-f/i/l cklcaqO Marxist, non-signersI I lntYSrvn sPeak f°r freedomVol. 64, Ho. 42 University of Chicago, Tuesday, April 10, 1956UC enthuses newdirector of athleticsby Bob H&J&szWalter Hass, UC’s new athletic director as of July 1, Friday expressed his surprise at thewell built athletic program the depth and range of athletics here.Hass, a well built man in his forties with a crew cut, was athletic director and footballand track coach at Carleton college in North field, Minnesota. He described the athletic pro¬gram at Carleton as being one of large participation with “studies coming first.”Loves football coachingAlthough he does not plan to coach any teams at present, Hass said “there is nothing Iwould love to do more than Major events remaining in Academic freedom week are atalk by two teachers who lost their jobs because of the Broylesact; a discussion on academic freedom by representatives fromdifferent national student groups; and a talk by Marxist his¬torian, Herbert Aptheker. ~r — —— ——alty oath prescribed for all publicemployees, will talk on their casesThursday, April 12, at 8:30 p.m.in Social Sciences 122. RaymondMarks, American Civil Libertiesunion attorney, will appear too.Student Representative party willact as sponsor.Herbert Aptheker, author, lec¬turer, and instructor at the Jef¬ferson school of social sciences inNew York will speak on “Thecommunist historian: his role onthe campus,” at 3:30 p.m. in Ros-enwald 2, Friday, April 13.Hear one sideAptheker’s talk is being spon¬sored by the Academic Freedomweek committee, to help insurethat “unpopular viewpoints getexpression during Academic Free¬dom week. An open question pe¬riod will follow Aptheker’s talk.WUCB has announced a se¬ries of recorded lectures on “Sci¬ence and the common understand¬ing” by* J. Robert Oppenheimeras its contribution to the week.Oppenheimer can be heard at 7:05p.m. on WUCB.Give socialist approachRepresentatives from theYoung Democrats, NAACP, theLabor Youth league, and YoungSocialist league, will discuss ap¬proaches to problems of academicfreedom by their respective or¬ganizations. The panel whichYoung Socialist league is spon¬soring will be in Ida Noyes at 3:30p.m., Thursday, April 12.Hear non-oath signersTwo Chicago teachers, Sara Pi-cus and Albert Soglin, who re¬fused to sign the Broyles act loy-coach football,” although therestoration of football “is upto i he University officials.” He in¬dicated that a class similar to lastyear’s football class would betaught again next fall.Hass said that from conferringwith T. Nelson Melcalf, the UC’sretiring athletic director, he gotthe impression that Chicago’s jun¬ior varsity athletic programv >uld be turned over to the Uni¬versity high lab school. The JVprogram has become a sore spotin recent years due to the factthat the number of early entrantshas diminished, and therefore hasreduced the JV squads to mostly U-high players.‘Interest athletes to come'Hass felt that a school’s beingin an athletic league simplifiesthings by standardizing eligibil¬ity requirements, and inducingnatural rivalries. On the subjectof improving the UC’s athleticsquads, he felt that the Univer¬sity should be able to interestyoungsters in the city of Chicagotowards coming here.Hass emphasized that he wasnot yet well acquainted with hisjob here and would be able tospeak with more authority con¬cerning athletics here once he as¬sumes the job this summer.Rollrace eggsends madly;in puff Confer on students' roleinternational relationsinby John HerzogThe role of national unions of students in international relations was the main topic dis¬cussed at a two and one-half day seminar held here this weekend by the Illinois region ofthe United States National Students association.Attended by 15 delegates from six schools, the seminar was designed to acquaint studentswith the work being done by NS A on the international scene, and to stimulate increased par¬ticipation in international program.It was stressed that an assoby Peter GreeneOver three hundred “persons” attended Chicago’s first an¬nual egg roll last Friday, sponsored by the Commuters asso-< u ion, in Ida Noyes hall. In addition to the traditional egg roll, andthi* other scheduled events, which included an improvised opera andt end of the Six-Day race, those present witnessed an unprecedent¬ed event, a ceremonial raw egg smashing on the Ida Noyes lobbylioor by Walter Jesske, Ida Noyes guard.Tiie opera, guided by Don Levine, and performed extemporaneouslyby a cast of unfortunate partygoers, concerned a prison inmate, incustody of Walter the Warden (Ida Noyes guard), whose sentencev. iv commuted by a judge known as “The Great Commuter,” in obvi¬ous reference to the Commuters association (hence the term).Taking the slot for the Maroon home team in the spring annualf \day classic was A. Schwartz, who came from behind to defeat Vic1 dd of the opposing Eggheads. Early returns showed Schwartz rid¬ing it hard in the free lane seeking to mousetrap Fuld, who thenv as one across at the jump.1 aid, top man in the bottle department, was slated to come hands< >\vn in the belfry, scribes charged, but under pressure was feather-a bit. Just past the pillbox, Mania Yawl, top bird man for theLeviathans, came onto the cross, signed the log book, and ran to theT id, to w ing the pretzel for the Eggheads.It began to look like room service for the Tony, but at this point,•c Invartz, pegged as tab man for the Doughboys, managed to groundit and wont off the deep end to double one down the rug and boundJar a grub. After toying with it for a moment, he snaked hard onthe extra, w'hich hooked just in time to go over the post.For a man who had been spreading them quite a bit, he managedmare motorboats in the butterfly division than this club has seen ina long time. Turning off Fuld, he took the dagger, and singled it downthe lead-in court to even the score, and in the sudden-death extra, hesounded it once, tapped the cane, and rapped it out into the drop forthe greatest Maroon victory in the history of this classic.Cap and Gown tootsI* ifty cents in pennies and nickels and four cash orders for* and Gowns were obtained through the efforts of the‘‘hungry six,” Cap and Gown’s German band.The hand, organized to publicize Cap and Gown’s subscrip-!n£?rii^dtaP?yed, tj1?lriaI' bargain rate on copies of the year-tills last Thursday and Friday ^ through next week,” Bur-‘ v playing in Mandel hall corn- nett stated. The sales managery.or and at various outdoor loca- went on t0 explain that studentstlons on campus. The band played deposit $2 now and the bal-approximately fifteen minutes in ance of 52.50 upon delivery someeach location. time in May.According to Brad Burnett, Cap “This is a saving of ten pera,*d Gown sales manager and cent over the regular purchasespokesman for the “hungry six," price of five dollars,” said Bur-n° coins were thrown the second nett.day of playing, but more orders “Gosh-a-rootie,” replied thewere taken. members of the hungry five plusWe re extending our special one (or six, as the case may be). ciation of students can actwith more freedom in meetingassociations of students from oth¬er countries and discussing inter¬national problems with them thancan the government, because it(the NSA) does not have the re¬sponsibility of committing thecountry to any particular standit might take. Often governmentrepresentatives find it necessaryto refrain from supporting astand which even the majority ofthe people might agree with, sim¬ply because it might commit thecountry to something it could notcarry out. A national union of stu¬dents does not have this restric¬ tion connected to its activities.After reading through volumin¬ous working papers Friday after¬noon, the participants on Satur¬day received additional informa¬tion on the history of the interna¬tional student movement and ofthe various national unions ofstudents, NSA’s relations withWorld University services, andUSNSA international policy. Dis¬cussions were led by Helen JeanRogers, a teaching fellow at Har¬vard, and Brian Buckley andFrank Fisher, both Chicago law¬yers.At the end of Saturday’s ses¬sion each participant was givena case to solve, in which he, as the international affairs vice-pres¬ident of NSA, had to deal with asituation which had arisen involv¬ing one or more foreign unions ofstudents. Sunday’s discussion ofthese solutions, which includedrelating what NSA actually haddone in similar cases, provedquite interesting and instructive.The final session of the sem¬inar was concerned with how’ stu¬dents can stimulate interest ininternational student relations onthe campus.The representatives from theUniversity of Chicago wrere TedDienstfrey, Otto Feinstein, andJohn Herzog.Strauss interprets creation storyby Ed BcrcknutnThe creation story in thefirst chapter of Genesis isneither literally true nor themyth of a particular culture butsimply a non-philosophical state¬ment of how things were created,Leo Strauss told a Hillel-founda-tion audience Wednesday night.The talk by Strauss, UC profes¬sor of political science, was thefirst of four public lectures atHillel, 5715 Woodlawn, the lastthree of which deal with “Aspectsof contemporary Jewish thought.”Strauss interpreted for an audi¬ence of about 100 the meaningsof the various parts of the crea¬ tion story. He emphasized thatthis is a particular kind of crea¬tion, whose two principles areseparateness and motion.God separated the light fromthe darkness, the waters from thewaters; plants and animals werecreated after their kind, that is,separated from the other kinds.Motion originated in the “lights”and then in the “moving creaturethat hath life.”One of the problems for manyreaders is that the sun is createdafter vegetative life. This is so,Strauss stated, because in vege¬tative life there is stability, whichmust precede the sun, which isphoto by BaconMembers of the “hungry five plus one” blow up a storm as theypush sales of the 1956 Cap and Gown. Left to right are Brad Bur¬nett, Jim Valentino, Nick Manaloff, Bill Miller, Lowell Hanson, andJohn Mueller. motion.The so-called “second creationstory,” beginning in Genesis 2,deals with a different problem,that of human life as we see itnow7. It may seem contradictoryto the first, but fundamentally itsprinciples are the same, Straussasserted.Tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. profes¬sor Abraham J. Heschel of theJewish theological seminary ofAmerica will speak on “An ap¬proach to Judaism.” This lectureis in addition to the Charles W.Gilkey lecture that professor Hes¬chel is giving at Breasted hallThursday at 8:15 p.m.The subsequent lectures will be“A religious-cultural approach toJudaism,” by Rabbi Ira Eison-stein of the Anshe Emet syna¬gogue, and “Martin Buber: Theway of dialogue,” by SeymourCain, leeturer, history of religi¬ons, University College, on April18 and April 25, respectively, at8 p.m.Eisenhowersupportersto organizeUniversity of Chicago Stu¬dents for Eisenhower will holdan organizational meeting Wed¬nesday at 4 p.m. in the Eastlounge of Ida Noyes hall.Plans for working for the re-election of President Eisenhowerwill be discussed and officers willbe elected. In addition “I like Ike”buttons will be distributed.The group has obtained a char¬ter from Citizens for Eisenhower.Page 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 10, 1956cWcaao11 laroon Coming events on quadranglesIssued every Tuesday and Friday throughout the school year and intermittentlyduring the summer quarter, on a non-profit basis by the publisher, the ChicagoMaroon, at 1212 East 59ih Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Editorial offices,Midway 3-0800, ext. 1003 and 3266; Business and advertising office, Midway 3-0800,ext. 3265. Subscriptions by mail. $3 per year. Business office hours: 2 p.m. to5 p.m., Monday through Saturday.Co-editors-in-chiefJoy S. Burboch Palmer W. PinneyManaging editor Business managerDiane Pollock Gary MokotoffAdvertising manager Lawrence KesslerExecutive news editor Ronald GrossmanCopy editor Norman LewakNews editors Robert Bergman, Jina.Birmingham, John Herzog, Fred KarstCultural editor Judy PodoreSports editor Robert HalaszNews feature editor Sue TaxProduction manager Robert QuinnPhoto editor John BystrynCalendar editor Earl HerrickStaff: Ed Berckman, William Brandon, Jack Burbach, Joyce Ellin, Saralee Feld¬man, Jean Kwon, Oliver Lee, Quentin Ludgin, Robert MacDonald, Richard Ward,Marina Wirzup, Adrienne Kinkaid, Miriam Garfin, Edward Wise, Gerson Green¬berg, Art Taitel, David Zack.Letters'News suppressed' Re LandersThe Maroon has done it again. Onpage one of the April 6 edition I finda boldface headline declaring “500 sig¬natures claimed by anti-SG leadersfollowed by 13 column inches of arti¬cle. Likewise, Ann Landers absorbs16 page one column inches. Buried onpage five is an article headed “Electionlaw changes voted by SG” followed by11 Inches of copy. We are gratified tolearn that the election law bill is "awatered down version of a bill presentedlast year by Joy Burbach (formerlyISL-soc)” to which I would add (nowMaroon editor). Completely buried inthe article is 3','2 inches about a reportof the student needs committee of SGconcerning methods of obtaining cheap¬er books for students; completely omit¬ted is any comprehensive considerationof his constructive proposals to try toachieve same. The Maroon assertionthat "the reported indicated that astudent book co-op was impractical” isa complete misrepresentation (see textof report attached to the April SGNewsletter ) •It is not my intention to here reportthe facts of the student needs commit¬tee report on books. This is a job whichproperly belongs to the Maroon as apublication supposedly devoted to serv¬ice of the student community. I main¬tain that the Maroon has done the stu¬dents a positive dissservice in suppres¬sing news of the committee's reporton obtaining cheaper books—an itemof great interest to every student whoowns a wallet.I would suggest that all members ofthe Maroon staff who cannot bringthemselves to report Important news,and In a fashion coresponding to theimportance of the item, do not belongon the staff of the University news¬paper. If, by some chance, these per¬sons wish to mend some of the dam¬age they have ben Wreaking all thisacademic year, a beginning could bemade by presenting a prominent, fac¬tual account of the student needs re¬port and its implications.Louis JonesSRP-college With reference to the Ann Lan¬ders affair, which has been calledthe event of the year, I think men¬tion should be made that this wassponsored by Vincent house.Credit should also be given DavidFreifelder, who successfully ar¬ranged the evening.Edmund Becker Tuesday, April 10Intervarsity Christian fellowship, lunch¬eon, “The Christian counsellor, chap¬lain Granger Westberg,” 12:30 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Varsity tennis match, UC vs. GreatLakes naval training station, 1:30p.m.. Varsity courts.University theatre workshop, 3:30 p.m.,Reynolds club theatre.Metals institute colloquium, “Ultra¬sonics, phonons, and superconductiv¬ity.” visiting professor A. B. Pippard.4:15 p.m., Research Institutes 211.WUCB broadcast, “Science and thecommon understanding,” (1953 Relthlectures) by J. Robert Oppenhelmer,7:05 p.m.. also Wednesday, Thursday,Friday same time.Docfilm: Strange Deception (Italian,1950), 7:15 and 9:15 p.m., Social Sci¬ences 122, 40 cents.MAROON special staff meeting to planfor special student activities project,7:30 p.m., 5537 Woodlawn.Jazz club, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes,Blackfriars, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Madrigal singers rehearsal, 8 p.m., IdaNoyes.FTS wives, “New Testament as awhole,” by Assoc. Prof. Robert M.Grant, 8 p.m., 5757 Woodlawn.Young socialist league lecture, 8 p.m.,Ida Noyes.Wednesday, April 11Lecture, “An approach to Judaism,” byprof. Abraham J. Heschel, Jewishtheological seminary of America, 3:30p.m., Hlllel, 5715 Woodlawn.Pre-med club movie. Journey IntoMedicine, 4 p m.. Abbott 133.Students for Eisenhower organizationalmeeting, 4 p.m., Ida Noyes.Walgreen lecture, “Labor — work — ac¬tion,” by Hannah Arendt, politicalscientist and author, 4:30 p.m., SocialSciences 122.Lecture, “The danger of a religious re¬vival,” by William Lee Miller, writer.The Reporter, sponsored by PorterFoundation, 4:30 p.m.. Breasted hall.Zoology club, “Studies on pathologicalchanges in mouse liver,” prof. J. Wal¬ter Wilson, Brown U., 4:30 p.m., Zo¬ology 14.Modern dance club technique class,7:30 p m., and choreography, 8.30 p.mIda Noyes.Apollo club, 7:45 p.m., Ida Noyes.Country dancers, 8 p.m., Ida Noyes,wear tennis shoes.WUCB broadcasts, “Jazz for the con¬noisseur." 7-8:05 p.m., and J: S. BachBrandenberg concert!, 5 and 6, at 9p.m.Nick Bova — Florist5239 Harper Are.Ml 3-4226Student DiscountDelivery Service* Imagine/MOVING DAY andnothing to Jof*it's all PRE-PLANNEDOur experts "blueprint” every de¬tail in advance—take all the workand v/orry off your hands. Andwe move you in a ©SanitizedVan! No extra cost,PETERSONMOVING & STORAGE CO.55th & Ellis AvenueBUtterf.ed 8-6711SERVING U. nCANADAALASKAHAWAII ANDPUERTO RICO I It’s a pleasure to get to know Old Spice After ShaveLotion. Each time you shave you can look forward to some¬thing special: the Oi.d Spice scent — brisk, crisp, fresh asall outdoors*... the tang of that vigorous astringent — ban¬ishes shave-soap film, heals tiny razor nicks. Splash onOld Spice — and start the day^refreshed!,Add Spice to Your Life .-n Old Spice For MenSHULTON New York • Toronto Thursday, April 12Varsity tennis match, UC vs. WilsonJC, 1:30 p.m., Varsity courts.Psychology club and ophthamology de¬partment, “Eye movements in relationto visual perception,” prof. R. W.Ditchbuon, U. of Reading, England,3:30 p.m., Swift 106.Statistics seminar, “Duration and oeext-pation time limit theorems,” assoc,prof. D. A. Darling, 4 p.m., Eckhart207.Lecture (Porter Foundation), “Thecauses of a religious revival,” WilliamLee Miller 4:30 p.m.. Breasted hall.Law wives, 7:30 p.m., Ida Noyes.Gilkey lecture, “About our reasons forbelieving in the realness of God,” byprof. Abraham J. Heschel, 8:15 p.m.,p.m.. Breasted hall.TV broadcast, “Modern painting: thenew perception—cubism and develop¬ment,” 9:30 p.m., WTTW, chanupl 11. Friday, April 13Varsity baseball game, UC vs. ChicacoTeachers, 3:30 p.m., Stagg field ^Sociology seminar, “An overview of th*research needs in the social welf trafields, 3:30 p.m.. Social Sciences 12?Walgreen lecture, “The traditional hierarchy in the Vita Activa,” by MissArendt. 4:30 p.m., Social Sciences 122Lecture (Porter Foundation), “The nos-sibillties of a religious revival ” i>¥Wm. Lee Miller. 4:30 p.m. Breasted hallMathematical biology, “Studies on relifine structure during protein svnthf-sis,” assoc, prof. Hewsori H. Swift4:30 p.m., 5741 Drexel. *Dor film: L'Atlante (French film) 7 15and 9:15 p.m., Social Sciences 122admission by series ticket only ’Italian club meeting, 7:30 p‘m IdaNoyes hall.University concert, Anla Dorfmann pi¬anist, playing Mozart, BeethovenSchumann. Ravel, Choplln, 8:30 pm’Mandel hall, admission $1 50, studenttickets $1 at Music department.On Campus withMax ShuJman(Author of ‘ Barefoot Boy With Cheek,” etc.)THE MANY LOVESOF THORWALD DOCKSTADERWhen Thorwald Dockstader—sophomore, epicure, and sports¬man-first took up smoking, he did not simply choose the firstbrand of cigarettes that came to hand. No, indeed! He did whatany sophomore, epicure, and sportsman would do: he sampledseveral brands and then picked the gentlest, tastiest, mostthumpingly, wondrously, unfailingly pleasing of all — PhilipMorris, of corris!Similarly, when Thorwald Dockstader took up girls, he didnot simply select the first one who came along. No, indeed!Thorwald sampled. He took out several likely girls and then hecompared their charms and then he made his choice.His first date was with an English lit major named ElizabethBarrett Grish, a wisp of a girl with luminous eyes and a soulthat shimmered with a pale, unearthly beauty. Trippingly,trippingly, she walked with Thorwald upon the beach and satwith him behind a windward dune and listened to a sea shelland sighed sweetly and took out a little gold pencil and a littlemorocco notebook and wrote a little poem:I will lie upon the shore,1 will be a dreamer.1 will feel the sea once morePounding on my femur.Thorwald’s second date was with a physical ed major namedPeaches Glendower, a broth of a girl with a ready smile and asize 18 neck. She took Thorwald down to the cinder track wherethey jogged around thirty or forty times to open up the pores.v*, m mu wnr—T"' r,"11• .jfieyjoobedaround SO or/fOiitve$ to open up the yOfcyThen they played four games of squash, six sets of tennis, 36holes of golf, nine innings of one-o-cat, four periods of rugger,six chukkers of lacrosse, and a mile and a quarter of leap frog.Then they worked out for a few hours on the parallel bars, theflying rings, and the bongo board, and then went ten roundswith the eight-ounce gloves. Then they had heaping bowls ofbran and whey, exchanged a manly handshake, and went hometo their respective whirlpool baths.Thorwald’s final date was with a golden-haired, creamy-browed,green-eyed, red-lipped, full-calved girl named Totsi McEstway.Totsi was not majoring in anything. As she often said, “Geewhillikers, what’s college for anyhow - to fill your head full ofmorbid old facts, or to discover the shining essence that isYOU?”Totsi started the evening with Thorwald at a luxurious res¬taurant where she consumed her own weight in Cornish rockhen. From there they went to a de luxe movie palace where Totsihad popcorn with butter and a bag of chocolate covered raisins— also with butter. Then they went to a costly ballroom andcha-chu’d till dawn, tipping the band wildly all the while. Thenthey went to a Chinese restaurant where Totsi, unable to deci¬pher the large and baffling menu, solved her problem by order¬ing one of everything. Then Thorwald took her to the women’sdorm, boosted her in the window, and went downtown to waitfor the Morris^ Plan office to open.While waiting, Thorwald thought over all of his girls andcame to a decision. “It is clear,” said Thorwald, “that 1 am notyet ready for girls.” “It is equally clear,” he continued, “thata man needs a gentle companion, and who,” he asked, “will bemy gentle companion?” “Why, PHILIP MORRIS, of corris,”he answered. “Philip Morris will be my tender comrade, mysolace and my strength, my friend in adversity, my shelter invicissitude, my boon and bosom buddy,” and, so saying, Thor¬wald lit a PHILIP MORRIS and was content. ©Mu Shulinan, 1966The makers of Philip Morris, who bring you this column everyweek, hope that Thorwald will soon find the girl of his dreams, andthat they will make beautiful smoke rings together—with Philip Morris,of corris!THE CHICAGO MAROON Rage 9April 10/ 1956CLASSIFIEDS AF week eventsStudent rote 5c per word.' Others 10c per word. Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265Wanted For Rent< hiid sitter. Student to sit with 5-year-,,,ri child from 1-3 o’clock, Mon.-Frl.pO 3-8167. l'/^-Room kitchenette apartment. New¬ly decorated. Refrigerator. Close to cam¬pus. FA 4-5538. 6107 Dorchester.Four room neatly furnished apartmentnear campus and ICRR. Phone Green¬field. BU 8-9424.Minted* Five or six room furnishedapartment to be leased by tour male,, n craduate students from Octoberl 1956. through May 31, 1957. If youinow somebody vacating such an apart¬ment or someone who would like toJniblease one, please contact: LarryKessler, 1005 E. 60th St., phone MI3-ti000. To sublet 3>/2 room furnished apartment(with bedroom and private bath) Inwell kept building. Well decorated; fullsize refrigerator. 57th and Dorchester.NO 7-6786 or MI 3-0800 ext. 3266.Faculty apartment to share for summerwith another woman. Contact SaniaHamady, International house, 8-9 p.m.,week nights. Must know soon.For Salei ivine room, bedroom, dining room fur¬niture. electric ironer, housewares of allkinds. MU 4-8586. Wanted: Female student to share 3',i-room apartment. Call MI 3-1188, late• evenings.Services PersonalMathematics. Instruction and applica¬tions lor Individual or group. Loop orSouth Side. Special arrangements forcroup formed by yourself. Soglin & As¬sociates. 28 East Jackson, WE 9-2127. Attention Maroon staff: Plans will bemade tonight for the Maroon project onactivities, 5537 Woodlawn, 7:30.FoundFrench tutoring, coaching and trans¬lations. Native teacher. Reasonable. NO7-2722. Slide-rule near or In Eckhart. Call MU4-6203 evenings.The American Youth Hostels andthe Folk Lore Society of the University of Chicago present-Jean Ritchieaccompanying herself on the dulcimerin a program of folk songs and balladsof her Kentucky mountain homeMandel Hall, 57th St. and UniversitySaturday evening, April 14, 8:30 P.M..Reserved Scats $1.50 General Admission $1.00Tickets on sale at AYH Office, 451 S. tVabash andReynolds Club Student Service Center, U. of C. Tuesday, April 10“Student organization: problems andimplications”: a lecture by DonaldMeiklejohn, professor of social sciences.Green Hall, 6:30 p.m., refreshmentsserved.“The army loyalty program and aca¬demic freedom,” will be the topic ofFrancis Heisler, attorney for AmericanCivil Liberties Union at 8 p.m. in IdaNoyes Hall. Sponsored by Social YouthLeague. „J. Robert Oppenhelmer on WUCB,“Science and the Common Understand¬ing” series, 7:05 p.m.Wednesday, April 11 *J. Robert Oppenhelmer on WUCB.“Science and Common Understanding”series, 7:05 p.m.Thursday, April 12A discussion on academic freedom byrepresentatives of the Young Demo¬crats, NAACP, Labor Youth League, andSodial Youth League at 3:30 p.m. in IdaNoyes Hall.J. Robert Oppenhelmer on WUCB:“Science and Common Understanding”series, 7:05 p.m.Edward R. Murrow’s filmed interviewof J. Robert Oppenhelmer will be shownin Burton-Judson, 7:30 and 9:30. Spon¬sored by Independent Students League.“The Broyles bills: their constitu¬tionality and morality,” a panel withAlbert Soglin and Sara Picus, teacherswho were fired under the act, and Ray¬mond Marks, ACLU attorney, at 8:30p.m.fl in Social Science 122. Sponsoredby Student Representative Party.Friday, April 13“The Communist historian: his roleon the campus,” will be discussed. Her¬bert Aptheker. Marxist author and lec¬turer, at 3:30 p.m., in Rosenwald 2.Sponsored by Academic Freedom Weekcommittee.“The purposes of freedom” will be the topic of Malcolm Sharp, professor oflaw, at Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn,8:30 p.m.J. Robert Oppenhelmer "on WUCB:“Science and the Common Understand¬ing” series, at 7:05 p.m.Burton-Judson will shown a film onConstitutional history with their regu¬lar film program. Concert date wrongThe Ania Dorfmann concertwill be in Mandel hall at 8:30p.m. on Friday, April 13, notApril 6, as was erroneouslyannounced in the Maroon. •Festival of the Arts-Announce ballet, contestsRuth Page and the Chicago Op¬era Ballet will perform the newballet “Susanna and the Barber,”based on Rossini’s opera “TheBarber of Seville,” at Mandel hallon Wednesday, April 25, at 8:30p.m. The performance, a benefit^for the Frankfort exchange pro¬gram sponsored by Student Gov¬ernment, is part of the Festivalof the Arts. Tickets, on sale atthe student service center in thebasement of Reynolds club, are$1 for student, $1.50 for generaladmission, and $2 for reserved.* * *The Beaux Arts Ball is comingto the UC, and with it two con¬tests: costume and banner.There will be prizes for thebest individual costumes, and forDoc Film presentsStrange Deception(II Cristo Proibito. 1953)Raf Vallone Anna Maria FerreroSet in postwar Italy, Curxio Malaparte's film is a politically contro¬versial study of Italians who fought on both sides.TONIGHT! Admission 40cSocial Science 1227:15 and 9:15 the most cleverly costumed group,such as fraternity houses anddormitories.All organizations wishing tohave banners or shields displayedmust turn them in to Administra¬tion 303. For information contactSteve Oppenheimer in BJ.Kentuckianto singFolk singer Jean Ritchie willgive a program of Kentuckymountain folk songs and ballads,accompanying herself on the dul¬cimer, this Saturday, April 14, inMandel hall at 8:30 p.m. The pro¬gram is presented by the Ameri¬can youth hostels and UC’s Folk¬lore society. Tickets, $1 and $1.50,are on sale at the student servicecenter, and the AYH office, 451S. Wabash.Miss Ritchie, a graduate of theUniversity of Kentucky, comesfrom an old Kentucky family with,a long tradition of folk singing.In 1953, she traveled in the Brit¬ish Isles under a Fulbright grant,tracing the origins of the Englishand Scottish ballads sung in theEastern Kentucky highlands.or ^• * *Grin, and Beat itOnce upon a time, there were three bears. No, notthe Chicago Bears—just plain old everyday bears:Freddie, Eddie and Teddy. (These were hermit-type comes the trio. It looks like Marilyn’s going to playa one-night stand as a bear dinner, when she pullsa swifty and pours cold Budweiser for all hands.Now, Eddie, Freddie and Teddy aren’t polar bears... but they’re cool, dad. They latch onto the Budand send Marilyn on her way.bears whose hut was so far back, they hadn’t evengotten word of golden Budweiser!) One day whilethey were out, a chick named Marilyn comes strut¬ting down the path with some barbecue andBudweiser for Grandma. She spots the bears’ hutand decides to take five ... when hoity-toity, here And before we go on our way... dig this: Budweiser isthe beer to have in your hut. Once you latch onto it, you’llfind nothing quite matches that Budweiser taste.king of beersANHEUSER BUSCH, INC. - ST. LOUIS • NEWARK - LOS ANGELESTHE CHICAGO MAROONTake your libertyin licensed premises55th Gr UniversityMl 3-0524820 April 10, 1956Track club beats varsityDay- Team Opponent Site TimeToday Tennis Great Lakes Varsity courts 1:30Thursday JV track DuSable, Leo Stagg field 4:00Thursday Tennis Wilson JC Varsity courts 1:30F riday Baseball Chgo. Teachers Stagg field 3:30F riday JV Tennis Luther North Varsity courts 3:30UC nine edgedWhile the track runners were making their appointedrounds around the track at Stagg field, the baseball team wasplaying Knox college in Galesburg, .Illinois, under the sameconditions. The Maroons suffered a heartbreaking 4-3 defeatin extra innings.The game was postponed bysnow three times and occasionalgusts of winds over 30 miles perhour gave the players on bothsides quite a time. Wayne Pad-enegro, a recent transfer fromWright junior college, did thepitching for Chicago.At the end of the regulationseven innings, the score was tied1-1, Kurt Karohl having driven inthe Maroons lone run. Chicagopicked up two more runs in thetop of the eighth inning to lead,Netmen win 3-1, but Knox’s left fielder, RalphLundgren, hit a three run homerin the last of the eighth to giveKnox a Hollywood-type victory.The lineup for Chicago in addi¬tion to Padenegro was the follow¬ing: Dave Currie, rf; Gene Crain,ef; Si Hersh, If; Bruce Colby, 3b;Kurt Karohl, ss; John Franken-feld, 2b; George Gray, lb; andAit Antonick, c.An afternoon game was alsoscheduled, but was called off dueto the cold, snow, and wind. TheMaroons will* get another crackat Knox here April 28, in a double-header. outdoors in cold and snowHigh winds, snow flurries, and freezing weather failed to stop the varsiity and ChicagoTrack club from holding the first outdoor track meet of the year for both squads, at Staggfield Saturday. The track club reversed an indoor season defeat at the hands of the var.sity with a 74^4-56victory. The club has gained strength lately while the varsity has lostsome key runners.The mile and two mile runs, both won by Bob Kelly of UCTC, saw the shivering run¬ners wearing gloves, as inter¬mittent snow flurries fell fromthe slate-grey skies. ArneRichards of the track club sport¬ed a wool cap.The middle distances, the 440and 880 yard runs, were won byvarsity men. Bill Gram won theformer race, while in the latter,Tinkie Heyns beat Merle Crouseof the track club.Jim Caffey of the UCTC wonboth the 100 and 220 yard dashes.Trailing him in second place inboth races was Hosea Martin ofthe varsity.The finish of both the 120 yardhigh and 220 yard low hurdleswas identical: Mitch Watkins andDan Trifone of the varsity tookfirst and second, while Dick Park-man of the track club placedthird. Frank Loomos, the Ma¬roons number one hurdler is outindefinitely due to an injury suf¬fered to the arch of his foot whilecompeting in the Daily News relays. Shaderowsky, who won the jave-Floyd Smith of the track club Ibi throw,won the high jump handily, while Topping off the frigid after-Paul Hoffman, also of the track noon was a very close victory byclub, won the broad jump to roll the track club in the mile relay,up the UCTC’s lead. as Art Omohundro just failed toTerry Ellis’ first places in the catch Jim Caffey at the tape,discus and shot put, and Bob Next Saturday, the varsity willKemp’s first in the pole vault for meet Central Michigan on theirthe track club clinched their vie- home grounds. The Maroons pre-tory. The only varsity winner in viously defeated Central Michi-the weight throws was Larry gan during the indoor season.Bill Moyle’s tennis squad gotoff to a fine start Thursday after¬noon on the varsity courts bytrouncing two colleges. NorthCentral college and the IllinoisInstitute of Technology. The Ma¬roon netmen took 11 of their 12matches from their two oppo¬nents.Match cancelledIllinois Tech’s golf team, sched¬uled to meet Chicago’s squad inthe first match for both teamsSaturday, cancelled their matchbecause their golfers were notready yet. The match was sched¬uled at the Maroons home course,Longwood country club.The golfers will meet NorthernIllinois State and St. Ambrose atthe former’s grounds at DeKalb.Satisfy Yourself with a Milder, Better-Tasting smoke-packed for more pleasure by exclusive AccuRayKING SIXi REGULARMILD, YET THEY QatLifa... THE MOST! 9l«x»n * ilmt T«mw» C»To the taste, too . .. Chesterfield packs morepleasure. Firm and pleasing to the lips... mild yetdeeply satisfying to the taste.. .Chesterfield aloneis pleasure-packed by Accu-Ray.,A touch will toll you... an Accu-Ray Chester¬field is more perfectly packed .T. and that meansChesterfield satisfies the most ... . bums moreevenly, smokes much smoother.CHICAGO'S NEWESTAND MOST DISTINCTIVEshop for men608 n. michigan avenuewh itehall 3-2410Books Boughto Any Subjecto Any Languageo Any QuantityClark & ClarkHYde Park 3-03211204 E. 55th St.Sports contests to be held