<br />
World War II, "Is Paris Burning?"<br />
An aerial shot in black and white of<br />
Paris on the day of its liberation in<br />
1945 suddenly changes to color, instantly<br />
implying by our natural<br />
association with color that the<br />
scene is of Paris today.<br />
"Hitler : The Last Ten Days"<br />
also should have been done in<br />
black and white. At several places,<br />
the camera goes outside Hitler's<br />
bunker to devastated Berlin in<br />
black and white and the effect<br />
catapults us back to 1945, but when<br />
we return to Hitler and his<br />
mistress in color , blue-eyed and<br />
brightly dressed inside the bunker.<br />
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three decades are suddenly<br />
missing and we are obviously<br />
somewhere in Pinewood Studios.<br />
In spite of its being a re-enacted<br />
documentary, flesh tones on Hitler<br />
are disturbing and do the worst<br />
thing possible to a film of this sort,<br />
which is to remind us that it is<br />
"only a movie."<br />
Since films of Hitler do exist and<br />
¦<br />
even now home movies taken by<br />
Eva Braun recently found in the<br />
Washington Archives, it's difficult<br />
to accept anyone else iri the part of<br />
the leader of the Third Reich.<br />
We can accept Kirk Douglas as<br />
Spartacus or Charles Laughton as<br />
Captain Bligh, figures deep in an<br />
unseen past, but Alec Guiness stepping<br />
in for the murderer of six<br />
¦<br />
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I Pieces |<br />
^H Jack Nicholson - Karen Black ** ^y .^^m<br />
^H Friday & Saturday, May 25 & 26 J, ^H<br />
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Delicate<br />
Balance'<br />
to open<br />
in Studio<br />
KRANNERT I<br />
CENTER<br />
mtmimFummm * j<br />
and the<br />
; Department of Dance present<br />
"IN THE<br />
PLAYHOUSE"<br />
A FACULTY<br />
DANCE CONCERT<br />
JWorks choreographed by:<br />
WILLIS WARD<br />
CHESTER WOLENSKI<br />
BEVERLY BLOSSOM<br />
MARCIA SCHRAMM<br />
RUTH WORTIS<br />
SUSAN MORTON<br />
Music by:<br />
BARRY BROSCH<br />
TONIGHT AND<br />
TOMORROW<br />
8:00 PM . ><br />
Playhouse<br />
Public $2.00<br />
Students $1.00<br />
7:00-8:20-9:40 J<br />
THEALL OUT !<br />
SEXCOMEDY RIOT! j<br />
The hysterically funny i<br />
story of a wild j<br />
and wacky Mafia gang, i<br />
thcF.B.I.;40 j<br />
beautiful girls, and how !<br />
Seymour became the '<br />
world's greatest lover. \<br />
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RATED "R"/<br />
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*<br />
The Graduate Student Workshop<br />
will present Edward Albee's "A<br />
Delicate Balance" at 8 tonight and<br />
tomorrow night in the Studio<br />
theatre at The Krannert Center for<br />
the Performing Arts. . }"'<br />
this is not the usual Krannert<br />
production.' But "The only difference,"<br />
said director Ron Tippe,<br />
"is that there's no budget." As a<br />
result the set is constructed from<br />
scrap and miscellaneous set pieces<br />
found in storage. The technical<br />
crew are all volunteers, as opposed<br />
to the usual Krannert staff .<br />
According to Tippe most of the<br />
supporting people are graduate<br />
mmw ^^Mli *"<br />
students, though a couple of the<br />
cast members are undergraduates.<br />
"A Delicate Balance" has only<br />
six characters. The main couple<br />
are Tobias and Agnes, who are in<br />
their sixties. In this version they<br />
will be played as twenty-year-old<br />
people because Tippe feels,<br />
"Twenty-year-olds can feel all the<br />
emotion of someone who's 60."<br />
The play explores the need of<br />
these people to reach some sort of<br />
accommodation with the way<br />
things are in order to go on.<br />
Tickets were free, but no more<br />
are available.<br />
^^^HB&DfKfHiSHi^B^BHKjBm^B^BH<br />
TONIGHT 7:00-9:25 •<br />
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Hitler...<br />
iCinttiii iii il I'nuh i>tni< J-y '<br />
still Rich Little when he does his<br />
James Cagney impression.<br />
To sustain Hitler s personality<br />
for two hours against the archives<br />
of film that document the man is<br />
certainly more than Guiness. who<br />
never works up to Hitler's trance<br />
of self-satisfaction .<br />
Twice "Hitler: The Last Ten<br />
Days" takes the right turn and<br />
then doubles back. Simon WardT<br />
who portrayed Winston Churchill<br />
in "Young Winston ." is a young<br />
German officer in the bunker with<br />
Hitler. His anominity as a young<br />
man offers no specific comparison<br />
with a historical figure and so his<br />
character has the freedom of living<br />
within the film. Walking outside<br />
the bunker, a girl member of the<br />
Hitler Youth runs up to him and<br />
asks for the promised autographed<br />
pictures of Hitler to distribute to<br />
her comrades defending Berlin's<br />
remaining bridge. The une.XDected<br />
I STARTS TONITE --DOUBLE FEATURE I<br />
I THE MARTIAL ARTS MASTERPIECE! 11<br />
¦ Sights and sounds lite never before! I<br />
- pratnit ¦<br />
TIE IISTaiY<br />
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a special BS-hMr<br />
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TI Diri lTfl HELD OVER 2nd WEEK! I<br />
IheKlHUU<br />
AT 7:45 and 9:35<br />
J^^^^M^T ^;-<br />
¦ " '<br />
• '<br />
Admission 2.00<br />
Pulp means paperback books, also means<br />
pulverized bodies. 'Pulp is a comedy thriller<br />
from the team that made /Get Garter'<br />
....This time they're ready to kill you with laughs. '<br />
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Tradition<br />
Beer 'smuggling' stumbles into past<br />
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS<br />
For generations of college students, a cold beer<br />
meant a trip to the local "college" bar or spiriting a<br />
bulky brown bag into the dorm . But times are<br />
changing.<br />
Spurred by widespread lowering of the legal<br />
drinking age, colleges across the country are opening -<br />
school-owned bars on campus where students can<br />
drink. Almost without exception, they simply are<br />
called "the pub."<br />
A bill that would have allowed beer and wine sales<br />
in the Illini Union was defeated in a House committee<br />
this week.<br />
Most of the campus bars serve only beer and wine.<br />
Twenty-five cents for 12 ounces of beer is standard , a<br />
price usually slightly lower than off-campus<br />
establishments. College officials hold the liquor licenses<br />
in most cases, but student organizations own and<br />
operate a few.<br />
Princeton <strong>University</strong> opened a pub last month. It's<br />
located in an old library building, next to the new<br />
library .<br />
"They come pouring out of there and over here like<br />
lemmings at 11 o'clock," Said Bernard Gavin , the<br />
university official who runs the pub.<br />
Like most campus pubs, the Princeton establish -<br />
KM r. 30 pm " '~<br />
Illini Union Commons<br />
—<br />
4mmli»<br />
ji^V'<br />
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL<br />
| , IWQ<br />
MA Suspense Thriller from the Director of "Might of<br />
¦ . v, the Livini Dead"<br />
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FRIDAY AND SATU RDAY<br />
7:30 and 9:30<br />
141 COMMERCE WEST $1<br />
Students -<br />
^^B A ^'* mf ^^m^Sm^^m^mt^Sm^^A^^^^^A^A^^^^^^^^^^Km^^^^^^^^^^AAA^ s2.00 - Public $ 250 B^B^I '^^^^^ ^^^^^ l 1 *%<br />
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I "THE AFRICAN QUEEN"<br />
fl Friday-Saturday at 8.00 10.00-Midnight<br />
B Lincoln Hall Theater — Admission $1.00<br />
¦¦¦¦¦<br />
a cjnemag^jM presentation MHH |<br />
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I ' CALL: JUST Ym^ ^ " mL " : Mf :<br />
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I AND I MIGHT BE ABLE -7 Wm§ ]/1J J , I<br />
I TO DO SOMETHING ^ 7^<br />
I ABOUT IT! IJJ ^mtf* I<br />
DON'T BLOWIT ' ¦¦' ¦ ¦ ¦//J- ' . |¥<br />
SYWMTimm
Banks hike prime<br />
rate to 7%% . £<br />
NEW YORK-N.Y^AF) - Some of the nation's biggest banks boosted<br />
their prime rate* to 7V4 per cent Thursday, prompted by Federal Reserve<br />
Board efforts to tighten credit and stem inflation.<br />
This means that large business loans will become more expensive and<br />
that corporate spending, a major ingredient in economic expansion,<br />
should taper off.<br />
Interest rates on loans to small businesses, consumers and mortgages<br />
should not be immediately affected.<br />
The hike in the borrowing fee that banks charge their biggest and best<br />
corporate customer was the fifth this year, and raised the prime to its<br />
highest level in 2V2 years.<br />
,._ ..<br />
The V4 per cent increase in the prime was first announced by Chase<br />
Manhattan Bank, the country's third largest bank, and shortly became<br />
industrywide.<br />
Last week the Federal Reserve, which acts as the nation's money<br />
manager, announced a series of actions aimed at making it more expensive<br />
for banks to obtain lendable funds. Tuesday, it appealed to banks<br />
to limit the number of loans they make.<br />
Bank loans, which have been growing at a record rate, contribute to an<br />
economic boom because they generate an increased flow of money. This<br />
in turn generates increased demand for goods and services.<br />
Ozark mechanics' strike<br />
enters 6th week<br />
ST: LOUIS, Mo. (AP) — The<br />
strike by the 560-member Aircraft<br />
Mechanics Fraternal Association<br />
against Ozark Air Lines entered its<br />
sixth week Thursday as a second<br />
session of new negotiations to end<br />
the walkout was under way here.<br />
The talks resumed Wednesday in<br />
what was described as a "cordial"<br />
session by spokesmen for both<br />
sides in the dispute which has idled<br />
about 2,400 Ozark employes and<br />
halted the airline's operations in 62<br />
Now In Rantoul At The I<br />
KARAVAN<br />
SUZANNE ^___<br />
.<br />
¦ -,<br />
Rantoul<br />
CWO JomM W.Codl*<br />
'<br />
¦<br />
' '<br />
cities in 15 states.<br />
Prior to Wednesday's session, no<br />
talks had been held since the<br />
mechanics voted by a 4-1 margin to<br />
reject a company offer May 10.<br />
The last reported salary demand<br />
by the union was $6.82 per hour<br />
plus 15 and 30-cent hourly<br />
premiums for mechanics with airframe<br />
and powerplant licenses.<br />
The last offer reported by the company<br />
was a $6.80 wage without the<br />
premium pay feature. ,<br />
B^H^L^L^LB^^'i i^.^n^B^H<br />
^A ^A ^\w^A^A ^A ^A^Awtm ^^A ^AWRJXS^A ^A ^A ^A<br />
-^M8P^^**^ B^ B^ BH<br />
'<br />
' ¦ ' ¦<br />
'<br />
. : ;; " "<br />
FLAG OF EARTH<br />
ITS AIMTHEM-<br />
THE WIND IN HER TREES,<br />
THE WAVES OF HER SEAS.<br />
Composition: \<br />
Yellow(Sun)-Blue(EarthhBlack'White(Moon)<br />
. All Flags Extremely Heavy Duty<br />
MAY BE FLOWN ANYWHERE, ANYTIME<br />
122 x 183 cm (4' x 6')..; $16.50<br />
91 x 132 cm (3' x5) .$14.50<br />
61 x 91 cm (2' x 3') $8.75<br />
write for information,to:<br />
FLAG OF EARTH CO. INTERNATIONAL<br />
R.R #2. ST. JOSEPH ILL: U.S.A. 61873<br />
& MEET PEOPLE £<br />
# AND^M MONEY<br />
£<br />
§ SELL THE 74 ILUO! $<br />
§ SIGN UP NOW! 5<br />
4f r Tm\<br />
V* SALES START IN AUGUST J£<br />
¥1- during w<br />
JJ*<br />
New Student Week VI-<br />
2? Call 333-1284 or drop "down" Jj£<br />
SJ. to the basement of Illini Hall j?<br />
620 East John<br />
^<br />
J ?<br />
[The Final T^o Episodes<br />
I of The Prisoner<br />
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BB^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H^^. "I/^ BWLBI . «* •- - J ^^L^L^L^^B *' ^ ^^^¦^¦^L^L^L^B mm<br />
An J.^^M«B*a«B^t^B^B^HI^B|L^feS^V^Hk-<br />
' ' "^i'&Sm^F' ' ^1 B«B^B««BBBBBB^^ «4BS B^^^UKH^H^^^^^^^ H ^H<br />
^H I|BVB^HHHHBVB1B^BB^H^B1I BVB^B^*T-'-- ':> 4flHM IHBVB1B^HMBVW1!^< ¦¦¦WB^B^B1>^"^B "B"JB"B"B"B""JJ>^B^I^B^B^^I^BB^B« ^H<br />
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^ |<br />
I Does His Nightmare End? I<br />
I The Prisoner faces ruthless interrogations and is I<br />
I given the ultimate test to make him reveal why I<br />
I he resigned from his top secret job. The mental I<br />
I battle becomes a physical fight. I<br />
I In the final episode The Prisoner shows he has I<br />
I survived the test but has he really found an end I<br />
I to his nightmarish adventures? I<br />
I Both of these adventures will be shown on I<br />
I Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Prisoner XVI will I<br />
I be shown at 7 and 9pm and Prisoner XVII will be I<br />
I shown at 7:45 and 9:45pm, in the Tavern. I<br />
I Admission is 50C. I<br />
I O) Illini UnkM\ ^ L/"" I<br />
I 1^/ ShidcntActi^^ I
Classified Ads<br />
PLEASE CHE^K YOUR AD<br />
\<br />
• If you find an error, report it ;<br />
to the Classified Department immediately<br />
by calling 333-3730.<br />
We regret that we cannot be<br />
responsible fore more than one<br />
day's incorrect insertion if you<br />
do not call the error to our '<br />
attention. Thank you.<br />
* n"~~" DAILY ILLINI CLASSIFIED ~ "'<br />
ADVERTISING CASH RATES<br />
1 2 3 4 B<br />
-.,» • .. Jan- '"•• '"»• •«¦• ¦ 1«L.<br />
10 word* 2.00 Z.w *.«« o.ov - •».%•*<br />
MB wont* 2.00 2.70 3.60 4.60 5.40<br />
IBwonto 2.00 2.88 3.84 4.80 S.78<br />
17 wonts 2.04 3.06 4.08 S.10 6.12<br />
IBwomta 2.16 3.24 4.32 6.40 6.48<br />
19wonto 2.28 3.42 4.S6 5.70 6.84<br />
20 wont* 2.40 3.60 4.80 6.00 7.20<br />
1 OMIMJIH for accaptanca of daMifiad copy r»<br />
3 p.m. tha day pracadina publication. To ptaca<br />
a CtasaiBadAdphona333-3730. _' '<br />
.<br />
"<br />
.. T-<br />
¦ -' r ~<br />
t<br />
¦<br />
s<br />
Advertisers of all types of living<br />
quarters listed in The Daily<br />
Illini have agreed that they will<br />
not include as qualifying consideration<br />
in deciding whether<br />
or not to rent or sell to an applicant,<br />
his race, color, religious<br />
preference or national origin.<br />
Violations of this agreement<br />
should be reported to The Daily<br />
Illini and/or to the <strong>University</strong><br />
of Illinois' Housing Review<br />
_ Committee for investigation.<br />
Hr>ln wnnt pd lint in era nrp tint<br />
classified as to sex. Individual<br />
ads may not discriminate as to<br />
race, color, religion or sex unless<br />
such qualifying factors are<br />
essential to a given position.<br />
^<br />
Jl^ARTMENTS<br />
L.ARGB<br />
2 bedroom apartments at<br />
1107-1209 E. Florida Ave.<br />
are now available. Deluxe features include<br />
private balconies, air conditioning,<br />
carpeting throughout, soundproofing,<br />
generous parking, and new<br />
swimming pool and rec building. Add<br />
to these the conveniences of a shopping<br />
center, churches, and schools.<br />
$155 and up.<br />
344-2072 or 352-0666. F-20659<br />
CENTURY 21 APTS.<br />
a Studio and 2 bedroom<br />
apartments<br />
• No lease<br />
• Free color TV<br />
• Free indoor parking<br />
• Free health club indoor<br />
pool and sauna<br />
• Night security<br />
• Rent begins as low as $182.50<br />
. • Club on 21 Smugglers<br />
THIRD AND JOHN<br />
ON CAMPUS<br />
384-2100<br />
;.......,.... ...A-272<br />
PARKLAND TERRACE<br />
From $125<br />
359-5330.<br />
- .- ' . , P-1131<br />
COLORADO TRACE<br />
905 E. Colorado, Urbana<br />
$148 & $153<br />
2 bedroom apartments. Now, summer<br />
and fall. Special summer rates. Carpeted,<br />
a/c, pool clubhouse, laundry,<br />
¦ close to shopping, on bus line, low<br />
utilities, resident manager, complete<br />
furnishings available. 384-5120.<br />
.....' C-3999<br />
Undergraduates and other. Mobile<br />
homes renting summer or fall. 328-<br />
1036.<br />
W-4454<br />
1405 West Kirby, Champaign<br />
Available August 15. Very attractive.<br />
Two bedrooms, large livingroom, kitchen<br />
and bath. Carpeted. Central air.<br />
Lots of windows. A building you will<br />
like. Full time maintenance crew.<br />
$145 $155 unfurnished. $20 extra to<br />
furnish. Barr Apartments<br />
1610 S. Neil. C.<br />
356-1873<br />
B-4159<br />
. " .;¦ ILLINI MANOR<br />
.Furnished efficiency's<br />
Phone 344-0362<br />
PROFESSIONALLY MANAGED<br />
BY N&M PROPERTY<br />
MANAGEMENT CO.<br />
• '• «*••«¦•*•»*•»• ¦ • • • •¦ • • . i^i~9i£«9<br />
LANDO APTS.<br />
Furnished efficiency and<br />
1 bedroom apartments.<br />
Phone 344 4505<br />
PROFESSIONALLY MANAGED<br />
BYN4M PROPERTY<br />
MANAGEMENT CO.<br />
.' ¦ •<br />
N-5724<br />
Cedar Court. 310 Chalmers. Fall<br />
¦¦ leasing new deluxe studios. 1 bedroom<br />
and 2 bedrooms. 352-1122, 352-<br />
1665.<br />
__ :-.... R-5656<br />
MAIN MANOR<br />
r " APARTMENTS<br />
2 bedroom apts.<br />
furnished for 4.<br />
Phone 367-9727 after 5 only.<br />
PROFESSIONALLY MANAGED<br />
. ¦-; BY N & M MANAGEMENT CO.<br />
. N-5726<br />
APARTMENTS<br />
""""" ~ 8o6~W. ~ Ch ~ urch, C.<br />
Available June 17 to August 15. 2<br />
bedrooms, livingroom, kitchen and<br />
bath. Attractively furnished , air conditioned,<br />
shag carpeting, rent reduced<br />
to $100/monlh. Phone 356-1873. R-5170<br />
BANKIER APTS.<br />
August leasing,<br />
new deluxe 1 & 2 bedrm..<br />
and efficiencies.<br />
Furn. or unfurnished.<br />
On campus.<br />
352-1644 or 359 0647. B-5863<br />
On campus, large furnished 1<br />
bedroom, shag carpet, a/c, heat and<br />
water furnished. $150. June and<br />
August 359-9655, 352-8173. After 6,<br />
367-8886.<br />
H-5917<br />
6th & STOUGHTON<br />
Large furnished efficiencies.<br />
Carpeted, a/c, parking,<br />
$120/month.<br />
356-0171, 356-0121. L-6134<br />
THE VILLAGE<br />
6TH & WHITE, C.<br />
Under construction and now<br />
leasing for August occupancy.<br />
• 1 bedroom<br />
• Balconies<br />
'• Garden patios<br />
• Shag Carpeting<br />
'• Big Showers<br />
• Village concept<br />
• Privacy and security<br />
Make your selection now at<br />
the Rental Office at 608 E.<br />
White, C. 359-9233.<br />
V-6197<br />
800 W. Church, Champaign. Available<br />
August 15. Attractively furnished ,<br />
two bedrooms, livingroom, kitchen<br />
and bath. Deep shag carpeting. A/C.<br />
Fire resistant building. Excellent<br />
soundproofing. Full time maintenance.<br />
$125 unfurnished, $140 furnished.<br />
$25 extra for 9 month lease.<br />
Barr Apartments<br />
1610 S. Neil, C.<br />
356-1873<br />
B-6326<br />
310 S. Prairie, Champaign. 2 bedroom<br />
apartments, a/c, carpeting, furnished ,<br />
modern, quiet, private. Laundry.<br />
$155. Parking. Aalden Apartments.<br />
367-9009.<br />
B-6373<br />
SOUTH FIRST MANOR<br />
Large 2 bedroom apartments. Completely<br />
furnished or unfurnished.<br />
A/C, parking, pool, laundry, liberal<br />
lease agreements. PRO-<br />
FESSIONALLY MANAGED BY<br />
N&M PROPERTY MANAGEMENT.<br />
344-0828<br />
2301 S. 1st., C.<br />
S-6539<br />
GILLESPIE<br />
ROLAND APTS.<br />
Near campus<br />
Furnished - Air Conditioned<br />
Special Summer Rates<br />
Leasing for Aug. 15, 1973<br />
Efficiencies from $122<br />
1 Bedroom from $144<br />
2 Bedroom from $185<br />
Ph. 359-1222<br />
•<br />
Office - 901 S. First.<br />
G-6694<br />
WHITE STREET APTS.<br />
503-505-508 E. White, C.<br />
Renting for June and August 15, 3bedroom<br />
apartments, completely furnished,<br />
dishwasher, disposal, laundry,<br />
shag carpet, central air, sun roof,<br />
some with large balconies, resident<br />
manager. 356-8510.<br />
....: W-6524<br />
Summer or fall. Studios. 1, 2, and 3<br />
bedrooms. Pets. From $80-$240. 11<br />
locations. 344-2246, 352-1122. B-6835<br />
New Studios. 307 E. Armory. A/c.<br />
Carpeted. Laundry. Parking. From<br />
$95.00. 344-1124.<br />
• - • • • • P-6750<br />
bummer and Fall, large one and two<br />
bedrooms, central air, shag carpeting,<br />
pools, pets, parking, laundry, storage.<br />
From $120. 352-0500, 352-1665, 344-<br />
2246.<br />
P-7311<br />
Efficiency , north campus , area for<br />
year starting August 15. Nicely furnished,<br />
carpeted , a/c. $120. 367-7763.<br />
G-7144<br />
O'Conner Apartments.<br />
Modern apartment complex.<br />
1 & 2 bedroom.furnished,<br />
large closets, carpeted ,<br />
air conditioned. Lower<br />
cost utilities, laundry facilities.<br />
Quality sound control. Near<br />
Sunnycrest Shopping Center. On .<br />
direct bus route to campus.<br />
Off-street parking. $100 gift<br />
certificate or apply to<br />
2nd months rent.<br />
No lease. Liberal rental<br />
agreement. Large 1 bedroom<br />
unfurnished at $129/month.<br />
Sign for fall now!<br />
367-8408, 367-7847.<br />
....:. , . 0-6566<br />
Summer and/or fall. 1 bedroom wellfurnished<br />
apartment* Brick building.<br />
Close to campus, carpeted , a/c,<br />
parking, security locks, suitable for 1<br />
person or married couple. $130. Apply<br />
356-4656, 359-2414. 359-7434.<br />
, .. ..H706n<br />
¦FRANKLY SPEAKING" by Phit frank<br />
'YOU HAVE A SICK MOUSE<br />
HERE, YOUNG MAN y<br />
APARTMENTS<br />
Very large, light and pleasant<br />
efficiency, rent negotiable, for<br />
summer-fall option. 344-1700.<br />
U-7236<br />
ON CAMPUS<br />
Beautiful furnished efficiency<br />
one and two bedroom apartments,<br />
now renting for fall.<br />
Shag carpeting, a 'c. Some summer<br />
sublets available. James O'-<br />
Mallev Co. 313 E. Green.<br />
344-0272.<br />
0-7537<br />
Hartman's Efficiencies. 500 block<br />
on Clark St. Now leasing for sum:<br />
mor and August occupancy from<br />
$115 per mo. Rental office is at<br />
608 E. White, C. Phone 359-9233.<br />
H-7475<br />
On East Campus. Summer and fall one<br />
room efficiency apartments, private<br />
and share baths, gas heat , no pets.<br />
367-6754 before 10 a.m.. after 5 p.m.<br />
: N-7708<br />
On East Campus. Summer and Fall. 3<br />
room house - also - 3 and 4 rooms, private<br />
bath , gas heat, suitable 2 to 4<br />
students. No pets please. 367-6754<br />
before 10 a.m. after 5 p.m.<br />
N-7707<br />
Two bedroom apartment, a/c, furnished.<br />
Summer and fall option. 356-<br />
6685.<br />
W-7912<br />
Furnished apartments. Efficiency, 1<br />
bedroom, 2 bedroom, and a 4 bed -<br />
room. Located in campus business district.<br />
356-1580.<br />
' ., C-7909<br />
On campus, large furnished 2 bedroom,<br />
a/c, heat and water furnished.<br />
$185. June and August. 359-9655, 352-<br />
8173. After 6, 367-8886. ....... H-7858<br />
On campus. 3 bedrooms. $225. 384-<br />
5317.<br />
...L-8145<br />
2 and 3 bedroom furnished apartments.<br />
58 E. John, 352-8922, after<br />
5:00, 352-2809.<br />
v.- . -.;.' D-8605<br />
WALTON APARTMENTS<br />
Corner of First and Armory<br />
Rooms for summer and fall. Good rating<br />
in recent CSA housing survey.<br />
Reasonable rates. Utilities included.<br />
Fall nine months lease. Air conditioned.<br />
Kitchen facilities. Good premises.<br />
Ideal for seniors and graduate<br />
students.<br />
Call 344-7624.<br />
W-8002<br />
August 15th. Urbana. 2-bedroom<br />
duplex. $150. 384-5317.<br />
... ..L-8144<br />
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS<br />
At Sixth and Stoughton.<br />
Leasing for fall. 2 ,<br />
bedroom apartments, furnished,<br />
air conditioned, carpeted,<br />
parking. Near campus.<br />
356r30Ql;<br />
•*•• ¦•.* .•;. ••,... . ..«... _.,, U-ol 58 -<br />
400BRIAR LANE<br />
(WEST OF HOLIDAY INN, C.)<br />
2 bedroom apartments<br />
FALL LEASING<br />
¦ Furnished-a/c<br />
$150/month plus<br />
utilities and deposit<br />
SPECIAL SUMMER RATES<br />
$125/month through Aug. 15<br />
359-4444 ask for Don<br />
Dependable Realty<br />
Evenings and weekends<br />
call 359-1168.<br />
D-7956<br />
Furnished efficiency apartments - 509<br />
E. Clark. C, 310 E. White. C. 12 month<br />
lease -$105/month , 9 month lease -<br />
$120/month. Fall and summer. Carpeted,<br />
a/c, etc. 359-6790, 356-7260,<br />
359-0453, 359-9717.<br />
. - ... .. ..>,..,.. .iR-8050<br />
APARTMENTS<br />
2 bedroom apartment, requires roommate<br />
to share expenses. Furnished,<br />
modern, a/c, parking, near campus.<br />
$77.50. 367-9009.<br />
i . . B-7895<br />
209 E. CLARK<br />
Furnished, 2 bedroom apt., central<br />
a/c, dishwasher, garbage disposal,<br />
carpeted, free off-street parking.<br />
367-8766<br />
503 E. STOUGHTON<br />
Furnished, 3 bedroom apt., central<br />
a/c, dishwasher, garbage disposal,<br />
carpeted, free off-street parking.<br />
367-8766<br />
307-309E.HEALEY<br />
Furnished, 2 and 3 bedroom apts.,<br />
central a/c, dishwasher, garbage<br />
disposal, carpeted , free off-street<br />
parking.<br />
367-8766<br />
Personally managed<br />
M and W APARTMENTS<br />
.....W-8033<br />
COUNTRY FAIR<br />
BEST VALUE IN TOWN<br />
Pool , partyhouse, playgrounds,<br />
basketball, tennis, picnics, planned,<br />
fun parties. Large 1 and 2 bedrooms.<br />
Furnished and unfurnished. Low rent<br />
includes heat, water. Inside laundry<br />
rooms. Huge closets. Tile bath with<br />
vanity. Next to Country Fair Shopping<br />
Center. On all bus lines.<br />
SPECIAL DEAL FOR STUDENTS<br />
AND PERSONNEL. Model open<br />
today. 359-3713.<br />
R-8149<br />
2 and 3 bedroom houses. Off campus.<br />
Now summer>and fall , from $140. 344-<br />
2246, 352-1122.<br />
B-8052<br />
Super 1 and 2 bedroom apartments.<br />
Now, summer, fall. Central air conditioning,<br />
carpet, laundry, pool, parking,<br />
pets. From $125. 352-0500, 352-<br />
1665.<br />
.......P-8053<br />
August 15th. West Champaign. 3<br />
bedrooms. A/C. Sauna. Shag car<br />
peting. $195. 384-5317.<br />
L-8147<br />
Quality apartments. Available immediately.<br />
Near downtown Champaign.<br />
Also' summer and/or fall. 1bedroom<br />
, $135. 2-bedrooms, $157.<br />
Summer rent negotiable. 384-5317.<br />
L-8146<br />
Apartment 1 - 2 or 3, fall option,<br />
Prairie and Healy, Champaign. $135<br />
Monthly, no utilities. Will negotiate.<br />
Rick 359-3365, 359-9281.<br />
W-7886<br />
2 rm efficiency on campus. A/c, porch ,<br />
garage, shag rug. Summer. Cheap.<br />
356-3528.<br />
............. F-8166<br />
Semi-furnished : 1 bedroom apartments,<br />
available June 15, year's lease,<br />
located Vz block from <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>Library</strong>, $120 and $125, including heat<br />
and water, 344-1184, Mon. thru Fri.,<br />
8-5 p.m.<br />
r S-8207<br />
3 bedrooms, livingroom, kitchen and<br />
bathroom. 504 E. Chalmers, Champaign.<br />
359-7122.<br />
G-8252<br />
.Females. 2 room apartment for rent.<br />
No pets allowed. 402 E. Stoughton,<br />
Champaign. 352-7778, 352-7624.<br />
............M-8200<br />
SUPER SUMMER<br />
Colorado Trace Apts.<br />
905 E. Colorado. U<br />
Rent a deluxe 2 bedroom<br />
apartment with SWIMMING<br />
POOL and Clubhouse.<br />
A/C, shag carpet, for June<br />
thru Aug. 15, completely<br />
furnished from $153,<br />
unfurnished, $25 less.<br />
384-5120. N<br />
.- •••• - •••• i;^ - -v- -.;:n;:::i.-- -^648<br />
i ¦' •'.! \* : -V/ . . . .<br />
.... APARTMENTS __ __ __<br />
OLD TOWNE APTS.<br />
Special rates , for the summer, very<br />
large .2 bedroom apartments, choice<br />
Urbana locations near campus area,<br />
shag carpet , fireplaces, a/c, parking,<br />
private courtyard, resident manager,<br />
furnished , or unfurnished.<br />
- MAKE US A DEAL.<br />
384-1046, , '- > ' '.<br />
• :...70-8351<br />
3 bedroom apartment , $176.00, 11<br />
month lease starting July 1.344-5982;<br />
.......... D-8295<br />
Two bedroom duplex apartment with<br />
air conditioning and a chance to do<br />
some odd jobs (cleaning, mowing,<br />
painting).for some extra cash. $115.00<br />
per month. Call 352-5644.<br />
'¦•• ' . J-8284<br />
Summer/Fall option —1 bdrm. furnished<br />
apartment , on campus,<br />
parking and utilities included.<br />
Reasonable. 344-3879.<br />
, R-8278<br />
2 bedroom furnished, fireplace, ideal<br />
for 2/3. 910 West Nevada. Super loca -<br />
tion. Summer/Fall. 344-8650.<br />
••• .. ; ... M-8244<br />
1 and 2 bedroom on campus, studio<br />
and 2 bedroom off campus7Summer or<br />
fall. 356-5493. 356-4311. ,<br />
S-8310<br />
There's no need to raise a<br />
BIG STINK<br />
about where you're going to' live. A<br />
$50 deposit will hold a big one bedroom<br />
apartment in Marycrest at 1101<br />
S. Mattis , C. Get a package price of<br />
$250.<br />
OVER<br />
the entire summer or $139 per month<br />
for fall and winter. Lots of parking,<br />
quiet, and well lighted. Stop fussing<br />
about<br />
" DORMITORY BEANS<br />
and see us. Open today and tomorrow<br />
2-7 p.m. at 1101 S. Mattis or phone<br />
352-0451 or 356-8381.<br />
L-8401<br />
ONE BEDROOM APTS.<br />
All fully furnished , shag carpet,<br />
security building, washer and dryer,<br />
and sun-roof..<br />
$145 per month.<br />
Call 352-7206 or<br />
352-3294.<br />
. S-8419<br />
2 bedroom apartment close to.campus.<br />
$140/month. Unfurnished. Available<br />
June 6. 344-7401.<br />
B-8414<br />
LANDO APARTMENTS<br />
Furnished and unfurnished 1 bedroom<br />
apartments. Available for fall rental.<br />
Our apartments feature<br />
• Air Conditioning<br />
• Wall-to-wall carpeting<br />
a Equitable lease<br />
a Garbage disposal<br />
a Reserved parking<br />
a And more<br />
Call 344-4505 or stop in this weekend<br />
between 9-5 p.m. at Apt. 305. ..L-8413<br />
Furnished 2 large rooms and bath ,<br />
paid utilities , $125, campus, June 15,<br />
no pets. 367-6517.<br />
E-8383<br />
FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS<br />
Three-bedroom apts; furnished, carpeted,<br />
a/c, $84 each per month. Or,<br />
SINGLES - rent your own bedrm ,<br />
share livingroom , kitchen and bath<br />
with 2 other grads. $85 - $88 per month.<br />
CHARMOR APARTMENTS<br />
107 E. Chalmers St., Champaign<br />
344-7996<br />
, R-8404<br />
..- A?A?TMENJSyBLET<br />
Summer sublet - fall option. Lg ef<br />
ficiency, carpet, a/c, rent negotiable.<br />
352-3489, after 5 p.m.<br />
V-8084<br />
June free. Furnished/unfurnished 1<br />
bedroom. 352-6792.<br />
C-8085<br />
NEW FURNISHED<br />
EFFICIENCY FOR SINGLE<br />
PERSON. A/C. UTILITIES<br />
PAID. SUMMER/<br />
FALL. $95. 408 E. Stoughton.C.<br />
352-4777, 344-7401.<br />
. S-6862<br />
NEW UNFURNISHED TWO<br />
BEDROOM: COUPLES<br />
OR SINGLES.<br />
SUMMER/FALL. $135-$150.<br />
102 N. Gregory, U.<br />
344-7401.352-4777:<br />
•<br />
S-6866<br />
NEW UNFURNISHED DELUXE<br />
ONE BEDROOM.<br />
CARPETED, A/C,<br />
SUMMER/FALL.<br />
$140-$145<br />
406 E. Stoughton.C.<br />
352-4777. 344-7401.<br />
S-6864<br />
NEW UNFURNISHED DELUXE<br />
EFFICIENCY. CARPETED,<br />
A/C. SUMMER/FALL.<br />
. $105 ,$115.<br />
407 S. State, C.<br />
359-2340, 352-4777.<br />
.7. S-6863<br />
LARGE NEW UNFURNISHED<br />
DELUXE TWO BEDROOM.<br />
CARPETED, A/C, ETC.<br />
COUPLES OR SINGLES.<br />
SUMMER/FALL.<br />
$170-$200.<br />
EXCELLENT LOCATION.<br />
409 W. Elm, U. 352-4777. 344-7401.<br />
:... .. _._._ .. •.. %u...t.uv
Classified Ads<br />
..I ArARTMENTSUBl,^. - ___<br />
Summer sublet. Furnished, a/c. efficiency..<br />
Rent negotiable. 510 E.<br />
Clark. 359-1033. - ____;_ ' A<br />
,<br />
—... rrr.:. .^..: D-SIO5 lh block from Union,- sublet/fall option,<br />
a/c , furnished , carpeted ,<br />
panelled, utilities. 359-4451.<br />
L-8083<br />
Summer sublet/fall option. 1 bedroom<br />
deluxe apt., Locust and Chalmers.<br />
359-6649 after 5:30. . ':<br />
.^-r. TT7...... E-7999<br />
Free furnitMre, 3 speed bicycle, June<br />
rent,.a/c, campus, architect apt., fall<br />
option, 356-2451. , "<br />
: , ¦ •," ;' .. ,,, ..¦•;» ."-v M-8046<br />
2 ' bedroom furnished, mid-June<br />
through August. Available in fall.<br />
Across from Crystal Lake, a/c. $150.<br />
367-7939 after 4:00.<br />
........:........... B-8012<br />
Summer sublet: 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,<br />
a/c, bi-level. Ill E. Chalmers: Reduced<br />
rent. 384-5867.<br />
.^ C-7997<br />
3 bedroom, a/c, d/w, furnished, First<br />
and John. Rent negotiable. 356-4740. -<br />
D-8188<br />
Urbana, summer/fall, 2 bedroom,<br />
utilities, $130. 328-1181 or 359-8127.<br />
...K-8227<br />
Close - new : cheap. 356-0890.<br />
.....,. -..... ......<br />
¦ ... - ... . ! .:. , . T-8230.<br />
Free car' with apt. A/C, pobK car 1<br />
.....ApARTMENt^y^_r<br />
BEST. THIS SUMMER<br />
WHITE STREET APTS<br />
503 E. White, Champaign<br />
3 bedroom apartments,<br />
a.c , shag carpet ,<br />
dishwasher ,<br />
peted, 2 bedroom. 344-4553.<br />
.....D-8234<br />
Summer. Large 2 bedroom furnished.<br />
A/C, parking, balcony,- laundry, on<br />
campus. 344-0933.<br />
;..... . G-8271<br />
Summer^ furnished 2 bedroom , a/c,<br />
many extras, Busey and Illinois.<br />
Cheap. 344-1086. •<br />
"~<br />
P-8256<br />
2 bdrms, a/c, 2 '/2 blocks from Union ,<br />
fall option , June free. 367-4200.<br />
.,. .....R-8228<br />
Own room in a/c apartment, furnished,<br />
dishwasher., will negotiate for<br />
summer. 356-5175.<br />
.......„,;.....J-8179<br />
3 bedroom, a/c, dishwasher, 2 months<br />
free, 3rd negotiable. 359-9546.<br />
...B-8178<br />
Bargain basement. Near campus. 3bedrooms.<br />
$225/summer. Fall option.<br />
384-5317.<br />
L 8127<br />
New 2 bedroom luxury apt., furnished,<br />
a/c, shag carpet, balcony, on<br />
campus. Reduced rent! 367-4814.<br />
......: A-8194<br />
Must sublet immediately! One<br />
bedroom apartment for 1 or 2.<br />
$135/month. Close to Krannert. 344-<br />
1693.<br />
S-8251<br />
Lincoln & Illinois, summer/fall , 1<br />
bdrm furn., brick, a/c , off-street<br />
parking, $200 for summer. 344-1747.<br />
A-8175<br />
Summer sublet. 3/4 people. Large 2<br />
bedroom , furnished, a/c, parking, carpeted<br />
, 605 S. Fifth. 384-1006, Fred.<br />
'E-8226<br />
Own room in gorgeous new apartment,<br />
a/c, dishwasher, $100 entire<br />
summer, 2nd and Chalmers. 344-6511.<br />
U-8190<br />
June rent free. Modern a/c efficiency<br />
with balcony, near Champai gn<br />
Holiday Inn. 356-0533.<br />
. ... " H-7867<br />
1 or 2 males, share upstairs apt. of<br />
house. Individual bdrms, a/c. Cheap.<br />
332-4107, 344-6585.<br />
R-8197<br />
Summer sublet - 1 bedroom , fullycarpeted,<br />
air conditioned , on campus.<br />
$120/mor;lh. Call 344-8594.<br />
R-8181<br />
OLD TOWNE APTS<br />
Summer Specials<br />
Rent a LARGE two<br />
bedroom apartment in choice<br />
Urbana location, A/C, shag<br />
carpet, deluxe features<br />
throughout, rent is negotiable<br />
for summer.<br />
384-1046.<br />
H-6649<br />
One^room in Urbana , share bath and<br />
kitchen , $45/month. Everything. 367-<br />
3792. .<br />
..G-8280<br />
Summer sublet , furnished , shared<br />
bath , on campus , refrigerator.<br />
$70/month (negotiable) utilities. Jonny,<br />
352-1644, 359-9322.<br />
• •<br />
H-8277<br />
Fall option , a/c, furnished, pets, on<br />
campus, 3 bedrooms. 344-2172.<br />
F-2850<br />
Efficiency, a/c, furnished, carpeted.<br />
356-2249 after 4.<br />
..... i _.G-8249<br />
Summer sublease and Fall option:<br />
Air-conditioned furnished efficiency<br />
apartment. June free, S minutes from<br />
Union. 356-6141.<br />
G-8248<br />
Sublet 2-bedroom apt. Perfect loca -<br />
tion. Summer/Fall option. $120/month.<br />
Furnishings optional. 367-2371.<br />
..L-8247<br />
Summer sublet/fall option. 2 bdrm,<br />
a/c, pool, tennis, parking, laundry.<br />
Your price. 359-9398.<br />
P-8243<br />
Summer: 1 or 2 women to share apartment.<br />
58 E. Armory. No. 12, a/c,<br />
spacious, modern , $70 each for entire<br />
;.dmmrr.-341-(5294. 352-6106,<br />
S-8314<br />
' Summer/fall. A/c. pool , carpeUng,<br />
two bedroom , unfurnished , $1 18/mon<br />
th. Call 314-0851 after 5:00.<br />
... , S-8319<br />
Summer sublet , .large 2 bedroom<br />
apartment, furnished, a/c. carpeted ,<br />
disposal , parking,<br />
close t o campus, cheap. 359-9285.<br />
special summer rates,<br />
!..,.... ..S-8318<br />
. . - make us an offer.<br />
Summer sublet - .1 bedrm ' furnished.<br />
356-8510<br />
$200 for summer, incl. utilities. Avail.<br />
,_._... ...W-7216<br />
June 1.367-7768.<br />
2 bedroom apartment. Modern ap-<br />
•,<br />
D-8340<br />
pliances, a/c, available anytime. 359-<br />
Cheap. Neat apartment , 2 bedrooms,<br />
2162 after 3:00 p.m.<br />
a/c. shag, large. 344 0111.<br />
.._tl-..---<br />
..../:S-7375<br />
•••••• ,.,..C-8336<br />
Summer sublet, perfect location, a/c.<br />
Three, rooms, close to campus, park<br />
Furnished 2 bedroom. Posihle room-<br />
ing. disposal, $95 monthly. Available<br />
mate available. Call 344-1639.<br />
June. 367 3813, evenings.<br />
.......... . ...... S-7468<br />
• B-8348<br />
2-bedroom, a/c, on campus, large,<br />
Cheap, next to campus, 2 bedroom,<br />
June free. $200. 356-3978.<br />
air, shag, and furnished. $300 for sum<br />
. .W-7785<br />
mer. 356-9220.<br />
Summer sub/Fall option. Roomy<br />
S-8298<br />
3 bedroom basexent apartment.<br />
Cheap. 2 bedroom, a/c, good location.<br />
384-1902. . - . . '-<br />
Best offer. 359-8569 ;<br />
D-7567<br />
• ••• G 8347<br />
Large, quiet, furnished<br />
Summer and/or fall. 1 bedroom well-<br />
efficiency.<br />
A/c, utilities paid, parking, close,<br />
furnished apartment. Brick building.<br />
cheap. Single male. 352-6668.<br />
Close to campus, carpeted , a/c, .parking,<br />
security. locks, suitable for 1 per-<br />
•• ••• . A 8296<br />
Summer/fall option: one bedroom<br />
son or married couple. $130, reduced<br />
apt., furnished, a/c, on campus,<br />
to $110 for summer. Apply 356-4656,<br />
$85/mo., including utilities. 356 7242.<br />
359-2414 , 359-7434.<br />
M-8335<br />
..H-7702<br />
June rent free. 2 girls. A/c. dish-<br />
Summer sublet. 1 bedroom apartwasher,<br />
disposal, sundeck, helpful<br />
ment, 1 block from campus. New brick<br />
managers. Close to campus. 356-7073.<br />
building, large rooms, well furnished,<br />
M-8269<br />
carpeted, a/c, parking, security locks.<br />
3 bedroom, 2 full baths, a/c, dish-<br />
Regular $150 reduced to $120. Apply<br />
washer, on campus, rent .cheap, fur-<br />
356-4656, 359-8492, 359-2414.<br />
nished. 359-2951.<br />
.....H-7703<br />
Z-8263<br />
Summer sublet only, new, modern ,<br />
Special Deal! 3-room apartment for 1<br />
furnished , large, a/c, parking, laun-<br />
or 2 people, bv Lincoln Square.<br />
dry, shag carpeting, balcony. Busey<br />
$170/summer.' Call ' Mark 344-0610,<br />
and Green , $52.50/month/person.<br />
until 12:00 p.m. Keep trying.<br />
344-5743.<br />
.....; M-8264<br />
, . R-7705<br />
Furnished large.2 bedroom, a/c, car-<br />
Summer 2 bedroom , a/c, close. 344-<br />
peting, good landlord, on campus,<br />
5373.<br />
rent negotiable. 359-7785.<br />
E-7859<br />
; . .B-8285<br />
Summer efficiency, on campus,, pri-<br />
$170 total/summer<br />
vate kitchen, bath, rent negotiable.<br />
Call Mrs. Borleff, 344-1767.<br />
S-7833<br />
June free. 2 bedrooms, 4 persons,<br />
near campus, a/c, furnished , parking.<br />
344-3713.<br />
..,..,. .....F-7827<br />
Large 2 bedroom 4 person, furnished,<br />
a/c, campus apartment with balcony<br />
and free parking. i367-3804.<br />
..;.......,. P-7985<br />
Summer sublet: 5 room apartment, 2<br />
bedrooms upstairs, furnished, a/cT<br />
carpeting, pets, underground parking,<br />
laundry. Good location. Rent<br />
negotiable. Days 359-7031, evenings,<br />
344-8202.<br />
., . . G-7948<br />
Summer sublet 3 bedrooms, furnished,<br />
a/c, 3 blocks from Union,<br />
$300. 367-5880.<br />
R-7982<br />
Summer/fall option. Furnished<br />
modern 2 bedrooms for 2 - 3. A/C,<br />
parking. $198/month , negotiable. 359-<br />
2068. 510 E. Stoughton , C.<br />
B-7949<br />
Summer sublet - 2 bedroom, a/c, carpeting,<br />
on campus, disposal, rent<br />
negotiable. 356-9316.<br />
...: R-7935<br />
Furnished, 2 bedroom, a/c, parking,<br />
$136 month. 344-5116.<br />
B-7936<br />
Summer sublet. 2 bedrooms, a/c,<br />
dishwasher, furnished, new building,<br />
private parking, 5th and Green,<br />
Negotiable. 359-5479.<br />
C-7932<br />
Roomy summer sublet. Queen size<br />
bed, • livingroom, and kitchen. 333-<br />
6143, 367-7860, Larry.<br />
..L-7938<br />
Lando sublease, 1 girl. $175/entire<br />
summer. CaU 367-5473, 356-7499.<br />
. ...J-7976<br />
Really cheap! Three bedrooms, a/c,<br />
dishwasher, on campus, 359-9128.<br />
B-7939<br />
Beautiful summer sublet. Modern<br />
apartment for 2 or 3 people. Furnished,<br />
a/c, shag carpet, balcony, sky<br />
lights. Fantastic location. 328-3904.<br />
;<br />
N-7930<br />
Summer/fall option. Efficiency near<br />
campus, a/c, ¦ $88/month. 352^6782.<br />
.... ,.;..,....,.. M-7929<br />
Summer/fall, 2 bedroom, a/c, furnished,<br />
106 E. Healey No. 1,352-5585.<br />
...C-7925<br />
1 bedroom, furnished, basement, utilities<br />
paid, summer $180, 1st and John,<br />
352-0904 evenings before 9:30 p.m.<br />
C-7891<br />
Free June rent. Pay only July 1 - Aug.<br />
15. Large 2 bedroom apt. for 3 people.<br />
A/c, 3 blocks to campus. $198/month.<br />
Fall option. 356-2215.<br />
• D-7893<br />
For summer. Modern 2 bedroom, furnished,<br />
air-conditioned apartment<br />
near Lincoln Square. Rent negotiable.<br />
367-7165.<br />
..V-7898<br />
Apartment sublet for summer, 1<br />
bedroom , near Cole Hospital ,<br />
$120/month. Phone 356-4018 or 352-<br />
9218.<br />
P-7959<br />
Lando Place, summer sublet, furnished,<br />
one bedroom, a/c. Rent very<br />
negotiable. 344-4274 or 352-9687<br />
..S-7951<br />
1 APARTMENT SUBLET ><br />
PEOPLE!<br />
: 1-bedroom, fully<br />
furnished. 352-6839, after 6 p.m. 352-<br />
0645.<br />
. ...C-8399<br />
STOUGHTON MANOR<br />
Summer sublets now available. Rent<br />
negotiable.<br />
PROFESSIONALLY<br />
MANAGED BY<br />
N AND M PROPERTY<br />
MANAGEMENT COMPANY<br />
359-4438<br />
M-8409<br />
BUSEY APARTMENTS<br />
Summer sublets now available. Rent<br />
negotiable.<br />
PROFESSIONALLY MANAGED<br />
BY N AND M PROPERTY<br />
MANAGEMENT COMPANY<br />
367-1070.<br />
N-8408<br />
$280 for summer! Large, 2 bedroom ,<br />
a/c, Mathews,- Main , 344-4367.<br />
F-8358<br />
Summer/fall. Modern 2 bedroom apt.,<br />
a/c, furnished , free parking. Rent<br />
negotiable. Call 367-0827, or 367 7564.<br />
G-8346<br />
Summer sublet , new efficiency, air<br />
conditioned, $270 for summer, 359-<br />
8854.<br />
B 8353<br />
Summer sublet , 3 bedrooms, exceptionally<br />
large, under $320 for summer.<br />
Will negotiate. 332-3292. 332-<br />
3277. '<br />
S 8365<br />
GIGANTIC APARTMENT<br />
OVER TRENOS<br />
- MUST SEE TO BELIEVE<br />
3 bedrooms, shag carpeting,<br />
air conditioning, balcony,<br />
1 block from Quad<br />
Summer sublet.<br />
Rent negotiable. •<br />
344-8978. 344-4779<br />
W 8447<br />
703 W; OREGON<br />
Summer sublets, fall option.<br />
1 bedroom , furnished ,<br />
carpeted, parking.<br />
$145/month , utilities included.<br />
367-1288. 344-7299.<br />
H-8446<br />
GIVE YE SHELTER<br />
NEW 4 bedroom , 2 full baths.<br />
$65/month (negotiable ) Reg.<br />
$85/month 1-4 persons. Furnished,<br />
a/c, -Bi-level, d/w. carpeted, parking,<br />
laundry, balconv<br />
111 E. Chalmers.<br />
332 1810.<br />
B-8451<br />
Large, airy. 2 bedroom, a/c. second<br />
floor apartment/house. U. 344 3773.<br />
B-8438<br />
Summer., June free. 2 bedroom, a/c,<br />
furnished, campus. 356-3064.<br />
:•...... M-8437<br />
Efficiency apartment. Furnished, on<br />
campus. A/C. $HC/month. Reduced<br />
to $80/month. 359 2192 for the summer.<br />
C-8384<br />
Large 2 bedroom furnished, a/c,<br />
close. che:-.p. 367-2847.<br />
.\ W 8433<br />
2-bedroom. furnished, a/c. pool, carpeted.<br />
2 vrs. old. $110'month. 344-<br />
4553.<br />
, D-8433<br />
Summer sublet , furnished, 2 bedroom,<br />
large livingroom and kitchen.<br />
359 0098.' ....: . . . . .<br />
F-8385<br />
" oi'JV " BACKS ""<br />
ARE<br />
BROKEN! WE ARE NOW REOF-<br />
FERING OIK JUICY APARTMENT<br />
FOR 4 FOR THE ROCK BOTTOM<br />
PRICE OF $100 APIECE FOR' THE<br />
WHOLE FRICKIN' SI MMER.<br />
THAT'S ONLY $40/MON<br />
TH/PERSON! CHECK OUT THE<br />
APARTMENT FIRST. AND IF YOU<br />
DON'T FEEL YOU'RE GETTING A<br />
BARGAIN. THEN YOU HAD BET<br />
TER TAKE . AN ECONOMICS<br />
COURSE! 1006 S. 3RD. 332 1760.<br />
K-8391<br />
Floor of house. Residential area. 2bedrooms.<br />
$250/entire summer. Fall<br />
option on entire house. 384-5317.<br />
L 8427<br />
August 1st sublet. A/c. 1 bedroom,<br />
¦<br />
furnished. 367-2952. ": -<br />
S-8425<br />
Large efficiency across from Mc-<br />
Kinlev on Lincoln, summer sublet,<br />
rail option. Call 359 3380'.<br />
M-8364<br />
Sublet: 6/6-8/15. 2 bdrm.. furn., a/c.<br />
dishwasher. 309 E. Healev. $200/sum<br />
mer. 356-5856 ;<br />
K 8355<br />
Summer/Fall option! 2 bedroom furnished,-a/c.<br />
dishwasher, cheap! 359-<br />
6707. .. ..<br />
• L-8389<br />
Efficiency one and two bedrooms.<br />
Furnished and unfurnished. Reduced<br />
rates for summer. Smith and Manley.<br />
356 1323.<br />
•<br />
. S-8421<br />
$195 all summer, sublet, fall option.<br />
A/c, furnished. 356 9354, 356-2329.<br />
.R8418<br />
Great apt.! Cheap! 3 rooms, a/c, on<br />
campus. Will negotiate. Call 344-3831<br />
or 352-1263.<br />
...; W-8289<br />
Sublet - fall option. New. 1 bedroom,<br />
furnished, a/c, laundry, parking, on<br />
campus. Rent negotiable. 911 S.<br />
Locust No. 101.352 7703.356-3016.<br />
M-8354<br />
Summer - 2 bedroom , a/c, furnished,<br />
near Lincoln Square, pets. $225. 344-<br />
7785.<br />
A-8370<br />
Very , nice unfurnished apartment,<br />
a/c, four rooms, First Street, $126.<br />
Parking. Good landlord. Available<br />
June 16th. 344-3870.<br />
L-8357<br />
STOUGHTON GOODWIN<br />
Summer sublets now available. Rent<br />
negotiable.<br />
PROFESSIONALLY<br />
MANAGED BY<br />
N AND M PROPERTY<br />
MANAGEMENT COMPANY<br />
367-9727.<br />
N-8410<br />
...J?.9?. ^M .. - .APARmEJ^^BLEJ_ ^_ .<br />
3 bedroom Townhouse, a/c, quiet<br />
area , off street parking,' fall "option.<br />
$56.25 per month and utilities. 344-<br />
7888 or 344-7885 after 5 p.m.<br />
...-.:-.;...,..,.. r..?r. . M-7903<br />
*<br />
- ' "" 1006 S. 3rd<br />
LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT<br />
THIS SUMMER? IF YOU DON'T<br />
CHECK OUT ONE OF THE JUIC-<br />
IEST APARTMENTS ON CAMPUS,<br />
WE SAY YOU'RE NOT LOOKING<br />
HARD ENOUGH. AND IF OUR<br />
PRICE OF LESS THAN $50/MON-<br />
TH DOESN'T ENTICE YOU, WE<br />
SAV GET LOST!<br />
_ 332-1760.<br />
• •< «• K*80uO<br />
Summer-Fall option, a/c, furnished,<br />
large bedroom near campus. Utilities<br />
paid. 359-8374.<br />
..F-7994<br />
Summer sublet. Comfortable, unique.<br />
In large old house. Can have air-conditioner.<br />
$95. 359-7395, 367-6333.<br />
A-8022<br />
Summer. 3 rooms near campus.<br />
$85/month. 328-2137 after 5:30 p.m.<br />
.... .....:.... ;....L-7995<br />
HALF-PRICE<br />
New; 2-bedroom luxury apartment,<br />
a/c; fully furnished, shag carpeting,<br />
parking, balcony, laundry facilities,<br />
free ice.<br />
ONLY3BLOCKS<br />
FROM UNION<br />
344-7064<br />
... . M-8047<br />
$170 for summer. Ross Larson, 333-<br />
3526, 8-10, 2-5 daily.<br />
L-7941<br />
Summer/fall option. 2 bdrm Townhouse.<br />
Reasonable. Pets.-352-5548.<br />
......:.::.....:..:..;.. H-8088<br />
Summer sublet for one, mostly furnished.<br />
Large livingroom and kitchen.<br />
Negotiable price. 710 W. Church No.<br />
6. 359-5961.<br />
L-8104<br />
2 bedroom unfurnished, great location,<br />
$145/fall. Will negotiate for summer.<br />
367-8163.<br />
H-8103<br />
3 bedroom. Close to campus. Porch.<br />
$150. Fall option. 367-1006.<br />
. . -...: :.......;.. .. Q-8125<br />
Summer sublet/Fall opt., large 2<br />
bdrm, unfurnished, a/c, walk to Lincoln<br />
Sq. or campus, $125 month/summer.<br />
328-1790.<br />
;... L-8079<br />
4th and Green, 2 bedrooms, great for<br />
2 or 3.2 baths, a/c, summer. 359 0379.<br />
.; L-8040<br />
Beautiful apartment on campus for 3<br />
people. $325 entire summer. 344-1745.<br />
•••• /.. R-8038<br />
Summer sublet/fall option. 2 room<br />
furnished apartment on campus. Very<br />
quiet. Great landlady. Available June<br />
.A!E _WANTED<br />
1. Only $75/mbnth. 352-2950.-<br />
F-8036<br />
Two male roommates to share two<br />
Sublet, large efficiency, a/c, 2 blocks<br />
bedroom apartment. Fall and Spring.<br />
from campus. $78 monthly. 359-6686.<br />
605 E. Green. Fred, 384-1006.<br />
. H-7984<br />
Female wants to share apartment<br />
with same, own room, fall. 344-7438.<br />
B-7942<br />
Free June rent. 1 or 2 roommates<br />
wanted to share large 2 bedroom apt.<br />
June 15 - Aug. 15. A/c, 3 blocks to<br />
campus. $198/month. 356-2215.<br />
D-7892<br />
Male, fall. Century 21, a/c, pool, color<br />
TV. $74/month. 344-0497.<br />
A-7870<br />
Summer roommate needed. Own bedroom.<br />
$57.50/month. 6-15 to 8-15, 332-<br />
3967.<br />
•<br />
S-8155<br />
Fall-friendly female roommate to<br />
share beautiful Urbana 2 bedroom, -4person<br />
apartment. Barb, 384-5048.<br />
M-8098<br />
Summer sublet - 3 bedroom, a/c, near<br />
campus. Greta 344-0387. Janet, 359-<br />
7411.<br />
S-8091<br />
Couple, married or un to share large<br />
beautiful house near campus. 356-<br />
5734. 344-8373.<br />
O-8090<br />
Male roommate wanted to share 3<br />
room apartment. $60/month plus utilities.<br />
616 E. Daniel. 367-1592.<br />
..D-8124<br />
Summer sublet. Own room in large 2<br />
bedroom apt. - Second floor of housefurnished.<br />
352 8496. Susan or Becky.<br />
L-8075<br />
1-2 males, summer. 3-bdrm. furnished<br />
apt., a/c, $50/person/month. 332-<br />
1690.<br />
K-8062<br />
Male roommate wanted for June 1<br />
thru August 15. $116.25 for entire<br />
summer. Great location. 707 S. 6th.<br />
344 6563.<br />
¦ ••>••••••• ¦•> . ••••¦..•.•• Iv'oUOf<br />
1 . 'or 2 roommates. Large, tri-levei.<br />
campus apartment. Laundrv, Dishwasher.<br />
Larry, 384-1012. Mark, 384-<br />
1113.<br />
P 8186<br />
Own room in large carpeted house.<br />
Fireplace, large yard. $55/month.<br />
2110 E. Main. Urbana. 367-2309. 333<br />
6353.<br />
J 8131<br />
One or two female roommates needed<br />
for summer in very large 2 bedroom<br />
apartment. Close to campus. $160 for<br />
summer/utilities included. Negotiable.<br />
Call 344 4249.<br />
C-8174<br />
--. T-8102<br />
Summer-fall opt: two bedroom apt.<br />
Furnished—entire top half of house.<br />
All utilities paid; $150. Phone 359-<br />
2284. If no answer keep trying.<br />
E-8065<br />
All our liquor free to 2-3 girls. Whole<br />
summer sublet, $100 each. August<br />
rent free. Air cond., dishwasher.<br />
Many extras! 1006 S. 3rd. 344-4545.<br />
.: M-8037<br />
Fantastic offer. On campus. 5-bedroomf.<br />
$300/summer. 384-5317.<br />
L-8126<br />
One bedroom, furnished, carpeted,<br />
a/c, fall option. 359-2903, 359-6978.<br />
M-8132<br />
Summer sublet, fall option , 2 bedrooms,<br />
a/c, carpeted. 359-9554.<br />
D-8150<br />
Rent-free apartment to married<br />
couple for managing modern brick<br />
apartment building. Near campus. Efficiency<br />
apartments. Available in<br />
June. 356-4656. "<br />
,. ...H-8121<br />
Rent-free apartment to 2 or 3 men in<br />
return for work around apartment<br />
buildings. Available June. Close to<br />
campus. New brick building. 356-<br />
4656.<br />
. ' H-R120<br />
Fall option. One bedroom, furnished,<br />
carpeted, a/c, Heat, water furnished.<br />
Fall rent , $140/month. Summer<br />
negotiable. Call 356-2069.<br />
C-8094<br />
Summer sublet 56 V2 E. Green, Champaign,<br />
furnished 3 rooms, a/c, parking.<br />
$105/month. 352-1301..<br />
:.. G-8092<br />
3 bedroom , porch, fireplace, $150. 367-<br />
1006.<br />
. ¦ ..." ;.?'. ....N-8108<br />
June free, rent negotiable: summer/fall<br />
option, 2 bedroom furnished townhouse, a/c, pool, 356-6640.<br />
...P-8089<br />
$97 per person for entire summer (4<br />
people), 2 bedroom, furnished, near<br />
campus. A/c, dishwasher, other extras.<br />
-Will negotiate. 359-0413.<br />
E-8043<br />
Summer sublet for 4. Tri-Ievel, two<br />
bedrooms, a/c, dishwasher, shag carpeting.<br />
1006 S. Third. Price<br />
negotiable. Marilyn. 332-5711.<br />
: B-8080<br />
Large 2 bedroom apt. A/C, on' campus.<br />
Price negotiable: 359-0839.<br />
.,. r W-8081
Classified Ads<br />
DR<br />
....J?9PJ^? ? RJENT<br />
...J?^^?*ATJ__WANTE_D __ _<br />
Needed: 1 male roommate for summer<br />
apartment. On campus. A/C. 359-<br />
8341.<br />
..S-8184<br />
Rent drastically reduced. $150 whole<br />
summer. Modern , apartment , own<br />
bedroom , near MRH Snack Bar. Call<br />
now. 384-5219.<br />
L;8183<br />
Male roommate, June - Aug. 15. $115.<br />
A/C. share room. 367-6744.<br />
_ V-8232<br />
Male, for summer. Beautiful a/c apt.<br />
Own bedroom. 344-2271.<br />
. . J-8261<br />
1st month free! Male. 2 bedroom apt.,<br />
8/73 - 6/74. Excellent location. 384-<br />
1199, Wayne.<br />
R-8235<br />
Need 2 female roommates for on campus<br />
3 bedroom apt. this summer. 1006<br />
S. 3rd. 344-4816.<br />
B-8138<br />
Own bedroom in 2 bedroom furnished<br />
a/c apartment. Located near downtown<br />
Urbana. For summer or longer.<br />
$150 for 6-1-73 to 8-30-73. Prefer male<br />
grad. Alec, 333-0669 days, 367-1951<br />
evenings.<br />
H-8253<br />
Share 2 bedroom house, Urbana, with<br />
male grad. $70, utilities. Walt , 333-<br />
0217 days, 367-9825 nites.<br />
K-8191<br />
Roommate wanted. For large modern<br />
two bedroom apartment. Parking,<br />
a/c, dishwasher. Best offer. Call<br />
Steve. 352-9264.<br />
A-8193<br />
Summer sublet. Two grads seeking<br />
male roommate. 3 bedroom house.<br />
Near Crystal Lake. $100 for summer.<br />
Ron or Lou, 333-2235. 367-6185.<br />
C-8168<br />
Summer: 1 boy for 4 bedroom bi-level<br />
apt., 2 baths, furnished , a/c, balcony.<br />
367-6760, 384-5154. .<br />
R-8176<br />
Suinmer. 2 bedroom apt., a/c, swimming<br />
pool , shag carpeting. Jeff. 332-<br />
3617.<br />
M-8223<br />
Own room , a/c, furnished , parking,<br />
near Lincoln Square, June - Aug. 15,<br />
$150. fall option. 344-7141.<br />
R-8341<br />
Female roommate. Summer. Own<br />
room. Campustown. $150 for whole<br />
summer or best offer. 356-3064.<br />
W-8301<br />
Summer: female roommate, own<br />
room, modern a/c apt., dishwasher,<br />
close to campus. 359-7538.<br />
B-8300<br />
$110/summer. Share apt. with 2 male<br />
grads. A/C, near campus. 359-9650.<br />
M-8292<br />
Town and Country! Own bedroom for<br />
summer, $100, pools. 367-8720.<br />
M-8281<br />
Need 1-2 males to share luxury 2 bedroom<br />
apartment on campus. Furnished<br />
, shag, a/c, balcony. $95/person<br />
for entire summer. 352-9577.<br />
S-8290<br />
Female, own bedroom , 6th and Green.<br />
Summer. 356-3064.<br />
B-8317<br />
Apartment wanted for summer or will<br />
share with one who has apartment<br />
and needs roommate. 359-8147.<br />
. - .-. D-8315<br />
Female - summer. A/c, balcony, shag,<br />
sundeck! Cedar Courts, 310 E.<br />
Chalmers. Negotiable. 344-8972.<br />
. ' . V-8268<br />
Girl to share 1 bdrm apt. on campus.<br />
$95 summer.-344-7201.<br />
.....\............ M-8242<br />
Girl ,- own room with half bath, a/c.<br />
$100 " the summer, 352-5359.<br />
A-8306<br />
Enchanting third , bedroom in house<br />
with advantages. 404 West Green ,<br />
Champaign. $70 monthly. 367-5656.<br />
' S-8400<br />
One woman to share homey, modern<br />
apartment, a/c, carpeted, summer.<br />
344-7887.<br />
. ' . . S-8394<br />
1-2-3 female roommates. Near campus,<br />
$110/summer. 384-5593.<br />
. " D-8361<br />
Female-Summer sublet. $130. Own<br />
bedroom , furnished , a/c, campus. 359-<br />
7495, 359-5921.<br />
G-8288<br />
Roommate wanted for Fall. Own<br />
room, shag, d.w., new on campus.<br />
$68.00. Call Bob, 337-5344.<br />
, B-8360<br />
Roommates wanted. Large house.<br />
Own room. $65/rhonth. Includes most<br />
utilities. June 1. No pets. 359-3395.<br />
. . L-8411<br />
Person needed to share 5 bedroom<br />
house. Real cheap. Utilities included.<br />
On campus. 344-0370.<br />
...:........... . R-8368<br />
Needed roommate for fall semester .summer<br />
optional. 2nd and Chalmers.<br />
Call Terry or Norm , 384-5765.<br />
.- B-8342<br />
Summer roommate(s), reduced new<br />
apt., a/c, bi-level, own bedroom(s).<br />
furnished. Ill E. Chalmers. 332-181Q..<br />
. 7B-8452<br />
Girls: Own bedroom , luxury apartment.<br />
. Fall—$79. Fun atmosphere!<br />
332-3881.<br />
... '<br />
Approved double rooms for men with<br />
kitchen privileges, laundry, pool<br />
room, parking, very close. 910 W.<br />
California. 344-1969. Cheap summer<br />
and fall.<br />
H-5801<br />
Approved men's doubles for fall,<br />
shared kitchens, newly decorated, air<br />
conditioned, near Engineering and<br />
DCL. $215 per semester, off street<br />
parking available. Laundromat and<br />
grocery in same block. 356-6167 after<br />
4:00pm.<br />
H-6071<br />
<strong>University</strong> approved rooms for men.<br />
356-1580.<br />
C-7911<br />
Cheap summer rooms in nice older ,<br />
house. 367-4531, afternoons.<br />
.. 7 . B-7907<br />
Grads, don't sweat Daniels Hall this<br />
summer. Air conditioned single rooms<br />
two blocks north, 2 blocks to DCL,<br />
newly decorated, shared kitchens, offstreet<br />
parking. Laundromat and<br />
grocery in same block. $55 monthly.<br />
333-2457 days, 356-6167 after 4.<br />
. ...H-6113<br />
August leasing, singles with kitchen<br />
privileges. On campus. 352-1644.<br />
_.,._...<br />
7 -.. ..0-8434<br />
¦<br />
B-7033<br />
Girls single and double rooms with refrigerator.<br />
<strong>University</strong> approved. 9<br />
month contract. 2 blocks west of<br />
Union. Showing rooms every Saturday<br />
from 2-4.<br />
Mansion, 410 E. Green, C.<br />
356-1496.<br />
Medea , 412 E. Green, C.<br />
'359-3339<br />
. ' ;> _. ..'__ • •« • •• . M-6613<br />
For summer only, near campus $45<br />
monthly. Shlens 359-3023, 356-4311.<br />
S-5457<br />
DOPE - GET DOPE ON<br />
806 W. MAIN<br />
Urbana - 367-0151 , 4<br />
doubles and 1 single left for fall<br />
semester. Cooking facilities -<br />
offstreet parking - Laundry<br />
facilities - Large yard.<br />
Approved Male housing.<br />
Grocery 1 block.<br />
Rent $50 - $65/month.<br />
Well maintained .<br />
M-6696<br />
Girls - singles and doubles with kitchen<br />
privileges. Summer and fall leasing.<br />
352-2869, 367-8235.<br />
R-7767<br />
For summer and fall term. Quiet clean<br />
single rooms for male students age 21<br />
and over. Cooking privileges, parking<br />
available. 367-4715.<br />
T-7967<br />
Single and double rooms for graduate<br />
men. Kitchen facilities available.<br />
Washer and dryer jn basement. Basement<br />
rooms remodeled. All rooms carpeted<br />
and well maintained. 344-6603,<br />
344-6530.<br />
: L-7970<br />
One room of two bedroom a/c apartment.<br />
Share with grad student. $90<br />
whole summer. Call 352-0549.<br />
B-8152<br />
Fall rentals, male. Singles, $80/month;<br />
doubles, $70/month; large apartments<br />
for 3, $75/person/month. Kitchen,<br />
laundry and parking facilities.<br />
352-0998 after 5:00.<br />
M-8118<br />
Summer rentals $50/8 weeks. Kitchen<br />
and laundry facilities. 1005 S. Second,<br />
Champaign. 352-0998, after 5:00.<br />
;...... M-8117<br />
Mens singles and doubles, $100 for all<br />
summer. 352-0210.<br />
W-8057<br />
Women. Parking, linens, kitchen?<br />
sewing machine, no discrimination.<br />
Evenings and weekends, 344-6678.<br />
A-8212<br />
On campus. Furnished single and<br />
double co-ed rooms. Converted frat<br />
house. Kitchen facilities. $85 - $100 for<br />
summer. $50 - $60 monthly for fall<br />
semester. 404 E. Daniel , Champaign.<br />
367-4177 , 1-485-3940.<br />
7 A-816&<br />
Women. 2 single rooms in private<br />
home near Lincoln Square. $150 for<br />
summer. Kitchen privileges, laundry<br />
facilities available. Available June 1,<br />
367-6911, 367-6281.<br />
.- , ....F-8211<br />
Mixed group looking for people to<br />
share big house for summer. Cheap.<br />
332-0621.<br />
:<br />
P-8208<br />
Summer sublet - 3 rooms - large house<br />
- nice yard - $40/month. 328-1333, 328-<br />
1429.<br />
. L-8195<br />
Summer and fall. For men. On campus.<br />
Share kitchen and bath. Cheap.<br />
328-1408, 359-5530.<br />
M-8352<br />
One room in two bedroom modern a/c<br />
apartment. Reduced $150 whole summer.<br />
Female only. 384-5219.<br />
L-8294<br />
Men's approved housing, summer or<br />
fall. Close to campus. 411 E. Green ,<br />
Champaign. After 5 p.m.<br />
............... ..\ B-8326<br />
Summer or fall , men and women ,<br />
with/without kitchen. 356-5493, 356-<br />
4311.: • .;.. • -<br />
•" ••• -r •• • • S-8309<br />
Student rooms for summer. Close-in<br />
to campus. Kitchen facilities.<br />
$30/month, 328-2953r ~ •¦•- --—— -<br />
-*99.^.fOR _ RENT.<br />
Furn<br />
E-8240<br />
* ishe " d " . " $35? S " hare kitchen and<br />
bath. Available 5/21. 359-8472.<br />
K 8303<br />
Summer and Fall. Share .kitchen and<br />
bath. $35 and up. 359-8472.<br />
...... K-8302<br />
vVomen. Un campus, 2 basement<br />
rooms, kitchen. Summer half-price.<br />
367-2480.<br />
B-8444<br />
For the summer, 2 blocks from the<br />
Union. Male kitchen privileges. $90.<br />
352-6245 between 5-7 p.m.<br />
M-8381<br />
CLOSE CLOSE CLOSE<br />
Just drive bv , half block from Quad.<br />
1206 W. Nevada , Urbana. McCraigh<br />
Place. Single rooms or whole house.<br />
Summer rent , $90 up. Taking Fall contracts.<br />
367-3357.<br />
M-8379<br />
On campus —rooms for summer<br />
and/or Fall. $60/month , kitchen facilities.<br />
367-0693 evenings.<br />
R-8359<br />
Summer rooms for women. Near<br />
Krannert. Kitchen facilities. 328-2651.<br />
; ... :..... ' .. : ... - . . L-8363<br />
Fall: 1 space in double, kitchen facilities,<br />
close to campus, female approved<br />
housing, Mary, 384-5209.<br />
...B-8371<br />
- GIRLS!!!<br />
Approved Rooms with<br />
Kitchen Privileges<br />
WHITEHALL<br />
207 East John<br />
356-5291 356-3902<br />
FALL CONTRACTS:<br />
$225-292.50/sem.<br />
SUMMER CONTRACTS:<br />
$10-$12.50/wk.<br />
V .,._ .,._ J-8449<br />
TVPIN6<br />
" " MRSTKELLEY<br />
TYPING & STENO SERVICE<br />
Theses, Reports, Letters, Etc.<br />
Overnight Typing Available<br />
352-0465 -<br />
' '<br />
K-523<br />
Exper. typist " call B. "'<br />
TWO WHEELERS<br />
'72 Honda 750 cc. Low miles, very<br />
good condition. Must sell. 359-7606 after<br />
6. Ask for Jeff.<br />
C-8082<br />
1968 B.M.W. R-60 excellent condition,<br />
dazzling basic black. $900. 1-469-2503.<br />
....:. M-8077<br />
Must sell 1967 Honda 450. Good condition.<br />
344-7708.<br />
M-8074<br />
BSA 650cc, very good condition. Must<br />
sell. $725 or best. 352-2318.<br />
B-8060<br />
1966 Yamaha 305cc, good condition,<br />
$250 or best offer. 333-4919, 359-6484.<br />
A-8017<br />
Honda 350 CB 1970, asking $375. Call<br />
356-0699, at dinner time.<br />
Z-8213<br />
1971 Hon.da/CL 175 with 72 title, excellent<br />
condition , just tuned , has extras.<br />
Call 328-2387 or 367-0205.<br />
S-8165<br />
'68 Honda 305 Scrambler. Just tuned.<br />
Call Jerry after 6 p.m., 359-2951.<br />
.<br />
Wright, 356-<br />
0921.<br />
.....: W-4896<br />
DEE'S TYPING &<br />
COPY SERVICE<br />
707 S. 6th St.<br />
Room 206-Lando Place<br />
Guaranteed Thesis Typing<br />
Top Grade Copy Work<br />
Thesis Printing-Up To 10<br />
Copies 45' Per Page<br />
Call 344-0063<br />
. .. , . K-5050<br />
Smith Corona Galaxie Deluxe typewriter.<br />
$50.367-1785.<br />
S-799J<br />
Experienced thesis typist. Mrs. Gordon<br />
367-4304.<br />
G-3891<br />
Experienced typist. Reasonable rates:<br />
356-3221.<br />
..0-5561-<br />
Theses, Reports, etc.<br />
Mrs. Johnston 359-0836<br />
^.<br />
^<br />
J-4470<br />
Hart Secretarial Service. 367-4239.<br />
Tapes, dictation, all typing. Call after<br />
5:00, except weekends.<br />
: H-6728<br />
r'.iperienced, accurate theses typist.<br />
344-6437.<br />
S-6763<br />
TECHNI-TYPISTS<br />
Experienced typiests for theses,<br />
term papers, reports and letters.<br />
Transcription of tapes or<br />
belts. Fast efficient service. Call<br />
352-2101 or 359-7409,<br />
Professional typing and secretarial-<br />
service, Mrs. Wolf , 367-<br />
1354. '<br />
A- - -. W-7506<br />
secretary will dp. typing for anyone in<br />
Champaign-Urbana area. Neat and accurate.<br />
Call toll-free , after 5:30, 1-598-<br />
3503.<br />
• • • •_ =. •••••• ..... ... .^ J... . *_..:. F-8430<br />
TWO WHEELERS .<br />
Cycle Insurance. Low rates. Milum<br />
Insurance, 203 Lincoln Square. 328<br />
\ 2842.<br />
•;••• M-3448<br />
IDti<br />
QUALIT Y SERVICE<br />
HONEST PRICES<br />
511 W.Eureka Street , ChampaFgn<br />
352-7794.<br />
• ••<br />
'¦<br />
. 1-6976<br />
Must sell. 1973 Honda CB100. Will<br />
haggle. Call 367-8015 eves.<br />
•... ..M-7261<br />
Chopped Harley 74, 1951, 352-<br />
4542.<br />
: B-7535<br />
1971 Kawasaki 500, Mach III, excellent<br />
condition. Best offer, 344-7565.<br />
• .. .Y-7735<br />
1972 Honda CB350. Low miles. Excellent<br />
condition , $750. 344-7506.<br />
Z-7766<br />
1971 Suzuki 350, excellent condition,<br />
$600 or best offer. 332-3720.<br />
G-7890<br />
1971 Honda CB100, 2700 miles, perfect<br />
condition, $300. 356-7015.<br />
R-8157<br />
1971 Honda CL350. .like new condition,<br />
helmets, sissy bar. 367-6060,<br />
Don.<br />
..M-8093<br />
71 Honda CB 350, 67 Honda 350,<br />
$294.95. 333-1930 , 328-3085.<br />
' . ' .:. W-809T<br />
' F-8171<br />
1966 Yamaha 250 cc. Scrambler.<br />
Cheap, Stewart, 356-9763, 333-6722.<br />
• ¦ ••¦ ¦<br />
S-8334<br />
Must sell 1970, 650 Triumph Bonneville<br />
Sharp. Bert 359-6985. $825 or<br />
best offer.<br />
S-8337<br />
1970 Kawasaki 175. Best offer. Phone<br />
352-4973 after 6:00.<br />
• ...:... ........ W-8331<br />
1968 BSA Lightning. Excellent condition<br />
, just tuned. Best offer. 332-<br />
3702.<br />
. . ..T-8297<br />
1970 Honda CL450, 9700 miles, $450.<br />
Boy's Schwinn $10. 344-0577.<br />
R-8432<br />
•Honda "71 350 CB. $400. 359-9553.<br />
M-8397<br />
1970 Triump h 250 and one rail trailer<br />
engine rebuilt guaranteed. Weekdays<br />
after five weekends all day 1-643-<br />
7852.<br />
-. J-8362<br />
1971 Yamaha 360. Good condition. Expansion<br />
chamber, new piston. Too<br />
loud for my neighborhood. $550. 344-<br />
0456 evenings.<br />
B-8388<br />
MotoCross-Greeves 250 - street legal ,<br />
$275. Gary 384-5929.<br />
• • H-8373<br />
67 Honda 305, recently overhauled ,<br />
runs good , turn signals, new battery<br />
and rear tire. $275 or best. 344-3121.<br />
F-8356<br />
1972 Honda 350cc, street scrambler.<br />
Excellent condition , only 1600 miles,<br />
garaged, save $150. Must sell. 328-<br />
1314, 333-3771. Ask for Bob.<br />
W-8403<br />
Honda SL-175, 8,000 miles, excellent<br />
condition , $300. 352-3058.<br />
M-8245<br />
1965 Harley-Davison Electroglide,<br />
full dress, good condition , recently<br />
overhauled. 359-8306.<br />
• C-8382<br />
AUTOS FOR SALE<br />
AUTO INSURANCE for students<br />
and staff. Low monthly payments.<br />
Brya Insurance, Goldblatt's, Credit .<br />
Department. 356-8321.<br />
B-1272<br />
1971 Maverick Grabber, 6-cylinder, 22<br />
mpg, a/c, bucket seats , excellent<br />
mechanical condition. Must sell. 367-<br />
1174 days, 1-586-2542 evenings.<br />
U-7666<br />
1966 Dodge van. $550.00. After 5<br />
p.m., 367-6347.<br />
. . ' . W-7724<br />
1964 Chevrolet Impala. $150 or reasonable<br />
offer. 356-1799.<br />
A-7933<br />
For sale, 1970 VW, extra good condition,<br />
39,500 mis, $1,200. Call after<br />
5:30 p.m., 344-7923.<br />
..H-8049<br />
1969 Dodge Polara Convertible.<br />
Power steering, power brakes, AM,<br />
FM radio, excellent condition. Owner<br />
leaving. 359-6649 after 5:30.<br />
..E-8000<br />
1967 Volkswagen , excellent condition,<br />
radio, carrier, 58,000 original miles.<br />
356-6039 after 10 p.m.<br />
C-8009<br />
1960 MGA 1600cc coupe. $900 or best<br />
offer. 359-4819.<br />
."<br />
t<br />
H-8109<br />
'63 Plymouth Slant 6. Some rust, runs<br />
good. $125. 352-6047.<br />
H-8069<br />
1968 VW Bug. Excellent condition,<br />
new engine, starter, exhaust system.<br />
$800. Radio. 359-1432 after 5.<br />
R-8070<br />
1964 Corvair window van with table<br />
and seats and screened windows. $350<br />
or best offer. 352-9458.<br />
..... C-8031<br />
'67 Fleetwood Cadillac. Excellent condition,<br />
plus all extras. Best offer. 352-<br />
1061, keep trying.<br />
• F-8054<br />
64 Chevy Impala. Excellent condition.<br />
344-6508.<br />
0-8274<br />
1969 Galaxie 500, 4-door hardtop,<br />
automatic, P.S., P.B., A/C, radio, excellent<br />
condition. $1150. After 6 p.m.,<br />
344-7894.<br />
T-8259<br />
1964 Ford Van , good condition , a real<br />
steal. 333-2764.<br />
..:........<br />
¦ ... ' .. ' . ' :... ' . ' .. ' ....„AyjO_^_W__SALE<br />
69 Opel Kadette 1900 wagon, 41,000<br />
miles, excellent condition, mounted<br />
snowtires and radio. $950. 356-4595 after<br />
4 p.m.<br />
\ M-8204<br />
1966 Mercury Comet, low mileage,<br />
very good condition. Phone after 6.<br />
359-4898.<br />
,.' ..C-8198<br />
'65 VW , new bat., new brake, '66<br />
rebuilt Micro-bus engine, '69 interior,<br />
good tires, repainted , radio, excellent<br />
condition , call 332-1681.<br />
,. 0-8172<br />
'63 Chrysler. Runs and looks good.<br />
Good Int. and radio. Nice big 'car.-<br />
$175, 384-5835. t<br />
.. '.:.... M.-8330<br />
1967 Bonneville , factory air , rear<br />
defroster and speakers. Year old<br />
tires. $800 or best offer. 384-5924.<br />
S-8398<br />
'64 Volkswagon , engine needs work,<br />
many new parts, $200. 356-2284.<br />
A-8429<br />
1969 Volkswagon, poptop campmobile<br />
with attachable tent, radio, trailer hitch<br />
, 30,000 miles, 5,000 on present<br />
tires. Very good condition. $2,100.<br />
367-6468.<br />
R-8428<br />
1973 MGB-GT green with wire whpels<br />
and other extras. $3400. 367-4363 after<br />
5 p.m.<br />
G-8424<br />
1966 Mustang Convertible, V-8, 4speed.<br />
$450 or offer. 328-1375.<br />
R-8395<br />
Fiat 850 Spider '69. $750. 356-6923.<br />
...T-8436<br />
1971 Toyota Corrolla 4-door sedan.<br />
Good economy car. Best offer. 367-<br />
2303.<br />
L-8387<br />
'63 Ford Fairlane, stick, new Diehard ,<br />
exhaust and much more. $300 or best<br />
offer. 367-8720.<br />
\ ..; M-8377<br />
65 Pontiac convertible. Good top.<br />
Good mechanically. P.S.. P.B., A.T..<br />
$300, 352-7096.<br />
¦ - : -<br />
....:D-8415<br />
By original owner. 1969 VW Squareback,<br />
automatic transmission, radio,<br />
low mileage, excellent condition. Call<br />
344-3498.<br />
...B^8406<br />
... J-RAM*5<br />
..-*. .SALf. .::<br />
1970, 12 x 52 Fawn - Invader, furnished,<br />
tied-down, underpinned, a/c,<br />
shed, large lot, many extras. Candlewood<br />
Estates $3,950.00. 1-586-2306.<br />
..'.... B-7599<br />
1965, 12 x 55 Elcona, 2 bedroom, central<br />
air, washer-dryer, carpeted ,<br />
built-in stereo speakers. Excellent<br />
condition, good location. $3250. 344-<br />
5571.<br />
V-7958<br />
12 x 60 Mobile Home, 2<br />
.'M-8439<br />
lk bedrooms,<br />
IV2 bath. 'A acre fenced. Thomasboro<br />
area. 352-8814.<br />
..B-7957<br />
12' x 60' Deluxe Star 1971, Early<br />
American furniture, shag carpet, air<br />
conditioned, 2 bedroom, underpinned.<br />
344-7074. 20 Carriage Estates, Urbana.<br />
S-8100<br />
10' x 477 2 bedroom , a/c, shed,<br />
awning, fenced yard. Good condition.<br />
Nice neighbors. In Urbana. 344-4610.<br />
...... ...L-8272<br />
1963, 10 x 50 with tip-out, 2 bedroom,<br />
furnished , a/c, city lot, $2100. 359-<br />
7413.<br />
-..W-8206<br />
Beautifu l 12 x 60 Fleetwood with 7 x<br />
14 expando, dryer, air conditioning,<br />
underpinning, storage shed , furnishings<br />
optional. 356-8141 after 3 p.m.<br />
C-8202<br />
Champion 8 x 42. Good condition.<br />
Lessaris Tr. Ct. No. 28, Urbana. $950,<br />
negotiable. Call Danville 446-7229,<br />
446-4396. ' *<br />
G-8180<br />
Finally graduating! Must sell 10 x 52<br />
Star. 2 bedrooms, furnished , carpeted<br />
, air conditioned , storage "shed.<br />
Available June 15th. 367-4999:<br />
. . : C-8328<br />
10 x 50 Ritzcraft. Furnished, a/c, excellent<br />
condition. 7 minute bike ride to<br />
campus. Reasonable. 367-3546.<br />
L-8287<br />
Come See: 1967, 12 x 52 semi-furnished<br />
, air conditioned, carpeted. 367-<br />
7422.<br />
B-8393<br />
Beautiful' 12 x 60 Fleetwood with 7 x<br />
>14 expando, 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths,<br />
dryer, air conditioning, underpinning,<br />
storage shed, furnishings optional.<br />
356-8141 after 3 p.m.<br />
. . . C-8416<br />
SPEaAL NOTICES _<br />
Summer dance classes - modern technique<br />
and improvisation taught by<br />
senior in dance. Anita, 344-5862.<br />
F-7897<br />
Need job. Will pay $20.00 cash if you<br />
find me one. 359-9698. -<br />
K-8135<br />
__ _ FOR RENT<br />
Canoes for rent, all accessories furnished.<br />
356-1985.<br />
. ..S-8286<br />
Covered parking on campus.<br />
$10:00/month. 344-1825 after 6:30<br />
p.m. " •--¦ -¦"' ' < "¦>> ¦< ¦ '¦ ><br />
•?'* '•} ; .. . . . D-8329
Classified Ads<br />
HELP WANTED<br />
Help wanted listings are not classified<br />
as to sex. Individual ads may<br />
not discriminate as to race, color,<br />
1 religion or sex unless such qualifying<br />
factors are essential to a given<br />
position.<br />
. . — .,.—.—........ .,. _ .,<br />
Now hiring. Waitresses, cooks, busboys<br />
and dishwashers. Fulltime or<br />
•parttime, a.m. or p.m. shifts available.<br />
Apply in person , The Neil St. Red<br />
Wheel Restaurant, 1805 S. Neil,<br />
Champaign.<br />
R-6819<br />
Wanted mature undergrad or grad to<br />
provide assistance for handicapped<br />
grad student in return for free living<br />
accommodations at Lando Place. Beginning<br />
in summer. Call Tom, 344-<br />
7890 after 6:00 p.m.<br />
H-7655<br />
Telep hone sales, evenings 6 to 9. Starting<br />
$1.65/hour. No experience<br />
necessary. Call 352-2781.<br />
. . ; A-8276<br />
Attendent new laundromat, z evenings<br />
per week definate. Possibility extra<br />
stand-in work. Start $1.75. Apply<br />
Ozier Construction, 2000 N. Mattis.<br />
0-8151<br />
Cook wanted for small fraternity for<br />
next fall. Good working conditions.<br />
344-1858. '• S-8042<br />
Gas leak technician, $150 per week,<br />
travel, will train. Call for interview<br />
217-359-160 1, Ex. 102, Tuesday thru<br />
Friday.<br />
S-8071<br />
Applications being accepted for<br />
WINE STEWARD. Knowledge of<br />
wines desired but not necessary. Also<br />
openings for day and night shift busboy<br />
positions.<br />
Apply to:<br />
CHAMPAIGN HILTON<br />
302 E. John, Champaign<br />
... .; -i .J!°.??!-^ .....<br />
RENTERS let Rental Housing Directory<br />
find you a place continuous nou<br />
listings daily. Suite 108, 135 W. Clark<br />
C. 356-4845.<br />
- • R-584J<br />
Fall- 3 bedroom furnished house near<br />
Champaign Central - 9V* months<br />
lease. 367-3865.<br />
P-7973<br />
Renovated farmhouse. 2 miles out. 7<br />
rooms furnished. 367-6086 after 5:30<br />
p.m.<br />
• C-8028<br />
3 bedroom ranch, a/c, 2 car garage.<br />
367-6086 after 5:30.<br />
. ' . C-8027<br />
FOR FALL<br />
LARGE HOUSE FOR 11<br />
Many, many bedrooms, 3 baths,<br />
livingroom, diningroom, etc.<br />
Close to campus. Urbana.<br />
$60 each plus utilities.<br />
352-2048.<br />
P-8016<br />
Lovely furnished . sabattical house<br />
near campus. June 15-August 1974.<br />
Possibility of renting summer<br />
separately. 344-3796. No singles.<br />
H-8010<br />
August 15th. 4-bedrooms. West<br />
Champaign. $250. 384-5317.<br />
L-8143<br />
August 15th. West Champaign. 3-bedrooms.<br />
$195. 384-5317.<br />
L-8142<br />
Fall. West Champaign. Big farmhouse.<br />
IV2 acres. 5-bedrooms. $275.<br />
384-5317.<br />
L-8141<br />
Available now. West Champaign. 3bedrooms.<br />
$175. Fall option. $195.<br />
384-5317.<br />
L-8139<br />
August 15th. 2 baths.. 2 kitchens. 4bedrooms.<br />
$240. West Champaign.<br />
384-5317.<br />
L-8122<br />
HOUSE FOR SUMMER<br />
1212 W. Clark, U.<br />
4 bdrm. - $165<br />
This house is completely furnished ,<br />
close to campus. 3 people maximum,<br />
summer only, this house rents for<br />
more than twice the above amount<br />
during regular school term. 384-1004 .<br />
:....H-8136<br />
Summer, 3 or 4 bedroom , garage, fireplace,<br />
a/c, negotiable. 359-7258.<br />
. W-8260<br />
Close to campus, good company, own<br />
bedrooms. Summer sublet . 2<br />
openings. 328-3668. T- J-8188<br />
Full y equipped house, central a/c,<br />
married couple or single person. June<br />
1st-August 15th. Call 344-2073 or 333-<br />
0870.<br />
K-8219<br />
2 bedroom house for rent. Central air.<br />
Females only. No pets allowed. 504 E.<br />
Springfield, Champaign. 352-7778 ,<br />
352-7624.<br />
...... .... M-8199<br />
Law or grad student to share house.<br />
.. ^JSR. SALE _ ; _<br />
1972 19" Son^" " color TV, " ZenUh<br />
stereo. Excellent condition. Owner<br />
leaving. 359-6649 after 5:30.<br />
..¦ ¦<br />
E-7998<br />
Concord Mk IX Dolby Cassette deck.<br />
Utah WD-90 12" 3-way speakers. 352<br />
0794.<br />
Z-8086<br />
Ampeg guitar with case. $70. 367-<br />
1592.<br />
• D-8123<br />
Moving, must sell Dvnaco SQ-80 4-D<br />
amp, Thorens 150 II table, KLH 23<br />
speakers. $650 value for $500. 6 months<br />
old. Also 10-speed for $50. Call<br />
359-9705.<br />
M-8262<br />
Hewlett Packard HP 35 pocket<br />
calculator, excellent condition . ' must<br />
sell. $300 or best offer. 332-4216.<br />
• ...B-8275<br />
Mattress, box spring and frame. 4<br />
months old . $35. Couch , excellent condition<br />
$10. Steve. 344-5655.<br />
B-8273<br />
Quad, tape player plus tapes. Strob<br />
and 12 volt car tape player. 702 W.<br />
<strong>University</strong> No. 5, Champaign.<br />
• • ..C-8255<br />
Water bed - queen size, includes<br />
everything, $50. Call 332-0721.<br />
G-8154<br />
Desk, made from solid oak door, matching<br />
shelves , ideal for studying. 356-<br />
0367.<br />
J-8192<br />
2 wheel, covered luggage trailer 3Vz x<br />
7x4. Universal type hitch included.<br />
$55.00. 328-1381 after 5:00.<br />
0-8221<br />
'72 Realistic STA-36 solid state stereo<br />
receiver. Fine condition. $100 new, 22<br />
RMS, $45. 367-4389.<br />
F-8164<br />
Desk and bed. Good condition. Negotiable.<br />
Gayle. 352-2228.<br />
M-8167<br />
5 month old Sony HP-610A stereo<br />
component system. Dual 1211 turntable.<br />
$300. Contact Jim at 356-4439<br />
or Sandy. 367-6820.<br />
C-8239<br />
Folk guitar "Alvarez," $70 with case.<br />
332-3581.<br />
B-8170<br />
Fender Dual Showman D-140. Fender<br />
Precision Bass, Hofner Beatle Bass.<br />
Sony TC-355 reel-to-reel and down<br />
sleep ing bag. 1-586-4373.<br />
• S-8236<br />
9 x 12 beige rug. bookcase , lamp,<br />
drapes. Best offer. 344-5251.<br />
. C-8162<br />
Beer or pop machine. Great for Frat<br />
or Organized House. 367-5641'.<br />
P-8220<br />
Ampex Micro 87R stereo cassette<br />
recorder, w 'am-fm radio, speakers.<br />
$95, 344-1146.<br />
• G 8332<br />
Stereo amplifier. 14 watts RMS/channel.<br />
FM. tuner turntable, good condition.<br />
Best offer. 333-6014. 7:30 p.m.<br />
17th floor executive office.<br />
¦<br />
•.<br />
C-8030<br />
Skilled craftsmen wanted for summer<br />
construction work in Champaign-<br />
Urbana area. All trades. 359-1523.<br />
• M-8029<br />
Summer help wanted. Apply at<br />
Pagliai's Pizza, 204 W. Main.<br />
••; P-8006<br />
Girl wanted for candy counter. Apply<br />
in person , Rialto Theatre. Call 356-<br />
8304 for appointment.<br />
_••¦ .<br />
R-8014<br />
Waitresses and cashiers wanted Papa<br />
Del's Pizza. Inquire during afternoons.<br />
•••••• • ¦:.... P-8011<br />
Good pay! Parttime delivery hel p.<br />
China Chef , 356-8232.<br />
..........:............. C-8258<br />
Help wanted cooks immediately now<br />
through summer. Ground Round, 505<br />
S. Neil. App ly in person.<br />
'<br />
• •<br />
• G-8203<br />
Men and Women's Speciality store<br />
near campus seeks male and female.<br />
Part and full time hel p. Person must<br />
be experienced, hard working and<br />
strong in sales. Mail resume to The<br />
Daily Illini.<br />
........ G-8237<br />
SUMMER<br />
Part or full time salespeop le wanted,<br />
$1.75/hour plus commission. Can earn<br />
$4 - $5 per hour.<br />
352-4619 alter 8:30 p.m.<br />
• B-8307<br />
Bartenders and waitresses apply in<br />
person before 12 noon. Karavan<br />
Lounge. 225 N. Garrard. Rantoul.<br />
••••- K-8308<br />
Salesmen needed to sell Illio's on campus<br />
next fall. Sign up in the basement<br />
of Illini Hall.<br />
1-8316<br />
NEED MONEY?<br />
Be a.DI substitute during<br />
finals week.<br />
Wed , Mav 30 - Sat.. June 2<br />
, . Call 333-3730<br />
for details.<br />
•••••• D-8445<br />
Camp Waupaca for boys in centra l<br />
Wisconsin needs staff in the following<br />
departments: golf, tennis, archerv ,<br />
baseball, Ron. 352-0957.<br />
• • L-8376<br />
RN's and LPN's fulltime and parttime.<br />
7-3, 3-11 , 11-7. Hiring for new<br />
addition, excellent benefits, pleasant<br />
atmosphere. Salary open. A pply Personnel<br />
Office, Champaign County<br />
Nursing Home, Mondav through<br />
Friday, 8-4.<br />
C-8417<br />
Waitress wanted at the Big Di pper on<br />
<strong>University</strong> Avenue in Urbana: Parttime<br />
or fulltime. Phone 344-1004.<br />
• ' • ¦ '<br />
¦•¦« B-8412<br />
__ SALES<br />
Garage sale for benefit of Lukemia<br />
Research Foundation - East Central<br />
Illinois Community Aid Fund. Friday<br />
and Saturday\ May 25t h and 26th , 9<br />
a.m. - 4 p.m., at the United Methodist<br />
Church, Race and Green , Urbana.<br />
B-8305<br />
Garage sale, small appliances, books,<br />
clothes, record player , bed, furniture,<br />
household stuff , 10 a.m., Sat., May .26,<br />
604 S. Lincol n, Urbana.<br />
' A-8325<br />
. FOSSILS - MINERALS<br />
For Sale<br />
Sunday 12-5<br />
AYR-WAY FLEA MARKET<br />
Berbaum 1-863-2296 ,. f ,.<br />
wui<br />
R:»?fi7<br />
Call after 6:00. 359-2825.<br />
" . ' ... '<br />
..F-8431<br />
Grand Funk Junk. August 15th. Lots<br />
of space. Near campus. $225. Lots of<br />
¦<br />
paint included. 384-5317.<br />
, -. ' ¦<br />
L-8426<br />
Summer sublet -_ fall option. 3 big bedrooms,<br />
nice bath and kitchen. Close to<br />
campus. $195.'month. 328-2088.<br />
;<br />
B-8374<br />
Fantartic house. Two people needed.<br />
Good location. $90'summer. 344-5875.<br />
S-8344<br />
FOR SALE<br />
New paperbacks - 15% off; used<br />
books 50% off. The Used Book Store,<br />
basement <strong>University</strong> YMCA. Mon-Fri<br />
10-5, 10-3 Sat.<br />
••. •. U-4599<br />
Singer sewing machines. Some still in<br />
cartons. Equipped to do most kinds of<br />
sewing such as: zigzag, buttonholes,<br />
sews on buttons, and much more.<br />
Only $59.95. United Freight Sales, 5th<br />
and <strong>University</strong>, Champaign. Open 9-9,<br />
Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 9-6 Wed. and<br />
Sat., 1-5 Sunday.<br />
••• U-7469<br />
Stereo Special. Stereo compact 200<br />
watt am-fm multiplex. Full sized<br />
professional Garrard changer. Huge<br />
10" 3-way air suspension speakers.<br />
Suggest retail $449, while they last<br />
$269.95. United Freight Sales, 5th and<br />
<strong>University</strong>, Champaign. Open 9-9,<br />
Mon , Tues., Thurs., Fri. 9-6 Wed. and<br />
Sat., 1-5 Sunday.<br />
U-7470<br />
120 watts rms acoustic research amplifier,<br />
superb specs, 9 months old,<br />
walnut case, 333-4149.<br />
t<br />
..D-7986<br />
TEAC 4010-S, dust cover, remote control,<br />
$275, 344-2254.<br />
M-7944<br />
Gibson "Les Paul" custom and hardshell<br />
case. Excellent condition. 352-<br />
6249.<br />
S-7987<br />
CANOES<br />
Aluminum, 15' - 17' - 19*<br />
Square Stern Available<br />
367-8140<br />
See at 1605 W. Springfield,<br />
Champaign.<br />
,<br />
Y<br />
v:..-.V:..M-8020<br />
to 10:30 p.m. Jamie.<br />
V.<br />
W-8333<br />
>ola-bed. excellent springs and fabric,<br />
storage space . $70. 367-7651.<br />
Y-8339<br />
Piano, upright , $75. Tom. 356-8799.<br />
M-8299<br />
U pright piano. $100. Call 367 1639.<br />
- .N-8338<br />
Black and white portable TV. $35.<br />
RCA color TV. $125. 344-0741.<br />
' P-8323<br />
Fine sitar. $125; beat-up guitar. $15.<br />
344-6930.<br />
F>-M">A<br />
K and I\ drafting machine with<br />
Hamilton table, stool, 384-5810.<br />
T-8266<br />
Moving Sale 4 - 7 Fri. and 12 - 6 Sat.<br />
Stereo turntable, furniture, babv<br />
items, 48" blacklight 8,000 BTU air<br />
conditioner, many other items. 713 S.<br />
Elm Blvd., Champaign , 2nd floor.<br />
.*<br />
L-831 1<br />
Advent speakers. AR turntable.<br />
Dynaco SCA-80 amp. Perfect condition.<br />
$375. 332-1815.<br />
G-8396<br />
Portable Zenith 6-speaker stereo.<br />
$60.00 10-speed man's Schwinn Varsity<br />
bike. $40.00. 367-3730.<br />
H-8390<br />
607 N. Willis, Champaign. Air conditioner<br />
, gas stove, refrigerator,<br />
moving cartons, men's clot hes,<br />
miscellaneous.<br />
. '<br />
P-8378<br />
Panasonic component stereo 80 watt<br />
receiver, 2 or 4 channel, excellent condition.<br />
344-4988 or 352-779-1.<br />
.- . .. M-8420<br />
Electric portable typewriter, good<br />
condition. $50. Ev. 332-1569.<br />
B 8345<br />
Panasonic 8-track stereo system. Excellent<br />
condition. Best offer. 356-9507.<br />
D-8366<br />
Bundv flute, good condition. Best offer.<br />
356-0966 or 344-7843 after 3 p.m.<br />
C 8343<br />
... WANI?.P..T.9.. RENJ.„<br />
Apartment wanted June 15 - Aug. 31.<br />
1 bedroom , quiet , preferably furnished.<br />
Studying for Bar exam.<br />
WRITE DAILY ILLINI.<br />
.....:. .....G-7865<br />
Two bedroom apartment or house,<br />
a/c, Urbana, older house. Call 344-<br />
5334.<br />
...J-7905<br />
«.;- '.V . . . . -.<br />
TV and Stereo Rentals<br />
$9.50 per month<br />
Free Delivery and Service<br />
Call<br />
NEJAC<br />
356-4311<br />
N 2585<br />
M AXIPRINT OFFSET COPYING<br />
10 copies 60' 100-$] .50 500 $5.50<br />
602 E. Green, C, second floor<br />
Opposite McBride's 344-1621<br />
•••••• M-2724<br />
U-HAUL RENTALS<br />
Small deposit NOW will<br />
guarantee you the equipment you<br />
need: trucks, Econolines, trailers,<br />
tow bars, hand trucks, furniture<br />
pads, mirrors, car top carriers;<br />
packaging material, utility and<br />
wardrobe boxes available.<br />
Meserve Service Center<br />
1605 W. Springfield, C.<br />
367-8140<br />
• „ ..M-6350<br />
ROYAL TYPEWRITER<br />
HEADQUARTERS<br />
Rentals—Kales —Service<br />
Also Large Stock Used Typewriters<br />
BUNDY<br />
BUSINESS MACHINES<br />
806 N. Randolph, Champaign<br />
Phone 352-2114<br />
1) 5748<br />
BICYCLES<br />
Girl's 10 speed Atala $75. 359-0969 af<br />
ter 5 p.m.<br />
W -8257<br />
Men's three-speed. $25. 33*5160.<br />
• • •. ; ... Z-8224<br />
10-speed Schwinn super sportj. Like<br />
new. $110. 367-5885. John.<br />
N-8161<br />
Men's 3 speed English Bike. $25. 344-<br />
8898.<br />
•i \ B-8392<br />
yos i^mjovmii<br />
Reward, white furry puppy, 10 weeks<br />
old, "Alaska". 344-5370.<br />
F-7968<br />
Lost: brown portfolio full of notes.<br />
Rewfard. 328-3150.<br />
•••• N-8225<br />
Lost: white wit h black 10 month male<br />
mixed-collie. Phone 352-9636 after 5<br />
p.rti.<br />
M-8313<br />
Lost - opal ring. Reward. Joan. 332-<br />
5492.<br />
W 8367<br />
Stolen from undergrad lib. 2.books. 1<br />
journal notebook. Please return journal<br />
to lib. or call 332 0891. Important.<br />
No questions asked.<br />
S-8440<br />
Lost: Ladies silver Benrus watch.<br />
Sentimental value. Reward. 356 8463.<br />
M-8422<br />
....?PP. ^.. AN .P„?_OARP<br />
Fall 73 - Univ. approved residence for<br />
women. Meals. 344-9562.<br />
A-8350<br />
Female: room and board for tail<br />
semester. Near campus. Call 344-<br />
2027.367-4216.<br />
D-8241<br />
WE'RE MORE LIKE<br />
HOME THAN HOME!!<br />
Fall Room and<br />
Board Contracts<br />
Pi Lams take<br />
Orange title<br />
By M1KK •M.WOLAKKS<br />
Daily Illini Sports Writer<br />
Pi Lambda Phi slugged its way past Alpha Chi Rho. 9-5, to take the<br />
Fraternity Orange 12-inch intramural softball championship.<br />
The Pi Lams were paced by Scott Brenner, who drove in four runs with<br />
three Ms. one of them a triple, and scored three times. The left fielder<br />
also shone defensively, making a spectacular diving catch in the fifth on<br />
Steve Miller's dropping liner.<br />
The winners took a quick lead in the first that was never challenged .<br />
Brenner hit a one-out single that scored two men, then scored when the<br />
next man , Mark Portman. doubled. The Pi Lams added two more runs in<br />
the top of the third from Jeff Epstein's solo home run , Brenner's triple,<br />
and Portman's sacrifice fly.<br />
The Crows, who had gathered one run in each of the first two innings ,<br />
made their only bid to tie Pi Lam in the bottom of the third. With one out ,<br />
they brought in two runs on hits by Jerry Heisner. Gary Knesher. and<br />
Gary Lindemann. Miller added another single, but pitcher Rick Turim<br />
retired the next two men on easy grounders.<br />
The game was clinched in the fifth , when Pi Lam exploded for four<br />
runs. Five consecutive hits after one was out brought in the inning's total ,<br />
but even then Pi Lam was able to load the bases on infield hits before the<br />
side was finally retired.<br />
A home run with no one aboard by Heisner completed the day's scoring<br />
in the fifth , and the victory gave Pi Lambda Phi its second consecutive<br />
Frat Orange championship. The previous year , it had also swept the allcampus<br />
playoff to reign as <strong>University</strong> champion.<br />
Give a<br />
pintsized<br />
gift.<br />
+<br />
the<br />
good<br />
neighbor.<br />
TKtAjMricanltHCrou
Lee Eiibracht<br />
Illini baseball coach com<br />
By BOB VANCE<br />
Daily Illini Sports Writer<br />
- Lee Eiibracht is an innovator.<br />
The 49-year old Illini baseball coach, upon<br />
the completion of his 22nd season as head<br />
mentor of the diamondmen, has a number of<br />
ideas he plans to present to the conference<br />
in the upcoming December meetings.<br />
Eiibracht, a strong opponent of the<br />
present spring baseball'schedule in the Big<br />
Ten hopes to receive acceptance of a splitschedule<br />
for the 1974 season.<br />
The Illini coach , whose summer proposal<br />
was voted down last year, will propose a<br />
schedule that will consist of conference<br />
games to be played in both the fall and the<br />
spring.<br />
Why is Eiibracht against the present<br />
schedule?<br />
Weather is a big factor. "It's no fun for the<br />
fans to sit out in the rain and cold ,"<br />
Eiibracht commented. "For that matter it's<br />
not much fun to coach third base in that<br />
Congratulations<br />
miserable weather."<br />
Another reason for the schedule change is<br />
the fact that six out of the 10 schools in the<br />
league will operate on an early schedule<br />
next year.<br />
"This year we made back-to-back trips to<br />
two schools (Purdue and Iowa ) where<br />
classes were already out," Eiibracht said.<br />
"That isn 't a good situation . The players<br />
are unhappy because they want to get out<br />
and get a summer job: They're not having<br />
any fun and the administration is unhappy<br />
about the money it costs to keep the players<br />
around ," the Illini coach added:<br />
With Eilbracht's plan three weekends in<br />
the fall would be scheduled for conference<br />
games with the remainder in April and<br />
early May.<br />
"You 'll ' be playing in more decent<br />
weather and it will be possible to coordinate<br />
the games with football games to increase<br />
attendance," Eiibracht said.<br />
1 ¦*¦*¦*¦*¦* ¦*¦*¦*¦*¦mmmmmm~¦- **<br />
— ¦ *"—¦— ——-J——¦¦¦—¦— *¦«—¦<br />
A An<br />
2nd-time champs of our<br />
:'v spring football tournament.<br />
- 7 .the f«> s<br />
— . .. l . l ¦ "<br />
*- —«¦»»-«B-«-«-M-PM M-M-__M<br />
Vz Mile Flat Track Professional<br />
MOTO RCYCLE<br />
RACES<br />
$3000 Purse Regional Championship<br />
FRI. MAY 25<br />
Practice 5 pm — Races 8 pm<br />
CHAMPAIGN COUNTY<br />
FAIRGROUNDS<br />
- AM A Sanctioned-15 Plus Events<br />
Adults $4-Free Parking<br />
Sponsored by Mid-State Cycle Racing,, Inc.<br />
Minnesota used this idea this sprir-p<br />
scheduling its baseball doubleheader with<br />
Illinois before the spring intrasquad football<br />
game. As a result better than five thousand<br />
people witnessedthe baseball twinbill.<br />
"In addition," Eiibracht continued , "by<br />
completing the season early the Big Ten<br />
champion will have time to prepare for post<br />
season play."<br />
Another change Eiibracht will attempt to<br />
make is >in regards to an outmoded<br />
eligibility rule.<br />
This spring Illini senior, third baseman<br />
Mike Alley (who is presently negotiating a<br />
contract with the St. Louis Cardinals ) was<br />
knocked out of action in the fifth game of the<br />
year with a hyperextended knee.<br />
By NCAA rules the Springfield infielder<br />
would be eligible for further competition<br />
next year, However, the Big Ten rule maintains<br />
that with participation after the first<br />
date a player can 't receive another year of<br />
eligibility.<br />
."The Big Ten rule is more restrictive than<br />
the NCAA which allows three dates in sports<br />
other than football before eligibility is lost,"<br />
Eiibracht said.<br />
"It's just another case where the Big Ten<br />
is hurting itself in competition outside of the<br />
league," Eiibracht said. "I'm hoping that<br />
we get more consistent with the rules. We<br />
shouldn't be taking eligibility away from a<br />
player but trying to get them eligible."<br />
Eiibracht is recognized by his peers as<br />
one of the premier coaches in the collegiate<br />
ranks.<br />
The former Illini catcher has compiled a<br />
396-285-4 record in his 22 years as Illinois<br />
baseball coach. Twice Eilbracht's charges<br />
were conference champions and two other<br />
times Eiibracht teams tied for the Big Ten<br />
title.<br />
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DO YOUR SCISSORS '<br />
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COLUMBIA 704 S. Sixth (High over the head of Second Chance) 3 67<br />
A WORKER CONTROLLED COLLECTIVE<br />
*¦ ¦¦____ -_»—_—MB—a— ^<br />
The Daily Illini this summer... ^Mrk^<br />
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Summer 73 will be the first summer the D.I. will be publishing 4 days a . lili ? ^ \5 l/ ^^^ ilS>'<br />
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summer coverage that was offered in previous years. And, if you'll be * f^ &-^^&^ J***!!!^'<br />
leaving for the summer, you don't have to miss this exciting D.I. "first." ^^^^__T / __*£§3§lr<br />
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Wood wins 11th<br />
CHICAGO (AP ) - Wilbur Wood,<br />
with last-out felief from Cy Acosta,<br />
hurled a six-hitter for his 11th victory<br />
and Dick Allen drove in two<br />
runs with a double and a sacrifice<br />
fly Thursday, helping the Chicago<br />
White Sox beat the California<br />
Angels 4-1.<br />
Wood , the winningest pitcher in<br />
the major leagues with ah 11-3<br />
mark, bested American Le* gue<br />
strikeout leader Nolan Ryan.<br />
Ryan increased his strikeout<br />
total to 107, tops in the majors, by<br />
fanning 13.<br />
Chicago took a 1-0 lead in the first<br />
on Ken Henderson 's bunt single<br />
and Allen's double. The White Sox<br />
then clipped Ryan for three more<br />
runs in the third .<br />
Ryan, 6-4, who earlier this<br />
season pitched a no-hitter, issued<br />
his only walk to Pat KeHy with one<br />
out in the third. Henderson singled<br />
Kelly to third , then Allen's drive,<br />
on which Ken Berry made a<br />
leaping catch against the center<br />
field fence, scored Kelly.<br />
Bill Melton doubled Henderson<br />
home from first and Rick Reichar-<br />
dt singled across Melton . ' x -<br />
The Angels spoiled Wood's bid<br />
for a shutout in the ninth when pinch<br />
hitter Billy Grabarkewitz,<br />
Frank Robinson and Mike Epstein<br />
singled. Acosta then came in and<br />
retired Bob Oliver on a fly ball for<br />
the final out.<br />
Wood's knuckler really had the<br />
Angels hitting into the ground as he<br />
recorded his 10th victory in his last<br />
11 starts.<br />
Beyond the California singles ,<br />
the only balls hit to the outfield<br />
were two fly outs by Frank Robinson<br />
until Wood lost his shutout in<br />
the ninth.<br />
Ryan, whose season strikeout<br />
high was 14 at Minnesota April 18,<br />
whiffed the Sox side in the seventh<br />
and struck out Jorge Orta in all<br />
three of his trips.<br />
Ryan struck out Melton to end<br />
the fifth after Kelly's scratch<br />
single and steal of second. Henderson's<br />
leadoff single in the Sox<br />
eighth and steal of second were<br />
nullified when Ryan then moved<br />
down the side.<br />
Gridders discuss turf<br />
(Continued from pnifc ¦!!> ><br />
"It really motivates me, although I broke my shoulder playing on it once<br />
in Washington (D.C.) ," Beaman said. "You do have to keep your legs<br />
up and moving, but it's easier to maintain your balance on artificial<br />
turf."<br />
Synthetic turf probably affects the position of quarterback as much as<br />
any other. Tom McCartney, upcoming senior and currently the No. 1 candidate,<br />
said, "There is a crown down the middle of the field so that towards<br />
the edges it is six to eight inches lower. A quarterback has to adjust to<br />
it by bringing his passes down.<br />
"Personally, I don't like artificial turf because it causes more ankle injuries<br />
than real grass, but v if we're going to compete we'll need it," he added.<br />
Bill Uecker , relegated to safety near the end of the spring session, said<br />
artificial turf is bad because of the cuts and abrasions one can receive<br />
from the surface, but agrees with most everyone else that it is needed to<br />
successfully compete in the Big Ten.<br />
Defensive lineman Mick Heinrich upholds the belief that we need it<br />
primarily because our stadium field is not up to par with everyone else's,<br />
and adds that he prefers artificial turf because he has better footing^on it.<br />
Savoy hosts prep golf<br />
A field of 25 teams will tee off<br />
today in the annual Illinois State<br />
High School Golf Tournament on<br />
the Orange and Blue Courses at<br />
Savoy. f , .<br />
Play will be split on the par-73<br />
Blue Course and the par-72 Orange<br />
layout. Each player will complete<br />
18 holes on each layout.<br />
Teams entered (with district<br />
team scores) are : Chicago Fenger<br />
( 336) , Decatur Mac Arthur ( 299);<br />
Decatur Lakeview ( 303 ) ,<br />
Springfield Griffin ( 306 ) , Belleville<br />
West ( 302 ) , Edwardsville (318) ,<br />
Mount Vernon ( 321) , Homewood-<br />
Flossmoor ( 324) , Country Club<br />
Hills Hillscrest (328 ) , Evergreen<br />
Park (335) , Quincy (313) , Pekin<br />
(316) , Peoria Richwoods (316) ,<br />
Rockford East- (319) , Rockford<br />
Guilford ( 326), Rochelle ( 326) ,<br />
Normal Community ( 299 ) ,<br />
Streator ( 306) , Normal <strong>University</strong><br />
High ( 306) , Lake -Forest ( 306) ,<br />
Wheeling (315) , Mount Prospect<br />
(Prospect) (317 ) , Hinsdale Central<br />
( 312) , Downers Grove North (313) ,<br />
and Naperville (315).<br />
Leading contestants for medalist<br />
honors will be Jon Kasch of Normal<br />
Community and Bob Milligan<br />
of Normal <strong>University</strong> High , who<br />
carded rounds of 70 in the Dwight<br />
Sectional Tournament. Other<br />
challengers include Doug Fort of<br />
Pekin (73 ) , Randy Phillips of<br />
Belleville West (70 ) , John Lanman<br />
of Decatur MacArthur (71) , Keith<br />
\Gockenbach of Robinson (71) , Jim<br />
Biemick of Paris (71 ) and Mike<br />
Budzius of Dwight (72).<br />
Racquetball title<br />
Sigma Nu won the Fraternity<br />
Orange racquetball championship<br />
at the Intramural-Physical<br />
Education Building by beating<br />
Alpha Chi Rho in the nine-game<br />
final round 5-4.<br />
Bob Bardeau, Steve Greene and<br />
Ray Bailey won the title for Sigma<br />
Nu with Roger Clemens, Gordy<br />
-Fujimoto and Gary Lindemann<br />
representing the runnerup squad.<br />
Ideal Gift For<br />
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Garner beats TAJ 6-5 in two-pitch semis<br />
Bv .I()K ll.\l (;il\KY<br />
Daily Illini Sports WViU'i<br />
Garner Third Chance, playing<br />
their fifth straight game of the afternoon,<br />
downed Weston Taj 6-5<br />
forcing a championship game this<br />
(Si.iff nf- .>'n i iv R.wfv rnsti-ini<br />
A TAJ RUNNER is called out on a close play at first base<br />
in their game with Third Chance.<br />
wL73j_sSs~']§ra^<br />
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And are you sharp enough<br />
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in less than a year?<br />
If you've been looking for an opportunity to use your<br />
abilities to their fullest extent, the chance to work and win<br />
. and receive the recognition and reward winning deserves,<br />
McDonald s Program may be the place for you. Hamburgers<br />
are big business, and we're the leader in'sales, in<br />
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opening new company-owned stores almost every day and<br />
that means opportunities! If you have a flair for dealing<br />
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Can you handle it?<br />
A^^ M^' _^^^_i Apply m person<br />
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i<br />
afternoon for the two-pitch softball<br />
championship.<br />
Garner opened the day with two<br />
shut out victories. They whipped<br />
the Emerald City Wizards 9-0 and<br />
then came back to trounce Townsend<br />
2N 14-0.<br />
Saunders II was Third Chance's<br />
next victim. On Wednesday Saunders<br />
had downed Garner 27-15, but<br />
Third Chance was ready for the<br />
rematch in the double elimination<br />
tournament.<br />
Third Chance had a comfortable<br />
10-6 lead going into the top of the<br />
seventh inning when they almost<br />
blew it.<br />
Saunders had the bases loaded<br />
with two out and Tony Schuld hit a<br />
long drive. It looked like a grand<br />
slam and a tie ball game. Schuld<br />
was tagged out at the plate when<br />
he failed to slide and Garner had<br />
won number three. .<br />
A confident Delta Chi showed up<br />
to battle the weary Garner troops<br />
next. And a battle it was. The<br />
game, tied 5-5 at the end of<br />
regulation play, went nine innings.<br />
It was the bottom of the ninth<br />
when trackster Hank Schniepp<br />
stode to the plate. He blasted the<br />
ball between the left and center<br />
fielders and waltzed home for victory<br />
number four .<br />
Taj jumped to a 1-0 lead. Third<br />
Chance tied them. Taj opened a 2-1<br />
lead, but Garner came back. Taj<br />
forged to a 5-3 advantage.<br />
IT8 ALLTOGETHER.. *^ &__,-<br />
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Gridders favor<br />
artificial turf<br />
By REED SCIIRECK v -<br />
Assistant Sports Editor<br />
The Illini gridders want artificial turf.<br />
According to a random sample of 11 football players—six offensive and<br />
five defensive—the acquisition of some form of synthetic turf is<br />
necessary if Illinois is to compete on an equal basis in the future with<br />
other Big Ten schools.<br />
A majority also expressed support for the entire bill as passed by the<br />
Illinois House of Representatives Committee on Higher Education and<br />
presently before the House. The bill includes $250,000 for a practice field<br />
with artificiahturf adjacent to Memorial Stadium.<br />
The most frequently" mentioned drawback to synthetic turf was that<br />
burns are easily received whenever skin comes into contact with the surface<br />
and that they are slow to heal.<br />
Catagorizing the opinions of the offensive team members, they<br />
generally believe it is more difficult to make cuts on artificial turf , but<br />
that the transition could be made with little trouble.<br />
Meanwhile, the defensive performers feel that they benefit from<br />
playing on the surface because they can move quicker, thus allowing<br />
them to remain closer to the men they are covering.<br />
Two offensive halfbacks, Roger Coleman and George Uremovich;<br />
seemed the most concerned about receiving burns.<br />
"I get burns all over my arms, hands and legs when I play on it, but<br />
acquiring it would be a step forward for the <strong>University</strong>," Coleman said.<br />
"It's a lot harder when I fall on it," Uremovich said, "and it's easy to<br />
get scrapes because you slide a lot on it. At Washington last season , three<br />
or four layers of skin were burned off my elbow and hand when I was<br />
tackled on the first play of the game."<br />
Uremovich favors getting a practice field artificially turfed . "We<br />
really don't perform up to par at our practices because of the poor field<br />
conditions," he explained. "And when it rains, we can't keep going to the<br />
Armory because it's too small. Roger ( Coleman) just about got killed in<br />
there this spring."<br />
Coleman was forced to miss a week of driHs because of a severely<br />
bruised leg incurred by running into some bleachers stationed in the Armory.<br />
One player is strongly opposed to having a practice field with artificial<br />
turf. "It's ridiculous to get one because the stadium would be sufficien t<br />
and also because of the costs involved," Ken Braid, senior co-captain,<br />
remarked.<br />
Braid, an outside linebacker , said he prefers playing on-normal grass<br />
but agrees synthetic turf is necessary for Illinois to become a solid football<br />
contender.<br />
"It would be a big advantage to Illinois to get it, especially since almost<br />
all the other conference teams have it," Braid said.<br />
Only one person contacted remained totally noncommittal towards<br />
acquiring artificial turf , that being potential superstar Lonnie Perrin. "I<br />
don't notice any real difference unless the ground's wet," Perrin said.<br />
Some of the strongest support came from a pair of defensive linemen,<br />
who are accustomed to practicing on the hole-infested southwest field.<br />
Mike Waller and Scott Studwell, junior and sophomore, respectively,<br />
have unique ways to describe the field.<br />
"It's like North Vietnam out there because of all the shot put holes,"<br />
Waller said.<br />
Studwell likened it to a mine field, and thus hopes Illinois receives both<br />
proposed fields, although he is aware of the high cost difference .<br />
As for playing on artificial turf , Studwell said, "I really like the stuff . I<br />
move a lot better on it, although I prefer grass fields but ours certainly<br />
isn't one of the best around.<br />
"I've played on artificial turf only four or five times, but I do feel<br />
faster, more mobile and agile on it. Also, there's more continuity to the<br />
surface. It's not like out at practice when you never know when you're<br />
going to step in a chuckhole."<br />
Defensive halfback Bruce Beaman said artificial turf has<br />
psychological implications for himself.<br />
( Cmitinued I»I ptif / v .371<br />
i<br />
8e reoLo\u -for Summer UctcdcVioh I<br />
sec +kc *me se\ec^6rv<br />
y m<br />
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of SumrneR CLOTHES/ 1 *\JJ<br />
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M^E NEM<br />
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; WHITEHALL !<br />
I ; 207 East John ]<br />
1 / 3 5 6 - 5 2 9 1 356-3902 (after 6) |<br />
I ?<br />
[<br />
<strong>University</strong> Approved Room<br />
Kitchen Privileges for Women<br />
l<br />
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— Off-street rental.parking available; bike rack<br />
— Soft drink machine and complete laundry facilities<br />
—Maid service provided in all public areas<br />
—year contracts with first-semester-only option<br />
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FALL CONTRACTS: $292.50-$225/semester<br />
SUMMER CONTRACTS: $10.00-$12.50/week<br />
I<br />
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Pivovar must pay for NCAA trip<br />
By FRED EISENIIAMMER<br />
Daily Illini Sports Writer<br />
Greg Pivovar, the Illini senior<br />
hurdler, was told Thursday morning<br />
by Illinois Athletic Director<br />
Cecil Coleman that he would be<br />
allowed to compete in the NCAA<br />
Outdoor Track Meet June 7-9, but<br />
would not be financed by the<br />
<strong>University</strong> Athletic Association.<br />
Coleman's decision changed his<br />
ruling of t Tuesday which denied<br />
Pivovar the opportunity to participate<br />
in the national meet,<br />
despite Pivovar's qualifying times.<br />
Coleman said Pivovar could take<br />
out a $250-300 loan from the <strong>University</strong><br />
in order to fund his trip. If<br />
Pivovar then placed in the meet,<br />
Coleman agreed to reimburse<br />
Pivovar for the full amount.<br />
Coleman said his decision not to<br />
pay for Pivovar's expense was<br />
based on the fact that "20 hurdlers<br />
have better times ( than Pivovar).<br />
It's simply a matter of money and<br />
my policy," Coleman stated.<br />
Pivovar said the ruling by<br />
Coleman apparently ended his<br />
hopes of going to Baton Rouge, La.,<br />
to participate in the national meet<br />
because "I can't see the funds<br />
coming from anywhere except the<br />
Athletic Association. I'm financially<br />
independent and would have<br />
Isn't it a pity that what works for<br />
one varsity sport can't work for<br />
another.<br />
It was announced Tuesday that<br />
Bob Blackman had just recruited<br />
the 46th of a long list of excellent<br />
freshman grid prospects. Blackman's<br />
job at recruiting is not that<br />
easy. He came to Illinois two<br />
seasons ago when the Illini were<br />
wallowing in the depths of the Big<br />
Ten bottom division with a football<br />
program that still had not<br />
recovered from the slush fund<br />
scandal.<br />
Today Blackman looks at the<br />
Illini grid records of the last two<br />
seasons and still sees losing<br />
marks. The 5-6 mark of the 1971<br />
season was followed by a<br />
depressing 3-8 count last year but<br />
no one is saying what a "klunker"<br />
Blackman is.<br />
The reason * is recruiting. Bob<br />
Blackman is possibly already the<br />
finest recruiting coach in the Big<br />
Ten. The list of freshmen coming<br />
here next fall is phenomenal. The<br />
Illini have a superlative prep quarterback<br />
from Indiana as well as<br />
several outstanding gridders from<br />
this state.<br />
The prep standout signed<br />
Tuesday is Chubby Phillips, an allstate<br />
running back from South<br />
Bend, Ind. Blackman snatched<br />
him from under the nose of Notre<br />
to go into debt if I went."<br />
Coleman also refused to allow<br />
Pivovar the chance of showing the<br />
Athletic Director he can bring his<br />
time down at an AAU track meet in<br />
Chicago. Pivovar concluded his<br />
season was now over.<br />
"I'm not planning to run at all<br />
this year unless the Athletic<br />
Association funds my trip,"<br />
Pivovar said.<br />
Bob Wright, the Illini head track<br />
coach, explained that "the only<br />
people we can take to the NCAA<br />
meet are the ones that I can convince<br />
him (Coleman ) can place,<br />
but I couldn't do it with Pivovar."<br />
Wright pointed out that four of<br />
the top five finishers in the 110-high<br />
hurdles in last year's national competition<br />
will return , all of whom<br />
have run 13.6 or better .<br />
The Illini coach felt Pivovar<br />
would have to run at least a 13.7 in<br />
order to place in the top six.<br />
Pivovar's best time this year came<br />
in a winning effort of 13.8 at the<br />
Illinois Intercollegiate with a<br />
strong wind at his back.<br />
"Pivovar's capable of running a<br />
:13.5," Wright said, "but he just<br />
hasn't put it together this year. At<br />
the third hurdle at the conference<br />
meet, he was way behind, but then<br />
came on like a streak of lightning."<br />
Pivovar wound up fourth in his<br />
race when he was jarred from the<br />
lead on the last hurdle by a falling<br />
Godfrey Murray of Michigan.<br />
One of the unwritten Big Ten<br />
rules states that an athlete must<br />
finish in the top three in conference<br />
before he can compete in the<br />
national meet, a fact Coleman<br />
might have taken into consideration<br />
in making his decisions,<br />
Wright said.<br />
Wright also said that although<br />
sophomore miler Mike Durkin did<br />
not place in his conference race, he<br />
had no trouble having Durkin approved<br />
in light of his three<br />
previous conference victories and<br />
seventh-place finish in the NCAA<br />
meet last year.<br />
Wright added that Coleman<br />
questioned 440-yard intermediate<br />
hurdler Jim Fasules' ability to<br />
place in the NCAA Meet, but he<br />
was able to show the Athletic<br />
Director that Fasules' :51.7<br />
clocking in the conference meet<br />
would have placed him fourth in<br />
last year's national meet.<br />
Illini senior half-miler Rob<br />
Mango is the fourth member of the<br />
team to qualify for the NCAA track<br />
meet.<br />
Raymond Murphy /On basketball recruiting<br />
Dame's perennial winner Ara Parseghian.<br />
In collegiate athletics, recruiting<br />
is equated with winning. If you<br />
recruit the talent you are going to<br />
win ballgames. If you don 't, you<br />
won't. It's as simple as that.<br />
In Illinois basketball the picture<br />
isn't bright. And the reason is<br />
recruiting.<br />
Harv Schmidt began his career<br />
here in 1967 and the then upstart<br />
coach found himself at the third<br />
largest university in the conference<br />
with the fans urging him to<br />
have a winner in the Assembly<br />
Hall or to pack his bags and head<br />
for a Johnny Wooden coaching<br />
clinic.<br />
Six years have passed and Harv<br />
is still around. In my estimation<br />
there are about four reasons for<br />
that. Their names are Dave Scholz,<br />
Greg Jackson, Nick Conner and<br />
Nick Weatherspoon.<br />
Scholz was a junior when Schmidt<br />
arrived and in his next two<br />
years proceeded to become the<br />
Illini's career leading scorer and to<br />
be twice an all-Big Ten selection at<br />
center.<br />
Greg Jackson followed Scholz up<br />
the ladder, playing behind him as a<br />
sophomore and starting at center<br />
the next year. The 6-8, 250 giant<br />
kept the Illini fans roaring with his<br />
rough, though often erratic play.<br />
Major League Standings<br />
American League<br />
East<br />
W L Pet. GB<br />
Detroit 21 20 .512<br />
New York 20 21 .488 1<br />
Baltimore<br />
Milwaukee<br />
Boston<br />
17 19 .472<br />
18 21 .462<br />
17 20 .459<br />
V/z<br />
2<br />
2<br />
Cleveland 18 23 .439 3<br />
Chicago<br />
California<br />
Minnesota<br />
Oakland<br />
Kansas City<br />
Texas .<br />
West<br />
' 24 13 .649<br />
21 17 .553<br />
21 17 .553<br />
23 19 .548<br />
23 20 .535<br />
12 26 .324<br />
3V2<br />
3'/3<br />
3V2<br />
4<br />
12<br />
Thursday's results<br />
Boston 10. Milwaukee 1<br />
Chicago 4. California 1<br />
Cleveland at Baltimore, ppri., 2<br />
Detroit 4. New York 0<br />
Minnesota 2. Kansas City 0<br />
Other clubs not scheduled<br />
National League<br />
East<br />
W L Pet. GB<br />
Chicago 24 17 .585<br />
xNew YOrk 19 17 .528 Th<br />
Pittsburgh 16 18 .471 4Vp<br />
Montreal 16 19 .457 5<br />
Philadelphia 15 24 .385 8<br />
St. Louis 13 24 .351 9<br />
West<br />
Cincinnati 25 16 .610 V2<br />
San Francisco 28 18 .609<br />
Houston 26 18 .591 1<br />
xLos Angeles 24 18 .571 2<br />
Atlanta 17 23 .425 8<br />
San Diego 16 27 .372 10'.*<br />
x—Night game not included<br />
Thursday's results<br />
Atlanta 2, San Francisco 1<br />
New York at Los Angeles, N.<br />
Other clubs not scheduled<br />
Oglesby wins 16-inch title<br />
By CRAIG MILLER<br />
Daily Illini Sports Writer<br />
Oglesby VII exploded for ten runs in the bottom of<br />
the fifth ehroute to registering a 17-4 clobbering of<br />
Three Fountains in the finals of the all-<strong>University</strong> 16inch<br />
softball championship.<br />
Three Fountains only led once in the contest, that<br />
coming in the top of the first. The score entering the<br />
crucial fifth inning was Oglesby 7, Three Fountains 2.<br />
Three Fountains drew first blood in this inning,<br />
coming up with two runs in the top of the inning.<br />
Then Oglesby went to work and put together the<br />
biggest inning of the game. After the damage had<br />
been assessed Three Fountains found themselves 13<br />
runs behind, an unsurmountable advantage for<br />
Oglesby.<br />
No more runs were to be scored in the contest. The<br />
final tally was 17-4, Oglesby the new <strong>University</strong><br />
champ. Much credit for the victory must be at-<br />
Jackson was Schmidt's stellar<br />
recruit in the young coach's debut<br />
year. Then when Greg was a<br />
junior, Schmidt had his most<br />
productive crop with a couple of<br />
out-of-state recruits.<br />
These Ohio stars have pushed<br />
the Illini into semi-respectability<br />
the last three years and closed<br />
their careers here this spring with<br />
their most productive campaign,<br />
leading the Illini to a 14-10 record<br />
and a third-place Big Ten finish.<br />
If you're wondering, the two are<br />
named Weatherspoon and Conner.<br />
But everything has not been<br />
roses for the Illini cagers. Despite<br />
consistently remaining around or<br />
above the .500 mark, Schmidt's<br />
Illini are in for a change for the<br />
worse.<br />
It isn't evident? Let's again take<br />
a look at the past. But this time<br />
let's look at the players that Sch-<br />
tributed to Oglesby's tenacious defense. Whenever<br />
Three Fountains threatened to score, Oglesby's<br />
defense came up with the big play.<br />
Three times Oglesby came up with inning-ending<br />
double plays when Three Fountains had runners on<br />
base. Gary Soffer should also be commended for his<br />
expert pitching throughout the contest.<br />
The key to the victory, however, was Oglesby's<br />
ability to hit the ball. Oglesby collected 21 hits in the<br />
game, seven of those hits were for extra bases. A big<br />
advantage for Oglesby was that of the seven extra<br />
base hits they had, three of them were home runs.<br />
Standouts for Oglesby were Soffer, Jeff Kopec. Tom<br />
Haughton and Bill Heinrich who all attributed for<br />
three hits a piece. Alan Gillman, however, had four<br />
hits and drove in seven runs.<br />
Rich Majewski and Jack Hehn were the big guns<br />
for Three Fountains. They each had three hits a<br />
piece. As a team Fountains ended up with nine hits.<br />
midt didn 't get. Clyde Turner<br />
comes to mind. So does Doug<br />
Collins. Anybody ever hear of<br />
Quinn Buckner? No one ever<br />
questioned why these players<br />
didn't go to their own state university,<br />
one of the finest academic institutions<br />
in the country with one of<br />
the finest basketball facilities in<br />
the world.<br />
Schmidt hasn't recruited a black<br />
in three years and the last black<br />
recruit, Billy Morris, left because<br />
of academic ineligibility last year.<br />
Illini fans with hopes of some<br />
superlative recruits this year were<br />
disappointed when Schmidt announced<br />
his freshman signees.<br />
Basketball is a game which is<br />
dominated by black athletes. In<br />
collegiate recruiting, blacks are<br />
necessary to gain athletic respectability.<br />
The fact that the blacks<br />
hold a numbers advantage in pro<br />
CRYSTAL LAKE POOL<br />
opens<br />
Saturday May 26<br />
Swim and Sunbathe<br />
in a beautiful natural setting<br />
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basketball indicates the black<br />
man's important role in athletics.<br />
The Illini were after Lincoln's<br />
Norman'Cook but he followed his<br />
coach west instead. Lockport's<br />
Alvin Green got away as did every<br />
other Chicago area all-stater.<br />
The list of recruits, only four, includes<br />
two all-staters but the<br />
names are not familiar to<br />
discussions of the top state prepsters.<br />
But Harv still has two scholarships<br />
left to give out this year and<br />
indications are that he is after a<br />
couple of big men from out of state.<br />
There's also the possibility of a<br />
junior college transfer.<br />
Optimism on these lines should<br />
be tempered though until Schmidt<br />
announces the new recruits.<br />
Meanwhile the future looks bleak<br />
in Illinois basketball , but I hope<br />
I'm.wrong.<br />
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