21 WOMEN CHOSENAS USHERS IN 1931MIRROR PRODUaiONBroadcast Specialties toPublic Tonight onWMAQADD CASTEight Women and FourMen CompleteRevueCharotte Saeniann will lead a startof twenty ushers, selected by the Mir¬ror hoard to meet the Mirror audi¬ences at the Friday and Saturday per¬formances of “What Ho!”Lucille Alger, Jane Klocki, Frances IBlodgett, Artelia Bowne, Helen Eat- Ion, Cora Mae Ellsworth, Sally Gor-rell, Dorothy Lasch, Adelaide Me Lin,Lois Moe. Mhry Maize, Marjorie Ca¬hill. Frances Nelson, Peggy Russell, jEvelyn Stinson, \’irginia Stokes,Frances Lee Tollerton, Cecilia Wolfe, IRosalie Sahath, and Rosalind Rose- jwater are the women chosen to usher jin the 1931 Mirror show. ’Broadcast TonightPreliminary to the opening in Man- jdel hall, however, Mirror is giving its jpublic an idea of what will take placebefore the footlights. Sunday nightJeanette Stein, accompanied by SarahStein and Orvis Henkle, gave a pro¬gram before the International Stu¬dents’ association: and tonight at 6:30eight specialty singers, a chorus ofMirn>r chorines, and the entire castof guest artists will appear before theWMAU microphone to broadcast a jprogram of past and present Mirrorsongs, including the song hits of“What Hp!"Jeanette Stein, Dorothy Dunaway,and Nada White will sing a song sat¬irizing the* Travelling Bazar, the hu¬mor column appearing in The DailyMaroon; and Miss Stein will also singa character song “Fady Lady”, Flor¬ence Fleming and Jackie Smith willlead a full chorus in the featured jazznumber of the revue, “Lion Hunt¬ing”.Men SingPat Magee, I.,awrence Smith, andHenry Sulcer will sing a waltz char¬acter song “When I Was a Romeo”;and all the men guest artists will singthe, "Midway’s Chant”. Four men havebeen added to the cast of Mirror sincethe initial announcement. Hal James,a freshman and member of Phi KappaPsi, appeared in the recent Playfestdrama, “Tables for Ladies”, FritzLeiber junior is the son of the Shake¬spearian actor who presented tenweeks of Shakespeare in Chicago thisseason.Leiber junior was cast for Playfestbut was unable to appear because ofillness. Winfield Lowe is a memberof Phi Gamma Delta, has been fea¬tured in Blackfriar productions andappeared in “All American”; andHenry Sulcer is a Psi Upsilon. a Soph¬omore manager of the Intramural car¬nival, and has done work on produc¬tion phases of Dramatic associationpresentations.New Women Cast.•\dditions have also been made tothe feminine cast. Alice Hamburger,Rose Hoch, Sara Jane Leckrone, KateMason. Rosemary Parsons, Beatrice(Continued on page 3)Episcopal StudentsTo Hear Dr. Bell“The New Alignment in Religion”will be the subject of a talk given byDr. Bernard I. Bell, alumnus of theUniversity and Professor of Religionat Columbia, at a dinner held in hishonor by the .\nderson society tonightat 6:15 in the sunparlor of Ida Noyeshalf. Episcopal students are invitedto hear Dr. Bell tonight by Mifirion*White, president.The second of the Lenten servicesfor Episcopal students will be heldtoday at noon in the Thorndike Hil¬ton chapel. Father W. W. Horstickand Father E, S. White will oflficiateat this celebration of the Holy Eu¬charist. This service will continue tobe held every Wednesday during theLenten period as part of the Andersonclub program for the year. Cap and Gown toGive Free CopiesA free copy of Cap and Gownwill be given away each Thursdayas a feature of the reopening of thesubscription campaign for the 1931annual. Thursdays will be knownas “Cap and Gown days” and sub¬scription desks will be placed inthe corridor of Mandel hall, inCobb hall, Ida Noyes half, theCommerce and Administrationbuilding and the Law school.A number will be designated bya member of the Cap and Gown‘taflf corresponding to a number ona subscription blank. The personwho hapi ens to b.iy this subscrip- !tion will receive his cony of the\ earbook free.A former campaign was carriedon last fall for which the mottowas “Save the Cap and Gown”, Atthis time, eight hundred subscrip¬tions were secured, a number suf¬ficient to insure its publication.■Senior'Women toHear VocationalGuidance LectureAlumna Speaks as GuestOf Federation andAlumnae ClubWomen of the Senior class will meetthis afternoon at 3:30 in the Libraryof Ida Noyes hall as guests of Fed¬eration and the Alumnae club to hear.Miss Ethel Kawin, the first alumnato speak on the place of women inbusiness..Miss Kawin is director of the Pre¬school branch of the Illinois Institutefor Juvenile Research and, accordingto Damari.s Ames, chairman of the jalumnae social committee, “an alumna jof much experience and achievement.” !First Joim ProjectAlthough the .Alumnae tea is an an- ;mial affair this is the first time that ;the Alumnae council and Federation |have worked together in the project of jproviding vocational guidance to Sc- jnior women. The council wishes to jmake it known that it is not their jaim to provide positions for the Sc- |nior women; it is, rather, to advisethe women as to the types of i)ositionsopen to them. The council hopesI that the women of the Senior classmay benefit from hearing about theexperiences of the graduates afterleaving school.Find Subjects of InterestAt the beginning of the meeting,cards will be distributed by mem¬bers of the council upon which thewomen are a.sked to check the voca¬tional subjects which interest themmost. Attempts will be made at alater time to provide speakers fromthese various fields.Federation council wishes to an¬nounce that the pictures of all up-percla.ss-counsellors will be taken to-(Continued on page 4)BEECHER WOMENKEEP MIDNIGHTVIGIL FOR MICELife is a series of comple:v prob¬lems—and if they persist in takingui> their abode in her room VirginiaOelgeschlager threatens to leaveBeether hall for good.At twelve la^st night Virginia wentto bed, her lamp at her side. Whenshe heard the familiar sound of scur¬rying feet in the darkness Virginiasnapped on her light. Eight grey micestood blinking for a moment—then,galloped awoj in all directio:is.“There were eight grey mice. Fourvery large ones with long thin whis¬kers and tw’O medium sized ones withmedium sized whiskers and one verysmall one that didn’t have any whis¬kers and couldn’t run very fast”. MissOelgeschlager reported.It is believed that the careful vigi¬lance maintained by residents in theother rooms has driven the “Beecherfamily” of mice into Miss Oelgeschla-ger’s rooms. During the first halfhour in which a mouse trap wasplaced in her room two days ago,Betty Millard also of Beecher hall,caught a mouse measuring 2^4 inches(Continued on page 2) 1-M BASKETBALLIN QUARTER-FINALSPonies, P.D.E., A.T.O.Macs All Win inFast GamesWith surprisingly lop sided scoresfor elimination competition, thequarter final games in “A” leagueIntramural basket ball were run offin Bartlett last evening. The fullfloor was used, a factor which con¬fused several teams.Ponies 20; Phi Delta Theta ISPhi Delta Theta suffered its firstdefeat of the year last night at thehands of the Ponies’ quintet in aquarter-final match of the Intra¬mural basketball tourney. The PhiDelt scoring trio of Aufdenspring.Bunge, and Johnson failed to func¬tion with its accustomed smoothnessagainst the strong Ponies opposition,and the Shetland team, gaining anearly advantage, led the waythroughout the contest. The gamewas fast and roujjih, as is witnessedby the 26 fouls committed duringthe battle. Edelstein performed ad¬mirably for the Ponies at forward,while Bunge, a pivot-man for thePhi Delts, was effective in bothguarding and offense.Mac* 38; Phi Kappa Psi 5In a rather disappointing contestthe Phi Psis tumbled before theMac offensive by a score of 5 to 38.The game was not all it should befor a quarter-final contest. Stirlenbore the brunt of the lethargic PhiPsi offensive and for his efforts re¬ceive sufficient fouls to eliminatehim from the contest. Finitzb, play¬ing his usual stellar basketball,counted 18 points for the Macs,while Sheer, his running mate, atforward, used his talents effectivelyto add 10 points to the total. Jonesconnected with the basket for theonly Phi Psi goal from the field.Froden was also conspicuous for thelosing five.Phi Delt Epsil 21; Phi Beta Delt 17In a contest that increased in in¬terest a.s the game progressed PhiDelta Epsilon snatched a tussle fromthe “Phi Bete” squad. During thefirst period neither team was able topenetrate within actual scoringrange of the basket, all of winner’s8 points and the loser’s 2 points be¬ing the result of long shots. Cople-man, in the second half led Phi Del-♦^a Epsilon in a scoring attack which,taking new life as the contest near¬ed the final whistle, added 13 pointsto its total. Heller and Lerner ablya.ssisted him in securing this total,((oiitinticd on page 3i» ■Representative ofDictaphone Corp.To Meet SeniorsBevan Lawson of the DictaphoneCorporation of New York, will speakunder the auspices of the Vocational(iiiidance and Placement Bureau to¬day at 2:.30 in Cobb 208. He will in¬terview all seniors interested in theDictaphone TVaining Course for Col-ege Men which is given each year un¬der the direction of his company.Each year this corporation selects acertain number of college men whichit trains in its special Dictaphone salesdivision. The first specific trainingextends over an intensive period of sixmonths at Bridgeport, Connecticut,where the students attend the factoryschool. They are then transferred toone of the branch offices of the com¬pany where they remain at a salary of$30 a week. At the end of the sixmonths those men who have shownan aptitude and liking for the workwill be employed as salesmen in thecompany.Herbert Paul Zimmerman, alumnusof the University and Vice-presidentof R. R. Donnelley and Sons com¬pany, will speak on “Printing” underthe auspices of the Vocational Guid¬ance and Placement Bureau today at4 in Eckhart hall.Mr. Zimmerman, a member of PsiUpsilon, was managing editor of theCap and Gown, a member of Owland Serpent, Iron Mask, the Banjoand Mandolin clubs, the Orchestraand the Band. After his graduationin 1901, he became Chairman of thealumni council for several years. IAN UCKS FULLEXPERIENCE’-BEUMust Acknowledge theReligious Aspect ofHuman LifeThat the coming of science hastransformed— “and perhaps mal¬formed”—many things in this life;and that because of this, modernman is out of touch with the fullstream of experience. Dr. Bernard I.Bell, William Vaughn Moody lectur¬er last night in Mandel hall, be¬lieves that the only way to keep thehuman race from becoming hopeless¬ly unbalanced is to introduce thisn.odern man to the mystical or re¬ligious experiences of life.Today man- is lost in his new uni¬verse; he is enslaved by his new in-ventioiis; he is become enmeshed inpursuing the fact of science and onlyscience with, what Dr. Bell believesis, “a cynical insanity.”Defines True KnowledgeIf man is to arrive at the trueknowledge he must be able to appre¬ciate and understand forces abouthim with the same degree of perfec¬tion with which he understands him¬self. Because, as Dr. Bell sees it,knowledge is really a series of myth¬ical intuitions in which we catchideas of the Eternal mind there isno other way to approach the realmsof knowledge except through the ex¬periences of love, of beauty, of sen¬timent. Dr. Bell believes that thereare three types of experiences, all ofwhich are necessary for a complete,well-rounded existence. First, a manmu.st be able to observe with his fivesenses; second, a man must be ableto manipulate sounds, words, formsinto meanings so that others mayunderstand; and third, one man mustbe able to appreciate another. Inother words, a man must be a scient-i|t, an artist, a lover.C^tacts With Reality“Each one of these types of ex¬perience reveals something in my un¬iverse that the others cannot. If Iomit the cultivation of any one ofthese, I deprive myself of a possiblecontact with the reality that I amseeking.“Some people regard only the su¬perficial, the external side of re¬ligion. They see only the unbeauti¬ful effects and consequently all theirarguments against religion havenothing to do with religion. Thereare also some people and I amamong these, that look at religionnot as a recognized system of dog¬mas but as the experience of falling(Continued on page 4)Announce Three NewVisiting ProfessorsFor Spring QuarterThree new professors will visit theUniversity; and six new courses willl)e given during the Spring quarter,it was announced yesterday at theoffice of the Bureau of Records.Professor H. S. Bennett, Universitylecturer at Cambridge, England, andDirector of English studies at St.John’s college and Emanuel college,will give two new courses: 394 Eng¬lish Life and Thought in the 14th andiSth centuries and 434 English Vil¬lage Life, IlOO to 1500. Joseph Pijoan,lirofessor of History and Art fromPomona college, will also give twocourses: 250 Primitive Art, and 272Baroque Art. Professor Pijoan will re¬main at the University for only theSpring and Summer quarters.Albert Brogan, professor of Philos¬ophy from the University of Texaswill give two courses Spring quar¬ter: 403 Plato, and 450 Seminar inEthical Theory. Professor FranzAlexander of the University of Ber¬lin 'who Has been giving courses inPsycho-analysis at the University will•give an introductory psychologycourse (Med. 311) in the departmentof Medicine.Eustace A. Haydon, professor ofcomparative religion, will broadcast acourse on “Modern Trends in WorldReligions” at 8 over WMiAQ during theSpring quarter, following in the wakeof Professor Merle Coulter whobroadcast his course, “Evolution,(Continued on page 4) 1^Athenaeum ColumnRevived by MaroonIn the tuture The Daily Mai■ will conduct an “Athenaeum” ccl-umn for the benefit of campus con¬tributors. Articles dealing with anysubject of interest to the studentswill be received by the editors un¬der the following conditions: thej name of the writer must be dis-^ closed to the editors but a psuedo-nym may be used on the printed ar¬ticle; the contribution must remainthe property of The Daily Maroon.I Two years ago the “Athenaeum”was established to answer theneeds of the ‘campus. This student‘Voice of the People” appeared ev-jry day lauding or condemningUniversity policy, undergraduateactivity or graduate apathy. In re-istablishing this column The Daily■Maroon hopes to even more clearly•eflect campus opinion.Maroons Drill toIHand Indiana FiveSecond TrouncingGame Likely to ResembleFirst OvertimeBattleIndiana, traditional school of greatbasketball teams, will journey fromBloomington to the Midway nextSaturday to engage the Maroons intheir second meeting of the season.Chicago, in the opening Conferencegame for both teams, managed toleave the floor at Bloomington, win¬ner by virtue of a single foul drop¬ped in by Sid Yates during an over¬time period.Indiana ErraticIndiana, after being conceded theprobable team~tb ann*ex' the Big I'entitle in pre-season ratings, found herfirst game with Chicago a bit toodifficult to save, then spurted intosecond place rating only to let downagain with disasterous lackadaisicalperformances. Her game Mondaynight with Illinois showed the fight¬ing mini’s string of victories to bei no fluke, as the Orange and Bluecompany piled up a 35-25 victory atChampaign. Chicago’s defeat theprevious Saturday at the hands ofj Illinois was by a similar score, andI the game here next week-endI should be evenly contested all the: way.j In anticipation of the impendingj contest, Norgren spent yesterdayafternoon’s practice in a light drillon fundamentals of floor work andpassing and finished up the sessionwith a brisk scrimmage between thefirst two teams. Rexinger teamed upwith Yates at the forwards, withFish and Ashley stationed at guards,and with Parsons at center on thevarsity five. Stephenson, who twist-fContinued on page 2)NOTED GEOLOGISTWILL SPEAK TOSIGMA XI TONIGHTProfessor William H. Bobbs, headof the department of geology at theUniversity of Michigan since 1906,will deliver an address at 6:30 at theUniversity Church of the Disciples ofChrist before the Society of the Sig¬ma Xi on “The Greenland Expeditionof the Universit}' of Michigan” ofwhich he was the leader.He is a distinguished geologist aswell as an explorer and author. Pro¬fessor Hobbs is an authority especial¬ly on the subjects of earthquakes andthe existing glaciers, but his versatil¬ity is shown by his writings which in¬clude a biography of General Leon¬ard Wood, and a book on “The WorldWar and Its Meanings”.His latest book is “The North Poleof the Winds”. It is based on thestudies and observations made on hisrecent scientific expedition to Green¬land. Sigma Xi is an honorary scien¬tific .society composed of men whohave made noteworthy contributionsin the field of research in allbranches of the physical sciences.Among its members are many menof the University faculty. BOOKS ARE MISSING;UE DETEaOR MAYBE USED BY CLASS, Students In ProfessorMott’s Course GivenUntil Tonight; DEFACE VOLUMESTear Pages From BooksPlaced on ReserveShelves ^Asst. Professor Rodney Mott willuse a lie detector to solve the mys¬tery of the missing library bookswhich recently disappeared from Har¬per reading room, where they were re¬served for his class in Constitutionallaw. The class will be given untiltonight to return the books, and ifthey do not return them by that time,they must face the detector.At the beginning of the quarter,five coies of Evans’ “Cases on Con¬stitutional Law” valued as high as$15 apiece w'ere placed on the openshelves for reference use. One by onethese vanished and new copies werebought and placed behind the reservedcounter for two hour use. These havecontinued to be taken; and last weekan entire section was torn out ofCooley’s “Constitutional Limitations”,a rare book valued at $25. The dam¬aged volume was the sixth edition ofa book now out of print.This recent abuse of reading roomprivileges culminates a long period ofinfringements during which there has1 been a steady draining of books re¬served for classes in literature, his¬tory, sociology, and political science.Last year some 500 books were takenfrom the reading room and never re¬turned, and last quarter alone 137volumes disappeared from the shelves,i During tiie last week, in aiddition tothe losses from Dr. Mott’s class, thelibrary lost the five copies of Mun-ro’s “Governments of Europe” andBeard’s “.American Leviathan,” whichwere reserved for students of PoliticalScience 103 and 101.Mr. Cate, jbf thf history depart¬ment, recently assigned a paper onthe Renaissance for which he referredhis class to the Encyclopedia Brittan-ica; and the next day the section often pages on the Renaissance hadliecn completely torn out. The defacedvolume is one of a set valued at $150.When books were lost or defaced inthe days when the reserved bookswere in E 11, the cuprits were tracedby matching signatures of those whohad taken books and by checking upon the references used in papers forthe classes which reserved the books.No such police system is contem¬plated, however by Dr. Raney, direc¬tor of the library. He will continueto maintain the reading room underits present regulations unless the sit¬uation becomes “more acute”, at whichtime the reading room will be abol¬ished entirely. Dr. Raney declares hewill take no half way measures. Hewill either maintain or do away withthe reserved book system. Abolitionwill mean an added expense to stu¬dents who must then buy their refer¬ence books.The only immediate action to betaken officially will be to place be-(Continued on page 3)Begin PreliminariesOf I-M Mat MeetFifty grapplers went into actionj'esterday as the preliminary round ofthe Intramural wrestling tournamentopened in the West stand. The finalsof the meeting will be fought as partof the annual Intramural Carnival tobe held the night of March 6 in Bart¬lett gymnasium.Due to the fact that many of thosew’ho were entered in the tourney, andwere scheduled to fight yesterday,were serving as watchers at the polls,the I-M department announces thatthey may wrestle their first roundbouts today.The mat encounters yesterday gavepromise of a hard-fought tournament,and many of the bouts showed thatthe men possessed unusual skill. Kap¬pa Nu w'as ahead as the result of yes¬terday’s tilt.i A1Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1931iIIII! iatlg iKar00ttFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished morninics, except Saturday. Sunday and Monday, during the AutumnW’inter and Springs quarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University Ave.Subscription rates $3.00 per year; by mail, $1.50 per year extra. Single copies, five-cents each.Entered as secondIllinois, under the Act class matter March 18, 1903. atof March 3. 1879. the post office at Chicasco,The Dailyappearing in Maroon expressly reserves all ritthts ofthis paper. publication of any materialMember of the Western Conference Press .AssociationEDGAR A. GREEN WALD, Editor-in-ChiefABE L. BLINDER, Business ManagerJOHN H. HARDIN, Managing EditorMARION E. WHITE, Woman’s EditorALBERT ARKULES, Senior EditorASSOCIATE EDITORSWALTER W. BAKER.MARGARET EGANHERBERT H. JOSEPH, Jr.JANE KESNERLOUIS N. RIDENOUR. IIMERWTN S. ROSENBERGGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEFSOPHOMORE EDITORS -ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERSROBERT T. MsCARTHYJAMES J. McMAHONSOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSRUBE S. FRODINBlON B. HOWARDJ. BAYARD POOLEGARLAND ROUTTJAMES F. SIMONWARREN E. THOMPSON ..•IHN CLANCYRICHARD DEUTSCHEDGAR GOLDSMITHCHESTER WARDSOPHOMORE WOMAN EDITORSDOROTHY A. BARCKMAN ALBERTA KILLIE.MAXINE CREVISTON ELIZABETH MILLAR’'MARJORIE GOLLER INGRED PETERSENELEANOR WILSONJOHN MILLS, Photographic EditorNight Editor: George T. Van der HoefAssistant: John B. Poole.WANTED — 500 BOOKS!Another exhibition of the caliber of student mentality wasbrought to light yesterday when a reporter discovered that appar¬ently the number of books in Harper is on the decline due to thepride-of-possession-instinct of those who thirst for knowledge hereon the quadrangles. TTiis proclivity has cost the University librariesfive hundred books through theft in the past year and one hundredthirty-seven last quarter.This is really no news. Everyone knows that people get itchyfingers for masterpieces of the printer’s art quite frequently. Butthe degree to which the evil has now advanced is news—appallingnews. One case of theft has become so flagrant that a whole class—for whom the stolen books were placed on reserve—will probablybe subjected to the lie-detector today. Other examples likewise illu¬strate that this case is no exception or exaggeration. It was foundthat a valuable law book, no longer in print, had the most import¬ant pages torn out; that members of a class in History 131 hadcreated havoc in several volumes of an expensive EncyclopediaBritanica; and that a class in Political Science 103 has been keep¬ing reserve books in that course for good as fast as the Librarycan purchase new ones.Of course, the first question that will be asked is, how can astop be put to this evil? The answer is not as easy as the question,simply because the manner in which books are now placed at thestudents’ disposal was regarded as ideal by the students them¬selves who asserted quite staunchly that honesty is the best policy.If a police system of any sort were now inaugurated a storm of pro¬test would immediately greet the preventative measures. Workingthus on the hypothesis that the Library is for the students and theirbenefit, the University is forced to face this tremendous annual loss,both in convenience and in money, because a group of full grownmen and women, with supposedly above-average intelligence, hasnot the common sense to refrain from biting the hand that feedsthem.No doubt, if any individuals were apprehended and dulyproved to be guilty of theft, the said parties would have a hostof excuses at their finger tips. And perhaps some would be justifi¬able alibis inasmuch as no Library system is guaranteed to be per¬fect. But that is not the point to be taken into consideration. TheUniversity provides as many copies of text books as it deems neces¬sary and expedient, and arranges a system for the use of thesebooks. If the system proves adequate—as the present one doesunder the circumstances—there is no cause for theft. If the systemfails to be adequate, it would be much easier on the students andon the Library heads if all grievances were aired verbally insteadof being voiced through the theft of books.Mr. Raney says his system is built on an ideal. That is un¬questionably true in a quite literal sense, if his ideal is honesty. Atleast the records for the past year prove as much. One can alwaysexpect a few thieves in honest circles; but one would hardly ex¬pect a robber’s den in the midst of a university. At the rate of fivehundred books a year unaccounted for, it would take but a decadeor two for Harper to have completely renewed the most importantpart of its contents.In such cases, of course, the innocent must be taken into ac¬count as seriously as the guilty. A police system would perhapsprove a handicap to a hundred honest students for every guiltyone. Therefor, if any reform is attempted, it must not be a swing¬ing of the pendulum from one extreme to another.The problem is an enigmatic piece of sarcasm on the Univer¬sity student. A cracker-barrel omniscient seems to have hit the nailon the head when he remarked, “What university students needmore than education is common sense." . . . E A G. THE TRAVELLINGBAZAARByART HOWARDLast quarter there was a girl in anKngli.sh 103 who seemed to be get¬ting along very well. Every one of herpapers received an or better, so thestory goes. Whenever she raised herhand, she was given preference overmost everyone else to talk, and herjudgment was absolutely final. Afterthe course was over, an industriousyoung male student dug up the intothat the girl in qestion was noneother than Sherwood Anderson’sdaughter. There seems to be a meth¬od in every Prof’s madness.* * ^IcThe sociology department is notedfor the length as well as the breadthof the term papers it assigns. Thisquarter, however, sociologists Stew¬art, Sheldon, and Bradshaw are show¬ing the same zest in writing as thedept, does in assigning. To date,they have gotten out a questionairewhich is intended to find out whypeople smoke, among other things.Said J. Sheldon in regard to the prob¬lem. “I am a last (|uarter senior. Thisi is the first time in four years I havegotten excited about anything, and itWOULD be sociology. “So far re->ults show that you smoke becauseyour friends do.* * *There were a couple of frosh doingqueer things in Cobb Hall yesterday.()iu frosh was instructing the other.“Bend over and touch your toes’’,said one. The subject complied. “Nowget down on your hands and knees ”.The subject complied. "Now push yourhind legs forward and backward’’.The subject also complied wonderingwhen the tough part of this trick wasgoing to start. “Now", said the onegiving instructions, “bark like a |dog! !”* * •I’p browsing around the Tower iroom where the dramatic associationhangs out, we noticed a large facsim¬ile of the i^etition sent in to the man- jagement of the Blackstone Theatrerequesting a revival of Mrs. Fiske in j“Becky Sharp". The petition read, I"We. the members of the Dramatic |.Association petition....’’ and itwas signed by a goodly crowd. But |right in the middle of all the bona fide ;dramatic stars which we had seen a |number of times before was the name, iin 3 bold signature, “Chicago EveningPost’’.* * ♦ *Notices like this were distributedvesterdav. Mavbe vou got one.'N-O-T-I-C-E-SPresent yourself, full of glee,.\t the I’. Dance at half past threeEvery Friday, and the place,Ida Noyes Theatre. Have the grace'I'o come on time and bring yourfriends,'N (in’ll <tay until the whole dance ends.* ♦ *.\!r. Mott who teaches Poly Sci 2S3,1BEAUTIFUL TYPINGSarah TaylorWork Called For and DeliTered1434 Plaisance Crt. Plaza 5346(Blackstone south of 60th) Wabash 6360Get Your MealsJ. & C. RestaurantSelected Quality FoodSea Food a Specialty1527 E 55th St. Mid. 5196GOODMAN THEATRELake Front at Monroe Central 4030Until March 8“LAZZARO”By Luifti PirandelloNights except Monday—Mat. FridayApply to Daily Maroon for Special RatesTHE STUDENTSTYPING SERVICEMsnaged by FVances A. Mullen. A.M.EXPERT WORK ON THESES ORSHORT PAPERS.1326 E. 57th St. Dor. 2896EVERY FRIDAY NIGHTisFRATERNITY ANDCLUB NIGHTat theDlLL-PlCKLE CLUB18 Tooker PlaceLADIES FREE! Maroons Drill toHand Indiana FiveSecond Trouncing(Continued from page 1)ed an already weakened ankle yes¬terday in scrimmage, spent the dayon the side lines looking on in hiscustomary quiet way. There is nodanger, but that he will be at hisforward post against Indiana nextSaturday.In scrimmage, Tor me first time inseveral weeks, the squad stressed thefast break down the floor and easedinto the block plays only when un¬successful in the first flying at¬tempt. Fish w’as the offensive starof scrimmage, slipping in on thebreak for set shots time and agrain.Yates, usually the brilliant scorer inpractice, was tentatively buttonholedin his corner by the combined effortsbelter known as Constitutional Law,iinds a great difficulty in keeping ev¬erybody honest. You have that sametrouble, too, in poker, but that’s an-» t'ner story. .Anyway, Mr. Mott cameout with the formidable announcementthat unless the books which havebeen stolen from the library are re¬turned by tonight, he’s going to putthe lie detector boys to work on theclass. Let this be a warning. Thatbo (it lector might work. We’ve triedit Piid they found out that if wewere imt guilty, we at least have aguilty conscience. .And that’s sonie-'liing.* * * IDown on LaSalle street, the boysart lietting even money that Thomp¬son pets as many votes in the primary.is Lyle and .Albert do combined. Con¬trary to such excellent opinion, wepick Thompson tt> win handily atihree o’clock m the afternoon, Lyle t(jilace aroumi lliree-thirty. and .Albert jto show sometime next week. C‘'r- |mak gets the c-?ll froi., tliC ’''emos. IVv el. ya can't be right '-i! the time' | , of Porter and Fraider, although he• did sneak in for several cinch bas-I kets. Against Illinois, Yates againj led the Chicago scoring by makingten of the team’s points. All threeof his baskets were pop shots, hisother, scoring being the result ofdouble fouls on the part of the crash¬ing Illinois guards.In stopping Indiana, Veller, Zellerand Campbell still present the sameobstacles as they did last January,More dangerous than the scoring ofeither of these men is the remark¬able defensive work of Campbell atguard. In the first meeting of bothteams, Yates was .stopped so effec¬tively by the crafty Hoosier that hemanaged to get but three hurriedshots at the basket, all of which wereunsuccessful. Stephenson and Fishkept Chicago in the running all dur¬ing the first game by their accuratelong range shooting. Both men made over ten points apiece while Yatesmanaged only to contribute threefree throws.A danger which failed to material¬ize at Bloomington during the firstgame, was the “red hot’’ shootingof the lanky Zeller at forward.Against Chicago last year, in themidst of a concerted Maroon rallyZeller dropped in four shots fromwell out to the center of the floorto definitely decide the game for theHoosiers.Beecher Women KeepMidnight Mouse Vigil(Continued from page 1)from nosv to ti]) of tail. Miss Ocl-gesclilager had not counted the micebefore last night and so could give nodoubt a> to wbetber or not there isanother "Beecher family’’.STATIONERY BARGAINU. of C. paper, engraved with an attractivedesign:8 sheets engraved8 sheets plain16 envelopesWrapp>ed in glassineenvelope, a real bargain atThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AveONE SMALL BRAINcan dressa million you better thandollar income!VOGUEA CONDE NASTPUBLICATION Vogue lias known this secret for ages. Lots of cleverwomen have giiessetl it too—that one small brain candress you better than a million dollar income!It isn't the money you put into your clothes—beyond acertain irreducible minimum, of course. It's your taste,your instinct for the truly fashionable, it's knowingwhen a style is definitely out, when a new one is worthfollowing. It’s knowing bow to combine your accessorieswith several diflTerent ensembles . . . bow to make a dressdo double duty.Vogue knows all about making wardrobes fit clothesallowances. Vogue knows what styles are going to begood for more than one season . . . what particular col¬ours ami lines suit you, your figure, your type. Voguehas dressed all sorts of women w itb all sorts of incomes,from the ones that look swagger in lapin to the onesthat scintillate in ermine.Don’t waste a penny of your clothes allowance. LetVogue help you plan, show you bow to be perfectlyturned out for every occasion!10 Issues of VOGUE »2Special Introductory Offer to New Subscribers OnlyVOGUE, Graybar Building, New York City.Q Enclosed find $2 for TEN issues. I am a new subscriber.Ci Enclosed find |6 for one year of Vogue (24 issues)NSign and mail Street . - —the coupon now. _.Stat«» gcni■- '" niTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 25. 193L Page Threec*-s>United States DepositoryChecking Savings and In¬vestment Accounts of Pro¬fessors and Students in¬vited on the basis ofSAFETYSERVICEandCONVENIENCEHYDE-PARK-KENWOODNATIONAL BANKof Chicago53rd Street and Lake ParkAvenueIn the Crescenttat Cornell... as in 42 otherleading colleges,there is one favoritesmoking tobaccoEngineers walking across cam¬pus to a lab in Sibley .. . artsstudents gathered on the porch ofGoldwin Smith . . . lawyers on thesteps of Boardman. Not much timebetween classes ... but enough fora pull on a pipe of good old Edge-worth ICornell men know their smok¬ing tobacco. And they're not alonein their choice. Harvard, Yale,Illinois, Michigan, Stanford, Dart¬mouth, Bowdoin—all report Edge-worth far in the lead. In 42 out of54 leading colleges and universitiesEdgeworth is the favorite pipetobacco.Cool, slow’-burning hurleys givethis smoke the character that col¬lege men like. Try a tin of Edge-worth yourself—pack it into yourpipe, light up, and taste the richnatural savor of fine hurleys, en¬hanced by Edgeworth’s distinctiveeleventh process.At all tobacco stores—ISfi thetin. Or, for generous free sample,write to Larus & Bro. Co., 105 S.22d St., Richmond, Va.EDGEWORTHSMOKING TOBACCOEdgpworth Is a blendol fine old hurleys,with i ts natural savorenhanced by Edge¬worth’s distinctiveeleventh process.Buy Edgeworth any¬where I n two forms—*• Ready-Rubbed ”and " Plug Slice.” Allsites, pocketpackage to poundhumidor tin. THEATREbyAlbert Arkules UNIVERSITY BULLETINI "LAZZARO”——GoodmanPia Florence WilliamsCico William BrentonDr. Gionni Kent SmithDiego Spina Harry MervisMonsignore Hale MacKeenSara Gladys ParvisVillage Dr Carl KroenkeLucio Robert GalbraithIf "Lazzaro” is representative ofthe best in Pirandello, then it ispainfully obvious that the Italianphilosopher-essayist has just aboutreached the end of his tether as adramatist. One play doesn’t make aplaywright, of course, but threeplays can begin to tell things. Onthat score, the three Pirandelloplays which have been seen in Chi¬cago within the last three years re¬veal a Pirandello who is beginningto lose his sense of the drama.For purposes of a discussion about"Lazzaro,” it is well to go back sev¬eral seasons when his much talkedof “Six Charactei*s in Search of AnAuthor” came to life on the Good¬man stage. Its fascinating theme,brilliantly propounded, stamped Pir¬andello as an unusual craftsman. Hewas not wMthout faults. He flisplayeda tendency in “Six Characters” to beverbose and long-winded. The firstact, if my memory does not fail me,was almost ruined by this defect, andthe blemish was only obliterated bya dramatic instinct which brought tolife several scenes that were nothingshort of startling. It was odd that aplay markedly in contrast to our lit¬eral drama should elude falling intothe realm of close.st^drama. The na¬ture of the play would almost inevit¬ably catalog it as such, and that itdefinitely took on color and formwhen presented on the stage was, ofcourse, a tribute to the author’s abil¬ity.Pirandello emerged into the lime¬light again this season with "As YouDesire Me.” Once more, he fash¬ioned for dramatic material, a fan¬tastic theme. I say fantastic to de¬scribe the problems of illusion which Wednesday, February 258—Radio Lecture: “Evolution”. Associate Professor Merle C. Coul¬ter of the Botany department. Station WMAQ.8:35—“News from the Quadrangles”. Station WMAQ.1 1 :50—Joseph Bond chapel. William Sweet, Professor of Churchhistory.12—Faculty Women’s Luncheon, Ida Noyes hall.3—Pi Delta Phi Cozy, Wicker Room, Ida Noyes hall.3-5—Renaissance Society, Miss Bertha Cowan and Miss WinnieSparks, District Supervisors of Art in the south side publicschools, will speak informally on an exhibition of children’swork, Wieboldt 205.3:30-5:30—University of Chicago Alumnae Club and Federationof University Women tea for Senior Women, Library, IdaNoyes Hall.4—Public Lecture (Alumni Committee on Vocations) : “Printing”,Mr. Herbert P. Zimmermann, R. R. Donnelley and SonsCompany. Eckhart 133.4:30—The Mathematical Club. “On the Invariance of ProjectiveProperties of a Conjugate Net under the Laplace Transform¬ation”, Mr. William Borgman. Eckhart 209. 21 Women ChosenAs Ushers in 1931Mirror Production(Continued from page 1)Roberg, Marion White, and NadaWhite have been cast in special skitparts in addition to the original act¬ing cast of twelve women. Of these,two have appeared in previous Mirrorshows. Beatrice Roberg took castparts in “Slip Slaps” and “Yours toDate” and has worked on productionphases of other Dramatic productions;she is a member of Phi Beta Delta.Marion White, woman’s editor of TheDaily Maroon, ap|)eared in “Slip[.Slaps’’ and “Yours to Date”; she hasacted in Playfest and directed one ofthe Freshman plays this year.The cast and chorus complete, allparts of the Mirror show have beenunited in rehearsal; and FrankO’Hara, Frank Parker, and FMithBallwebher are welding skit, danceand lyric together for the Friday per¬formance of “What Ho!”4:30—Zoological Club. Mr. H. H, Strandskov: “The Inheritanceof Human Blood Groups”. Zoology 29. New World TongueBased on EnglishStockholm, Sweden. — A newworld language called "Anglic,”based on modern English but insimplified spelling, has been launch¬ed by a Swedish profesor R. E.5—Musical Vesper Service. Dr. Bernard I. Bell. The University 1 Zachrison, of I’lisnla university.Chapel. I advocates of the manner of^ , o • “Tu M M* ..I. • expression, who include a numberDinner, the Anderson Society. The New Alignment in Re¬ligion ”. Dr. Bernard I. Bell. Ida Noyes Hall.6:15-6:30- of spelling reformers in the UnitedStates and Great Britain, claim that‘Anglic has an excellent chance ofbecoming the dominating world lan--The Society of the Sigma Xi. “The Greenland Expedition ofthe University of Michigan”. Professor W. H. Hobbs, Uni-jguage of the future,versity of Michigan. University Church of the Disciples of Teaching experiments conductedChrist.Pirandello is crude and pedantic. His , I-Mtendency to devitalize characters at ithe expense of tedious exposition isaptly illustrated in “Lazzaro”. The Imilieu of the play, I am sure, would I (Continued from page 1)BasketballIn Qarter-Finalssuggest to the ordinary dramatist a ! With five minutes to go the counthost of compelling characters. Cer-^ knotted at 14 points each. Phitain it is to the spectator that they Delta Epsilon then drove through tomove about in “Lazzaro,” but the additional 7 points whilehaze of the Pirandellian conversa- > their opponents added another 3 Experiments were said to havehave intrigued him as a dramatist, jtion obscures them. They ^belong > poii^ts Marver, Wattenberg, and j shown that the students who pre-by Professor Zachrison and startedimmediately following the publica¬tion of his linguistic system a fewmonths ago are reported to havegiven successful results, hrofessorZachrison’s students were reportedable to read and converse readily inhis “reformed” English after aI course in “.Anglic.” They tooktwenty lessons of ninety minuteseach.But the story, instead of serving as quite frankly in the closet,a springboard for the development \ , , xior. if you will, exposition of inci- The Goodman struggles valiantlydent, led the Italian dramatist into ' make an evening of it, but th^elong, rambling flights of metaphysics.A lot of mental “hocus-pocus” tookplace in the course of the evening,which proved rather trying. Char¬acters degenerated into mere pup¬pets ,and dramatic situations wereforced. The only bright ray in “AsYou Desire Me”, insofar as itsAmerican production figured, was the Prince scored the “Phi Bete” | viously ^had no knowledge of thepoints. i English’language had almost to dif-A. T. O. 44; Divinity 28Alpha Tau Omega continued to ficulty in reading English bookseven in ordinary spelling. Represen-odds of incompetent authorship miti- ^ opponents, even in the nar- ' tatives of the Swedish state schoolgate against it. If anything, the com- competition in the quarter j board who controlled the final ex-pany like the author s lines, has ^al - , defeat the Divinity school j pressed surpri.se as to the rapiden into a stiff and archaic pattern of ' •' 'artinK, and any semblance of natural- ^ ^ness, winch might a,d the perfo™- ^ |a^nce. is o ay a wese , [points besides. Tilton was Wilcoxon’s !noodnian could use a Judith Ander-.^ scoring aid with five baskets'son hanil.ly but it ,s a poor drama- ^illuminating performance of Judith [ ® I time was 18-0. During the final pe-Anderson.And now “Lazzaro.” To me, it isPirandello at his lowest ebb. Thetheme, concerned with the restora¬tion of a man to life by adrenalinwho has been killed by an automo¬bile, and the subsequent transform¬ation of his personality, furnishesonly a very slight ba.se for drama, asyou and I understand drama. IfPirandello is the precursor of a tran¬sition in the theatre, I should enjoybeing enlightened, but I have not, asyet, gone over to a form of dramawhich makes mere puppets out ofactors. Not even fanciful stagescenery can serve as a substitute, sothat for sheer dullness “Lazzaro” ex¬ceeded anything I have seen this sea¬son.Removed from the philosophic-dramatic realm of “Six Characters” I flight actresses to bolster him upOrganize SandwichVending AgencyA sandwich vending agency underthe direction of Ralph Lewis and JohnSpearing has been organized underthe supervision of John Kennan ofthe Board of Vocational Guidance andPlacement. Representatives of thisagency will make the rounds of thefraternity houses every evening at nineo’clock with fresh sandwiches, applesand oranges. This is the secondagency which has Iiecn formed forthe benefit of student employment.The first one is being carried on liy.Sam Horwitz and Roland McKenziewlio have Iieen given the necktie agen-cy. riod Divinity, led by Swenson, spurt-led but ineffectually.Europe This Summer$475 — JOIN THE U. OF C. GROUP — $475Through Italy, Austria, Germany, Holland,Belgium, France, England.Visit the Heart of Europe With Your FriendsPersonally Conducted Tour—July 3 to Aug. 25•This Price Includes Steamship Passage, Hotel Accommo¬dations, Meals, European Rail Fares, Sightseeing Toursand Services of Guides and Lecturers.MAKE RESERVATIONS NOWFull Information and Descriptive Folder FromMYRON L. CARLSON BOWEN S.S. AGENCYCampus RepresentativeBLAKE HALL—9 5507 S. HALSTED ST. Lie Detector MayBe Used By Class(Continued from page 1)hind the counter for two hour use,those hooks which it is deemed un¬satisfactory for individuals to use fortoo long a time. Dr. Raney has setup a library on the honor system andlie will not subject students to anyinfringement of that system. All sounds in “Anglic,” as a ruleare represented by a single symbolin letters. While the “I” sound inordinary English is expressed by avariety of letters or combinationsof letters, this sound in “Anglic” isinvariably expressed by the letters“ei.” The statisticians show’ed thatthe most frequent combination ofletters for thi.s sound in commonEnglish was “ei.”Thus “light” in “Anglic” reads“leit,”; Friday becomes “Freidae;”right is “reit,” and buy “bei.”Professor Carl Grabo of the Eng¬lish Department has a new novel justout—“A Man and a Woman.” You’llwant to own it. Get your copy at theUniversity of Chicago Book Store,Ellis Hall.—Adv.SPECIAL SHORT TIME ONLY50c Reduction with This AdAFAMOUSPUSH-UPPERMANENTWAVEHAIR DYEING$3.50 up FACIALS$1 upSPECIAL ALL WEEKHair Cut. 50c; Shampoo, 50c; Marcel, 50c; Arch, 50c;Wave, 50c; Manicure, 50c. ANY THREE FOR Finger J jFAMOUS PERMANENT WAVE SHOPS, INC.LOOP SHOP—202 8. STATE. 13th FI. PHONES HARRISON 6732-6733NORTHPALisade 7191SlTNny>>><f 7961SOUTHNORmal 00697759 8. Halated St., Nr. 79th 8t., 2nd FI STEwart 298611100-06 South Michi(an Avc.. Rooms 6 and 7 (Roaeland)—WESTSPAuIding 81274002 W. Madiaon St., Nr. Crawford. 2nd FI VAN Bnreii 8863OPEN 9 A. M. TO 9 P. M. SpecialBookItemsPriced for this week only,while they last:1. Westermarck jHistoryof Human Marriage.3 Vol. New.Original Price $25.00Our price this week only*6^2. DaughtyWanderings in Arabia.New — Original Price$4.00.Our price this week only:$2-003. Rhodes History of CivilWar. Original p(rice$4.00. Our price$2^.50StationeryPriced for this week onlyPhoto Album69cStandard size 7’’xl0’’50 black leavesLoose leaf—durable coverusual price $1.00U. of C. Statiffliery85c24 sheets and 24 envelopes“Club Parchment” Stationery,deckled edged, large two-foldsize, white or gray, engravedwith U. of C. seal, in silver,regular price $1.25C40SpecialTypewriter SaleThese Prices for this weekonlyBrand New - DiscontinuedModels ■Royal Portable$ 47 .50Underwood Portable$ 47 .50Latest Model - Slightly UsedCorona 4 Portable$ 47 .50For a good typiewriter“buy” — see theseSPECIALSAll fully guaranteed by themanufacturer and our One-year FREE Service Guarantee,which includes cleaning andoiling.Woodworth^sBook Store1311 E. 57th St.OPEN EVENINGSTel. Hyde Park 1690-7737The Largest’ Book StoreOutside the LoopPage Fou \THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1931UNIVERSITY OFFERSAVIATION COURSE;CARRIES NO CREDITAn elementary course in aviati- n,preparatory to training at Gi’eatLakes and an eight months* ccurseat Pensacola, Fla., will be given thissemester at the university under theauspices of the Naval departmen:,Victor Randecker ’32, ensign in theLl S. naval reserve and attaclic ofthe Naval Reserves Aviation squad¬ron at Great Lakes, announced Mon¬day.Students successfully passingthrough this training will be coiiiinis-sioned either as ensigns in the Navalreserve or as first lieutenants in themarine corps reserve, and will reservea year’s active duty in the fleet orin the marine corps. 'Victor Randecker and Clinton D.Case, assistant professor of nuthan-ical engineering. Extension division,both of whom received commissionsafter completing the course in 1P2G,will be in chrge of the instruction.The course does not crry universitycredit.Senior WomenHear Lecture(Continued from page 1)day at noon in Mandel hall. Thecouncil also wishes to state that fourout of the six candidates to the Fed¬eration Executive council viyll beelected instead of the “three out ofsix’’ that was formally announced.The election will take place onMarch 3 in the foyer of Ida Noyeshall.“Man Ucks FullExperience’’—Bell(Continued from page 1)in love with God, an act which in it¬self makes possible this system ofdogmas. These souls who reveal thenature of religious experience bearan able witness to the meaning ofthings which cannot be omitted.Only a fool will neglect to notethem.” Announce 1931 BigTen Baseball CardAlloting the Maroon baseball teamseven games on the home diamond,the Big Ten baseball schedule for1931 was announced yesterday.Games away from home are playedwith Illinois, April 29; Iowa, May 2;Indiana, May 23; and Wisconsin,June 6.Games to be played on the Mid¬way are with Illinois, April 18; Wes¬tern State Teachers, April 23; Wis¬consin, April 24; Hosei, of Japan,May 6, Michigan, May 9; Iowa, May11; Minnesota, May 16; MichiganState, May 26; and Indiana, May 29.Seven men who made the Japantrip are returning for the 1931 sea¬son; with batting averages in theneighborhood of 300. They are:Lynch, .346; H. C. Johnson, .380;Henshaw, .333; Olson, .321; Hous¬ton, .318; Fish, .313; and C. L.Johnson, .293.Announce Three NewVisiting Professors(Continued from page 1)I Heredity and Eugenics*’ over \VM.\QI this quarter.I Two new courses in the Commerce, and .\dministration department w'illbe given by H. G. Shields and James: \V. Young. Professor Shields willgive a course on “The Problems ofAdvertising.”Texans MeetAt the annual dinner of the ex¬students of the University of Texasassociation w'hich will be held atthe Allerton House March 7, Dr.Brogan of the Philosophy depart¬ment and formerly of the Universityof Texas will be the speaker of theevening. Admission is $2.00 perplate and all Texans and their fam¬ilies are asked to attend.Ann Arbor—If a co-ed of theUniv'ersity of Michigan wears afraternity pin she is liable for a fineof fifty dollars or six days in jail.Professor Carl Grabo of the Eng¬lish Department has a new novel justout—“A Man and a Woman.” You’llwant to own it. Get your copy at theI University of Chicago Book Store.EUis Hall.—Adv. BIG TEN SCHOOLSTO PUBLISH NEWHUMOR MAGAZINEAnnouncement has been receivedof a new intercollegiate magazinewhich will be devoted largely to mat¬ters of interest in the Big Ten uni¬versities. It will be the “Midwest- ;ern Conference” magazine and will jbe published in Madison, Wisconsin.The publishers invite paid contri¬butions of scholastic athletic or othertopics relevantly or humorouslytreated that are lakely to appeal tounivei*sity people. It will be a for¬ty-eight page magazine, and will of¬fer an opening for journalistic abil¬ities and cartoons.The object of the publication is topresent college humor, especially thesort that has not lost the livelinessthat characterizes the Americanuniversity. The articles and car¬toons will be bought on a slidingscale rate, according to research in¬volved, quality and length.The first issue, scheduled to ap¬pear the middle of February, wiilattempt to demonstrate the type ofcartoons, caricatures and articleswhich will be accepted for publica-I tion. Here is an opportunity forstudents of journalism and for otlierswho have the feeling that they arenatural writers to prove what theycan do in free lance writing.Recital by Claire DuxThe song recital by Claire Dux(Mrs. Charles Swift) illustrating thelecture by Mr. Francis Neilson, “Ly¬rics of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth' Centuries,’’ will he held on Thursday.March 5, instead of February 26, asoriginally announced. The lecture andrecital will be given in the UniversityChapel. Woodlawn .Ave. and Fifty-ninth St., at 4:30 o’clock.CLASSIFIED ADSA few young ladies received indelightful summer home on Georgian: Bay, Canada. Golf, riding, swim¬ming, etc. References required andgiven. Apply Rev. and Mrs. EdwardHoering, 5443 Kenwood Avenue.,I Chicago. Midway 4027.Weighed — and found worthy^ You may feel perfectly assured in eatingat the Maid-Rite Grill. It has met every testof a good eating place — every test subjectedto it by a discerning student body.^ Our service is just as worthy. The SandwichShop remains open for your convenience until2 a. m. And if you do not desire to ventureforth into the night, we are pleased to deliversandwiches to your rooms.^ We suggest that you test the worth of theseshops yourself.TheMAID-RITE SHOPS, Inc.PLAZA 5551 WE DELIVER THE STORE FOR MENMARSHALL FIELD & COMPANYCollege is an expensive enoughproposition as if is •• 0 betterTAKE ADVANTAGE OF THELAST 4 DAYS OF OUR GREATand save money onyour new spring suitSmart college styles intwo-button notch lapelmodels, as well as manydoiible-breasteds, areoffered in this dollar-saying eyent at seyeralattractiye prices.The trousers are justthe right width — thecolors exactly what youdemand. You’ll findplenty of blues, graysand browns in neat, eon-seryatiye patterns. Andnow, with the reduc¬tions in effect, suits thatformerly sold for muchmore may now be hadas low as*35YOUNG MEN'S SUITSTHIRD FLOOR ««K>A4