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THE SUNDAY b. . PAYS TRIBUTE TODEAN HANILTON Senior Class Gives Portrait to Law School at Opening | of Commencement. | | Lyons and nearly night in Hamil eran dean of aw school ler of the Dis for 53 vears. hix country and casion. which marked the | of commencement week at Georgetown, was the presentation of A portrait of- Dean Hamilton to the law school hy the senior class President' Lyons made the announce ment for the first time that the American Bar Assocfation has just declared the Georgetown Law School of the highest rank among the law schools of the country. “I feel that Dean Hamilton w honored,” he added, “when the b association put the Georgetown Law School in class he portrait on behalf | Father Lyons paid a | Hamilton a8 a man of whose service to b und the welfare of the serves as u model for . Georgetown students has ever come to the uni versity which 1 prize more highly sald lather Lyons, “than this testi monial to one to whom Georgetown owes so much to Mr PORTRAIT PRESENTED TO G. U. LAW SCHOOL. R. Murphy, the class valedictory. While the law senfors were holding forth the National Georgetown Alumni Assoclation held its annual meeting on {the Hilltop, re-electing Frank J. Hogan | as president. Other officers re-elected for the year were Luclen E. Van Doren, secretary, and Hugh J. Fegan, assistant dean of the law achool, treasurer. ] Reports from the deans of the vari ous departments and from Louls | Little, director of athletics, were sub mitted. President Lyons and Mr. Hogan In addressing the alumni em phasized Georgetown's hopes of carry |ing out successfully its ambitious bullding program. ‘The annual busi | ness meeting of the association was | postponed until “Home Coming Week," | next November 6. Class Day Exercises. Outside in the brilliantly lighted | auadrangle the college seniors held their class day exercises, featured by | the Cohorongurton oration by Esmond D. Murphy. Perched high above the | entrance to the Healy Buflding, and | garbed as an Indian chieftain, Mr. | Murphy ®ave the traditional farewall of the seniors to the Potomac River, | which has flowed Georgetown history | for 136 vears. Other features of the | Hilltop exercises were the salutatory by Frank J. Murray, and a oneact play called “Classmat ' a story of Georgetown men fn the Civil War. Those who took part In it were James | E. McLarney, Thomas A. Callaghan, Willlam J. Kalt, Matthew J. Lyvons, ®and Joseph N. deRalsmes. A double quartet consisting of John | McDonough, Richard McDonough | John Joyce, Charles Crowlev, Thomas K 3 nes Mclarney, Willilam | 010 by Richard McDonough | | London to Honor Mute Heroes. | Corresp idence vt the Amsociated Press LONDON, May 19.—The Royal So- STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JUNE 17, 1925—PART 1. HONORARY DEGREE | rowres b ororscions FORCOL ASKELL Prominent - Soldier to Be Made Doctor of Laws by Georgetown University. | Col. Willlam Nafew Haskell, a most | distinguished soldier and representa- | tive of the United States in the recon- | struction period following the World ‘War, is to receive the honorary degree | fof doctor of laws from Georgefown University tomorrow. Col. Haskell is a n: ve of Albany N. Y., and is in his 47th vear—a de. endant of William Haskell, who me from England in the seventeenth century and settled Stonington, Conn. He was graduated at the West | Point Military Academy in 1901, at the School of the Line in 1904 and at the | Army Staff Colloge in 1905. He was commissioned first Heutenant in 1906, captain in 1916. major in 1917 and " : K fentehint calonat In 1090 COL. WILLIAM N. HASKELL. He assisted in the organization of |~————————————— T 29th Infantry after the e OS] oy Siadt Golicke 5t Tangroe'snd s ippine Islands with the Sth Cavalry|CAme assistant oper: R during 1901-2, and the 4th Cavalry dur-|2d American Army ps on the Brit ing 19067 in operations ugainst the|iSh front. Subsequently he was trans Moro tribes. Colonel of 69th New York. | Louned to the New York National Guard in 1916, he becar lonel of the famous Irish regiment, the 69th New York, when 1t was sent to the Mexican border, and within a few months transformed it into one of the most efficient fighting units in the country A week before the United States en Mi opera tions of the . com manded by Lieu Bullard, After the armistice, at the request of Herbert Hoover, director general of relief operations in Europ, he was de tailed as chief of the allied mission to Rumanis to alleviate famine con ions officer of the | serations (o the 4th | menia, and coincidently was charged | with the co-ordination of all foreign | | relief measurex. He entered upon these | duties in July, 1919 | In order to consolidate effori, he ]Ilmk over the relief work of the Ar menian Relief Association, the Amer- | ican Committee for Relief in the Near | the A an Red Cross, and all | nd Eur & relief | | CAMP MEETING ENDS AT TAKOMA PARK Services This Evening to Wind Uy 10-Day Gathering of Adventists. Sep- | or | Returning to tember, 1920, he of salex of surplus |until August. 1921 Washington in was acting direc Army war stocks when he was called upon o undertake a relief enterprise vastly larger and more important [than any he had yet eonducted. The! ooy in Takoma Park, will come to a | Russian_government, through Maxim | cloge tonight with a lecture hy Rev. Gorky, had appealed to the world for | g "4 Hartar on the subject “Commu id in’ combating a famine that was picavin " Wi ) 10 " ading over large areas In Russia Another feature of this evening's 18ing an appalling loss of life, and | gervice will he a musical program un: in some districts driving the inhabl-| gar the direction of Prof. T. H. Bar< tants o cannibalism. ritt, which will include selections by ¥ lief. an orchestra, solos on glass tumblers, ieaded Russian Rellef the saw. the oboe. the saxophona | ¥unds amounting to nearly $70.000.. chimes and xviophone, as well as {000 were provided. of which $24.000.-| congregational singing. The musical 1000 was appropriated by the United | feature will begin a1 1:15 o'clock “ongress and $12,000,000 by the | The dav's program will begin with sviet government, $10.000.000 by the | services for the young people and American Relief Administration. and | older folks in saparate pavilions at # the nder by other organizations.|am. W. W. Jennings will be the With headquarters in Moscow, Col.|speaker to the adults at o'clock. Dr, | Haskell nrgani a Russian mHMIB. F. Bryan. pastor of the headquar {corps of 1 workers and 20,000 | ters church. will speak at 11 o'clock |feeding stations in the famine dis " H G r 4t 3 and O. K. Butler, |tricts. through which 72,000 carloads | who has recently returned from a 12 of American foodstuffs were distrib-| vear stav as a missionary in South [uted to the starving Russians. more| Africa. will speak at 4:30 than 11,000,000 being fed daily for| Yesterdav was observed as the months in_spite of enormous trans-|bath at the encampment port difficulties and disorganized con-|church in Virginia was represented, [ditions xene and many came from Raltimore and Col. H other points in Maryland in effec disease, | . iu which m; The 10.day camp mesting of the Potomac Conference of Seventh-Day Adventists. which has been in prog- Uittinated “sani.| Many Japanese Nonagenarians. orced in thousands lages, and 14,000 hos- | tutions equipped with Correspondence of the Associated Press TOKIO, Ma 2 —In connection with the imperial gifts distributed to persons over %0 years of on the occasion of the royal silver wedding, the authorities found 19,500 persons American Red | Japan who were eligible. Sixty of 1 | pital supplies | In the Fall of 19 | loaned by the Ar > Col. Haskell was fean Rellef Ad the | stration 10 tions. He checked a devastating salt s to lled | famine, obtained transportation for upon | American food supplies and ar supervise relief work among | cent of them were women ugees who had fled | women, 111 years of age eac eece | the longevity record. Served for 50 Years. Eugene ( the senior cl portrait, dec rrait tered the European war he was c back to the Federal service ar the creation of the National Army he [an agreement among th sent 1o the headquarters of Camp the distribution pton. Long Island. he hecoming adju intng in that tant and later chief of staff of the 77th on his return te Paris. he Division selected by the.allied supreme coun Arriving in Prance, he attended the ! eil as allied high commissioner 1o At or McLaughlin, president of | ass, who presented the ared it “tendered with 1o ands and willing hearts. He praised Mr. Hamilton as one who had_been identified with the growth of Georzetown since hisx admission as | golden jubilea anni at_the age of 13 vears in | zraduation 30 years, he said, Mr.!| The address o | memorial Hyde Park and has commissioned a sculp. tor to undertake the work. A wounded o yun, president | horse and a dog figure in the gro which will stand on s granite b along which will run a frieze rapre. senting the animals which helped in the war ed unceasingly for | lw university, which | made by 1 him on the his Hamilton has sery the welfare of the three vears agn honored ceived the distinguished service m from the I'nited States and the splcuous service medal of the S of New York nia ler of Polonia Res and officers of the Legion of of the morning section France, and he also re Trvin Toseph A ersary of gave the class history f welcome at the ! 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