“COMPLETECAMPUSCOVERAGE” Batlp Jlaroon Name Interscholas-tic heads.Vol. 28. No. 92. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY. APRIL 25. 1929 Price Five Cent!AthenaeumMORE ON THE PROPOSEDCOURSE IN A SENSE OFHUMORBy James T. FarrellYesterday in this column, I sug¬gested the addition of a Sense ofHumor Course to the University’scurriculum, feeling that it would de¬velop an added charm, grace, tol¬erance, and humanity in the life ofthis beautiful campus. I also listedseveral specific reasons why such aninnovation wks desirable. To thiscategory, I shall add more items,and then proceed to outline somemethods of procedure in the actualinstruction after classes have beenorganized. First of all, there is thesign on the basement wall of Bart¬lett reading “For Chicago I Will” alovely sentiment which (of course)does not mean “I will win footballgames.” Rivaling this motto, is thealma mater song, a ditty superior tothe “Star Spangled Banner” and“We Will Meet by the River.” Thentoo, there is the professor who hasspent .twenty-five years paintingpretty little red, g^reen and bluemarks in the New Testament striv¬ing to prove something or other, theimported Wisemen who spill Chris¬tianity about the chapel on Sundays,the football yells and songs, the ele¬vator, and doormen who would soon¬er break a neck than a rule, themale aestheticians who serve aswalking delegates for the arts, sci¬ences, and food shops, the under¬graduate elections, and the recentmillion dollar good-will-gift.This course should be supervisedby the Department of Philosophy,and should be compulsory for bothstudents and faculty. It should re¬quire actual field work in humor.This might be of various sorts. Thinstructor might, for instance, placeseveral deans on the platforms ascase studies, and give the classespractice in laughing. Another stuntwould be to place a mirror in therear of the instructor’s desk, and re¬quire each member of the class tostudy his reflection for five or tenminutes. A meeting of the facultyor of the board of trusteesshould be staged, with the instruc¬tor illustrating each element of thecomedy as it unfolded itself. If Mr.Stagg would consent, a pep meet¬ing could be held for the benefitof the elementary students in hu¬mor. From time to time off campustrips to the Board of Education, theSanitary Commission, the Tivoli,Jack Jones’ Dill Pickle Club, theCourt of Domestic Relations, Bug-house Square, the LaSalle Street Y.M. C. A., and the Chicago Chamberof Commerce. Term papers shouldbe optional, with such subjects as“Why I Am So Ridiculous,” beingsuggested. Courses could be pol¬ished off by one final exhibition, saya marriage, a chapel convocation, ora University football game.Results from these courses wouldbe slow. This university, being solarge an institution, naturally de¬velops tremendous quantities of bal¬loon-like over-importance, its wallsfortify tons and tons of smugnessand squeamishness that masks as dig¬nity, its faculty and student body in¬evitably acquires Great Souls, HugeMinds, bridge players, prayers, cheerleaders, and professors who repeattheir jokes. All this clownishness,ridiculousness and burlesque couldnot be undressed over night. Itwould take at least several years toconvince divinity students that a si¬lencer should be placed on theirnoonday yowling. The chapel com¬mittee (or whoever arranges forsermons) is more or less bound toinvite Doctor Fosdick every" year ortwo. Honorary degrees could not besuppressed, at least not until a fewdozen more cornerstones were laid.Then too, some of the listed vaude¬ville acts might prove to be incur¬able. I am, for example, extremolysceptical of ever seeing aestheticiansreduced to the stature of human be¬ings, and I am likewise doubtful ofever convincing religionists that their(Continued on page 4) DRAMATIC GROUPPICKS CAST FORPLAY B^IDEOUTGrant Permission forPrivate ProductionFriday“GoLn’ Home” the prize winningmelodrama by Ransom Rideout willbe presented by members of theDramatic Association before the sea¬sons sponsors, the officers of theDrama League, and members of theUndergraduate Council Saturday at8:30 in the Reynolds club theatre.Members of the Dramatic Associa¬tion will be admitted by card to thedress rehearsal Friday.“Goin’ Home” was awarded firstplace in the contest held under theauspices of the Drama League ofAmerica for which hundreds ofplays from all over the country weresubmitted. The play was producedby Brock Pemberton in New Yorklast year and it was through himthat the Dramatic Association re¬ceived permission to present it hereas a private production. Mr. Ride¬out is a professor of English in theUniversity of California.Scheibler In CastThe cast includes Beatrice Scheib¬ler, who recently appeared in Play-fest, as Lise, the proprietess of theFrench cafe, which forms the sceneof the action; Pat Magee who playeda lead in “Hazel Kirke,” as an Amer¬ican negro who through various cir¬cumstances becomes literally a man(Continued on page 4)STAFF REPORTERCOMMENDS ALPHADELT’S AMBITIONToward the eivd of last year whenthe baseball bats were stored awayin the cellar of Bartlett and the boysfrom Blackfriars had ceased scrub¬bing the grease paint from theirhands and face, the Alpha Delta be¬thought themselves of an old tradi¬tion that called together at the closeof every school year active and alum¬ni members for a final smoke and atalk about the gooa old times when—. Accordingly they got the au¬thorities to hand them over the keysto Mandel, and there they put onsome lampblack and a little rougeand produced “Quare Medicine” and“Where the Cross Is Made.”Everybody said the boys did fine,including the boys themselves. Sothis year, despite the fact that theyhave been hampered by moving anda topsy-turvy state of affairs in gen¬eral, they have planned to carry onagain their stage careers. “Allison’sLad” and “Her Country” are conse¬quently in the making with the boyshoping to bow to a packed houseMay 3 and 4. ^Sam Stuart, Norman Eaton, Rob¬ert Graf. Louis Ridenour, JamesLoomis, Arthur Hjoward, CameronEddy and Jack Holt, have theirnames in capital letters on the bills.The first iright is “campus night”and the second for alumni exclusive¬ly.ALAS! NO GODIVAGRACES ARTS BALLLady Godiva and her white horseare not scheduled to appear at theArt Student League Ball this year,but features equally as interesting—or nearly so—are planned by of¬ficers of the League.A special reduction in price ha^been made for University students,and the regular ten dollar bids maybe obtained for four dollars at theUniversity bookstore. Charlotte Eck-hart and Ted Tieken are acting ascampus representatives for the*League.The Alts Ball, a feature costumeaffair, is to be given this year onWednesday ,May 1, at the Congn*essHotel. A fifty dollar prize is offeredfor the most distinctive costume. \ Clarence Darrow Speaks TonightOn “Crime and Its Treatment”Crime—its causes and the mosteffective antidotes for it—is the“brief” which Clarence Darrow, crim¬inal lawyer and, according to Profes¬sor Robert Morss Lovett, “one of themost notable figures in Americanlife,” will present tonight at 8 inMandel hall. Mr. Darrow, who ad¬dressed a campus audience last yearon “The Poetry of A. E. Housmanand Omar Khayyam,” comes to theUniversity as a result of the effortsof Charles Coe, president of the Lib¬eral club.“Tribute of People”Commenting on the lecture. Pro¬fessor Lovett declared that “Darrowhas always been known as a friendof the oppressed, and of late yearsSeniors Meet toPlan Class GiftAll Senior students will be ex¬cused from attendance at 11 o’clockclasses Friday to attend the classmeeting which will be held in Man-del hall. Acting President FredericC. Woodward has called this meet¬ing at the request of the Seniorcouncil and will preside.Formal announcement will be madeof the gift which the Senior classcontemplates presenting to the Uni¬versity at graduation. It is expectedthat the gift will probably take theform of a special endowment fund.This is a distinct departure from tra¬dition. Plans for the gift have beendiscussed by the Senior council andwill be brought before the meetingFriday. A vote of the Seniors pres¬ent will probably be taken.Plans for a social meeting of thewomen of the Senior "lass, whichmay take the form of a picnic, arebeing discussed by the council. Fur¬ther announcement will be made lat¬er. his generous support of unpopularcauses and persons has made him asort of “tribune of the people’.”“Most of Mr. Darrow’s work,”said Coe yesterday, “has been donein the field of criminal law, and it ishere that he must be judged. Intalking Thursday night on ‘Crimeand Its Treatment’, he is talking onthe subject in which he has spentthe greater part of his life studyingand attempting to find remedies forabuses of criminal law.”Opposed BillMr. Darrow has spent th'- last fewweeks in opposing an Illinois assem¬bly bill which, he believes, may bendto base judicial decisions on eco¬nomic status and power, iiecently hetestified on behalf of Theodore Drei¬ser’s best-selling novel, “The Amer¬ican .Tragedy,” before a Suffolkcounty jury in Massachusetts.While his reputation has been es¬tablished mainly on the cases wherehe acted as defense counsel, he haslectured widely on “fatalism versusfree-will,” on Tolstoy’s philosophy oflife, and on poetry of a fatalistictrend.Tickets may be bought for twenty-five cents at Woodworth’s or the Uni¬versity bookstore, and at the door.Any residue of funds after advertis¬ing expenses have been paid will begiven to the League for IndustrialDemocracy, according to Coe.DR. W. D. STRONGHEADS SERIES OFPUBLIC LECTURES AUSTRIAN LEADERDESCRIBES LIFE OFFOREIGN STUDENTDoctor William Duncan Strong, ofthe Field Museum, will deliver thefirst of a series of public lecturesWednesday, May 1, in Room 2 ofRosenwald at 4:30. His talk, “In¬dian Winter in North Laborador,”will be illustrated with the slides andmotion pictures he took while amember of the Rawson-MacMillansub-arctic expedition of 1927-1928.Lewis Mumford will lecture on“Herman Melville and the TragicThursday, May 2. He talks at 8:15Sense of Life” the following day,in the Disciples’ Divinity House.Professor Ernest Barker of Cam¬bridge university, delivers a lecture,“The State and Economic Groups,”on May 10.The following Tuesday, May 14,Professor Herbert Spencer Jennings,of Johns Hopkins University, talkson “What Can We Hope From Eu¬genics?” at 8:15 in Mandel hall.There are two lectures which areplanned, but for which no definitedate has as yet been' set. DoctorWild will talk on some phase ofmathematics, in the latter part ofMay. Pf^Jfessor Meyer-Lubke, of theUniversity of Bond, Germany, andfounder of romance philology, isalso scheduled to talk.^Thomas Jefferson’Is Subject of Talk“Thomas Jefferson” is the subjectof a public lecture which AssociateProfessor Avery 0. Craven of theHistory department will give at6:45 today in Fullerton hall. Art In¬stitute. This is one of a series ofpublic lectures on American democ¬racy given by members of the his¬tory department.Professor Craven will discuss theideals of Thomas Jefferson, his life,and his relation to American de¬mocracy.r, Dr. Walter Kotschnig of the In¬ternational Student Service of Au¬stria will be the guest of honor ata luncheon today at noon in the sun-parlor of Ida Noyes. The luncheonwill be for a group of students andmembers of the faculty who havebeen especially invited to hear Dr.Kotschnig speak on the “GeneralStudent Situation in Europe.” Hewill emphasize the fact that nationalprejudices undercut the aim of edu¬cation, discussing it in the light ofhis personal experience in the Inter¬national Student Service.Dr. Kotschnig is an Austrian bybirth, and took his university workat Graz, Austria. He may be calleda product of the Student Reliefwork which was inaugurated by theWorld Student Christian Federationjust after the war. Following hisuniversity career, he became Assist¬ant Professor of Political Economyat Kiel university, and soon beganto attract attention through hisbrillance as a student, and popular¬ity as a teacher. Dr. Kotschnig waselected executive secretary of theInternational Student Service arm ofthe fedration. This service is rend¬ered throughout all the world with¬out regard to race, creed, national¬ity or politics, but solely on the basisof actual need. Dr. Kotschnig is inthe United States upon the invita¬tion of the National Council ofChristian Associations, which is anational joint committee of StudentY. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. and(Continued on page 4)jt |O’HARA IS IDOL OfU. HIGH STUp^NfSA new idol has replace^ the IStewinners of the “Beau E^ummell”contest according to the posters de¬signed by the Writer’s club of theUniversity High school. FrankO’Hara is the latest recipient of pub¬lic favor in their estimation.Every year, the club has AssistantProfessor Frank H. O’Hara of theEnglish department as one of its dis¬tinguished speakers. His talk yes¬terday was heralded by posters whichrivaled those of the moving picturetheatres. One urges the public to‘See and Hear Frank O’Hara,” whileanother announces the coming talkof Frank O’Hara, “The Idol o/ theUniversity.” Once again Mr. O’Haracomes to the aid of budding talent^ jd offers an outlet for its genius. Forge PublishesContributions ofFifteen AuthorsLyrics, sonnets, and other poemsby fifteen different writers, are themain features in the Spring numberof the Forge which has been placedon sale today.“The Art of Helen West Heller,”by Nicholas Matsoukas is the secondof a series of articles on Chicagoartists, and is accompanied by a re¬production, of an original woodblockby Miss Heller.Charcoal drawings entitled “TwoMasks” done by Robert Bruce, is an¬other art feature. The frontispiece isa pen and ink drawing by BeulahGriffing-A new prize donated by Mrs. Wil¬liam Vaughn Moody and RobertFrost is announced in this issue.A new format and a grreen con¬tents band are external improve¬ments for the convenience of thereader. This Spring number is thelast issue of the school year. Thenext one will appear during thesummer quarter.The Forge is on sale in Cobb hall,in Ida Noyes hall, and in neighbor¬ing bookstores.INSTALL MIRRORBOARD TUESDAYMirror officers for next year willbe installed at the annual Mirrorbanquet Tuesday at 6, in the sun-parlor of Ida Noyes hall. All mem¬bers are invited, and they must se¬cure their tickets before Mondaymorning to be able to attend. Thetickets are one dollar and may beprocured from officers and membersof the Mirror Board, who are: Mar¬cella Koerber, Cora Mae Ellsworth,Catherine Scott, Marguerite Fern-holtz, and Muriel Parker. Cora MaeEllsworth will be installed as the newbusiness manager; Marcella Koerber,the new production manager, and theothers as members of the board atlarge.Ellen Hartman and Florence Herz-man are the retiring production andbusiness managers. Dorothy Hart¬ford, Carol Simons and Alice Wilesare the retiring members of theboard.Eighty women were elected to(Continued on page 4)Ries Is Lenient toFaculty Bicyclers inNew Parking EdictNo tickets are to be' attached tothe faithful vehicles of ProfessorGeorge Herbert Mead of the Philos¬ophy department, and Herbert Ells¬worth Slaught of the Mathematicsdepartment. They alone are to beexcluded from the no-parking rulewhich was recently passed by theDepartment of Buildingfs andGrounds.These two may park their bicyclesanywhere on campus and may ridewhere their fancy directs as long asthey do not obstruct the automobileand student traffic. When the banon parking was passed the questionas to whether or not these would beincluded was raised, and when thecommittee called on Mr. Lester Ries,superintendent of the Buildings andGrounds, be allowed them a specialdispensation.Debating Union MeetsTonight in ReynoldsPlans for a debate with Cam¬bridge university next fall and forimpromptu meetings with neighbor¬ing universities and colleges in thenear future are to be formed tonightwhen the Debating union mets at 7in the Reynolds club theatre.‘^Interest in debating has appar¬ently been revived here, if we judgeby the crowd at our Harvard de¬bate,” said George Pidot, in urginga large attendance at the meeting. SPENCE SELECTSFOUR JUNIORS TOHEAD PMP MEETWillett, Lawler, Rutter,and Gartside HeadCommitteesWilliam Gartside, James Rutter,Howard Willett and Edward Lawlerhave been awarded the four Juniorchairmanships of the Twenty-fifthAnnual Track interscholastic, to bestaged on Friday and Saturday, May31 and June 1, at Stagg field, Rob¬ert Spence, Senior chairman, an¬nounced yesterday.Gartside Publicity HeadGartside, Alpha Delta Phi, headsthe publicity staff. He is a formermember of the varsity track squad,and was co-chairman of the Settle¬ment Night tea dance.James Rutter, Delta Kappa Ep¬silon, who is chairman of the organ¬ization committee, is treasurer ofthe Junior class, score manager ofBlackfriars, and was housing chair¬man of the last basketball interschol¬astic.Howard Willett, Psi Upsilon, whowill arrange the entertainment forthe visiting athletes, has acted asprogi-am chairman of SettlementNight and Tour director during thebasketball tournament.To Appoint AssistantsEdward Lawler, Chi Psi, willhead the rushing committee. He is amember of the University baseball(Continued on page 4)UNIVERSITY PRESSRELEASES BOOKS ONSOCIOLOGY, TRAVELTwo new books have just been re¬leased from the University press.One, “The Gold Coast and theSlums” by Harvey W. Zorbough is astudy of Sociology. In this book,Mr. Zorbough deals with the life ofthe inhabitants of that conglomeratepart of Chicago—the Near NorthSide. This section of the city in theshadow of a sky scraper is one of in¬stability and change, an area a mileand a half wide containing a popula¬tion of 85,000, representing manynationalities and diverse types ofpeople. There are immigrants frommany countries living within astone’s throw of Chicago’s wealthiest class. The author’s realistic at¬titude towards city life is an expres¬sion of the current tendency to dis¬card reform. He shows conclusivelythat the city communifV based oncontiguity of residence has ceased toexist.The second book, “Far People” byGrace Philips, librarian in the Di¬vinity school, opens the window tothe life of other lands. India, China,Korea, Japan, the Phillipines, Brazil,Africa, and Russia are discussed asto their literature, customs, and re¬ligion. Many of the folk songs andstories printed in this book are ap¬pearing in English for the first time.SCANDINAVIANS TOENTERTAIN CAMPUSThe Scandinavian members of theInternational Students’ Associationof Chicago will present ScandinavianNight PYiday at 8 in Mandel halLSocial dancing with “GjestelandsOrkerter” will follow the programplanned for the evening.Swedish and Icelandic folksongswill be sung by the Orion Male Koart-et as the opening feature of the pro¬gram. Folk dances of Norway andSweden, and solo musical numberswill comprise the rest of the enter¬tainment. The program is arrangedby student representatives from allover the city. Florence Zeigler, campus representative, has been an ac¬tive participant on the committee.The International Students’ As¬sociation of Chicago and vicinitymetropolitan in organization andrepresenting students from all partsof the city, has also featured Ger¬man, Chinese, and Hungarian Nights.Page Twoi iatlg liarnntt« FOUNDED IN 1901i THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICA60i —{ Published morninss. except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn,I Winter and Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company. Subscription ratesI M-04 per year; by mail, $1.60 per year extra. Single copies, live centa-each.I Entered as second class matter March 18, 1908, at the poet office at Chicago,I Illinois, under the Act of March 8, 1879.j The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publication of any materialI appearing in this paper.( Member of the Western Conference Press AssociationI The StaffI LOUIS H. ENGEL, JR.* MANAGING EDITORROBERT W. FISHER, BUSINESS MANAGER; HARRIET HARRIS, WOMAN’S EDITOR\ HENRY D. FISHER, SPORTS EDITORI DEXTER MASTERS, CHAIRMAN EDITORIAL BOARDI OFFICE—ROOM 16, 6831 University Avenue, LEXINGTON HALL( Tel^hones: Midway 0800, Local 44, Hyde Park 9221' MEN* rbsrlis H. Good. Nerws Editor1 Edwin Levin News EditorI Robert C. MeCormaek News Editor, Edward G. Bastibn Dag EditorI SUnley M. Corbett Dag Editor} Norman R. Goldman Day EditorEdgar Greenwald —Day Editor’ John H. Hardin Day Editor. Henry C. Ripley —Day Editor• WOMENI Harriet Hathaway Junior EditorI Rosalind Green — Junior EditorI J. Aldean Gibboney Faatnre EditorFrances A. Blodgett —St^bomore Editor‘ Marjorie Cahill Sophomore Editor' Pearl Klein Sophomore Editor) Marion E. Whits Sophomore EditorI Margaret Elastman Senior Reporter' Alice Torrey Society Editor SPORTS DEPARTMENT'Albert Arkules Sophomore EditorMaurice Liebman Sophomore EditorJerome Strauss Sophomore EditorEmmarette Dawson Women’s EditorMarjorie Telman ..Associate Women’s EditorIBUSINESS DEPARTMENTEarle M. Stocker —Advertising ManagerRobert Nicholson Circulation ManagerLouis Forbrich Circulation AssistantWilliam Kincheloe Circulation AssistantLee Loventhal Local CopyRobert Mayer ^DowntownFred Towsley Downtown CopyAbe Blinder Downtown CopyRobert Shapiro — Local CopyI THE DAILY MAROON PLATFORMiI <1. Eneottragement of student initiative in undergraduate activitys and scholarship. •JV 2. Application of research principles and abolition of grades forsenior college students.I 3. Promotion of undergraduate interest in lectures, concerts,I exhibits and other campus cultural influences.' 4. Erection of a field house.I 5. Adoption of a deferred fraternity and club rushing plan.I 6. Institution of a Reading Period plan.LOCAL MISCELLANYTTie University’s model League of Nations will be held thisyear on the first, second, and third of May, with more than 200delegates from colleges and universities all over the country in at¬tendance. The latter fact indicates, as Professor Kerwin of thePolitical Science Department has observed, “a remarkable growthof interest in international affairs on the part of our youth. Andwhile the fact does not indicate that the interest is yet liable to in¬fringe on, say, the baseball industry, it is distinctly pleeisant to notethat at least 200 students find more interest in playing shuttlecockfor a few days with an idea than with a piece of leather.Y ^ ^ ^The track team, after a rather long period of years in which theother fellow’s kicked-up cinders constituted a far too steady diet,has emerged into a fair amount of limelight. It numbers amongstits members a Big Ten champion in the high htirdles, a mile relayteam whV:h holds the American Intercollegiate indoor record atpresent, and certain other lesser, but still notable, champions. Thisweek-end, part of the team goes east, and part goes west, to Pen¬nsylvania, to Drake. There is no need to plead for enthusiasmfrom the University; a crack team seldom requires such a plea. Andbesides, those pleas are fully taken up by any team that happen notto make victory a boring affair.H- * * *There has appeared from time to time in The Daily Maroona request for th'e reason or sense back of the no-tennis-playing-on-Sunday condition now existent. No answer has been forthcomingfrom anypne in authority or out. Personal inquiry hew discoveredthing but a general disapproval of the state of affairs. The stand andthe arguments of The Daily Maroon are, or should be, known. Whatconstitutes any alternate stand, or arguments, if any. The DailyMaroon would like to know.4; V « « «The Spring Number of The Forge appears on campus today,clothed in white and bound in green. The issue will contain poetryby young writers from California to New York, from Texas to Min¬nesota, from Arizona to Georgia. There will be two charcoal draw¬ings, a reproduction of an original woodblock, a pen and ink draw¬ing, all by young artists Chicago artists. 'There will be announce¬ment of a prize donated to The Forge by Robert Frost and Mrs.Wiliam Vaughn Moody. There will be, in short, an admirablequantity of most things which make for a good literary review. But,if we may judge on past performances, the issue will lack one im¬portant thing around here that most good magazines have; and thatis a deserved number of buyers. The Forge has, for five years, main¬tained a front rank among literary reviews; and it has consistentlybeen neglected by the University that bore it. It is, in addition toanything else it may be, living proof of the fact that a “prophet iswithout honour in his own country." THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 1929OFFICIAL NOTICES♦Thursday, April 25Radio lecture: “Christianity and Ro¬man Imperialism.” Professor ShirleyJ. Case. 8, Station WMAQ.^Divinity chapel. Professor Robinson,the Chicago Theological seminary,11:50. Joseph Bond chapel.Public lecture: (The Graduateschool of Social Administration). MissJessie F. Binford, Director, JuvenileProtective Association. 3:30, Cobb 109.Radio readings: “From the Forge,”Mr. George Dillon, 7, Station WMAQ. Public lecture: (Divinity school)“Science and Religion,” Professor J.Y. Simpson University of Edinburgh,Scotland, 4:30. Joseph Bond chapel.Bacteriology club, “Some Bacterio¬logical and Seriological Studies ofUndulant Fever,” Katherine M.Howell, M. D., Michael Reese Hospi¬tal, 4:30, Ricketts 1.Public lecture: (downtown) “Thom¬as Jefferson,” Associate ProfessorCraven, 6:45, Fullerton hall. Art in¬stitute.Public lecture: “School for CripidedChildren,” Miss Jane Neil, 4:ib. Cobb108. Friday, April 26University Chapel Assembly, AisPsistant I^rofessor Wilhelm Pauck, Chi¬cago Theological Seminary, 12. —ri -• -'i'! —Radio Lecture: “Christianity andRoman Imperialism,” Professor Shir¬ley Jackson Case of the DivinitySchool, 8, Station WMAQ.MARQUETTEDANCme SCHOOLpiazr Better Dancers come from** Cottage3434 GroveExpert Private and Class Instructionin aii styies of DancingTHE /T€CE rCC HENHAESEIALL El ELD& CCHPANrannouncestHatVIPGIL GIST AND rCEG TGGNEGHtwve been seenred to design a tine ofclottses exclusively for CHicago MenVirgil Gist and Fred Turner, adjndgedtbe best dressed men on tbe campus,baT^e consented to design models formen at tbe University of Gbi€^go.Tomorrow tbey will meet at Tbe StoreFor Men and eboose tbe styles tbeytblnk are best* Tben tbey 'will selecttbe fabrics and patterns tbey feel aretbe most accepted by men of gtiod taste*Based on tbeir critical comments wewill produce one exclusive line of Suits,to be ready In about tbree weeks*WATCH FOR FURTHER AIVIVOUIVCEIIIEIVTS IIVTHE DAILY MAROON.These twua smartly dressed menme€ur clathes from The Stare TorMen, Marshall Field & Companyli