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THE SUNDAY! STAR, WASHINGTON, D. qa, SEPTEMBER 26, 1926—PART T. SCHOOLS & COLLEGES ..U SEMESTER (OPENS TOMORROW Two Freshmen Assemblies Scheduled for First Ses- Sion of New Year. George Washington University will open its doors tomorrow morning to begin the academic year in all depart- ments. The calendar of events for the opening day is announced by President William Mather Lewis. There will be two assemblies for freshmen tomorrow. The first will be held in Corcoran Hall at 11:05 am. The second will be held in the same hall at 5:10 p.m. Freshmen from the department of arts and scienceg at the two will be addressed dean of the uni- Howard Lincoln Hodg- Kins and Prof. Henry Grattar Doyle, faculty adviser for men. ‘The freshmen will be talked to along the line of what college means and whag advantages may be obtain- ed. The orientation talks will be brief and to the point. Various ac- tivitles and phases of university life will be outlined. Dean Rose to Speak. Tomorrow &t 9:30 am. and also at 8 p.m. the university law school will be addressed by Dr. Lewis, Willlam Bruce King, member of the board of trustees, and Dean Willlam C. Van Vieck law school. At 4 o'clock in the medical school the entering class will be addressed by President Lewis and Dean Willlam Cline Borden of the medical school. Tuesday morning all of the fresh- men girls of the department of arts and sciences will be addressed by Dean of Women Anna L. Rose. Prob- lems of university life will be dis- cussed by the dean. The university has set aside two buildings for the 'exclusive use of women'’s activities for this year. Clubs and sorority rooms have bgen fur- nished and the whole scheme of wom- en’s activities in the institution has been contralized. Registration Ends Tomorrow. Tomorrow will be the last day for regular registration in the university. During the past two weeks the uni- versity gymnasium has been used for registration. The new scheme has proved unusually satisfactory and may be offered to other large uni- versities. According to university officlals and the large activity noted on the campus, there is reason to believe that the institution will enjoy a most successful year. Considerable changes have been made with the addition of buildings and laboratories; while the faculty has been enlarged, and the |} scops of courses in practically all de- partments has been broadened. During the past week Dr. Willlam Cline Borden and Dean Willlam C. Van Vleck have been attending im- ortant conferences. Dr. Borden vis- ted the cancer control conference at Mohonk, N. Y., while Dean Van Vleck attended the American Bar Associa- tion conference at Harvard University day President Lewis ng address at the Uni- versity of Delaware at Newark, Del. he spoke at the opening College, Hollins, Va., near Roanoke, where his daughter has en- tered tRe, freshman class. The University Hatchet, the official student publication, which appears weekly during the year, has made its appearance. _ The Hatchet is sent to For Practical Results Study at The Master-School of Interior Decoration of Washington Specializing in Interior Decoration enting Arte & Decoration. New York B fhither Information. apply o Rudolphe de Zapp, Director ______'___—T LENORE MARIE, de GRANGE Children Players of Washington open their Any one wishing to join compai Phone Miss de Grange, Adams 2526 § BEGINNERS AND ) _ADVANCED ASS] Poter Efnnnmm iny n } SE l!‘l‘l!l’ : megnone Academy 1517 R. L Ave. N Crit;:}ief School of Painting and Applied Arts wing and Drawing. Life Claxses. , Interior, Decorntion. n and Poster, Advertising. ping classes for rhlldrfl| L 14th & T Sts. Day Clas Compiee ¢ Engmeermg Dm 00006000 00006000000000 | Study Interior Decoration { Profsssional, Cultural, Fundamental rses. Personal instruction. Mfi.n.z School Fine Applied Art 1747 Rhode Island Ave. Main 1760 : terms ‘Franklin 5503 VOICE STUD] Same e ) all students and alumni of the insti- tution. The alumni_ monthly, in charge of Vernon Brewster, will shortly make its appearance. Foot Ball Team Returns. Other student activities at the in- stitution have been under way for the past two weeks in preparation for the opening tomorrow. Tho foot. ball team returned to town from College Park, Md, ¥riday, Fuere Coneh “Meandw Crum and Carl Davis have been putting the men through a three weeks’ intensive course of train- ing. The eleven, with eight men back from last vear, has_firsj-class pros- pects. Through the courtesy of Maryland University the squad of 40 men has been conditioned and in- structed at the Maryland institution and is looking forward to the opening game here with the College of the City of New York on October 2. There has been a generous response from alumni and friends who have been sent season tickets for foot ball and basket ball, according to the re- port from the office of the director of athletics, George Washington has several important contests here this fall, leading off with the C. C. N. ¥ game and winding up with Catholic University contest Thanksgiving day at Brookland. Other activities for students which are under way are debating, all girls' outdoor sports, the publications and the clubs and Sororities. The university is announcing a course of three lectures on Italian and French and ancient and modern art by Prof. Albert Gilmer of Tufts College, leading authority on the drama, who has spent the past year in_ Greece, Italy and_ France. The dates for the course will be announced shortly. Mrs. Carroll Back From Europe. Mrs. Mitchell Carroll of the faculty of arts and sciences has returned from her fifth consecutive Summer of spe- cial study abroad. She is bringing to her students in archeology a first- hand acquaintance with many of the important excavations going on_in western and central Europe. She has gathered much material for illustra- tive purposes. One of Mrs. Carroll's privileges has been to meet the lead- ing forelgn archeologists and learn from them personally of their work. Prof. John Donaldson, head of the school of commerce, and Mrs. Donald- son recently returned from Europe, where they spent the Summer touring France, Belgium, Holland aund Ger- many, Switzerland, England and Scot- an Dr. Donaldson visited the Royal Ex- change at London and the League of Nations at Geneva and conferred with officials of the International Chamber of Commerce at Paris and with vari- ous American commercial attaches, trade commissions and representatives of American chambers of commerce at principal European centers. Dr. Donaldson spent last week as_rep- resentative of the university at Phila- delphia at the Congress of American Industry, of which he is a member. GOLUMBIA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL, 1034 th n languages. mathemat- ot ndaat: Gi: evening: 1o needs: 28! STEWARD SCHOO —and be sure of a Secretarial P sition. Dl)' and night classes nown: formin, 1202 F N.w. O en Fields | A (‘o-liutndnn-l Progressive School for Children Foreat men?“&'fi'fi" ‘Telephone Woodside 1 Sidwell's Friends School| For Boys and Girls 44th Year Begins Sevt. 20 aty All Grades. and 18091819 Eye St. N.W. Olhrhn !fi 3901 mmln—?::.- e Oventry Ciub. Gymaatium, Bus Servieo THOS. W. snrw:u.. AM., Princival aln 284 v, | lege enroliment. AMERICAN U. HAS 18 IN SENIOR CLASS Second Year of Academic Work Finds 134 Enrolled. 25 States Represented. ‘With the College of Liberal Arts of American University getting under way in opening preliminaries last week and an enrollment of 134, regis- tration is proceeding in the School of Political Sciences and Graduate School, where ,lectures will start Thursday. Twenty-five States and two foreign countries are represented in the col- There are 75 new students, and the senior class, al- though this is only the second year for the undergraduate school, num- bers 18. Twenty-two of the boys in the col- lege will be housed in dormatory fa- cilities in whe new gymnastum, which is being pu'shed to completion. Dr. Luclus C. Clark, chancellor of the university, and his secretary, Miss Sara Dow, bursar of the institution, have moved their offices from the downtown location at 1901 F street to the new Battelle Memorial Library on_the campus. Policies for the university in fits several departments were outlined at various functions opening the year during the past week, including the chancellor's reception to the faculty, opening exercises of the college, re- ceptions and student “frolics” in the campus socfal center, the women's residence hall. New Ideas Included. The graduate school, it was ex- plained by Dean Edward T. Devine, will be directed under a policy com- bining harmoniously the best tradi- tions of its 30 years and the vision of education obtained by the new dean through diverse experiences. Dr. De- vine was one time a professor at C lumbia University and was a member of the United States Coal Commis- sion and director of Red Cross relief at San Francisco and Dayton, Ohio. ‘Will Hutchins, professor of art ap- Professional, Cultural, Fundamental Courses. Personal instruction. National School Fine Applied Art 1747 Rhode Island Ave. Main 1760 9006000000000060000000000 The Pierce-Orme School 0f Natural Education. A Select School 1o Al a Boarding Pupxls T'Qlfth (‘onmnth'e cvilie S S Br ot “Methods—Individual - Instruction Teachers' Kindergarten Traiping Course Phone North 1523 DRAMATICART Studio—Stage WALTER BECK 1712Y, Eye St.— Phone M. 8997 Private and Class Lessons Rehearsal—Voice Pantomime—Make-Up Student Productions Georgetown 1926—1927. Morning and Afternoon Classes For Information and Registration Apply at s Georgetown Law 506 E Street Northwest, ‘Washington, D. C. Law School School Building H Telephone Main 7293. LaSalle Unrivalled in ACCOUNTANCY | MAIL COUPON FOR Accountancy Booklet LaSalle Extension University 604 Albee Bldg. Keith's Theater Building Main 8320 Open Evenings preciation and dramatics, and Dr. Frank W. Colller, professor of phi- losophy, also presented at the chan- cellor's reception diverting accounts of their trips to Europe during the Summer, and Dr. D. O. Kinsman, pro- fessor of economics, spoke for the newcomers to the faculty. Prof. Hutchins brought back with him for use in advanced courses in fine arts a large number of {llustrated monographs, photographs, lantern slides and other materials. Students participated Wednesday night in a “big brother and big sister” party under the direction of Jacob Snyder and Miss Helen Rohere, chair- men. Friday night the college recep- tion for faculty and students was held at the women’s residence hall, when the principals in entertainment were Harold N. Dudley, instructor in his- tory, who sang, and Mrs. Dudley, who gave dramatic readings. New Faculty Committees. Eight committees of the faculty have been named to take charge of va- rious college activities during the year, with chairmen as follows: Curricu- lum, Dr. John E. Bentley; social and religious activities, Miss Mary Igpuise Brown, dean of women; library, Dr. Paul Kaufman; public occasions, Dr. athletics * and physical education, Dr. Kaufman scholarship and henors, Dr. George Woods, dean of the Coilege of Liberal Arts; lectures, concerts and entertain- ments, Dr. Bartlett B, James; auditing accounts of student organizations, Dr. Shenton. Miss Maenette Olsen, graduate of Baylor University, at Waco, Tex., has been appointed registrar and secre- tary to Dean Woods, succeeding Mrs. Barbara Van Tuyl Molstad, whose husband, Melvin Molstad, has ac- cepted instructorship in’ chemistry at Yale and with Mrs. Molstad wiil leave October 1 for New Haven. Dr. Paul Kaufman has just had pub- lished by Doubleday, Page & Co. a new text book already adopted by American Unjversity, .Yale, Boston University, Ohio, State University and many oth!rs, entitled “Points of Y}lle\;v for College Students.” The au- olo, Posters, Illustrations, Cartoon: Dynamic Symmetry. INTERIOR DECORATION Lectures and Research. ing, Pattern Design, Research, Symmetry, ete. the Courses. 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 00000000000000000 Register Now. & is a collection of essays from- 200000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000008 NATIONAL SCHOOL FINE AND APPLIED ART Connecticut Ave. and M St. (1747 Rhode Island Ave.) FELIX MAHONY, Director. Main 1760 Day and Evening Classes, Sketch and Life Class, Children’s Saturday Class Our 8-month Professional Fundamental Course fits you to accept a position in Interior Decoration, Cos- tume Design, Dynamic Symmetry, Color and Commer- cial Art. Call, phone or send for catalog. COMMERCIAL ART includes Drawing in Color, Black and White, Caricature, Fashion and Life Draw- ing, Lettering, Layouts, Retouching, Perspective, Reproduction, includes Drquwing, Architecture, Furniture Construction, Historic Periods, tive, Rendering in Water Color, Dynamic Symmetry, Course of COSTUME DESIGN includes Color, Dress and Stage Design, Water Color Rendering, Costume Illustration, Sketching and Life Draw- cludes the study of Color (the Spectrum) Pigments, Har- es, Application of Color for Show Window and other display, Color for the Promotion of Sales, Lectures and Demonstrations. Individual Instruction by Mr. Felix Mahony and Staff in all Exhibition of Students’ Work. Positions Obtained for Graduates School Opens October 1 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 — the leading minds of the nineteenth and twentieth centurles designed to introduce freshmen to the *‘panorama of modern human thought.” Dr. Kaufman during his vacation con- ducted research work in California under the auspices of the American Council of Learned Societies. He was principally concerned with a Shake- spearean folio in the Huntington Li- brary at Pasadena. s W ABBOTT ART SCHOOL IS HOLDING. EXHIBITION Students’ Work Being Shown to Public—New Course in In- terior Decoration. The Abbott School of Fine and Com- mercial Art, 1623 H street, it is claim- ed by its sponsors, has contact with the trade and enables students to find a market for their work while yet students. The school now is open for registration, having enlarged fa- cilities. An_exhibition of students’ is being held at the school, ch is open to the public until 5:30 ss Anne Fuller Abbot® announces course in interjor decoration. 1 take up the history of the d\nmng from the cave man t» the present day. The study of the styles of architecture with the rela- tion of the exterior to the interior of the house, period furniture, textiles, color harmony also are included in the course. Mary Farrar Koenig, a graduate of Pratt Institute and the Chicago Art Institute, will {nstruct the day classes in commercial art, while Elizabeth Hammond, a graduate of the Mary land Instifute, will instruct the night classes and Margaret Leet will have classes on Saturdays. B. H. Harris will direct the etching class. Miss Abbott will instruct in the fine arts both day and evening, while Susan Chase will have classes in water color. ol Color, Interior Perspec- Perspective, Lectures, Dynamic 990000000900000000000090000000000000000000000000000000000¢000000000 1,000 Drawings J §“M““00 ANNOUNCEMENT Hotel Operator Seeks Lewis Graduates (Extract from letter recently recelved by Clifford Lewls) sist they appreciate. * * * P S we “Frankly, we feel ghat have, without, excep~ tion, the finest resort hotel in.the entire south and you know how ultra _) punctilious I am about service. I am now build- ing the organization and ~>-#in staffing I am anxious Bl to get employes who have instilled in them the high ideals of hotel operation which your institution in- I shall be proud if I can advertise that our department heads are Lewis Training School graduates.” . HAL THOM'PSON,- Mgr. Pine Hills Hotel. Lewis Graduates in Big Demand Requests for Lewis graduates come from all parts of the United States. Thousands of positions open in hotels, clubs, res- taurants, tea rooms, cafeterlas, apartment houses. Demand increases dalily. institutions, schools, colleges and You can prepare for big salary quickly, Our Free Employment Bureau is in close touch with hotels throughout the United States and places graduates in contact with good executive positions everywhere. Over One Blllion Dollars will be spent in 1926 for hotels, clubs, apartments, tea rooms, cafeterias, etc. 258,226 New Rooms Building—193,671 Employes Needed 425 new hotels projected for Florida alone. Prepare now for this uncrowded field, which gives you a rich choice of pesitions. -Big pay. with rapid advancement. RNS DOWN $5,000 JOB p R. A. Herfurth, manager, Chicago Engineers’ Club, a Lewls graduate, writes: “I am just in receipt of your offer of new club at Washington. I thank you for the offer, osition in ut at present time am well satisfied here.” Mrs. A. J. Dyer, president Y. W. us, writes that she has selected Mrs. J. ferred to her, as house director. C. A., Nashvjlle, in thanking M. Clayton, whom we re- Because of our training, Miss Bess Bush, another graduate, is manager of Cornwell’s Tea Room. Clifford less than 225 leading hotels. visory board. for managerial positions. Lewis, our president, is managing 150 other big hotel men on our ad- All look with favor on Lewis-trained men and women Course_indorsed by such hotels as Biltmore, Waldorf-Astoria, Astor, consultant for no New Willard, Mayflower and others, all over the cwn!.ry Drop everything for this uncrowded big-pay profession. Salaries start at up to $150 and $400 a month, with opportunities to earn $20,000 a year and more if vou have ability. Meals and luxurious apartments often included free. Live in own city—or select Summer or Winter resort—or travel on same = uners. Mix with bes peop! la so investl; and cIIbI quickly. Thea ageide Tof yourmait Fl:)';el ‘Training hotos of big hotels ools CLIFFORD LEWIS, President Washington Circle and 23rd St. N.W., Washington, D. C. (Call 8:30 A.M. to 9 P.M.) E. B. BURLING HEADS HARVARD DRIVE HERE Attorney Will Aid Law School to Seek $5,000,000 Endow- ment Fund. Thirteen lawyers residing in the District of Columbia, Maryyland and Delaware have already accepted mem- bership in a regional committee which will conduct in this section the re- cently announced national campaign of the Harvard Law School to raise an endowment fund of $5,000,000. William C. Coleman of Baltimore is chairman of the regional committee which includes: Clarence K. Bowie, Richard F. Cleveland, Frank B. Ober, Reuben Oppenheimer, W. A. Parker, Aubrey Pearre, jr. and Robert W. Willilams of Baltimore; Frank H. Jacobs of Towson, Eugene E. Berl of Wilmington, state’ chairman for Dela- ware, and George N. Davis and Thomas M. Keith, also of Wilming- ton, and Edward B. Burling of Wash- ington, chairman for the District of Columbla. Similar committees are being organ- tzed among Harvard Law Sciool Alumni in all of the 18 regions into 900000000000000000000000¢ y Art Students Exhibition See the Drawings of Our Pupil National School Fine & Applied Art 1747 Rhode Island Ave. Main 1760 Felix Mahony, Director 00000000000 00000000000000 DOES YOUR CHILD FAIL TO CONCENTRATE? This jauit is often found in supergified children, due ‘o 'lack of int in routine work. Our progressive methods, our small classes, and our understanding teachers, enable us to attain unusual success with such children. A Country Day School of the progressive, Dew education type. with small boarding de- partment under ideal home conditiona for Rbildren under sixteen. EIghth season opened Beptember 22nd. Chase Country Day School Cleveland 1374 Diggetor, Stanwood Cobb, Harvard A. M. The Abbott School Fine and Commercial ART 1623 H Street Phone Main 8054 - Day and Evening Classes Children’s Saturday Class Etching—Portrait—Water Color Interior Decoration Costume Design Commercial ll.lustra.tlon Exhibition—Public Invited Contact With the Trade Open for Registration Catalog on Request which the country has been divided for campaign purposes. Widespread support of the cam- paign not only among Harvard-trained lawyers but also among others is fore- casted by those famillar with the pro- gram for which the fund is to be used. They point out that already more than a fifth of the amount sought has been promised, although the campaign will not formally open until October. 'Of this, as was recently announced, $750.- 000 18 a conditional gift from the gen- eral education board, its first contribu- tion toward legal research, and the remainder is $400,000 from private donors. The fund will be used for two major purposes, maintenance of high stand- ards at the school and conducting legal research. Referring to this pro- gram, Dean Roscoe Pound of the Harvard Law School has announced: “What research has been done for the prevention and cure of disease, what it has done for engineering and what it has done for the technical arts, it may well do for the law. The call for research in law is especially strong. “American law schools can render a real service, not merely to the pro- fession, but to the economic gnd busi- ness interests of the country, and to 2 by carrying on the sci- gation on which the law reforms of the future must go fore ° ward.” ST. MARGARET’S TO OPEN, St. Margaret's School, 2115 Califore nia street, opens October 1 in all de- partments with improved equipment to meet the increasinz enroliment, it was announced last night. From the kindergarten through the grades and high school work teachers of experis ence and scholastic standing are ems ploved, it is announced The faculty this vear will have graduates of ar, Wellesley, North Western University, Maryland State Normal School. Peabody Conservatory, . the Corcoran School of Art and the Temple School for Secretari 9000000000000000000000000 Study Interior Decoration Professional, Cultural, Fundamental Courses. Personal instruction. National School Fine Applied Art 1747 Rhode Island Ave. Main 1760 000000000000 0600000000000 School of Foreign Service GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY Washington, D. C. OMPLETE courses in Foreign Trade, Inter- national Diplomacy, and Shipping Consular Trade Commis- sioner Work, Inter- national Law, Ac- counting and Political Science. Leading to the degreesof B.F. S, M. F. S. and Ph. D. Morning courses start at 9 A.M. Afternoon courses start at 5:10 P.M. New semester opens 8 P.M., Fri- day, October '1, 1926, ¥ CATALOGUE AND COMPLETE INFOR- MATION CAN BE OBTAINED FROM THE OFFICE OF THE SCHOOL 431 6th Street N. W,. Telephone Main 5440 ARE YOU SURE OF YOUR JOB? Why Not Use Spare Time to Prepare Yourself? JOIN NEW CLASS IN SECRETARIAL SCIENCE October 4, 1926 Just the Thmg to Enable You to Hold Your Job or Win Rapid Promotion Many Fine Jobs Will Soon Be Open For Those Trained in STEWARD NIGHT SCHOOL Steward;s Night School offers several distinct advantages: 1st—It affords you the opportunity6f completing your education at a nominally low monthly expendi- ture. 2nd—It requires less time than a similar educa- tion obtained through attending a free night school. 3rd—It offers more personal instruction and a greater interest in each student’s progress and ulti- mate success. 4th—It permits you to enroll at any time and to advance in accordance with your own ability. 5th—In a few months it greatly increases your efficiency and thus enables you to do your daily work in a more intelligent manner and at a larger remuneration. ‘We would suggest,-therefore, that arrangements for seat reservations be made at once, as our capacity is limited and our school is rapidly filling More than 200 high school graduates enrolled, up. FRANK C. STEWARD President Steward School Eastern Director of the American Associstion of Vocational Schools. STEWARD SCHOOL For Secretaries and Accountants 1202 F St. N.W. Accredited