Georgetown University - Ye Domesday Booke Yearbook (Georgetown, DC)

 - Class of 1923

Page 222 of 584

 

Georgetown University - Ye Domesday Booke Yearbook (Georgetown, DC) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 222 of 584
Page 222 of 584



Georgetown University - Ye Domesday Booke Yearbook (Georgetown, DC) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 221
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Georgetown University - Ye Domesday Booke Yearbook (Georgetown, DC) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 223
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Page 222 text:

lxxxsx x LX,,?::,T ,,.,x .KxNK. 1 wma xxxxx ixxuks lsxxx X x,,,,,, .4, ' V 1 mx xnxx XXXX xx 'rx X X X X Q .x.x : :::,,.--SFX QYI x Q Ls g X is WM,,,,,.,aw.:....m W gm s sw :sw X Q NNN N-N NXW-w.t....,s.,.. kx...,.,,.. wa-.t.....,a. Xxws Nsw...-s supreme duty and obligation to bring credit and glory to her name, and to keep ever fragrant the memory of the splendid record that this class has left behind. As one looks back over the three short years that have passed, there can be seen, in each man of the Class of 1923, certain splendid achievements. which successes will be constantly increasing as the future years come and go. lt is only necessary to review the work of men of our profession throughout the country to realize what Georgetown men do. And so, our faculty and University can be sure that there will be an incessant echo in the form of He is a Georgetown man of lQ.23.i' ' The brilliant. aye. l might even say extraordinary, although, of course, vividly green collection of freshmen which has now grown into this dignified class of 244 seniors, first appeared in Hall 1, in October, IQZO, before the entire faculty, including the Reverend Rector, Father Creeden, at which time we received our first advice on how to make ourselves successful lawyers and good citizens. During our freshman year many social events and class activities came to pass, many victories and few defeats. XYhy? For we had that sterling good fellow, Walter bl. Nilan as our president. .Xnd what a wealth of material there was from which to select the other officers. Such able assistants as Jerry Burns, Sam Gilmore, Harry NlcNerney, XYilliam 1X. Smith. iid Heafey. Frank Daley, Edward Reynolds and L. I. Fitchthorn completed the official portfolio in our first year. They, exercising the trusts and confidences reposed in them by their fellow classmen, set a high standard for future class activities. Our first get-together, the smoker, was held at the Xilashington Hotel. where one of the most spirited affairs ever held by a Georgetown class was enacted. lt was an event that bespoke with emphasis the aggressive and whole-hearted spirit with which the class was to participate in future social activities at Georgetown. Professor Laskey, speaking with all the sobriety of his cfficial togo, and in front of thunderous applause, told us it was the liveliest Georgetown Smoker he had ever attended. Professor Fegan en- dorsed it as the best. Further congratulations were unnecessary for the activities themselves spoke for the enjoyment and success of the evening. The next event which appeared on our ponderous freshman record was the 'fpromf' held at the XVardman Park Hotel. The committee, chairmaned by that genial and suave bon 'I'l.'Z't1IIf, Jeff Sullivan, gave to our class an event that occasioned no little favorable comment for its elaborateness and success. Our freshman year furnished us with a Debating Society that has turned out some of the best teams that have ever represented Georgetown. This society listed on its rolls some of our most distinguished members. Among them, jeff Sullivan, XValter Nilan, .Xl Kane, E. Costello, John F. Victory, me N X Tqiiii NSS ' XS '::::::? assess- Y - :::f s Sw vs x' 1' NX' X N' si isishsssoit t fsstt i t it . . . Ss . . .S . . . Q .oo -. . -. Q-.cs-1--s ..: -.-. ws- . ' s-.ss-Q.-Q.: -a ss-Q - -- . . .. ,-rs.-,..., l- . -TV

Page 221 text:

x.... N.x.kX. . Q31 ' ' 5 it ' ,, A X Q' irx ...K . ,x.k , X sts I .Nk..N. ,.: .X... .... .-Q- - - is fi-ss we x 'k' N,k. XXwv,t,4.? Q ---- ...A.... V. , ,,,. 3 ,..4 i X y t. Lf . ul' n f J f . ' ,1 4 H liiatnrg nf the 0112155 nf 1923 XXNWMX 'Q tx'x' - -- -' - st- -s x . w t-- ss--s www It fx.. jggrw USTOM decrees that each year some ineinber of the graduating class shall record the deeds that the class has performed during its stay at the University. 'lihe writer has been selected for this duty. and will endeavor lo portray, to the best of his ability the glorious deeds and exploits of the Class of 11933, for who could hope to do otherwise in such a brief history. The class history of the 1933 Class niay well be described by the follow- ing phrase: Three years of happy association, three years of splendid learn- ing under one of the best legal faculties in the land, three years of deeds long to be 1'C1'llCl11lJ61'CCl.U lt is not exactly possible to write of all the things that have transpired in our days at the law school, for that would take many volumes. lt is there- fore feared by the writer that this article will be inadequate as a historyg but. it is hoped, that it will serve as a modest reniindei' of those happenings that took place in our law school days, and which will, in the years to come, be an aid in strengthening our recollections of those pleasant experiences. As the nieinbers of each graduating class line up for the Hnal roll call before departing for their honies, there comes to each and every nieniber a certain sadness at the thought of never being united again as a class entire. but only as a skeleton at some Georgetown reunion. ln October, IQZ3, there will be no reasseinbling of the class, in the past, an event that has always been looked forward to with fond anticipation. But the blue and gray flag of the Class of 19.23 will be unfurled to niany foreign scenes and courts. il lowever. the writer feels safe in saying that there will not be one of us who will be uninindful of the debt we owe our Alina Mater, and that each will feel it his Y A -t f X X NX. .s .A is v 6. ix . - Ax. at x XGX Q .As .. Q NJ KX i7i.'.::s s' '- -' -W P--NT'-1 M A Nw



Page 223 text:

, X. X N Wx .... ..,v.vssXXg gg N N , ...xxx -f-- ss E Q.-Xe... ,s 5 N is ,.,.. .aa gm , Ne. we YTD 'DX X NS N jess my Veeder Donaghy, Tom Leavey, Rudolph johnson and jack XYhite, have bravely and victoriously borne our standards in the field of debate. All have participated in prize debates and have brought credit and honor to our class. The Lam' fourlzal Staff, for the past three years, has enjoyed the privilege of having' on its staff the following members of the 1925 Class: Victor S. Mersch, Frank Ifasby-Smith, lddward McCarthy, Allen Tingey, Tom Regan, Sam Boyd, john McG-arry, XYilliam C. DeLacey, Daniel Lynch and Harold Beacke. Daniel Lynch was selected by the retiring staff of lQ22 to edit this important feature of the University for the year of '23. These men have all worked hard and acco-mplished their task by placing the Georgetown La-zu JOHVIIUI in the fore as a college publication of past perfection. fn the fall of 1921, the Class returned to the University with the title of juniors and prepared to set our freshmen friends examples worthy of emula- tion. The most noteworthy achievements in that year were two in number: the junior Smoker, captained by Al Kane, and the junior Prom., led by l,arry Hardy, both of which affairs were highly successful. In that year, the Class chose for its pilot that much admired and all-around good fellow, Dick Herbert. by whose splendid leadership we were able to advance another milestone in our unbroken and unspotted chain of victories. ln October, 1922, we gathered for the final chapter. Two hundred and forty-four men comprised our rolls, a gradual falling off of the previous year's attendance. The ranks were thinned-it may have been because of Professor joseph Sullivan's Slaughter of the Innocents, in our most beloved subject of Real Property, or of some catastrophe in Professor O'Donoghue's pet subjects, Equity and Common Law Pleadingf' By a tenacity of purpose and a merciful faculty, we were able to start on our last lap with two suc- cessful years behind us. Our senior year has passed tranquilly, save for an occasional breach of quietness in Professor Keigwirfs Sub Silc'11c1'0 sessions, while he so diligently expounds the juridical dichotomy of the law. VVhen we look back, it would seem that we had come to the University only last week, so quickly have these three happy years passed. Vtfliat have we done in this our last year? True to the traditions of Georgetown Senior Law classes, a political cam- paign for class officers was soon under Way. It is hard to imagine a keener, cleaner or more commendable competition taking place while organizing the campaigns of the various candidates for office. There was electioneering in every man's mind, each for his favorite, but all strong for the success of 1923. XYhen you have such candidates as jack Quinn, Tim Daley, Emmet Doherty and Al Kane for president, it is not hard to understand the closeness of the battle that was waging. The finest tribute that can be paid to any men in such NNN N W vN XN NNmN Q w lN N i..XN,Y,E ,, .. .Q,.-www aw sax. is.. ww My ...SK . .,.. .. .Nxmx w , vw . .. 3g.,...NMw .is g . X X - . .. . -it . . ... ..

Suggestions in the Georgetown University - Ye Domesday Booke Yearbook (Georgetown, DC) collection:

Georgetown University - Ye Domesday Booke Yearbook (Georgetown, DC) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Georgetown University - Ye Domesday Booke Yearbook (Georgetown, DC) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 517

1923, pg 517

Georgetown University - Ye Domesday Booke Yearbook (Georgetown, DC) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 255

1923, pg 255

Georgetown University - Ye Domesday Booke Yearbook (Georgetown, DC) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 384

1923, pg 384

Georgetown University - Ye Domesday Booke Yearbook (Georgetown, DC) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 376

1923, pg 376

Georgetown University - Ye Domesday Booke Yearbook (Georgetown, DC) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 280

1923, pg 280


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