A merica lavish periodical CeNter
CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 10, OHIO
lifE,PentarlEhisit(iiRoNICIE
February 21, 1936
"The Singing Poet" New Cinema Opens
on Weinberg's Hour at Noon Wednesday
! I [efl
NOW!
Will Appear in Musical Program
The Blue Light," a continen-
Sunday; Stars This Week-End tal dramatic fantasy that received
at Littman's Theater
wide attention during its New
York engagement, will be the
The Singing Poet," one of New opening attraction, starting Wed-
York's most prominent radio and
nesday, at the new Cinema, E.
stage stars who will be featured
Columbia St., near Woodward
this week-end at Littman's Yid- Ave. Formerly known as the Eu-
ropa, it will open under new man-
agement as the "theater of ar-
tistic pictues."
Filmed in the Italian Dolomites,
"The Blue Light" is based on an
ancient legend and was widely
praised for its pictorial beauty,
original musical score and deft
direction. It was directed by its
leading player, Leni Reifenstahl,
and the music composed by Giu-
seppe Becce. A private premiere
will be held Tuesday night.
Films from all over the world
will be imported for the Cinema.
In instances where they will be
spoken in a foreign tongue, the
dialogue will be translated on the
screen in English dialogue titles.
Attractions listed for early
showing at the Cinema are the
superior French version of "Crime
and unishment" and Peter Lorre
in Fritz Lang's remarkable "M."
"The SINGING POET"
Exceptional short subjects will
be in keeping with the policy.
dish People's Theater, will be pre- Doors open Wednesday at noon.
sented in a program of music on
Weinberg's ewish (four, from 10:30
At Saks Cocktail Bar
to 12 Sunday morning on Station
WJBK.
This singing star actor will ap-
pear here in "Motel the Operator,"
a play which attracted an audience
exceeding 300,000 in New York,
Philadelphia and Boston.
a.
r
eed
( 04
Hue
ugl y
ugly
:me
I kw
l.
N.
for
10
,m41
Han
rent
ralr
ulgh
4■11.01
rent
5:50
nate
RD.
.o.
Ire
OI
STAC t
IN PERSON!
15
BENNY
RUBIN
4
LInerica
resit?
Jewish
Jea!
uild the
rt shall
class?
of our.
or are
ms will
rational
State
h will
March
of the
now on
ates of
on give
he posi-
e oppo-
cement?
nerican
of the
IN JUMBO OF
ALL REVUES
II
01-14-fP
.
•
HOLLYWOOD
STANLEY BROS.
"STEP SONS"
RIO & WEST 3 1/2 STOOGES
"MUSICAL NUTS" "NO POOLIN'"
DUNN BROS. & DOTTIE
"DAFFY tisio.
FRANCES WILLS
"STOP-LOOK.LISTEN"
l&Manhotton Merritt
"ACTION STARS"
outtt dI
ray,
man's
ud
omen's
r home
i Cori-
aid in
athlete
ouse in
sist in
ins in
of
t Mrs.
wrence
towinx
Mrs.
Mrs.
t; Mrs.
; Mrs.
I made
a show
re.
Party
(ENGLISH DIALOGIC TITLES)
• "DIVINELY BEAUTIFUL,"
Says Ethel Barrymore
VETERAN'S BROADCAST
Ihaye
OPENS WEDNESDAY
CINEMA
"Theatre or Artistic Pictures"
••'NEXCELLED for sheer pictorial
N. Y. liersid-Tribune
beauty."
"The Bluelight"
A Mountain Symphony
Filmed in the Italian Dolomite
COLUMBIA AT WOODWARD
CALI. I DERRY Ilia owvs ■ .
SPECIAL SUNDAY
Dinner $1.25
•
LARRY VINCENT, M. C.
COYLE McKAY'S MUSIC
Welaltoc
TEN.FORTY
CLUB
CLUB MANHATTAN
;0. 152.
charity
nesday,
I7 Fen-
he pub-
There
lents.
I/
In an effort to create a wider
musical culture and appreciation
in Detroit and the state, the De-
troit Conservatory of Music is
planning several new choral
groups, which will appear in pub-
lic and represent the city. Member.
ship is free in any of the units,
including glee clubs, trios, quartets
and orchestral groups.
Registration is already under
way, and those interested are
urged to contact the Conservatory
immediately. Training is not a
requisite, says J. Bertram Bell,
director of the Conservatory, and
rehearsals will get under way goon.
Also included in the Conserva-
tory's efforts to build up Detroit's
dramatic and musical culture, is
the offer for free participation in
several new plays planned for the
near future by the Conservatorys
Players Guild. Rehearsals will
start soon, and application should
be made at one at the Conserva-
tory.
At the regular public recital at
3 p. m. Saturday, Feb. 22, Mrs.
Lee Corbman-Schakne will direct
miscellaneous students in the Con-
servatory. The public' is cordially
Invited to attend the free recital.
The Mild Foundation received
the following contributions towards
the Milford Stern Prize Fund: $25
from Mrs. M. Stern and $5 from
Mrs. Sarah Rosenzweig.
This fund is established to per-
petuate the memory of the late
Milford Stern who manifested a
great interest and devotion to the
religious and cultural work which
was being done by the Hillel Foun-
dation at Ann Arbor.
When this sum becomes substan-
tial so that the interest will be
sufficient to constitute an incentive
for students to compete, an annual
prize will be established for the
best essay on a Jewish subject.
?III g
week
N.
mmunf-
indivi-
ry, who
ke part
to be
r Day."
New Choral Groups Planned
by Conservatory of
Music
.Gifts to Stern's •
Hillel Prize Fund
tz wilr
(is
in
JeOLth
ink the
tamest,
Jewish
String ...
with the
SINGING MAESTRO
Dick Holman
and His Music
featuring
EVELYN NATIONS
and Her Accordian
•
FULL COURSE
DINNER
PAGE NINE
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
Si .00
SAKS
The Cockerel Bee Cafe Macros
WODOWARD
TR. 2.5151
Batmen Seward sod Virginia Park
ONDA
A 131feresf Amateur
T71;1
I
GEORGE KAVANAGH
STAGE AND SCREEN
Center Theater Features
TRUDI SCHOOP BALLET
Four of Year's Best
HERE MONDAY, MAR. 2
Pictures
An entirely new form of theater
Four of the year's hest pictures
ballet that has caused a profound
stir in European capitals will be are being featured at the Center
introduced in Detroit by S. Ilurok Theater, Woodward and the Blvd.,
when Trudi Schoop and her Comic this week.
On Friday, Saturday and Sun-
day, the features are: "Special
Agent," starring George Brent
and "Freckles", with Tom Brown
and Carol Stone in the leading
roles.
On Monday, Tuesday, Wednes-
day and Thursday, the features
will be "Shipmates Forever," with
Dick Powell and Ruby Keeler in
the starring roles, and "The Last
Days of Pompeii."
"The Last Days of Pompeii"
brings to the screen RKO Radio's
spectacular drama of magnificence
based on poverty, splendor founded
on despair, and lavish luxury
thinly cloaking brute savagery,
wiped from the earth in a single
giant upheaval of nature — Vesu-
vius in eruption. Preston Foster,
Alan Hale, Basil Rathbone, Louis
Cathern and Dorothy Wilson head
the cast.
Member of Trudi Schoop Ballet
Ballet appear here at the Masonic
Auditorium on Monday, March 2.
Trudi Schoop is the innovator
and director of this unique style
of ballet a young Swiss girl who
started to be an actress and then
because a dancer, she has been
hailed throughout Europe as the
"female Charlie Chaplin," first be-
cause her point of view, like Chap-
lin's, is to interpret through comic
jantomine the microcosmb of the
common man in terms of simple
workaday events; secondly, be-
cause her technique as performer
and the eloquence of her expres-
sion is in a class with Chaplin's.
Assisted by a company of 15
pantomimists, she will offer two'
major ballet comedies, one entitled
"Want Ads" revealing the drama
behind the classified ads that are
buried at the back of newspapers;
EVELY NATIONS, pretty ac- another called "Fridolin" tracing
cordianist and singer, now appear- the adventures of an innocent boy
who, torn from his mother's apron-
ing at Saks Cocktail Bar.
strings, grapples with a world that
Brestoff Named as Concert mocks hi sinnocence.
Master of Michigan
Theater Orchestra
Phil Brestoff, well known Detroit
violinist, has been named concert
master of the Michigan Theater
Symphony Orchestra. The an-
nouncement comes from Eduard
Werner, Michigan director, who re-
veals the fact that Brestoff is one
of the youngest picture house con-
cert masters in the Country, Ores-
toff has been with the Michigan
Theater orchestra for seven years.
He studied violin in Cleveland
under Charles V. Rychlik, one of
the best known pedagogues in the
country. The violinist started his
commercial career at an early age,
acting as concert master for
Spitalny's Orchestra at the age
of 17.
Mr. Brestoff has also been as-
sistant conductor to Mr. Werner
for the last three years. He re-
sides with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Brestoff, at 12835 La
Salle Blvd.
He's Here!
* JUNE, JOAN
U JERI
*6*
* Bill LANKIN
A WONDER AT
THE PIANO
AND HIS DANCE ORCHESTRA
SPECIAL .. •
FrogLcg $1.50 1
I
Dinner
10WA TAN S
'
Fez—"The Prisoner of Shark
Island" now at the Fox with War-
ner Baxter in the role of Dr. Sam-
uel Alexander Mudd, whose career
and unjust imprisonment by his
Government wrote a curious page
into American history. Mudd was
the physician who innocently min-
istered to John Wilkes Booth, as-
sassin of Abraham Lincoln. Gloria
Stuart play. the doctor's wife.
N. T. G., pioneer rani an-
nouncer, and his girls will furnish
the stage show.
Adams — Ruth Chatterton re-
turns to the screen in "Lady of
Secrets," now at the Adams. The
second feature will be "The Calling
of Dan Matthews" with Richard
Arlen.
Charlotte Wynters, stage play-
er, makes her screen debut playing
opposite Dick Arlen in the Harold
Bell Wright story,
Presented by Migmatite. BILLY CARR
Samuel Sotferin has stepped
forth again with a show ... Barnes
and Steger . . . not only pleasant
to listen to but .. abound with
material of that special comedy
nature ... June, Juan and Jeri...
three maids . . . marble tunefully
and pleasantly . . . Margie Lyons
Dancers ... lend a colorful "pal
chritudiness" background to Inti-
mate Powatan .. .Bill Lankin
plays piano ... with one hand
like ... well ... you'd like to play
with two.
• • •
Penthouse ... literally pants ...
with the array of clever song
material . . . thrown around by
Reis and Dunn . . . if you've al-
ready heard them . . . an entire
new set of songs are ready for a
repeat visit ... the Murray Browne
cuties . . . have . . . four new
routines ... involving some lovely
costuming ... to meet . . . Mar-
garet English . . . who plays and
sings . . . your requests . . . is to
like . . . "Maggie" . . . Sammy
Dibert . . . has become ... emcee
... and that smile ... he throws
at you ... is deastating ... that
cute vocalist . . Irma Dear ...
and its not a secret that Tuesday
nights at the Penthouse . . . thea-
trical .. , terrific.
Lois Nixon has moved over to
Ten-Forty ... Wayne . . . down-
town's only nice club . . . in that
captivating way . . . of sing and
sway .. . one of those southern
"cutie-pies" . . . Larry Vincent
still pleasantly clowns away . . .
and puns . . Winifred and Lor-
raine ... blonde and brunette ...
imitate Ginger Rogers and Fred
Astaire ... cleverly ... the brun-
ette ... in tux ... tails ... Jean
Is an accordionist
DeFrance ..
. . supreme music by Coyle
.
McKay ... and the boys.
•
Society has moved in ... to ...
Webster Hall , . . Michael and
Deane . . smart ballroom dance
team ... Miss Deane ... Chicago
socialite . . . waltz . . . tango .
and the like ... in style ultra
Ruth Brent ... piquant perk of
a miss ... is stopping .. shows
. . with rhythm songs .. like
... "I Gotta Get Hot" . , . and
others ... more familiar ...
George Kavanagh ... quite popu-
lar too ... the handsome maestro
... of orchestra ... sings ... solo
and in trio ... with the boys ...
Jimmie Nolan ...is one Every
Saturday ... a special augmented
show .. . is put ; .; on.
Billy Carr at Oriole Terrace
Benny Rubin, popular star of
stage, screen and radio, heads the
big stage show at the Michigan
Theater this week.
DINNER
Senorita Conchita
.•
sally andl
s•sasr.
IN NEN DARING, DIAT/LOEFYING
SLIDEforLIFE
•••• .•
WOW
rr
Ns ewer or A1•.
4
Cast al TO—Carla Terney Dancers
CONTINUOUS 55055 I P. IN T0 I A. N.
TERRAC
Muse ht
GNAT GORDON ORIOLE
and Ilk Orchestra
EAST GRAND BOULEVARD It
Dane 7 a. N.
WOODWARD
I s. a
f Nearterom
E Trinity 7.111,11
Trini ty 7- 11105
y, w , secege,
Manager
MONDAY EVE., MARCH 2
MASONIC AUDITORIUM
Trudi Schoop Ballet
Sensational
TI1 KEES, 11.1e fa frT,TO
Dance Comedian.
GRINNELL'S, TErnplt Y-7100
ORCHESTRA HALL
FOUR
SPECTACULAR
ngi L A RTil j PERFORMANCES
'E RR D FOR
A
MATINEE
--
FEB. 27-28-29
a
I EVENINGS
al 8 30
•
MATINEE I
a12530
Monte Carlo
LET RUSE
a 7720169Aav,92,2ctercte of-40.01y
—WITH--
SymphonyGreat Company
Orchestra
I
of 125
Detroit
leafs Now et
IPROG11.4545 CHANGE EACH PERFORMANCE?
tr:g CI.
( ,,r,`A"
tr,
ALL . NEW SONGS . NEW PARODIES . NEW DANCES
*REIS and DUNN *
HIn ging
Coltatthls and
Comedian, of
Natlunal ltrundtanthku ay Men.
ON THE 51.01)10 STATION WXYZ TONIGHT AT TEN-PIETICEN
THE MURRAY BROWNE GIRLS
MAST OTIIKR lEATTRES IN A NEW I'ENTIIOESK RE', E
•
1111: 555 INN 14 TO THE
•
PENTHOUSE
Sammy
Dibert's
DINNERS
FROM
ONE-VICET
NEVER A
On ER
CHARGE
AT)))' PARK AVENUE 1111TIC1.
Music
111 SPROAT ST.
CL. 1213
•
—
YON d'AY3
arclitIZ
I
Today—Sat.—Sua.
Mon.— TOM •■ Wed.— Thur.
'DICK POWELL.AUBT KEELER
BETTE °BUIS
SHEIK EIGER
GEORGE BRENT
3•1r1ill41:104
OTHER
S LOota.t4
A 1.00
iflertium
Tom Brown — V. Weidler
iv
"FRECKLES"
C.
C<4ec's
ME EAST DAIS
inpOMPEll
OPEN DAILY
Ilan a. m. Is
m.
ise to e p. nt.
FREE PARKING
and chauffeur
service
EARL WALTON'S
PRESENTING A
music Red Hot Harlem Revue
by GEORGE SIG4TENNON, featuring
ALICE WHITMAN }."7,1.a.;.4, 4 7:::,
'
PRINCESS WEE WEE "^"
Sepia Tini
Star "4
HOM AIM I fi PLANTATION
/IE DIAL
G. DARLINGS
OTHERS
*
The CLUMPLANTATION
550 ADAMS AVE., EAST
CLIFFORD 0230
A SUPER-EXCELLENT REVIEW Featuring—.
PERSON
EASTERN STAR CAFE
6515 GRAND RIVER AT GRAND BOULVD.
ti
Dr. Alfred Adler at Town' medical and child study founda-
tions; he is among the world's fore-
Hall in Cass Theater
most aut?..,rities on child psychol-
on Feb. 28
Ily TIATTIE MORRIn
LAM night. dear h... you tarn* In rnt
1.•• ■■ 1?
Fall-Cterss Fore"
FLOYD SNYDER and His ORCHESTRA
to IS. sweet Meerut' sf MynIster. Bens
Motels nllsermae. she
•
died
an rob. IAN Ind
Am I on .Staged !hat you errata hardly
know?
Leer night, dear heart. Yens carnet. me
in 515•10n.
Staged and Directed by Lea, Kane
Sits nal prwat her Character Pertray•to al the LEADING MOVIE STARS
In Hollywood whit Sans. and Dances.
• C55.• Mack, M. C. CMe,tin • Marvel *Palmer • Duryea *Arlen. Borden
LAST NIGHT, DEAR HEART
And. Awe, .ere you happy hero Ian?
Mehl.
did the world guile odd and •r110
rr
PEGGY
ARENA GARDENS
A flip of the coin by Promoter I
Adam Weisamuller has given Me-
phisto • bout with Stanley Buresh,
light heavyweight wrestling title
claimant, in the main event of
next Monday's card at Arena Gar-
dens. Mephisto wrestled Bert Rohl
to • draw last Monday in a match
which was to determine Buresh's
opponent. Ali B a b a, Turkish
wrestler, who made ■ sensational
debut last Monday, winning in
two minutes, will meet Bad Be )
Brown of Shreveport, La., in the
semi-final.
In dream:
Jost for a while you quit the gate. 5,5
Pennine..
and ening as an mush r-OU tame mare
To welle at we from out your dear.
rh sr rata
A H•ermidir P•ru.tation of
Glootle, GlmmoraNs WOW!.
Ezio Pinia,distinguished Metro-
politan opera basso, will be guest
artist on the Ford Sunday eve-
ning Hour, Sunday, Feb. 23. The
program, which features music
of the Ford Symphony Orchestra
and Chorus, under the direction
of Victor Kolar, will be broadcast
from 9 to 10 p. m., E. S. T., over
the complete coast-to-coast CBS
network.
The ambition of his parents
was for Pinza to become a civil
engineer. With this in view, he
was sent to school at Ravenna,
but finally gained his own way
The "Cabin in the cottonflelds
and was permitted to attend the
Conservatory at Bologna, where of Adams Ave." ...home of torrid
sepia
revues ... Club Plantation
he studied music under Maestro
Vizzani. During the war, the stud- . . . has . . . a new one . . . by
George
McClennon Alice Whit-
ent served his native country. lie
made his first operatic appearance man . . . greatest colored female
in Tristan at the Teatro Reale tap dancer ... tops the revue
dell' Opera at Rome before going . . . Wee Wee .. , Princess . . .
to Turin and Milan. In the latter smallest colored woman in the
city he was heard by Gatti-Casaz- world . . . is interesting . . to
51 of the Metropolitan Opera who see . . . and hear . . . "Snooks
persuaded him to come to the Howard ... is a dancing fool ...
Auzie Dial ... sings ... and plays
United States.
requests ... Eight Plantation Dar-
Conservatory's Weekly Ra- lings . . . are . . . capable frame
to any revue ... of torrid rhythms
dio Program Sunday
... and there is more ... all with
A tenor solo by Emmet Lieb and the smile of ... Earl Walton ...
a violin number by Lewis Bodo will genial maestro ... that he is.
• • •
feature the Detroit Conservatory
of Music's weekly radio program
Dick Holman ... is doing right
over Station WXYZ from 3:45 to by himself ... with swing rhythm
4 p, m. next Sunday, Feb. 23.
dance music at ... Saks ... home
I The Conservatory's famed string of the murals ... interesting
ensemble, under direction of Henry of drinks ... Dick leads .. , the
Siegel, will present Mozart's "Ro- band . and sigma ... and that
mance" and Handel's "Gigue" as pretty who plays the accordion so
its regular portion of the broad-
. well . . . is ... Evelyn Na-
cut.
tions ... with a cute style of song.
EASTERN STAR CAFE'
The Eastern Star Cafe an-
nounces an unusually attractive
floor show featuring Peggy Eames,
the child motion pictures star in
person. She is "Baby Peggy" of
the "Our Gang" comedies and will
present her character portrayals
of the leading movie stars in Hol-
lywood with songs and dances.
Others on the bill are Geo. Mack,
M. C.; Martin and Marvel, Palmer
and Doreen and Arlene Borden.
Floyd Snyder and his orchestra
furnish the music.
* Barnes
&Steger
Ballet in the ideal style—a ma-
jor symphony orchestra accom-
panying the dancers—will be wit-
nessed in Orchestra Hall, Feb. 27,
28 and 29, when the famous
Monte Carlo Ballet Russe is pre-
sented with the Detroit Sympho-
ny. The special engagement is
sponsored by the Detroit Sym-
phony Society.
This is the first time in the his-
tory of ballet in this city, save
when Ruth Page appeared here
last year, that a full symphony
orchestra has occupied the pit. On
other occasions only from 25 to
30 musicians have interpreted the
musical scores. With a great or-
c hestra of 70 players the magni-
ficent sonority of the music and
the special effects composers have
incorporated in their works in this
art form will be adequately dis-
closed. Manuel de Falla's "Three-
Cornered Hat", Igor Stravinsky's
"Petrouchka", the Po I o v t si a n
Dances from Borodin's opera
"Prince Igor", popular here as
concert pieces, will be presented
in the brilliant choreographic
form the composers intended.
Efrem Kurtz and Antal Dorati,
co conductors with the Monte Car-
lo Ballet will direct the Detroit
Orchestra. Kurtz will be remem-
bered as formerly chief conductor
with the Pavlowa Ballet Russe.
Four entirely different pro-
grams are being offered. All eve-
ning performances will begin
promptly at 8:30 o'clock. The
Saturday matinee, planned espe-
cially for young people, will be
at 2:30 o'clock. The opening pro-
gram, Thursday evening, Feb. 27,
is on the regular subscription
course of the Detroit Symphony.
Tickets for thin performance are
being mailed to subscribers.
Ezio Pinza Guest Artist on
Ford Hour Sunday
Downtown Theaters
STARS FROM BEN
BERNIE'S CASINO
Appear with Sym-
phony Feb. 27-29
A Rush-Beaner Production
/55
They float ...through the air...
with the greatest ... ease ... and
abandon ... at the Oriole Terrace
this week ... as you gaze ... and
gaze ... and wonder at it all ...
The Oriole Jumbo . . . Senorita
Conchita is easily ... the star ...
so gracefully defies the laws of
gravity . . . and those trapex (lit-
ters ... that make your head ...
go round and round . . . with
watching ... dogs ponies
yes . . . a high diving dog at that
... tumblers ... clowns ... ladies
and gentlemen . . . a cast of 70
stars of the tent assembled under
the Oriole roof . . . for your
amazement ... and music by Gray
Gordon ... including a trio of sing-
era . . . with the Carla Torney
dancers thrown in ... with novel-
ty dance routines . . . stunning
ones ... and to the welcome auda-
city of Mister Becker , the boss
. we remind you ... at no in-
Monte Carlo Ballet Russe to crease in prices..
The national broadcast of the
Jewish War Veterans will be on
Station WJR from 1 to 1:30 p. m.
this Sunday, with Ferdinand Pe-
United Artists — Charlie Chap-
cora as principa )speaker. The
local post, No. 135, was recently lin's "Modern Times" is now at
the
United Artists Theater. Al-
organized here.
most two years in production,
Chaplin's
first picture in five years
Slobodka Yeshiva Auxiliary
is also his most pretentious. Like
Sponsors Party
its predecessorr, "City Lights,"
"Modern Times' is without dia-
The Ladies Auxiliary of Slobod- logue but boasts some novel gourd!
ka Yeshivah will give a party on
effects.
Tuesday evening, Feb. 25, at Con-
gregation Tefilah-Emanuel, Tay-
Michigan—Bing Crosby, Ethel
lor and Woodrow Wilson, to raise Merman and Charlie Ruggles in
money for matzos. There will be the singing, dancing comedy "Any-
music, entertainment and refresh- thing Goes,' is now at the Michi-
ments.
gan Theater, while on the stage
Benny Rubin appears in an elabor-
ate show that lists the Stanley
Brothers, Edith Drake, Dunn
Brothers, Helen Fallon, Bob Barre,
Rio, and Wed, Frances Wills,
Eleanor Etheridge, Dorothy Rogers
and a chorus of dancers from the
NEW SHOW !
French Casino.
Back by Popular Demand
State--"Woman Trap" a dra-
matic thriller with Gertrude
Michael and Roscoe Karns, is now
at the State Theater together with
"Timothy's Quest" starring Elea-
nor Whitney, Tom Keene and
Dickey Moore.
SOCIETY'S FAVORITE
SONG TEAM
RKO Dotratews--"Follow the
w
Fleet," the new dancing, singing,
comedy picture with Fred Astaire
and Ginger Rogers is now at the
R KO Downtown.
The story was taken from the
NBC SONG STARS
musical revue "Hit the Deck."
w
Irving Berlin has provided new
songs, lyrics and musical score. it
marks the fourth co-starring pic-
ture for Astaire and Rogers.
Margie Lyons
DANCERS
NOW SHOWING • -THE WORLD PREMIERE
Billy Carr, man of many moods, is the popular master of core-
monies who has donned the tight fitting garb of the circus barker,
along with the whistle and whip, and is seen as ringmaster at the
spectacle "Jumbo" now at the Oriole Terrace.
Carr, featuring Senorita Conchita in her death-defying slide
for life, presents the acts in the swaggering manner typical of the
sawdust ring.
The world famous Viennese pay- i
chologist. Dr. Alfred Adler, will
talk on "Problems of Personal Con-1
duct," at The Detroit Town
in the Cass Theater. Friday morn-
ing, Feb. 28, at 11 o'clock.
Dr. Adler, torn in Vienna end
holding the highest honorary title
that city can bestow, "Honored
Citizen," was graduated from the
University of Vienna and first
gained recognition as a diagnosti-
cian. Today the world is Dr. Ad-
ler's clinic. He has been the hon-
ored guest and speaker before the
most important civic groups here
and in Europe, at universities,
ogy and his books are standard
text books while his other writings
—some designed for the layman,
some for scientists only—have been
translated into mealy languages
and indicate Dr. Adler's rare abil-
ity to address both types of sudi-
once, simply, profoundly, thrill-
ingly.
Eclip:ing, as many think, the
contributions of Freud and Jung,
Dr. Adlees discoveries rank with
those of the world's great scien-
tists, and his theories are as applic-
able to the life of the normal in-
dividual as to the mentally dis-
turbed.