Evening Star Newspaper, September 28, 1930, Page 23

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I0ODWAR]) e SCHOOL Jor log. O . 22—Send M. e MOUNT PLEASANT SCHOOL | Park Road Northwest COLUMBIA SCHOOL Engineering Department Classes Begin September 29th COMPLETE INTENSIVE NINE-MONTH UNITS | ODYNAMICS, STRESS ANALYAIS. SR ENGINEERING | TENT - OF Di RE TENT pOLEICE SPEC. WRITING ICAL ENGINEERING IGERATING ENGINEERING A ENTILAT] iG_AN] ING ENG. | VEYING AND MAP COMPILATION w cxvg..‘ INUM% G LUCT U] ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS —ARITHMETIC tourse includes necessary mathematics 0 Entrance Requirements Send for Engineering Catalogue 19 F Street N.W. Met. 5626 * !I-OOD’S SCHOOL & Accountants ESTABLISHED 1885 311 East Capitol St. Lincoln 0038 All Commercial Br: Enroll Now for Fall New typewrit h in Evening Rates, $5.60 a Month Day Rates, $16.00 a Month COURT F. WOOD, Principal STUDIO-SCHOOL 1781 New Hampshire Ave. 2 courses in Eng- lish. Short Story, Modern Literature and the De- velopment of the Drama, including P la y-writing, are unusually interesting. 2021 Belmont Road Northwest An exclusive home for Soun; wemen snd girl students. Cha: ing, artistic and cultured surround- ings. EXCELLENT CUISINE Columbia 5255 SCHOOL | The School for Little Children Music, French and Piano i elix Mahony’s ational Art School Supervised play and special Athletic Class. Playgrounds Open Wednesday, October 1st 2344 Massachusetts Ave. N.W. MRS. FRANK C. COOK, 1 Decatur 2750 * Visit Our Student Exhibit olor, Interior Decoration, Costume | ign, Commercial Art, Posters and Children's Saturday Class Work 747 Rhode Island Avenue North 1114 GRODKLAND SCADOL OPENS WITH WSS Rev. J. H. Ryan to Officiate at Exercises—Rev. E. A. Pace Preaches. The formal opening of the academic year at the Catholic University will take place this morning, when solemn mass of the Holy Ghost is celebrated by Right Rev. Mgr. James Hugh Ryan, rector, in the crypt of the National sthrgraeagt the Immaculate Conception o . The sermon will be preached by Right Rev. Mgr. Edward A. Pace, vice rector. Preceding the mass an aca- demic procession of the faculty and students and superiors and members of religious communities will start from Caldwe!l Hall at 10:15. The university chaplain, Very Rev. Edward G. Fitz- gerald, O. P., of the Dominican House of Studies will direct the procession. Last Tuesday, registration day, ap- proximately 2,000 students matriculated in the various departments of the uni- versity. This number includes grad- uate and undergraduate, lay and clerical students. An increasing num- ber of women students was noted in the Graduate School. The freshman class numbered more than 200. The Graduate School, having ma- terially augmented' its teaching staff in many departments, has shifted its seminars and class hours from the mornlnf to the afternoon. The pur- pose of this move is to make the graduate classes of the university avail- able to teachers in local schools and colleges, and to Government employes who would find it inconvenient to at- tend morning classes. These courses will be held from 3:30 to 6:30, and in successive years the afternoon class hours will be interchinged, so that a student who could attend the late after- noon hour only could, over a number of ars, take all the courses in a single department. Some new courses that are being offered this year are the theory of recreational leadership, by Dr. Paul Hanly Furfey, and cultural anthropology, by Dr. John M. Cooper, both of the department of sociology; in the department of Semitic and tian languages courses are offered in Arabic, Ethiopic, Assyro- Babylonian and Coptic, by Prof. Ro- manus' Butin, Prof. Arthur Vaschalde and Prof. Hyvernat; Dr. Rubio of the department of Spanich will present courses in the Spanish mystics, the Spanish drama and the romantic writers of Spain. : In the department’ of philosophy | Mgr. Edward A. Pace will conduct a course in theories of freedom. In the department of German new courses are the German didactic literature, by Dr. Leo Behrendt, and the history of the German novel, by Prof. Paul Gleis. Courses in medieval Latin will be of- fered by Dr. Martin Maguire of the department of Latin. Announcement has been made of forthcoming texts and research publica- tions edited and published by members of the university department of Latin and Greek. Among these is an edition for college classes, edited by Dr. James ] .fld b[e"u'xg“ mm?e'du;; pul . Dr. Roy J. Deferrari . James M. Campbell are col- the publication of “A Cone to Prudentius.” These scholars have been awarded a large sum of money by the Medieval Academy of America for the furtherance of this research, and the work will be published under the auspices of the academy. Dr. James M. Cooper has completed the third volume of his series, “Religion Outlines for Colleges.” It is a book of 500 b Dr. Paul Gleis of the department of German, conducted graduate courses in hilology and the history of German fium\u-e m‘u;: Summer school of the Unijversity of Notre Dame. Thfimhmln class was welcomed to the, university last Sunday morning at & mass celebrated by Rev. Dr. Nicholas A. Weber, 8. M, d“éecl dean l;!f‘ g: School of Arts pn ences, chapel of Gibbons Hall. Rev. Dr. Paul H. ley preached the sermon. COLUMBIA PRESIDENT WELCOMES STUDENTS School of Engineering and Draft- ing Will Open Classes Tomorrow. =A welcome address by Paul J. Lev- erone, president of the Columbia School of Engineering and Drafting, will mark the formal opening of the 1930 classes of the engineering and drafting depart- ments of the Columbia School tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. at_the school’s auditorium in the Strayer Building, 721 Thirteenth streef t. All students, friends and graduates are invited to attend. H. P. B 3 dean of the drafting department, will preside and the faculty, headed by F. Biberstein, dean of the engineering de- partment, will welcome' the new stu- dents. ‘The Columbia School will have a staff of 22 instructors this year. This open- ing will mark the beginning of the school's new engineering department, which began operations on a large scale this year with 14 engineering and tech- nical courses. The enrollment for both the drafting and engineer departments of the school has far exceeded all rec- ords and the school'’s officials are making desperate efforts to obtain eight addi- tional class rooms as soon as possible. will be necessary to operate on a tem- porary condensed schedule in order to accommodate all of the classes. Enroliments in_the school’s topo- graphic map drafting class have ex- ceeded previous records and it has be- come necessary to extend the class ses- sions to the six nights of the week. Senator Allen Much ietter. BALTIMORE, September 27 (#).— Senator Henry J. Allen of Kansas, who underwent a major operation at Johns Hopkins Hospital recently, was said today to be making “a record recovery.” sses Begin October 1. Register Now o He may be able to leave for his home next week, it was stated Evening Classes For beg.inners in Gregg Shorthand tomor- row, 6 o'clock For review in Graham-Pit- Until these class rooms are obtained it | i THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON., D. C., SEPTEMBER 28, 1930—PART ONE. {KAYSER HEADS SPECIAL STUDENT] ! BRANCH OF G. W. UNIVERSITY { Program Developed to Make School National in Scope. Survey Will Be Made to De- termine Extension Work Need. Further development of the program to extend George Washington Univer- sity to the full stature of the complete urban university, national in scope, been made this year through establish- ment of a division of special and exten- sion students. The addition of this academic unit sity of the people. providing, as before, traditional studies and disciplines of liberal arts and sciences curriculum and of various professional schools and in addition making available a wide vari- ety of special courses designed to give cultural richness to intellectual life and greater profictency to vocational activity of the individual. Served as Secretary. Prof. Elmer Louis Kayser of the his- tory department, who has served for 11 years as secretary of the university and for 5 years as director of its Summer sessions, has been named director of the division of special and extension stu- dents, it is announced by Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin, president. During the coming year a survey will nitles in the direction of extension work in Washington and the surrounding re- gion, with a view to adding next year any courses for which there may be a need in the community. Meanwhile, the student nucleus of the new division will be the group of special students already registered in the uni- versity, which numbered last year about 1,000. This group is composed of ma- ture students, most of them already in business and professional life. Special students are those over 21 years of age whose preparation is sufficient to permit their pursuing with profit elected studies. Admittance as a special student in all cases is upon the specific authorization of the instructor in charge of the course. Special students will be designated not as students of a particular school, but as “university students,” in which status they will remain so long as they pussue studies’ of a special nature only. Upon meeting the specific requirements they may be transferred to the school or col~ lege of their choice. s Has Twofold Purpose. The effort of the division in behalf of university students will be twofold—first, to provide special studies to meet their regularizing their work .so that if de- sired they may later become candidates for degrees. Delayed one day because of enroll- ment demands which necessitated pro- longing the registration period, classes in the university opened on Thursday. On Friday opening assemblies were heid for freshmen, when they were welcomed to the university by President Cloyd Heck Marvin and heard addresses by Dr. William Allen Wilbur, provost; Dean Henry Grattan Doyle of the Junior Col- lege; James E. Pixlee, director of - cal education for men; Ruth Atwell, director of physical education for wom- en; Mrs. Vinnie G. Barrows, director of women’s personnel guidance, and Prof. Willard Hayes Yeager, head of the de- partment of public speaking. Wednes- day afternoon the freshman women were entertained at a tea by the George ‘Washington Y. W. C. A, and on Friday night a dance was given for all students of the university under the auspices of the Student Council. Law School students assembled Wed- nesday afternoon, when they were ad- dressed by Judge Joseph W. Cox of the District Supreme Court, a member of the Law School faculty, and by Chief Justice Alfred Adams Wheat, an alum- nus of the Law School and president of 1000000000000000000000000« Felix Mahony’s National Art School 1747 Rhode Island Avenue North 1114 Classes Begin October 1. Register Now 0069000000000000000000000 makes the institution a veritable univer- | be made of the demands and opportu- | in special needs; second, to assist them in | Train! PROF. ELMER LOUIS KAYSER. the Columbian-George Washington Law School Association. The opening assembly in the School of Medicine was held Wednesday after- noon, when the speakers were the assist- ant deans of the school—Dr. Oscar B. Hunter, Dr. Walter A. Bloedorn and Dr. Joseph H. Roe. Medical students as- sembled again Friday afternoon to hear Dr. Marvin. The director of women's personnel guidance, Mrs. Vinnie G. Barrows, will hold an assembly for freshman girls on Wednesday of this week at 12:10 o'clock Corcoran Hall, and on each of the following Wednesdays, Mrs. Barrows is planning a serles of talks by prominent Washington women. ‘The university’s regular weekly devo- tionals will be resumed on PFriday at 12:10 o'clock, under the charge of the provost of the university, Dr. Wilbur. Scholastic aptitude tests for entering students will be given by the department of psychology on'-Friday, October 3, from 5:10 until 7:10 p.m., and on Satur- | f, day, October 4, from 10:10 a.m. to 12:10 pm. These tests are required of all entering students, both freshman and those entering with advanced standing, except in the Law School and the School of Medicine. The tests form a regular part of the entrance credentials of the student and are a background of refer- ence and suggestion in serving interests of the student during his course. HOTEL CLASSES FILLED Indicative of a Nation-wide interest in the hotel and institutional field is the fact that students, enrolled in the resident classes at the Lewis Hotel ing Schools, come from all parts the United States as well as from |1 of Canada. Capacity enrollment for the September and October day classes was reached weeks before the opening day and many applications had to be refer- red to the next resident classes, which will be organized in January and Feb- ruary, 1931. *0 6000000 Felix Mahony’s National Art School Visit Our Student Exhibis Color, Interior Decoration, Costume Design, Commercial -Art, Posters and Children’s Saturday Class Work 1747 Rhode Island Avenue North 1114 Classes Begin October 1. Register Now LEARN SPANISH The only school in Washington éxclusively dedicated to the teaching of the Spanish language. - Professors from Spain. New Conversational Method, Rapid Progress. l-ennumyr This School, asidé from private lessons, rices. orming new YEAR’'S OFFER Four Economical Courses weekly of one hour each. in these classes is limited. 1338 H St. N.W, 1319 F Street N.W. NEW ENLARGED LOCATION Two are for Beginners, one for Intermediate and one for Advanced students. These courses begin October 2nd, consisting of two lessons To take advantage of these economical courses it is necessary to enroll before the above date. The number of students SPANISH SCHOOL OF WASHINGTON Phone NAtional 9369 COI{UMBIA SCHOOL ENGINEERING and DRAFTING TWENTIETH YEAR PAUL J. LEVERONE, President Office and Classrooms MEt. 5626 W. T. PAGE SPEAKS T0 DEBATE CLASS House Clerk’s Lecture Starts + Season at Washington Law College. William Tyler Page, clerk of the House of Representatives, delivered a lecture on ‘“Parliamentary Procedure” at the opening session of the debating class held last evening at the Washing- ton College of Law. Assistant United States District At- torney Rebecca Greathouse presided, and she will have charge of all future activities of this group. The moot court also held its initial session last evening, at which time Dr. Edwin A, Mooers lectured on “The Preparation of Cases for Trial.” Other activities in the undergrad- uate department are under way. The post-graduate course will commence on Wednesday, and, according to Dean Grace Hays Riley, will be made espe- clally attractive this year. It brings into the local fleld the new trends of legal education which are being intro- duced by the leading schools through~ out the cduntry, with special emphasis on the practical relationship of law to industry in general. It aims to show the student the law as a system and its relationship to other sciences, partic- ularly sociology and economics, Francis Colt de Wolfe, assistant so- licitor of the State Department, will begin his course of lectures on inter- national law, covering the principles of law governing the intercourse of states, the -rights and duties of nations and their nationals in times of peace and war, where international questions are involved. Roscoe J. O. Dorsey will conduct in comparative legal history, ancient, Ro- man and modern jurisprudence. Harleigh H. Hartman, vice chairman of the Public Utilities Commission, will lecture on public utilities and economic interpretation of law, presenting the in- luence of economics on common law in all its special branches, The course will take up economic influence on the different. brlnchs ‘of l"rlt' lucg as real property, personal property and agency, and will deal with practical problems of legislation, showing the probable eco- nomic influences on law which will be enacted to mieet present conditions. The course in patent law embraces the study of trade marks, which class is conducted by William L. Symons, formerly a member of the board of tax appeals of the Interior Department and an examiner in the Patent Office. The course in substantive patent law will be conducted by “Henry E. Stauffer, for- merly chief of, interference in the Pat- tory School of Languages includes ur grades backward children, teacher oLgcommended; - convenient locatign. hi keeping. Civil servic tatlon ciasses. Start 1383 L. 10000000000600000006000000¢ Felix Mahony’s National Art School 1747 Rhode Island Avenue : North 1114 Classes Begin October 1. Register Now T0 SYRAGUSE STAFF John Davidson’s Appointment as English Instructor Fol- lows Rigorous Preparation. Graduated from Central School in 1926 and from the University of the South at Suwanee, Tenn., last June, John Sumner Davidson, son of Mr. Mrs. Charles H. D-vldlm’ll‘dof Kensington, B has been name: instructor in Eng- lish at Syracuse University. Young Davidson, who now is only 22 years of age, at- tended the elemen- tary school in Chevy Chase, M before entering Central. At John 8. Davidson. % master’s d at Harvard. Mean- while, however, he made formal ap- plicatidn for a position as instructor at Syracuse. His appointment came re- cently, almost as a surprise, and the Kensington scholar now is in m’:‘l‘ew berth, the only member of the faculty without a master degree. At Suwanee, Mr. Davidson won_ the Guerry medal, the institution’s high award for English. He is a member of Sigma Nu.. He plans to complete his master degre; work. as soon as op- portunity is presented. Mexican Bandits Executed. MEXICO CITY, September 27 (#).— Dispatches from Aguas Calientes say four bandits who had been terrorizing sections in the State of Aguas Calientes Zacatecas for the last 20 years have been captured by soldiers and executed. v ot o - Pr se. cor. 13th and ¥ Felix Mahony’s National Art School ART Students Work ..V.’ H.i; =% Exhibition Sept. 15 to Qct. 1 of Color, Interior Decoration, Costume Children’s Saturday Class Work 1747 Rhode Island Avenue North 1114 OF SPEECH AND EXPRESSION International Bldg., 1319 F St., Bet. 13th & 14th Established 1904 A SCHOOL OF SELF-EXPRESSION Teaching only subjects of practical value in everyday life Courses in Self-Expression and Public Speaking for Business and Professional Men and Women, Organization Members, Salesmen, etc. Voice and Speech Training. English (Spoken and Written). Self-Development Courses for Confidence, Poise, etc. The Arts of Expres- sion. Special Courses for Clergymen, Teachers 'urers, Readers Aleo Home Study Courses Class or Private Instruction, Day or Evening ,, ™ ATIONAL L2318 tropol UNIVERSITY Registrations Now Open LAW DEPARTMENT Three-year undergraduate course for employed students, lead- ing to the degrees of Bachelor of Laws (LL. B.), Bachelor of Civil Law (B. C. L), and Doctor of Jurisprudence (J. D.). Students ac- cepted for full course only. Graduate school offers one and two year courses leading to the fol- lowing grpduate degrees in law: Master of laws (L.L.M), Master of Patent Law (M. P. L), Doctor of Juridical Science (S. J. D.), and Doctor of Civil Law (D. C. L.) Interstate Commerce Law. Patent Law and Practice. Admiralty .and Maritime law. Public International Law. Private International Law. International Relations and Organization. Evolution of Modern Civil Law. Modern Civil Law—Analytical. Jurisprudence and Legal History. Comparative Government and Public Law—(A) Governments of Europe and (B) Governments of Central Europe. The following courses are offered in this department: Medical Jurisprudence. Federal Trade Commission. Roman Law—(A) Analytical, (B) Historical. Community Property Law. Practice Courses. Advanced Moot Court. Foreign Commercial Laws. Public Utilities. 2"5732"“‘«% oo gu"xm. - AN ccount 3 -y p—— , Mining and Irrigation Law. Federal Tax Laws. Laws of Trusts and Monopolies. Students may register for any one or more of these courses. SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS AND GOVERNMENT This school offers a standard four-year collegiate course in Economics and Government, leadin Arts (A. B) and Bachelor of Science (B. S.) The following courses are offered: Government. Corporation Finance Businéss Finanee Investments Business Organization and Administra- on to the degrees of Bachelor of in Economies and D. C. YOUTH NAMED) his | president, Design, Commercial Art, Posters and Classes Begin October 1. Register Now | HICKMAN scrooL MONEYWAY PREPARED TO ENROLL STUDENTS Few Vacancies Exist in Short-Story ‘Writing Classes of Fall Term. Lewis Lofton Moneyway, director of the Moneyway Studios of Short Story Writing, has returned to the city and will be at the studios in the penthouse at 912 Nineteenth street from 5 to 7 p.am. each day this week for the purpose of registering students. A few vacancies exist in the class for beginners, which will meet on Mondays and Thursdays of each week at 5 o'clock, beginning Ottober 2, and there is room for a properly qualified T son in the ‘group of writers which meets at the studios on each Wednes- day evening for constructive criticism from the editorial viewpoint. In this school no attempt is made to alter the individual outlook of the student. He is taught, however, to recognize his faults with a view to their elimination, and to shape his ma- terial 80 as to preserve illusion and pro- duce definite emotional effect. — B. F. U. OPENS MONDAY Freshman members of the day di- vision of Benjamin Franklin University will be addressed at the opening session tomorrow by John T. Kennedy, and Edwin C. Bosworth, dean. Sam A. Syme, member of.the day law faculty, will conduct the first session in business law. On Wednesday afternoon at 5:25 o'clock the second section of the evemxf freshman class will get under way. ithough the quota of the new class has been raised to 75 students it is not believed that all plicants can be accommodated and a: other evening section has béen sched- uled to open Wedriesday, October 15. —— P000000000000000000000000 Felix Mahony’s National Art School 1747 Rhode Island Avenue North 1114 Classes Begin October 1. Register Now 000000 90004 -l LECTRICAL NGINEERING Complete Course in One Year A comprehensive course of t:edory and practice in uh’u rp-;‘m and shop to qualify men for posi- tions in the electrical field. The course includes mathe- matics, engineering drawing and intensive shop work. Students construct motors, install wiring and test electrical machinery. Thoroughly equipped, fireproot dormitories, dining hall, shops. Catalogue on Request, igq Established Bliss Fseblis Electrical School 210 Takoma Ave., Takoma Park, D. C. Telephone: Shepherd 3070 ART SCHOOL WILL HAVE PAINTING CLASS FOR MEN Tentative ‘Plans to Begin Course at Start of Winter Quarter Are Announced. | Washington business men who grow weary of ticker and ledger may take to pallette and brush for recreation when tentative plans for a business | men's painting class at the National | School of Fine and Applied Arts are | completed and executed by Feliz Ma- honey, the school's director. Mr. Mahony said last night that busi- ness men in some of the leading marts of the country, including New York and | Chicago, arg turning to art for rellef from their “daily grind and many of | them are producing surprisingly fine | canvasses. A class for such men will | be established at National School of | Fine and Applied arts with the begine ning of the Winter quarter this ye he said. POTEET’S Secretarlal ana C W & Exe Sis, NW. BUSINESS COLLEGE ivll Servies orming., “Nat, 4y \] STUDIO-SCHOOL Il 1751 New Hampshire Ave. ||| For young women who || wish to spend a prof- itable Winter studying only subjects that in- terest them. See announcement on | Felix Mahony’s National Art School Visit OursStudent Exhibit Color, Interior Decoration, Costume Design, Commercial Art, Posters and Children’s Saturday Class Work 1747 Rhode Island Avenue North 1114 “The School for Y. afing Children” Nursery—School—Kindergarten—1st 4 Grades Nutritious Midday Meals—Supervised Afternoon Play Bus Service Brookeville Rd. at Taylor St., Chevy Chase, Md. Phone Wisc. 4078 Director, Mrs. Mildred Fonda Barnum Term opens Oct. Ist. Registration after Sept. 15 from 9.12 LAW Co-educational THIRTY-FIFTH YEAR Fall Term Begins Sept. 22 Day Session, 9:10 to 11 Evening Session, 5:10 to 7 Three-year cours leading to LL. B. ~ Four.year course leading to LL. M. and M. P. L. Special ‘courses in Patent Law, Constitutional Law, Business Associations, Interstate Commerce and Public Utilities 2000 G Street Fall Term Starts October st Short and Regular Courses Commercial Art Costume Design (French System of Draping) Advertising Illustration Interior Decoration Fine Art Classes Begin October 1. Register Now 966660000000 ! , man Shorthand tomorrow, 7 o'clock. ALL BRANCHES Etching AERODYNAMICS, STRESS ANALYSIS, AIRPLANE DESIGN MECHANICAL PATENT OFFIC! MACHINE DESIGN STRUCTURAL STEEL ARCHITECTURAL TOPOGRAPHIC (MAPS) ELECTRICAL HEATING & VENTILATING Day Classes REFRIGERATION MATHEMATICS, ARITHMETIC Forming tomorrow and October 6. PATENT OFFICE SPECIFICATION WRITING . BLUE PRINT READING & ESTIMATING THE TEMPLE SCHOOL, Inc. SPEC R P NI A L RO Bers No Entrance Requirements X Members of the National Association of Accredited 34RO DR ErSomenN Miae Commercial Schools Send for a Catalogue SCORRESFONDENCE ReeARTENy Fricical fnsigiel 1420 K Street N Painting Pictorial Illustration Life Class Applied Art Arts and Crafts Puppetry Stage Craft _ Children’s Class THE ABBOTT SCHOOL OF FINE AND COMMERCIAL ART 1624 H St. NW. NA. 8054 nagement Accounting History b Literature, five ou 2 and \Tve. Government, two courses Government Economiec Histor Somied Ilzl.lu-hd:gnhbhn e tary Biolosy Students may matriculate for less than a full course. Requirements for admission and full information tion. Registrar’s Office open for registration, 9 A, | 818 130 S NW. applica- " TN o S oty tion Continued Throu; Each Cou udes Necessary Matroeten (4] Taeontont B i Tels. National 6617, Met. 7964 8end for Draf Catalogue WS Free Naticnal 3258

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