^})e Baflp i^laroonVol. 32. No. 70. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1932 Price Five CentsSIX ALDHNI ANDSIX UNDERGRADSCONTRIBUTE MUSIC,SKITS FOR MIRROR Phoenix to GiveCash Sales Prizes“All's Fair” Attracts ’31Graduates in RoleOf Writersex actors do lyricsSix underxrraduates and six alum¬ni of the Ill'll class have tied inwriting most of the skits, lyrics, andmusic for this year’s Mirror .show,‘‘.toll’s Fair”, to be jfiven in Mandelhall February 26 and 27. All thesnaduates, with one exception, havecontributed to previous Mirrorshow.^? or been closely connectedwith r>ramatic a.ssociation produc¬tion.'-; of the underjfraduates, butone ha.-^ written previously for Mir¬ror.The underjrraduate write-rs in¬clude; .Albert Arkules, William Car-roll. Dorothy Dunaway, Jane Kes-ner. Ray Vane, and Jim VanNice.Graduates named are: Norman Eat¬on. On’i.'- Henkle, Art Howard, Ru.s-<ell Huber, Julian Jackson, andJean Searcy.Arkules, Carroll Write.-Mbert. .\rkule.s, Senior Editor ofThe Daily Maroon last year, andauthor of “Symphony in D Minor”of the 10.11 Playfeat, wrote skitsfor "What Ho!”, the 1911 Mirror,and a^in contribute.s to “All'sFair." William Carroll, member ofthe Fniversity Symphony orchestra,KH'ojmizexi for his "Raft to Love”,one of the hits in the last Black-frian-' .show, offers music and theorchestrations this year for Mirror.Dorothy Dunaway, member of theFniversity choir and chairman ofthe present music committee for“.^U's Fair”, has composed music.•lane Kesner, business manag'crfor 1932, aide, and Senior Editor ofThe r>aily Maroon, has composedl.vrics. .Jim VanNice, Beta ThetaFi. who is campus correspondentfor the Chicasro Herald and Exam¬iner. contributes skits; Ray Vane,who edited the Cap and Gown lastyear. thL« year enters a new fieldin hi.s composition of mu.sic for‘‘All’s Fair.”The jrraduates literally return tocampu.s. with their larjfe portion ofthe material this year: Norman Ea¬ton. pjist president of the Dramaticassckoiation, has composed lyrics and>uu.-i(; Drvis Henkle, who has writ¬ten mxue than a half-dozen “hits”for previous Mirrors shows, ag^ain(Continued on page 4) Cash prizes and a ten percentcommission are the inducements of¬fered to .sales women by the Phoe¬nix, which appears tomorrow withits “Election number”. Applicantsfor -sales positions are asked to re¬port at the Phoenix office in Hask¬ell 14 before tomorrow morning.The campus humor magazine willlaunch a “President Hutchins rorPresident” campaign on the plat¬form, “Beer and Liberty, Youth andProgress, Comprehensive Exams forCivil Service Employees.” Presi¬dent Hutchin’s response to the nom¬ination will also be published. Alsoin line with the motif election willbe a sketch of Meredith Week as apolitician.Morrison Scoresrads arid Thrills'Of School System“The fads, thrills and frills shouldbe taken out of the public schoolsystem,” according to Henry C.Monrison, professor of Education,who is working with other Univer¬sity authorities in advising the Chi¬cago Board of Education in its cur¬rent financial predicament. Thestatement was made before an audi¬ence of teachers, club women andrepresentatives of civic organizationsat the W’oman’s City club.“The public schools are the verycornerstone of our political fabric,”declared Profe.ssor Morrison. “Themaking of a citizen embraces gen¬eral discipline and training in allthe fundamental arts and science.sof civilization. There is no sanctionfor including an enormous amountof stuff in the schools merely toallow the child to pick what hewishe.s to study.”“Much of what has been creepinginto the .schools comes under thename of fads and thrills. One devex-opment has been the conversion ofthe schools into expensive club¬houses. It was never intended thata tax-supported schoolhouse shoulcbe a clubhouse of the better sort.”Profes.sor .Morrison condemnedthe “elaborate g>mnasiums, stad¬iums, and playing fields built formany high .schools.Yesterday he outlined the “form¬ula” of education upon which hehas based his remarks. “Public.schools are, or rather should be, in¬stitutions for the training of citi¬zens and nothing more. Until somesuch policy is adopted it is unlikelythat any progress will be made to¬ward ending either the financial orthe curricular confusion.”board of GOVERNORS APPOINTED TOmanage new international houseMember*Fiaham .Aldisl^'tcr .Aimoui-Mi>, William BushHfiiry P. Chandler* ^‘ailcs S. Dewey•Vaonii DonnelleyA. Downs^ktor EltingCharles W. Gilkey^ • H. GoodspeedM'.s. William G. HibbardEdward C. JenkinsJiidsonJanie.s KeeleyGeorge McKibbinNelson .MorrisPaul Ru.ssell'E F SimondsErne.'^t J. StevemsJanies M. Stifler•^ila'^ Strawn-'I^Tle J. TreesGeorge A. WorksE. WormserQuincy WrightM. HutchinsEmery T. PilbeyG. PlimptonE. R. .Steere Officer* and Committee*President Charles DeweyVice-Pi esident. Mrs. W'm. G. HibbardTreasurer Paul RussellSecretarv James M. StiflerExecutive CommitteeCharles S. Dewey, ChairmanFinance Committee■ Paul Russell, ChairmanHou*e CommitteeErnest J. Stevens, ChairmanDevelopment and InformationCommittee/ James Keeley, ChairmanActivities CommitteeGeorge A. Works, ChairmanDirectorBruce W. Dickson SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA PLAYSWORKS OF HANDEL, STRAUSSBY DAVID C. LEVINEIn today’s concei't, to be given atfouir-fifteen in Mandel hall, the Chi¬cago Symphony Orchestra presentsa wide range of compositions, fromHandel’s F Major concerto to the“Spanish Caprice” of Romsky-Kor-sakow. Frederick Stock will conduct.Concerto No. 2, F Major, forString Orchestra George Fred¬eric Handel (1658-1759).Bach and Handel did not employthe word “concerto” in the modernsense. For them it meant a com¬bination of voices or instruments,and as .such was applied by Bach tohis cantatas and by Handel to the“Twelve Grand Concertos forStrings” composed in 1739, The FMajor concerto was originally scor¬ed for a seven part string orchestra,with a figured bass for harpsichordaccompaniment. The concerto willbe presented today in a modifiedform, as arranged by SigismundBachrich.Symphony No. 3, F Major, Opus90. ... Johannes Brahms (1833-1897).Brahms’ third sympnony, produc¬ed in 1883, aroused a tremendousamount of praise. The commotionwa.s almost as great as that follow¬ing the first performance ofBrahms’ first symphony: but in the Ica.se of the first symphony the com¬ment was far from being whollylaudatory.Joachim sugggested that the thirdsymphony was a musical presenta¬tion of the story of He-ro and Lean-der; Schuman believed the sym¬phony to be a “forest idyll”; othercritics have called it “the ultimateexpression of the tender melancholyof the Romantics.” Tone poem, “Don Juan,” Opus20. . . .Richard Strauss (1864- )In his tone poems Strauss endeav¬ored to enlarge the descriptive scopeof music beyond the depictingof elementary emotions. “Don Juan”aptly illuBtrates this endeavor.Rather than mere gusts of passion,it shows a definite mental develop¬ment.Strauss drew his inspiration for“Don Juan” from a dramatic poemof Nicolaus Lenau. In the score isprinted a quotation from the poemdescribing the course of love froma “magic realm” to the conclusion,“Exhausted is the fuel;And on the hearth the cold is fierce¬ly cruel.”Cappriccio Espagnol, Opus 34. . .Nicolas Rimsky-Korsakow (1844-1908).This piece is a fantasia on Span¬ish dance themes, as seen by a manwhose art is said to be “rooted inRu.ssian soil.” There are fivemovements, played without pause:the first, “Alborada”, is a morningserenade, similar to the Frenchaubade. In the second movementare five variation.s, followed by areturn to the theme of the “Al¬borada” in a new key. The fourthmovement, “Scene and GypsySong”, IS largely made up of aseries of cadenzas, followed by theimpetuous gypsy song which leadsinto the finale, “Fandango of the As¬turias.” The fandango was an An¬dalusian dance with accompanimentof guitar and castanets. The themeof the Alborada reappears in thecoda.Mr. Stock in this concert resumesthe baton which he relinquished tohis younger protege, Eric DeLamar-ter fo'r the earlier progi'ams.HONOR WASHINGTONIN CHAPE SUNDAY PROM-BENT WOMENBUY OWN TICKETSDean Gilkey Will DeliverAfternoon Address Sale of Bids IncreasesAs Ball NearsA special ceremony commemorat¬ing the 2Q0th birthday of GeorgeWashington will be held in theUniversity chapel Sunday afternoonat 4:30.The event, probably the city’smast important celebration of theWashington bi-centennial, is spon¬sored jointly by the Illinois chap¬ters of the Society of ColonialDames, the Sons of Colonial Warsand the Mayflower Society.Dr. Charle.s W. Gilkey, Dean ofthe University Chapel, will deliverthe address, and the Reverend Dun¬can H. Browne, rector of St. JamesEpiscopal Church, will give the in¬vocation and benediction.The ceremony will be a spiritualinterpretation of Washington, rath¬er than an interpretation of hismilitary achievements, according toMrs. Edgar J. Goodspeed, Chair¬man of the Patriotic Service Com¬mittee of the Colonial Dames, “Weshould like to stress the contribu¬tions of Washington to his countryrather than his ability as a general,”Mrs. Goodspeed said in announcingthe program. It’s Leap Year!That’s the only explanation thusfar advanced for the fact thattwo women have bought tickets forthe Washington Prom at the Book¬store sales counter. The Washing¬ton Pirom committee, met in execu¬tive session last night to considerthe phenomenon, expressed com¬plete approval of this local applica¬tion of Leap Year privileges, andhoped that other women would be¬come equally venturesome.“Obviously, they can’t resist theattractions of this year’s prom,”one of the committee members re¬marked. And the committee sagelynodded its collective head in agree¬ment.The men are doing their sharetod, according to latest reportsfrom ticket salesmen working infraternity houses and residencehalls. With the Prom only threedays away—Friday, February 19—several hundred tickets have alreadybeen reserved. The $5.50 bid en¬titles each couple to the midnightsupper which will follow the GrandMarch.Students to CompeteFor $100 Essay PrizeThe National Municipal Leagueannounces the William H. Baldwinprize of $100 to be awarded for thebest es.say written by an undergrad¬uate of an American university ona subject connected with municipalgovernment.Optional titles are: “The Develop¬ment of Non-Partisan IVTovement inthe Last Decade”, “Needed Exten¬sion of Home Rule Powers toCities”, “Judicial Interpretation ofCivil Service Legislation”, “TheFate of the Urban County”, “TheManager Plan for Counties”. Northwestern Co-eds’ Boycott Japan’s TeaFreshman women at Northwest¬ern university are taking the Chino-Japanese conflict quite &eriou.sly,according to report from theEvanston campus.The co-eds last Friday began aneconomic camp^aign against Japanby agreeing to drink no more Jap¬anese tea. They declared they wouldmaintain this boycott at restaurants,sorority parties, and other socialevents.As late as last night, Japan hadpaid no attention to the Northwesri,-ern co-eds. Student Art WorksDue Next ThursdayThe deadline for contributions to jthe Student Art Exhibit has been -extended from yesterday, the orig- jinal date, to next Thursday at noon, jAt that time all contributions should }be in the office of Mrs. Alma ■Brooks on the first floor of IdaNoyes hall.The jury will meet at 3:30 iThusday afternoon to pass on the Icontributions. All types of art may jbe submitted, including sculpture. 1water color, oil painting, charcoal, ;pencil or ink sketches, photography, jand lithographing.The exhibition, the first in thehistory of the University, is spon¬sored by the University StudentSocial committee. TRUSTEES APPROVEACT OF SENATE INABOLISHING BOARDOF ORGANIZATIONSOther Ruling Bodies toMerge in FacultyCommitteeHold IntramuralCarnival TryoutsTonight, ThursdayFinal tryouts for skits for theEighth Annual Intramural CarnivalMarch 3 in Bartlett gym will beheld today and Thursday from 7:30to 8:30 in the Reynolds club theatreunder the direction of PalmerClark, director of the Universityband. Fraternities and clubs thatcannot arrange to show their skitsat these times may make special ap¬pointments with Palmer Clark byapplying at the information desk atthe Reynolds club.Several skits have already beenaccepted, the Intramural depart¬ment announced yesterday. Thosefraternities that have arranged skitsare: Phi Sigma Delta, Psi Upsilon,Delta Kappa Epsilon, Alpha SigmaPhi, and Phi Pi Phi. LydabethTressler, Intramural club chairman,announced that several clubs haveskits lined up with prospects forother entries.Preliminaries of the intramuralboxing matches will start Thursdayat 3:30 in Bartlett gym. The pre¬liminaries of the wrestling matcheswill be held a week from today atthe same time in Bartlett. All of thepreliminary bouts in both sportswill be run off up to the finals.Contestants in both the boxingand wrestling matches must seeSpyros K. Voires, wrestling coach,today between the hours of 10-1and 3-5, they will be allowed toparticipate.All entries for the track eventsmust be in by one today. Partici¬pants in all track events over 300yards must have Ned Merriam’s O.K. before they will be allowed tocompete. SIMPLICITY IS KEYNOTEThe Board of Student Organiza¬tions, Publications and Exhibitions,comprised of the heads of all cam¬pus organizations and faculty advis¬ors, and which was the governingbody for all student activities at theUniversity, has been abolished by ac¬tion of the University senate andthe Board of Trustees.In addition, the faculty hoard ofAdmissions, and of Physical Cultureand Athletics, has been done awaywith to give place to a general fac¬ulty-senate committee, which will de¬termine the general policies relatingto student affairs, admissions andathletics.Works Heads New SchemeThe Board of Student Organiza¬tions, Publications, and Exhibitionswas abolished in the interests ofsimplification of student affairs. Itwill be replaced by a committee ap¬pointed by George A. Wo^rks, Deanof Students at the University andwill be composed of one graduatestudent, two Senior women, twoSenior men, two Juniors and twostudents in the college. There willbe no faculty members of the com¬mittee with voting power, but therewill be several as members in anadvisory capacity.This new committee will be em¬powered to initiate and suggestchanges in the policy of the Univer¬sity relating to student affairs. Itwill also constitute a body represen¬tative of student opinion, to whomthe office of the Dean of Studentsmay refer n^atters affecting stu¬dents, and which may itself refermatters to Dean Works. It may leg¬islate freely and is subject to thejurisdiction only of Dean Works aslong as it stays within the bounds ofgeneral policy laid down by the sen¬ate committees.New Group Is More WieldyThe old board served more in thecapacity of an arbitrary body forall the activities on campus. It ap¬proved of the constitutions of allstudent organizations, thereby giv¬ing them official recognition. Theold board was three times as largeas this one', and the reduction to acommittee of nine members will fa¬cilitate prompt action.BARRETT H. CLARK, GEORGE O. CURMEGIVE MOODY LECTURES TOMORROWTwo lectures, under the auspicesof the William Vaughn Moodyfoundation, by Barrett H. Clark,author, and editor, and Geo^rge O.Curme, professor of Germanic phil¬ology at Northwestern Universityare scheduled for Wednesday after¬noon and evening respectively.Mr. Curme will speak on “Is OurLanguage English or American?” at8:15 in Mandel hall; Mr. Clark willdiscuss “The American Theatre ofToday” at 4:30 in the Reynoldsclub theatre.Mr. Curme has been professor ofGerman at Northwestern since 1896.Before that, he was instructor inGerman and French and finally professor of German language and lit¬erature at Cornell College, Iowa un¬til his appointment to Northwestern.He is, at the present time, amember of the Linguistic society ofAmerica, a member of the ModernLanguage Association of America,and of the National Institute of So¬cial Sciences.His first literary work ^^■»^,s anedition of French poems, “Selectedpoems from Premieres and Nou-velles Meditations of Lamartine.” “Lessing’s Nathan Der Vei-se” fol¬lowed, and then he wrote a Gram¬mar of German Language. He edit¬ed Libussa by Grillparzer in 1913.After that he wrote another Ger¬man grammar and a College Gram¬mar of English.Mr. Clark, a member of DeltaUpsilon, studied at the Universityfrom 1908 to 1909, and againfrom 1911 to 1912. Following this,he studied for one year in Paris.His dramatic career started whenhe became actor and assistant stagemanager with Mrs. Minnie Mad-dern Fiske. For eight years, he wasinstructor in drama at Chatauqua,New York, and at the same timethe literary editor for SamuelFrench, publisher. He was mem¬ber of the board of directors at theDrama League of America, editorof the Drama Magazine and duringthe world war dramatic director ofCamp Humphreys.He has written numerous bookson the drama. His first book, “TheContinental Drama of Today”, waswritten in 1914. “European Theorie.sof Drama”, “A Study of The Mod-(C«ntinv«tl on page 4)Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1932imlg iiarnnnFOUNDED Hi 1901THB OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished mornings, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday,during the Autumn, Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5831 University Ave. Subscription rates $3.00per year; by mail. $1.60 per year extra. Single copiea, flve-centaeach.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chicago forany statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the postoffice at Chicago, Illinois, ur.Jer the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right of publicationof any material appearing in this paper.Member of the Western Cbnferenc« Press AssociationLOUIS N. RIDENOUR, JR., Editor-in-ChiefMERWIN S. ROSENBERG, Business ManagerMARGARET EGAN, Asst. Business ManagerJANE KESNER, Senior EditorHERBERT H. JOSEPH, Jr., Sports EditorASSOCIATE EDITORSMAXINE CREVISTONRUBE S. FRODIN, JR.BION B. HOWARDJ, BAYARD POOLEJAMES F. SIMONWARREN E. THOMPSON3LEANOR E. WILSON BUSINESS ASSOCIATESJOHN D. CLANCY. JR.EDGAR L. GOLDSMITHSOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSSTANLEY CONNELLYWM. A. KAUFMANWALTER MONTGOMERYVINCENT NEWMANEDWARD SCHALLERSOPHOMORE EDITORSJANE BIESENTHM.MELVIN GOLDMANWILLIAM GOODSTEINEDWARD NICHOLSONTASULA PETRAKISROSEMARY VOLKMARGARET MULLIGAN BETTY HANSENROBERT HERZOGDAVID LEVINEEUGENE PATRICKWILLIAM WAKEFIELDJANE WEBERNight Editor: James F. SimonAssistants: Herzog and NicholsonTuesday, February 16, 1932STUDENT AFFAIRS—NEW STYLE IIIn our last edition, it was proposed to createfour general student boards to handle the affairsof virtually all of the student activities of thecampus in an efficient though simple manner.These bodies are a Board of Dramatic and Musi¬cal Organizations, a Students’ Publishing Com¬pany, a Student Social Committee, and a Board |of Student Affairs. IThe purposes of setting up these bodies arethe following: to secure, in extracurricular activ- jities, the unification of a common directing body ■and the continuity of policy which has been ob¬served only rarely in such activities; to minimize !the somewhat disreputable campus politics which,like the poor, is always with us; to simplify thenow complicated structure of student governingbodies and to clarify the duties of each mem¬ber left in the simplified structure.There exists on the campus a good many or¬ganizations which, founded on the basis of a com¬mon interest among members, decide that atreasury would enable them to carry on theirwork more thoroughly and more successfully. Tothe question: “How are we to make money? ”there are two common answers. They are, in theorder of their usual proposal. ‘ Let’s put on adance ” and “Lets get out a publication and sellit”.It is the belief of The Daily Maroon that a Stu¬dent Social Committee, appointed by the Deanof Students, should be vested with the sole pow¬er to authorize the presentation of an all-Univer-sity social affair of any nature to which admissionwas to be charged. A social program for theyear could be mapped out in advance and a uni¬form policy followed.The Board of Dramatic and Musical Organiza¬tions would be composed of representatives fromM irror, the Band, the Choir, the Orchestra, TowerPlayers, and Gargoyles, to which would be added,for the sake of unity, the hitherto independentBlackfriars. This body would be solely respon¬sible for the dramatic and musical productions ofstudents at the University, and no dramatic ormusical presentation to which students were solic¬ited to purchase tickets could be offered withoutthe sanction of this body.The Students’ Publishing Company would be abusiness organization with the sole authorizationto produce an official undergraduate publication.Its publications would probably consist of a daily,a monthly, an annual, a student directory, and astudent handbook. Each of the first three wouldhave a staff of its own, headed by a managingeditor and a business manager. The president ofthe company, selected from any of the threestaffs, would be the publisher of each of the pub- 1lications, and would be responsible for their 'proper conduct. 1We have now set up boards for the conduct of jall the activities aimed at making money—boards |which, in our opinion, would simplify and unify : the operation of these activities. There remains abody to act as mediator between the students andthe administration; under the proposed plan, thiss the Board of Student Affairs. It would be ap¬pointed by the Dean of Students, ft would haveno power in determining the social policy of theundergraduates, nor in supervising the publica¬tions or the dramatic or musical organizations. Itwould concern itself only with the arbitration ofquestions arising between the student body andthe administration. It would not sit around andtry to think up such questions; it would meet onlyon petition of, say, fifty students that a certainmatter be considered.The Undergraduate council, a board composedof representatives of the campus at large and of 1all sorts of activities, has dismally failed properly |to unify the activities of the campus and to be jtruly representative of student sentiment. It has |failed in its mission for some years, in spite of the jfact that repeated efforts have been made to giveit authority and meaning. This failure The Daily 'Maroon takes as indicative of something wrong iin the theory that one student group can super- 'vise the affairs of a number of student groups as ivaried as are the campus activities. An Under- igraduate council by any other name, we feel,would be just as ineffective as the present body; !TO one student board can at once oversee the pub- |lications and dramatics and campus social life andmake recommendations to the administration onquestions of policy, no matter how this board is !set up and empowered. At least the four we have^suggested are necessary.—L. N. R.. Jr.illiiiiiiiiliiiilliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiliiiiHiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii):::!::::':’ in.I The Travelling BazaarI BY FRANK HARDINGOutside of the few comic valentines we got(why is it that no one will ever send us a real¬ly refined one, all lavender and lace with asweet sentiment and two tighty claspedhearts?) there was one that came to Nerts,the campus squirrel, in care of this colm. Anddammit, the thing was by far the most expen¬sive cord we saw during the season.i« » ¥Louis Cohen, who many will remember asa Zeta Bete from school here, has anotherjob outside of the one with the Trianon. Hehas a sort of Winchell half hour over theradio 6:30 p. m., WCFL, in which he deliv¬ers all the radio gossip.* *S . • ^Just recently we saw what was perhaps thefunniest thing of tJrt? year; an old womanexercising two bulldogs at the corner of Stateand Madison. One dog was tugging on oneleash trying to go to the lampost, and theother dog was pulling his best to get to thecorner of the building. The people were try¬ing to go both ways.—Oh, yes we know thatwe have a perverted sense of humor but didyou ever eat caviar out of a three year oldcan. You too would turn green and beginwriting like Tovrov, that’s what happens.Some one brought this to our attention. Anexample of what can be done with one goodad with a sour mind.A MIDNIGHT SUPPERTHE DRAKE HOTELHERBIE KAY’S ORCHESTRATHE GLAMOUR OF AUNIVERSITY FORMAL BALLCross out the “S” in the first line, the “D”in the second, the “OR” and the “RA” oforchestra in the third, the ‘ G in the fourth,and the last six letters of the fifth.ONLY ONE MORE DAY! BIG AN¬NOUNCEMENT TOMORROW! ! !Yes’m we are about to spend astretch at Leavenworth and it won’t be forbootlegging either. We are all in the wrong,it seems; we have been running a lottery inthis business of scrambling words for Mirrortickets. The U. S. Post Office informs us thatwe can t do that and unless we quit they willpay a personal call. Sorry folks but we mustretreat and all we can do is to tell you aboutthe show. Your Prom Hose Will CountToward a ... Free 13th Pair!No trouble matching your dress intissue chiffons, $1, or intriguingNeumode evening nets, $1,15No worries aliout getting exactly the sime sh;idenext time... for Neumode keeps a completecolor line from \ear to year. No trouble findingshades to blend with the mo^t unusual eveningdres>es. No worries as to how they’ll wear. . .;isk I.nKiint' t>r Kalhrriut' D'u'rssen. ’louronly trouble will lx* in choosing Ixtween Campuschiffiin>, Hoc. . .tissue chiffons, . . .nets, $1.15.nEUMODE HOSIERY SHOPNext to Huylers, 16 S. MichiganPoliticscomes toCampustownHutchin’s gets hatthrown in ring—Tomorrow RobertMaynard Hutchinsis placed as a candi¬date for presidency.The well knownmagazine the Phoe¬nix is back of thecandidate. In fact itcrept up in back ofhim in the smartestwit, fun, and satireof the season. You’lllike it. Besides thiswe have the beststories of the year inthe columns. TheInk Pot goes crazy,the armchair clinicstays that way, andLaufmann has plen¬ty pictures.-Feb. 17- Of all the dancesever held, noneofferedA Midnight SupperA Famous BandThe Drake Hotel BallroomNight Club Entertainmentfor$5.50THEWASHINGTONPROMon February 19 hasall of this—.There is still time to get a date — to get aBid — NOW. iS"/VOS'IaTHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1932 Page n»reeTheGrandstandAthletebyHERBERT JOSEPH JR.Football Rule Change* for 1932The national football rules com¬mittee has met and adjourned, andivs a result football next year willhe a very different tfame. The modi¬fications passed by the committee inan effort to check the tendency to¬ward increasinff injuries are:1. To restrict the formation ofthe team receiving: the kickoff byrequiring that five players of the re¬ceiving team remain on their 45-yard line until the ball is kicked,an<l to aTlow the kickoff to be madecither by place kick, punt, or dropkick.2. To forbid players on the de- Ifen.xe to strike an opponent on the j•head, neck or face with the hand, ;wrist, forearm or elbow.:t. To liberalize the substitutions jrule to allow a player withdrawn |from the jrame to re-enter once in |any suksequent period. j4. To forbid use of the flyingblock or tackle.To make the ball “dead” whenany part of the ball carrier’s body jexcept his hands or feet touches the |ground. it). To amplify the rule regarding |e(|uipment .s<» as to require paddingof hard an<l unyielding substances |uith felt, foam rubber or other .softpatiding at least three-eighths of aninch thick.These changes are the mo.'<t im- ,poiTant in recent year.s, and several !will alter fundamentals of the game,number 2 in particular. Number 5is a (lueer change, and will elimin¬ate. among other things, a lot of‘‘piling on".The legalizing of the punt ordrop kick in addition to the placekick on the kickoff will bring about'•■^ome changes in that department.It looks like a break for the teanusthat lack all-round good kickers.The kickoff formation i>oint was ex-iiected, hut the others are more orless of a surprise.. !>> e should like to gab for severaleolumns on the subject, but we haveno rubber type at hand.Consider ThisYOUR HOTEL1-KV()NK here—from door¬man to manager—always has ahearty welcome for University oftliicago students. For generationsVC been friends. Years of ex-l'<rie!Ke enable us to arrange yourdinners, luncheons, dances andNrties just the way you want them^md at prices to fit your budget, too.C S. A convenient place to park>‘'nr parents, also—not too near—■'‘•t not too far.Ifotels llindermere^hicagoStreet at Hyde Park Boulevard^ard B. James, ManagerFairfax 6000 PURDUE RALUES INFINAL MINUTES TOBEAT CHICAGO 40-27 fGymnasts, Trackmen, Wrestlers | MEDICS TAKE TWOVictorious in Week-end Meets GAMES TO BECOMELEAGUE CHAMPIONSStephenson Keeps TeamIn Running withTwelve PointsBIG TEN SCORESM ichigan 40, Iowa 22Illinois 23, Minnesota 15Indiana 33, Wisconsin 21Purdue 43, Ohio 26Again lacking that final drive towin, Chicago lost her sixth succes¬sive conference basketball game toPurdue 40-27 last Saturday eveningin the new- fieldhou.se. Trailing theBoilermakers by but a single pointwith less than three minutes to go.the Maroons let down completely a.«Wooden and Eddy peppered theChicago basket with .shots, piling upa thirteen point lead before the gunsounded.The Purdue team entered thegame heavy with over-confidence andafter playing badly disorganized bas¬ketball the entire game, flashed theonly hint of their real form in thefinal spurt during the closing sec¬onds of play. Stephenson againkept the Maroons in the running,making several impossible shots ashe drove into the basket closelyguanled by Puidue men. He endedthe evening with a hook shot frot!.the side court, with VV'ooden crowd¬ing him off the floor, to bring histotal of points to twelve. Eddy, thehusky forward who started his ca¬reer at Purdue with Captain Wood¬en three years ago, led the .sco-ringfor both teams with six field goalsand five free throws.Saturday’s results in the Big Tenproved a day of u{>sets as ninthplace Iowa administered a 'sounddrubbing to the undefeated Purpleof Northwestern. The llawkeyes ledthe entire game to win .‘10-25. Min¬nesota also suffered defeat and lositheir hold on second place when In¬diana came out on the long end ofthe 27-22 score. Maroon teams spent a busy week¬end as the gymnasts, fencers, track¬men and swimmers opened Confer¬ence schedules and the Wrestlerswent east on their annual tour.Coach Hoffer’s gym team impres¬sively defeated Ohio State in begin¬ning the defense of their Confer¬ence title. The swimming team lostto Ohio but came back to defeat theBuckeyes in the polo game. Maroontrackmen defeated Purdue in a dualmeet while the fencing team wasdefeated by Ohio State. The wrest¬lers won two meets, tied one andlost one on the annual eastern tour.Coach Dan Hoffer’s gym teamshowed its consistent championshipform by defeating Ohio State, 1169points to the Buckeyes’ 948. CaptainOlson of the Maroon squad, enteredin all five events, took four firstsand one second place.Placing in the first divisions ofthe meet were as follows: Rings;Olson, first, Wright, second. Stone(Ohio State), third. Horse; Wright,first. Olson, second, .Adler, third.Horizontal bar; Olson, first, Wright,second, Coons (Ohio State), third.Parallel bai-s; Olson, fir.st, Wright,second, Alvarez, third. Tumbling;Olson, first, Nordhaus, .second,Scherubel, third.! The ouckeye fencing team re-i couped the loss suffered by theirI gymsters by defeating Coach F. V.! Merrill’s swordsmen, 4 to 3, in Bart-i lett gym Friday night.The Chicago squad took twopoints in foils, to its opponent’sone. split with Ohio State for onepoint each in epee, and lost in .saber0 to 2. Julian and Almond tookI the Maroons’ points in foil and Gil-i lies captured the lone point in epee.On Feb. 26 and 27 the Chicagoteam will compete with Illinois andNorthwestern at home. On March11 and 12 they will also entertaii.with the Conference meet at Bart¬lett gym.i The Chicago wrestling team,' which entrained last Wednesdayj for their annual trip east precedingI the regular Conference schedule,i met with marked success as on suc-I cessive days the grapplers defeatedMechanics Institute and Brown, tiedThe definitely accent-ed.form-fitting frocksof the new season de¬mand that your figurebe perfectly moulded—bust uplifted, waist¬line slender and hipssmoothly rounded.With Maiden Form,it’s easy to acquirethis naturally beauti¬ful silhouette. MaidenForm foundations arescientifically design^to mould the figure inharmony with fash¬ion’s dictates. A new perfectly fit¬ting “uplift” bras-siere.with acleverlycurved elastic insertbetween the bustsections, to allowjustenough“givc”.“NON.A*LASTIC”— girdle. Made ofspecial clastic (cx-clusive withMaiden Form) non-strctchable acrosscenter front for ab¬domen control withenough “give”through waistlineand back for bodycomfort. Excellentlot heavier figures.There is a Maiden Formfor every type of figure.THE SAME“Maidcnctte Seam¬less” a new “wispof a brassiere”, forslight figures, withtiny scams under thebust so chat they’repractically invis¬ible. The daintygarter belt is of nettriiniDcd with lace. Ref. U.S. Pit. Off.c * *. • 11 * * c A S.T I a. sitTSBrassieres, $t.00 te|2.95.Cffst/es, $2.9} *• $12.}0.GarSer Belts, $1.00 S» $2.9}Sae Maiden Form styles st your dealer or write to us for booklet.Maiden Form Bnustere Co., Inc. Depc NN—245 Fifth Aee., N. Y.“Maiden FormDouble Support ‘ ‘—the brassiere mostpopular with wom¬en of fuller figure.This new importtdall-clastic girdlenips in the waist¬line and perfectlycontrols the hips. Harvard and lost narrowly toFranklin and Marshall in the finalmeet. Eight men were carried onthe trip and all won at least onematch in four attempts.The wrestlers met Mechanics In¬stitute at Rochester Thursday eve¬ning and after doubling the score20-10, moved on to Providence, R.I. where they defeated Brown Uni¬versity 22-8 on Friday afternoon.The same evening Chicago met Har¬vard University, and after leadingthe entire meet, finally emergedwith a tie. Franklin and Marshallproved the only stumbling block ina completely succe.ssful tour, de¬feating the Maroon matmen 17-11.Coach Ned Merriam’s trackmenopened the Conference schedule bydefeating Puirdue 52%-51 (4 in adual meet at the new fieldhouse.The Purdue team, supposedly oneof the weakest in the Big Ten, showed remarkable strength and the Chi¬cago victory was in question untilthe final relay which gave them theone point margin.Brooks and Black led the Chicagoteam with two first place victories,while Bi'ooks also took a second inthe low hurdles to lead the scoringwith thirteen points. The Maroonstook a clean sweep in the low hurd-le.s, took first and second in the highhurdles, and all three places in the60 yard dash. The distance eventswent to Purdue while the shot put,pole vault, high jump and broadjump were divided about evenly.Brooks won the broad jump andRoberts tied for first in the highjump.The swimmers were not able todown the Ohio State tankmen lastFriday night. They got one first, indiving, when Bud Marron won andJim Marron took third. The Ma¬roons took second and third in the440 and 220 yard events. The wa¬ter polo squad came back to eventhings up trouncing the Buckeyesby an 11 to 1 score ^ ^ Ponies Beat Ramblers;Meadville DefeatsScramblersThe Ponies I took the lead inthe Gamma league in Intramuralbasketball play last night by defeat¬ing the Ramblers, the latter beingrunners-up. After winning twogames, one a rescheduled tilt, theMedics were given first place in theSigma league, second place going tothe King's Horses. A victory of theMeadville five over the Scramblensput them in a tie with the Ponies IIfor second place in the Zeta league,the Independents having capturedthe league title.Medics, 28; King’s Horses, 15Slott and Wilcoxon were out¬standing for the winners as theRoyal Equestrians went down to de¬feat.Meadville, 18; Scramblers, 15Haberly and Van Dyke playedwell for the Theologcians. TheScramblers had a one-man team inMcGlothin.Medics, 41; C. T. S., 9In their second spectacular vic¬tory of the evening, the Pill Rollersshowed good playing. Geisen scored; 24 of the winners’ total.I Ponies I, 21; Ramblers, 6j The first Little Horses quint hadj no trouble in downing the predict-j ed champs, playing a smooth short-; passing game.! Burton “600”, 22; Judson “400”, 12I Borg was outstanding for thej Burton Court squad, scoring 12FOR COLFEGF GIRLSAnI V Graduates or Uuderirraduatea. Six• • • months of thoroush training — putinto a three months’ intensive course for trirls whoknow how to study. Send today for Bulletin.Courses start October 1, January 1,April 1, July 1M0.4»KR BlT.SI!VEK5i COLLK«sB"The Busineaa ColW* with a University Atnwtrphere"116 South Michigan Avenue, ChicagoPhone Handolph 4347 1-M Games TonightThe schedule for Intramuralbasketball games for tonight isas follows:7:30Wildcats 400 vs. Badgers 500“B”Barbarians vs. Phi Sigma Del¬ta “B”Phi Gamma Delta vs. ZetaBeta Tau “B”8:15Gophers 600 vs. Hawkeyes700 “A”Delta Upsilon vs. Tau DeltaPhi “B^’Phi Beta Delta vs. Psi UpsilonI “B”9:00Alpha Delta Phi vs. Psi Up¬silon II “B”^ Delta Kappa Epsilon vs. PhiDelta Theta “B”points, ably assisteu by Bonady.Drawings for places in the “A”division elimination tournamen't willbe held this afternoon at 1.MENIf you are interested in Eu¬rope, you will be interested ina new organization forming atthe University of Chicago.Profitable part time work isoffered students with' this or¬ganization. Apply in personat Maroon office, LexingtonHall, Room 7, between 2:30and 4:30 today.WE DESIRE one or two out¬standing students classed asleaders t® whom we will givea very attractive proposition,they to lease pleasantly furn¬ished rooms to their friendsand fellow students. Highly de¬sirable University location. At¬tractive new lobby. Full de¬tails on application. Send re¬plies to Daily Maroon, Box O,Faculty Exchange.ONE GAME WITH YALETHAT STAGGWOULD LIKETO PUY OVERThe Battle started in I 889. Theytried to sell Mr. Stagg a Yale yearbook. He didn’t take it. He ap¬peared to be in the lead by severaldollars.Years elapsed and Mr. Stagg. athousand miles away, still remem¬bered those glorious days at Yale.But he would like to have had pic¬tures of some of his old friends. Thescore was still even. One goodmemory for Mr. Stagg. One goodyear book for Yale.Then came the great up-hill battle. Mr. Stagg s fertile memory was pitted againsta pictorial and written record. The odds were too great. Yale took a slight lead.Now the battle to'^remember faces, facts, and scenes is all in Yale’s favor. Timehas taken its toll of many of Mr. Stagg s most pleasant memories.Today the “Old Man’’’tells us he would pay any price for that yearbook. Thememory of those years at Yale really meant a great deal.Someday you too, will be waging a battle to remember friends and scenes ofthese years. Classmates and the University will have a 1932 Cap and Gown to helpthem battle a fading memory. Don’t leave yourself open to the pain of not being able toremember the happiest years of your life.Obey that impulse. Reserve your copy of the Cap and Go%vn today — now.Ask about it at the U. of C. Bookstore.The price is $2.50. $1.00 Down $1.50 Later.Page Four THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16. 1932COEDS - IF YOU ARESOCIALLY POPULARWRITE ME TODAYI am appointing: one coed in severallargre schools to represent my company.There is no investment nor canvassingto do. If selected, you will merely actas my agent in contacting your girlassociates on a dignified, professionaland ethical basis. Naturally it is desir¬able that the applicant have .a wide ac¬quaintance to qualify tor this opiHirtun-ity to earn an excellent remuneration forvery little effort. -Address your reply toA. R. Johnson, 510 No. Dearborn St.,Chicago. Ill.READER’S CAMPUSDRUG STORE(Opposite the New Men’s Dormitory)^S.El. Comer 61st and Ellis Ave.A most delightful place tolunch.Our Special SandwichLuncheon 30cIncludes soup, sandwich,dessert and drink.We serve Breakfast, Lunchand SupplerDelivery Service FreeFairfax 4800The pipe u not forpretty girls.Here, MIU,smoke aman’s smokeAPIPEFUL of good tobacco is dis-, tinctly a man’s smoke. Thewomen (long may they wave!) havetaken over mostof our masculineprivileges. Butpipe smoking stillbelongs to us.In every walkof life you’ll findthat the men atthe top are pipesmokers. And most college men agreethat the pipe offers the rarest pleasuresa man could ask of his smoking.When you smoke a pipe, be sureyou choose the tobacco that will giveyou the greatestenjoyment. In 42out of 54 collegesEdgeworth is thefavorite. You canbuy Edgeworthwherever goodtobacco is sold.Or for a specialsample packet,write to Larus 6C Bro. Co., 105 S. 226.St., Richmond, Va. Sample is free.EDGEWORTHSMOKING TOBACCOEdgeworth is a blend of fine old hurleys,with its natural savor enhanced by Edge¬worth’s distinctiveand exclusive elev-enth process. BuyEdgeworth any¬where in two forms—Edgeworth Ready-Rubbed and Edge-worth Plug Slice.All sizes, 15# pocketpackage to ^1.50pound hunudor tin. Here’s the smoke formen, a pipe and goodtobacco.. ExrsA, , THEATREbyJane KesnerLIND’S TEA ROOM6252 University Ave.• Special Luncheon 40cDinners 50c and 60c “MOURNING BECOMESELECTRA’’Eugene O’NeillBL.\CKSTONEEzra Mannon Thurston HallHis wife, Christine.. Florence ReedHis daughter, Lavinia.Judith AndelrsonHis son, Orin Walter AbelCapt. Brant Crane WilburPeter Eric KalkhurstHazpl Bernice EilliottSeth Seth Arnold g^host and the subseauent determin¬ation of the daughter to bury her¬self forever in the house of hate.With a slightly more compacttreatment, O’Neill could have wov¬en his threads of incest, murder,and hate into two plays—with ingen¬uity and sufficient scenes, he couldhave evolved one three act play.The shorter form would have lentitself to even greater emotional in¬tensity and dramatic effect. But Mr.O’Neill pledged himself to theCreek and to the Greek he is faith¬ful. However the tedium of time and; the very poor acting of Walter Abelare both effaced in the brilliant per-I formance of Judith Aiuleison—whois indeed an exclamation point inthe drama.It is a stark, austere mourningwhich becomes this Electra—amourning which Mr. O’Neill has fash¬ioned from the grimmest of trag¬ic fabric to adorn the scintillatingperson of Judith Anderson. .\s La¬vinia Mannon, daughter of a cursedfamily, she sits on the stairs of theMannon residence—a slim blackpunctuation mark against the uglygrey walls and bleak white columns—and watches the vile destinies ofher family slip through her fingers.Balancing her is Florence Reedas the mother of the house, allur¬ing and terrible—the image of whatLavinia will gradually become. Theylight the hatred which has been kin¬dled for generations in the familywith a scorching flame which is initself the motivation and the end ofthe entire plot. Together they prof¬fer their performances as offeringsheld aloft on delicate hands to what¬ever gods of the theatre exist.And there is no better way to ap¬preciate those powers than to see {the productions of the trilogy which ■in printed form promised so much ,in the way of great tragedy. Witha technically perfect production— 1including every detail of staging, |lighting, and costuming — Mr. iO’Neill’s drama in the flesh exhibitsa few alarming weaknesses not ap¬parent in the print. The trilogy Jform, patterned after the Greekportrayals of “families accursed”— |was perhaps suited to the Greektheatre when people came to spendthe day out of doors.It is a form which many first-nighters came to realize—is notvery well adopted to the modernstage. Of a length which taxes au¬dience endurance, and of an emo¬tional intensity which proves utter¬ly fatiguing—the plays lag badly inspots and are saved sheerly by theelectric cuiTcnt which emanatesfrom Miss Anderson throughout thefibres of the plays.The action which is summarilytitled “The Home Coming”, “TheHunted” and “The Haunted” tracesthe return of Ezra Mannon from theCivil War and his subsequent mur¬der by his unfaithful wife—the mur¬der of the mother’s lover by herson and daughter and the mother’ssubsequent suicide—the suicide ofthe son pursued by his mother’s Editor, PhilologistDeliver Two MoodyLectures Tomorrow(Continued from page 1)ern Drama”, “British and Ameri¬can drama”, “How to ProduceAmateur Plays”, “Eugene O’Neill”“Pollyanna”, and “Professor Clark,a Memoir” came later.After writing these books, he be¬gan editing plays of all nationsFrench, Belgian. Spanish, and Eng¬lish.Both men have been chosen asrepresentatives of the literary worldin a series on art, literature and sci¬ence.Chapel Service MarksWashington Centennial(Continued from page 1) jA processional of the three so-!cieties, led by Professor Robert V. jMerrill, Marshal of the University, |will open the service. Followingprayers by Dean Browne and the ad- idress by Dean Gilkey, Mrs. Ferdin-'and Schevill, contralto, will sing asolo.Alunmi Aid Mirror(Continued from page 1)offers music. Art How'ard, ex-con¬ductor of the Travelling Bazaar,lyrics writer for the 1931 Mirror,this year contributes a .skit; RussellHuber, actor in several'campus plays,wrrites skits, lyrics, and music, JulianJackson, editor of the 1931 Phoenix,has a skit; and Jean Searcy, formerchairman of Federation, is the only1931 alumnae offering a skit.SHORTHANDfor UniversityStudentsImagine how much' easier it would beto take class notes in Shorthand.Gregg College offers special classea foruniversity students, meeting late aft.emoons or Monday and Thursday eve¬nings. Write, call, or telephone State1881 for particulars.THE CRECC COLLEGE225 N. Wabash Are.. Chicago. III.WEDGEWOOD HOTEL64th and WoodlawnDine in the delightful and quiet atmosphere ofWcodlawn’s Most Beautiful Dining Room. Here you maypartake of the choicest morsels on the South Side, Fairprices and service have always been our motto.Luncheon 40cDinner - - - - 50c and 75cSpecial Sunday Dinner - $ 1.00OUR BALLROOM IS "OPEN TO PARTIESfmFOR RENT—6-Rm. furnishedhouse for 6 mos. on Longwood Dr.in Beverly Hills. F'ine location.Good transportation. Oil heat. $100per mo. Call Bev. 1192 between 5and 7 P. M.WANTED — Representative forA. Nash Clothing Co. to sell madeto measure clothing direct. Fordetails see Mr. Kennan. WANTED—University woman toteach 15 year old girl piano les¬sons in exchange for meals. MissRobinson.STUDENTS—ilvery automobileowner is willing to pay $2 for $16worth of service on his car. Crewmanager gets half. For details seeMr. Kennan. TODAYon theQUADRANGLESThe Daily MaroonNight editor for the next issue:Rube S. Frodin, Jr. Assistants;William Wakefield and Robert Al¬varez.Undergraduate OrganizationsY. W. C. A. dinner at 6 in thesunparlor room of Ida Noyes. Pic¬tures will be shown afterwards.Alpha Kappa Psi meets at 7 ;30in room D of Reynolds club.Music and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel: “Disarmament. I.The General Problem.” ProfessorRobert Morss Lovett. 12. in JosephBond chapel.Noon concert of symphony rec¬ords, at 12:30 in the Reynold.^ club.Organ music, at 5 in the Univer¬sity chapel.Lecture-recital, on the program ofthe Chiaago Symphony Orchestra..Assistant Profes.sor Cecil MichenexSmith. 3, in Theological Seminary439.Concert by the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra. 4:15 in Mandel hall.Departmenlal OrganizationsThe Medical Journal club meetsat 4:30 in Billings M. 443.Extension lectures in Keligion:“Early Babylonian and AssyrianArchaeology.” Professor EdwardChiers. 7:30, in the Oriental Insti¬tute. “How Christianity Made ItsDoctrines.” Professor Edwin Aub¬rey. 8:30 P. M., in Oriental Insti¬tute 208. “The Finances of theChurch.” Robert CashmarL 8:30 I’.M., in Oriental Institute 210.The Philosophy club meets at7:45 in Classics 20. “ConscienceWOMENIf you are interested in Eu¬rope, you will be interested ina new organization forming atthe University of Chicago.Profitable part time work isoffered students with' this or¬ganization. Apply in personat Maroon office, LexingtonHall, Room 7, between 2:3'and 4:30 today.SALES¬GIRLS-CommissionandPrizesThe political num¬ber of the Phoenixwill be another sell¬out. Get in onsome good pinmoney, and alsoget yourself a poli¬tical pull.Call at the OfficeTuesday or Wed¬nesday A. M.Phoenix as a Function of Doing-Suffering.” |Professor T. V. Smith. •Miscellaneous |Radio lectures: “Colonial Liter-iature.” Professor Percy Boynton. 8 jA. M., on WMAQ. “Readings.” A\- ilen Miller. 10:45, on WMAQ. ]"Elementary Spanish.” Associate Professor Carlos Castillo. 4-30 onWMAQ.Public lecture (downtown); “Sop¬hocles for English Readers.” Thorn¬ton Wilder. 6:45, in the Art Insti¬tute.Meeting of the Boara ot Exam¬inations, at 4 in Social Science 30'^FRIDAY NIGHTEnjoy a riot of ileasure duringafter-theatre supper at Chicago’smost popular night club.DON PEDRO COLLEGIANSwill play dance music smoking hotDANCING till 1 A. M.Broadcast over KYW — N.B.C. ChainA LIVELY FLOOR REVUENOCOVERCHARGE in tfif MORRISON HOTELCLABK ANO MAOISON STREETS NOCOVERCHARGEGOING TO THE PROM?TUXEDOSNew and uncalled for at our Wabash Avenue Tailor ShoponlyChoice$39.50Formerly sold up to $80,00225 N. Wabash Ave.at Wacker Drive—3rd Floor“all’s fair”andwhile it isbuy those ticketstothe mirror showforfeb. 26 and 27at$1.50, $1.00 or 50cbox office open9-4:30 daily inmandel cloisters