INSIDE: STUDENT GOVERNMENT EXECUTIVE SLATE INTERVIEWS
APRIL 29, 2020 FOURTH WEEK VOL. 132, ISSUE 20
UChicago for Fair Tuition Holds Demonstration in Front of President Zimmer’s Home By AVI WALDMAN Senior News Reporter
Julia Attie
Organizers with student group UChicago for Fair Tuition (UCFT) demonstrated in front of University President Robert Zimmer’s house on Friday afternoon in order to escalate their campaign demanding that tuition be halved for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic. The demonstrators obser ved social distancing guidelines, lining the street six feet apart and holding signs or honking to show support from inside cars parked along University Avenue. R e pr e s ent at i v e s f r om #CareNotCops, Graduate Stu-
dents United (GSU), and UChicago Against Displacement (UCAD) all gave speeches in support of UCFT’s demands. “There’s a lot of alignment between #CareNotCops and the campaign for fair tuition,” said fourth-year organizer Michelle Yang. “UChicago is a super-wealthy institution. It made and maintained its wealth through exploitation and extraction.” GSU member Ca meron Mankin, an M.F.A. student in visual arts, gave a speech describing how graduate students, especially master’s students who pay tuition for their programs and upper-year CONTINUED ON PG. 8
Mac Residents Must Sign NDAs Before Discussing Rent Changes By CARL SACKLEN News Reporter Mac Properties, a property management company with around 5,000 apartments in Hyde Park, has told tenants they must sign a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) before being able to discuss rent payment arrangements even as they face financial hardship as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Maroon obtained a copy of the NDA, which can be viewed
ARTS: Cooking During Quarantine with the Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
below. “NDAs are often part of a settlement agreement in some kind of legal dispute, but for the privilege simply of talking, that’s not something we’ve seen often,” Jon Raffensperger, supervising attorney at the Lawyers’ Committee for Better Housing, told The Maroon. Those who break the NDA risk being sued and could be required to pay damages and related costs. “As far as we’re aware, this is
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not a normal business practice that landlords employ in discussing possible resolutions with tenants who are having difficulty in paying,” Raffensperger said. “We think it’s an appropriate protection for both the residents and ourselves,” Peter Cassel, director of community development at Mac Properties, told The Maroon. “I can’t talk to my neighbor and say what maybe they could do in order to get help with their rent,” a
Emma Dyer
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EDITORIAL: THE MAROON Will Not Endorse an SG Executive Slate
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SPORTS: Fourth-Year Reflects on Outdoor Adventure Club
VIEWPOINTS: Tuition Reduction is Possible
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