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Show 7"". "'pp Tir"5;r7: CHICAGO, March 19. Prof. Charles Zueblln of the University of Chicago yesterday told . the members', of the League of . Religious Fellowship that one cannot belong to the "four hundred" hun-dred" without losing half the joy of living. Be said It Is Impossible for the Individual to become a member of any exclusive set without finding himself a loser when in the end he takes account ac-count of his assets. "They don't get anything out of life," said Prof. Zueblin. "Their perspective is narrow, they have only a small circle of friends, and they are 1 constantly meeting the same faces. They , intermarry and intermarry, with tho re-' suit that finally their children are marked in the same way that the children chil-dren of the aristocracy are marked they are without vigor, without pur- pose,-without ambition." Prof. Zueblin also declared that those of the so-called exclusive set who refuse to recognize those outside of their set do so because they are afraid to know people in the other classes. "They feel the iasecurity of other positions in their own class, and hence are afraid of losing their position if they associate with people outside of their class," he said. "The really big people are never afraid of losing anything any-thing by mingling with all classes. One can measure the real stature of a woman wo-man by her interests." Prof. Zueblin declared that one of the social needs of the hour is a greater great-er approach to economic equality. He urged that this . economic equality should extend to the family. "The wife who is economically independent," inde-pendent," he said, "is the more respected re-spected by her husband." . . |