SG Picnic Nets $500;Raby, Terkel AttendTHE MAROONVolume 78, Number 5 The University of Chicago Thursday, August 21, 1969Kirk, PL Assailant Face ChargesA fracas in front of Ida Noyes Hall Au¬gust 9 between a former FBI undercoveragent and a suspended student attending aProgressive Labor (PL) party meeting re¬sulted in charges against both.Gerald Kirk, a former University stu¬dent who recently testified before theHouse Internal Securities Committee (HISC)on his FBI activities, was charged withunlawful use of a weapon. Timothy Row-ton. suspended economics graduate stu¬dent, was charged with assault. Court ap¬pearances for both are scheduled forAugust 27.Kirk was allegedly assaulted on the stepsin front of the building by Rowton, who wasaccompanied by other members of PL.Kirk had left the building immediately af¬ter learning that there was a PL meeting inprogress there.Kirk allegedly pulled out a gun, con¬ducted Rowton and the others into IdaNoyes Hall and told a security guard therehe wanted Rowton arrested on assaultcharges.Earlier this month, Kirk testified beforethe HISC on his activities in the CommunistYouth Organization and in Students for ademocratic Society (SDS). Rowton couldoe charged with the Federal offense of as¬saulting a witness before a Congressionalcommittee, but no complaint has beenlodged.' harles O’Connell, dean of students,tated that the University does not allow guns on campus, but could not commentfurther on this particular incident.O’Connell said also that to his knowledge,no member of the University adminis¬tration had ever been aware that Kirk wasan FBI agent. “We don’t ask such things,”he said. “There may be people on campusrepresenting all points of view but we don’tkeep track of them. Probably all univer¬sities have such agents on their campuses.”Kirk is not registered here this quarter.Contrary to the reports of local papers, he has not received a degree from the Univer¬sity.Kirk began working for the FBI in 1965.Prior to his August testimony, he had pre¬viously testified before the Subversive Ac¬tivities Control Board.Kirk claims that his HISC testimony wasprimarily about his Communist Party affi¬liations. The testimony on paranoia withinthe local SDS, which was given widespreadattention by press here, he claims was en-Continued on Pag«j FiveSFA Tables NS A CaseDelegates from the national student orga¬nization (NSA) were stymied in their suitagainst the committee on recognized stu¬dent organization (CORSO) when the stu¬dent-faculty-administration court (SFA) re¬fused to hear the case.The court’s refusal was based on the factthat no student members of the court couldparticipate this summer. Four of the sixstudent seats are vacant, and the two stu¬dents presently seated are not in Chicago.The NSA delegates filed the brief in pro¬test of CORSO’s allegedly illegal cut in NSAallocations from $1200 in 1968-69 to $50 for1969-70.In the past, funding to the delegation hasfinanced delegates’ trips to the annual na¬tional convention of the NSA. This year’sGERALD KIRK: Kirk, second from left, in 1967 black students sit-in. Phil Lathrop convention starred Tuesday in El Paso withthree delegates from the University. BillPhilips, Bernie Grofman, and Judy Boggsall are attending as delegates, though notfunded by their Chicago delegation.In an attempt to get emergency fundingto enable delegates to attend the con¬vention, some NSA delegates petitioned theUniversity administration to advance themmoney, to be paid back in the fall when thesuit couid be heard. James Vice, then act¬ing dean of students, refused the request.The three members of the SFA court inChicago, Dallin Oaks, law professor;Charles Wegener, humanities professor;and Margaret Perry, associate director ofadmissions, had urged student governmentto seat student justices on the court.Student government, which is presentlyacting under a summer enabling act, de¬cided that it would violate the by-laws tomake such appointments at this time.CORSO replied to the suit at a meetingAugust 12. The reply stated that there wasevidence that not all NSA delegates werenotified before the suit was filed, and askedthat the case be dismissed. CORSO thenreplied to some of the delegation’s specificcharges, stating;• CORSO’s priorities are in accordancewith the SG constitution;• The trend of NSA allotments has beenin a downward direction; and• The delegation did not submit properfinancial records.CORSO further stated the NSA had notproven that it deserved any money, andthat the delegation had not tried to providethe campus with activities. Bio PlacementThe biology common core courseshave been significantly altered fornext year. Because of this, a newplacement test is being given tofreshmen. Any upperclassmen whowould like to try to place out ofbio, should send a letter to the Deanof Undergraduate Student’s office inGates-Blake requesting to take thenew placement test.political combat between “the good guysand the bad guys (I was a good guy)” whenRaby arrived at the picnic.The Chicago civil rights leader, a gradu¬ate student at the University and recentlynamed political action chairman for Oper¬ation Breadbasket, economic arm of theSouthern Christian Leadership Conference,encouraged SG to continue work on anotherof its projects, a tenant union.“He told me it’s one of the best projectshe knew to bring students and communitytogether,” Barnett said.After the picnic, Barnett said, “We gaveaway some leftover food to indigent fami¬lies in Woodlawn.”* In his office Wednesday, Barnett ex¬plained that the $516.88 raised Saturdaywas only a start. “The picnic was fun andgot us publicity for the project — but weneed other ways to get money,” he said.SG would like to raise $10,000 by Decem¬ber in order to fund breakfasts and lunchesfor 200 children under the sponsorship ofthe Woodlawn Methodist Church for the re¬mainder of the school year.The church has cafeteria facilities ade¬quate to feed 400, Barnett said, unlike near¬by Wadsworth Elementary School whichdespite enrollment of more than 800 hasfacilities for only 80.In addition to donations from individuals,Barnett hopes that public aid, such as the$5,400,000 school lunch appropriation Gov.Ogilvie signed into law Tuesday, can be ap¬plied to meet SG’s goai.If the goal cannot be met, the SG presi¬dent continued, “We may be able to fundonly the breakfasts.”To promote ticket sales early last week,SG set up a free lemonade stand in themiddle of the quadrangle, at 58th andGreenwood.“We must have given away 500 drinks aday, and some people really came to de¬pend on that lemonade,” Barnett said.“When we set up our ticket stand Fridaywithout the lemonade, there were com¬plaints.”David TravisBETTER BATTER: SG picnic was held toraise food for Woodlawn children.By Sue LothAn afternoon of marshmallows, vol¬leyball, and talk at the student governmentsponsored benefit picnic Saturday raisedmore than $500 for a proposed morningmeal program for Woodlawn school chil¬dren.A brief shower that afternoon did little todampen spirits for more than 150 attendingthe three-hour festivities. Visitors included5th ward alderman Leon Depres, IllinoisCon Con candidates A1 Raby and MikeShakman, and WFMT-FM announcer andauthor Studs Terkel.“There were a lot of neighborhood kidsrunning around, and in the spirit of the pic¬nic we fed them, too,” said Mike Barnett,SG president. “They stayed around after¬wards to finish off the marshmallows.”People with hamburgers, hotdogs, water¬melon, and lemonade gathered around tohear Terkel, former UC student, tell talesof older UC days.Barnett left the volleyball game, a non-BABY ROCK? Free rock conceit held in Hutch Court. David Traviswauthorized AUSTIN-MG sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, illinois 60615mi 3-3113foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.GOLD CITY INN**** Maroon"A Gold Mine of Good Food10%STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559( Eat More For Less)Try our Convenient TAKE-OUT OrdersMimi and Bing are on vacation,but the Gold City Inn is still open.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH-—NEW & USED—Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders - Phones - AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% discount to students with ID cords' Every night at 11....(Sunday at 10)2/The Chicago Maroon/August 21, 1969 ^9a ^9^vjvt Cornett Sftorht ** 1645 E. 55th STREET ** CHICAGO, ILL 60615 *E Phone: FA 4-1651 2Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856Big Wheel Bike ShopAijthorizi l>Nortmsiol Rai riGH ARobin Hooo Di ai.f.hs■aliicn]1/ PHONE: 34B-03 I 3EXPERT REPAIR WORKON ALL MAKES HANDCRAFTED GOLD& CUSTOM SILVERJEWELRY5210 HARPER CT.667-8040 Ul AriiCr’S ALL NIGHT SUCH3 P(RfORUUN(G MUD*T is SATUHDAr fQUQWING LAST rffGUUR IfAlURIAugust!Poul NewmonElizoboth TaylorCAT ON A HOT TIN ROOFAugust 14Kirk DouglasFrank SinatraCAST A GIANT SHADOW August!P*t#r FondaSusan StrasborgTHE TRIPTickets $1.50PIUS: m ex dting FlaskGordon adventure MINGCONQUERS THEUNIVERSE every nijdrtunew chapter August isRichard Morristhe SPORTING LIFEAugust 22C. ScottPLAYBOY!VTME ATE IR { THE FLIMFLAM MANfTi n as msm me m jM jBuy any Smith-CoronaElectric Portable and neteither of these beautifulcameras for only sgssMINOLTA 16PSInstant loadsub miniatureSold at retail (orup to $29.95ANSCOMATIC S/81Super 8with electric driveSold at retail forup to $39 95Buy any Smith-CoronaManual and get eithercamera for only s-mssl Ml CltSIT) OF ClIIC ICOBOOKSTORET) FEW RITER DEB IRTMEVFOFFER EXPIRES AUGUST 30,1969To help alleviate the tight market for stu¬dent loans, the University National Bankhas decided to continue issuing studentloans at the seven percent interest level al¬though on the outside market, eight and aquarter is now the accepted rate.Norman Simon, president of the bank, lo¬cated at 1354 E. 55th St., announced thedecision after an August 15 meeting withthe bank’s board of directors.The bank last year funded over 120 stu¬dents for a total of $127,000. Almost all ofthe money will be available to students inthe University, although there may besome applications from students at otherinstitutions.The service will be open to costumers ofthe bank and to students designated as “de¬serving” by dean of students CharlesO’Connell. Cornelius Lott, a bank executive, said thebank hopes that Congress will pass legisla¬tion to increase the rates on student loansto ten percent. He said “We’ll take outlumps and hope that Congress will providesome help.”Lott added that the fund is a “two-waystreet.” University National hopes that stu¬dents coming to the University who havetaken out loans will place their accounts inthe bank.O’Connell clarified the term “deserving”by saying that any registered student whowould normally be recommended for anyother loan program will be eligible for thebank loan fund. He has informed the finan¬cial aid office of the service and if neces¬sary, they will send certification of regis¬tration to the bank.“I am very, very happy that UniversityRemsen Appointed HeadOf New Service OfficeA new office of service opportunity willopen in the fall in Reynolds Club.The office, to be run by Chester Remsen,a ’69 graduate of the social service admin¬istration school and newly appointed assis¬tant to dean of students Charles O’Connell,will “act as a clearing house for individualstudents interested in getting involved incommunity organizations,” according toO'Connell.Remsen, who will also be working onblack recruitment in the graduate divisionsfor the admissions and aid office, whichcomes under the jurisdiction of the dean ofstudents, will attempt to supply any inter¬ested student with as much information aspossible about work in community relatedactivities, both inside and outside of theUniversity.O’Connell said that many students thisyear have expressed interest in the prob¬lems of the city yet there is no way forAnother First!InflatableChairsby Fjeldof Norwayin 6 colorsONLY $14.95Scandinavian import Systems5300 So. Lake Park667-4040 Open every eveningtil 9 PMSaturdays & Sundaystil 6 PM National Bank is providing this service tothe University community. It should help torelieve the loan pressure,” O’Connell said.University students took out approxi¬mately $700,000 in guaranteed loans lastyear. O’Connell said that considering thenational representation of the student body,the percentage of loans coming from thebank is significant.Loans are getting tighter all the time.Graduate students have reported that dueto a story in the last Maroon relating thetightness of the situation, they hurried over to the aid office only to be told thattheir requests will have to be consideredin the light of the trouble.Many students fear that the situation willhinder their education and some say thatthey may have to leave school. The gov¬ernment is presently considering measuresto corerct the loan situation, but with thelack of money for many Federal programs,there is little likelihood of any more money.The longer students wait, the worse thesituation will get. All students who wantloans for the fall quarter should startfiling for them as soon as possible.these students to get information about vol¬unteer and paying positions in which theycould help the community. This is why thenew office is being set up.Remsen, due to his other duties in re¬cruitment, which will call for him to be offcampus, will have an assistant, who is asyet unnamed.By putting the office in Reynolds Club,O’Connell hopes that the information in theoffice of career counseling and placementwill be used for the benefit of the studentsinterested in community work. Summerjobs of a social work nature might also becross-listed in the new office to make themmore readily available to interested stu¬dents.The office will, hopefully, have informa¬tion on organizations in Hyde Park, Wood-lawn and all over Chicago. The office willhave information on the organization itself,the type of workers needed and all otherrelevant information. GEOPHYSICAL VIEW: The horizen over the new towers. David RosenbushSites Resume Normal ActivityConstruction was near normal on twoUniversity construction sites Wednesday af¬ternoon, as Dr Ralph Abernathy and theSCLC rolled into town to join the Coalitionfor United Community Action in protestingracism in the building trades union.Workers returned Monday to the SocialService Center, which is under constructionat Ingleside and 61st. The site had beenquiet since July 31, when the Coalition pick¬eted there.The Social Service Center is a joint proj¬ect of the University’s School for SocialService Administration and the city of Chi¬cago, aided by a $1,291,393 grant from theDepartment of Housing and Urban Devel¬opment.A worker at the center said Wednesday that the construction crew was still aboutseven or eight men short.The giant Regenstein Library had just re¬turned to its normal rate of constructionWednesday. The $23-million library waspicketed along with the Social Service Cen¬ter three weeks ago.It has been predicted that with the arriv¬al of the SCLC, the Coalition’s fight to closedown all construction in Chicago may be¬come the largest and broadest civil rights-black militancy action in Cliicago since Dr.Martin Luther King’s housing campaign in1966.A third site, the international studiesbuilding at University and 58th, has notbeen picketed, and work has not been slow¬ed.KEEP KOOLIN JOHN’SSPRING WEARummer$alejean bell bottoms$5.98jockey turtlenecks$1.98striped jerseys, pocket T-shirts,& tennis sneakers sole pricesJOHN'SMENS WEAR1459 E. 53rd. Jimmy's and theUniversity RoomFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWNEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 The Carpet BarnA division of Cortland CarpotWe have an enormous selectionof new and used wall-to-wallcarpetings, staircase runners,remnants and area rugs (a largeselection of genuine and Amer¬ican orientals). Antique furnituretoo.We open our warehouse to thepublic for retail sales on Sat¬urdays ONLY from 9 - 4.1228 W. Kimie (at Racine)HU 4-1844 243-2271What’s good forTurin Bicycle Coopis good forthe U.S.A.Cheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh, Robin Hood, Falcon,Peugeot, Gitane, Vfercier,Radius and Daws. Factorytrained mechanics. Used bi¬cycles spasmodically.Fly-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clerk U 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00-8:30; SAS 10-8Hnrjr Ford ridn a bicycle I SHORELAND HOTELOffice space also Availablefrom 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Special RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailySingle rooms from $9.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake View Please call N.T. Norbert PL 2-10005454 South Shore Drives *» * August 21, 1969/Thu Chicago Marcon/3By Susan Spector and Steven UrkowitzTaking the classics down off the shelf andbreathing new life into them is a businesswhich always seems chancy at best. TheCourt Theatre takes its responsibility in theacademic community for airing the classicsseriously and in its latest production, TheCountry Wife by William Wycherley, hasnot only aired but actually revivified thisRestoration comedy for the modern au¬dience Without a doubt, this is the Court’sfinest offering this summer, a total theatri¬cal work in which all aspects of productionare conceived to enhance the whole.James D. O’Reilly has performed the di¬rector’s complex job beautifully: castingand coaching actors, choreographing move¬ment so that position and attitude under-Art Show ExhibitsSports ExcitmeritBy David Travis“Man in Sport” is truly one of the mostmind blowing experiences to come to theArt Institute. It covers the excitement, mo¬tion, color, and emotion of sport. The de¬sign and the super graphics of exhibitionsare as exciting as the images. The princi¬pal photographers — George Silk, JerryCooke, Mark Kauffman, Hy Peskin, ToniFrissell, Art Rickerby, Gerry Granham,Horst Baumann, T. Tanuma, and RobertRiger — have achieved tnrough photogra¬phy that which has remained generally un¬touched by artists over the centuries.The largest photograph in the exhibitmeasuring eight by ten feet is an out¬standing image of Johnny Unitas by the di¬rector of the exhibit Robert Riger. Many ofthe photographs are in color. The printingand mounting is a sort of a technical tour deforce. The exhibition will last until the endof September. For those students who donot have the fifty cent admission fee thereis a photograph of Jim Clark: The LotusStreak in beautiful color 60 by 36 incheshung just outside the entrance.Elsewhere in the world of art or arts andcrafts, are the summer art fairs. The GoldCoast Art Fair ended last week much tothis author’s frustration. After walking themany miles of sidewalk and seeing only afew pieces of art, the general chairman ofthe fair told me that there was no place forphotography in his fair. He proceeded tokick me out, but not until I had sold morethan anyone in my area. Perhaps thepeople want to buy photography and not his“art.” I hope with all the displays of ear¬rings, apple people, trinkets, and otherartsy craitsy items the Gold Coast ArtFair will not be called an art fair nextyear if it continues to exclude photography.There should be other names . . . andthere are. Alfred Stieglitz where are younow? For one last creaking trip this summerthe Vulture stretches its aging wings, sur¬veying the city for some modicum of enter¬tainment. Your best bet for summer fun isto take a cab out to O’Hare, get on a planegoing anywhere, and don’t come back toChicago for at least two weeks. If you can’tor won’t do this, you might pick from thefollowing. Don’t say we didn’t warn you.TheatreStay close to home and see The CountryWife, as presented by Court Theatre in Hut¬chinson court, weekend and Thursdaynights at 8:30, through August 31. There’s aMaroon review around here someplace that strongly recommends it.Ravinia’s theater season has begun, andCeremonies in Dark Old Men is therethrough August 31. It’s gotten great reviewsin New York. September 3 through 14they’re presenting Three Sisters. Chekhovwould have loved Highland Park.For the sentimental, the Ivanhoe Theatreis showing The Miracle Worker for the nexteight weeks. It’s a play we don’t like, butwho are we to dictate taste? It stars RitaMoreno as Annie Sullivan.MoviesMovies have the virtue of being air-condi¬tioned. Some of the air conditioned theatersshowing interesting movies are the Chi¬cago, Esquire, Playboy, and Village, show¬ing, respectively, The Wild Bunch, Easy Ri¬der, The Loves of Isadora, and La GuerreEst Finie. may get in free. Call 326-1393 for more info.The final, fitting cultural mind boggierto top off the last Vulture of the summeris, of course, graduation. In the words ofJB, are you passed or are you flunked?All the glorious passed ones get to assem¬ble in the big Rock August 26 to pass onto greener pastures, leaving the womb ofacademia and 2-S. Congratulations Tom!Congratulations Dale! Anticipatory congra¬tulations John!Social NotesWhat good natured, wholesome Nebraskaphotographer has struck it rich with whatalluring Medici waitress? Ponder the logic:if marriages are made in heaven, and Dav¬id and Leslie met in the Maroon office,then the Maroon must be . . .MusicSubscriptions to the Lyric Opera fall sea¬son are already closed, and you were crazyto have missed them. You’re even crazier ifyou don’t order individual tickets now, bymail.Orgelmusik! Free! In Rockefeller Chap¬el! Hannes Kastner, guest organist fromLeipzig, gives a free organ recital August26 in the Big R.UnclassifiableUnimpeachable sources have given us ahot tip: go visit the Glessner House, 1800 SPrairie Avenue. Our source tells us it’s “acontinuing treat for architecture buffs oranyone who loves fine old buildings.” The35 room mansion, designed by Henry Hob¬son Richardson, contains Robie House fur¬niture, a sculpture and poster exhibit, andLouis Sullivan ornaments. The house isopen Sundays from 2-5. There is a donationof $1, but look poor and sincere, and you THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: David TravisNews Staff: Frieda Murray. Sylvia PiechockaPhotography: Edward Futch, David RosenbushSenior Editor: Roger BlackFounded In 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303, 304, and 305 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus and inthe Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service.score and create a continuous physicalreality in the playing space. Mr. O’Reillygives us, beyond a good evening’s enter¬tainment, a dramatic standard againstwhich we can measure future universityproductions.Mr. O’Reilly has filled all the major andmost of the minor roles ably, in some casesbrilliantly. Top honors go to Anne Andichwho played the title role, the country wife,with honesty, freshness and charm. Mrs.Andich has a capacity, rarely found amongamateur actors, for making her life onstage seem improvised and utterly spon¬taneous. She si real whether filling her quillpen or hiding under a cloak. Her raspyvoice and simple good looks are ideallysuited to the unsophisticated but not dull-witted Margery. Equally impressive washer sister-in-law and confidant, Alithea,played by Judith Van Buren. Her poise,cultured refinement and good-humored vir¬tue were effectively drawn with grace,beauty and intelligence.After shaky opening moments of the firstnight’s performance Robert Keefe broughtsardonic life to the lead role of Horner, theknight-errant of other men’s marriagebeds. As he distributes his “china,” as heflits from pollination to pollination, as hemakes acrobatic leaps through the tissue ofmorality, Mr. Keefe brings us to delight inhis outrages by his own evident delight onthe stage.Willem O’Reilly also deserves specialpraise for his creation of Sparkish, at oncesincere enough in foolish self-adulation andprecise enough in his lack of justificationfor it to fill the broad comic outlines of therole without falling into uninteresting ca¬ricature.The precision of the director’s choreogra¬phic blocking allowed almost all the sup¬porting characters to become comicallyvivid as well as humanly interesting. Thebest among these were Leonard Krug asSir Jasper Fidget, Pauline Brailsford asMAN IN SPORT: Exhibit booklet for Art Institute Show.D. id Travis Douglas MunsonCOUNTRY WIFE: Donald Swanton and Anne Andich (Mr. and Mrs. Pinchwife)in the court production.My Lady Fidget, Donald Swanton as Pinch-wife, and Jerrold Ziman as the Quack.Good performances were also given byChristine Russick as Lucy, Miss Alithea’smaid, George Tountas as Dorilant and Ger¬ald Fischer as Harcourt.Dainty Fidget and the Squeamish girlswere more in keeping with the unfortunatelevel of most amateur acting. Althoughtheir characterizations lacked any basicreality, skillful blocking, as in the ladies’drinking scene, always maintained the ebband flow of relationship and conflict re¬quired by the plot.The costumes, designed by Sandra Tap- pan, were handsome, well-constructed, anddramatically effective. The properties, es¬pecially a coyly phallic “china” prize wonby Lady Fidget, heightened the comic lifeon stage. The furniture, Mr. Horner’sdoors, the New Exchange, and the lightingwhich set moods but never forced us topeer into obscurity, each added to the totaleffect of the evening.Mr. O’Reilly, his cast, and crew haveshown how professional standards when ap¬plied to an amateur theater production canbring alacrity, joy and giddy bawdry ontothe stage. The Country Wife runs throughSunday until August 31. Don’t miss it!CULTURE VULTURE II4/The Chicago Maroon/August 21, 1969Joni and 'Supergroup Charm at AuditoriumBy Michael Fred EllisIt’s all been said. Every reviewer in thecountry has put out more raves and createdmore superlatives than the English lan¬guage has ever seen before. I hesitate be¬fore saying again because, as we all know,miracles do happen. So who am I to sayanything new about the new “supergroup”,Crosby, Stills and Nash (now Crosby, Stills,Nash and Young). The first performance ofthe new act was held Saturday night in theAuditorium Theater on the same bill withjoni Mitchell. That makes this a Maroonexclusive: the first review (unless someonehas beat us to it) of Crosby, Stills, Nashand Young. I might even say a few wordsabout Joni Mitchell. „The background of the members of thegroup is well-known to anyone who followsthe rock world (for those of you who don’t,Stills and Young are ex-BuffaloSpringfield’s, Crosby is an ex-Bird andNash is an ex-Hollie). Without Young, theother three got together and for fun put outan album. Later they added Young and theaddition only adds to the stature of thegroup. They are indeed the best group Ihave ever heard and that includes the Beat¬les, the old Byrds, the Stones and anyoneelse you can name. Their sound is beau¬ tiful. Listening to them in person is betterthan hearing them on their records, if thatis possible. And when they go electric (thefirst part of the concert was played onacoustic guitars) the music goes rightthrough you. As they put it in one song, it“thrills you to the marrow.” They are theultimate in performance and writing. Thethree of the original members, who wroteall the songs on the album, are all accom¬plished songwriters. Stills, especially, isamazing. His songs all speak of loneliness, and it is nice to think that he is talkingabout Judy Colins (whose virtues I will notgo into here) as he does in the first song onthe album entitled “Suite: Judy BlueEyes.” Instrumentally, Stills is the bestaround. He plays everything and plays itwell, if not better than anyone else. And theharmony! They sing all their songs in aharmony reminiscent of the Hollies, butwith the other voices, it is better yet.Enough raving about them. I could go onforever, and at the drop of a hat, will for anyone who is interested. On the same pro¬gram was a woman whom I have writtenabout in these pages before and I’m surethat all of my loyal readers (that’s at leastmy mother and little brother) know myfeelings for Joni Mitchell by now. To statethem in one word, I am convinced that JoniMitchell is an omen from heaven, telling usthat she is the musical savior. What morecan I say. If you have the chance, see her.And if you have the chance, see them. Theyare too, too much.Redgrave Acting Passes ScreenplayBy Paula MeinetzIsadora Duncan is largely responsible forthe turn-of-the-century development of anexpressionistic form of dance. In her barefeet, with a flowing tunic, Isadora respond¬ed intuitively to masterpieces of music. Hersimple running and jumping movementsand her wide-swinging arms involved, forthe first time in dance, a total person freelyrelating her emotions.Vanessa Redgrave gives a fantastic per¬formance as the free-spirited Isadora whoconsumes life and men in “The Loves ofKirk Infiltrated DuBois, SDSContinued from Page Onetirely theoretical. He also stated that thisdiscussion took up only a few minutes inseveral hours of testimony.Kirk, a Chicago resident, worked with theFBI from 1965 until the time of his testi¬mony when his cover was destroyed.Throughout this period, Kirk was also usu¬ally a registered student, although he saysthat this was done through his own desireto be a student here rather than throughany arrangements worked out by the FBI.♦ CARPET CITY♦ 6740 STONY ISLAND♦ 324-7998*Hqj what you need from a $10Tus«d 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in RemnantsMill returns at a fraction of the^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualities.▼Additional 10% Discount with this4 Ad| FREE DELIVERY During his years in the Communist youthorganizations, Kirk rose in the party hier¬archy, becoming midwest director of theDuBois Club, a section of the Communistyouth organisations.Kirk says that the DuBois Club leaders,after learning that he was a student at theUniversity, told him to join SDS. Kirk at¬tended SDS meetings last year but stoppedattending as frequently this year.Kirk is now unsure of what his future willbe. He says he could register here again orenter graduate school.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644Now there is an addition in the Volvo family.We think you should see it... our new"6 cylinder Deluxe"May we invite you for a test drive?VOLVO SALES & SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE « > -MOOWe specialize in European delivery — call us Isadora,” which premiered last week at thePlayboy Theater. Unfortunately, Miss Red¬grave cannot dance. If only the producershad juxtaposed her acting with frames ofIsadora from the Library of Congress’s“Historical Films!”However, the most blatant handicap ofthis film is the screenplay by MelvynBragg. You find a vital character speakingin comic strip balloons. Jason Robards por¬trayal of Paris Singer, the sewing machineheir who was Isadora’s lover, also falls in this non-credible category.Larry Pizer is responsible for some mar¬velous location shots in England, Yugo¬slavia and Italy, though there are someover-done, misty sequences., One especially humorous scene occursnear the end, when Isadora becomes en¬tranced by a Russian poet and begins tak¬ing Russian lessons from a spinster school-marm who recites “Is this pencil blue orred?” while Isadora wants to know how tosay, “You have beautiful thighs, I adoreyou?!”dreamingaboutyour future?then stop!Here's a once in a life¬time opportunity' for ad¬venture and challenge.A civilian career withthe Army Recreation orLibrary Program in Eu¬rope or the Far East.If you are single, a U.S.citizen and have a de¬gree inRecreationArts and CraftsMusicDramatics orLibrary ScienceWRITE FOR A BROCHURESPECIAL SERVICESSECTIONRCBDEPARTMENT OF THEARMYWASHINGTON, D.C.20315 And We Love Mavericksl nNELSONBANKS FORD7600 SO. STONY ISLAND 731-7000August 21, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYSecy, of LaborSecretary of Labe. ureorge Shultz, thedean of the UC business school before hewent to Washington, is widely reported tohave been the mediator in the White Housecontroversy in writing President Nixon’snew welfare package.On one side of the dispute was economistArthur Burns, chief advocate of the no job,no check provision of the new plan.On the other side was Urban Affairs Ad¬visor Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who fa¬vored the “carrot” theory of welfare: ifyou work, your check won’t be cut com¬pletely.Shultz, an experienced labor-manage¬ment negotiator, is reported to have beenthe person who reconciled the two. Thepackage, as presented by Nixon, includesboth the carrot and the stick: employablepeople in communities where there are“suitable” jobs won’t be eligible for wel¬fare (though women with pre-school chil¬dren still will be), and poor people who canget jobs will still be eligible for welfare ona sliding scale.Kalven ReportsLaw school professor Harry Kalven Jr.was one of five authors who criticized Chi¬cago officials for not making city streetsand parks more readily available to dis¬senters. The 72 page report was issuedthis week by a citizens’ group.Kalven worked on a subcommittee of theChicago Citizens Commission to Study theDisorders of Convention Week, a groupformed in the spring of 1968 to investigatea confrontation between police and peacemarchers at the Civic center. After the con¬vention week violence last August the com¬mission undertook an investigation of thosedisorders.The report pointed out Chicago’s “dis¬criminatory” record in issuing right of as¬sembly and use of streets and parks per¬mits.Although the city “welcomed” paradesled by conventional groups or for holidays,the report stated, “Groups with unpopularopinions have had a different experience.When they attempted to parade or rally,march or demonstrate, it is fair to say gen¬erally they met a wall of silence and delay,and obtained permits with the greatest dif¬ficulty.” fication, revision and codification. This isthe first and indispensible step to avoid thefrustrations and violence of April 27 andconvention week, 1968.”Kalven was chairman of a committee ap¬pointed by dean of students CharlesO’Connell in March, 1968 to study and rec¬ommend changes in disciplinary procedure.The committee’s report, released last Feb¬ruary, suggested that student discipline behandled in two divisions, one for offensesagainst the “mission of the University” andone for offenses “against University life.”RichmanHarold A. Richman, associate professorin the school of social service adminis¬tration (SSA) and director of the Center forthe Study of Welfare Policy, has beennamed a vice-chairman of the UnitedStates Secretary of Health, Education, andWelfare’s Task Force on Medicaid and Re¬lated Programs.The appointment was announced by HEWSecretary Robert H. Finch.Richman also will serve as chairman ofthe Task Force’s panel on Medicaid eligibil¬ity. Two other panels will study Medicaidprogram management and the effective useof Medicaid.Walter J. McNerney, president of the Na¬tional Blue Cross Association, is TaskForce chairman.The Task Force was established to studyapparent deficiencies in Medicaid and re¬lated programs requiring both immediateand long-term corrective measures.New FacultyNeil Harris, a specialist in American his-date professor of history and Arthur Wise,an authority on equal education opportunityhas been appointed assistant dean of thegraduate school of education, assistantchairman of the department of education,and assistant professor of education.Harris, an assistant professor at Har¬vard, has received degrees from Columbia,Cambridge and Harvard.The author of Artist in America: TheFormative Years 1790-1860, Harris also co¬edited a two-volume book Reading in theHistory of the United States and is now gen¬eral editor of an eight-volume series, TheAmerican Culture.The report concluded “It is clear thatChicago’s ordinances, requirements, andpractices are greatly in need of clari¬ Wise, who received his A.B. from Har¬vard and his higher degrees here, servedfrom 1967 to 1969 as a captain in the USHYDE PARKSTARTS FRI. AUG 22Jack Lemmon andCatherine Deneuveare“The April Fools”Technicolor*ALSOCHARLEYCHAPLIN IN"THE PAPER HANGER" Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW's encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanics havejoined js. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease A oil change done evenings by appt.Hyde Perk Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Hland e 734-6393IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.CAN EARN $25 OR MORE DAILYDRIVE A YEUOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school scheduleDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from qaraqe near home or schoolApply Now for Summer Work6/The Chicago Maroon/August 21, 1969 Army where he was assistant director ofresearch and a research psychologist at theUS Military Academy in West Point, NewYork. Previously, he was affiliated withHarvard and the New England Data Sys¬tem. time to teaching and research. Hamp willcontinue to serve as director of the Centerfor Balkan and Slavic Studies.In MemoriamWise’s book, Rich Schools, Poor Schools:The Promise of Equal Education Opportun¬ity, was recently published by the Univer¬sity Press. His work has formed the basisfor a number of court tests of the con¬stitutionality of current school finance leg¬islation. Helen Russel Wright, 78, former dean ofthe social service administration school(SSA) and a member of the University’sfaculty for 28 years and Hilmer A. Sieving,56. librarian in the department and gradu¬ate schools of education since 1949 died thispast week.Department HeadsLeonard Linsky, professor of philosophy,and Norman Zide, associate professor oflinguistics, have been named chairmen oftheir respective departments by PresidentEdward Levi1.Linsky, an authority on the philosophy oflanguage, will succeed Manley H. Thomp¬son, Jr. who has resigned to devote fulltime to teaching and research. Thompsonhad been chairman since 1960.Linsky was appointed professor of philos¬ophy in 1967 when he came to the Univer¬sity.Zide, an authority on Indian linguistics,has been a faculty member since 1960. Hewill succeed Eric Hamp, professor of ling¬uistics, who also resigned to devote full Miss Wright died Thursday, August 14 inPasedena, California where she had beenliving since her retirement in 1956. Knowninternationally for her work in the socialwork field, Miss Wright was an associate ofthe SSA’s pioneers — Edith Abbott, Soph-onisba Breckenridge and Grace Abbott.During her term as SSA dean, the schooldeveloped and extended its doctoral pro¬gram to include advanced social case work,social research, and administration. Shewas instrumental in establishing theschool’s first research center in social workand in developing a generic approach to theteaching of social case work.Sieving, who died Sunday, August 10, hadserved as librarian in Eckhart library be¬fore moving to the education library inJudd Hall. Before coming to the Universityin 1946, he had been on the library staffs ofHastings College in Nebraska and the Uni¬versity of Illinois.I’ve got a roseBetween my toes Martin and Richard....the world's greatest teamnow appearing in the filmFor Love and MoneyMORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST. FAR EAST KITCHINCMHKSI. MUMCM MSTAWANTOpen Sun. - Thors. 12- 10 PMFri. & Sot. Noon. MidnightOrders to take out1654 E. 53rd St. 955-2229CARLOAD TIRE SALE"Mobil Premier" Premium Quality• 100 Level • Full 4 Ply• Nylons • WhitewallsSAVE 50%Buy 2 And Get 2 FreeAnd Away You Go.,for Smooth DrivingNew tires? Oil change? Whatever yourcar needs, you can be sure of fast,friendly, efficient auto service, here. TIRE SIZE775-14/775-15825-14/815-15855-14/845-15900-15/915-15HYDE PARKCAR WASH1330 E. 53rd Si'? r "f'V- .r~„ n . i . .. . ; . , V ■' •' **»V, V • • IT;(Maroon Classified Ads)WE CANT PROMISE YOU THE MOONBATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents per'ine. For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perline each additional insertion.Count 30 typewriter spaces perline.TO PLACE AD: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.No ads will be taken over thephone or billed.The next issue of the Maroonwill be Sept. 26. Deadline for alladvertising is 4 PM on Sept. 24_the Wednesday before publica¬tion.first fall issueThe Maroon will have a big fall is¬sue Sept. 26 (Fri.) with a specialOrientation Supplement. I will try tocall on regular advertisers in theevenings during Sept. Or call the of¬ fice. Or send in your ad. Joel willbe in the office 8:30 to 5 duringSept, to help you.Thanks for your business this sum¬mer; we made a little profit. Em¬met Gonder, Business Manager.FOR SALE5 RM CO-OP FOR SALE2 bedrooms cedar closets, Ige liv rmformal din rm, full bath with show¬er, air cond. Price $3750 Mr. CohnDO 3-6672SILVERWOOD, INC.FURNITURT upholstered single bedend table lamps filing cabinet call221-36041/5 sailboat international 505 goodcondition 2 months of sailing leftowned by 5 students $200 221-360463 VOLVO EXC Cond avail Sopt 10will haggle $600 285-3426 evesComplete house furniture - ind. pots.Avail Spt 10 285-3426 evesPEUGEOT - 403 1962 40,000 miles“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”Pickup & Delivery ServiceSince 1926 493-5200BELL SHELL SERVICE 5200 LAKE PARKCOURT THEATRE1969OURFIFTEENTHSEASON“Chicago'sOldestOutdoorSummerTheatre”WycherleyTHE COUNTRYWIFEAug. 15 -Aug. 31All performances at 8:30 PM(in Mandel Hall in case of rain)TirkrU: SeriesThun.. A Sun. $2.25 $5.25Friday 2.50 6.00Saturday 3.00 7.50GROUP RATES ON REQUESTStudent DisrounlaCOURTTHEATREUniversity of Chicago5706 S. UniversityChicago, Illinois 60637Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3581 Held over 8th MonthCINEMAChicago Ave at MichiganACADEMY AWARDA bittersweet love storythat touches the heart.CLIFF ROBERTSONCURE BLOOM"CHARLY"* . _ A Student rate every\ I Ml day BUT Saturdaywith I.O. CardClarktheatre■ enjoy ourm special studentratem O C C at all* times■ for college students■ presenting i.d. cardsat our box officee different double featuredaily• open 7:30 a.m. — lateshow midnight• Sunday film guilde every wed. and fri. isladies day—all gals 75little gal lery for galsonly• dark parking—1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly programdark & madison fr 2-2843] radio, 3 spare tires $250 call MU4-7336MACE FOR SALEprotection for sale $3.00Perhaps the only legal weapon youcan carry, a twenty shot can ofmace with a range of 15-20 feet. Ex¬treme accuracy and effectiveness.Available Chicago Maroon, Box S,1212 E. 59th St., ChicagoIllinois 60637The Chicago Maroon is not sellingMace, please address all requests toBox SMUSTANG, '65, V-8, auto., 37000miles, $1050. Call 684-0190PEOPLE WANTEDSONGWRITERS - We are lookingfor songs to publish and record.Send Demos and tapes to: Ron Saw¬yer, R.D.M. Records, Suite 403, 6290Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif.90028.Blackfriars needs you - script, mu¬sic, lyrics call Annette Jaffe 642-2577Exc. performing classical guitaristseeks begin 8> adv serious students.Legitimate methods. $5-per Jan Ar¬nold PL 2-1512Oriental waitress P.T. nites Dia¬mond Head Rest 925-1678Secretary wanted for doctor's officecall 723-1009Male government worker desiresyoung female government worker oruniversity student to share hisapartment rent free.Call 638-4632 in Washington D.C.Area code 202 LEAVING for California Aug 31 RI¬DERS WANTED to share expensesand driving 324-9358WRITERS WORKSHOPWriter's left liberal writers work¬shop, seeking new members. Fourletter words invited. For detailsphone Cohen 955-9505 or Monastra955-4615PEOPLE FOR SALEFemale vocalist seeks group incountry-western-rock-blues bag Ref:Flying Burrito Brothers 752-5694PART TIME POSITIONS. YouthServing Agency in South Shore. Spe¬cialists in Arts and Crafts, Recrea¬tion, etc. To work with children ofall ages. Both afternoon and eveningpositions available, as well as week¬ends. Program hours are flexible.Ideal for Juniors and Seniors in col¬lege and graduate students. Salariesare competitive. For further infor¬mation, Director, YMCA Youlh Cen¬ter, 7601 South Phillips Ave., Chi¬cago, III. 60649 RE 1-0444 TrorCLASSIFIED ANDDISPLAY ADSnow being taken forregular and new studentorientation issues.Impressionable targetsfresh from the farm andsummer jobs will bereturning with money tospend on you and me.CHICAGO MAROONIda Noyes Hall1212 E. 59th St.ChicagoMI3-0800 x3266MAY WE DO YOUR TYPING? 363-1104WANTEDPart-Time Girl Friday for CharterFlight Program. Some typing andmuch imagination and poise. $2.50-hrMl 3 0800 ex 3598STUDENT GOVT needs hardworkingintelligent secretary begin Sept 29,1-5 pm daily $2.25 per hr call ext3274 1-3 pm BRAIN AND INTELLIGENCE byWard C. Halstead, U of Chi Press(1947) Phone Ml 3-0800 ext 4774A rider to Boston. Help drive a carAug 31 221-3604$50 REWARD for finding 3 gradferns a 3-bedroom apartment UCarea, rent up to $200 need by Oct 1.Sheila, x3458 Barbara 324-4043"THE FUST MUST-SEEHUM OF 069."—Andrew Sarris, Village VoiceJEAN PAUL BELMONDO ANNA KARINAJEAN-LUC GODARD'SPIERROTIFFOUTHREE PENNY CINEMA“it* 2424 N. Lincoln; Park Free' Student Rate; Tel. 528-9126 3 Bedrm. Apt. near U. of C startingSept. Call (215) MO 4-2519 collectafter 8 P.M.FOR RENTl-BEDROOM APARTMENT$118.502-BEDROOM $139 - 3-BEDROOM$160FREEPARKING, GAS HEAT, HOT WA¬TERAND COOKING GASNew 21-StoryISLAND TERRACEAPARTMENTS6426-44 S. STONY ISLANDOPPOSITE JACKSON PK.Roof sun deck. Free connection withmaster TV antenna. Free bicyclestorage room. See Model Apt. Opendaily 9 to 5 - Sat. & Sun. 1 to 6ALBERT H. JOHNSON REALTYHU 3-1470SUBLET 2-br, l'/2 bath townhouse$160 per mo. 536-8324SPACE TO SHARE in 8 room apt wcouple, child, cat. $50-70 - mo or de¬pending Dial OBILYKSDESPERATE - need 2-3V2 rm subletSept or Oct - end Dec. 667-7086Nearby 2, 3 rm apts. Unfurn. Quiet,Airy. Light Stm. ht. $80 up. Freeutils. 955-9209TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE? 4 placesopen in student run housing. Wehave our own professional cook,linen and maid service. And a senseof community. 2 double rooms.Rates competitive to apartment liv¬ing. Mike 684-96082'/t room basement in PleasanceCourt. Former residence of JosephJarman, Tcdd Capp et at One monthrent free, then $60 per month.ROOMMATESRoommate wanted to share large 4rm S. Shore apt with fem grad stud.$65 Call eves 955-4230$10 REWARD!! Mature intelligentfemale student desires private roomin nearby apartment with other girlsor same in a home for paymentand-or baby sitting. For on or beforeSept. 25.BU 8-9078 - Ask for Carol.Fem roommate wanted: Irg 6 rmapt, furnished, own bedrm, 55 &Dorchester, From Sept 1, $70-moCall 388-3950 aft 5 pm4th year Roosevelt U. student (fem)seeks apt with responsible femalestudents. Phone Judy, eves. 363-2791PUBLIC NOTICECity code requires your landlord towhitewash or paint in light coloryour basement every year HPKCC.City cede requires one electrical out¬let for every twelve feet of total dis¬tance around living and bedrooms.HPKCC.Gerry Kirk is an FBI informant whoknows how to use a gun. As on Sat¬urday night, August 9 he previouslygave paranoid testimony on BSA &SDS to H1SC YOUR "friendship"with him may mean a speedy potbust, etc.COMMUNAL GROUPFaculty A graduate students inter¬ested in joining an experiment ingroup living based on concensus 8,depth interaction. S. Shore location955-3945UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITYfor LIBERATED WOMANCommunal group acquiring promis¬ing venture (marketing exclusive souvenir & giftware line) estab 2yrs. Need full or part time womanwith business experience or admintraining to assume full charge.S. Shore location. 955-3945PERSONALA local, non-profit arms merchantseeks to equalize the balance ofpower in Chicago. Reduce HydePark's level of paranoia. Buy mace,it makes you freeCOME DANCE WITH US!Paul Collins of Ida Noyes fame, willcall folk dances and squares on Sat.Aug 23, 8 pm, 5480 Kenwood. Re¬freshments. Students - 50 centsAdults-$1.00THANKS Sabine TechelYOU DID A GOOD THING.F.B. Ajay is about to get the goodnews.Space between the Fine Arts build¬ing and the library has been setaside as a Free Speech Area. Any¬one who has something to say isfree to use this area.NDEA Plan I leads 3 to 1.ARTIFICIAL GRASS IS GREENERBetty Box a prominent film produc¬er in England, has just paid $100,000for the film rights to Percy, a novelscheduled for publication in Novem¬ber.It's the story of a man's search todiscover the owner of the sexual or¬gan given to him in a transplant op-e r a t i 0 n . The leading characterbribes a hospital attendant to deter¬mine the identities of all the deadmen in the mortuary who serve aspossible donors. He then sets out tofind the women who knew thesemen.Miss Box states the film is an "in¬credible detective story . . . and itwill not be salacious or sniggery . ..it is the intrigue, the tracking downof the women that really make it. Itwill be a question of building andmaintaining suspense to the end."People or parties interested in hav¬ing this film premier on the Univer¬sity of Chicago campus inquire ?tthe Maroon office and sign the chr 1letter being forwarded to Miss. Box.The organist began to play. He be¬gan very softly; the first wisps ofGhost Rider In the Sky echoed andwas gone, a few seconds later therewas a suggestion of Red River Val¬ley. The stadium was transformedinto a vast and lonely prairie.Then, behind home plate, a man onhorseback came into view. His waswas all but hidden by his wide-brim¬med Stetson, as he rode slowly for¬ward. The music in a burst oftriumph, swung into Back in theSaddle Again. From high above thestadium, from the tiny sanctuary,there came an excited, wonderful,bursting joyful voice, "Electric AuntJemima, Goddess of Love, KhakiHELP WANTEDBUY BLACKThe center for Urban Studies maybe hiring several students to helpgather information during Septem¬ber for a fact book on blackbusiness. Salary $500 plus expenses.Maturity and automobile required.Inquire Ext. 4770; leave name andnumber.Confidential to PDH: Now you knowMR PENSUBSCRIBEthe CHICAGO MAROON, 1212 E. 59th St. Ida Noyes Hall,Chicago, IllinoisMaroon issues for the full academic year (69-70) can be sent anywherein the country for $7.00. For an additional $1.00 we throw in the June 6Yearbook Issue last year.Complete your collection, keep your family informed of campus life, im¬press your friends.NAME.address ZIP1 year $ubscription $7.00LJ Yearbook Issue $1.00 Total inclosed MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE: 50‘ per line, 40c per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75' perline, 60c per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free.1August 21, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/7SALEWAREHOUSE CLEARANCE■’ ■ ' ■■ ■ •; ' -- -;v ■/ v '■ . v?,ifPPPfs* ,*V.V’- ', ;mm ■■■; '• IppIAmTk■ ■/ M / MI-Ml . / 7 p:vpii■*, piSyH I■ pY.pppg:#. P'TP.V-V. . ppgg.58th and Ellis' '^P Ppv^P ' V'V ’'‘v ■■ ’ ■T ' ’ V- ■ P P^PTiT-pf #PPP»PT®SP«PP ‘ ' -V-P,p-: PPPPSave on our vacationfilm plan.Free Camera Checkup elcome to newcomers..........* . ». '■1342 L 55tfi HY3-9259Student DiscountAre you a -good student?Are you a RESTAURANT■-P’- - ' .. ■ ' . : ; ; - ■ ■ ■SERVES GOOD CHINESE FOODDAILY I I A.M 9 PMSUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS OPEN 12 NOON - 9 P.M.CLOSED MONDAY1318 EAST 63RD STREET MU 4-106:'. '. pA ■■■: '■ : : , •careful driver?V' v s. p: . ^If you are tired of 'paying a nigh prerrii'um :for your car insurance itwill pay you toinvestigate Sentry'sgood student discoun*.Inis is in addition toSentry's discount fordriver education. Callyour Sentry man for fastfacts.:|PPV. ■ *Until now, if you wanted a Renault lh It carries a lot superior traction.The frontcar that could carry a lot. you without looking like a truck ‘ seats recline for sleeping. Ithad to buv a station wagon. Something we ve achieved has 4-wheel independent;The trouble with a station through a more intelligent suspension, disc brakes upwagon is, one—it looks like a use of interior space. The front, a top speed of 93 m. p.n.," small truck and. two—most back seat has ah ingenious and squeezes 30 miles'out ofway of folding out of the way. a gallon of gas.wh ;!e a huge back door makes gall • a- r-x.-m -• •• :<■f(>! o.urM-. M«-r«- - mur«- to "T'li p OF THE UNIVERSITYDAILY—WEEKLY—MONTHLY^■. ■' . : ''VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • RAMBLERS-uJim (.rane372-7227i AS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAY. • - . ■ . . •PLUS 10Vmilc (50 mile:mon.)4CLUDES GAS, OIL, & INSURANCEof the time it travels aroundempty, anyway.' Thanks to Renault vounow have an alternative. Theri SENTRY UINSURANCE HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715T'aPp-Non - Profit Orq.U. S.; POSTAGEPAIDChicago, I'iinoi*Pornoit No. 7931m ..a 2235 SO. MICHIGAN AVE , CHICAGO, ILL. 60616TEL. 326-25508/The Chicago Maroon/August 21, 1969The first/alternativeto the station wagon