former president of the United States Chamber of Commercc, and'Norman Thomas, Socialist nominee for presi-- dent. Secretary Wallace wilI. visit,»thel campus july 15 and 16 to lectu e and. lead discussions on "Agriculture and American Life." Mr. Strawn wilI speak on,"Governmentand Business" while Mr. Thomas, wilI discuss "The Future of Political Government." Inali seven leaders in the fields of social' science, literature, education, and religion will participate as staff members in'the course. Others who will present.their views 'wîll be J. W.ý Studebaker, Unite tates .commis- .sioner of'educatiôn,, Bertram Cabn, president of B. Kupp>enheimeèr& com- pany, Zona Gale, author and dramat-. ist, and John Hayes Holmes, pastor of tbe Community.church, Ne* York., Prof. B3aker, l3rownell of the Medil School of Journalisin organized the course, hie said, to help students dis- cover the pattern of tbe' modern World. "This course," he said, "is an effort to meet one of the great eduicational. needs of these disturbing times. It attempts to face the realities of the contemporary situation, and through discussion, lectures, readings and give-and-take contacts with men dis- tinzuisheuI in tiieir fieldsi tn find out with an atm to co-ordifnate the stu- dent's knowledge and to help bim. relate the fragments of bis educa- tional experience in an intelligible %whole. Thé course is designed to give the student a unified idea,,of the ,world, in which:he lives." Announces1 for which is commonly lcnown as Palm Sunday. .Words and music move in na tural sequencethrough, the subsequent scenes. A high point in dranatic interpretation is reached in the trial before Pilat e. Hovwever, there is no substitution of .dramatics for excellency.inmusical interpre- tation; rathier, there is a fusion ofthe two., Trhis music provides an p-i portunitY for an appropriate observance of this significant day.. A cordial invitation is extended to al who wisb to hear this presentation. Thechorus choir.of thirty voices is -under the d irection of mise Mai. e Éi4I Miss Marie Bni. :The- soloists are: soprano, Miss Mary A. Strong; Miss Florence Farrar; tenoir, ,Russell Nelson, baritone,, L. 0. Dees. HRALTH CINTER. NEWS M"I ..The chest clinic whlch is held every third Monday of the month wil be held Monday, April 13, instead of Monday, April 20. Dr. Julius Novak, medical director of the Chicago Tuberculosis institute,- who is in clinic are trom 1 to 4 p. m. The next Infant Welfare clinic will bc held from 2 to 4 at the Health Center, April 8, Dr. Noei Shaw, pediatrician, is in charge. The dental clinic suipported by the Logan-Howard P. T. A. is conducted, every Tuesday morning at the Health Center. Mrs. Emma A. Stopka, R. N., contralto, ents of children that bave not1 immunized or vaccinated to seec family physician. been at the Health Center free of charge. Learn of Death of_ L.,A*#A e LAO AvAVs ieiene neietaIIV tri-. mand, daughter of.. Mrs. Emilié Louise Frimand, 318 Fourth street, was received in Wilmette this week. Mr. Miller, who died on Saturday, March 28, had been married to Miss Frimand on December 31, 1934. They moved to Rock Island iimediately after the niarriage. Mris. Miller, who was prostrated at the death of ber husband. is now re.. fluring the first semester of the current school year, students 7earned a total of $6Z203. Men students av- eraged $162 and the women $9z. one manearned,$475 while a woman sMu- dent earned $395. N.O esdk Aid reau headed, by Director Willard Buntain, serves as -a liaison between students. and prospective -employens. The bureau can furnish students for' aIl types of work--office and, dojuestic workers of varlous linds, interpret- res, salesmen,' public speakers, pi cians, preachers and radio aninouniceri. One hundred and thirty-one stia- de nts of whom 26 are women'do flot even idepend upon a check fromx home, to put them through school.- They- are -"making ,the grade" with- out financial assistance. NwJ.h F"ls While the time honored jobs of waiting on tables and firing furnaces still are the most popular with men students, the coeds have opened new occupational fields lncluding tea room hostesses, cashiers, and stenograph- ers. One girl earns herboard by play- ing a piano in the dining room of a hotel. Another is a switchboard oper- ator in the same hotel. Others have his way as a barber. Another is a soda "jerker" while still others hcp1d down jobs as watchmen, masseurs, window-washers, playground instruc.. tors, vaudeville entertainers, and jani- tors. Illness Forces Delay Hitchcock. Funeral Funeral servces tnr Mr%-. Mr nue, >15021, who 15is 'reeniauîvenu. w on cf Mari-I. - 1 hig of Cincinnati. The Health Center urges the pr-to, was a ust of1 for an, 1 mount, ý caver