Evening Star Newspaper, January 6, 1935, Page 20

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B—b ADVERTISING—ART. Interior Decoration— Costume Design. LIVINGSTONE ACADF.\IY'. 1138 CONN. AVE. MET. 96 The Temple School SECRETARIAL TRAINING Beginners’ and Advanced Classes Day and Evening Sessions Day Classes forming every Monday Review, Principles, Gregg Manual January 7, 5:15 P.M. Beginner's Gregg Shorthand Class January 16. 7 P.M. Reviews, Prine Pitman Shorthand Janaary 28 W., NATIONAL 3258 Critcher Art School Fine and Commercial New Classes Now Forming Evening Painting Class Saturday Classes for High School Students and Children 1726 Conn. Ave. North 1966 CThe Cynthia Warner NURSERY SCHOOL For Kiddies, 2 to 5. 1405 Emerson St. N.W Phone GE. 8909 FREE TUITION FRENCH CLASS FOR BEGINNERS will organize on WEDNESDAY eve- ning, JANUARY 9th next, at 7:15 o'clock at FRENCH LANGUAGE SCHOOL OF WASHINGTON, 1206 18th Street N.W. (Established 1915) Tel. NA. 6136 Full information on rea. Accountancy Pace Courses: B.C.S. and M.C.S. Degrees. C.P.A. Preparation. Day and Even ingClasses: Coeducational. Send for 28th Year Book. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN UNIVERSITY TRANSPORTATION BLDG. MET 2518 ACCOUNTANCY Day and Evening Classes Second Semester Begins January 28 3-Year Course Leading to B. C. S. Degree Also early morning, day and evening classes in School of Law. Southeastern University (Co-educational) 1736 G St. NW. NA. 8250 ART CLASSES FOR CHILDREN AND ADULTS The Marguerite C. Munn Studio School of Painting 1653 Pa. Ave. Tel. District 1232 * BEGINNERS’ CLASSES Accountancy and Business Administration courses leading to B. C. S. Degree Forming January 8, 1935 Walton Courses in Accountancy Registrations Now Being Received COLUMBUS UNIVERSITY 1323 18th St. N.W. DE. 3443 CALCULATING MACHINE SPECIAL _COURSE IN COMPTOMETER, MONROE AND BURROUGHS. BEGIN TODAY a spe- cial course. - S5 complete. SPECIAL FOR COMING EXAMS. in SHORTHAND AN TYPEWRITING. The Civil Service Prep: atory School. L. Adolph Richards, M. M. S. Pi 12th st. The Clifford Brooke Academy of Stage Training in the Dramatic Arts . n.¥. Met. Courses in 2ll branches of Dra- matic Art—motion picture work ~—radio technique. Prominent professional faculty. Stage productions, actual theatre. Special Children’s Courses Catalogue on Request WINTER TERM BEGINS JANUARY 14th 1000 CONN. AVE. N.W. NAtional 8248 Heating and Machine Des| Aero Ground Airplane Electrical—Mechanical Refrigeratior Civil Engineerin, Engineering English Aircraft Engines Air-Conditioning Eng. Building Construction, Blueprint Reading and Estimating Mechanical Blueprint Reading RADIO Radio Engineering Radio Repair and Service Commercial Radlo Oper- ator bing Amateur Radio Operator Columbia “Tech” Institute Recognized f Individual Instruction—S8tart Now. No Entrance Requirements—All Instruction Text Furnished. Send for Catalogue or Call Paul J. Leverone, Principal Columbia Graduates in Demand! 1319 F ST. N.W. * |uary 18. During this period students Practical Concrete Work Sign Painting Refy ercxtlo‘n Repair Servic Schools an Events of Interesting G. U. Honors Founder. ‘ONORING the memory of George- town’s founder, Archbishop John Carroll, the student body and faculty will attend a pontifical mass | Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock in Dahlgren Chapel. The occasion is the 200th anniversary of his birth, | which is being observed in many parts of Maryland. The apostolic delegate to the United States, Most Rev. Amleto Giovanni Cicog- nani, will pre- side at the mass and during the morning it was expected that he would place a wreath before the John Carroll statue at the front entrance to t¢he university. Dr. Peter Guil- day, professor of history of the, Catholic Univer- sity of America, | will pay tribute to the educator and churchman in his sermon at the mass. No word having been received to ! the contrary, it was expected that | | Dr. Coleman Nevils, S. J., president | of Georgetown, would arrive in Wash- | ington some time tomorrow for the | observance. He sailed from South- ampton, England, last Wednesday. In Baltimore today the archdiocese | also will honor the memory of Arch- bishop Carroll. Rev. Arthur A. O'Leary, S. J. acting president of Georgetown, will attend the high mass which will be conducted by Arch- bishop Michael J. Curley in the cathedral. The Mask and Bauble Club of the College of Arts and Sciences will be guests of the Minister of the Irish Free State at a reception Friday aft- ernoon in honor of the visiting Abbey Players from the Abbey Theater in Dublin. _ Classes will be resumed at the col- | lege and foreign service school tomor- | Tow, other departments of the uni- versity having reopened last week. | Mid-year examinations will occupy | most of their attention after next! week. FRESHMAN at the Department A of Architecture of the Catho- | lic University has been awarded | a first place mention in a Nation-wide | architectural contest sponsored by the | Beaux Arts Institute of New York City. He is Robert Davitt Fuller of | Cranford, N. J. The theme of the contest, “The Entrance to & Rocky Vault,” was inspired by the sudden death recently of a Greek archeolo- gist engaged in research at Mount Parnassus in Greece. The problem, which attracted 200 competitors from | the major schools of architecture throughout the United States, was a ‘Io:xr-x\esk design of a Greek monu- | Rev. A. G. Cicognani. C. U. Freshman Gets Prize. mental tomb entrance suitable for construction at Mount Parnassus. The annual Christmas recess period was concluded Thursday with the re- turn of students to the university and the resumption of classes in all departments and schools. Instructors will begin immediately the prepara- tion for the semi-annual examina- tions to be held from January 28 to February 2, inclusive. The second | semester will open on Monday, Feb- ruary 4. The alumni and alumnae of the, Catholic University will join in spon- soring a card party and dance to be held on the night of Friday, in the foyer of the John K. Mullen Memorial Library on the campus. Arrange- ments, for this, the second annual co-operative function of the two groups of the local university gradu- ates, are under the direction of Miss Sheila Doody, committee chairman. G. W. Registration Limits. RE-REGISTRATION for the sec- ond semester in George Wash- ington University will open to- morrow and continue through Jan- now enrolled may plan schedules with the assistance of deans and advisers, execute the necessary forms and com- | plete registration. Registration for students entering the university from high school or transferring from other colleges and | universities will take place January 30 and 31, and classes for the second | | semester will begin February 1. Mid- year examinations will run from Jan- |uary 19 to January 26, the period | | from January 26 to February 1 con- stituting the mid-semester recess. Dean Henry Grattan Doyle, profes- sor of romance languages and dean of the senior college of letters and sciences, has prepared the first biblio- graphy of pan-American literature ever compiled. The bibliography has just been issued by the Harvard University Press, which will shorily bring out two other bibliographies by him. Dr. Lester Kruger Born, head ol‘ the department of classical languages and literatures, addressed the poetry | section of the American Association of University Women at its meeting | yesterday. Tomorrow Dr. Born will | be the speaker at the convocation of | Wilson Teachers’ College, repeating by | request his talk on the “Brain Trust,” recently given over the radio. Special Short Courses in All Branches of DRAFTING Patent Office, Architectural, Sheet tering, Electrical, Ship, Lithographic, Landscape, Machine, ENGINEERING (Also Standard Four-Year Enmgineer ing Courses) Ventilating Steam & Gas Power Eng. Aerial Navigation Surveying_and Mapping inforced te Keinfor, nerel Building Construction n Eng. ng. Radio—Architecture Structural Steel lng‘ Landscape Architecture - Highway and Bridse Eng. Aireraft Blueprint Reading TRADE SCHOOL e Sieam Eng. Practical Electricity Armature Winding lor 25 Years Day and Evening Sessions. MET. 5626 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JANUARY 6, 1935—PART ONE. d Colleges Student and Faculty Activities in Washington’s Leading Educational Institutions. The * university'’s regular weekly radio program, broadcast each Thurs- day at 7:30 p.m. over Station WMAL, will be concerned during the next two weeks with Federal aid to educa- tion. This Thursday Dean Willlam Carl Ruediger of the schoc! of edu- cation will discuss “Federal Aid to Education—With or Without Cor:trol?” The following Thursday Prof. William John Cooper, who formerly was United States Commissioner of edu- cation, will discuss other aspects of the question. Classes in the university resumed on Thursday following the Christ- mas recess. Howard Honors Students. twelfth annual honor day ex- ercises will be held at Howard University at.noon Wednesday in Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel. These exercises are held for the pur- pose of encouraging scholarship at the university, and to honor those students who have maintained an average of “A” in all subjects for the full ye of work. The Scrollers’ Club of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity has presented a silver cup, known as the Kappa Cup, which is awarded annually to the frestman of the preceding year who has main- tained the highest average. | recipient was Sarah Pauline Clark. W. C. L. Holds Exams. ASHINGTON COLLEGE OF lvg\w resumed classes on ‘ednesday in all departmen after a 10-day holiday period. Prep: ration for the close of the first semes- ter and the mid-year examinations scheduled for the last two weeks in this month face returning students. At the January meeting of the Pat- ent Alumni Association, to be held on the 15th, the recent changes in in- terference practice will be discussed. L. H. Sutton, well known patent law- yer and a member of the Patent Office Advisory Committee, will speak on “The Work of the Patent Office Ad- visory Committee, Particularly With Respect to Revision of Interference Practice.” H. H. Jacobs, primary in- terference examiner, United States Patent Office, will discuss “The Changes in the Rules of Interference Practice and Their Effects From the Viewpcint of the Examiner.” All per- sons interested are invited to attend. Keith G. Misegades, president of the association, will preside. The freshman class of the division debated yesterday afternoon the question, “Resolved, That a lawe yer should refuse to defend a pro- fessional criminal unless requested to do so by the court” The affirmative team was composed of Hugh V. Mc- Cabe, Robert L. Grady and Richard P. Cooley, while those speaking for the negative were James W. Colvin, George J. Miller and Benjamin Miller, A. U. Registration Announced. LASSES will reopen tomorrow at both the College of Liberal Arts and the Graduate School of American University, bringing the Christmas vacation to an end. Plans already are under wi y for BEGIN TODAY CARD PUNCH MACHINE SPECIAL_STATISTICAL. and GEN- FILE ERAL ICAL. The Civil Service Prepar- atory Schoo 12th st. n.w. Met. 63 RENSHAW School of Speech For_all vocations in which the Spoken Word is Significant Public Address Speeches for special occasions. Impromptu and extemporaneous speaking. Various vocational tech- niques. Intensive training for effective communication. Mondays at 8 P.M. Vocal Technique ‘Tone training. Proper placing for singing or speaking. Clear diction. Voice diagnosis. Correct pronunci- ation. Correction of speech de- fects. Phonetics. Cultural values of vocal expression. Tuesday at 5:20 P.M. English Grammar. Rhetoric. Compo- sition. Correction of common errors. Vocabulary building. Cor- respondence. Mastery of your mother tongue. Thursday at 8 P.M. Conversation Principles of social usage. Spoken English. Cultivation of poise. Excellent reading course. Topics of classic and modern culture, ‘Tuesday at 8 P.M. Expression Impersonation. Story telling. Platform art. One-act play and monologue for interpretation. Excellent course for artistic release. Thursday at 8 P.M. Educational Backgrounds Brief intensive survey of ele- mental sociology, literature, psy- chology. A general culture course for mental stimulus. Wednesday at 8 P.M. Individual Psychology Problems of personal efficiency. Compensation for the inferority complex. Analysis of the friction in life. Removal of “blind spots.” Building self-esteem. Private Hourse Only. Membership limited. Each course meets for two hours once a week. Class or private instruction. Readers or speakers sent out on request. Visitors welcome. Write for catalogue. Anne Tillery Renshaw 1739 Conn. Ave. North 6906 the second semester. Registeration will open at the college January 11 and at the graduate school January 21, Lectures begin for the second semester January 28 at the graduate school, and January 29 at the college. Dr. Joseph M. M. Gray, chancellor of the university, spoke last Thursday before the annual meeting of the deans of all Summer schools of the Methodist Episcopal Church, held at Evanston, Ill. Tomorrow night he will address the Men’s Club of the Pirst Methodist Episcopal Church, at Baltimore, and January 9, will speak on “Character Education,” before the Association of Bu- uate school, will speak today at the Mount Pleasant Congregational Church open forum. The women'’s debate team of Ameri- can University is preparing for its next debate, at Hurst Hall on the campus January 11 against a women's team from Western Maryland College. Donald Sherbondy is debate coach. HE Clifford Brooke Academy of Stage Training in the dramatic arts will open its Winter term January 14. The academy affords its students preparation for a career on the professional stage and has courses in motion picture work and radio technique. Mrs. Adelaide Hibbard, who has been seen with the National Theater Players for the past nine seasons, has joined the faculty. The academy offers special courses for children, holding class periods every Saturday morning. DMINISTRATIVE officials Strayer College are fulfilling a gagements at the present time, their | sppearance taking the form of voca- tional guidance talks to senior class | members in high schools of Wash- | ington and vicinity. L. E. Smith, registrar of the col- lege, speaks tomorrow to the seniors of McKinley High School on “Em- ployment Opportunities in the Gov- ernment for Clerical Workers and Machine Operators.” “Advantages and Disadvantages of the Secretarial Profession” will be the topic of a talk Dean Elgie G. Purvis will deliver successively at the Hern- don and Oakton High Schools in Faiffax County, Va., Tuesday. Dean Purvis also spoke last Friday at the Clifton High School. Classes at the college were resumed on last Wednesday in both the day and evening sessions. Paul J. Leverone, principal of the Columbia Technical Institute of Washington, announces that all in- dications point to thé largest Janu- ary-February enrollment in the 26 years’ history of the school. The mechanical, aeronautical, * NE GREAT CAR in- O spires another. There are new Airflow Chryslers for 1935. And—there are * of | | heavy schedule of speaking en- | architectural, topographic, electrical, structural steel, landscape and patent office drafting courses have been com- pletely revised and extended by the addition of practical job problems and drawings obtained from the drafting sections of the Federal Government bureaus and private concerns. National U. Instructor Is Author. sents a study of municipal aeronautic law of the United States and foreign countries, and international aero- nautic law. The work further em- braces a study of air rights as related to_real estate. Prof. Le Roy, who has lectured at National Law School since 1931, has been a student of developments in the fields of radio and air law for 15 ROF. HOWARD 8. LE ROY of| v, National University Law School faculty is author of & book, “Outline and Guide to Air Law,” which has just been published. Regarded in the educational and legal professions as a clarifying addi- tion to the speedily increasing volume of literature on radio and air laws, Prof. Le Roy's new work was designed as a concise and comprehensive review of the entire fleld. The new book presents, under radio law, a study of municipal radio law in the United States including statutes and ordi- nances, administrative regulations, and decisions and opinions, and a study of municipal radio law in for- eign states. It presents also a study of international radio law, covering international conferences, interna- tional conventions and regional agree- ments, administrative agencles, and decisions and opinions. Under aeronautic law, the work pre- LAW Early Morning, Day and Evening Classes Second Semester Begins Jan. 28 Tlm-’eil‘%cu‘rl:'::l‘l- teo and ening Classes ool of Accountanmey ) Southeastern University (Co- cational) 1136 G St. N.W. NA. 8250 CHILDREN 2 to 6 Years o x t ' 2 6 : Sound edu- cational KALORAMA DAY SCHOOL 1810 Kalorama Rd. Columbis 2336 he made analytical studies of Paris Air Navigation Convention of 1919 which was submitted to but never ratified by the United States Senate. In 1927 he was legal adviser of the United States delegation to the Inter- national Radio Telegraph Conference at Washington, and for the duration of the conference he served as the DE JARDIN SCHOOL OF French Language Day—Evenings Best Results in the Shertest Time 908 14th 8¢. N.W. Met. 1832 ¢ GUNSTON HALL 1906 Florida Avenue School for Girls. Four-year High School course and two years of College Work. -LITTLE GUNSTON Kindergarten through 8th grade; boys through 4th grade. American member of the general retariat. Since 1928 he has been Commf District of Columbia Bar Association. For Practical Paying Results, Study at Master School of Interior Decoration e T Aoy Doperptlen o fica: *ana’ " Protessions essional Training T o . S 1206 CONN. AVE. NA. 6136 Begirners’ class now forming. Register now or get in touch with us for information. MT. ST. JOSEPH’S HIGH SCHOOL Mid-year Enrollments Accepted Conducted by Xaverian Broth- . Effectively prepares_bo for college or 1l classes. Graduates in over 40 colleges and scientific schools. Home'life in democratic atmos- | lern laborato: il pool, eymnastum, 15 tennis i courts, 4 gridirons. Orchestra. Students from 25 States. 60th NEW CLASSES [ ] in Accountancy DAY CLASS PACE COURSES Opening Monday, February 4th. 85:30 EVENING CLASS ° Call or telephone for 26th Year Book. Opening Friday, February lst. 7:30 EVENING CLASS Opening Friday, February 8th. Registrations for Advanced Classes also being received. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN UNIVERSITY MEtropolitan 2518 Transportation Bldg., 17th & H Sts., N.W. . i lor s choad ! SHORT-STORY WRITING Write for Folder THE MONEYWAY STUDIOS ‘The PENTHOUSE, 912 19th N.W. stration Daily, 10 A M. . es. 'and Thurs. Evenings s o 3" Stuart School of Costume Design and [llustration 1711 Conn. Ave. NOrth 3373 BERLITZ SCHOOL OF TANGHACES SECOND TERM | FEBRUARY FIRST Professional Artist in- structors present in every class to insure sound, rapid progress. L] . The School which A actually trains s professionals F A ‘' opportunities in many fields. ® {THE_ABBOTT SCHOOL FINE and COMMERCIAL A—-RT l.l‘h%usfi'floaA w. ® = o CHPYSLLP * * * of Chrysierownersthenew- est and best in motoring. Now more than ever before. . . you'll be hap- riew Airstream Chryslers for 1935. ‘The new Airflows arrest the eye. ‘There’s a perfect marriage of science and art in the new truly streamlined radiator design . . . the new louvers .« « new headlight treatment . . . new radiator grill. ‘The modern features which aroused so much comment last year are here for 1935, of course . . . greatly en- hanced in value. Drawing room spaciousness . . . seats wide as divans ... wide doors . . . passengers carried between the axles near the center of balance . . . the unit-built frame and all-steel body, SAFEST IN THE WORLD . . . the increased vision. The marvelous Floating Ride is finer than ever . . . made so by a new tapered leaf spring that permits quick flexing on little jolts, controlled flexing on big ones. . 1612 You St. N.W. Coast-In Auto Works, Inc. 712 E Street S.E.~LIncoln 9393 District Motor Company 1515 14th St. NNW.~POtomac 1000 Automatic Overdrive, of course, standard on the Airflow Imperials, optional on the Airflow Eights. That marvelous transmission improvement that changes gear ratios automatically at 45 miles an hour. ‘There’s a new syncro-silent trans. mission . . . for easy, quiet shifting. New perfected steering . . . so sure and effortless that these big cars handle like a small roadster. Inside . . . a softer, richer treat- ment of cushions, side and roof fabrics. “We’ll build,”” said Chrysler en- gineers, “‘another line of cars that will give many of Airflow’s advantages at much lower price.”” See how they’ve done it. To the eye a striking family resemblance. In radiator, hood lines, sweeping wind- shicld, tapering rear. Engine and seats have been moved forward, to get a more scientific dis- tribution of weight and a floating shock-free ride. Worlds more room. inches more head-room, leg-room, elbow-room and seat width. Wider doors. Tapered spring leaves like the Air- flow. Syncro-silent transmission as in Airflow. Streamlining that really means something. Modern interiors. Surging power such as Chrysler knows so well how to provide . . . Marvelous new diamond-hard pistons . . . High compression engines . . « Alloy valve seat inserts. An Airstream Six . . . and Air- stream Eight. Joining with the great Airflow line to give added thousands * * * See the cars—Tbe Chrysler Airstream Six and Eight and the 1935 Airflows are now on display st Chrysler dealer show- rooms. Immediate deliveries. CHRYSLER AND PLYMOUTH DEALERS . Gardner-Stuart Motors, Inc. 604 H Street N.E.—LInceln Skinker Motor Company 1216 20th St. N.W.~District 4310 H. B. LEARY, JR,, & BROS. Smoot Motor Company, Inc. 3342 M Street N.W.—WEst 1850 Tom's Auto Service, Inc. 637 N Street N.W.~POtomac 2400 pier with a Chrysler! * * * CHRYSLER AIRSTREAM SIX . . . A hand- some new Six revealing Airflow influence, 93 h. p., 118-in. w. b. Five bod;“tipu. From $745'to $860. 3-Door Sedan CHRYSLER AIRSTREAM EIGHT... A big, brilliantly-performing new Eight with 103 h. p. and 121-in. w. b. Four distinguished body types. From $935 to $995. 4-Door Sedan $975. clusive advantages of Airflow design. 11 b p. and 1230, w. b. Six- Sedan, coupe and business coupe, all models $1395. CBIY&EI{{WIDW{D;:?ML‘; « The i formance of 1 . P.; the roomy mflml:‘& possible by 128-in. w. b. Sk—E senger sedan and six-passenger coupe $1 AIRFLOW CUSTOM IMPERIAL . . . Mag- i est in Airflow craftsmanship. bp. with 137-in. w. b. and 150 h. p. with 146-in. w. b. Prices on request. POtomac 6000

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