Page Five Student org. control, Med. Center top Regent agenda (Continued from Page 3) procedures were being formed," he complained. "They are not working for the students, they are working against student in- terests." Gold believes such action is being taken for political rea- sons, to keep a finger on po- litical activismi. "They will have a lever against these organiza- tions and will have an amazing one," he added. The S tu d e n t Organization Coalition, a group opposed to the proposed regulations, stated in a recent handout that "there is no process for appeal or any forum for accountability on the part of University administra- tors." TOM EASTHOPE, Assistant Vice President for S t u d e n t Services, reported that "there is some sort of appeal (pro- cess)" that is being tossed around, although it is not part of the proposal that the Re- gents will vote on Friday. Easthope asserted that this action stems from "a Univer- sity obligation to ascertain that these groups fulfill IRS regula- tions." He reported that a sim- ilar policy was in effect until 1971 when it fell into disuse. According to Easthope, the "re- cent proliferation of firms has led to the possible reinstatement of the rule. In response to Gold's allega- tions pertaining to "political reasons" for the University ac- tion, Easthope retorted, "Cat's nonsense." The Medical Center revamp- ing, also before the Regents, will break up the five-year old administrative unit, comprised of the Medical School, the School of Nursing and the Uni- versity Hospital, into three sep- arate bodies. At present all three units are responsible to the director of the Medical Center. Under the new proposal, both the Medical and Nursing School deans would report directly to the Vice Pres- ident for Academic Affairs, while the hospital would be run by an executive board. TONIGHT! MICHIGAN REPERTORY '74 Presenting William Inge's summer romance PICNIC POWER CENTER-8:00 p.m. 763-3333 BOX OFFICE OPENS AT NOON Tomorrow: Shakespeare's THE TAMING OF THE SHREW AP Photo Go directly to jail... San Francisco cabbie Lynn Wall converses with his faithful companion Monopoly the Mule shortly before Monopoly was escorted to jail for grazing on the City Hall front lawn. Monopoly is sitting out his sentence in a local stable and Wall refuses to pay the $25 fine and daily grain charges to get the mule released. He hopes the charges will be dropped. Promoters seek site for concert (Continued from Page 3) viewpoint," claimed John Sin- clair, vice president of Rainbow Multi-Media, at a small press conference at Otis Spann, tra- ditional site of the festival. "They said they don't want the festival to go on because it attracts undesirables, because it will cause a lot of pot to be smoked, and because of the garbage problem. We offered to put up $5,000 bond to guarantee that the garbage. would be picked up." According to Sinclair, the Re- publicans killed the festival "because they have a strong cultural bias against people like ourselves." In reference to Mayor James Stephenson's assertion that last year's festival "tarnished the city's i m a g e" Sinclair com- mented, '"The festival is an in- ternationally acclaimed cultural event. From our point of view, those people are the ones who are tarnishing the reputation of our community. "THESE PEOPLE are pigs, when you get right down to it," Sinclair continued. "T h e y' r e anti-cultural, anti-human, pre- judiced, racist pigs. They watch too much TV, play too much golf, go to shopping centers too much and eat too much McDon- ald's food, and it's made them just crazy." City Councilman James Ken- worthy (D-Fourth Ward), also present at the gathering, com- mented, "If any group in town wants to hold an event and it won't i n f r i n g e on anybody's rights, I think the city should go along with it." The festival promoters had planned a program which would headline James Brown and Sun Ra, and would include B.B. King, Gato Barbieri and Boogie Woogie Red. Sinclair hopes to find some- one willing to purchase a plot of land in the city's vicinity to be used as the site for future Blues and Jazz Festivals and other concerts. Bernard could sleep later and save gasi Whether you've been studying or partying the night before, you could forget the rush hour hassle and enjoy a few extra winks each morning at our place. If you're involved in campus activities, you can walk to meetings instead of driving. Save your gas money for that special date with your special friend. There are other good features here you'll like. So... make the right move. Come to where the living is easy. 11i ersi1% OM~eli 5368.Forest Avnue,AmuArbor,Mchiga 48104 Phon (313),61-2680 "' TRY DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Have a few extra moments during the day? Need something to occupy your mind? THEN, tuck a copy of Crossword Puzzle under your arm.