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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 17

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St. Louis, Missouri
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17
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ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1950 ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH 3B ELOISE WELLS POLK E.P. SYLVESTER Guggenheim Fellowship Awards To 3 on Washington U. Faculty St.

Louis Letter By Ralph Coghlan RECITAL TO LEAVE PASTORATE MARQUIS CHILDS Pat McCarran's War on the Indians Performance at Wednesday Pilgrim Congregational Min Club Final Event in Artist Presentation Series. ister Accepts Connecticut Call. With Pick and Shovel AS an archeologist, George Mylonas is strictly a pick-and-shovel man. This sounds like a dirty dig but Prof. Mylonas will recognize it as a compliment.

As in all other walks of life, there is snobbery among archeologists. And the pick-and-shovel man looks down HE other day in a closed committee hearing Senator Pat Mc-Carran of Nevada renewed hostilities in a war that he has been prosecuting for 12 years or more. Senators around the table chuckled as the redoubtable McCarran laced into Secretary of Interior Oscar Chapman who was in the witness chair. By THOMAS B. SHERMAN Eloise Wells Polk, the youthful The Rev.

Dr. E. Paul Sylvester, pastor of Pilbrim Congregational Church, 826 Union boulevard, yes ranching and livestock company. In five previous congresses Mc St. Louis pianist who has made Carran has tried to get a bill The others are prosperous ranchers.

They have for years had. several appearances before local terday announced his resignation, passed which would give to white illegal possession of the lands settlers land claimed by Paiute to be effective Aug. 31. He will accept the pastorate of the Edge- which they have operated in con-'. Indians of the nection with other tracts to Pyramid Lake audiences in the last few years, gave a recital yesterday afternoon at the Wednesday The occasion was the final event in the annual series sponsored by the wood Congregational Church, which they have clear title.

Indian Reservation. As one of At McCarran suggestion, evic ius nose at the arm-chair savant, just as in the Army the frontline soldier scorns the dog-robber at headquarters. When George Mylonas talks about his calling, he has to stop every once in a while to tell what a wonderful life he has chosen. He is happy enough in the classrooms of Washington University, telling the kids about the Stone Age, but he is happier still messing about the ruins of ancient Greece. And my guess he is at his happiest in his "office" a subterranean chamber at Eleusis, an excavated village 14 miles east of Athens.

In that village, the Greeks of old practiced the Eleu-sinian mysteries. the Senator's tion of the white settlers was postponed and they were per- Artist Presentation Committee From left, DIETRICH GERHARD, EDGAR ANDERSON. SERGIUS MAM AY. colleagues New Haven, Conn. The Rev.

Dr. Sylvester has been pastor of Pilgrim church here for six He came to St. Louis fJm La Grange, 111., where he was pastor of the First Congrega muted to lease the lands at issue and the auditorium was filled for a brief period. Because it is "It looks like virtually to its capacity. difficult or impossible to operate separately the tracts legally Miss Polk undertook a program that would have taxed the in owned by the settlers, the In Pat wants to keep the displaced persons out and the Indians off." tional Church.

He is a graduate of Johns Hopkins University and Yale Divinity School and received St. Louis Teachers Among 158 Americans and Canadians to Study and Do Research Abroad. terpretative insight of a veteran performer and carried through in terior Department came up with I the proposal that the Govern-; George Mylonas an honorary doctorate from the McCarran has Chapman Chicago Theological Seminary in fought with ment buy these lands and add them to the Indian reservation. But the ranchers demanded prices far in excess of appraised values and the idea was dropped. a manner that denoted a hign degree of musical cultivation.

Her poise and freedom reflected her assured technical control. In Bach's "Italian" concerto her treatment of the first and third movements was fluent, graceful amazing persistence against liberalization of the Displaced Per For the Sake of Votes? and transparent; both were plausible, valid statements. The an 1943. He has served as president of the Ministerial Alliance of St. Louis and vice president of the Metropolitan Church Federation.

He also was chairman of the Citizens' Housing Committee here. The Edgewpod church is the largest Congregational church in New Haven, with a membership of 1700 persons. EDWARD Y. M'NAMARA DIES; dante apparently impressed her as a serene meditation and not too consequential; a longer experience with it may convince her that it can express a concentration of profound feeling. Beethoven's two-movement So Anderson has been connected with Missouri Botanical Garden and Washington University since 1922.

Gerhard's project will be the preparation of a book on the stabilizing forces in European history from the Twelfth to the Nineteenth Centuries, work he plans to do in Europe and the Near East beginning in June 1951. The university said his work will be a comparative study of institutions and society of the various European countries in the centuries before the French and industrial revolutions. It is designed to show the common nata in Sharp (Opus 78) was PUBLIC RELATIONS EXECUTIVE sons act. He was defeated when the Senate voted, 47-37, to admit more DPs. But he has not given up on those Indians out in Nevada.

For years when Harold Ickes was Secretary of Interior he stood like the Dutch boy with his finger in the hole in the dike resisting McCarran. When Ickes went out and Julius Krug succeeded him, the persistent Senator from Nevada thought his opportunity had come. Ranchers in Possession. But Krug took the same stand as Ickes. In a letter written a year ago to chairman Joseph C.

O'Mahoney of the Interior and Insular Affairs committee, Krug explained his opposition to McCarran's perennial bill to give the lands to the white settlers. Krug pointed to five separate cases in which federal courts Once again McCarran's perennial bill is on the Senate calendar. But it is believed to have little chance of passage. McCarran is up for re-election this year and he is naturally interested in winning the favor of as many voters as possible in the big empty state he represents. Mining and ranching are the two most powerful interests and McCarran has served them both very well.

Gambling is a close third. If the forthcoming Senate investigation into crime really gets down to bedrock, those who know say that some interesting connections will be revealed between the wide open gambling in Nevada and the national syndicate that spends so lavishly to corrupt public officials. Funeral services for Edward Y. McNamara, an account executive for the public relations firm of Kelly, Zahrndt Kelly, 3529 and persistent institutional and social features of Western civili Franklin avenue, will be Wednes zation. Wrote on Rise of Russia.

day at 9:30 a.m. at St. Francis Xavier (College) Catholic Church, Gerhard, who lives at 6108 239 North Grand boulevard. Buri Awards of Guggenheim Fellow-1 ships for study and research overseas have been made to three members of the Washington University faculty, it was announced today. Recipients are Edgar Anderson, professor of botany in the university's Shaw School of Botany; Dietrich Gerhard, professor-elect of history; and Sergius Mamay of Akron, who is a graduate assistant in botany.

They were among 158 American and Canadian scholars and artists who have been granted a total of $500,000 by the foundation, established in 1925 by the late United States Senator Simon Guggenheim and Mrs. Guggenheim, as a memorial to their son, John Simon Guggenheim, who died in 1922. Anderson, who lives at 4059 Flora place and also is geneticist at Missouri Botanical Garden, will study the origin and development of cultivated plants in the New World. An authority on the history of the corn plant, he will establish a small experiment plot in Honduras and will supervise the project, which is designed to integrate the research of several other botanists. His award covers three years of research.

His Second Award. This is the second Guggenheim awarded to Anderson, the author of many research papers on the subjects of taxonomy and the origin of species. He received his first award in 1943 for a research project on corn plants. During 1929-30, he was a National Re- McPherson avenue, will become al will be in Calvary Cemetery. Mr.

McNamara, 40 years old, died late Saturday following an operation at DePaul Hospital. He a full professor of history effective July 1, his promotion having been announced April 1. A graduate of the universities of was a member of the news staff Berlin and Heidelberg, he stud transmitted with gratifying delicacy, brought out through close shading, clearly marked accents and a rhythmic impulse that was vital without being convulsive. It is true that according to the dynamic indications in the score, Beethoven flexed his muscles occasionally here as elsewhere. But tension and explosiveness would compromise the essential character of the first movement.

Miss Polk made it lyrical but preserved its slight but definite gravity. The Brahms "Variations and Fugue" on a theme by Handel were so managed as to hold one's interest despite its discursiveness. Bartok's suite, Opus 14, went well, but it has little of the penetration and originality of later works. She played three pieces by Max Reger with great poetic charm, and closed with Chopin's "Taran-telle," and the Ballade, Opus 47. It was a relief to hear a definite Chopin coloring produced without excessive rubato.

But Miss Polk took both of them a little too fast for clean articulation and didn't respond to the climactic passages of the Ballade with enough McCarran's' Self-Esteem. ied in London from 1927 to 1929 as a Rockefeller Fellow, produc Tn thp residential election of ing "England and the Rise of of the Globe-Democrat from 1933 until 1936, and later held advertising positions here and in Jefferson City. He was a petty officer in the Navy recruiting service in wartime, and joined Kelly, Zahrndt Kelly last year. iur 62 117 ballots were cast in IT IS THE PROFESSOR'S ambition that some day he will be able to tell the world just what those mysteries were and all the details of the pilgrimages that used to send Greeks flocking to Eleusis, as the Mohammedans flock to Mecca. When the passage to the subterranean chamber was discovered some years ago, George Mylonas experienced a kind of ecstasy.

Here, he thought, may be the key to the mysteries. Alas! the chamber yielded nothing, but it did provide a nice, air-cooled retreat where Mylonas can pore over his specimens, make his notes and contemplate man's antiquity. Next year, Mylonas will go back to Greece for his sabbatical year to join his pick-and-shovel crew. (He regards his classroom work as a kind of vacation from his operations in the field.) He will pursue his search for the mysteries at Eleusis, and when that begins to pall, he can run up to Northern Greece to visit Akropotamos. That is a Stone Age village, dating from about 5000 B.

where there is a lot of work still to be done. Or he can go over to Hagios Kosmas, a comparatively new subdivision, dating from the Early Bronze Age. AS A STUDENT, George Mylonas began his search among ruins by assisting the celebrated Prof. David M. Robinson of Johns Hopkins in the excavation of Olynthos.

Olynthos was destroyed in 348 B.C. by Philip of Macedon, father of Alexander the Great. It was a city of some 60,000 to 80,000 souls, peacefully engaged in selling wheat, wine and olive oil to Southern Italy, Cyprus and Asia Minor. It put up a stubborn resistance to Philip, the Hitler of his time, arousing the anger of the conqueror. He was further enraged when an expert Olynthos marksman knocked out his eye with a sling pellet.

While archeologists previously had learned much about the public life of ancient Greece, Olynthos gave them a chance to find out how ordinary people lived. Here was revealed the floor plan of the houses (as functional in their design as a Harris Armstrong job); the suggestion of a city plan; the jewelry and pottery that was used; the aqueducts that carried water from 15 miles away a la New York City; the coins that showed where Olynthos products were sold, arid so on. ONE QUAINT DEAL was that, if a man had a mortgage on his home, the fact was recorded on a stone tablet stuck on the 'front of the house. One such mortgage provided for the payment of 50 drachmae a month, principal and interest FHA fashion. To give an idea of property values at the time, Robinson and Mylonas found a record of sale.

A 13-room house sold for 1200 drachmae (which Mylonas estimates as equal to $3000.) Not a high price for 13 rooms, but the professor points out it was located in a gully between two hills which probably ranked as a slum section. IT COULDN'T EVEN BE WHISPERED at a gathering of archeologists, but people sometimes wonder how much good it does, in practical terms, to dig up old ruins. What application has all this research to modern problems? Well, in the case of Olynthos, there is a historical lesson for our times. W7hen Philip started his aggression against the cities of Greece (cf. Hitler's forays into Austria and Czechoslovakia), the city of Athens was still top dog in that part of the world.

But far-seeing Athenians smelt danger. Among these was the great orator, Demosthenes, who, in a series of speeches called Olyn-thiacs, warned his fellow-citizens against Philip's designs upon Olynthos. He was like Winston Churchill thundering in the House of Commons in the 1930s. As Philip knocked off one city after another, Athens pursued a policy of too little and too late. In 349 B.

Demosthenes noting the steady progress of the conqueror, cried: Is not Philip our enemy? And in possession of our property? And a barbarian? Is any description too bad for him? But, in the name of the gods, when we have abandoned all these places and almost helped Philip to gain them, shall we then ask who is to blame? Russia," published in 1933. He Nevada, 31.291 for Truman and joined the Washington faculty in 29 357 for Dewev. In the Twenty- 1935. second Election District in Ohio Mamay's project will be a com Surviving are his wife, Mrs. had rendered decisions making it "clear that the legal rights of the Indians to the lands involved in S.

17 the McCarran bill) are paramount to the rights of the settlers and that a gross injustice would be perpetrated upon the Indians if they should now be deprived of the lands." "Furthermore," Krug wrote, "the enactment of the bill would infringe the solemn guarantee against the alienation of tribal property without tribal consent Nellie Walsh McNamara, 727 Ru- alone, perhaps the largest in tne country today. 356,489 voters went precht avenue, Lemay; two sons, to the polls in '48. Michael and Stephen; three broth ers and a sister. At one point in his career, McCarran was reported to be anxious for a federal judgeship. His re EDITORIAL WRITER TO SPEAK election to the benate was doubt.

But the judgeship did not anrt Mcfarran did win contained in the Indian Reorgan Evarts Graham Hirial parative study of the coal age floras of Europe and America. He was awarded his master of arts' degree here in 1948 and last year was awarded a university fellowship, which he has used for further research and study. During his fellowship year under the Guggenheim award, he will study at the University of Cambridge, England. He is a graduate of the University of Akron and, while in the United States Army in World War II, studied at Yale and the University of Michigan. ization Act of June 18, 1934, and the election.

There is little doubt repeated in the constitution and Dreaotn and tonal depth. "As encores, she played a Scarlatti pastorale and Beethoven's Rondo in F. The large audience Search Council fellow and studied at John Innes Horticultural Institution in London. Except for the period 1931-35, when he was a lecturer at the Arnold Arboretum, Harvard University, but that he will be returned again this fall. The escalator of seniority has carried him to the lofty position of chairman of the Judiciary Committee and to certain powerful subcommittee chairmanships.

writer for the Post-Dispatch, will speak on the importance of the European Recovery Act toward European reconstruction at a luncheon of the Downtown League of Women Voters at noon tomorrow at Bishop Tuttle Memorial, 1120 Locust street. Graham spent several months in Europe and Germany last year and wrote a series of articles on "Germany: East or West." Miss Ruth Lindsey will serve as chair-man of the meeting. was attentive and enthusiastic. In general it can be said that the performance showed a strong talent steadily maturing but still a little soft in its approach to the knottier problems of charter granted to the Pyramid Lake Paiute tribe in accordance with that act." McCarran insists, in spite of these opinions, that the Indians never owned the lands and that they have always belonged to white settlers. He talks about his boyhood in the Pyramid Lake region and his intimate knowledge of land ownership.

One of the claimants is a large It's not surprising that he persists in thinking that he, Pat McCarran, can singlehandedly get the Paiutes off the reservation and keep the displaced persons nut nf thp rnuntrv. Tomorrow's Events MRS. WILLIAM J. CALHOUN 11 a.m. Mary Powell talks on "Art of the Romans," at City Art Museum, Forest Park.

PREPARATION FOR MARRIAGE SERIES AT DOWNTOWN Y.M.C.A. A series of five weekly discussions on preparations for marriage, using movies based on the book, "Marriage for Moderns" by Henry Bowman, professor of sociology at Stephens College, Columbia, will open at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Downtown Y.M.- DIES; FUNERAL TOMORROW Funeral services for Mrs. William J. Calhoun, widow of a vice president of Seidel Manufacturing will be at 2 p.m.

tomorrow 12 noon Robert de Kieffer, president of Film Council of America, shows motion pictures with talk before St. Louis council, 1 at Ambruster undertaking establishment, 6633 Clayton road, C.A., 1528 Locust street. THERE WAS ANOTHER orator In Athens. Aeschines, who op- The first meeting will open with Clayton. Burial will be in Val A SPRING FESTIVAL SALE AT-STRAUB'S SO MANY GOOD THINGS TO EAT AND SO MANY OF YOUR HOUSEHOLD NEEDS ALL AT SAVINGS PRICES NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY! the showing of "This Charming halla Cemetery.

posea JJemostnenes efforts to arouse the city, and his counsels pre 5ElCTi Couple," a study of "romantic at Downtown Y.M.C.A., 1528 Locust street. 1 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. St. Louis National Home Show, at Arena, 5700 Oakland avenue.

6:30 p.m. Dinner meeting of Business Women's Chamber of Commerce, at Melbourne Hotel. FOODS love" and the falsity of the ideas it engenders and the goals it sets Mrs. Calhoun, 65 years old, died of a cerebral hemorrhage yesterday at her home, 6249 Pershing avenue, where she lived with her son, John Calhoun, and daughter. Miss Gloria Calhoun.

Her husband died in 1935. up, xne ideas presented Dy tne film will be discussed at the meeting. 3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS Titles of other films and the vailed. The result was that Olynthos fell in 348 and it was not long after that before Athens was shorn of its power. Aeschines probably carried an umbrella, went to Munich on weekends, and used the slogan: "Peace in our time." In order to be a pick-and-shovel archeologist.

a man has to be versatile. In Greece, not every archeologist is allowed to dig. He must, for one thing, serve an apprenticeship of five years. The pick-and-shovel savant, according to Harry Reginald Holland Hall, the British expert, has to be more or less expert in many ways. He has to have some knowledge of elementary engineering and of lifting heavy weights.

He should be a practical photographer. He should be able to improvise practical methods of attacking any problem in digging and. of conserving any object he may find. He must know how to manage men. He must have an eye for the lie of the land.

THAT'S JUST A STARTER. Your digger should have a knowl- PARKSIDE STORE KINGSHIGHWAY AND MARYLAND PLAZA STORE 8282 FORSYTH BLVD. DEImar 2121 WEBSTER STORE 40 W. LOCKWOOD AVE. WEBSTER 0170 dates of presentation are: "Who's Eoss," April 26; "Choosing for Happiness," May "It Takes All Kinds," May 10, and "Marriage Today," May 17.

The program orslmann HJooieni US AuU fab Charles T. O'Neal Dies. ROCHESTER, N. April 17 (AP) Charles T. O'Neal, former president of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad for 14 years, died here Saturday night.

He was 76 years old. He became president of the C. E. I. in 1931 and retired in 1945.

series is sponsored by the Young Adult Council of the Downtown Y.M.CA. 4S MARYLAND A FEW OF THE FEATURES FOR TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY SIRLOIN or TENDERLOIN STEAKS UB. 98 WHEN IT COMES TO A STEAK. THERE IS CERTAINLY NO SUBSTITUTE FOR QUALITY THIS CUT IDEAL FOR SERVICE OF 4 OR 5. CHUCK POT ROAST- SMOKED BEEF TONGUE 49 TO COOK IN THE OLD IRON POT WITH POTATOES.

BY MAYROSE AVERAGE 3 TO 4 LB. ECONOMY COURSE. 63 LB. LB. edge of modern and ancient language, including the Sanskrit; he should know something about geology; have a close working knowledge of history; of coins; of sculpture; of design; of old bones; and withal he must be a diplomat, to avoid ruffling foreign governments; and a labor relations expert to handle his crews.

It doesn't hurt, either, if he is a good money-raiser to help pay for his digging. GEORGE MYLONAS QUALIFIES in most of these brackets; that's why he is allowed to putter around Olynthos, Hagios Kosmas, Akropotamos and Eleusis. At his subterranean cave, his office hours during the sabbatical year will be roughly 5:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. And they say the law is a jealous mistress! FRESH GROUND STEAK Hunter's Skinless Wieners 48s LB.

CARTON FOR THE REAL PERFECTION IN BEEF FOR HAMBURGERS. FOR A QUICK AND EASY LUNCH SO GOOD. TOO! LB. 89' FROM OUR FRESH PRODUCE DEPARTMENTS'. MRS.

WILLIAM F. KNUDSEN DIES FLORIDA SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUIT 39 FOR DETROIT, April 17 (AP) Mrs. Clara S. Knudsen, widow of Wil REALLY GIANT SIZE TOP QUALITY AND AN EXCELLENT BUY FRESH WATERCRESS GREEN BEANS FOR SALE: Peace of Mind Selecting your family plol now is an investment in Peace of Mind. It is yqurs for all time.

It cannot be taxed. It cannot be attached. It is judgment proof, lien-proof and loss-proof. It is sacred ground, a family heritage. It is the only guarantee that the family will be united for all times.

Buy be-, fore need and make sure that you enjoy the advantages of choice location, low prices-convenient terms care of your plot without extra cost and Peace of Mind. Iflfjetnorial jparh The Cemetery Everlasting A PERPETUAL CARE BURIAL PARK EV. 2111 Lucas Hunt Road Lb. I9c liam F. Knudsen, died early today FOR A REAL SPRING SALAD SO FRESH, CRISP AND TENDER at her home here after a long illness.

Her husband, who died April SPRING ONIONS CALIF. CARROTS ADDS THAT ZEST TO YOUR MENU TOP QUALITY CRISP AND SWEET 27, 1948, was former president of Genera Motors Corp. and the War Department's production co ordinator during World War II. JOSEPH A. MATTER, RETIRED LANDSCAPE GARDENER, DIES Funeral services for Joseph A.

Matter, retired landscape gardener who donated the property on which St. Joseph's Institute for the Deaf was constructed in University City, will be at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday at St. Patrick's Catholic Church, 8665 Olive boulevard, University City. Burial will be in Central Cemetery.

Mr. Matter, who was 74 years old and lived at 1469 Eighty-second boulevard, University City, died of heart disease Saturday at St. Joseph's Hospital, Kansas City, where he had gone to visit a daughter, Sister Rita Agnes. A native of Alsace-Lorraine, Mr. Matter came to St.

Louis in 1903. FROM OUR BAKERY DEPARTMENTS iL A WYE 11 holds a brief for Hoffman. A man of logic ultimately must choose this wonderful in 25 U. S. CITIES Ptopli art mastering modern languaqes at fh world-renowned BERLITZ SCHOOL iktrntrrr ORANGE CHIFFON LOAF CAKE 59c A DELICIOUS MOIST LOAF CAKE WITH FRESH ORANGE fciNG BLUEBERRY MUFFINS 6r28c SANDWICH BUNS d.

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Call CHestnut 5450 for name of your Hoffman dealer STRAUB'S BUTTER LAN-O-SHEEN He retired in 1933 and since that time had taken care of the grounds at St. Joseph's Institute for the Deaf, 1483 Eighty-second boulevard. Surviving, besides the daughter, are two sisters, Mrs. Alfonce Hirtz, 3700 Gustine avenue, and Mrs. Elise Morin of Montreal, Canada.

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Pages Available:
4,206,663
Years Available:
1869-2024