Evening Star Newspaper, April 3, 1932, Page 21

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Schools and Colleges Events of Interesting Student and Faculty Activities in Washington's Leading THE SUNDAY STAR, W mer session in the School of Economics and Government, Pi Alpha Epsilon Fraternity of Na- tlonal University heid its annual ban- quet last night at the Annapolis Hotel, with many members of the faculty as guests. Dr. Ho, the Chinese student Wwho recently addressed the student body, was the guest of honor and Dean Bernard Mayo of the School of Eco- nomics and Government was another guest speaker, Educational Institutions. Seutheastern U. Affairs. ALLY the entire student body | © and faculty cf Southeastern Uni- | most lawyers of the country. and Rep- versity attended the annual ban- | resentative James M. Beck. quet and dance of the university Friday night at the Mayflower Hotel, enjoying | continue their association with the pub- an elaborate All Fools program in tune | lication under its new name and aus- | pices. with the day. | Prof. August H. Moran was humorist- toastmaster for the ocasion. Speakers toastmaster for the occasion. Speakers classes: Lester E. Elff, senior account- ancy; Homer F. Johnson, senior law: L. C. Brackman, junior accountancy; James Forbes, junicr law; Ida Malick- son, freshman accountancy: C. H. Mann, freshman law, and Sophronia J. Lasica, representing the co-eds Page McK. Etchison offered the invo- cation. Pred J. Eden of the law fac- ulty sang. Special guests included Dr. and Mrs. A8 Chritie, Mr. and Mrs. L. W. De- | Gast, Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Imley and George A. Lewis. Dr. James A. Bell, head of the uni- versity, awarded bowling prizes to C. N. Pryor, E. L. Dlugensky, A. L. Orme, A E. DesNoyers, C. H. Mann, L. E. Tan- ner and A. L. Loose. The committee in charge was com- | posed of Fred L. Dawson, chairman; J F. Addor, Kate E. Barkdull W. V. Beam, L. C. Brackman, James Forbes C. Y. Latimer, W. R. Lucas, Ida Malfc son, C. H. Mann, Howard R. Moore, Eva Newman, B. C. Palmer, Richard T. Rassier, Elizabeth Saunders, Alberta Scott, R. F. Talbert, Frank E. White and Bessle M. Wcodcock. Seventy-five students of the criminal law classes attended a two-hour clinic at St. Elizabeth's Hospital, conducted Thursday, by Dr. J. E. Lind through arrangements with Dr. Herbert R. Grossman, professor of criminal law of Boutheastern. A beginners' class in accounting will start April 5, with Alexander K. Han- cock as instructor. Washingten Preparatory School stu- dents heard a lecture by Will C. Barnes on “New York to Japan" last Wednes- y. d."rhe ‘Woodward School reopened Wed- mesday after a short Easter vacation. G. W. U. Women to Dine. ‘HE twenty-fourth annual banquet of 1L " Columbian Women of The George Washington University will take place on Priday night, April 8, at the Chevy Chase Club. The banquet will be at- tended by & distinguished group of offi- cial ladles as guests of honor and speakers. In the group will be the wife of the | Attorney General, Mrs. .William D. Mitchell; the wife of the Senator from Tdaho, Mrs. William E. Borah; the Con- gresswoman from California, Mrs. Flor- ence P, Kahn; the Congresswoman from Florida, Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, and the wife of the Second Assistant Secre- tary of Labor, Mrs. W. W. Husband. Mrs. Cloyd Heck Marvin, wife of the president of the university, is the honor guest from the university group. Mrs. Kahn and Mrs. Owen will be the-speak- ers of the evening. Ballots for the election of alumni trustees of the George Washington Uni- versity have been issued to the alumni. ‘The nominees this year are: Brig. Gen. Avery D. Andrews of New York City, general counse! and vice president of the Barber Asphalt Paving Company and associated cor- porations, American J’grruenhuve of the Royal Dutch Petroleum Company of Holland and chairman of the board of varfous subsidiaries and director of lz:iks Irving Trust Company and other William Earl Clark, Washington phy- sician, eminent in the fleld of internal medicine. John Joy Edson, president of the Equitable Building Association and chairman of the Board of the Wash- ington Loan and Trust Company. George E. Fleming, vice president and assistant trust officer of the Union ‘Trust Company of Wash! % lu&olm Gn;;e on;:-, "““é‘.?_' Peop! Drug Tes, .COTPOTR ‘Washington. Maurice Crowther Hall, chief of the Zoological Division of the United States Bureau of Animal Industry. Claude Worthington Owen, president of the E. G. Schafer Company of Wash- n, Elizabeth Peet, dean of Women and | professor of languages in Gallaudet College. Frank Btetson, second vice president and trust officer of the National Sav- l‘nks and Trust Company of Washing- on. Alumni are represented on the board by six trustees of their own nomina- tion. Two alumni trustees are named each year for terms of three years, | This year & third trustee will be elected to fill the vacancy in_the unexpired term of Mrs. Joshua Evans, jr, who :‘nntum:. on thednno-nl but whose atus been nged in recogni- tion of her services from trustee by alumni nomination to trustee by Board election, President Cloyd Heck Marvin has an- hounced the appointment of John Al- bert Mclntire, A. B, LL. B., as editor of the George Washington University Law Review and Constitutional Review. The Constitutional Review, published by the National Association for Constitutional Government, headed by the late Dr. David Jayne Hill, was taken over by the university some time ago. It wiil be issued under university auspices as THE ITALIAN 22X o8t Rassd native expert teacher. Moderate terms. 1429 21st ST. N.W. No. 5615, of of Landscape Painting Commercial Art Spring and Summer Sessions THE ABBOTT SCHOOL OF FINE & COMMERCIAL ART 1624 H St. NW. NA. 8054 FREE TUITION IN FRENCH Beginners, intermediate. advanced e (under auspices and ot An—Ad\:erliting V | Interior Decoration \ Costume Design | Low taltion mow LIVINGSTONE ACADEMY 2883 DE JARDIN FRENCH LANGUAGE One Lesson FREE A free trial lesson will prove how easy it 18 to speak any modern lan- wusge. Na teachers. S lorming all the Prench, German. Italian or the Berlitz conversational way—suc- cesstul for B4 years | 8 scholarly quarterly specializing in gov- | merly on the staff of the University of instructor in law. | Rogers, on April 20. |be “The Character Element in Legal | Education.”” Rev. Francis E. Lucy, S. J., | regent of the law school, will preside, |and Dean George E. Hamilton will in- - |the American Bar Association on legal | | announced a special lecture on the Far | his_lecture. |and Sciences this week the seniors | being the last to return on Tuesday, | 8 special foreign service edition of the | Hoya, weekly news publication of the | university. { tory of the school and activities of the | various classes and clubs. | Willard Hotel. | done much in recent years to stimulate |tend to the end of August. ! momic problems, rnmental and Federal public law. Charles Warren, one of the fore- former identified solicitor general, who were will with the Constitutional Review, The newly appointed editor was for- Cincinnati Law Review. He joined the | faculty of the law school last Fall as Legal Talks at G. U. series of special addresses on legal | | ethics and legal education will be delivered before the student body of the Georgetown University School of Law this Spring by prominent Govern- ment officials and attorneys. ‘The first of these will be given by Assistant Secretary of State James G. His subjects will troduce the speaker. Mr. Rogers is a graduate of Yale University and formerly was dean of the University of Colorado Law School He is a member of the committee of ethics and legal education. The second speaker will be Green H. Hackworth, legal adviser to the Secre- tary of State, who is scheduled to speak on May 11. Mr. Hackworth is a grad- uate of the Georgetown Law School in the class of 1912. He will discuss in part the legal work of the State De- partment. ‘The School of Foreign Service also East which will be given before a group of classes on April 6 by Charles K. Moser, chief of the Far Eastern Division of the Department of Commerce, Mr. Moser took a trip all through the Far East about & year ago and returned with some splendid motion picture films. These he will use to illustrate ‘The public is invited. Classes reopen at the College of Arts following the Easter vacation. During their absence last week, the students of the Forelgn Service School got out It was replete with a his- The main social affair to which the foreign service students and faculty members are looking is their annual prom which is to be held the evening of May 6, As usual invitations will be issued to & number of prominent Gov- ernment officials and members of the diplomatic corps to serve as patrons. All the classes of the school are joining in the prom, with the senior e in charge. Georgetown alumni are expected to attend in larger numbers than ever before the aighth annual v: sity dinner ‘which Gabe Murphy, graduate | manager " of athletics, announced will be held Wednesday, April 20, at the ‘The “G” dinners have alumni interest in athletics at the Hill- top and have had as guests some of the leading coaches of the country. National U. Activities. THI graduating class of 1932 at National University has dedicated ‘The Docket, the university’s year- book, to former Justice Qliver Wendell Holmes, who recently retired from the United States Supreme Court after so many years of distinguished service. Announcement W made at the university yesterday that the yearbook is just about to go to press. Embracing the activlies of both the School of Law and the School of Economics and Gov- ernment, the 1932 Docket will be the most elaborate the students have yet published. It will contain many fea- tures in connection with the George Washington _Bicentennial ] pictures of the faculty, graduates and ::he!'n‘ f th Nfl’ml.l University of e Building. Plans are already in progress for the Summer session at National University which opens on June 15 and will ex- At least two new courses will be added, an- nouncement of which will be made at a later date. Classes in current eco- especially important in view of the world-wide economic | crisis, will be stressed during the Sum- NOTICE ME’!“ GUl\:::—.' 5280y Durihes aehool Biacs mmediatel Clasves tmited: BOYD BOHOOY, “Acerediieds (Eat. 15 years), Schools in” other clties. 1383 ® st. "Nat. 2342, | Temple School ‘ Moets Individusl Requirements o, | Business and Secretarial Training 1 Day—Late Afterncon—Evening | | 1420 K St. Na. 3258 Why Be Unemployed? Learn shorthend, type- business letrer be # good spell- methods. For Practical Paying Results Study at The Master School Register For Beginners’ Now Of Class Interior Decoration Specializing In Interior Decoration and offering an Accredited, Practical and Professional Training Course. Ex- pert Teachers. Individual Instruction. Rudolphe de Zapp, Director Representing Arts & Decoration, New York 1206 Conn. Ave. North 5236 X YR Felix Mahony’s National Art School Professional Courses Position in_Cq Decoration, Costume reial Art, Posters. Children's S y Class.’ See our Exhibition. New Classes Now Forming. 1747 R. 1. Ave. North 1114 COLUMBIA SCHOOL OF DRAFTING All Branches 218t Success/ul Year lumbls Tech Schools & Laverone. Frineipal Send_for_Catalogu i BEGINNERS Our Eight-Month Fit You to Accept New Class Starts April 5 Gain One-Half Year Meets Tuesday and Thurs- day Evenings, 7:30 to 9:30, Until May 19. Southeastern University (Coeducational Na. 8250 1736 G SL.N.W. | Assistant _United States Attorney Michael F. Keogh spoke last Thursday night before the class. in practice and procedure in the Law School. His sub- ject was “Procedure in the United States Branch of the Police Court of the District of Columbia.” A number of National alumni have been active In various capacities ac- cording to word received at the uni- versity. John Edward Starks, who took his master of arts degree in 1928, suc- cessfully passed the Arizona bar ex amination this month. Judge Harr: O. Chamberlain of the Marion, Ind, Circuit Court for the last 12 vears, has announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination to succeed him- self. He is & native of this city and took two law degrees at National Charles Sumner Lobingier, professor of comparative law at National, has con- tributed an article on “The Modern Expansion of the Roman Law,” which appears in the current issue of the University of Cincinnati Law Review The blography of Secretary of War Patrick J. Hurley, who obtained his law degree from National University in 1908, has just been presented to the university's libras American Beauties to Compete. O performances of Tiller's Mar- ionettes will be given at the gym- nasium of American University at the campus, Massachusetts and Ne- braska avenues, next Friday afternoon and evening, under auspices of the Women's Guild of the university. The afternoon show will start at 4 o'clock and the evening performance, with a different program, begins at 8 o'clock. The most beautiful girl at the Col- lege of Liberal Arts is to be chosen as & result of a contest ored by the Aucola, annual student publication. Already flve candidates for the honor have been elected by the four classes, and by the editorial board of the Aucola. These five, from whom the winner will be selected by Buddy Rogers, the motion picture and swage star, are: Sylvia Sard, a senior, of Secretary, Md.; Verona Goetz, a junior, of Jamalca, N. Y.; Marjorle Stuart, a sophomore, of this city; Shirley Holmes & freshman, of Cumberland, Md., and Jean Hoch, daughter of Representative Homer Hoch of Kansas, chosen by the editorial board of the Aucola. ‘The annual dinner of the staff of the American Eagle, college newspaper, will be held Thursday night at the college dining hall. Announcement will be made of the new editor elected for the | Paul J. Bailey, Edward N. Bodholdt, |from the Church of the Immaculate | the department of economi coming year. Chancellor Lucius C. Clark, accom- panied by Mrs. Clark, has gone to!jr.. Harold Crelly, James T. Gallahorn, | Chicago on business in the interests of the university. They plan to return late this week. The cherry blossom dance of the ‘Women’s Student Government Associa- mtvu held at the gymnasium last Plans are being concluded for the junior prom to be held April 15 at the Kennedy-Warren, at Connecticut ave- nue and Macomb street. The Jester Club held an April fool's dance Friday night at the Reno-Ester Club. Dr. Ellery C. Stowell, head of the Department of International Law and Relations of the Graduate School of American University, is making prelim- inary plans for the League of Nations ! Conterence to be held next February 20 to 25 under auspices of the Graduate | School. Model sessions of the Assembly and Council of the League as well as | the World Court and International | Labor Office will be set up. A memorial service for the late Mrs. Sally Kappes Varrelman, first librarian of American University, and wife of Prof. Varrelman of the College of Lib- eral Arts, was held at College Chapel last Thursday Varrelman died Easter Sunda; her home at Law Classes Reopen. EGINNING tomorrow all classes at ‘Washington College of Law will resume sessions after a week's vaca- tion. With the resumption of work will begin the new class in patent office practice in the graduate course on in- tellectual and industrial property law, leading to the degree of master of | patent law. Instruction in the subject of patent office practice will be under the direction of Marie K. Saunders, | who served for many years as an ex- | | aminer in the Patent Office and who | has enjoyed a wide experience in the | practice of patent and trade mark law since her resignation as first assistant examiner in 1923. These classes will be given on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and continue until the end of the school year in June, jr.; Mayhugh H. Horne, Donald Imirie, Milton J. Landvoigt, Eugene C. Miller, Vernon Payseur, Charles H. Purcell, Leigh R. Sanford and John L. Wood- ward. Dr. Edwin A. Mooers and Maj. J. Garfield Riley, members of the col- lege facuity, and Carlyle S. Baer, grand master of rolls, were also present. Columbus U. Prom Held. THE annual Columbus University senior prom was held last night in the gold room of the Shoreham Hotel. |The event was sponsored by the senior | classes of both the law and accountancy schools. | Among the patrons and patronesses | were Dean and Mrs. William E. Leal Assistant Dean and Mrs. John R. Fitz- | patrick, Judge and Mrs. Gus A. Schuldt | Assistant Corporation Counsel Robert |E. Lynch and Mrs. Lynch, Mr. and Mrs. Prank J. Hogan, Prof. and Mrs. | James B. Flynn, Prof. and Mrs. Wil- | llam D. Harris, Prof. and Mrs. Thomas | J. Fitzgerald, ‘Assistant United States Attorney William A. Gallagher. Public Utllities Commission Counsel William A Roberts and Mrs. Roberts, Prof. and Mrs. H. Winship Wheatley, Prof. and Mrs. P. Michael Cook, Deputy Clerk Moncure Burke of the District Court of Appeals, Dr. Edward C. Wynne, As- sistant Historical Adviser of the State Department and Mrs. Wynne, and Frederick J. Rice, chairman of Colum- bus University board of trustees and Mrs. Rice. Although he argued on the losing side, Maurice O'Connor of the senior | class ‘of the Accountancy School was declared the best individual speaker in the first interclass prize debate of the season. O'Connor and George C. Cozzens upheld the affirmative side of the si ject: “Resolved, That Federal unemploy- ment insurance would be beneficial to the American people,” while the win- | ning_freshman team was composed of Joseph L. Sheehy and John T. Burns. | Judges were Hugh Rivers, Joseph V. Byrne and Charles Iovino, all Columbus | University graduates. Daniel S. Ring, beginning of tl al uninterrupted session of the current academic year. Prof. John McDill Fex, dean of the law school, i8 a member of the board of directors of the Academy of World Economics of Washington, which will | hold_its first meeting Wednesday at | the Brookings Institution. | and commerce as business manager. Women's Glee Club of the uni- versity wiil be presented in the annual recital series Tuesday evening at 8:15 in_Andrew Rankin Chapel. In additian to selections by the group solos will sung by Mrs. Edith Sewell and Miss Louise Burge. A feature of The response of the local alumni to |the meeital will be & waitz for two the invitation of Arthur J. Bergman | pianos by Misses Naomi Martin and to join in & night of athletic activity | Louise Myers. at the university gymnasium a week ago was so enthusiastic that a second athletic night will be held tomorrow, | 7:30 o'clock. The program will be under the direction of Coach Bergman | and his assistants, Cotton, Vik, LaFond. The sports events will indoor baseball, basketball, volley and the swimming pool will be open for all who wish to participate in aquatic games. George O. Gertman, secretary of the | District Bar Association, will deliver a lecture on “Applying the Law to Real Estate Actions” at the university, Friday, April 8, at 8 pm. This will b the tenth of the series on practical problems in fundamental legal pro- cedure arranged by Austin F. Canfield | of the District Bar. uiem mont 1 be brated at the Shrine at 10 o'clock Sati April 9, in memory of th e Tector emeritus _of the _univer Bishop Shahan. The faculty and stiudent body { will attend in ful academic dress, | Howard-New York Debate. } OWARD will meet New York Uni- | versity in the finel debate of the season tomorrow evening at 8:30 | mind ational rning +[in Andrew Rankin Chapel on the uni- "~ | versity campus, In keeping with the rule of inter- | collegiate debates, Howard, as the home team, will defend the afirmative side | | of #he question, “Resolved, That Social- | ism has more to offer the people than capitalism,” the same subject upon Next weck also there will begin a |8nother graduate, presided over the |which Howard debated Ohlo Wesleyan | special series of lectures on extraordi- | nary legal remedies for the senior class | to be given by Justice F. Dickinson | Letts of the District of Columbia Su- preme Court. These lectures will cover the remedies of quo warrento, man- damus, certiorari, procedendo, prohibi- | tion and habeas corpus. The Oliver Wendell Holmes Chapter of Sigma Nu Phi Legal Fraternity held its annual Spring banquet at the Roose- velt Hotel last Saturday night. Robert | W. Maxwell, chancellor, presided aud introduced the speaker of the evening, | Judge David D. Caldwell, executive assistant, Department of Justice, and member of the Bicentennial Commis- sion. This banquet is given each year | in honor cf the new pledgees of the | fraternity, who this year are as follows: | Frank P. Alexander, Emil G. Anderson, | Herbert C. Brown, David T. Burgh, | John E. Chadwick, Roger W. Conway, debate. The subject, “Resolved, That the sev- eral States should enact legislation for compulsory unemployment _insurance,” | will be argued by the Pi Chi debaters | early this week. Misses Bessie Squires and Lavina Ann Kelly will take the af- firmative, while Eleanor Spates and Eleanor Trossen will uphold the nega- tive, Prof. Thomas Fitzgerald will pre- | side. Judges will be Margaret McCar- thy, Mary J. Kane and Dr. Elizabeth Sohnon, all graduates of the university. Catholic U. Rector to Speak. IGHT REV. MGR. JAMES H. RYAN, rector of the Catholic University, will deliver the first | of a series of April sermons to be given | by members of the Catholic clergy of Washington, when he speaks over Sta- | tion WOL at 5 o'clock this afternoon Conception, during the Washington Catholic Radio Hour. Classes were resumed at the univer- | the early part of the season. | ~ During the season Howard has en- | gaged in 26 debates, three of which | were upon judges’ decision, Hpward win- | |ning from Virginia State College in | | support_of the complete independence | |of the Philippines, and defeating Blue- | | field Institute in support of the nega- tive side of the same question. Howard | lost the decision debate to Rutgers Col- lege. | The final debate with New York Uni- versity will also be to decision, The Howard debaters are Samuel W. Tucker, | member of the junior class, with Leon- |ard E. Terrell, Monroe N. Plant and Fred Minnis, all members of the class | of 1932 According to one of the speakers, the | arguments of the Howard team have been greatly strengthened by the addi- tion of Dr. Abram L. Harris, head of s, as faculty adviser. George D. Lipscombe of the | department of English has served dur- ing the season as coach, and Gustav F. O. B. FLINT. MICHIGAN The club is under the direction of Miss Carolyn V. Grant of the School of with Miss Madeline Cole- re School of Music, as ac- companist Selections to be sung by the club in- s; “Berceuse,” ‘Laud! Vergine Ma- ; Darling Wandered irst Dance Song.” native tunes, by chaun,” by Tre- clude “Pa Westward” based on _African Wendt; “The Lep harne; “The Water Sprite,” by Bar- tholomew: “Moon _Marketing,” by Chinese Lullaby.” by Bowers- and s from Crispus Attuciks , Indianapolis, Ind., visited Howard University last Wednesday as guests of Prof. T. J. Anderson of the College of Education. Prof. Anderson was former principal of the Attucks School. In addition to luncheon and a sightseeing tour the visitors were en- tertained by gymnastics and aquatic ex- hibitions in the department of physical education Garnett C. Wilkinson, assistant superintendent of public schools, ad- dressed the historlcal soclety Wednes- day evening on “The History of the Public Schools of the District of Co- lumbia, Divisions 10-13.” Dr. Ernest E. Just salled Thursday from New York to resume biological investigations in the Kaiser-Wilhelm laboratories {n Berlin. ing to Germany, Prof. Just will spend several weeks in Paris FARCE TO BE GIVEN BY ST. STEPHEN'S CLUB Miss Kier, Author, to Direct “Leave It to Me” Presentation Tomor- row and Tuesday Nights. “Leave It to Me,"” three-act farce from the pen of Miss Angela Kier, will be presented under direction of the author tomorrow and Tuesday nights by the St. Stephen’s Dramatic Club at St. Stephen’s suditorium, Twenty- fourth and K streets. The cast is headed by Paul W. Mur- ray, formerly of the Stella Maris Club; Grace Sprucebank, Gladine Wade, Felice Loyd, Violet Wachter, John Flannigan, Frank Harrington, Edward Chaput, Charles Parrott, Bernard Fol- liard and Joseph Stanton Miss - Kier was instrumental fn originating the weekly radio dramatic program, “Hunted,” over the N. B, C. network s BUICK'S BIG 3500-POLND SEDAN at the Before proceed- | * B-S§ s e ARSI SURVIVOR, 8, DIES Brig. Gen. Godirey Saved His Band at Little Big Horn by Falling Back. By the Associated Press COOKSTOWN, N. J, April 2—A fa- mous old Indian fighter—Brig. Gen. Ed- ward S. Godfrey—is dead today after an attack of heart disease in his old Colonial home, filled with relics of his | thrilling battles. He was 88 years old. ‘The noted veteran of the Indian wars, who fought in the Battle of Little Big Horn, escaped the fate of Gen. Custer and his troops in that famous massacre by temporarily ignoring orders of his superior officer. He drove the Indians to cover and fell back, saving the lives of his men Several Weeks Abed. ‘The {liness which caused the gen- | eral's death had kept him in bed for several weeks in the house which has been in the possession of Mrs. Godfrey's family more than 200 years. He leaves his widow, whom he married after the death of his first wife; a son and & daughter. After funeral services next Tuesday at the Memorial Chapel in Arlington National Cemetery, Gen. Godfrey will be laid at rest in the noted burial grounds near the remains of many of the heroes with whom he served. As an officer in the 7th Cavalry, Gen. | Godfrey rode the plains for 12 years, fighting the Indians almost continually. Previously, as a youth of 17, he saw active service during a short enlist- ment in the Civil War and later par- ticipated in the Cuban campaign of the Spanish-American War. Wrote of Famous Battle. Upon his retirement from the Army in 1907, Gen. Godfrey came home here to spend his time gardening and writ- ing an account of the Battla of the Little Big Horn.. He was chairman of the National Custer Memorial Associa- | tion. ~In addition to this service on the plains, Gen. Godfrey was a Cavalry | instructor at West Point and was once commander of Fort Riley, Kans. Veteran Educator Dies. TUSCALOOSA, Ala, April 2 (®).— Col. Thomas Chalmers McCorvey, 80, professor emeritus of history at the gnlvemty of Alsbama, died at his ome on the university campus today after a heart attack. NATIONAL EXHIBIT OF GENERAL MOTORS PRODUCTS WASHINGTON AUDITORIUM, 19th & E STS. & NEW YORK AVE. NW., APRIL 2 TO 9 MUSIC BY WAYNE KING AND HIS ORCHESTRA (April 6-7) Always a center of interest, Buick's display at the General Motors Exhibit in this city is attracting marked public attention. A prominent feature of the display is this big 3500-pound sedan, $395, f. o. b. Flint, Mich., the lowest price at which any Buick Eight or Six sedan has ever been sold. tHe New BU ICK eicHT wiTH Stanley H. Horner 1015-17 14th St. Bury Motor Co. Anacostia, D, C. Lodge Motor Co. Purcellville, Va. UTOMOBILES AR Wizard 1t is a great, powerful car—a Buick through and through—with Body by Fisher, Buick's Valve-in-Head Straight Eight Engine and Wizard Control, including Automatic Clutch, HERB GORDON AND HIS ORCHESTRA (April 34-5) Controlled Free Wheeling and Silent-Second Syncro-Mesh. Like all Buicks, it is capable of 150,000 miles and more of fine, reliable service. Control Buick Motor Co. 14th at ‘Washigton, D. C. Fred. N. Windridge Rosslyn, Va. W. Lawson King Gaithersburg, Md. L UlLT UICK WILL BUILD THEM Be sure to attend the Exhibit, and see this big, luxurious sedan. Avail- able on liberal G. M. A. C. terms, it opens the doors of Buick owner- ship to new thousands of families. Emerson & Orme 17th and M Sts. N.W, Rushe Motor Co. Hyattsville, Md. Bowdoin Motor Co. Alexandria, Va. PRODUCT OF G E NERAL

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