Walter Walker: The Man andIn his new fifth floor office in the Ad¬ministration building, Walter Walker, new¬ly appointed vice-president for planning atthe University, spoke Tuesday, July 8, toMaroon editor Caroline Heck. Walker, auniquely articulate administrator, spokenot only of his position and responsibilities,but also of student protest, the duties ofadministrators and the decentralization ofthe University's administration. Following! is the text of the interview:How do you feel about the switch you’vemade this year from full-time faculty mem¬ber to taking on administrative duties?I think that administration of institutions ofthis type is a very wearing role. Five or tenyears is the most anyone can stand of thiskind of life. I have a feeling that twentyyears from now you won’t find any collegepresidents over the age of 45. I think it’sj easier here because the faculty takes overI so much of the administrative load, but it’s; not the kind of thing you do for a career.Your appointment brings the number ofUniversity vice-presidents to six, twice as many as there were last year at this time.Do you see a pattern emerging from Presi¬dent Levi’s appointment of more vice-pre¬sidents?I think this institution, though it only has8000 students is really a very large in¬stitution, and you really need a lot ofhands, a lot of minds. I think what the pres¬ident is doing is decentralizing and I thinkit will work better that way. The institutionwhen Mr. Hutchins was here was more of aone man institution. I think that was un¬fortunate.Do you think this decentralization will haveany effect on student protests?I don’t think anything the administrationdoes can really defuse student protests.Student protests, if they are going to beresolved, have to be resolved in the class¬room, by meeting students’ needs in theclassroom. That’s why students come to auniversity.There hasn’t been a vice-president for plan¬ning in some years. Why was this post re¬activated at this time? I think that it was reactivated because thepresident felt that the University as an en¬tity had some kind of a variety of peopleand a variety of areas and there needs tobe someone to pull it all together. This is anattempt to coordinate it, not rationalize it,not plan it, so that at least the right handwill know what the left is doing.What are some of the responsibilities thisjob will entail?One of the things I’m concerned with is allof the University programs that operate inWoodlawn, all of the University influencesthat are felt in Hyde Park. I am the personin the administration who is responsible forseeing to it that things proceed on a fairlyorderly basis. One of the things that happenhere is that we make a decision and then noone makes sure it gets done. In terms ofhow I go about remedying this, I simplyask questions, remind people, and try tobring a big picture together.The opinion on the University’s in¬volvement with its community seems totend toward two extremes, one stating that the PostWALTER WALKERNew Planning Vice-PresidentDavid Travisthe University should be concerned with thecommunity only insofar as it directly af¬fects them — i.e., student housing, securityin the area, making the community attrac-Continued on Page SixTHE MAROONVolume 78, Number 2 The University of Chicago Thursday, July 10, 1969David TravisAcademy Elects 6 From Levi Appoints WalkerLatest Vice-PresidentSix University professors have beenelected to the American Academy of Artsand Sciences, the major academic societyin the country.Saul Bellow, professor of English; DanielBoorstin, professor of history; AnthonyTurkevich, professor of chemistry; Gil¬bert White, professor of geography; Wil¬liam Zachariasen, professor of physics;and Antoni Zygmund, professor of mathe¬matics are among the 135 new membersof the Academy.Their elections brings the number of Uni¬versity faculty members who are membersof the Academy of Arts and Sciences to 68.Prominent past members of the Academyinclude George Washington, Oliver WendellHomes, Horace Mann and Rev. Dr. MartinLuther King, Jr.Both White and Boorstin are leaving theuniversity in the fall. White has accepteda position at the University of Coloradoand Boorstin will head a department at theSmithsonian Institute in Washington, D. C.Bellow has been a member of the Univer¬sity since 1963. He is the author of sevennovels and collections of short stories forwhich he has received numerous honorsand awards, including the National BookAward on two occasions and the Inter¬national Literary Prize. He also serves as amember of the committee on social thoughthere.Boorstin has been a member of the facul¬ty since 1944. TwQ volumes of his. three- volume series on America, “The Ameri¬cans,” have been published and receivedwide acclaim. He is presently working onthe third volume “The Americans: WorldExperience.”Turkevich, one of the principal in¬vestigators in the various Surveyor probesof the moon’s surface, is also a member ofthe National Academy of Sciences. His 1968papers on the “Chemical Analysis of theMoon” received wide circulation, both inscientific and lay circles. He developed thealpha scattering instrument which suc¬ceeded in analyzing the chemical com¬position of the moon’s surface.White, an authority on water and its con¬servation, has helped shape new federaland international policy on river devel¬opment and flood problems. From 1946 to1956 he served as president of HaverfordCollege, and has been a faculty memberhere since then.An authority on the man-made elementsof the atomic age, Zachariasen is a nativeof Norway and has been a member of thefaculty since 1930. He served as chairmanof the physics department from 1945 to 1949and again from 1956 to 1959. He was dean ofthe physical sciences division from 1959 to1962. Zachariasen is particularly noted forhis work in crystal physics.Zygmund, born in Warsaw, Poland, cameto the University in 1947 after teaching atseveral Polish and American universities.His special field of interest lies in math- Walter Walker, assistant professor in theschool of social service administration(SSA), is the University’s newest vice-pres¬ident. Edward Levi, president, namedWalker vice-president for planning effec¬tive June 27, 1969.Walker described his responsibilities asco-ordinating a broad range of Universityand community programs.Walker joined the University faculty lastAugust. He has served as assistant to thepresident since January. He intends to con¬tinue teaching next year, and is currentlyteaching one course at SSA. He is chairmanof a University committee on child care.UC Facultyematical analysis, primarily in the field ofharmonic analysis, real and complex vari¬ables and partial differential equations.The Academy is one of America’s oldestlearned societies. It was founded in Bostonin 1780 by John Adams and other leaders ofthe Massachusetts Bay Colony, who used asmodels such learned societies of Europe asthe French Academy and the Royal Societyin London.Three members of last year’s committeeof the council of the University senate werere-elected to the committee during elec¬tions late spring quarter.Re-elected were Philip Kurland, profes¬sor of law; Norman Nachtrieb, professor ofchemistry, and Edward Rosenheim, profes¬sor of English. Newly elected members ofthe committee are Norman Bradburn, pro¬fessor in the business school; Felix Brow¬der, professor of mathematics; James Red-field, associate professor and master ofthe new collegiate division; and StanleyYachnin, associate professor of medicine.The committee is the chief executive or¬gan of the University. All members of thecommittee are also members of the coun¬cil, the 51 member legislative body electedfrom the membesrhip of the University sen¬ate. All members of the University with po- W’alker’s appointment brings the numberof vice-presidents to six, twice as many asthere were a year ago. Walker’s sees thisincrease as the president’s effort to de¬centralize the administration, and added,“I think it’ll work better that way.”Walker is the second black to be appoint¬ed to a University vice-presidency. 'Levimade the first such appointment last springwhen Eddie Williams was named vice-pres¬ident for public affairs. Walker, who in hisnew post will deal with community groupsthat approach the University, stated “Ithink color is kind of irrelevant in this job.It’s really who you are and what you dothat makes the difference. If I behave likea “white man,” then color won’t make itany different.”Walker, 33, was born in Chicago. He re¬ceived a BA from the University in 1955. Hegot his PhD this year from Brandeis Uni¬versity.Walker has worked in the past with thePhiladelphia Redevelopment Authority, theInstitute for Youth Studies at Howard Uni¬versity, and the University Research Cor¬poration of Washington, D.C.Walker lives in Hyde Park with his wifeand two children.sitions of assistant professor with oneyear’s teaching experience or above serveon the senate.There are no formal nominations for thecommittee, as all members of the councilare eligible to run. Elections for the com¬mittee are held ten days to two weeks afterthe election of the new members of thecouncil.Three members of last year’s committee,Morris Janowitz, professor and chairmanof the sociology department; Richard Land¬au, professor of medicine; and George Stig-ler, professor of economics were not eli¬gible for re-election because their terms asmembers of the council expired in June.Arnold Weber, professor of business, wasthe only member of the committee who,though eligible for re-election, was not re¬elected.3 Return to Council Committee'Enthusiasm and Wif Mark Court s Richard IIIRICHARD III: Pauline Brailsford (Queen Margaret) and Nicholas Rudall (KingRichard) in Court Theatre production.By Thomas BuschCourt Theatre has opened its summer-long season with an entertaining and enthu¬siastic production of “Richard III,” di¬rected by James O'Reilly, and featuring afine actor, Nicholas Rudall, in the title role.The play is a melodrama set in the finalyears of the Wars of the Roses. Richard isThe Vi’lain. a hunchback who becomes kingby means of cleverly timed marriages andmurders, but who is finally defeated byRichmond, The Hero. The plot of the playand the relations of the characters are diffi¬cult to understand; this production haswisely focused on the intricacies of Rich¬ard’s character rather than on his Machia¬vellian politics.Whenever Shakespeare is produced, agreat deal of cutting is necessary for prac¬tical reasons. For this production, the char¬acter of the Duchess of York, Richard’smother, has been amputated from the text.Her absence gives the play greater claritybut less force. We miss the scenes in whichthe matriarchs of the houses of York andLancaster unite in their grief and anger.Unfortunately, there is no way of cutting anhour of Shakespeare without weakening theplay.Court Theatre’s stage is similar in designto the Stratford, Ontario, Festival stage,and is an excellent one for productions of Shakespeare. James O’Reilly has used itwell in this fast-paced production. The si¬multaneous scenes of Richard’s and Rich¬mond’s dreams and orations were quite ef¬fectively staged. O’Reilly is also to be com¬mended for allowing the battle of BosworthField to take place off stage. Nicholas Rudall uses a variety of ges¬tures and expressions to create a Richardof great complexity. Cultivated, clever, cy¬nical, and witty rather than monstrous,he is villainous because he chooses to berather than as another birth defect.His character is most effective in hisgloating soliloquies and in those scenes inwhich he is playing a role, as when he is“persuaded” to accept the crown. He isnever the power-hungry maniac he might have been. His cynical wit prevents himfrom taking himself too seriously.The supporting cast generally is enthu¬siastic and competent. Several perform¬ances are exceptionally good. The hoarserage of queen Margaret (Pauline Brails¬ford) and the unctuous, heroic purity ofRichmond (Robert Keefe) are excellentfoils for Rudall’s controlled, practical, vil¬lainous Richard. William Costello is de¬lightful as the bumbling Lord Mayor.Marge Kotlisky is an interesting brassyMargaret. Gerald Fisher and Donald Swan-ton stand out in their small roles. ChipperBamburger is terrific as the young Duke ofYork.Phyllis Budzinski, with the impossiblerole of Lady Anne, was convincingly angryat Richard, but seemed to change her mindtoo rapidly, which is perhaps the fault ofher part.Richard's victims needed more defini¬tion: Buckingham (Leonard Kraft) is astrong lieutenant for Richard, but lacks awill of his own. The righteousness of LordHastings (Bill Lattin) never came across.Clarence (Willem O’Reilly) seems non¬plussed both by his dreams and by his im¬pending murder.The traditional costumes by Sandra Tap-pan nicely reflect the mood of the produc¬tion. The tents, banners and properties byLouise Erlich are lovely.The production runs for two more weeks.Thursday through Sunday nights, and iswell worth seeing.O'Neill Play Demands StaminaBy Paula H. MeinetzA playwright imposes himself on you. Heasks you to leave the comfort of your homerespectably attired, monetarily to endorsehis efforts, only to be squeezed into a seatsurrounded by matrons discussing theirgarbage disposals. Then the lights areturned off and demands are made on yourattention.For the theatergoers who merely want“an enjoyable evening at the theater,” Eu¬gene O’Neill’s 1943 play, “The Moon for theMisbegotten,” now playing at the Studeba-ker Theater, is not a wise choice. ForO’Neill is thoroughly imposing; in fact heblasts at your guts.You’re relieved when the play ends, andyou can envision O’Neill’s relief too. Theplay is not one for which a playwrightmight calculatingly sketch an outline, butrather one that was slowly wrung-out fromO’Neill.In “Moon,” he has poignantly mouldedJosie, who he has described as “so over¬sized, that she is almost a freak,” andJamie, a weak drunken Broadway actor,and Josie’s pa, Phil, an earthly, loud Irishtenant farmer. O’Neill turns these charac¬ters into people who are important to us.Theodore Mann directs this Circle in theSquare production with the New York cast— except for Morgan Sterne, who unfortu¬nately has replaced Mitchell Ryan asJamie. When Jamie’s mother dies, he triesto drink himself to death — as did EugeneO’Neill’s brother Jamie. He visits a farmthat is part of his late father’s estate and meets Josie, a 28-year-old hunk of Irish girlwho falls in love with him and harbors no¬tions of fulfillment.Mr. Sterne comes across like a sick, postured, not-so-handsome Tony Martin, whoshould be styling ladies’ hair instead of act¬ing. He never lives up to what O’Neill de¬mands, but he comes close in the movingscene when he tells Josie, who has pre¬pared a nuptual bed, his guilt feelingsabout his dead mother and his utter disgustwith sex, all of which are destructive bits ofhis self-hate.Comic lines are superficially scatteredthroughout the three-act play, but are al-w a y s laden with sadness and dis¬appointment. One scene has Phil, adequate¬ly portrayed by Stephen Gierasch, having agrand time with his English neighbor fromStandard Oil who comes to complain aboutPhil’s pigs which have trespassed, dam¬aged his fence, and swum in his ice ponds.Phil’s Irish gusty spirit is matched byJosie, whom he calls “an overgrown lumpof woman.” O’Neill has woven a complexrelationship between Josie and her father.Salome Jens has been Josie for a yearnow, and superbly portrays the gamut ofhuman emotions that this maternal virginbears during the 18-hour period which theplay covers.O’Neill offers the chilling themes of isola¬tion, alienation, and anguish. What we takewith us from O’Neill and this performanceof “Moon for the Misbegotten,” has notbeen easily earned. The audience worksand sweats, as did O’Neill. For the Vulture to deliver the culturenews now is not going to do much good. Thegreatest cultural event of the season tookplace last Friday. It’s too late now, butkeep in mind for next year that the onlyway to celebrate July 4 is to cut a wedgeout of a watermelon, pour a fifth of gin intoit, and spend the day getting drunk whilespitting out seeds. If you want to go deluxe,pour in a little Hawaiian punch.For those who didn't have the luck to par¬ticipate in this enriching experience, andwho still thirst for cultural fulfillment, thefollowing:MoviesHot off the pumpkinvine: the Vulture hasit from unimpeachable sources that “ADouble Life,” which Doc Films is showingFriday at 8 in Quantrell, is one of thegreats. Ronald Colman, our source says,was never better.If you’ve got time on your hands a weekfrom Friday, you can see “Big Clock”same time, same station then.If your fantasies have been wearing thinlately, you can lay in a new stock at theHyde Park Theater. They’re showing“Belle de Jour,” and there just aren’tenough exciting things in Hyde Park to givevou anv excuse to miss it. Theater“Richard III,” starring Nicholas Ru¬dall, is still going strong at HutchinsonCommons, Thursday through Sunday eve¬nings this week and next. If you believewhat you read in the Maroon, (see review)the Court Theatre production, directed byJames O’Reilly, is well worth seeingIf you’re more inclined toward self flag¬ellation, Chicago can now boast that it toohas a Eugene O’Neill play in production.“A Moon for the Misbegotten” is showingat the Studebaker Theater. Be prepared tohave your entrails twisted. See the reviewelsewhere in today’s Maroon.You can also see “The Little Foxes” atthe Ivanhoe Theatre. 3000 N. Clark.Frau MusicaRavinia: c’mon, you don’t really want tomake us list all those programs, do you?You name it, they’ve got it. Claudio Arrautonight. Joan Sutherland next Wednesday.Next Friday Ravinia goes on with its seriesof programs on classic film comedy withW. C. Fields’ shorts (!.)For the lazy and/or poor, you can standoutside Rockefeller Chapel any Thursdayevening at 7:30 and hear a carillon concert.You might try venturing into the Chapel aweek from Tuesday to hear Edward Mon-dello give an organ recital.authorized AUSTIN-MG sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, illinois 60615 -mi 3-3113foreign car hospital & clinic, inc. riArucri all-night show1 PtRFORMANUl IBID A r t SATURDAY I0U0WIND. IAST RtODTAR HATURIJune 20Alec GuinessLAVENDER NIU MOO July 4Vanessa RedgraveMORGAN! July 11ELVIRA MADIGANJune 21Finney/Richardson'sTOM JONES July SSean ConneryTHUNDERBALL July 12Sean ConneryFROM RUSSIAWITH LOVEJune 27Burt LancasterELMER GANTRYJune 28The Beatles TICKETS $1.50PIUS: the firstHash Gordonadventure-ONIYFLASH GORDON-Every Night a New Chapter July 18Bruce BrownsTHE ENDLESS SUMMERw6mSK>July 19TL,— D ,jHELP! PLAYBOY VT M E AT E « 9- ine BeatlesYELLOW SUBMARINE g* *>** ^ »>i< >>:« >>:« »:«»:<>>;< »>:« »>:< »;i »•> »>Jj r!*%e!*!« >!*%»!•% »5!i *!5Te»!5!« ,y, ^| ADVERTISERS: You only haveM until July 21 (Monday) to get your Ht iH: ad in the next issue.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% ducount to students with ID cords2/The Chicago MarWrr/rjuly> 10/1969Appointments Cement UC-Reese RelationResident Group Opposes57th St. Zoning ChangesSix full-time members of the medicalstaff of Michael Reese hospital have re¬ceived full professor appointments at theUniversity; and Julian Levi, professor ofurban studies and executive director of theSoutheast Chicago Commission, has beenappointed a Michael Reese trustee.The appointments are the first since theaffiliation between Michael Reese and theUniversity’s biological sciences divisionand Pritzker School of Medicine began inJanuary.The six new professors are all heads oftheir respective departments at MichaelReese. The appointees are Stanley Deutsch, professor of anesthesiology; Roy Grinker,professor of psychiatry; Bertram Levin,professor of radiology; James Nicksn,professor of radiology; Gerald Peskin, pro¬fessor of surgery; and Eric Reiss, profes¬sor of medicine.Levi will be the first University memberto serve in any official capacity at MchaelReese.Dr. Deutsch, 39, is head of Reese’sanesthesiology staff. Deutsch has served onthe faculties of the University of Pennsyl¬vania school of medicine and Harvardmedical school.Dr. Grinker, 68, head of the psychiatry department at Michael Reese, holds de¬grees from the University and is a 1919graduate of Rush Medical College. He hasserved on Reese’s staff since 1937.Author of more than 200 articles andbooks dealing with psychiatry, Grinker is apast president of the American Psy¬chosomatic Society and editor of Archivesof General Psychiatry. From 1929 to 1950 hewas on the University faculty and currentlyholds appointments at Northwestern andthe University of Illinois college of medi¬cine.Dr. Levin, 49, earned his MD from theUniversity in 1944 and currently serves asdirector of the department of diagnosticroentgenology at Michael Reese, a positionhe has held since 1954.SG Arranges Picnics, Passes Nine Resolutions Sharon Jeffrey,- area program director ofthe Hyde Park-Kenwood Conference, saidthat the Conference opposes the change be¬cause “we don’t want to see planning doneon 57th St. on a piecemeal basis.” Sheadded that the Conference wants to see acomprehensive plan for 57th St. and thatthey are presently working on such a plan.The Conference, Miss Jeffreys said, doesnot oppose this particular restaurant andadded that perhaps the Chinese restaurantmight be part of the comprehensive plan.She added that she hoped the Universityadministration and realty company wouldparticipate in the Conference’s com¬prehensive planning for the street.The realty company applied for the zon¬ing change about a month ago. At a hearingbefore a sub-committee of the city council,the Conference asked for an extension be¬fore the sub-committee would pass. on arecommendation to the council itself, sothat they could consider the change andmake their own recommendation on it.Miss Jeffrey said that the Conference hasindeed decided to oppose the change. Mr.Cady, however, expects “favorable actionfrom the city council.” *David TravisChairman of the radiation therapy de¬partment at Michael Reese, Dr. Nicksori,53, is consultant to the US Public HealthService, a member of 13 professional so¬cieties, author of over 80 articles and haspreviously held faculty appointments atCornell University and Chicago.Dr. Peskin, 44, is head of surgery at Mi¬chael Reese. He is a member of over tenprofessional societies and has authoredmore than 64 professional publications andarticles. He has also served as consultantto the Veterans Administration hospital inPhiladelphia. JULIAN LEVINew Reese TrusteeChairman of Reese’s department of medi¬cine, Dr. Reiss, 45, has served on the facul¬ties of Washington University school ofmedicine and Chicago medical school pre¬viously. Reiss is also former director of theJohnson Institute of Rehabilitation at Wash¬ington University, consultant to the Nation¬al Institute of Healh, and author of over 58articles.David TravisSTINEWAYS: Will this store become a “high-class" Chinese restaurant? The University Realty Company has metwith opposition from the Hyde Park-Ken¬wood Community Conference in its attemptto change the zoning ordinance of 57th St.from Kimbark to Kenwood Avenues. Such azoning change would allow a large restau¬rant to move into the building at 57th andKenwood where Stineway’s drugstore usedto be.The realty company, according to Ken¬dall Cady, director, has a “high-class Chi¬nese restaurant” ready to move into thebuilding.Student government (SG) has scheduledtwo picnics for University students, staffand faculty, the first to be held Satur¬day, July 26.SG hopes that the picnic, to be held atArgonne National Laboratories, will beused by many departments within the Uni¬versity in place of their annual summerHill Will Be NextFaculty SecretaryCharles O’Connell, dean of students, hasbeen replaced as secretary of the facultiesby Knox Hill, professor of philosophy, afterserving ten years in that position.O’Connell has been replaced because“the job had become increasingly time-con¬suming,” he said.“I’m glad to be a full-time dean of stu¬dents,” he added.The secretary of the faculties is respon¬sible for seeing that minutes of all the rul¬ing bodies of the University (i.e., the coun¬cil, the committee of the council, the col¬lege council, the college governing com¬mittees, the division governing committees,etc.) are taken and sent to the members ofthat body. He also supervises all electionsto faculty bodies.Hill, a faculty member since 1939, is analumnus of the University. In 1953 he wasawarded the Quantrell Award for ex¬cellence in undergraduate teaching. He isthe author of “Interpreting Literature” aswell as numerous articles in scholarly jour¬nals. He has also served as College andUniversity examiner from 1956 to 1960. outing. There will be a charge of $1.25 perperson, with hot dogs, hamburgers, softdrinks and watermelon supplied.All students, staff, faculty and their fami¬lies are invited. Buses will leave Ida Noyesparking lot at 11 am and return at about5 pm.The second picnic is tentatively sched¬uled for August 8.During the summer, the executive com¬mittee of SG is acting as the legislativebranch, due to the passage of the summerenabling act. SG is meeting in executivecaucus and will hold an informal meetingfor all interested students and for any rep¬resentatives who may be in Hyde Park July14 in Ida Noyes library.SG is currently working on programs thatwould create a housing file, feed schoolchildren in Woodlawn in co-operation withthe Woodlawn Methodist Church, create anarea coalit on of college student govern¬ments, and oppose appointments of stu¬dents to University committees by anyoneother than SG.Nine resolutions have been passed by thenew student government, either at its lastmeeting on June 3 or by executive caucus.Including among these are:• Support for the principle of a studentactivities fee administered by the commit¬tee on recognized student organizations(CORSO);• Rejection of the process and content ofthe disciplinary action taken after the win¬ter 1969 sit-in;• An effort to seat three students, chosenby the SG assembly to sit on the council ofthe University senate and three to sit on theboard of trustees; • Assigning to the pres:dent of SG thepower to appoint, with the consent of theassembly, up to four executive assistantswho will sit without vote on the executivecommittee;• Condemning the University for theunnecessary delay in revealing and mak¬ing a decision oh Richard Flack’s requestfor an early tenure decision from thesociology department and the College.MAIN QUADS? No, it'* a be-in at a downtown park.July 10, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3EDITORIALSLevi and his V.P.sPresident Levi has appointed a new vice-president to thesomewhat nebulous sounding post of vice-president of planning.Levi now has a battery of six vice-presidents, and the newest postsounds like it should encompass just about anything the first fivemissed.We are pleased to see that Levi’s appointments have tendedto combine men with extensive experience in academics, such asJohn Wilson, vice-president and dean of faculties, with the famousLevi tradition of attracting new people, such as Walter Walker,the most recent appointment. The present administration is alsofortunate in its variety of backgrounds — academics, government,journalism. The plurality of viewpoints helps in avoiding a narrowapproach to the academic, social, and moral problems the Univer¬sity faces.The appointment of a vice-president of planning could opena new stage in University-community relations. As yet, the job isnot clearly defined; we hope that it can be developed to encompassa clearer and more openly stated policy concerning the Universityand its neighbors. Up till now, community groups approaching theUniversity have had to deal with several offices, none of which hadcomplete information on all aspects of the University’s involve¬ment with the community. Hopefully, this appointment willimprove the situation.57th StreetFifty-seventh Street isn’t a nice place to visit and we wouldn’tlike to live there. The problems of the area are obvious to theresidents, to the University, and to visitors approaching from the east. !At present, the only interests adequately represented on 57thStreet between University Avenue and the lake are the laundro¬mats, dry cleaners, and empty lots. What should be an inviting and■ interesting stretch for the many pedestrians approaching the Uni¬versity is a barren and depressing walk.Recent events indicate that a new pattern for the area may beemerging soon. There is now a large vacant building owned bythe University at 57th and Kenwood. There are already so manyempty lojts in the area that it seems a bit impossible that the Uni¬versity is going to let yet another spot go untenanted. UniversityRealty Company is currently engaged in an attempt to change thezoning ordinance of the area to permit an expensive Chinese res¬taurant to move into the area.Some local residents represented by the Hyde Park-KenwoodConference oppose the move, and we think the University shouldlisten to their objections. It should be clear to all the various prop¬erty owners'in the 57th Street area that no general improvementcan take place if the various groups involved do not co-ordinatetheir plans and attempt to evolve a joint program for the area.The idea of putting a large, good restaurant in the 57th-Ken-wood block could work very well into a general plan for the area.Without such a plan, no one change is going to effect any greatimprovement in the area. Residents are currently trying to formu¬late such a plan. Many of these residents are people with an interestin the University. We hope that the University takes an officialinterest in the groups of residents, too, and joins with residents andlocal property owners in their attempt to improve the street.The street has problems unique to this community. A largenumber of residents are transient students, and their interests andwishes for the street are often in conflict with permanent residentswho want a quiet, stable neighborhood. The University is plaguedby a lack of all types of eating places, and has few attractive,nearby shopping spots. The interests of all these groups conflict,sometimes irreconcilably. But just as it is clear that each groupis going to have to make concessions in any general plan, it isalso clear that if they don’t get together to form a compromiseprogram, 57th Street is going to continue to develop in a mannerhighly unsatisfactory to all involved.4/Th* Chicago Maroon/July 10, 1969 ABOUT THE MIDWAYCarillonneursRobert Londine, organist, choirmasterand carillonneur at St. Chrysostom’sChurch, 1424 N. Dearborn, has been ap¬pointed visiting carillonneur at RockefellerMemorial Chapel, succeeding Daniel Rob¬bins who is leaving his position, havingserved as carillonneur since 1960.Bernard Brown, assistant dean of thechapel, will become permanent carillonneurin the fall. Recitals will be given over thesummer by both Londine and Brown. Checkthe bulletin of events for details.Robbins' final performance was the‘ gala event” during the final weekend ofthe festival of the arts (FOTA) in May. Theperformance was highlighted bv fireworksexploding over Rockefeller accompanyingHandel’s Music for the Royal Fireworksplayed on the carillon and Moogsynthesizer.Bergman ShowA summer sculpture show is being held inBergman Gallery, fourth floor Cobb Hallthrough August 2.The show, a multi-media art exhibitionemphasizing fantasy and organic forms, isopen to the public free of charge.All the pieces in the show are by Chicagoartists, familiar with each others’ work.Sculpture dominates the show, rangingfrom three large birds in plexiglass boxesby Nancy Schulson to a Russian dancer byPaul Zakoian.Jim Zanzi, Don Goldberg, Roderigo Cal-Iejas, Jim Falconer, Cosmo Campoli, Ka¬ren Stern and Jerry Noe have also contrib¬uted to the exhibit.La RabidaDr. Raymond Peterson, professor of pe¬diatrics, has been appointed director of LaRabida Institution, one of the world’s fore¬most children’s hospitals.Peterson, 38, has served as director ofresearch at La Rabida since 1967.He succeeds Albert Dorfman, Crane dis¬tinguished professor of pediatrics andchairman of the pediatrics deapartment,who will continue to be associated with some of the research projects at La Ra¬bida.La Rabida was founded in 1896 in a build¬ing erected on the lakefront in JacksonPark by the Spanish government as part ofChicago’s Columbian Exposition. Designedas a rep’ica of the monastery where Colum¬bus stayed before sailing to the new world,La Rabida was donated to the city “for thecare of infants . . . who would benefit fromfresh air.”It has since developed into an inter¬nationally known child-en’s hospital de¬voted to long-time illnesses and a majorresearch center. It became affiliated withthe University in 1957 and all members ofits medical staff are on the University fac¬ulty.Famed for several decades for its pio¬neering work in the treatment, control andpreventation of rheumatic fever and rheu¬matic heart disease. La Rabida’s servicestoday encompass a greater variety of long¬term chi'dhood illnesses including neph¬rosis. nephritis, asthma, ulcerative colitis,and immunological deficiency states.Peterson completed his undergraduateand graduate studies at the University ofMinnesota. During 1965-66 he was visitinginvestigator at the University of Uppsala.Sweden under a Guggenheim Fellowship.Space FormaldehydeThe presence of formaldehyde in inter¬stellar space has been confirmed by Pat¬rick Palmer, assistant professor of astrono¬my and astrophysics working with threeother colleagues.Formaldehyde, believed to be the missingchemical link in the chain of gases neces¬sary for the evolution of life, is located indense, dusty clouds, according to an articlethe group published in the current issue ofAstrophysical Journal.Benjamin Zuckerman, University ofMaryland, and Lewis Snyder and DavidBuhl of the National Radio Astronomy Ob¬servatory (NARO), along with Palmermade their discovery while working withthe 140 foot NARO radio telescope in Green-bank. West Virginia.BULLETIN OF EVENTSThursday, July 10 Monday, July 14CARILLON SUMMER SERIES: Robert Lodine, VisitingCarillonneur, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 7:30 pm.THEATER: Richard III, presented by Court Theater,Hutch Court, 8:30 pm. MEETING: Informal SG meeting, open to everyone. IdaNoyes Library, 8 pm.SEMINAR: Transplantation Seminar, La Rabida In¬stitute, 5-6 pm.Friday, July 11 Wednesday, July 16FILM: A Double Life, Quantrell Auditorium, 8 pm, docfilms.THEATER: Richard III, Hutch Court, 8:30 pm. LECTURE: "Foreign Acquisitions of American ResearchLibraries", Philip McNiff, director, Boston public li¬braries, Quantrell Aud, 8 pm.Saturday, July 12 Thursday, July 17THEATER: Richard III, Hutch Court, 8:30 pm.Sunday, July 13 CARILLON SUMMER SERIES: Robert Lodine, Rock¬efeller Chapel, 7:30 pm.THEATER: Richard III, Hutch Court, 8:30 pm.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERIES: Rev. E. SpencerParsons, dean of the chapel, Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 11 am. Friday, July 18ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Hillel House, 7:30 pmTHEATER: Richard III, Hutch Court, 8:30 pm. FILM: Big Clock, Quantrell Aud, 8 pm, doc films.THEATER: Richard III, Hutch Court, 8:30 pmSaturday, July 19THEATER: Richard III, Hutch Court, 8:30 pm.Sunday, July 20Editor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: David Travis UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Rev. E. SpencerParsons. Rockefeller Chapel, 11 amISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Hillel House, 7:30 pm.THEATER: Richard III, Hutch Court, 8:30 pm.Monday, July 21News Staff: Frieda Murray, Sylvia PiechockaPhotography: Edward Futch, David Rosenbush SEMINAR: Transplantation Seminar, La Rabida In¬stitute, 5-6 pm.Tuesday, July 22RECITAL: Edward Mondello, University organist, Rock¬efeller Chapel, 8:30 pmWednesday, July 23LECTURE: "Education for Librarianship", Lester Ash-eim, director, office of education, American LibraryAssociation, Wuantrell Aud, 8 pmThursday, July 24LECTURE: "Self-Learning Computer Programs for CellIdentification", Dr. Peter Bartell, Research associate,Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Dora DeLee Hall, Chicago Lying-In Hospital, 4 pm.CARILLON SUMMER SERIES: Robert Lodine, Rock¬efeller Chapel, 7:30 pm.til <>o«» 0The Renault 16hidden trunk trick.SEDAN WITH 12.6CU. FT.TRUNK 42 CU. FT. STATION WAGON10, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5 r-’ yhit VqottvtsMTEL 326-2550THE RENAULT 16 SEDAN-WAGONoC^eslvj imports, <&nc.2235 SO. MICHIGAN AVE.. CHICAGO. ILL. 60616If you’ve ever owned a stationwagon you know there’s no wayto carry anything in one withoutletting the whole world know aboutit. Including the underworld.ButtheRenault 16Sedan-Wagontook care of that with one neat trick.A hidden trunk.When it’s a sedan, it’s got a hid¬den trunk behind the back seat bigenough to carry about 9 suitcases.In secret. (When it’s a stationwagon it’s got up to 42 cubic feetof hauling space.)And it takes care of a few other would-be problems. Like fuel con¬sumption: 28 miles to the gallon.Comfort: Stirling Moss, in the Brit¬ish publication QUEEN Magazine,said: “ I can’t recall a car in which theseats afford such an astonishingdegree of luxury. Correction. TheMercedes-Benz 600 does —but itwill cost you 10 times as much as thisone.” ($25,785.) And your budget:Only $2445 P.O.E.mmtWalker: 'University is in the Community'ontinued from Page Oneive to faculty — and keeping its hands off4her community affairs. The other ex-reme would have the University involvedn every phase of the society of its commu-uty, taking on responsibilities for educa-ion and housing of all its neighbors. Hownuch do you think this University shouldnd has to be involved in the community?<Yrst of all, the University is in the commu-lity. It’s a body; it has an ecological rela-ionship to the community. For instance, Iion’t have any idea of what our total pay-*oll is, but that certainly has impact. Thefact that when we bring students here theynave to live somewhere has an impact onche community. I think there’s no choice;we are involved, we have to live some¬where. The question is, does a universityappropriately attempt to influence the di-■ection of a community, give it direction?Who sets that direction? I think that a Uni¬versity really has no right to manipulate a-•ommunity, just for its own convenience.You were an undergraduate here in theearly ’5Q’s, a period when the Universityarea was in great trouble. What are thechanges you see in the area for better orworse, and how instrumental do you thinkthe University has been in effecting thosechanges?I can tell you how it was when I came here.My entering class had something like 350people. I can remember people were afraidto walk down many streets. I, as a blackperson, was subjected to constant harass¬ment by police officers because the crimeproblem was very nasty. I can rememberseeing a guy mugged right at the entranceof B-J and no one moved to help him. Thiswas a terribly different kind of institution.When I came back — I was gone aroundten years before I even came back to lookat the place — I was surprized to see it stillhere and growing. Faculty had been leav¬ing; it had been a very depressing kind ofplace. You come back, and you see it grow¬ing. The University was at a very lowpoint. Fifty-fifth Street, as I remember it,was filled with bars and they weren’t “stu¬dent bars.’’ These were bars like you usedto find on West Madison. The eastern endwas essentially skid row. The housing wasiffy kind of housing, and it was going down,and it was segregated; the community wasessentially segregated. There were restau¬rants that I couldnH eat at. It was a prettytough place. And it’s not that way now.This community, Hyde Park — and Ken¬wood to a certain extent — is probably theonly community in the city where whitesand blacks live in any proximity to one an¬ about this, but what I want to do is spend igood part of next year building a case foiit. I think that this University has to develop a vehicle for conveying funds to community groups who want to do things that theUnited Fund wouldn’t pay for. There’s aplethora of social agencies that are starting, and there are community services thalare going on in Hyde Park and Woodlawrand they aren’t adequately funded. So whalI’m thinking about is a plan similar to thefederal government which runs a funcdrive among its employees and gives a certain percentage of the funds to the community fund, to the United Fund downtown, acertain part of it to all the health drivesand then they reserve a kind of pot to bereserved for interesting proposals that aremade by groups. I would think that whatwith this faculty, and with a fairly affluentstudent body, we could contribute something so that our money would not have togo downtown and then be filtered back tcour agencies; it could be allocated herecentrally by a board of students, facultvmembers and employees. I think it’s important that the University begins to usethe money which it voluntarily contributesfor community purposes.other. Now that says nothing about econom¬ic levels; obviously, it costs a lot to live inHyde Park. But you look around at the restof the city, and you see white ghettoes andyou see black ghettoes. I’ve lived in severalother cities, and I’d say Chicago is prob¬ably the most segregated city in the coun¬try. I think the University had some posi¬tive impact in changing that in Hyde Park.There are still some areas in Hyde Parkthat need work. For instance, are thereplans underway for work on the 57th St.area?We’re giving that area a lot of con¬sideration. We talk about it almost con¬stantly. There are a lot of problems there.First of all, the University owns some prop¬erty but in a zoning fight, for instance, indi¬vidual property owners have as much tosay as the University. We asked for a zon¬ing variance to bring a restaurant intoStineways and the Hyde Park-KenwoodConference fought it. One of the things thatconstitutes the problem is that what is in¬teresting neighborhood for students andfaculty members walking through is notnecessarily what is an interesting neighbor¬hood for someone who lives there.You have been serving this year as chair¬man of a University committee to in¬vestigate a child care center. What stage isthat committee in?I will continue as the committee chairman.We are presently preparing a survey for allemployees for their interest in a day-carecenter. We also will probably survey stu¬dents at fall registration. What we’re goingto have at the end of the summer is a fairlycomprehensive view of day care. Then it’sa question of whether or not day care is feasible for this institution. We will make arecommendation.Do you have any pet projects, and particu¬lar programs that you hope to launch inyour new position?Yes. I have one. I haven't told anyoneNow 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 RE 1-3800We specialize in European delivery — call us6/The Chicago Maroon/July 10, 1969IF 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 YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school scheduleDAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or schoolApply Now for Summer WorkSave on our vacationfilm plan.Free Camera CheckupMODEL CAMERA1342E.55rtiHY3-f2S»Student DiscountDependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW's encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanics havejoined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease A oil change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393hr THERANDTHEHPANYSCOfTMCKENZIEMAMASANNEDHEATHU6HMASEKELAJEFFENAIRPLANEWITHGRACESLICKERICBURDONANDTHEANIMALSTHEWHOCOUNTRYJOEANDTHEFISHOTISREDDINGJIMIHENORIXRAVISHANKARUf II 9 1 wINGCOPASCANN"A CMtinpwary Musicfile... Captures tktpop Musical willingnessta hurl yoursolt intothings without all theaction stoppingself consciousness ifan earlier (intratiM "—Renat* Adler,New York Timet"Teah, the camaramilt lava ta tktMonterey Ftp Festival... a beautiful, well-done. OK fantastic film,doing what a film should and rarelytoes de. by taking i real-life eventand creating a living firm, anotherreality... I’ve just seen a film that’sworth seeing. 72 minutas if what musiccan do and what a filmmakar withsome heart can de.”-LIU EIImu, tut VilUf* Other"What is ytur mind blowing level?A guitar being raped at a pep festival?Something more substantial, like RaviShankar tearing loose with a dazzlingdisplay ef musicianship’ Si muchis packed inti this documentary if the MontereyPep Festival if June, 1967. Plus more, more, mere."—William Wolf, Cue MagazineMONTERFY POPIt O.A. PERNEMKBtFURS AT THE MONTEREY INTEKMATtONAl POP FESTIVALA LEACOCK PEMEMKER RELEASE mCOUWTHREEPENNYCINEMA 2424 N. Lincoln AvenueChicago, Illinois 60614phone: 528-9126 THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSIN COLD LEATHERRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline. For non-Univerity clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perline each additional insertion.Count 30 typewriter spaces forline.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 July 24. Deadline for alladvertising is 4 PM on July 21—the Monday before publication. Wanted: female roommate who likescats. For a large, bright, convenientapt. 324-4626.Own Ig. room, big apt., $45-mo afterAug. 1. 288-6598.FURNISHED ROOMFurnished rm. 493-3328. Some sound adviceStereo components at large savingsat Musicraft Summer Specials. Oncampus: Bob Tabor324-3005 Free deliverySee Rudall swing in Richard III.LOOKCHARTER FLIGHTSHELP WANTED Jet to London, $124 from Phila¬delphia August 21, Sept. 4, 8, 17, or25. 493-3961.FOR SALEDiscounts on Garrard, Dyna, A. R.,Scott & Kenwood at Musicraft. CallCampus rep. Bob Tabor. 324-3005. The new Assistant Business Man¬ager of the Maroon is Joel Pondelik,who will be keeping daytime hoursof sorts in the Maroon Business Of¬fice, 1212 East 59th Street. He willbe the pleasant voice on the wireduring the day, and is in charge offeeding the one and only ChartreuseGoose in captivity.RICHARD III Free at last in black leatherWork it on out at the Bandersnatch.Free music. Live JAZZ CONCERT,Saturday July 12 8 pm till midnight.For Richard III ticket info, call ext.3581.It is striking that the three greatestMiddle English poets were almostexact contemporaries . .. ready tube used.Refuel at the Bandersnatch. TheSnatch is open everyday from noontill ten, loaded with luscious goodies.Yum.THANKSVolunteers needed to cook, etc. atSG picnic. Free Food. Money? Callext. 3274, 1-3 PM.Native speaker of Serbo-Croation:2.50 hr.-min $25. Contract HaroldLucas 324-1499 or X2381.% Cornell DlorUt *# 1645 E. 55th STREET *# CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 *# Phone: FA 4-1651 £ X3330; 684-60;ig tut138 to midn.An ear: male student to trade listen¬ing services weekly for same. 288-8956 'til 10 PM. Hand-Made 5!4" Super - TiesYou know what else we have.INSANITY 51 st near HarperPEOPLE FOR SALEMay we do your typing?363-1104Math tutor for high school senior.Call Mrs. Rodgers, X6285.ROOMMATE WANTEDRoommate wanted for deluxe S.Shore apt. complete with photo darkroom. Not the cheapest. 667-2740eves.Aging male HD'er returning from 2yrs in jungle desires apt with peace¬able older grad students 10-1.Call proxy, x3416.Fern, private room, July-Sept. $55 amonth. Call 493-0911.Two male students need summerRoommate to share large apt. pri¬vate room — $53-mo. or best offer624-1282 N 07-4700 x 8307ICARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998 <a Has what you need from a $10Yused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants *Mill returns at a fraction of the 6^original cost. <^Decoration Colors and Qualities. *▼Additional 10% Discount with this *|Ad. II FREE^DELIVERY | 1967 Suzuki 120cc. 900 mi. Like new.$225. 643-0742.TEACHERS WANTEDTeachers wanted: Entire WestSouthwest, and Alaska. Free Regis¬tration. Southwest Teachers Agency,1303 Central Ave. NE, Albuquerque,N.M. 87106.APARTMENTS FOR RENTEfficiency apartment ready now.New furniture, 5th floor, near U ofC, call Dan Brown at Ml 3-0800x2485, leave name and phone no.2 bedroom co-op townhouse (withstove, refrig & basement) in ParkForest. $110 a month. AvailableSept. 1 but can move furniture inbefore then. Phone after 7 PM —747-5298.Co-op, 4 rooms (2-bedrooms) Mer-riom Square — 72 & Clyde. Pr: 4000—- assmt. 125 per mo.Mr. Scherer DO-3-6672SILVERWOOD, Inc.So. Shore delux 6rm plus den plussun-rm 2ba 1st fl $184 Sept 1, 76th-Kingston RE-1-7261NEAR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO3-5 room apartments, all with tile-baths & showers. Ideal for students,interns, nurses, young couples NOCHILDREN.RENTAL $85-$105 call RE 4-4141.6 rms-3bdrms plus den 2 bthrmsprefer family Will take 3 studentssome furniture available. So. Shorecall 6-8pm 721-5302.PERSONALSNAME GAME WINNERDavis Travis won $25 for suggesting“Megaphone" .. . Roger Black ishappy. Richard III July 10, 11, 12, 13, 17,18, 19, 20.Hutch Court, 8:30 curtain.RARE BIRD IN IDA NOYESI, Emmet Gonder, being of unsoundmind....Blackfriars needs you — script, mu¬sic, lyrics. Call Annette Jaffe 643-2577There will be TISHA B'AV servicesWed. evening July 23, at HillelHouse. Reading of ichah, discussionand singing.Jazz Concert! Live! All night tillmidnight. At the Bandersnatch Club.Free admission. Do you have achoice? Sat. July 12.It purges extremes of conduct andbrings the viewer comfortably backto a norm, it restores the statusquo. Richard IIICLASSIFIED BUYERSYou must get your purple prose,bodies wanted, cars for sale, housesfor sale, apartments for rent, andother gibberish in and paid for by 4PM, Monday, July 21.Last two weekends to see Court The¬ater's Richard IIIIsraeli dancing meets Sundays at7:30, Hillel backyard.“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”Pickup & Delivery ServiceSince 1926 493-5200BELL SHELL SERVICE 5200 LAKE PARK The Carpet BarnA division of Cortland CarpetWe 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. Kinzie (at Racine)HU 4-1140 243-2271 Harken the NewArrival!! Whitherthe Kenmore??Gulliver goes for...Eleanor & Robbie'sChoice Puppy BiscuitOrder Today! Don't Delay!19 Rynda RdMaplewoodA bicycle puts you closeto nature - Thus spakeZarathustraTurin in, Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for Carlton,Raleigh, Robin Hood, Falcon.Peugeot, Gitane, Vlercier.Radius and Daws. Factor)trained mechanics. Used bi¬cycles spasmodically.Fly-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8863Free DeliveryM-F 12:00 - 8:30; S&S 10 - 8The carpetbaggers from Old TownWelcome to newcomersTAl-SAM-YIMNRESTAURANTSERVES GOOD CHINESE FOODDAILY 11 A.M. - 9 P.M.SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS OPEN12 NOON - 9 P.M.CLOSED MONDAY1318 EAST 63RD STREET MU 4-1062eye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th st.DO 3-7644 MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd, ST.FAR FAST KITCHENCHINESE - AMERICAN RESTAURANTOpen Sun. - Thurs. 12-10 PMFri & Sat Noon MidnightOrders to take out1654 E. 53rd St. 955-2229 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive (iilt Item- fromThe Orientand \rimnd The W orldI 162 E. 53rd Si,VII 1-6836July 10, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/7V* •• •yvawv.y. •-.y?; >pSunbeam Alpine FastbackThe new sporty runabout from the Chryslerpeople, priced from $2375 (full price)CARS WITH FULLY AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION* NOW IN STOCK!optional at extra cost.Hyde Park Auto I mports MOO S. Cottage GroveAuthorized Sales, Service, & Parts 643-6100ADVERTISERS: You only have untilJuly 21 (Monday) to get your ad in thenext issue.Sssssr7600 SO. STONY ISLAND 731-70008/The Chicago Maroon/July 10, 1969 Held over 7th MonthCINEMAChicago Ave at MichiganACADEMY AWARDAnd We Love Mavericks.....NELSONBANKS FORD% 9 A bittersweet love storythat touches the heart.CLIFF ROBERTSONCLAtRE BLOOM ’"CHARLY". . _ Student rate every\1 KQ day BUT Saturdaywith 1.0 Card^ >1. *.t. j^* SPACE! *ey*Checker TaxiHASI MM l 1)1 AI i 01*1 MNCiSI OKSUMMI R EMPLOYMENTEM ELI I M I .MININGSWORK AM MM BEK DI-DAYS (MR WEEK FROM :to (i DAYSDAYS or NK.IIISWORK I'lDSl ID IIDM1 AIDM ()l 11 N GARAGESLOt A I I 1) I IIROl IjIIOI IUIYM \LI or FEMALE.MINIMI M At;I :iAPPLY«45W WASHINGTONS OU AM to 4 30 PM DAILYS OU AM to I I 1)0 AM SATC ALL 421 I A14You're under 25but you drivelike an expert.Why should youhave to payextra for yourcar insurance?Sentry says you maynot have to. A simplequestionnaire could saveyou up to $50 or more.Call the Sentry manfor fast facts.Jim < rant*238-0*171SENTRY «TINSURANCE MUSICRAFT FOR SOUISD ADVICEOn Audio EquipmentHundreds of UC Students & Faculty Are SatisfiedOwners ofA.R. MCINTOSH JBEDYNACO SONA ALTEC LANSINGKLH TE.AC ELECTROYOICEFISHER RE VOX SHI RESCOTT EMPIRE AkGH ARAlAVkARDON 1)1 AL BOSES ANSI 1 GARRARI) BOZAkSHERWOOD THORENS RECTILINEAR>1 ARANTZ a. d.o. PICKERINGMl SICRAFTGl \R ANTEES THE LOW ENT PRICESPEI S 15 day cash refunds jPLL S 30 day full exchange privilegesPLUS Eree delivery for l of CPEI’S Complete service facilities on the premisesMmiCiaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St.—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St —779-6500SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Ratal forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore Orive EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Piaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372SIMCA1204The New Back - Door Runabout with Front - Wheel Drivefrom the Chrysler People.41 cubic feet of luggage space with the back seat folded.Priced from $1866 (full price).CARS WITH FULLY AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION*NOW IN STOCK! * optiona, at extra cos,Hyde Park Auto Imports 6900 s. cottage Grove,Authorized Sales, Service, & Parts 643-6100Non-Profit Org.U. S. POSTAGEPAIDChicago, IUinoifPermit No. 7931—!••G, frt r4