Evening Star Newspaper, September 13, 1931, Page 95

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THE SUNDAY A. Ul INAUGURATES “FRESHMAN WEEK" Elaborate Program Ar- ranged, Starting Saturday. Three Added to Faculty. ‘With faculty, three new members of the and prospects for a substantial | r last year, | open with “Freshman week, Nebraska and Massa- v next Q\mrda\ at the ramh\ chusetts | Th> oek has been started | as an innovation in the schedule to bring the first classmen a fow days shead of the other students, in order that they ray become better acquainted | with their new environment before col- | lege work begins An_eclaborate program of functions has been arranged for the freshmen, with group meetings, recreation hike and an informal period of campus tra ditions. The new class of 1935 will register Monday morning, September 21, at 10 o'clock. and will take an ex- > amination in English on that afternoon ! at 2 o'clock. General Registration September 22 for the coll year will be on Wi r*dn"td"\ morning 2 10:45 at chapel. First-class work will begin Wednesdav afternoon Avong the threec new members of th> faculty ave Dr. Lowell P. Huelster. who is to be assistant professor of economics. He is a graduaje of Law-! ence College. and took his' dezree of master of arts and doctor of philosophy at the University of Illinois. Miss Vir- ginia Dantzler, a graduate of the Majorie Webster School of Phy: Esucation will be instructor in phy education for women. and the new de- bates coach will be Donald Sherbondy, who last year tqok his degree of master of arts from American University. He| is a graduate of Ohio Wesleyan Uni- versity, and is also to be instructor in political science. Miss Dorothv Randolph. of Wheaton Colloge, who t gree in library science at Dr tute, is to be th> college libras Miss Randolph has previe od in the library of American a graduate | her de- ol Insti- | Athletic Field Ready. | mong the changes in the campus for college v ~ outstanding one | d. which has been | several vears and | Tocated on the | south portion n’ the 90-acre campus. below the gymnasium and the home of | the chancellor, ‘the new field required | much grading of the hillside and prepa- ration of the surface and soil. with an entire vear's growth of sod. which now 1s ready for the foot ball season. Plans for the opening of the college are virtually complete under direction | ius C. Clark, chancellor of ity and Dr. George B. 1 of the College of Liberal | returned some time ago | \ New England | on arrange- | opmont of our | are full of his- “and_its mu- led with | for the! es and cathedrals | yo Privileged indeed are o1 Who decide to share in these great & fis to humanif was \u"d stu- | such time m college rou- what you will and your| Iy for developing personality hip will be found in t} are the ke the best Hee of ‘the odd moments at college.” | CLASSES BEGIN SEPT. 24 ] AT CHEVY CHASE SCHOOL | Education Prner'\m at Institution | Strengthened by Addition of Several Courses, Chevy Chase School, which has been a junior college \um a preparatory de- 1 partment since 1927, reopens Wednes- ' day, September 24. Theodore Halbort ! Wilson then begins his second year as president. i Mrs. Ivah K. Whitney, instructor in English, will serve as dean also. The new librarian teacher of high school Latin Mrs. Z. E. Tem- pleton. who comes from Mississippi. The high school French will be in Mme. Andree Strong. for- her in the Gordon Junior Lenore Piper, a ge and of the arlinzton Jun- cach the college French and Spanish. Miss Frances Barnes, a | graduate of vhn _George Washingion University and yor's Bus Col- | lege, will be heed Shtne college de- partment of serretarial science |- Miss Ethel Claire Randall, who con- tinues 2s head of the department of dramatic art, recently was appointed | dramatic adviser to the George Wash- ington Bicentennial Commission. ! With new courses introduced in mas- | terpieces of literature, the English | Bible, the history of the Far East, in-| troduction to the history of philosophy and introductihn to the history of re- ligions, the educational program has | been broadened and strengthened. . Job Service Is Planned. An employment service for students | aduates of Southeastern Univer- Hvuh ior College t s be conducted bv a special em- ployment committee, in co-operation | with_the empleyment department of the Y. M. C. Al While jcbs are not definitely promised, everv effort will be made to find employment for applicants FISHBURNE MILITARY SCHOOL Waynesboro, Virginia S1st Year IMITED numbers and large faculty assure application and individual attention. In every class each boy recites every day. Students from all over the country attend Fishburne. Graduatese ter all colleges. Certi cate privileges, High rdard varsity athletics ntramural sports for Mild climate of Vir- mountains. Four hours from Washington. Up - to - date equipment, Swimming p.\..x Catalog. Col. M. Hudgins, Box 10, W-ynuboro. Va. Member . Ass'n Military Collzm lml Schools U. 8. all ginia | Liberal Arts, i American | ceventh Debates Coach DONALD SHERBONDY, Who is to be instructor in political | science and debating at the College of American University, this COURSES REVISED - BY COLUMIA TECH One of Largest Enroliments Expected—Accommoda- tions Are Extended. Plans have been ¢ompleted at the Columbia Technical Schools for one of the largest enrollments in the history of this institution. Courses have been revised and the school's accommoca- tions have been extended. According to Paul J. Leverone, presi- dent of the school. the car course has been com v Roscoz C. C. Sloane, highway engineering, and John Montz, assistant, professor of civil en- | gineering at Ohio State Univ Practicelly 21l of the otl of the drafting department, includir the mechanical. patent office, arch tectural. electrical and structural steel have been revised and supplemented with additional drafting and text mate- rial. ~Additions have been made also to the builders’ technical course, which includes blueprint reading. District of Columbia building regulations and esti- mating. This new course, which was offered for the first time last year, met with great response from the ‘architec- tural and building construction interests in the city. Due to the system of individual in- struction used in the drafting and building construction courses students may start at any time. The engineering cour: will start en the even The courses ofl ment include ng of Scptember cd in this depart- dynamics, is and design, mechar engineering, archite 1 engin ing, patent office spacification writ machine design, electrical cngineeri refr'gerating engineering. heating ventilating engineering, surveying map compilation of civil e structural engineering and mathemati The drafting department of the 1. which was established 21_years he Columbia School of Draft- ing by Roy C. Claflin, its first president. The engineering department was inaug- urated in 1928. and College Opening Seventh Year. While the College of Liberal Arts of University is opening its vear, the gradgate school is much older, having“been the first unit of the university established, when it was formally opencd by President Wil- son May 2. 1914, on the campus, Massachusetts and Nebraska avenues The site was purchased in 1890 and a charter obtained from Congress in 1893, but during the World War the campus was turned over to the Government for a camp, where was located the Chem- | ical Warfare Service of the Army. The | graduate school i5 now located in quar- ters at 1901-1907 F street, purchased in | 1921 Cheering Held Essential. Basing his belief both on a statement by the late Knute Rockne. famous foot ball coach, and on experience of aih- letic teams of American University, Dan Terrell, cheer leader at A. U., believes that “a, cheer is not merelysa noise or a demonstration of youthful exuber- ance: it is an essential part of the game.” He quoted Rockne as saying ‘A player is made up of 60 per cent fight, and this should be instilled by the rooting section, A SELECT SCHOOL ¢ A Business Schnol with University at- mosphere. re fion” and" ch and soeial ndvnnulu ing of college Seeretarial train. - Employment service, WASHINGTO! HOOL FOR PRECS RUILDING wasuingron. o ¢ (I E CIETARIES EVENING Accounmnc\/ Fall Term Begins Sept. 14 5230 ang, 230 Also Morning. 7:00 to 8:40 Southeastern University 1336 G St. N.W. (V.MLC.A) _ Na. 3250 Typists and Stenographers Civil Service Course Register Now—Day or Evening Mount Pleasant Scheol for Secretaries Tivoli Theater Building 3313 14th St. NW. Columbia 3000 IF YOU would like to or PLAY, W flair for INTERIOR DEC! DESIGN, have DRAMAT terest in THEATRE ARTS— WHETHER rou are may happily indulge a hobby— The King-Smith Studic-School —offers unique opportunities to develop your talent or aptitude, to prepare you to capitalize your ab: least to give interest to othe KING-SMITH STUDIO-SCHOOL 1751 New Hampshire (OLUMBUSUMOVES 10 187 1. SOON: |Classes in Schools of Law and Accountancy Start September 21. Columbus University will move short-| {1y nto its newly-purchased home at ! 1823 Eighteenth strcet, near Dupont . | circle, but meanwhile registrations are | be'ng taken at 1314 Massachusetts av nue, where the university has been lo cated for a number of years. Assistant | United States District Attorney John R. Fitzoatrick, who is_sccretary of the! School of Law, snnounced yesterday | that enrollments indieate that a record- breaking academic year is in prospect. | Classes in the Schools of Law and Ac- countancy will start Monday evening, September 21, at the Massachusetts | avenue address, as a number of altera- tions yet to be accomplished will defer moving into the new building. Judge Nathan Cayton of the Muni- cipal Court will inaugurate a new post- | graduate course dealing with the prac- tical side of work at the bar. Titling his course “Practice, Procedure and | Forms,” Judge Ceyton yesterday said this course should b2 especially valu- able to the student or young lawyer ason is unable to serve hip before engaging in intended to be a prac- in every-day problems of ., as weil as the troublesome d'fficuities of the untrained lawyer, he explained. All Branches Covered. “The course covers separately and fully every branch of practice in every court of the District of Columbia, and mmparabln courts in other Jun isdic- | tions,” Judge Cayton explained.” “Every step, from the preparation and filing | of initial pleadingsgto the final determi- nation of every kifid of case is carefully explained. The functions and methods of each clerk’s office—including matters not covered in any rule book or text book—are taught.” The course includes practical lectures on the organization, functions and methods of procezure in the office of the United States Attorney, the Cor- poration Counscl, the Referee in Bank- . the Register of Wills, the Re- corder of Deeds, United States Marshal and the \arious commissions of the District Government, and the exact mode of procedure before each. Atten- tion is devoted to law-office management and the preparation of forms for all corporat g and commercial documents and contracts A nuirber of prominent practicing at- torneys are on the university's staff. These include Thomas J. Fitzgelard, as- sistant chief clerk of the Department of Commerce: Thomas W. O'Brien, chief counsel of the United States Housing Corporation; Robert E. Lynch, Assistant Corporation Counsel. Willlam A. Gal- lagher, Assistant United States DL‘(H(‘[\ Attorney. John R. Fitzpatrick, Assistant United States District Attorney, and William A. Roberts, public utilities legal expert for the District of Columba. George D. Horning, jr., is a former As-| sistant United States District Attorney R)‘d William E. Leah; dean of lh(“ 1 of La rer Special As- Attorney General, Ay Law Library Increased. ‘The law libr of Columbus Univer- has just been increased by the ad- sets of works, which to the post-graduate 1, as well as to under- a leading part in the renova- : former residence of Robert 0 was Secretary of State in on Cabinet, as the new home.of | the university is Sefton Darr.. a&sls'.am dean of the School of Law, who assisted | in handling the real estate and nnandnl transactions. James D, Cushman, dean of the School of Accountancy, who is a practic- | ing certified public accountant and spe- cialist in income taxation, explains that ased enrollments are in sight for nool. Its facutly will be about same as last year. Mr. Cushman | has recently been on a trip to the Pa- cific Coast Rice Directs Athletics. H Columbus University, which recently | sent a rifl> team to Camp Perry, Ohio. | to participate in the matches there, | under the leadership of Charles A Tovino. proposes to have athletics occupy a prominent part in academic life again ris vear. Prof. Fred J. Rice, until re- | cently basketball coach at Catholic Uni- . will be in charge of this activ- - will also lecture on common | law pleading to the second year class in the Law School. | Judge Cayton and Prof. Lynch will | head the university's debating teams 2. 0.6.9.0.6 ¢ Felix Mahony’s National Art 1747 R. I. Ave. School orth 1114 T Sehool of PHYSICAL ' DUCATION~ 2 and 3-Year Normll Course L] 1-Year Professional Course ° Day Students and Boarding Students Night Recreation Classes Indoor Swimming Pool SPECIAL SATURDAY MORNING CLASSES FOR CHILDREN Free Placement Bureau Dormitories—Catalog Fall Term Opens Septg‘ls:h Jith and Kaimia Read Rock Creek Park Thone GEorsia 1300 SING or PAINT, DANCE RITE or MODEL, have a ORATION or COSTUME IC ABILITY or a real in- ambitious for a career or rwise dull hours! TAR, WASHINGTON, Avenue, Waahington Telephone North 10385 Law Teacher JUDGE NATHAN CAYTON. and ektemporaneous speaking will again | be sponsored, Dean Leahy asserted, so | that students may become proficient in this all-important equipment of the lawyer. Columbus University was founded in | 1922, under the auspices of the Knights of Columbus here, as an outgrowth of the jost-war activity in giving a free education to former service men and women. It is co-educational and non- sectarian and when the Fall term semes- ter opens on September 21, classes will | be from 6 to 8 o'clock. Plans Seismograph Cave. Georgetown University is making ar- rangements to construct a special cave in a hillside on the western portion of its grounds for a new seismological ob- servatory. These sensitive instruments are kept now in a vault under one of the buildings in the quadrangle, but | react to disturbances. The new cave| would be far removed from the build- | ings. . Colnmi:us Limits Law Classes. William E. Leahy, dean of the School of Law of Columbus University, an- nounced yesterday that despite the growth of the institution classes will be kept small, in order to accentuate in- dividual instruction. vided into two sections. same professors. The aim of the uni- versity, he said. is to keep each class within a limit of 75 members. MORNING ScHooLox LA Corducational SOUTHEASTERN UN Fall Term pegint utilizing the ) 730 1736 G 8 5 MCAS Na. #2530 D C. SE a2 BA PTEMBER 1 1931—PART EIGHT. 430 YEAR T0 OPEN- SPL3ATC.U, Imposing Growth Revealed as Campus Prepares for Students. Classes in all the schools and col- leges on the campus of the Catholic | University of America will open Wed- | nesday, September 23, ushering in the | forty-third_academic year of this na- | tional institution. Mass of the Holy | Ghost, marking the solemn opening of | | the 1931-32 school year, will be cele-| | brated the following Sunday morning. Under the control of the archbishops and bishops of the Catholic Church in America, the university, which is the only Bapal university in this country, is regarded as the base of Catholic edu- ‘clllonnl activity in the United States. Originally established as a graduate school for the clergy, the university later admitted members of the laity, and more recently added an under- | graduate department. More than 30 courses, covering all branches of knowl- edge now are conducted at the insti- tution. Located on 150-Acre Tract. campus Located on a 150-acre in Brookland, the grounds of which have been landscaped and developed exten- sively, the university as a whole now is comprised of 32 afiliated colleges constituting an impesing array of build- ings, many of which have been erected in recent years in the course of the steady growth of the university. | With accommodations for more than a million books, the Mullen Memorial Library now houses 200.000 volumes, and is equipped with spacious reading and studying facilities. _Outstanding among the valuable special collections in the library is the Ibero American Library of works on Latin America, | presented to the university by Dr. de Oliviera Lima. The university museum and main au- ditorium are located in McMahon Hall, principal recitation building, which also | hes many classrooms and several ad- | ministrative offices. The university is a member of the | Association of ~American Universities The faculties of the institution include the Undergraduate College of Arts and : Sciences, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. and the Schools of Sacred | Sciences, Canon Law, COLUMBIA COLLEGE Secretarial_and Accountancy Courses | Day and Evening | New Classes Now Beginning Law and Engi- Dean Leahy ex- | | plained that large classes will be di- \ P. O. Bldg., 1413 Park Rd. Col. 7078 | L 0 0. 0.0.6.¢ Felix Mahony’s National Art S(‘lmo]‘ 1747 R. 1. Ave. North 1114/ THE ABBOTT SCHOOL : OF FINE AND COMMERCIAL ART 1624 H STREET NORTHWEST. | WINTER SESSION SEPT. 15-JUNE 15 REGISTER NOW NAT. 8054 Trained Teachers WeDoNot Excellent Solicit Marvelous Equipment Ask for a Catalogue Location Progressive Methods Liberal In Extensive struction Curriculum THE TEMPLE SCHOOL Meets Individual Requirements in BUSINESS AND SECRETARIAL TRAINING Beginners’, Advanced and Review Classes Now Forming Day—Late Afternoon—Evening 1420 K Street Nat’l 3258 COLUMBUS UNIVERSITY Schools of Law and Accountancy ENING COURSES FOR MEN AND WOMEN 1931-1932 Sessions Begin September 21, 6 P.M. REGISTRATIONS NOW BEING RECEIVED The School of Law ‘Three-year course leading to year courses leading to the degree Patent Law. degree of Bachelor of Laws. One- of Master of Laws and Master of CLASSES, 6 TO 8 PM. The School of Accountancy WALTON COURSES Three-year course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Commercial Science. One-year course of C. P. A. preparation. CLASSES, 6 TO 8 P.M. FOR INFORMATION APPLY The REGISTRAR 1314 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE N.W. METROPOLITAN 4696 'naerlng. Courses are offered in the late afternoon for the accommodation of emplcyed students. More Than 120 on Faculty, ‘The faculty, comprised of more than 120 members, has been arawn from the major universities of the United States and of Europe. Significant work has been doneyin the field of the classics and in the Yast decade more than 3,000 books and articles have come from the pens of professors and graduate students as contributions to all fields of knowl- edge. Right Rev. Mgr. James Hugh Ryan is rector of the university. ‘The College of Arts and Sciences is a four-year undergraduate college for men leading to degrees of bachelor of arts and bachelor of sclence. It offers courses in biology, Celtic, chemistry, econbmies, education. English, geolcgy, German, Greek and Latin, history, mathematics, philosophy, physics, poli- | tics, phychology, the Romance languages, i Semitic and sociology. Degrees of bache'or architecture and of bachelor of architectural, civil, electrical and mechanical engi- neering are offered in the School of En- gineering, which also offers graduate courses leading to master’s and doctor’s | degrees. Higher degrees are offered in several other departments of knowledge, in the Graduate School. Hours for these classes have been arranged to accom- modate full-time and part-time stu- dents and are open to both men and women. o 3 Heads Columbus Trustees. Due to the death of Albert E McCarty, State deputy of the Knights of Columbus and chairman of the board of trustees of Columbus University, William G. Feely, until recently State deputy, has been appointed acting chairman of the board. A meeting of |the board scheduled for Wednesday ! evening was adjourned out of respect | for the loss of Mr. McCarty to Colum- | bus University. Holds Ranking Student Office. Claude Smith of Manassas, Va. fs president of the Student Government Association for the 1931-2 term at the University of Maryland. This is the ranking student office at the Old | Line institution, ! Faciliies ixth Grade Thru Hieh Schoot | Opens Sept. 21 1736 G St. N.W. (Y.'M. C. A.) National Cathedral School for Girls Wisconsin Avenue on Mount St. Alban — Mabel B. Turner, Principal Thirty-Second Year Term Begins OctoberIZ, 1931 fession. 3. Impartial, countancy. Transportation Bldg. chemical, | Five features JUNIOR UNIT ADDED AT SOUTHEASTERN Expanded and Additions Made to Faculty, Establishment of a junior ccllege, enlargement of the faculty and expan- sion of early morning classes will mark the opening tomorrow of Southeastern University of the Young Men's Ciris- tian Assoctation, according to an an- nouncement by Dr. James A. Bell, | director of education of the Y. M. C. A The Washington Preparatory School, affiliated with the university, began its Fall term last week with a large en- | rollment. The Woodward School for | Boys, another Y. M. C. A. institution, will open September 21. For the present the junior college will_ offer freshman and sophomore courses, upon completion of which a certificate of graduation will be issued. Required subjects are English, a foreign language, science, history and econom- ics,” including accounting. A number of ‘electives are offered. Early Schedule Extended. Success of the early morning “pre office clasces” in law, instituted for th first time last year, has prompted Dr the School of Accountanc and accountancy morning classes will be held from 7 to 8:40 o'clock. givirg the employed _students ample time to reach their offices before 9 o'clock. Th» evening classes of both schools will begin at 5:30 o'clock in the afternoon. All preparatory school classes are held Early Morning Classes Are| 3 in the evening. The Woodward School |is a day grammar school. New members of the university's faculty include Charles M. Trammell, B, LL. B, former judge of the | County Court of Polk County, Fla, who will teach law; Harvey T Casbarian, B. C. 8., C. P. A, cashier of the University of Maryland, who has been added to the faculty of the School of Accountancy; Edward C. Johnson, A .. LL. B, member of the local bar, who has been appointed to the Law School, and Robert Casad Hockett, Ph. D., instructor in French and English. Althnuxh accountancy classes will begin tomorrow, law classes will not meet until September 21. Entrance examinations for both schools were held the past week. The Law, Ac- countancy and Preparatory schools are co-rducational All Y. M. C. A. schools are under the administration of Dr. Bell, educa- tion director of the Washington Y. M. C. A. and Fred L. Dawson, as- sistant _director of education. Joseph K. Moyer is dean of the School of Ac- countancy, with Wayne Kendrick as assoclate dean. George W. Offutt is dean of the School of Law, Raymond O. Eliason is prineipal of the Prepara- tory School and J. J. Kihg is head- g’astcr of the Woodward School for Vs, } Pace Course Classes Wednesday. The first two sections of the new | freshmany class will begin the study of the Pace Course in Accountancy and Business Administration at Benjamin Franklin University Wednesday. = This will open the twenty-fifth year the Pace courses have been offered in Washing- ton. ****** Felix Tahony’s ational Art School 1747 R.1. Ave. North 1114 You Can Learn Commercial ART Beginners' and Advanced Classes ADVERTISING INTERIOR SALESMANSHIP Permanent DECORATION COSTUME DESIGN AND RETAILING Exhibition Positions Open Everywhere Graduates Assisted to Positions Get into an uncrowded profession Successful practicing teachers Ask for N ew Catalog REGISTER NOW Livingstone Academy Fugene T. Dickinson, President Associ of the Middle St 1333 F St. N.W. Member (2) required to exercise and door games and on of Colleges and Secondary Schools ates and Maryland Met 2883 St.Albans The National Cathedral School for Boys A Country Day and Boarding School where your boy will be (1) prepared for College Board Examinations take part in out- €3) gtven a systematic religious training THE BISHOP OF WASHINGTON President THE REVEREND ALBERT H. LUCAS of Board of Trusices Headmaster Enrollment for 1931-1932 Complete WRITE OR TELEPHONE CLEV Mount Saint Alban Wachi: =0 ACCOUNTANCY are of U for specific THE CAREER OF oo e o e of accoun career. : se mwm " ents This Book Contains— 1. Plans for fourteen busines$ careers and the public accounting pro- 2. List of over 125 business and professional leaders who have success- fully followed these plans. authoritative data on compensation in business and ac- Ask for 25th Year Book BENJAMIN FRANKLIN UNIVERSITY Pace Cauru’s\in Accountancy and Business Administration Leading to B. C. S. and M. C. S. Degrees 17th and H Sts . 0470 FOR CATALOGUE ngton, D. C. Thington B C anRlim U i — Tenklin Untt! Benic e ost be posi- Metropolitan 2515

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