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Dr. Hill Warns of Limitations and Responsibilities of Education. With the admonition to shun cyni- ®ism in their search for truth and accept | the challenge of an ever-changing civil- | ization to contribute to its progre Tinging in their ears, 432 George Wi ington Universit ates accepted their coveted degrees in the university's| commencement last night in Constitu- | tion Hall and sallied forth into life It was Dr. David Sy president of the University Mexico and now research associate of | the National Advisory Committee on| Educaticn, who warned the young men and women of the limitations and re- sponsibilities which education gave | 'm. It was Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin president of their own alma mater, who conferred .upon them through their de- | grees the mantle of education and who | gave them his wishes for success in the | | Dever-pausing Mfe which Dr. Hill has . @epicted for them “This graduation class” Dr. Hill de-| clared, “embodies the faith of parents,| their ‘love and s; the collective | confidence of many ci | cacy of formal education to bring about| changes in human nature for the bet- | terment of society through the per- petuation of the culture of centuries, and through the protection of civiliza- | tion by combating the evils resulting | from ignorance, namely, discase, pov- | eriy, superstitions and premature death. | *Whether the scientist or the poet por- | trays the stages of life, existence never | sctually pauses; it is.never at a stop- ge or resting place. Life is ceaseless. | e important practical question is— since we are confronted by and are a Tt of universal change—are our own gs and inner life only a phase of the universal blind process? Are we| merely victims of mechanical forces, or €an we in considerable degree become | asters of our own lives?” Cites Development of Life. An_open consideration of this ques- tion, Dr. Hill contended, shows that the findings of science, philosophy and re- | ligion, as distinguished from mere| theologles, are not as hopelessly contra- dictory as they seem. - Life itself is de- velopment, he asserted, but not merely an uncontrolable chemical process that ide: s against religion. | nate religion, ?. | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. Seven graduates of George Washington University received their degrees “with high distinction” at the commence- ment_exercises held last night. In the photo, seated, left to right: the picture was taken. They are photographed with Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin, president of the university. Ruth Bawell, President Marvin and Elizabeth Bunten. Gretchen Rogers, Virginia Shull, Elizabeth Styron and Herbert E. Angel. The seventh honor graduate, Virginia Mitchell, was not present when Standing, left to right: —Star Staff Photo, best as a participant in the mighty, truggle of the race to overcome. | Cynicism, the sense of futility, par-| both of the dignity of labor and the | imperative need to fight in the great | cause of conscious human development, festation of an inferiority complex on the part of some of the crusaders The crusade to elimi- he declared, “will ulti- | mately become a disastrous _crusade, because where science and philosophy end, then faith psychologically begins in order to satisfy the inextinguishable craving for the infinite.” is once gained. Shall we be content to nakes man a victim of fate. He cited| ‘aritt to and fro on the misty flats,’ | preventive medicine and surgery, and the business feld advertising and | persuasion, as evidence of the daily modification of bodies, minds and or- + ganisms, adding: “And formal education is nothing less n the struggle to change human + beings in accordance with the standards ‘-'n:a Ideals which society has painfully “Mental life,” Dr. Hill said, “is the highest product of the university and the choicest fruit of the life is self de- termination.” Continuing, he told the graduates that while the acquisition of sclentific knowledge is essential in order o conquer even a fragment of nature and to attain freedom of spirit, “sheer knowledge is capable of destroying both #n individual and also the civilization of which knowledge is a part.” Scientific knowledge, he explained, has brought most of the practical good man enjoys, but while that knowledge gave the world Iabor-banishing machines, he contended " #t ‘gave it also “the possibility of the few exploiting the many” in economic njustice, slavery and bloody revolution. e problem of securing the maxi- mum good while avoiding the evils of fast-accumulating scientific knowledge, Dr. Hill declared, is an issue today which knows no superior. Knowledge Brings Good and Evil. “Knowledge purchased by a price in- calculable in gold and by struggle and human suffering,” he declared, “brings both good and also_evil into the world. But one need not elapse into that form of attempted escape from reality known #s pessimism and cynicism in order to solve this en! b Dr. Hill referred at this point to Soviet Russia’s efforts to crush religion, char- acterizing those attempts as “a mani- In his conclusion Dr. Hill told the A gdu-m that the energies of men - it have been used for aggression and mutual destruction in wars must be | directed constructively. Citing the | in bacteriology which has m control of plagues, in miner- ology which brought the ores that have been fashioned into toil-eliminating machines and in psychology which has provided improvement in industry’s personnel, educational methods and in- sanity prevention, he declared: *All these activities of men offer | fields for joyful struggle to the youth of today and invite him to give his ' L t t 1 cise T} tion), Catherine Jean Bethune, Bygate Booth, Anita B. Brown, Oneda Maybelle Brown, Elizabeth Bunten (with high distinction), distinction), Morris Chase, Harold Eglin Cheyney, Margaret Bryant Cobb, Catherine Cate Coblentz (with distinction), Lo ton Cocke (with distinction), Charles ‘William Cole, Bernard Wallace Conger, Taliaferro Conway, H. Naomi Crumley ningham, or shall we consciously fight to exer-| choice, decision; to advance, hrough personal effort and : organized research, a step further in the devel- opmegt of power to control nature and ourselves?” The ®xercises were opened following he traditional academic procession nto the hall. Prof. Elmer Louis Kayser, marshal of the university, led the file of graduates and faculties into the big auditorium. Music played by John Russell Mason, organist, he; the arrival marked the opening of Rev. All Saints” Church in Chevy Chase, pronounced the invocation. ralded rocession and the exercises. pastor of of the Henry Teller Cocke, ‘The candidates for degrees were presented by the deans of the vari- ous schools and directors of the de- partments. to the rostrum Dr. Marvin conferred the degrees. which was intoned by Rey. Dr. Cocke, the graduates and faculties filed again in academic procession from the audi- torium while the stood. As the graduates walked After the benediction, capacity audience Those Recelving Degrees. Degrees in course were conferred at the George Washington University com- mencement last night as follows: Columbian College. Bachelor of Arts—Victor Allex, Flora Toba Alpert, Herbert Edmund Angel (with high distinction), Linwood XK. Bailey, Ruth Amanda Bawell (with high distinction), Vincent James Bellafiore, homas Bernard Bentley (with distinc- Betsy Max Caplan (with Ruth Christine Chindblom, uise Wil- William Ernest Coleman, Katherine (with distinction), Loretta Heany Cun- Harry Delbaum, Lewis N. Dembitz (with distinction), David Dia- mond, Louise Legare Duncan, Lindsay Opie Duvall, Edith Viola Edwards, Ger- fon Gutman Eisenberg, Joseph Epstein, | Richard Epstein, Louise Frances Fein- e Experts Agree on Their Remarkab An impartial jury o turers, retailers and that Miller Cooks shoes on the market le Value f tanners, manufac- buyers will declare are the finest $10 today. Reasons? Certainly; Nettleton designed them— stein (with distinction), Irvin Feldman (with _distinction), Robert Earle Fix, Mary Elizabeth Ford (with distinction), asitism, cannot abide where this vision, | Maurice Friedman, Florence Ruth Fritz, Helen Catlin Furer, Aaron Harry Ger- | ber, Willilam David Goldberg, Helen Bernice Goodin, Warren Edwin Grav Dorothy Gray, Robert Meade Gray Stella Porter Green, Nancy Griswold (with distinction), Frank Edward Grut- zik, Willard Lee Hammer (with distinc- tion), Ashlan Fleetwood Harlan, Flor- ence Harrington (with distinction), Jane Henderson, Caroline Hobbs, Elizabeth Hiden Hoge, Helen Edith Holaday, Franklin Austin Holmes, Laura Clarke Hooff, Raymond MacAllister Hull, Wil- liam Elderkin Huntington, Nannie Ar- mistead I'Anson, Alden Elon Imus, Jo- sephine Laure, Irey, Elizabeth Wingfield Jackson, Charles Grantham Jaquette, Merrill Edward Jefferson, Harold Leon Jenkins (with distinction), Richard Franklin Johnson (with distinction), Albert, Caldwell Johnston, Frances Beau- mont Jones, John Wesley Jones, Ann Patrick Kent, George Raymond Kieferle, Llewellyn H. King, Aaron HarrysKlei- man, Pauline Knauff (with distinction), William Luther Knott, Herbert George Kurtz, Claudia Lofs Kyle, Charles Baill Laughlin, Alicia Marie Lehman, Robert Sterling Leonard (with distinc- tion), Mark N. Linch, Edwin Chesley Estes Lord, jr.; Ellis W. Manning (with distinction), Lucy Rains Manning (with distinction), Jacob Herman Mason, Oneta McCarty (with distinction), Elizabeth Louise McGaughey, Grace May = McLean (with distinction), John Hamilton McNeely, Milton Eman- uel Mermerstein, Marguerite Sheffield Meyer, Verlin Estelle Mi®s, Barbara Ann Miller, Elizabeth Rgbecca Miller (with distinction), Nathan Miller, Ar- hur Minsky, rginia Mitchell (with high distinction), Helen Moore, Irma K. Mullins, George Theodore Mumaw, Mary Bedine Naylor, Allen Eldridge Neil, Richard David Nevius (with distinc- tion), Magdalene Rutan Newman, Law- rence Ayer Nichols, jr.; Kathryn Mae Orr (with distinction), Margaret Shir- ley Oxenburg, Dorothy Randall Phillips, Caroline R. Plugge, Eva Moore Pope, George Prussin, Dorothy Catherine Pul- len, Gilbert Rabinowitz, Clement J. Reap, Sarah Wilson Reed (with distinc- tion), Thelma Alice Replogle (with dis- E Simmons Beautyrest Mattress in the new tick- | tinction), Virginia Elizabeth Robinson | (with distinction), Gretchen Loulsa Rogers (with high distinction), Hen- rietta Anne Rosenthal, Dorothy Mae Ruth, Margaret Haywood Schneider, | Joshia_J. “Selinkoff, Thomas Shuler v, Virginia Moore Shull (with high | distinction), Fred Malcolm Shure, Wil- liam Titus Sichi, Donald Reginold Sick- |ler, Emilie Emma Siddall, Anna Jean | Sime, Helen Babp Smith, James Wilson Smith, _Aubrey Norris _Somervell, Joseph Ellis Sorrell (with distinction), Ella Lee Sowers, Margaret Louise Spratt, Judith Leroy Steele, Martha Lula Stecle, John Harold Stehman, Welby Reed Stevens, Virginia Janney Storck, Ethel Jane Theis, Jenny Emsley Turnbull, Melanie E. Uhlig, Margaret Lee Vail, Elizabeth Waller, Marjory A. Weaver, Esther Rae Wecksler (with distinction), Edward H. G. Weisser, Milton K. Wells, Elizabeth Beale Wheeler, John Leonard Wheeler (with distinction), Verna A. Whipple, I. Melvin Whitestone, Marga- ret Louisa Wills, James G. Wingo, Wil- liam Harvey Wise, jr.; Zora E. Woody, and Hikoji Yanagida. Bachelor of science —Glenn Lewis Barnum, Eugenia Cuviler (with distinc- tion), Harry Theodore Hutton, Edmund Houston McNally, Willard Hammond Mutchler, Helen Crockett, Nichols, John Adams Schricker and Arthur William Van Heuckeroth, School of Medicine, Doctor of medicine—Alfonso Leonard Algozer, James Clement Allison, Donald Cole Barber, Robert Claibourne Boyden, George K. Campbell, John Leland Card- well, Daniel Stephen DeStio, Willlam Shambough Detwiler, William Lloyd Eastlack, L. Otis Fox, Luciano Fiore Gentile, Stuart Bentley Gibson, Edgar Deucher Griffin, Benjamin Lewis Jones, jr.; John Albert Kardys, Max Katz, Sollie Katzman, Ira Ellen Kelly, Fred Robert Kelly, Oscar Lavine, Emanuel Liccese, John Bayne Marbury, Joseph Faraday Marinello, Spencer ~Vincent Meade, Francis Aurelio Merlo, Samuel Morrock, John Manly Orem, Hugo R. Paganelll, Howard Pope Parker, David Edman Quinn, jr.; Isadore Rod, Her- man R, Rothman, Luis Antonio San- chez, John James Scalzo, Willlam Schneider, Aaron §S. Schwartzman, Alma Jane Speer, Benneit A. Stoen, After a Hard Day You Deserve Proper Rest Success comes to the person who is properly rested ... a sleepy, dull mind will not function best . . . sound, invigorat- ing sleep is essential to your success. Choose good bedding and notice the difference in youtself. MAYER & CO. BEDDING IS GOOD A Few liems Are Quoted Inner-Spring De’ Luxe Coil Spring, very com- fortable and guaranteed. . ..$22 D. C., THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1930. Samuel Lester Tabb, Frank Joseph Vita, Harry Wallerstein, 'Max Jacob Wein- stein, Joseph C. Welsman, Charles B. Wigderson and Nat Joseph ‘Wilson. Nurses' diplomas—Ida Adelle Browne, Victorine L. Cherney, Elizabeth L. Cun- ninghsm, Roberta N. Deane, Naomi Z. Erb, Mildred A. Feagans, Wilma Ger- trude Frye, Alma A. Herndon, Mirlam F. Hess, Anna M. Nelson, Jane M. Pet- tit, Virginia Rafter, Mary C. Sette, Olive M. Btouffer, Jessie P. Wall and Lilllan White. Law School. Bachelor of laws—Karl J. Albrecht, David Samuel Allshouse, Julius Aronoff, Thomas J. Bailey, ir. (with distinction) ; Frank J. Barley, Maurice Runnels Barnes, Willlam James Barnes, Wil- liam Sidney - Bassler, John Calvin Box, jr.; James Keith Browne, Eliza- beth ~Gall Casteel, William Henry Churchwell, Raymond W. Cohen, Eliza- beth M. Cox, John William Cox, Donald Curtis, George B. Dent, jr.; Harold Dodd, Laurence Riggs Dodds, Daniel Christian Eberly, John Stirling Fessen- den, Ralph John Fichter, Melvin Free- bairn, Charles Futterer, Morgan M. Gil- bert, Louls Ginberg, Solomon Grossberg, Richard Haug, Jack Hayes, Mary Jo- sephine Holland, Albert Laurens Ingle. | Elsie Bradford Jansen, Albert Kimball Johnson, S. Warwick Keegin, Wade Hampton Kitchens, jr.; Louis Francis Kreek, Jullan L. Latimer, jr.; Park Hoffman Loose, Eiliott Dejarnette Mar- shall (with distinction), George Edward Monk (with distinction), Edmund Hurl- burt Parry, jr.; Philip’ Van Wagenen Peck, Angelo Marion Pisarra, Leslie Manfred_Rapp, Albert C. Reed, John Robert , 'Ray Dahiquist Reese, Owen G. Reichmann, Edwin Archer Riley, Junius Stowell Romney, George P. Sakis, Charles Thomas Shanner, William 'S. Shenker, Allan Edward Smith, Joel Gibson 'Stanford, Lionel Summers, John Gordon Turnbull, The- | odore Clay Uhler, William Addison Van- degrift, Patrick Jennings Warnick, F.! Roe Welse, Robert Rudolf Whitner and James Owens Wrightson. Master of laws—George Swartz Herr, School of Engineering. Bachelor of science in_chemical engi- neering—Lewis Harvey Phelps, jr. Bachelor of science in civil engineer- ing—Doyle Peter Affleck, Charles Alex- ander Burner; Mdrtin Duterman, Maceo Falso, William James Goodwin, Yost D. ‘Harbaugh, John Lenneis Haynes, Henry ‘William Herzog, Roydon Keyser McCul- lough, Milton Leonard Marland, R. Hamilton Rhea, Earl Chalmers Suther- land and John Philip Wildman. Bachelor of science in mechanical engineering—Joseph D. Bein, Charles Edward Brush, Earl Willlam Hunter, Lewis E. Keil and Richard A. Parsons. Bachelor of science, in electrical engi- neering—Don Darrell Andrews, William Joseph_Ellenberger, Louis August Geb- hard, Raymond F. Hossfeld (with dis- :lncllon) and Curtis Frederick Prang- ey. " School of Pharmacy. Gradute in pharmacy—Charles Arone stein, Hugh Stockman Cawthorne, Fred- erick Mahlon Everly, Vincent Benjamin Norelli, Harry Rosen. Bert Campbell Sasher, Joseph Schenck, Philip Shapiro, Harold D. Trantham and Samuel Wein- stein. School of Education. Bachelor of arts in education—Kath- erine Elizabeth Bergin, Irene Thomas Blythe (with distinction), Janice Bur- roughs (with: distinction), Ruth Camp- bell, Ethel Lamb Carney, Edna Preston Collins, Mildred A. Conklin, Helen Cut- ting Drew, Virginia King Frye, Anne Meade Haskins, Alice Marguerite Hill, Jean Van Loan Jackson, Edward Lin- coln Karmany, Virginia Crocker Linger, Margaret Mary Lockwood, Emiley Floyd Mitchell, Margaret Monk, Margaret Pa- tricla Murray, Marie F. Ockershausen, Virginia May Parton, Helen Louise Pro- bey, Catherine Rita Rich, Fay Rives, Mary Helena Ruby, Catherine Louise Shaw, Mary Elizabeth Sheads, Ruth Margaret Smedman, Gladys Stubbs, Margaret Grimm Umbaugh, Louise ‘Viehmeyer (with distinction) and Anna Louise Wenchel. Master of arts—Herbert Charles Brown, Lucille Finsterwald Ezekiel, Robert William Hambrook, Mildred Eve- lyn Stallings, Jeahette Fairbairn Stat- ham, Lester Transue Walter, Suzanne Beatrice Waters and Blanche Bowden Wilcox. | Doctor of philosophy—Francis M. Crowley. . Library Science. Bachelor of arts in library science— . B—13 John Paul Cullen, Powrie Vaux Docwr,l Crawford Taliafei Emma Mertins Elizabeth Belle Drewry, Margaret Gad- | Thom, Lida Josephine Usilton, Wanda dis Dutton, Richard Edge, Mildred Von | Webb, Cecil er White and Chris- Eiff Eichner, Mary Ewin, William Feller, | tine Margaret Williams. Willilam Alfred Pisher, Leon Stuart| Master of sclence: in chemistry— Gordon, Frederick Kilby Hall, Ann‘ Nicholas George Barbell. Sparks Hamilton, Sophus Dee Hanson,| Master of science—Harold A. Craft, Nelle Quinn Hargrave, Martha Eliza-| Walter Scholl and Herman Delius beth Harris, Karla Louise Heurich, Wil- | Weihe. liam Delmar Hershberger, Caroline G.| Doctor of philosophy—Ira Edwards, Hogue, Elbert Lowell Huber, Ethel Mina | Josiah Turner Newcomb and Walter Klemm, Emily Brown Kline, May Lep- | Courtney Werner. ley, Patricia McMurray, Hideomi Mori, Division of Fine Arts. Mallie_John Murphy, Katherine Eliza-| Bachelor of arts—Merrie Pender Chil- Parker, Charles Edgar Randall,|drey and Margaret Catherine Kane. 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