Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 89

Location:
Rochester, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
89
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Subwibarb and. Qoumh VlmvA. SECTION ROCHESTER, ft Y. eratnrmt SUNDAY. MARCH 4 -HENRY W.

CLUNE'S- Salk Shortage Here Democrats Pledge To Be Remedied Soon, Help in Speeding Loop Bill Passage By PAT BRASLEY Local Democrats yesterday pledged to use their Folsom Forecasts Rochester's Salk polio vaccine shortage soon will be THE SAGE OF CONCORD' 4 THE UNIVERSITY of Rochester was founded in. 1850 and a year later the pains of Its infantile growth were recorded in the journal of a man who has been called by one of his biographers "The Wisest American," who had stopped briefly in Rochester on his way west. Writing under date of "Feb. 7, 1851, the great essayist, philosopher and leader of the new American culture had this to say about an institution that today enjoys an endowment of a multiple of millions: Mr. J.

A. Wilder made me acquainted with the Uni- remedied, Marion B. Folsom, secretary of health, education and welfare, indicated yesterday. influence in Albany to speed passage of the city's unique The former Eastman Kodak Co. speea-ine-ioop Dill.

i treasurer, after addressing the City Club at noon in the Cham Democratic action came in theitroduction in the Legislature. half of one million dollars in research in education to find ways of improving education so that' ber of Commerce, said: form of a resolution adopted by the Democrats' municipal affairs committee and forwarded to the more children can get a better "I have been meeting with the State Offered Loan The redrafted bill offers the state a loan of 2'i million dollars instead of the original 4'i start in life. presidents of the five companies Tetany ujl ik. wiiita ja cALeiuiJUiiaius jieje iiiuiucaitri line a picnic. They had bought a hotel, once a railroad terminus depot City Council.

which produce the vaccine and I The administration is ask The resolution "urged and de am encouraged that they will millions. All the money would manded" that the city administra be earmarked for construction of ing Congress for a major increase in funds for operating the Office of Education from three million this year to almost six millions tion request local legislators to the South Avenue to George go ahead with a program of increased production. We have another meeting scheduled in Washington next week." y. introduce an Inner Loop bill Street arc this summer in event the state lacked funds. authorizing the state to accept an advance from, the city for loop construction.

next year. "Higher education is the re Since early January, when eli Vice Mayor Joseph Farbo at gibility for Salk inoculation was sponsibility of the states, locali Democrats promised to send Tuesday's Council meeting gave indirect recognition that Democratic co-operation could help ties and private groups and insti for $8,500, turned the dining room into a chapel by putting up a pulpit on one side, made the barroom into a Pythalogian Societys Hall, the chambers into Recitation rooms, Libraries, Professor's apartments, all for $700 a year. "They had brought an omnibus load of professors down from Madison bag and baggage. Hebrew Greek Chaldee Latin Belles Letters Mathematics all Sciences called the Legislature's minority leaders, the State Public Works Depart tutions, but comprehensive plan extended to children six months to 14 years old, demand here has shot up sharply. Both the Rochester Health Bureau and the district state health offive have run out of vaccine four times.

There ning on a nationwide basis is needed. To encourage a broad scale attack on the problems of education beyond high school, the President will shortly appoint ment, and Gov. Harnman letters urging passage and approval of th- bill. The Democratic state administration and miniority leaders in has-been no vaccine available to either office in three weeks. a group of outstanding educators Albany would listen with attentive speed construction of the loop.

When Frank T. Lamb, a defeated Democratic candidate for the Council last fall, called on the councilmen to provide parallel streets to ease traffic congestion, he was told by Farbo: "Cost of parallel streets would be prohibitive. Wre have initiated the Inner Loop as an alternative. You, Mr. Lamb, have influence in certain quarters that might help us with our loop plans." Concerned by Lucy Case Folsom told the City Club his and citiezns to develop proposals in this field.

Our schools are overflowing with IVi mililon children ears to the. feelings of the local Democratic organization on any local bill sponsored by the Republican administration. Democrats Switch Position beyond the normal capacity of PRE-TALK PARLEY Rochester's Marion B. Folsom, left, U.S. secretary of health, education and welfare, confers with Dr.

Lynn Rumbold, president of Monroe County Medical Society, prior to Folsom's City Club speech. classroom space. In many com The Democratic stand was a department is "concerned" about the Authorine Lucy case and a proposed amendment to the federal school construction bill which would deny U.S. aid to states which do not abide by the Supreme Court anti-segregation ruling. Lamb is a member of the complete reversal from the position taken 24 hours earlier on an- munities this means overcrowding, half-day or doubled-up school sessions, and the pressing into service of makeshift buildings Democrats' municipal affairs committee.

He joined Council ontherbill. On Friday Democratic in a painter put him up a lader to paint the title 'University of Rochester' on the wall, and now they had runners on the road to catch students. One has come in yesterday; another, this morning; 'tho't they should like it first now they thot themselves ill used if they did not get a new student every day. And they are confident of graduating a class of ten by the time green peas are ripe." The discovery of this reference in Ralph Waldo Emerson's journal was made by Dr. William H.

Gilman, associate professor of English at the university, who was at Harvard in 1953 on sabbatical leave under a Ford Faculty Fellowship. In checking Emerson manuscripts in the Houghton Library for material for an article he was planning to write on Emerson, Gilman found to his surprise that no one had ever edited man John G. Bittner, Henry E. neevr designed for schools, Gillette, George Hoffenberg, and "President Eisenhower sees no Every live minutes, day and George W. Cooke in signing the night, a new classroom of chil reason why the bill should be tied down by such an amendment," resolution adopted yesterday, dren reaches schol age.

Needy Communities Folsom declared. Cruelty to Livestock Denied by Holley Man Richard J. Culross of Holley pleaded innocent to a charge of extreme cruelty to animals before Clarkson Peace Justice Lloyd H. Butterf ield yesterday. His case was adjourned until March 10 after he posted $25 bail.

Rotarians to Hear "The problem of segregation is in the hands of the courts," Chairman William N. Posner announced he would use his Albany pipeline to attempt to block passage of legislation which would permit consolitation of city and town police forces into a county department. The city's loop bill sprang from local fears that lack of state funds would delay completion this year of the southern arc of the Inner Loop arterial highway project. The original bill provided for the cit yto loan the state 4V4 mil- linn Hllfe -f rr trta nnnctrnntinn he said. This administration Is urging federal assitance to help the needy communities provide The secretary had this to say adequate classrooms for our cbil all of the journals of the "Sage of Concord." He called this major literary omission to the attention of on three major divisions of his department: dren.

We have designed this pro-era to distribute federal aid Culross was served a warrant Gannett Executive Paul Miller, executive vice president of The Gannett News-papers, will discuss his impressions of a recent tour through Latin America at the Rochester Rotary Club luncheon Tuesday noon at the Powers Hotel. Recently, Miller and Mrs. Mil Health "Since the end of where the needs are great; to sworn out by C. Raymond Nara- World War II, we Americans ly 'small room that did not allow them sufficient room to walk. He encourage a continued increase more of the Rochester Humane have been carrying on the most in the essential efforts of states Society earlier yesterday intensive and widespread research attack on human disease said that some of them were soWOrk on the loop and the Eastcrn and communities, and to avoid Sheriff's Deputy John Kinni-any federal interference whatso- cutt who investigated the corn- weak they could Hardly stand.

Thruway connection, The state the world has ever seen Despite this ever-increasing assault According to Naramore, who would compensate the city in ever with state and local control I plaint against Culross reported of education." Ithat at a Clarkson farm where liiat aii a wicu asuu ini in also paid a visit to the Clarkson1 future right-of-way payments. on disease, the problems still con ler returned from a trip to Guatemala, Venezuela and other Latin American countries. Topic of Miller's talk will be "Manana Is Passing as the Latin Slogan It'o r.sllinn In n. Tin Tf Welfare "Nine out of 10 per-iCulross was keePinS his animal? by social ne fund a chained dog frozen to fronting medical research are are many and complex farm, Culross had not attended1 The state administration and i f. 4u.

A11 iDPW balked at provisions of the the animals for three days. All(original biU Bt tcr Kyml of Culross' stock was suffering faise starts and revisions, the sons are now covered Bred I "1 M.av IT 1 Jl V. 1 4 ing a year at Harvard. The three professors then evolved a plan which they submitted to the Emerson Memorial Assn, and the Harvard University Press, which agreed to publish the journals. The monumental editing task, which Is expected to take 10 years, ranks in magnitude with the recently widely heralded editions of the papers of the Adams family, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin and Alexander Hamilton.

The Emerson Journals, of which there are about 160, will comprise about 15 volumes, the first two of which are expected to be off the press in two or three years. The edition will be published under the imprint of the Belknap Press of Harvard University Press and Will be known as the "Harvard Edition of Emerson's Journals." The new edition will include both familiar fcmrrsnn mal The President has urged a death, three goats dead from mal security benefits. I would like to AbO VJI-LtHilig bU ISJ ,1 see it extended to 10 out of 10. major increase in federal funds for medical research. He has re nutrition, a dead pig and a dead calf.

State DPW indicated a compro More than 5 million Ameri quired an increase of 274 mil Kinnicutt said that. 50 other from malnutrition, said Nara more. If convicted of the misdemean mise could be worked out. E. Burton Hughes, deputy cans are today receiving public assistance.

These are the needy lions or 28 per cent in the goats were penned in an extreme SEMINAR ON PLANNING George F. Oest, asistant director of production planning at Kodak Park Works, will lead an American Management Assn. seminar on production planning tomorrow through Wednesday in funds provided to the National aged, children deprived of paren or, Culross faces a maximum pen superintendent of public Works, said Thursday that with a few minor changes the bill could be Institutes of Health, the research tal support, the needy blind and alty of a $500 fine and imprison arm of the. Public Health Service, Red Cross Budget the totaly disabled this assistance should be provided approved soon and handed to ment of one year, according to The great bulk of this increase local legislators for eventual in- Houston, Tex. Butterfield.

would be distributed in grants for "We are proposing amendments research by medical schools, hos pitals, health agencies and scien To Go Up $45,000 to increase self-support and self- care. We are proposing federal iinamcial assistance to help re tists throughout the country. The number research projects would be increased from 3,400 lieve a critical shortage of profes-sionl personnel trained to deal to an estimated 5,000. The num effectively with the problems ber of research fellowships from found among needy pepole. And about 900 this fiscal year to an we are proposing to support new estimated 1,600 during the com.

ing fiscal year. research and demonstration proj DRESS RIGHT you I can't afford not to! ects to oring more light to the Teaching "Facilities causes of dependency and to show in actual practice effective ways Appointment of 14 men to the advisory committee of the annual Community Chest-Red Cross campaign was announced yesterday as. campaign leaders were notified that the Red Cross budget will be at least $45,797 more than last year. John Remington, campaign chairman and Chest president, said the sum is necessary to help replace Red Cross disaster reserve funds, nearly exhausted by the western floods this winter. Boosts also are expected in the budgets of the 75 Red Feather agencies due to increased operat There is a serious short of helping individuals overcome dependency.

age today of medical research and teaching facilities. And so the President has proposed to terial and a great deal of Emerson's writings that have never been published, and the editors will apply to it all of the techniques of modern scholarship and editorial practice. For 40 years scholars and general readers have had to rely on an edition of the journals which is admittedly incomplete and is now out of print. The editors of the old edition, Edward Waldo Emerson and Waldo Emerson Forbes, descendants of the philosopher, made a conscientious selection from Jhc unpublished journals, Dr. Gilman says, but they purposely excluded from their compilation materials that ought now to be printed.

"Access to these materials," Dr. Gilman said, "will appreciably extend our knowledge of Emerson's intellectual development, cf his own nature, and of the intellectual ferment of his times." Of the approximate 160 journals Emerson kept the original, day-to day observations on his reading, thoughts on religion, political and literary events, and the life of his times, described by pr. f.ilmau as the "treasury" from which Emerson's timeless essays were created only 91 were used in the edition edited by Edward Waldo Emerson and Waldo Emerson Forbes. "Many omissions, logical enough at the time of publication of the journals, have somewhat reduced the recoverable picture of Emerson," Dr. Gilman said.

"It is clear that he was even more concrete, more robust, candid and human than he has appeared to be from the representation of the published journals. Publication now of the omitted passages would not in any way "Another example of a government investment that brings rich humanitarian and economic re Congress a five-year program of federal assistance on a matching basis for the construction of these facilities for medical wards for the future is vocational rehabilitation. In New York The good taste expressed in fine clothes is one of your greatest assets. Keep up your appearance and you'll feel better, look better, do better! State alone and the program here is not as good as in many schools and other institutions. ing costs and heavier demand for services.

There would be no interference i i. I in operation of those institu Paul Miller is vice cnairman oi tions the campaign. On the advisory Education "We have invested committee are Edward P. Curtis, approximately 30 billion dollars Edward J. Halter, Thomas J.

Har-grave, Harry A. Holmund, Gordon in the physical plant for (the other states 3,600 disabled persons were returned to employment and a self-sustaining life through vocational rehabilitation last year. These people were earning less than 1 million dollars a year when they started on the road to self-support. The first year of their rehabilitation their earnings were estimated at more than eight million dollars almost a six-fold increase." education of our children). We A.

Howe, Arthur M. R. Hughes, spend 14 billions a year to op Louis A. Langie, Sherwood W. Smith.

Robert C. Tait. Georee L. erate our educational system from kindergarten to college. Todd, Harold C.

Townson and Ana yet the federal government James M. Weil. Here! isjiiveaiing annuany less man Suits Plateau Taylor Plans Research Lab Nixon Backed By Parrish If Vice President Nixon is On Prince St. Campus Site Taylor Instrument Companies day in City Hall Annex, Main famous for light iveight now in refreshing new chosen for another term, it will be all right with County Repub plan to purchase 'Eastman Laboratory on the old Prince Street Campus to use as a commercial research laboratory. The proposed purchase was disclosed yesterday when the firm and the University of Roch Street West and Broad Street, include: Armark -Construction 921 Maple to erect a 17-unit apartment house at 700 East Ave.

in an F-l residential zone. 610 East Ave. to erect a 10-unit apartment house at the northeast corner of East Avenue and Goodman Street North in an F-l residential zone. Schoen Brothers Holding to demolish three frame dwell light tones ester made a joint application to detract from his On the contrary, respect for his honesty, acumen and liberality of mind can only increase among readers who are given the full range of his thought." Dr. Gilman is coordinating editor and one of four scholars who will edit the journals.

His fellow editors are' Dr. George Pierce Clark of Nothern Illinois State College and Dr. Merrell Rhees Davis, of the University of Washington, both associate professors of English, and Dr. Alfred R. Ferguson, professor of English, Ohio State University.

The basic purpose of the project, as described by Dr. Gil-, man, is to provide a modern, scholarly edition of Emerson's journals as a major contribution to better understanding of his place as writer and thinker and of his relation to and influence upon American literary, intellectual and religious history, "Emerson had a tremendous influence on the middle 1800's through his lectures and and was widely known on both sides of the Atlantic. He traveled all over the United States lecturing to all kinds cf audiences, beginning in the early 1830's and continuing until the 1870's. His shrewdness as an observer of human nature, his candidness and earthiness are enlarged by passages in the hitherto unpublished journals, which will give us a better knowledge of Emerson than we have had before. "In this age when people are fearful and anxious, with a tendancy tq conformity, Emerson is coming back into the public mind.

His doctrine of self-reliance, his emphasis on the. American heritage of individualism, moral law, character and principle have greater meaning than ever before." In his travels about the United States, Emerson visited 111- 1 the City Zoning Board of Appeals for a variance in the A residential district. lican Chairman Fred I. Parrish. Parrish endorsed the 43-year-old vice president in his first pronouncement on his feelings about Nixon's status since President Eisenhower announced his decision to run for a second term.

Parrish said: "I'm a great booster for Nixon. I think he has done a wonderful job. You always, hear that our party is full of old fogies and then you hear a lot of criticism when we put up a younger man, even one who is a war veteran." 3 in Fair Condition After Autos Crash Three area residents were listed in fair condition in Highland Hospital as a result of a two-car crash The three-story Prince Street building was used as a science laboratory by UR coeds until the Men's and Women's Colleges were werged last fall on the River Campus. Other applications which the board will hear at 11 a.m. Thurs ings at 181-183 Clifton St.

and use vacant lots for automotive sales and service and off-street park ing in a commercial and residential district. Second Driving Lesson Ends Against Tree; Teacher Hurt on Wcbster-Fairport Road about midnight Friday. Injured were Herman Rhcin-hardt, 51, of Town Line Road, You'll be dressed right" a Plateau suit from McFarlin's. Looks like a million on you! Feels lighter than any suit you've ever owned! Yet it's a sturdy pure wool worsted silky-smooth in finish Balanced-tailored by Timely Clothes for enduring style lines! You'll really go for the new light tones in sand, green, silver, blue, luggage and pewter. Closed Monday.

Open Tuesday 'til 9 North Ontario, driver of one car; Lemont Fox, 53, Clifton Springs, the other driver, and a passenger in the latters car, Bertha Pearo, A driver who told police he had only one day of previous instruction, brought an abrupt end to his second driving lesson yesterday afternoon when his car smashed against a tree after he lost control while making a left turn. Injured in the crash was Shi-geti Yamamoti, 27, of 87 Richmond who, according to po lice, was acting as the instructor. He was treated at Park Avenue Hospital for head cuts. The driver, identified as Ewer-aldo Wanderley, 23, of 544 Par-sells was said to be turning into Culver Road from East Avenue when the accident occurred. Police said Wanderley holds a learner's permit.

47, Clifton Springs. Rheinhardt suffered a broken collar bone; Fox has lacerated muscle tendons and Bertha Pearo has a fractured pelvis, according to hospital authorities. HAMBURG MAN HURT A Hamburg man was injured when his car overturned in Route Rochester at least six times between 1851 and 1863, according to early records in the Rochester Public Library. His lectures on such subjects as "The Anglo-Saxon Race," "Morals and Manners," and "Culture," were sponsored by the Ladies Anti-Slavery Society, and were given in the old Athenaeum and in Corinthian Hall. The J.

N. Wilder alluded to in Emerson's remarks on the University of Rochester, was a trustee cf the old Madison University (now Colgate), who was a leader in the movement to move Madison to Rochester following a rift among the members of the older institution, Dr. Gilman is a graduate of Harvard University, with a Th.D. degree from Yaie. He has been a member of the University of Rochester English faculty since 1947.

He is the author of the first full-length work on the youth cf Herman Melville, published in 1951 by New York University under the title, "Melville's Early Life and Redburn." Irondequoit Boy Injured by Auto iSf son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ger of Rochester 63 near Groveland about 4 p.m. yesterday. Reported in "good" condition in Wyoming County Darting from a curb while playing "cowboy" in front of 4420 Culver Rd.

about 1 p.m. yesterday a 4-year-old Irondequoit boy was struck by a car. Irondequoit polico identified the child as John M. Gerhardt, Hospital, Warsaw, late yesterday, hardt of 61 Lake View Ave. He was treated for head cuts by a physician.

Driver of the car was Mrs. Anne Grace, 56, of 239 Oneida police reported. Lawrence V. McCormick. 20, was being treated for a back injury.

McCormick hit an icy stretch. 195 EAST MAIN STREET-PHONE BAker 2720.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Democrat and Chronicle
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Democrat and Chronicle Archive

Pages Available:
2,656,849
Years Available:
1871-2024