Evening Star Newspaper, October 14, 1928, Page 20

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190 ON HONOR LIST AT EASTERN HIGH Awards to Students Will Be ~Made Tuesday and Wednesday. One hundred and ninetv Eastern High School students who won scholastic honors last semester will be given awards at assemblies to be held Tuesday and: Wednesday under the direction of Miss H. May Johnson of the faculty. Mrs. R. O. Denning of the Latin' de- partment will address the students briefly. . Those receiving honors are: Eighth semester, first honors—Jane Adams, | Ruth Bell. Ida Cannon, Sarah Casteel, Virginia Cook. Virginia Daiker, Evelyn Eller, Neva Ewin, Roberta Fissell, Anna Fopless, Ruth Greenwood, Beryl Hack- Jev, Rhoda Hatton, Helen Hughes,' Fiizabeth Jenkins, Alice Law, Esther Linger, Carol Meads, Lila Moss. Cornelia Mullenax, Margaret Payne, Elsie Seay, Jeanne Stivers, Theadore Bishoff, Sam- uel Bryan, George Clark, Max Cohen. Herbert Cooper, Charles Critchfield. | James Dietz, Horace Higgins. Wa,vn(‘: Hisle, Edward Moeller, Donald Mowbray. Chester Pyles, Edwin Ross and Ralph | Watt. Second honors—Audrey Bern- | hardt. Mary Kalser, Grace Lady, Dor- | othy Lederer, Norma Morrison, Kathryn | Mushake, Alice Teates, Grace Walther, | Adele Woolard, Elden Cary, Arnold Keplinger and Frank Lasken. Seventh semester, first honors—Mar- guerite Crawford, Virginia Facer, Frances Gernard, Rose Saidman, Harry Cole, Fred Fisher, Marshall Grinder. Clarence Hartman and John Reicks. Second honors—Laura Dove, Estelle Dunnington and Pearl Goldstein Sixth semester. first honors—Cathe- rine Bixler, Rose Cohen, Katherine | Cross. Dorothy Donnella, .ignes Gal- Jagher. Ruth Goldberg, Margaret Hewitt, Jean Hoch, Alice Imlay. Yotta Morgan- | stein, Mildred Roberts, Gwendolyn Rusk, Genevieve Spence, Helen Swick, Myrtle Thom, Lucile Tucker, Alex Goodkowitz, | Judson Harrison, Max Miller and Fred- | erick Stewart. Second honors—Eliza- | beth Bequette, Edna Creel. Karolina | Hedler. Grace Irish, Laura Myers, Ger- trude Rosengarten and Lawrence Pum- phrey. Fifth semester, first honors—Alma | Gemeny, Jane Menefee, Adolphus Wor- | ley, John Gernand, Wiley Magee and | Joseph Rabbitt. Second honors—Alice Lauxman, Edward Glover and Lewis Magruder. Two-year graduates, first honors -— Hildegard Schatz, Louise Schmid and Margaret Wolf. Second honors—Lois Denison, Anne Mullen and | Ellen Truman. Fourth semester, first honors—Clara Critchfield, Ruth Ferguson, Mary Mour- | hess, Ruth Myers, Grace Nelson, Anna | Helen Ott, Mary Louise Robbins, Ger- trude Shipley, Marguerite Teachum, Mary Thomas,. Ruth' Thomasson, | Blanche Widome, Hilda Zwillinger, | Charles Hart, Lynden Scates, Joseph | William Steiner and Harold Swift. | Second honors—Margaret Luers, Thom- as Walsh, Aloysius Appich and Paul Steinkueller. : Third semester, first honors—Henri- | etta Bellnick, Jenny Culbertson. Sylvia | Donovitz, Bessie Furr, Kathryn Gar- rett, Dorothy Gatewood, Grace Grif- fith, Anna Hunter, Frances A. Schrott, | John Meads, Leonard Minkoff, William | Smith and Arthur Willis. Second hon- | ors—Elizabeth Keeler, Josephine Cleo TRankin, Gladys Voehl, Alice Wlllhms.; Walter Bean, Paul Hartman, Isaac | Janopky, Davice Radice and Louis | Rernek. . ez Second semester, first honors—Velma Bradford, Mildred Donison, Madeline Duncan, Vida Funkhouser, Dorothy Kirsch, Elizabeth Leek, Grace Mathie- son, Alberta Scott, Martin Allwine, Richard Cooper, George Emmart. Frank Law, Franklin Richards and John Tay- lor. Second honors—Mae Arkin, Anna Felker. Marjorie Fuller. Jane Hughes, Mildred Leiper, Myrtle Lowe, Marie Rejer. Jeannette Willlams and John Hedler. | First semester, first honors—Margaret | Baker, June Beaver, Dorothy Bishofl, | Ruth Critchfield. Ada Fenstermacher, Dorothy Green, Georgéanna Held, Mar- garet Hinegarden, Sylvia Kessler, Flor- ence Pennington -and Miriam Posey. Second honors—Alice. Graham, Helen ., Dorothy _ O'Donnell, . Mildred King. Naoml Sugar, Janet Rock, Gladys Durrer and Florence Huhn. Post Graduate Course Planned. A post-graduate special business prac~ tice department to acquaint graduate students with the important items of procedure 3 in the average business collegs will be inaugurated by Club. which was formed at the univer- | | always taken a keen interest | Will Address Democratic Women. NATIONAL U.MASONIC CLUB HOLDS MEETING Officers to Be Elected in November. Moot Court Jury Trial Held. ‘The National ~University Masonic sity in December, 1920, held fts first meeting during the past week and wlll; elect officers for the present year at its next meeting to be held in November. Students of National Un'V!nlt{ have n the moct court work in the course given by | Prof. Glenn:Willett. The first tria! by | jury in the law and criminal branch of the moot court wos held last week, when W. R. Stitely and" Willlam A. Foley acted as prosecutors and the defendant was represented by Attorneys H. Win- ship Wheatley, jr., and Albert F. Ad- ams. In accordance with the usual practice. jurors were drawn from the student body. Election of officers of the Cy Pres Club, the f‘llonecr woman's organization of the university, will take placz dur- ing the month at a date which will be announced later. Organization of the ! senior, junior and freshman classes is being accomplished and it is expected that class elections will be held during the coming week. The two debating societies, the Miller and Alvey and the John Marshall Club, have activelv organized and plans for | debates will be completed this week. GUIDANCE PLANNED. Schedule Announced for Hine Ju- nior High School. Educational guidance, which has been featured at Hine Junior High School | for zome yvears, will be condueted under | the direction of Mizs Esther Woodward | of the faculty this year on the follow- | Ing schedule: 7A classes will receive in- struction on the lives of famous men through biographical sketches: 7B, 8A | and 8B classes will be taught a variety | of subjects, including aviation, govern- | ment opportunities. money-making in | the home, library practice and beauty culture, The library class will visit the Snulh-} eastern branch of the Public Library to | hear lectures by one of the aSsistant | librarians, and” 9A classes have talks on business ethics, and 9B are given suggestions as to senior high school and | college courses i “Why Southern Women Will Vote the Smith-Robinson Ticket" will be the sub- ject of a speech to be given by Mrs Sarah Lee Fain of Norfolk, at the weekly forum luncheon of the Woman's National Democratic Club tomorrow. Mrs. Pain is one of the four woman members of the House of Delegates of the Virginia State "Legislature. She will be introduced by Mrs. John Allan Dougherty of Washington, who wiil preside. Sturtevant Blowers For Burning Buckwheat Ceal FRIES, BEALL & SHARP 734 10th St. NN\W. Sage Tea Turns Gray Hair Dark By SHIRLEY BLAKE That beawtiful, | { s e of dark, glossy hair! can_only be had | by brewing a| mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Your hair is your charm. It makes, S or mars the face.| When it fades, turns gray or streaked, just an application or two of Sage and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundredfold. . Don't bother to prepare the mixture. | You can get this famous eld recipe, improved hy the addition ‘of other in- gredients, for only 75 cents, all ready | for use, -1t is called Wyeth's Sage and | Sulphor Compound. This ean always | be- depended upon to bring back the | natural color and luster of your hair, Evershody uses “Wyeth's Sage and | Sulphur Compound” now because it | darkens o naturally and evenly that| nobody can tell it has been applied. | You simply dampen a sponge or soft | | brush with it and draw this through ¢ b1 the Southern Brothers’ Business Uni- versity here, starting tomorrow, under the direction of Dr. 8. Read McAlpin. ‘The new branch will form practically a miniature finishing school for the busi- nexs university. Going Out Trunl Toilet Cases Billfolds Boston Bags SAL the hair, taking one small strand at a [ time: by morning the gray hair has di | appeared. and after another application | it hecomes heautifully dark and appears | glossy and lustr Advertisement. of Business E Pullman Cases Hat Boxes | development of the child's | search. Center hsre, where dictaphones | such conversations must be listened to | dren hold with themselves probably are | relate- to impressiol scalping 20 Indians | same topics and dramatizes itself in the | same role night after night,” the tests| | indicate, a built up which may lead to serious| of some such mental disease as dementia THE SUNDAY STAR: WASHINGTON. TALK OF CHILDREN SUBJECT OF STUDY Apparently Aimless Conver- sation Checked by Re- search Center. What does a child talk to itsell about when it is left alone in the dark? The apparently aimless. conversation may have an important bearing on the | rsonality, | it is belfeved at the National Child Re- hand strenuously enough, the situation may be cleared up alf her. The child does not hold his delusions so stubborn- ly and is ready to give them up under the right stimuli. There is one little boy who talks to the 'm clock night after night and is | continually speaking about his parents dying. He sees the two eyes of the {alarm clock following him. The same | thing might be trué¢ of any child, but time again. A possible interpretation arrived at by members of the research center staff is that the child’s conversation is a wish fulfillment—that he hates his pa- rents but can't express this in his ordi- nary acts. So, in the quiet before going to sleep, he creates for himself an im- | aginary situation in which they are dead. 3 ‘There is another little girl who time after time talks to imaginary nurses in a hospital. This may be interpreted as another wish fulfillment. She was in = hnds]pmlsflnn;e b“ildfl wnfnm;‘uq Vi kindly. she bullds up for her. have been rigged up under beds 10| sely : : . catch ‘svery siable that comes from felf an idsal world' to which she re the lips before the coming of the sand- |turny as often as possible. It always ma n. ‘Is dangerous, Dr. Sherman says, for But the center staff is working with | the, child to shut ltself “away from (imited material and wants as many rec- Ak ords as possible from the homes where there are children between 4 and 9 years of age. The experiment is being conducted by Miss Rita F. O'Grady, under direction of Dr. Mandel Sher- | man, director of the center. A record of what a child talks about to itself is of value, Dr. Sherman said, only when the speaker has no sus- picion that anybody is listening and is free to speak to an imaginery compan- ion without any inhibitions. Otherwise, the conversation will be artificial, de- signed for the ears of the suspected real listener, and throw no light on the fundamental nature of the child. So Questions Prepared. A set of nine questions has been pre- pared for the guidance of parents who wish to obtain data on their own chil- dren, starting with the name and age of the child. Others are: | When does the child talk to him- | self—morning, evening or before fall- ing asleep? How long does the talking last? king daily or occcasiol night after night through cracks in the door or from other-secure pointe of vantage in order to get worth-while | results. The conversations which most chil- innocent enough, Dr. Sherman says, and received in the re- cent past. In these quiet few minutes | before falling asleep the child may ap- pear a rather blood-thirsty little crea- ture, talking calmly about killing and or some similar | § $200 Cash $65 Monthly topic. Dual Personality. But when the child talks about the |'! ual personality is being | trouble later and may be the beginning | '/ praecox In later life, however, the split per-| sonality probably cannot be cured, while in childhood, if the case is taken in 1731 K Thirty-siv years at the same address A.KAHN INC. 935 F Street Buy Diamond Some Values injj Diamonds % of a carat, i A PERFECT DIAMOND ! | | i | 50/100 Karat $195 A gem of uncommon beauty, ideal for setting in an engage- matter of pride; and ment ring. A PERFECT DIAMOND 65/100 Karat 8275 This diamond weighs 10 points less than 34 of a karat. It is a gem of unsurpassing loveliness. A PERFECT DIAMOND 89/100 Karas $395 Eleven points less than one karat. Its scintillating beauty will bring to its possessor end- less happiness, A PERFECT DIAMOND 1 and 27/100 Karats $535 A gem of unsurpassing fire and scintillating beauty. Two points larger than 14 karats. Absolutely perfect. 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These persistent phantasies are most likely to appear with the children passing the highest intelligence tests, it :ns been found at the research center. “The basis of hallucinations,” says Dr. Sherman, “is apparently to be found in the imagination. Most psy- chologists have long recognized the marked vividness of imagery of cer- | tain types in children as compared to | adults. The normal child constantly uses fmagination in building up situa- tions which are unattainable in his | daily life. The content of the image | is determined normally by the previous | experience, the environmental factors At hand and by the mental processes most active at the time. “In the psychotic child these same :ucwrs‘fl:g m’nrkedl_v lnfl_rute‘;\u !hfihnl‘- ure of the imagery. psychotic child attempts to adjust his difficulty in the environment by means of imagery in the same way that the nor- mal child builds up {magery as a means of wish fulfillment. 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