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11 SCHOLARSHIPS T0 FRANKLIN WON Accountancy School Grants | Honors to Outstanding Prep Students. Eleven graduates of Washington and nearby high schools will enter the day department of the Benjamin Franklin University Accountancy School as a result of scholarships awarded in recognition of high schol- astic standing. The selections, which were made by the principals of the respective schools, also took into con- sideration character and aptitude for accountancy. The winners of the scholarships and the high schools represented are: Jean Fleishell, 520 Peabody street, Central; C. L. Birdsong, 8315 Con- necticut avenue, Western; Leo Jack- owski, 1007 Hamlin street northeast, McKinley: Mabel Mundy, 1412 Crit- tenden street, Roosevelt; David Brooks, 218 Kentucky avenue south- east, Eastern; James Russell Brown, 4404 New Hampshire avenue, St. John's; Elsie Winkler, 9131 Jones Mill road, Chevy Chase, Md., Bethesda- Chevy Chase High School; Julian Lee Blincoe, 3830 Glebe road, Ross- lyn, Va, Washington-Lee High School; Ruth Webster, 1750 Flower avenue, Silver Spring, Md., Montgom- ery-Blair High School; Martha J. Singleton, 1801 Wyoming avenue, | Hyattsville High Scnool, and Janet Otley, 9 West Maple street, Alexan- dria, Va, Alexandria High School. In addition to a large contingent from each of the local high schools, registration for the day department which opens September 30 includes representatives from 12 States. En- roliments for the beginning classes have been received in such number as to necessitate the formation of six sections of the freshman evening class. Acquisition of additional space will enable the university to accept regis- trations until October 1. NEW COLUMBIA TECH SCHOOL YEAR OPENING Classes in Engineering Will Start Tomorrow Along Varied Lines. All classes of the Engineenng1 Echool of the Columbia Technical In- | stitute will begin the new school year tomorrow evening. The institute is offering complete four-year evening courses in aero- nautical, civil, mechanical, electrical | and architectural engineering. There are also available one-year- unit evening courses in specialized branches of engineering, including air- plane design, airplane stress analysis, | basic mechanical, architecture, aerial navigation, marine navigation, ma- chine design, basic electrical, urlnli surveying end mapping, refrigera- tion, heating and ventilating, sur- veying and map compilation, struc- tural steel, building construction, highway and bridge, air conditioning, reinforced concrete, steam and gas power, landscape architecture, basic Tadio and television and combustion engines. Registrations in the various courses of the trade school, which is the new- est extension of the institute, are ex- ceeding all expectations, it was an- nounced. Trade school classes begin tomorrow. Duke Sails as Apprentice. ‘The Duke of Santamarca of Spain | has sailed as an apprentice on the Fin- | nish sailing ship Viking. Make Money Writing Stories An intensive 4-month course in short-story writing. limited to twelve students, will be given on Mondays and Pridays, at 5:10 p.m., beginning October 4th. “I have just sold a story. . .the story I did during the early part of my course .They have asked for other stories” writes one student. Registration dally, 5 to 6 Polder on request. Nat. 8092. THE MONEYWAY STUDIOS The PENTHOUSE, 912 19th N.W. p.m. $2.40 PER MONTH lor 2 evenings a week, or $2.10 per -month for 3 evenings per week. SHORTHAND view ol the Shorthand Manual Iso Typing. Tuition refunded. Courses given as an ad- wvertising feature of the WASHINGTON Employment Exchange. ict 2480 Press Building. For Practical Paying Results, Study at Master School of Interior Decoration Specializing in Interior Decoration and offering an Accredited. Prac- oot and Frefemiensl Traisipe Expert Teachers. Indi- vidual Tnstraction, Rudolphe de Zapp. Director Bepresenting _Arts & Decoration. New Yorl 1206 CONN. AVE. NA. 6136 Enroll for classes now forming | SPANISH apfhmous Berlitz ( Conversational } Method GUAGE! THE BERLITZ T "Conn, Aver LANS 5550 Hester Walker Beall Studio of the Spoken Word Established 1928 Fall Term, October 7 PUBLIC SPEAKING VOICE IMPROVEMENT CONVERSATION Class and Private Instruction, Adults and Children Registration Daily at the Studio, 4 to 5:30 o'clock Stoneleigh Court National 2266 9 BUSINESS Poteet’s coliece c.--in;‘('h‘...."'- CivilService Courses and Sts. N.W. Natl. 4717 New Class Now Forming TUESDAY AND THURSDAY EVENINGS, 8 TO 10 O'CLOCK In Practical, Applied ADVERTISING ington. training and practice in ¢ of modern advertising. A thorough working advertisi practice lemgelone Academy 35 Years 1n Waskinvion. " Met, 9605 D. C. Schools, Op To Care for Some 99,722 Pupils BY JESSIE FANT EVANS. Beginning tomorrow the school bell is to be the measure of time for the household in nearly 100,000 homes here in the Nation’s Capital. That epic moment, when 5-year-old kindergarten Mary and 6-year-old John are off for their first day of | school, opens for them a strange and | wonderful new world. And for father and mother, starting them out on this adventure, no less is this true. For then, very often, is given them for the first time the scope and signifi- cance of the vast organization which, built upon the American ideals of free public education, reaches out for every boy and girl of school age in our community. Despite new buildings provided to meet pressing major needs stressed by the superinteadent of schools, Dr. Prank W. Ballou, and the members of the Board of Education, distress- ingly crowded and antiquated equip- ment in various schools are still to be the portion of all too many chil- dren in the public schools of Wash- ington. Yet we have only to look back to the so-called “good old days” in our city's beginnings to gain a measure of patience with our present short- comings. Students to Total 99,722. This month, according to the fig- ures available at the Franklin School at Thirteenth and K streets, where | the administrative offices of our pub- lic school system are located, it is estimated that the school population of Washington in the white and col- ored schools is to total 99,722 chil- dren. Of this number it is estimated that there will be 38,424 white chil- dren in the elementary grades and 23,211 colored children. Twelve thou- sand, six hundred and eighty-two white children and 6,074 colored chil- dren will attend junior high schools. Upon the basis of attendance at the schools last June as the measure of registration this September, it is esti- mated that 12,160 senior high school pupils will apply for admission and 4,101 colored pupils. Using the same figures as a measuring rod, the white teachers’ college will have an enroll- ment of 478, the colored training school for teachers 566. In the voca- tional schools there was an enroll- ment of 1,105 white pupils and 921 colored. All of which totals 64,849 white children in attendance at 83 building units and 34873 colored children in 49 units. A building unit may consist of several school build- ings under one administrative prin- cipal. To put it another way there are| 132 school units housed in 174 school | buildings in the District of Columbia to take care of the dual educational school system for white and colored children. Value of System Stressed. Have you, Mr. and Mrs. Resident of the District of Columbia, ever asked yourselves when and where this great system of public education in our city had its beginning and what it would mean ‘to be with- out it? Consider, if you will, Washington C;liege of MUSIC Has Opened Its 32nd Year See Our Ad. on Music Page 1810 Conn. Ave. N.W. the assured | THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, en Tomorrow, financing, the carefully planned school buildings, the well-trained teachers, the free text books, the one hundred and one educational privileges and advantages which are ours ir this year 1935 in our Washington public school system. Then think back, if you will, to a time when none of these existed. The public school system of the District of Columbia had its origin nearly 131 years ago. Two years after the granting of our city charter Con- gress, by an act signed February 24, 1804, empowered the City Council to provide for “a permanent institution for the education of youth in the City of Washington.” A further act of December 15, 1804, provided for the appointment of a board of trustees, 13 in number, 7 of whom were to be chosen by a Joint ballot of the City Council. The other six were to be selected by private individuals who should con- tribute more than $10 each to the support of the schools. This board was further, required by Congress to make provision for the instruction of those children whose parents were unable to defray the expenses of their education. To maintain this free educational feature—one of the first to be set up for any municipality outside of New England—the City Council was authorized to collect a sum not to exceed $1,500 from the taxes on “Slaves and dogs, licenses on carriages, and hacks, wines and spirituous liquors, theatricals and other amusements, and hawkers and peddlers.” The largest individual contributor to the school fund was, as might be expected, President Thomas Jefferson. In a gracious letter from Monticello dated August 14, 1805, he accepted the presidency of the first board of 13 trustees which had been organized In Washington on August 5, 1805, with Mayor Brent presiding over the meet- ing held in the Supreme Court room of the United States Capitol. Two Schools in 1806. October 27, 1806, the School Board authorized the erection of the first| two school houses, to be located on lots owned by the United States, the use of which for this purpose had been granted by President Jefferson. These we are told “might have been | modelled after Noah's Ark,” for they | were built of wood, one story high, | 50 feet long, 20 feet wide and ‘“cost together $1,589.41.” Others of even | |lm desirability were “an abandoned Enroll for classes now forming in rlitz Conversatio; 'I‘HII BEILITZ SCHOOL OF LA Poteet 's BUSINESS Commereial. Secretarial. Civil Service Courses 14th and Eye Sts. N.W. Natl. 4717 The Gallery School of Art Affiliated with Phillips Memorial Gallery Day and Evening Classes Painting and Life Drawing Anatomy, Art Appreciation Opening October 1, 1935 REGISTRATION FROM SEPTEMBER 17 St“dio House 1614 21st St. Decatur 1778 KING-SMITH STUDIO-SCHOOL brewery and the lower floor of a tin and paint shop whose smell and noises punctuated the teachings of the course of study.” These schools were attended by two classes of pupils. There were those who paid the tuition fee of “$5 per | quarter and who in addition to the | ordinary branches were instructed in | geography and the Latin language”— | and those who were educated free because of “the indigency of their parents. The early teachers of these schools seem to have been in the main clergymen forced to supplement the slender subsistence rendered them by the church. Unquestionably the opprobrium of | “pauper schools,” the term by which they unfortunately came to be desig- nated, had something to do with the general lack of interest in their well-being. It would be difficult to decide which was the more indiffer- ent, the Congress of the United States, from whom no appropriation was made available, or the citizens of Washington themselves. A certain group of local scoffers was even of the opinion that the allotment of $1,500 from the city’s funds might better be spent “in the building of bridges and roads as they would ac- complish much more for the com- mon good.” Finally, in President Madison’s ad- ministration, the allotment for schools was summarily cut to $800 by the city authorities with the statement that “the schools seemed to have plenty of money anyhow and the | SPANISH r:¢ e r Formerly with THE BERL Write 1204 18th St. NW - Fel D1, Chaon Costume Design Fashion Art Specialized professional training. Fall term begins Oct. 1. Day and evening classes. Registration daily, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. STUART SCHOOL of COSTUME DESIGN and ILLUSTRATION 1711 Conn. Ave. NOrth 3373 C. MILLAN D. C., SEPTEMBER expense was much complained of.” Doffed Hats and Bowed. Among the rules for the govern- ment of these schools is this one: “Every scholar on entering the school shall take off his hat and bow to the preceptor.” Girls do not seem to have been in the minds of this early school board, doubtless due to the| fact that the education of girls of the | & principal teacher, who received a salary of $500 per year out of which | humbler classes was considered of small account. ‘ Education was forbidden to slaves and the fact that free Negroes were not under this restriction was of little avail, since there were no schools worthy of the name until after their emancipation. The plans of the original board of 13 trustees, of subsequent boards, and of the city corporation itself, for nearly 40 years seems to have been not so much for a system of public schools as we now understand them as for a sort of national university supplemented by “schools for teaching the rudiments of knowledge necessary to the common purposes of life.” A public library was also a contemplated feature of the set-up. Undoubtedly it was President Jeffer- son himself who was the chief author of the first plan of public education for our District schools, as he had several years earlier proposed a simi- lar one for the State of Virginia which he again vigorously advocated in 1817. In pursuance of the school board's 22, 1935—PART ONE. plan, an “academy” was organized to consist of as many schools as cir- cumstances should require and which for a number of years consisted of but two. One, known as the “Eastern Free School,” was located on East Capitol street. The “Western” was situated west of the White House, on I street near Seventeenth. For each of these schools there was he was required to defray the rent of the school house, pay for the nemury furniture used, the ink, the Winter | fuel and the salaries of any assistant teachers. Many years. later, while studying law in Washington, Salmon P. Chase, afterward Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, who presided over the impeachment proceedings of President Johnson, and Rufus Choate, | who was destined to be referzed to as one of the greatest lawyers before the American bar, held the non-envi- able positions of wuhen in the “West- ern Free School.” BOYS ENROLLING GIRLS DUPONT CIRCLE SCHOOL 1601 New (Oppesite Ar Years of expe: Embassy) individuality, training. ning. Junior High. Kin- s of Education. nnannur BOARDING . ART SCHOOL Announces New Location & 1143 Conn. Aw National 8054 Classes Now Forming RECEPTION IS TODAY The Abbott School of Fine and Commercial Art is holding a public reception today in its new class rooms at 1143 Connecticut avenue. An exhi- bition of the school’s work is being held at the same time. * Private showings of the new facili- ties were held at the school yesterday afternoon and evening. l THE YARD SCHOOL OF FINE ART 2117 Le Roy Place Berlnl its Fall ulun. Oflokr lnl léllv:n.;ll:‘ l"'!r;..:“ i :nl rmnu Cllllcl BERJAMIN FRANKRLIN UNIVERSITY School of Accountancy and Business Administration Announces the Sixth and Seventh Sections of ItsBeginning Class $:30 to 7:20 Class, Opening October 1 7:30 to 9:20 Class, Opening October 1 Registrations are also being accepted for the Day Class, Opening September 30 For information telephone MEtropolitan 2515 or call at Room 304, Transportation Building, Seventeenth and H Streets N. W. Washington College of Law An Institution Devoted Exclusively to the Teaching of Law 2000 G Street Washington, D. C. Fortieth Year Fall Term Begins September 23 Day Division, 9:00 to 11:00 Afternoon Division, 5:10 to 7:00 Evening Division, 6:10 to 8:00 Three-year course leading to LL.B. Fourth-year course leading te LLM. and M. P. L. Special Courses in Patent Law, Consti- tutional Law, International Law, Copy- right Law and Public Utilities. Catalogue and Complete Informa- tion Furnished on Request. MELt. 4585 | Law School (Established 1869) EVENING SESSIONS EXCLUSIVELY and J. D. (CO-EDUCATIONAL) Undergraduate Department : Three-year course leading to degrees of LL. B. Graduate Department : .P.L.and S. J. D. Faculty of the Law School HAYDEN JOHNSON, LL D ROGER O’'DONNELL, LL. M. National Univer sity Sixty-Seventh Year Opens September 23, 1935 One-year course leading to degrees of LL. M., HENRY L. WALKER, LL B Opening Day, Oct. 7; Registration, Week of Sept. 30 CULTURAL and PROFESSIONAL COURSES for YOUNG PEOPLE: Music, Art, Dancing, Dramatic and Theater Arts, Creative Writing, Languages, Social Sciences, Secretarial and Business. SPECIAL CLASSES under Mrs. VACHEL LINDSAY in Modern Literature. Creative Writing and Child Develop- ment. COURSES for CHILDREN: Creative Instruction Music, Rhythmic and Dramatic Expression, Art. in Folder giving information and rates sent on request 1751 New Hampshire Avenue ODWAR]) SCHOOL for Boys The all-important thing in the life of a boy is that he have the advantages of schooling adapted to his individual requirements and not De left to float along with the crowd—half taught. Woodward School is equipped to render this specialized instruction in both grammar and high school grades with exceptional facilities and ex- cellent results. For example: Physical Development Enrollment in the Woodward School carries with it supervised use of the splendid Y. M. A. gymnasium and lwun - ming pool, accompanied skilled physical ob- servation. Strictly a_boys’ school Only men instructors— and each of these se- lected for his peculiar fitness to teach his special subjects. Small_Classes Which means that each boy gets the direct at- tention he needs for a thorough grasp upon the subjects he is studying. That’s something that cannot be done in large classes. Athletics Under the experienced guidance of an athletic instructor, foot ball, basket ball, base ball, ten- nis, etc.—each in season, enters into the school life and fosters the spirit of manly sportsmanship. Interschool games are ar- ranged between Wood- ward School teams and those of contemporane- ous institutions here and elsewhere. Personal Attention Some subjects are easily acquired; others are more difficult. Under the Woodward plan of instruction eac boy masters his work under- standingly. The school life at Woodward—the thorough instruction, kindly but firm discipline, ideal en- vironment, combine to make a boy a REAL BOY —mentally, physically and morally. Fall Semester Just Beginning Catalogue upon request Woodward School for Boys Y. M. C. A. Building NA. 8250 1736 G St. N.W. (Of the Washington. D. C. Dean'of the Law Facuity and Frofessor of Eaquity Jurisprudence. CHARLES H. ROBB, LL. D. (Ausoctate Justice of the Court of Avpeals, D. C.) Emeritus Professor of La CONRAD SYME, LL. D (0f the Washington, D. C., Bar and Sometime Corporation Counsel for the District of Columbia) Professor of the Law of Partnership JENNINGS BAILEY, LL. D. (Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. D. C.) Professor of the Law of Equitable Trusts and Conflict of Laws CHARLES S. HATFIELD, LL. D. (Associate Justice of the U. S. Court of Customs and_Patent Appeals) Professor of Federal Procedure and the Law of Agency CHARLES PERGLER, D. C. L., LL. D. (Director of Graduate Studies) Professor of Constitutional Law and Jurisprudence D. LAWRENCE GRONER, LL. D. (Associate Justice of the Court of Appeals. D, C.) Professor of the Law of Admiralty THOMAS H. PATTERSON, LL. B, the Washington. D. C.. Bar) Professor of the Law of Contracts ana Assoctate Professor of the Law of Real Property RICHARD A. FORD, LL. M. (Of the Washington. D. C.. Bar) Judge of the Practice Court of Appeals FENTON W. BOOTH, LL. D. (Chief Justice of the U. S. Court of Claims) Professor of Jurisprudence JULIUS 1. PEYSER, D. C. L. (0f the Washington, D. C.. Bai Professor of Eauity Practice and Judge of the Equity Branch of the Practice Court CHARLES S. LOBINGIER, D. C. L, J.UD. (Sometime U. S. Judge, Philippine Islands and China) Professor of Roman. Civil and Comparative Law OSCAR R. LUHRING, LL. D. uuarmze Justice gf the Supreme Court. D. C.) Professor of Eaquity Plendin( and the Law of Surétyship JOHN PAUL EAI!NEST. LL. M. (Of the Washington. D. C.. Bar) Lecturer on Anglo-American Law and Constitutional History ERNEST W. GIBSON, LL. D. (U. S. Semator. Vermont) Lecturer ‘on Trial Procedure PEYTON GORDON, LL. D. (Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. D. C.) Professor of the Law of Bankruptcy JAMES M. PROCTOR, LL. D. (Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, D. C.) Professor of the Law of Crimes F. DICKINSON LETTS, LL. D. (Associate Justice of the Suprews Courf. D. C.) fessor of the Law of Mortgages w]LLlAM W. MILLAN, LL M. Judse ot the Practice’ Court ot Appeals and Lecturer on Appellate Practice (Of the Washington, D. C.. Bar) Professor of the Law of Torts and Common Law Pleading MILTON STRASBURGER, D. C. L. (Sometime Judge of the Municipal Court. D. C.) Professor of Equity Jurisprudence (Cases). and Lecturer on the District of Columbia Cwe Law WILLIAM A. COOMBE, LL. (Of the Washington. D_ C.. mm Professor of the Law of Marriage and Divorce THOMAS E. ROBERTSON, LL. D. (Sometime U.'S. Commissioner of Patents) Professor of Patent Law RICHARD FLOURNOY, LL. M. (Assistant_Solicitor, U. S. Department of State) Professor of International Law WALTER M. BA'STlA.\ LL. M. Professor of the Law of Evidence and of Legal Ethics J. ROBERT ANDERSON, LL. M. (Attorney. U. S. Department of Justice) Lacturer dn Government Contracts and Claims and Jurisdiction and Practice of the Court of Claims VERNON E. WEST, LL. M. (Assistant Corporation Counsel for the District of Columbig) Professor of the Law of Insurance GEORGE PERCY BARSE, LL. (Counsel, U. S. Treasury Department) Professor of the Law of Damages and Assoclate Professor of the Law of Real Property 0. L. MOHUNDRO, D. C. L. (Eraminer Interstate Commerce Commission) Professor of Interstate Commerce Law and Jurisdction and Practice of the Commission and the Law of Bailments and Carriers P. H. MARSHALL, LL. M. (Of the Washington. D. Bar and sometime Assistant Corporation Counsel for the District of Columbia) Professor of the Law of Municipal Corporations and the Law of Evidence (Cases) THEODORE PEYSER, LL. M. (Of the Washinoion. D. C.. Bar) Lecturer on Case Study and Analysis GEORGE E. EDELIN, LL. M, (Of the Washinaton. D. C.. Bar) Professor of the Law of Negotiable Instruments Associate Erofessor of the Law of Real Properts (Cases) and Associate Judge of the Equity Branch of the Practice Court H. WINSHIP WHEATLEY, LL. M. (01 the Washington. D. C.. Ba Professor of Criminal Law and Judge of the Probate Branch of the Practice Court HERBERT L. DAVIS, LL. M. (Sometime Commissioner of Insurance. D. C., and Auditor of the Supreme Court, D. C.J Lecturer on Administration of Trust Estates THOMAS C. HAVELL, LL. M. (Assistan: Commissioner. U. S. Land Office) Professor of Land, Mining and Irrigation Law GODFREY L. MUNTER, LL. M. (0f the Washington. D. C._ Bar) Professor of the Law of Sales and Extraordinary Legal Remedies_ and Lecturer on Office a: Court Practice (Of the Washington. D. Protessor ot the Law of Contracts (Cases) BERTRAND EMERSON, LL. M. Of the Washington. D. C.. Bar and Sometime Assistant U.'S. Attorney for the Districs Lecturer on. Criminal Procedure EUGENE R. WOODSOV LL M. Of the Washinnton Professor of the Law ‘of Wilis and_ Administration NATHAN CAYTON, LL. M (Judge of the Municipal Court, D. Judge'of the Law Branch of the Practice’ Court WALTER N. TOBRL\ER LL. B. (Of the Washington. D. C.. Bar) Professor of the Law of Domestic Relations L. HAROLD SOTHORON, LL. M. (Of the Washinnton. D. C.. Bar) Professor of the Law of Private Corporations D. PERCY HICKLING, LL. D. (Sometime Alienist for the District of Columbia) Professor of Medical Jurisprudence CHARLES P. SHERMAN, D. C. L, LL. D. (Sometime Professor of Law at Yale University Law School and Jurist and Publicist) Professor of Canon Law and Modern Church L Lecturer on Research in Greek or Hellenic La H. B. McCAWLEY, LL. M. (Of the Washington, D. C.. Bar) Lecturer on the Law of Federal Taxation, Income and Estate Taxes CLINTON ROBB, LL. B. the Washinaton. D. Lecturer on the Jurisdiction and Practice of the deral Trade Commission EV] ERE’I'I‘ F. HAYCRAFT, LL. B. (Of the Washinaton, D. C.. Bar) Lecturer on Anti-Trust Laws HOWARD LEROY, LL B. (Of the Washington, D. Professor of Radio and er Law lnd an!rnl(!nnil ms CALVIN 1. KEPHART, D. C. L. (Principa} Ezaminer. Intersiate Commerce Commission) Associate Protessor.of Gonfict of Laws THOMAS E. RHODES, LL. M. (Of the Washington, D. .. Bar) Lecturer on Public spgtkm' and in Charge of al Debati E. E. NAYLOR. D.C. L. (0f the Washington, D. C.. Bar) Professor of Municipal Government EDWIN S. PULLER, LL. D. (Of the Washington. D. C., Bar) Professor of Comparative Government GEORGE H. ZEbTZlUS. LL B. (Of_the Washinnton. D. Associate Professor of the Law of Corporations RUSSELL P. BELEW, LL. B. (Assistant_Clerk of the Supreme Court, D. C.) Clerk of all Practice Courts JOHN L. CASSIN LL M (Of the Washinoton, Assistent Dean and Facuits Representative nd School of Economics and Government LATE AFTERNOON SESSIONS—CO-EDUCATIONAL Standard four-year collegiate courses leading to degree of Bachelor of Arts (A. B.) Six-year combined course leading to A. B. and LL. B. degrees DEPARTMENTS OF HISTORY, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, POLITICAL SCIENCE AND GOVERNMENT, ECONOMICS AND FINANCE Principles_of Economics Business Fin; ‘redit. Prinei Credit. Collections Federal Reserve Sysiem Marketing Corporation Finance Contract: En, bl soeatine French, Introd Enelis ory International Relations For catalogues containing information as to qualifications for admission and other requirements apply to REGISTRAR, NATIONAL UNIVERSITY 818 13th St. N.W. NAtional 6617