Evening Star Newspaper, September 13, 1931, Page 94

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| formerly of the faculty of the University i 31 AREAPRONTED | TOGW.U.FAELY Many Curriculum Additions { Made—Graduate Council H Is Formed. 1 Thirty-one_appointments to the fac- ! uity of the George Washington Univer- ity have been announced for the com- ing vear by Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin, | president. | The academic year, which will be the | 111th in the university's history, opens | September 23. Registration will take place from September 19 through Sep- | tember 22. i Notable curriculum _additions have | been made in several fields of learning. The school of education will enter | upon a program which will bring here | each year the outstanding persons of the country in various fields of educa- tion. Prof. Lois Coffey Mossman of Columbia_University will give a course | in industrial arts, which articulates| with the public school program for cor- | relating art work in the elementary school with the students’ home eco-' nomic and manual activities. The division of fine arts announces & new four-year course in illustration. The entire morning of each school day for four years will be devoted by stu- dents in this course to problems mn composition, and the study of color theory, methods of reptoduction and the fundamentals of decorative painting New Post is Created. ‘The department of Philosophy has been materially expanded with the ad- | dition of six new courses and the crea- tion of a new faculty post. The cur- ricula and staffs of a number of other departments have been enlerged. A final step in the university's educa- tional reorganization is accomplished this year with the formation of the graduate council, & committee of ex- perts for administering the work for the doctor of philosophy degree. Dr. Charles Edward Hill of the university faculty has been named secretary of the graduaté council. The degree of dector of philosophy, under this tem, is conceived as a professional and | purely research degree conferred only upon those who have acquired a broad and thorough knowledge of their ficld | of learning and who have shown marked ability in original research. | Formal requirements cf course and res- idence, though essential, are wholly | subordinated to this principle Vacancles in two important adminis- | trative posts. the deanchips cf Colum- | bian College and the School of Govern- | ment, are yet to be filled. It is ex-| pected that these appointments will| be announced within the next few | months. In the interim, Dr. Marvin| has announced, these two schools will be_administered by faculty committees. The School of Medicine will open the year with a new dean, Dr. William Bald- win McKinley, who brings to his post a | rich background of experience and ac- complishment in medical administration, teaching and research. Dean VanVleck Back. Dean William Cabell VanVleck again ‘will be actively at the head of the Law | School, returning after a vear spent in ! research and writing. Dean Jobn R. Lapham of the School of E: also has returned from a ye: In the absence of Dean Ruediger of the Scheol of Ed who will b> on s-bbatical l~ave during the year, Prof. William Cullen French will serve as acting dean. The School of Pharmacy will be headed by William Paul Briggs. who has | been appointed dean. Dr. Briggs has ! been a member of the faculty since 1927 | and served during the past year as as- sistant dean of the school. ‘The new faculty appointments include, in addition to the dean of the School of Medicine, one teacher of professional rank, four professional lecturers, one as- sociate professor, five assistant profes- sors, 10 instructors, seven lecturers and two associates. In the School of Medi- cine, Lieut. Comdr. Franklin Forman Murdoch, acting executive officer of the Naval Medical School, will serve as pro- fessor of tropical medicine. Myron C. ‘Waddell, M. S., has been appointed in- structor in anatomy. and Edward A. Krause, lecturer on. first aid. Daniel Houston Buchanan, forme! of the Harvard Universitv faculty, has | aeen appointed asso depertment of economics. men Rice, assistant to the Uni Attorney General. kes ‘oined the faculty of this department as lecturer in com- | mercial and maritime law. Kennedy Named to Post. A new instructorship has been created | in economics and Ralph Dale Kenned: of Towa, will fill the post. Dr. L. Edwin Yocum has been added to the staff of the botany department as assistant pro- fessor. Dr. Albert Spear Hitchcock and Dr. Nell Everett Stevens also have joined the staff of the department as profes- sorial lecturers. In the department of education, Dr. Mitchell Dreese has been appointed to the newly created assistant professor- ship. Prof. Dreese received his acacemic training at Teachers' College, Columbia University, and came to George Wash- ington from Grinnell College, Iowa,! where he served as director of personnel. | Other additions to the staff of the de- partment are Prof. Mossman. who will | come from New York weekly for the | course in inGustrial arts, and Dr. Edgar | C. Higble, president of Wilson Teachers’ | College. who wiil give a course in the | elementary school principalship. | The department of architecture has an enlarged teaching staff, with Pascuale | Mario Torraca as the new assistant pro- | fessor of architecture. Prof. Torraca is a graduate of the University of Pennsyl- | vania and has spent much time studying in Italy and France. He will give a | course which is new to the department, | domestic buildings. a study of their | planning. decoration and mechanical | equipment. Harold F. Harding Appointed. The department of public speaking Also will have an enlarged teaching staff. | A new assistant professorship has been | created in the department and Harold | Friend Harding has been appointed to | this post. Prof. Harding is a graduate of Hamilton College and of Cornell Uni- | versity and has undertaken research | noroad. He taught at Jowa State Uni- | versity. Hariard Law School and at Cornell. An a3ditional acsistant professor has been appointed in the department of ro- mance languages in Dr. Alexander H. | Krappe. Dr. Krappe has been engaged in research in Europe and this country | and he has taught at the University of | Minncsota. Graduated frem the Univer- sity of Berlin (Germany) in 1015, he | went to the Universi of Towa, wherel Te took the master's degree. He holds | The Civil Service Preparatory School L. Adolph Richards, M. A,, M. S., Principal S. E. Cor. 12th and F Sts. N.W. | Washington, D. C. Tel. Metropolitan 6337 Prepares for Patent Office, Weather Bureau, Railway Mail, Post Office, Editorial Clerk, Statistical Clerk, Clerk Promotion, Junior and Senior Typist, Junior and Senior Stenographer, Clerk-Typist, Clerk-Ste- nographer, Computer, File Clerk, Special Agent, For- est and Field Clerk. THE SUNDAY STAR, R | Join G. W. U. Staff LAW ENROLLMENT INCREASES ATG. U. Registration Indicates Total Will Be Well Above Last Year's. Registration figures at the George- town University School of Law, which opens its sixty-first academic term the middle of this month; were repcrted already as being well in advance of last year's record at this time. | Since the requirement of two years of college work as a qualification for admission, the law school at George- town, as well as others which have followed this policy, have benefited not only from a more mature and carnest student body but the number of students who now drop out before | the expiration of the four-year course is negligible. Georgetown's enrollment this year is expected to exceed 500 stu- dents from universities in every State. Dean George E. Hamilton, who has been connected with the Law School since his graduation in the first cl has cm})hnlud to the younger grad- uates of the school the importance and advantages to be derived from ad- fa 1 Upper: Dr. Mitchell Dreese, assistant professor of education. Lower: Ralph Dale Kennedy, structor in economics. in- the degree of doctor of philosophy from the University of Chicago. The department of romance lan- guages also has a new instructor, Franc Paul Gaston Thenaud. A native of France, Mr. Thenaud was educated a’ the Universite de Bordeaux. the Uni veisite de Lycn. Centre d’Etudes Ger maniques de Mayence, and the Uni veisity of Illinois. He has taught at the American University of Beirut. Syria, and at the University of Illinois. The department of philosophy will have a greatly enlarged curriculum and an enlarged teaching staff. with the appointment of Christopher Brown Garnette, jr., as instructor in philosophy. An honor graduate of Princeton, the new instructor has studied in European universities and has submitted his thesis for the doctor's degree at the University of Edinburgh. - Mr. Garnette will teach the courses in principles of logic and ethics as well as Prob- Jems in the philosophy of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, philosophical nts in the eighteenth century, and a seminar In which Kant's do-- "l be investigaici. Dr. rd ~rdson.. Elion Pro- fessor of will give two new courses, ophv and medieval and scholastic philosophy. in addition to his courses in contemporary philosophy and the phil- osBphy of religion. Others Joining Faculty. Other new members of the teaching staff are: In the Law School. John Albert Mclntire, Instructor in law; holder of the degree of bachelor of laws from the University of Cincinnati and the AB. degree from Wittenberg College. i In the School of Engineering, Alfred G. Ennis, a graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, instructor in electrical _engineering. In the School of Pharmacy, Raymond |S. Smith of the University of Okla- | homa, instructor in pharmacognosy. In the division of library ccience, Charles Martel, professorial lecturer i ibrary science; Ernest Klotsch, lectur: er in library scicnee, and Belknap Sev- erance, asociate in library science. Department of psychology, Henry Furness Hubbard, instructor psy- chology. Department of chemistry, Dr. Her- man Kaveler, instructor in’ chemistry, and Paul Hugh Emmett, lecturer in chemistry. Department of home _economics, Grace Powers Hudson, lecturer in home economics, and Gladys Christine Halde- man, associate in home economics. Department of physical education for women, Dr. Grace Guile Purse, lectur- er in hygiene, and Agnes Rodgers, in- structor in physical education. n Dr. John Heads Commission. Dr. Walton C. John of the Bureau of Education has been appointed chair- man of the commission on educational standards of Southeastern University and associated schools of the Y. M. C. A. Other members of the commis- sion _are: George W. Offutt, dean of the Southeastern School of Law; Joseph K. Moyer, dean of the School of Ac- countancy: Wayne B. Kendrick, asso ciate dean, School of Accountancy; James J. King, headmaster, Wood~ ward School; R. O. Eliason, principal, Washington Preparatory School, and Dr. James A. Bell, director of edu- cation. Best Waiter Back on Job. William E. (Whitey) Hauver of Myersville, Md., sophomore student, who was voted the best waiter at the University of Maryland last Spring, will be back on the job Tuesday at College Park. Hauver also is “scrub- bing” for assistant managership. L0 0. 0.0 & ¢ Felix Mahony’s National Art School 1747 R. I. Ave. North 1114 Hester Walker Beall Studio of the Spoken Word Stoneleigh Court National 2266 Instruction in subjects for cultural development Poise—Confidence Voice Cultivation Enunclation Ph:netics Interpretation of Literature Dramatization of Plays Radio Address Public Speaking Diction By appointment, Adams 1514 1 and moral philosophy, | including | | lectures and readings in Greek philos- vanced legal training in the graduate department. In addition to the two years of college work required of all candidates for the degree of bachelor of laws, candidates for admission to the graduate school must be graduates of an approved law school. Washington Becoming Center. This graduate department opens on | Scptember 21. The first department | to open at Georgetown, however, is the late afternoon course, which com- mences September 16. This course is especially adapted to students who are employed during the day. For full- time students a morning course opens September 23. Washington is becoming more and more a center for advanced studies | and educational research work, Dean Hamilton points out. At Georgetown there is a carefully selected law library of 15,000 volumes. In addition, stu- dents engaged in research work have available the historic archives of the WASHINGTON, D. C, SEPTEMBER 13, Madeira School Moves Into New Colonial Home in Virginia 1931 —PART EIGH' TUTHILL WILL BEGIN INSTITUTION OF FINE TRADITIONS BECOMES university. the great laboratories and the law libraries of the Government. | Another course opportunity for seniors at the law schoo! and graduates of approved law schools, is the course in patent law. This is under the super- {vision of Thomas Ewing. former United States Commissioner of Patents. Wash- ngton is the logical centey for the practice of patent law. In the District Court of Aopeals all the patent cases are reviewed and the presence here of thé Patent Office renders rare oppor- tunities for students who wish to spe- clalize in this phase of the law. The Georgetown Law School is one| of the oldest and best known in this | section. Its graduates are numbered | not only among leaders of the bar in the District, but among Government officials and jurists in many States as well as in Washington. The thorough- ness of the course offered was demon- strated last June at the time of the | District bar examinations. Twenty | junior or third-year students of George- | [town took these examinations and of | {the number 17 passed successfully. These naturally are qualified to practice if they so desire. Apgproved by U. S. Bar. The law school enjoys the distinction of being listed as an approved law school by the Section of Legal Educa- tion of the American Bar Association and also is a member of the Associa- tion of American Law Schools. Among several new faculty members this year is Danlel W. O'Donoghue, jr. a graduate of Georgetown and the Un! versity of Southern California. He will be quiz master in the course in equity, | which his father, Daniel W. O'Dono- | ghue, sr., & !ormer'}arealdent of the Dis- trict Bar Assoclation, has taught for years. Another is Charles L. B. Lown- des, also a Georgetown graduate, who | has just completed advanced studies at | Harvard Law School. Mr. Lowndes for- merly taught at Georgetown and is to lecture this year on taxation, a subject | of tremendously increasing importance. | Kev. Francis E. Lucy, 8. J., professor | of legal ethics, has succeeded Rev. Thomes B. Chetwood, S. J., as regent of the law school. Announcement was made that there are now seven full-time professors on the law faculty of more than 35 me; | bers. "Prof. James A. Toomey was given | & full-time status this Summer and will lecture on bullding notes, evidence and domestic relations. E . — | _ World demand for Deauville sandals | is declining, according to footwear manufacturers in Crechoslovakia. COSTUME DESIGN See our advertisement on Page 3 | LIVINGSTONE | ACADEMY | YOUNG DEANMAPS || Youne Dean] REOPENING PLANS PR | Dr. Mayo, 29, Increases Staff at N. U. School of Econom- ics and Government. | | | I | | | One of the youngest college deans |in the country has completed plans for | the reopening of a Washington insti- tution of higher learning. | He is Dr. Bernard Mayo, 29-year-old dean of the School of Economics and | Government at_ National University. | Several new faculty members have been appointed by the youthful educator, | who also has added & number of new | courses to his curriculum in prepara- tion for the beginning of the 1931-1932 Fall term on September 28. A native of Indiana, Dr. Mayo has been assoclated with National Uni- versity as instructor since 1926. He holds the degree of doctor of philoso- phy in American history from Johns Hopkins_University and he is a mem- ber of Phi Beta Kappa. His election to the honcr society was in recogniiion of his prowess in the field of history. Besides Johns Hopkins University, Dr Mayo has studied at the University of Maine and at George Washington and the American University here. 'The first volume of his proposed “Life of Henry Clay” was accepted as his thesis for the doctorate degres at Johns Hop- | kins. He also is a contributor of his- | torical writings to American Mercury | and the Dictionary of American Blog- | raphy. | Dr. Taylor is Appointed. Among Dr. Mayo's faculty appoint- ments at National's School of ¥co- nomics and Government is Dr. Amns E. Taylor, former ingiructor for 10 vears at the Whaton School of the ersity of Pennsylvania Dr. Tav- who also pursued graduate work at the University of Paris and the Uni- versity of Chicago, will present a new course in “principles of foreign trade.” He secured his undergraduate training | at the Gettysburg College. | A new course in German will be offerad at National's college depart- | ment this year by Dr. Tibor Kerekes.| another addition to the faculty. Dr.| Kerekes will present his lectures on | Monday and Thursday at 4:45 pm. throughout the school year. Dr. E. E. Naylor will present & new course on_ “municipal government” during the Fall team. This course will be followed later in the year by his!| cessfully last Spring. i Dr. James F. Couch, professor of science, will_present_two_new_course: MARJORIE WEBSTF School for SECRETARIES One year thorough course In | Secretarial science. Training for | positions of responsibility. | Dormitories 16th Street and Kalmia Road Rock Creek k | Fall term Phone GEorgia 1700 Start the Children Right With | New Edition Fresh from Compton’s Pictured Encyclopedia the Press in 16 Volumes Room 728 Tower Building Phone Dist. 9329 or Metro. 4053 EMERSON INSTITUTE Est. Coast Guard, 1738 P St. N.W. 1740 P St. N.W. 1862 80th Consecutive Term Begins Sept. 15 ACCREDITED DAY SCHOOL —— LATE AFTERNOON SCHOOL CO-EDUCATIONAL Full High School Academic Course. Special Classes Preparing for U. S. Naval Academy, West Puint, Flying Cadet. Registrar’s Office Now Open North 10359 Decatur 0551 W. H. RANDOLPH Principal DR. BERNARD MAYO. The first, in the theory of thought knowledge, will be given at 4:45 p.m on Mondays and Thursdays, and the second will be conducted at 5:35 p.m. on the same days A new course in “industrial rela- tions” will be given this year by Dr. Edson L. Whitney, professor of eco- nomics. In_ this course Dr. Whitney will cover the field of organied labor in its various bodies, collective bargain- ing, industrial disputes, boycott, wages, hours, arbitration, conciliaton, media- tion, labor legislation, social insuranc: profit-sharing. welfare work, interna- tional labor office, and labor in foreign countries. Frederick P. H. Siddons. professor of banking, will present a new course in “stock_exchange moiement.” Dr. Wil- liam H. Stevenson, professor of finance, will conduct an carly morning course in “investments.” Dr. Stevens' lectures will be presented at 7.45 a.m A new course in “American political literature” will be given by Prof. Boyd Craig at 7:45 am. also. Lectures Start at 7:45. The course in advertising. which was announced recently for the coming term, likewise will be presented at 7:45 am. Francis Campbell of the H-K Advertising, Inc., concern is giving his lectures at that hour—terminating at 8:35 am.—so that employed stu- dents may take it without interference with their daily work. . Codfish caught by Norweglan fisher- | course in the District of Columbia | men this year weighed more than 140,- | government which he introduced suc- 000 tons. CHILDREN'S ART CLASS SATURDAY MORNINGS THE ABBOTT SCHOOL OF FINE & COMMERCIAL ART 14 H STREET REGISTER NOW YOUNG CAPITAL'S FIRST MADEIRA SCHOOL NOW IN VIRGINA | Widely Known Institution for Girls Builds Colonial Home. HE Madeira School, one of the District’s oldest _institutions of | learning for girls of high school age and throughout its 25-year life located in Wash- ington, this year becomes the National Capital's first “country day school.” |1t has moved into its handsome new | quarters in Fairfax County of Virginia, not far from Great Falls, where it will undertake to carry forward the tra- ditions it built in the Capital itself. Mrs. David LaForest Wing, who was Maderia before her marriage, is head mistress The new school is 12.3 miles from Dupont Circle. It wgs constructed at a cost of $675,000 and bas accommoda- tions for 126 resident students and 100 day students. Bus transportation will be provided during the school season from Dupont Circle to the school, with one bus leaving the city at 8:30 a. m and two returning in the afternoon one immediately after the close of classes and the later one at 4:30 | o'clock. | " Of early Georgian architecture, the | new Madeira School has several fea- | tures ‘that aid in establishing the beau- | ty of the plant. ‘The main living room, overlooking a flagged terrace which in turn commands a view of the swift moving Potomac River is perhaps fore- I most among these. Another is the pine- L 0. 0. 0.0 & ¢ Felix Mahony’s National Art School 1747 R. L. Ave. North 11 14 p FIORIE WEBSTE, Schoot of X ee (Z’r'fl)mfl/&gt'; Drama, Little Theater, Stage Craft, Platform Reading, Public Speaking, English, Radio Training (particular emphasis placed on the voice), Religious Drama, Taps and Interpretative Dancing, Orig- inal programs for Platform Reading. Florence L. McCracken, Ph. B, Dean 2 and 3-Year Normal Course 1-Year Profe Day Students and Boarding Students ional Course Special Saturday Morning Classes for Children Sept. 28th 16th and Kalmis Rosd Kalmis Rock Creek Park By Phone GEorgia 1 3II2TIIITILITIILLLL. WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Department Seventeenth and of Education K Strects N.W. Classes Open Week of October 5 Gymnastics Speedwriting Public speaking Law for Women Parliamentary Law Home Economics Italian Painti Amet ati Star Study Nature Study Finance Free Dictation Poetry Handeraft Events Helps for thy Greeting Card ni State-Craft—Current Popular Science Interior Decoration Short Story Writing Psychology Dramatics Swimming Badminton Home Nursing Bible Social Us Expression Letter Writing Poster Making ing ion e Hostes Verse Writing Adventures in Great Literature Catalogues Sent On Request THE LANDON SCHOOL FOR BOYS (Limited to fifty boys) ANNOUNCES THE OPENING SEPTEMBER OF ITS 21, 1931 FALL SESSION 2131 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE 1601 22d Street L] LOWER SCHOOL Grades I through VI for boarding and day pupils Bus Service UPPER SCHOOL Boarding and day pupils Forms I through VI Individual attention preparing for College Entrance Examination Board, An napolis and West Point L] PAUL L. BANFIELD Head Master Decatur 3382 “COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL” NEW TERM TUESDAY : Refurnishing and Redecoration Is in Progress in Preparation for Winter Work. The Tuthill School for Boys snd Girls, Inc., 1860 Mintwood place. will open its Winter term next Tuesday with an advance registration of 38, larger than any previous enrollment in its six years of operation. Designed to furnish schboling and child-care from the pre-school age up to Junior High School. the organiza- tion presents the regular- courses avail- | able in the public schools, students are | regularly graded twice a year by rep- | resentatives of the »ublig, schools. and |in addftion, there are oifered ecourse, - in dancing, French, instrumental and vocal music, art, swimming and horse-~ | back riding. |, Much refurnishing and redecoratirs is being done prior to the opening of | the Winter term, and a new fire escape | bas been constructed leading from the |top floor to the large playground in the rear, where many facilities @re | available ‘for supervised play. [ gpumhe school s backed by & board of i es of w 3} paneled memorial library with its at- Domeratzky is cprem;mf‘mfimmunrfl | tractive fireplace. ;%u chu ml;!nen chairman of the g | Finance Committee, Miss Constance C. - | i Seatures of the schusl ave W2 | Sucus pricetel of the schcol ao. | tiny “parlors” erected as “gate houses to the court formed by the dormitories and the main bullding of the school. One of these parlors is for seniors and the other is for junior classmen. Each is paneled and each is equipped with a fireplace. There are tiny kitchen closets accommodating equipment with | prepare | which the students may snacks” in their leisure hours. The tract of land on which the ol is situate comprises 150 acres. It ntains several ponds, including half- mile-wide Black Pond on which skat- ing can be enjoyed in Winter months, and smaller Yellow Pond. There are approximately 40 acres of laurel on the land and a half acre of rhododendron. The school year officially begins in October. The resident students will be enrolled by October 5 and the first classes will be held on Friday, Oc- tober 6. ¢ -edu Day Division 9:00 to 12:00 Three-year course Four-year course leading Special courses in Patent 2000 G St. - Law, Associations, Interstate Commerce and Public Utilities { nounced that facilities are available for caring for pupils over-night by special arrangement. | .. The Tuthill Parent-Teacher Associa- | tion, which is a_member of the Con- | gress of Parent-Teacher Associations of the District of Columbia, is headed by Mrs, Samuel C. Redman. Pollock Has Alumni Post. George Findlay Pollock, B. S. 1922 and M. S. 1923. now is assistant sec- retary of the Alumni Association at the University of Maryland. He was a {i(mt ball anrld base ball star in his undergraduate davs. He prepped af Central High School of thx.&p ri‘:{w 2 inuronr CIRCLE SCHOOL FOR CHILDREN sEramam - upent Cir 6243, | Supervised Study and Das. Boarding. WASHINGTON COLLEGE OF LAW cational THIRTY-SIXTH YEAR Fall Term Begins September 21 leading to LL. B. to LL. M. and M. P. L. Constitutional Law, Business Met. 4585 OUND, SINCERE, AND PR | COMMERCIAL ART TRAINING IN PHASES. INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCT | GUIDANCE BY A NATIONALLY KNOWN IL- | LUSTRATOR, WHO FOR NINE YEARS DI- RECTED ONE OF THE LARGEST COMMER- CIAL ART STUDIOS IN THE SOUT STRUCTIVE CRITICISM, NO FLATTERY OF NO EXTRAVAGANT YOU ARE CORDIALLY VITED TO VISIT THE SCHOOL ANY WEEK DAY BETWEEN NINE AM. AND EIGHT STUDENTS’ PROMISES. WORK. O'CLOCK IN THE EVENING. THE 'HICKMAN scHooL ACTICAL ALL ITS IORFAND CURRKULUM CONSTRUCTIVE DRAWING DESIGN CARTOON COL H. CON- ILLUSTRATION TERING ECHNIQUES REPRODUCTION METHODS PAPERS AND PRODUCTION STUDIO PRACTICE IN- FOST GRADUATE COURSE CREATIVE ART SATURDAY MORNING GLASS FOR CHNL- 514 NATIONAL PRESS BLDG- Distrucy 2480 © OF SPEECH AND EXPRESSION Woodward Bldg., 15th and H Sts. N.W. Established 1904 A SCHOOL OF SELF-EXPRESSION Teaching only subjects of practical value in everday life Courses in Self-Expre: ion 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 Expression. Special Courses for Clergymen, Teachers, Lecturers, Readers Also Home S tudy Courses one Class or Private Instruction, Day or Evening retrapnitan 2318 - RENSHAW SCHOOL OF SPE For All \‘m‘;flnnl in Which the Spoken Word Is Signi Conn. Av Public Address. preparing. _delivering _your promptu and extemporaneous Technique. | Polished diction. Tone support. Faults of voice corrected. Mellowness and reso- nance developed. Pronunciation, enuncia- tion posture and physical ease. Planning. cter p, costuming. stage Story Telling. ', Oultural backgrounds of Practice d xkfil in entertaining &rown-ups and children. ‘Writers' Class. Pou varloug forms of creative writing. Shors story. feal article. one-act DIAY. poetry" The endeavor will be (o And the student's field: | Embassy English. Practice course in Conversation for all aliens wha find _dificulty with English pronunciation “and vocabulary. Hours to e arranged. appear- narrative. both Conve: n. subject tectfully, Inter- g5 petson. Use of repartee; L ol et ] contaets. s Personal diagnosis i ECH e.—North 6906 : English Fundamentah. Correction of common errors. Sentence structure. Review of T and rhet- grie. Vocabulary bullding. Correspond- Readers' Class Public_reading. Monologue. atic narrative, play reading. ’::d requests for readers supplied 5 Literary Background. ik A speaking acauaintance with the finest |[# of literature. Browning, the humanita- ;Aln- poets and others. The sociologici N locus is introduced. The whys and hows of social control. | Reconstruction of Personality. Humans suffer from many inadequacies. Conflicts of all sorts arise in the social and economical contacts. Excessive shy- ness, various complexes. phases of intro- version and extroversion arise to destroy the self-unit. r within and _without, misery habit of the vears. Despeia- tion often results, ¥ ne s Iyrics, dra- Two hun- last restore a degree tent throueh focused education the mind clean by “othering” it through prescribed literature or induced moods is part of the method Individual diagnosis worked out under- standingly and privately. becomes a basis for construct! xperiment. to establish & harmenious co-ordination of all the faculties. It is in no_sense arture but rather a new foc reonal work. k of Bmall el Preparation ol al y and ‘"'m'-'rf Jn-:. Brivate thstruction: vuneu'rde-ma “nferview and. eata logue on

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