Evening Star Newspaper, May 8, 1932, Page 20

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Schools and Colleges Events of Interesting Activities in Washington's Leading Educatfonal G. U. to Give Comedy. | (Y EORGETOWN UNIVERSITY'S fask and Bauble Club will pre- ack,” a for- as its annual evening at 8/ comedy Tuesday Trinity Parish Hall. | cast assembled for “Captain | . several capable | art in the three s presented by the clul the Wardman Park Vernon Murphy will take ymond Hogan will Frederick Waters ka and Rolland Gal- | dway d Bauble players are under of Prof. Gerard Yates, successful cast | liegiate dramatic hia last year. Den- | al director, is assist- | | he competition for the Hamilton for_the best ex-tempore debate held tonight at the college be- ix members of the Philodemic Georgetown's oldest debating The medal is awarded annually Dean George E. Hamilton of the law est cont: nis Connell, a I b will be tween debate is “Re- ese policy in ed”” Upon the side_are David A, Dye president of the Philodemic; John Siat- tery and Robert Dick Their opponents are Raymond F. McNall . Smith and Henry B, Her- 1t was made at the law k of the annual scholas- winn of the Butler and Club, presented at the re- uet of two groups. John E \ the Fegan prize, offered er Club by Assistant Dean zan, The prizes offered by L. B. Lowndes to the re won by Joseph John | nd J. Olsen and John prize sH2 ¢ lub w Edmx kbl " hn S. Quigley of Connecticut was unced as the winner of the Bren- n medal in apologetics as a result of a contest held at the college. up N. U. Stages Last Debate. HE fourth and final interclass de- | bate of the sixty-third academic | year at National University was| gtaged last night when two teams of | Law School students argued the merits | of the jury system. The winner of the tilt, to be an- nounced this week, will be the fourth | member of the field of contenders for | the faculty prize in debating that is ewarded annually at the Spring com- mencement. . In the debate which witnessed the Bnalysis of the jury system of court- yoom justice from every angle, second-year team argued for abolition of the jury while the first-year con- tingent upheld the present system as just, practical and worthy of prevail- Ing. The affirmative debaters were Donald Sanburne, Eugene E. Ditto and Stanley E. Otto, and the negative side included L. R. Humbert, C. Hennrich and G. Rey. The student adjudged the best de- bater of the sextet will contend in his own right with Morris Weingarten, J. H. Hobbs and William G. MacKay, winners of the first, second and third interclass tilts, respectively, for the faculty award. This concluding debate be held at the university on May 21 Despite the proximity of the end of the year, National Oniversity's student paper, the Crier, has added three as- sociate editors, as representatives of the Law School, to its staff. These are Miss Leo Dunn, Miss Sophie Bookofl | &nd I Friedson. Appointment of these | editors was made with a view to estab- Jishing the paper on a firm footing for continuation next year. Registrations are being received daily in both the Law School and the School of Economics .and Government for the university’s Summer sessions which open June 15. The keynote of the vacation School this year will be current history in the fields of eco- komics, eivics” and politics. | A. U. Honors “Mother.” | 'HE College of Liberal Arts will ob- serve Mother's day today by af special dinner for mothers of stud- | ents and a service afterward at the chapel, when Mrs. Edgar Compton of | Belleville, N. J.. will speak.. There will ®iso be a_program of music. { Keeler Faus of Oscecla Mills, Pa., & senior, has been appointed to a teach- ing post in France by the Institute of International Education. He' will be the third American University student to get one of these prizes, only 10 of | which are awarded each year by the | institute. Previous appointments from | American University have been Otis | Fellows and Roger Craven. Arrangements have now *been made for two showings of “Macbeth,” the an- nual Shakespearean show by the ramatic Club. The first will be ‘Thursday, May 19, for high school tudents, and the second will be Fri- day, May 20, for the general public, oth performances to be in the gym- asium suditorium on the campus, direction of Wil Hutchins, sor of art. ay day was celebrated on the ‘campus yesterday with & gala ceremony of more than 100 girls in costumes of lizabsthan days, and the campus lined with flags of old England, Scotland and T i. The ; queen, Sylvia Sard, ry, Md., was crowned in the | the court of Queen Eliza- da Scobey. Ruth d the prologue, and two queens there were sev- eral dances of the realm, including the maypole dance. Miss Dorothy Wolf was director in charge. | Dr. Lucius C. rk, chancellor of | ‘American University, is speakers’ chair- man for the fourth district convention of Rotary Clubs to convene in Wash- | ington tomorrow and Tuesday. | Bicentennial Paper Out. tennial issue of the George University Cherry t annual, is being dis- ng a departure from | the 1932 Cherry Tree | ion of George Wash- | hout the text The methods of the eighteenth century have | v in such details as » layouts and color. Art MARET SCHOOL Summer Course June—July @rades and High School studies. All sub- gects ial attention given 1o onversgtional French. 2118 Kalorama Road Tel. North 2096 nder Martin € before t. Tr tributed A the usual desig; LEARN ANOTHER LANGUAGE by our easy conversation: famous for 54 years. 1 3 Telephone Deeatur 3952 lasses Limited to § Students For Practical Paying Results Study at The Master School Regist For Beginners' oz Of Class Now Interior Decoration 8 in Interior Decoration and offering an Accredited, Practical and Professional Training Course. Ex- pert Teachers. Individual Instroction. Rudolphe de Zapp, Director ting Arts & Decoration, New York | announced this week by Dr. Roy J. De- the | prought about, according to Dean De- | ter, John ‘Sheehy, Wesley THE W STAR, D. MAY 8, 1932 Student and Faculty Institutions. work for the annual has been executed by students in the division of under the supervision of Prof. Crandall and Albert Nelson the faculty. Pauline” Schaub is editor of the Cherry Tree and Wendell Bain busi- | ness manager. The editorial board in-| cludes also Ralph McCoy, Jean Fugitt. | Elizabeth Rees, Marie Seigrist and | William Hanback The Women's and Men's Education | Clubs of the university, eomposed of students in the School of Education will hold a banquet at the Dodge Hotel | on Saturday evening, May 14. Dr. Fred- ck J. Kelly, former president of the | University of Idaho and at present chief of the division of higher educa- tion of the United States Office of Edu- cation will speak. Newly elected offi- cers of the Women's Edu n Club for the year 1932-33 will be installed at | the banquet. These are Mildred | Green, president: Hazel Cragun, vice president; Katherine W tary. and Bertha Meridi The International Student: of the university, composed of st om foreign countries, held its annual Spring dance at the Hotel Lafayette last Saturday. The patrons and pa- tronesses included the Ambassadors from Italy, Japan, Poland, Great Brit- ain, Mexico, Spain, Austria, Bulgaria, Norway: the Ministers from the Irish Free State, Jugoslavia and Panama. On Wednesday evening the socis present- ed an unusually interesting progra the meeting. A motion picture of Hol land was shown by Henri R. M. Van Hoof, Dutch winner of last year's In- ternational Oratorical Contest and musi- | cal selections were given by Raymond G. Reya of Mexico and Morris Deutsch of Hungary. A program will be given by the Far East group later in the month. The faculty sponsor of the society is Prof. Allen T. Deibert, adviser | to students from foreign countries. A students at the Catholic Univer- sity will be opened in the Fall and placed under the direction of the sis- ters at Notre Dame de Namur, it was| Davis of C. U. to House Women, RESIDENCE for woman graduate ferrari, dean of the Graduate School Lay women will be accommodated at Graduate Hall, Trinity College, in the vicinity of the university, and the en- tire hall will be at their disposal. This will be the first time in the his- tory of the university that lay women have been able to maintain a residence | on the campus during the academic year. This Summer the lay women will be housed in St. Thomas Hall, likewise | a departure from the custom of past years, when they have been forced to reside in the city. Both these moves on the part of the university have been ferrari, by the increasing demands which are being made on the univer- sity by Catholic women who wish to carry on graduate work at a Catholic institution. ‘The senior ball held at the Wardman Park on Friday night was the last dance to be held by the graduating | class. The next social events of the | class will be held in connection with the commencement week program, which is now being prepared by a com- mittee of the class of 1932. The com- mittee which arranged the dance in- cluded Peter Kane, Louis de Santis, Frank Kleha and Leo Laughlin. ‘The academic senate of the univer- sity passed a resolution at its recent meeting to grant degrees with distinc- tion to the undergraduate schools be- ginning with the 1932 commencement. Degrees summa cum laude will be granted to those receiving a rank of 95-100 in their four years of college worky magna cum laude to those re- ceiving 90-94, and cum laude to those achieving a rank of 85-89. The under- graduates have been pressing their claims for such distinction for several years and the senate has had the mat- | ter under consideration for some time. Among the organizations petitioning for the move was Phi Eta Sigma, the freshman honor society. Columbus to Debate. N ELIMINATION contest will be! held early this week to determine the fourth contestant to take part in the finel prize debate to be held May 17, at Columbus University. Four debaters, winners of previous prize debates, were named to compete | in this final event. The list included Vincent Sheehy, Joseph D. Busher, John Nesbitt and Jerry O'Connell. However, when it was learned that O’Connell would be unable to partici- | pate, it was decided to name a substi- | tute from among those who were active in the first interclass debate of the year. This group includes Raymond Wal- Whittlesey | and John Mitten. Each will be given | an opportunity to speak about five min- utes on a chosen topic and the winner will be allowed to enter the final de- bate. Prof. Arthur Deering will be the sole judge of the elimination. &vent. The victor in the final debate will re- celve a $25 award at the June com- mencement exercises, m;:nd ;cc?}l\ln‘.‘aflcy school debate, spon- y the Venetian Societ be’glleld early this week T, eyl he subject will be “Resolved, the eighteenth amendment sl:gul;lrhl‘;: repealed.” The affirmative will be up- held by Joseph Morris, Thomas Coates and Katherine Burns, Patrick Geagan, Edward Fol and Virginia Calvagno will take the negative, Members of the post-graduate class will act as judges, Law Lectures Under Way. ASHINGTON COLLEGE OF LAW is holding a series of special leg- tures to close the course in patent law. Robert E. Healy, former asso- ciate justice of the Supreme Court DE JARDIN FRENCH TANGUAGE BEsT mellie Paris Graduste s " on tain Se. now. “ONEL Tags Temple School .‘Je:!! Individual Requirements ln‘ | Business and Secretarial Training \ Day—Late Afternoo: 1420 K St. N Students _enrolled st in 1931 fot a re- for a complete ot | SINGLE i unem- ployed today. to our knowledge: position secured or money refunded within 10 days There is no catch to this guarantee, except pay the tuition and meet our standard. Sec- retarial coyrse, 2-6 months. Dictation el - | classes, ute. Day-Even. sessions, all year “Aclredited.” 11333 F St. Nat. 2342 FREE TUITION IN FRENCH Beginners, intermediste. advanced and conversational classes (under auspices of Washington Salon since 1916). every evening ut T:15 o'clock at the FRENCH LANGUAGE BCHOOL OF WASHINGTON, 1206 18th st. | Mandell in the affirmative and Vernon SUNDAY of Vermont and now chief counsel of the Federal Trade Commission, deliv- | ered a lecture Thursday evening on | GRAII&UL}EETIUN Clayton act. His second lecture on Order Aimed to Improve Sup- Tuesday evening will go into the powers and extent of the jurisdiction of the plies for Urban Popu- lations. Government under such trade regula- tion laws, J. F. Mothershead, attorney in charge of patent litigation, Department of Jus- tice, will deliver a series of lectures commencing tomorrow evening on the patents, _The last debate of the regular ses- sion was held by the morning freshman ass Wednesday morning. The subject, “Resclved, That the District of Co- lumbia have the same rights and privi- leges as the several States,” was argued | ) by Wallace L. Dunn and Melvin H. | BYthe Associated Press MOSCOW, May 7.—The most funda- mental change in g with the Soviet ultural problem since collec- tivization began in earnest in 1928, was | decreed today by the Council of Peoples Commissars and the Ce: Committee of the Comn The decr policy of g preciably collectives purpose is t lispose of tk I. Payseur and Donald Imirie, victori- ous negatives. Howard to Honor “Mother.” OTHER'S day will be celebrated this afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock in the new dormitories for women at Howard University. when mothers of all students residing in Washington will be guests at tea of the women of the sophomore class. Guest speaker for the occasion will|d be Mrs. Mary McNeill, member of the Board of Educatlon. The Women's Glee Club will furnish music. Miss Council of Peo Lucy D. Slowe, dean of women, will 1 Joseph Stalin, greet the mothers. L Howard University health service will glve a dental exhibition from 9 am. to 6 pm. daily for the week beginning tomorrow, in the women’s corrective gymnasium. Material for the exhibition has been loaned by the Children’s Bureau, De- partment of Labor, American Dental Association, Washington Dairy Coun- . Home Economics. Bureau and the Department of Agriculture, 1 connection with the exhib poster contest is conducted for students of the department of art Dr. Margaret Kunds, assistant pr fessor of physiology, of the School of Medicine, University of Chicago, gave an illustrated lecture on “Recent Devel- s in our Knowledge of the En- | ne System” in the auditorium of H‘:e Medical School last Monday eve- ning. Louisa Vaughn Jones of the School of Music, Howard Univ panied by Miss Lillian Mitch of piano in the School of Music, played two violin solos at a luncheon given by the Washington Council on Inter- national Relations last Friday at noon at the Y. W. C. A, these 1ps to production in January 31 Although the decree ¢ specifically ed prices afs surplus, tion, and be cone markets CONTINUE INVESTIGATION OF MISSING ATTORNEY Public Defender, Found Sani- tarium, to Be Summoned at in NATIONAL-HOSPITAL DAY |5, o acsceiatea preee of the disappearance last Celebration Inquest Into Death. Public Defender Frank J. | ied today despite his dis- sanitarium here for the lanced. r's office prepa into the death Marking Florence Nightingale’s Anniversary In- | | inquest Tk | Jessie Hugh National Hospital day, which marks | the latte the birthday of Florence Nightingale, | 2utopsy w will be celebrated Thursday with spe- | Police theos ot her death a week cial programs at two Washington hos- | ago was murder and that her body was pitals and the others will hold open | placed in a st to simulate a house. v. Egan has been quoted | The Drinker respirator recently persons as s given to Children’s Hospital by the ¢ of Mrs. Washington Rotary Club will be for- mally presented at that time by S. Percy Thompson, president of the club, and will be received by O. H. P. John- son, president of the hospital board. | Children’s Hospital also will hold children’s garden party for the young- | sters who attend the clinics and & re- | ception for aduits. “Home-coming day” will be observed at the National Homeopathic Hospital | of Aiken County textile workers told with the return of babies born there, | Goy. Blackwood today the home of B especlally those born within the last | E. Brockshire, a non-union worker, was, year. Mrs. Wilson A. Coleman, super- | burned Friday night, and that women intendent, and members of her staff |and children are ing to death by will hold a reception for mothers and | cause of the textile strike in Aiken children throughout the day. County. o The strike has been in progress sev. Woman Gets Cycling Record eral weeks at Bath, Langley and Cl | water. The mills are operated b: Mother of two children, Mrs. Ethel | Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Man- Carter of Melbourne, Australia, broke | agement Corporation of New York. the world record for woman cyclists | The Governor was urged to take some by pedaling 100 miles in 5 hours and 20 | action. He announced he would study minutes. the situation KAHN on 7th St. cludes Two Special Programs. A second | | Hughes $25,000 estate. MILL CHILDREN STARVING, GOV. BLACKWOOD TOLD By the Associated Press COLUMBIA, 8. C, May 7—A group Established 34 Years Established 34 Years Specials Monday and Tuesday Genuine Toric Glasses Far or Near Complete With Shell or Metal Frame Easy Frame Complete Ol:tfi, With Case and Cleaner Included Genuine Toric KRYPTOK Invisible Bifocal Lenes Special price Monday and First and best quality. $'7 .50 Tuesday. Toric Kryptok Bifocal Lenses (one pair to see KAHN OPTICAL CO. 617 Seventh St. N.W. near and far). Best lenses made. Sold regularly $15. . 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