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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 21

Location:
Rochester, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 ROCHESTER DEMOCRAT AND CHRONICLE Monday, April 25, 1960 1 JEEPS- PLOUGHS PARTS SERVICE ALLING MILES, he. U01 ldj Rd. I. 4VTHORULD OtALlK HO 7-710 CO 4-1403 ELK HOTEL Mtn'i Retldtnc Hotel. Daily mali nrlc.

Convcnltntly lo-caltd downtown. 113 Clinton At. N. Low monthly ratei. Charles Walter L0 2-1780 4 Guggenheim Awards Won By UR Staff Four University of Rochester professors have been awarded Guggenheim Foundation fellowships, one of the highest honors in the academic world, it was announced yesterday.

They are Dr. William H. Gil-man, professor of English; Dr. as JOHNSON GIRL for Dining Room Poiitions HOWARD JOHNSON'S 3300 W. Henrietta Rd.

opposite South Town Plaid i I i I I rM'-t if tff VT'LJ' Xfv fir I -vz 4 I v4 Vl I Robert E. Marshak, chairman of the department of physics and astronomy; Dr. Arnold W. Ravin, chairman of the depart ment of biology, and Dr. William H.

Saunders, assistant professor of chemistry. They will be on leave of absence from the 100 PEXXSYLVAMA AJSTIIRACITE HARDCOAL PEERLESS QUALITY SLACK MAGIC Ton $20.95 S. 0. Cash Ti. Call JENKINS JVLACY CO.

BA 5-3430 U. of R. during the 1960-61 academic year to carry out the studies for which the fellow ships were awarded. T7 According to the foundation's announcement, fellowships were awarded to 303 scholars and art Genesee" Bootery's SPRING ists in North and South America and the Philippines. Faculty members from only three other colleges and universities in Upstate New York received the awards.

The others are Cornell, Syracuse, and Vassar. Dr. Gilman will continue editing a definitive edition of the journals of Ralph Waldo Emerson on which he has been working for the last six years with WOMEN'S SHOES Casey gave medals and blessed some 2,000 children at the event sponsored by the Rosary Guild committee. "COME UNTO ME Infants and preschool age children of county Catholic families file to communion rail at the Sacred Heart Cathedral for the fifth annual ceremony of the blessing children. Auxiliary Bishop Lawrence B.

20 40 Professors Merrell R. Davis of the University of Washington, Columbia Dean to Talk Wesleyan University and George I Dfl I vasttriWgnis Bill Opposed REDUCTION Southern -Negro Seen as Symbol At East High Dedication vuiuiue wuiit win ue jjuuusneu this fall by the Harvard Uni- A I versity Press. Another book. A I Cr Af edited by Dr. Gilman and Dr.

i0 LCllU I JJ ff CCJ Davis, "The Letters of Herman PP0Siti01; the City Council reso-University Press lution to create a human relations committee on the Black Patents and Blues only To Thinking Man America's young Southern Negro, engaged in a bloodless Dr. John H. Fischer, dean of Howard C. Seymour, superin-Columbia University Teachers tendent of schools, will give the College, will addre.ss dedica- dedicatory charge, and Charles tion exercises for the new East I N. Clark, principal, will re- grounds it isn't strong enough.

The proposed commit if tee would investigate discrimination in Rochester. High School at 3 p.m. Sunday Clergymen participating will Democratic councilmen yes in the school auditorium. Invitations to the dedication ALL SALES FINAL ment issued yesterday, said the resolution's present form "is ceremony are being mailed. Oth battle for his place in our culture, was suggested yesterday as a possible symbol for the thinking person unable to ally himself wholly with either the Beat Generation or the "gray flannel suit" community.

Fir William TTomilfrtrt unacceptable to some of our citizens most directly con Study in Geneva Dr. Marshak will use his fellowship for theoretical studies in elementary particle physics at the European Center for Nuclear Research in Geneva, Switzerland, where he will be guest professor. He will also make lecture trips to London, Paris, Rome, Copenhagen and Vienna. He first achieved international terday reported the wording of the resolution is "not entirely acceptable because it is unacceptable in its present form to the executive board of the NAACP." The NAACP is the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored HUNDREDS AND HUNDREDS cerned." He said: "If the committee is to ers interested in obtaining reserved seats may call at the school office.

Balcony seats will be unreserved. The auditorium seats 1,414. If additional seating capacity is needed, the forum room, cafeteria and library will be avail stamp out intolerance and prej- Lnria(' ftf Of women from all over Western New York take advantage of Genese Bootery's annual spring shoe sales. If you haven't tried these famous nationally advertised shoes, now is your opportunity to wear them at drastic reductions! ud.ee our community and to jtheol rat Rochester work unceasingly (for) equa ramify School, addressed the rlhtS Prt Hi "lot. Chapter of Phi Beta Kao- our The resolution, be Rabbi Philip Bernstein of Temple B'rith Kodesh, invocation; Dr.

Wilbour Eddy Saunders of Colgate Rochester Divinity School, dedicatory prayer; and Msgr. Charles V. Boyle, pastor of St. John the Evangelist Church, benediction. Music will be provided by the East High School band and choir.

SAILOR STUDIES RADIO His boot training completed, Seaman William S. Mayzak is studying Naval radio operation at Bainbridge, Md. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mayzak of 215 Fetzner Greece.

able for persons who wish to April 12 by Republican Frank Horton, was referred to Council's Public Utilities and Special changes in the resolution will 'Z 'rZl be offered. 1 i Guides will be on duly until uuiucs win oe on auiv unui membership. pm for inspection the 12 imr uieaeiuauuu ui certificates yesterday at the million dollar building, which Open 8:30 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. thru Sat.

GENESEE B00TERY University of Rochester Faculty Club. was opened last fall and is still in the process of completion. Mrs. Carl D. Ott, president of the Board of Education, will feel it is mandatory the committee members first familiarize themselves with the experience of similar human rights committees in Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Chicago, Cincinnati Services Committee for study.

The committee is headed by Horton and consists also of Republican Vice Mayor Joseph Farbo and Democrat Frank Lamb. Advocated by Democrats Lamb would not say last Points of Contact ,178 GENESEE ST. at Bronson. Dr. Hamilton described vir-lprecide at the ceremony.

Dr. tues and faults of both the and other cities. This is to arhipup mavimnm pffpfti vonpss Beats and the bourseois. then night whether the Democrats, in the shortest possible time." 'suggested four points of con- prominence as a theoretical physicist in 1947 when he proposed the theory, since confirmed, that there are two types of mesons, heavy and light, and has since proposed a new universal theory of weak interactions among all the elementary particles of physics, regarded as a milestone in the understanding of the fundamental forces of nature. This is the second Guggenheim fellowship Dr.

Marshak has received. The first was in 1953-54. Dr. Ravin, whose promotion from biology department chairman to associate dean of the College of Arts and Science, effective July 1, was announced recently, will spend six months of his Jeave at the University of Brussells laboratory as visiting professor, and also will complete the manuscript for a book on present frontiers in long advocates of such a com 'No Substitute for SCAD' tcepts- The Democrats stressed the! i Roth are excessively committee is not to be a both are "afflicted tute for a local SCAD (State by togetherness. and the Commission Against Discrimi- beat is only a dirtier version nation) office.

The committee, Lf he hnurcenis." Dr. liamil- the Democrats feel, should ton said both groups seem to work toward obtaining legis fear solitude, as distinct from loneliness, without realizing that moral and intellectual productiveness require solitude, i 2 Both are often anti-intel-, lectual, failing to realize that: there is no short-cut to true mittee, will vote against the measure if the Republicans call for a vote tomorrow night on the present resolution. Lamb said he will ask Horton, upon Horton's return from Florida, to call a committee meeting to study changes suggested by the minority. The committee has not met since the last Council session two weeks ago. The Democrats have met twice in the past few days with the executive board of the NAACP.

It was not revealed what all the suggested changes are. One, however, deals with making the committee to fight discrimination a non-partisan body. It is expected that representa biological research. He will spend the next six months at the University of Paris, con tinuing research on the chemi comprehension. cal bases of heredity which he 3 Both are non-moral.

He i said there is essentially no lative approval for a SCAD office in 1961. Horton, in introducing the resolution, suggested the committee might look into the question of a SCAD office for Rochester. The 1960 Legislature killed the appropriation for a Rochester office of SCAD even-though the county Board of Supervisors and City Council endorsed the proposal. The county leaders of both major political parties supported the SCAD proposal. Horton's resolution calls for Mayor Peter Barry to appoint a 15-member committee on human rights in the meanwhile.

has been conducting at Roches ter. Will Be Promoted clear interest in the moral and Dr. Saunders, whose award was granted for studies of tives of the NAACP executive board will attend tomorrow night's Council meeting to speak on the resolution. Lamb, in a minority state- social problems of the day arising directly from the conviction of the community. 4 Both are very religious and in both cases, he said, the religion is bad.

He suggested that "radical experiments" in religion must be tolerated in this day. He described the Beat Generation's religion as mystical, with the aim of escape through loss of the self in contemplation or by drugs. Third Community Image "Maybe the young Southern School Bus Operation Bill Doesn't Worry City Board isotope effects and isotopic tracers with relation to the mechanisms of organic reactions, will carry out his research at University College, London. The field of mechanism in chemistry is devoted to the study of the manner in which reactions occur, and the individual steps and sequence in which organic chemical reactions take place. He will be promoted to associate professor of chemistry at the U.

of R. Sept. 1. While Dr. Marshak is on leave, Dr.

Morton F. Kaplon will be acting chairman of the department, and Dr. J. Bruce French will become acting senior responsible investigator for the U. of R.

Atomic Energy Project in physics, Dr. Marshak to 10 miles rather than the 8 miles now specified in the com Negro of today is the image of the third community," Dr. Hamilton suggested. He said today's college students are "strangely interested" in the A bill that slate education au- thorities say would knock the Rochester school budget into a cocked hat hasn't excited much attention here. The Board of Education has made no protest to Albany on the measure, guided through the 1960 Legislature by Sen.

Edward J. Spcno of Nassau non-violent sit-in movement in County. Rochester school officials haven't even discussed it. f5 Ml As 1 Mm 1 HP Cv mh M) i WJ-ii TSs I I fm ffit VI Txi- hA f-V IfV, 1 Li fe' if It? I J1 1 -A r- I spevUd purchase! I 17' jewel Swiss precision watches I 111.95 Pius v. missioner's regulations, doesn't go into effect until October, 1961.

If the state school experts' interpretation is correct, the Speno bill would require Rochester to furnish transportation to the parochial high schools for city students who live more than three miles away. The Rev. William M. Roche, superintendent of diocesan schools, indicated that there is no great dissatisfaction among parochial school students and their parents with the present transportation provisions here. Some suburban districts now furnish transportation to out-of-district parochial high schools, and there is little disposition to demand transportation for Roch Speno's bill was intended to extend the transportation dis tance requirements for children the South, and suggested that "a new way of standing morally before one's culture is being shown to us." The following University of Rochester students were initiated into the chapter yesterday: Susan Van O.

Allison, Roberta M. Brush; Sue F. Conrad, Gertrude J. DeKraker, Patricia L. Eddy, Anna L.

Hengerer, Margaret M. Humm, Su-sanne M. Keaveney, Anne C. Loveland, Mrs. Jeanette S.

Musliner, Roger W. Nelson, Leonard E. Parker, Mrs. Rita M. Reimanis, Francelia R.

Roider, Patricia A. Runk, Gerhard H. Schmidt, Constance A. Sullivan, Winston B. Davis, Millicent O.

Kalaf, Timothy K. Wagner and Doris J. Wood. attending private schools, which would be principally Catholic, in the long, narrow Long Island said last night. Dr.

Kaplon and Dr. French have been on leave during the past year under National Science Foundation faculty fellowships. Dr. Kaplon has been conducting research in cosmic ray physics in London at Imperial College, Oxford University, and Dr. French has been carrying out theoretical research in classical nuclear physics at the University of Utrecht, the Netherlands.

Their promotion from associate professor to full professor was announced last week. 3 Persons Hurt In 2-Car Crash school districts. Speno says the bill doesn't apply to cities. Experts in the education law say it does, and a veto by Gov. Rockefeller is considered likely on the basis ester parochial school students when the city's public school students don't get it.

The 10-mile limit would make little difference in Monroe County. of their interpretation, according to Gannett News Service. In any event, the law, which would require transportation up Injured Driver 17 Nabbed as Gamblers Nabbed as Tipsy f'4 It' i 1 In Lyndhurst Street Raid A driver was injured and later arrested after his car left Three persons suffered head cuts in a two-car crash at 200 Mt. Hope Ave. about 12:15 a.m.

Vs. Mt. Read Boulevard near Maid vesterdav, en Lane, Greece, shortly before 4:30 p.m. yesterday and struck Detective Lucien DiGiovanni directed the raid after receiving Treated at Strong Memorial Truly outstanding values 17-jcvvcl imported Swiss movements in the newest, smartest cases. Come in, choose 'from our tremendous assortment (there are many, many more styles than those pictured here).

All with unbreakable mainspring and shock-resistant balance staff all guaranteed against mechanical defects for a year! Many are one-of-a-kind, so shop early! Sibley's Watches, Street Floor; all branches. Hospital, they were Mrs. Rath some construction pipes. Clarence J. Makeham, 62, of arine G.

Pleune, 42, of 90 Latti-more George M. Davis, 43, of 120 Maywood Pittsford, and David McMillon, 37, of 272 31 Devonshire Court, was treated at Northside Hospital for Police interrupted a card game at 102 Lyndhurst St. about 8 last night and arrested 17 men on gambling charges. Rosali Santiago, 39, of the Lyndhurst Street address, was booked as being the keeper of a gambling place after the raiders found him hiding in an upstairs bathroom. He was freed in $50 bail.

The other 16 were charged hand cuts. Greece Patrolmen Ormond St Donald Lemon and Glenn Goodno charged Makeham with Police said Mrs. Pleune and a complaint about gambling at the home. Plainclothesmen Frank Faso, Thomas Mahoney and William McEUigott assisted him. They confiscated several decks of cards, some dice and about $20 in change said to" have been hidden by the suspects in a coffee cup on a kitchen table.

The 17 men are scheduled for arraignment in City Court today. driving while intoxicated. He Davis were passengers in a car driven by Charles J. August, 41, was freed in $100 bail and his of 100 Beckwith and Mc case was adjourned until 10 a.m. Thursday following his ar Millon was in an auto operated with being inmates of a gam-by Claude Copeland 33, of bling place and were released 211 Atkinson St.

(in $5 bail each. raignment before a peace jus tice..

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Pages Available:
2,657,149
Years Available:
1871-2024