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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 21

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St. Louis, Missouri
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21
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ST. LOUIS POST- DISPATCH THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1962 ST. LOUIS POST- DISPATCH 3 L. SULZBERGER Seeking a Brush- Fire Peace HERE IS LIKELY TO BE A another sort this spring. and probably doesn't care Kennedy is there.

And a pressures well yet persuade Berlin, may, Khrushchev sees it, Is the surest way to wangle an encounter. He has managed in the past to see American Presidents by being nasty about Berlin. And, while Kennedy obJects to the bullying approach, it has produced desired results in London where Macmillan urges another talk. talk. Khrushchev seems wedded Khrushchev to summitry.

Being used to? authoritarian government, he sees no point in negotiations at lower levels. He mistrusts both our Department and his own Foreign Ministry and one suspects he considers occasional summits politically useful to himself. We mistrust summitry but the President is in a more favorable position for another face-to-face talk than he was last spring at Vienna, There are two essential reasons for this. The first is our improved military position, dating back to Kennedy's July 25 speech when he stepped up the pace of rearmament and got us seriously Into the counter guerrilla business. The second is Col.

Glenn's fine which has altered our psychological position, givIng us new self-assurance. How to Prepare. The point now is whether to prepare for another discussion by again elaborating positions on these major problems Berlin, the arms race, nuclear tests, Southeast Asia or whether to seek agreement on entirely different subjects where agreement is in theory possible. Since Vienna, Kennedy's leadership has shown we will not be panicked in Berlin by the threat of holocaust nor, in Cuba, will we be panicked into swatting A.M.A. GROUP GIVES $32,000 TO STATE MEDICAL SCHOOLS Missouri's three medical schools received a total about $32,000 from the Education and Research Foundation of the American Medical Association yesterday at a luncheon at the PARIS.

SUMMIT MEETING of one or Khrushchev wants such meeting who attends so long as President combination of Allied and propaganda the President to go in the end. mosquitoes with sledge hammers. We have likewise demonstrated in South Viet Nam an ability to fight brush-fire wars. This being the case, it might be wise for us to prepare for the next summit by perceiving where and how to formulate a brush-fire peace. Brush-fire war is military disagreement that does not escalate into total disaster.

Brush-fire peace is diplomatic agreement that achieves partial settlement while eschewing total peace. The Race in Space. There are regions where Washington's and Moscow's policies do not run against each other. A classic example is Antarctica which we agreed to neutralize and demilitarize. Kennedy offers to combine our space exploration efforts with Russia's as gingerly proposed by Khrushchev.

Any ultimate accord could neutralize and demilitarize outer er space along the Antarctic treaty's lines. Since this earth could be dominated from the moon and space, the import of such an accord would be immense. And if in attaining it the limits of national air versus international space could be defined, U-2 incidents would be forever avoided. Photosatellites already do graphic, the U-2 job. The next summit might well, therefore, focus on points of potential agreement rather than disagreement.

If the negotiating atmosphere can be improved by accords on areas not hitherto discussed, perhaps later time will come to unravel inherited Gordian knots. Our position is today more flexible. We have demonstrated we are at least Russia's equal in space. We have re-affirmed our national will and discipline. We have shown our ability to fight brush-fire wars.

It is time to initiate the concept of brush-fire re peace. University Club. Washington University School of Medicine received St. Louis University $12,061, and the University of Missouri School of Medicine $6996. Deans of the schools may use the money at their discretion for special projects outside their budgets.

NEW EUREKA PRINCESS VACUUM CLEANER PACKED WITH FEATURES Over H.P. motor Extra large sanitized disposable dust bag. Flip- Top lid Model 702A Price Includes deluxe 8-Pe. set $3995 Toe Cord Unbreakable switch of holder accessories. nylon handle hose.

FLOYD "CARLOAD" CORDES, Inc. 8082 WATSON RD. VI. 3-0214 FREE PARKING CORNER 18th and PINE MA. 1-1307 ST PARE FREE GARAGE INSIDE NEXT DOOR 18TM ART MUSEUM BUYS CARVED MADONNA Figure of Wood Probably Made in Germany Before 1470.

A carved wood figure of "'Madonna and Child" has been purchased by City Art Museum with funds of the Friends of the Museum, director Charles Nagel announced today. Nagel said the figure, which has been on loan to the museum for 10 years, probably was made in Nurenberg, Germany, no later than 1470. It is hollowed at the back and apparently was made to stand wall or column. The purchase was made from Dr. F.

O. Katzenstein of Salem, who acquired the figure in 1949. The 52-inch figure previously belonged to his father in Germany. It was confiscated by the Nazi government and sold to the Stadisches Gallerie of Frankfurt. At the close of World War: II, the Army came into possession of it and stored it in the Wiesbaden art pool until it was shipped to Dr.

Katzenstein. The Virgin is shown standing and holding the Christ Child on her left arm. Her right hand at one time probably held a scepter, which is missing. The Virgin's robe is of gold with blue lining over a dark red undergarment. Her crown is gold with an openwork upper tier.

One foot rests on a golden crescent at the base of the figure. A cherub figure is emerging from each side of the folds of the Virgin's gown. The figure is on 'display in Morlaix Court. QUEEN SEEMS TO LIKE SHOW THAT POKES FUN AT BRITAIN LONDON, March 1 (AP) Queen Elizabeth II last night finally went to see "Beyond the Fringe," the revue that pokes fun at the Establishment she heads, and like it. "Beyond the Fringe" has been a sellout for 11 months.

Princess Margaret enjoyed it, but most persons thought the Queen would dislike the remarks about the royal family, the Prime Minister, the National Anthem, the Established Church and other aspects of Britain's upper class. The Queen took a seat in the front stalls and was escorted by two other of the play's targets, Foreign Secretary Lord Home and the Lord Chamberlain, the Earl of Scarbrough, Britain's stage censor. Elizabeth seemed particularly amused at Peter Cook's impersonation of Prime Minister Macmillan, ALBERT OPTICIANS 3 Stores 805 LOCUST ST. Downtown CE. 1-3333 8117 MARYLAND Clayton PA.

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Funds deposited by TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT earn dividends frem March 1st. ASSETS OVER $221,000,000.00 Community Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 8944 ST. CHARLES ROAD HA. 7-7400 Art Acquisition 41 15 Madonna and Child wood sculpture purchased by City Art Museum. PLACES FIRST IN CHESS QUALIFYING TOURNAMENT Daniel Lordahl, 4037 Germania street, has placed first in the St.

Louis Qualifying Chess Tournament with a score of five out possible points, it was announced today. Carl E. Goldsberry, 5666 Waterman boulevard, won second place. Third prize winner was Carl Spies, 5622 Delmar boulevard. Dave Edwards, 5743 Delor street; Dr.

Robert J. Cook, 8529 Douglas avenue, Brentwood, and William R. Dameron, 8648 Julian avenue, scored four points each. Lordahl, Goldsberry, Spies and Edwards, with six players seeded from last year's tournament, will begin the finals for the St. Louis district championship at 2 p.m.

Sunday at the Downtown Y.M.C.A., 1528 Locust street. 3 SCIENTISTS GET $48.451 IN CANCER RESEARCH GRANTS Earl Special to the Post- Dispatch, particularly JEFFERSON CITY, March 1- Three grants totaling $48,451 have been assigned to St. Louis scientists for cancer research, the Missouri Division of the American Cancer Society reported last night. Each of the grants is for a one-year period ending Feb. 28, 1963.

The grants will be made to: Dr. Falls B. Hershey, Washington University School Medicine, Dr. Harold L. Rosenthal, Washington University School of Dentistry, $9832, and Dr.

Daniel L. Azarnoff, St. Louis University $11,017. MR. JOHN H.

ARMBRUSTER, President COMMUNITY FEDERAL SAVINGS LOAN ASSN. 8944 St. Charles Road, St. Louis 14, Mo. P.D.

Please Send Your Annual Report and Other Information te RUBINSTEIN TO PLAY HERE WITH SYMPHONY Golschmann to Conduct Special Concerts on Saturday and Sunday. Artur Rubinstein, renowned pianist, will appear with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra in special concerts here Saturday and Sunday. Rubinstein has said he will not make appearances with any orchestras next season and for perhaps longer while he performs exclusively in recitals. His concerts here this weekend will mark the twenty-fifth anniversary of his first appearance with the St.

Louis Symp' ony and will be his last of the season with an American orchestra. Rubinstein will appear with his long time friend, Vladimir Golschmann, guest conductor for the two concerts. This will be Golschmann's second return here since he resigned in 1958 as the orchestra's conductor and musical director. He had been conductor for 27 seasons. Two separate programs will be given at Kiel Auditorium Opera House.

At 8:40 p.m. Saturday, Rubinstein will be heard in Beethoven's Concerto No. 5 in Flat Major (Emperor) for and Orchestra. Orchestral offerings will be Beethoven's "Egmont" Overture and Brahm's Symphony No. 4 in Minor.

At 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Rubinstein will play Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 in Flat Minor. Also on the program will be Glinka's "Russlan and Ludmilla" Overture, Prokofieff's "Classical" Symphony and Tchaikovsky's overture-fantasy, "Romeo and Juliet." PRINCESS OF HESSE MARRIED TO COUNT AT FRANKFURT FRANKFURT. Germany, March 1 (AP) Princess Elisabeth of Hesse, 21-year-old descendant of the royal houses of Britain and Italy, was married to Count Friedrich Carl von Oppersdorff yesterday in Catholic ceremony in the Frankfurt Cathedral.

Princess Elisabeth Is a greatgranddaughter of Queen Victoria England Vittorio and a Emmanuele granddaughter III of Her mother, Princess Mafalda, died in the Buchenwald concentration camp where she was taken by the Nazis after Italy made a separate armistice allies in 1943. Oppersdorff, 37, was born in Silesia, now under Polish control. His ancestors include Polish, French and German: nobility. FUNERAL SERVICES HELD FOR HARRY L. GORNSTEIN Funeral services for Harry L.

Gornstein, president of the Chesed Shel Emeth Society for the past eight years, were held today at the Berger undertaking establishment, 4715 McPherson avenue. Burial in Chesed Shel Emeth Cemetery. Mr. Gornstein, 76 years old, died after a cerebral hemorrhage Tuesday at Jewish Hospital. A retired grocer, he lived at 7606 Gannon avenue, University City.

He was a member of the society for 35 years, and was active in a number of other Jewish organizations. He is survived by a son, Sidney Gornstein; two daughters, Mrs. Anna Siegel and Mrs. Jean Neuman; two brothers, and two sisters. MRS.

L. BOYD YELTON DIES IN SLEEP WHEN ON VACATION Funeral services for Mrs. Gertrude M. Yelton, wife of L. Boyd Yelton, head of the Mid-Valley Supply a wholesale plumbing firm, will be at 9 a.m.

tomorrow at St. Joseph's Catholic Church, 100 North Meramec avenue, Clayton, with burial in Calvary Mrs. years old, died in her sleep Tuesday, apparently of a stroke, in Hot Springs, where she and her husband were on vacation. The family residence is at 7545 Westmoreland avenue, Clayton. Also surviving are two stepdaughters, Mrs.

Martha Hanpeter and Mrs. Joan Adams, and a stepson, Harry Yelton. Have you heard? Heloise is going to tell how to get a really dazzling wash! Don't miss it! TOMORROW in the EVERYDAY MAGAZINE of the ST. LOUIS POST- DISPATCH STRESSES RELATION OF TEACHING TO LIFE Ford Executive, Says Colleges Must Show How to Apply Knowledge. The "root problem" of liberal education today is the separation of knowledge from its uses, with the arts and sciences failing to acknowledge each other's existence, Theodore 0.

Yntema, business executive and former educator, said here yesterday. Addressing a student assembly at Washington University, Yntema, vice president and chairman of the finance committee of Ford Motor emphasized the need for restoring "the connection between teaching and the problems of human life" by finding ways of teaching students to "apply general truths to the solution of significant problems." "The difficulty, of course, is to find teachers who are themselves deeply concerned with both general truth and significant problems," he said. He noted that "there is a strong tendency among the academic scholars who train our college teachers to become Yntema said that educational plans in most liberal arts colleges in America are designed to develop a considered sense of values, to impart systematic knowledge and to help acquire joy in doing and living. But these programs generally fail to train the student in "basic transferable skills and abilities," he said. Those skills and abilities, Yntema said, are "mastery of the scientific method; understanding people and working with them effectively; communication; organization the marshalling of scarce resources for given ends; persistent application to the task at hand and use of memory." The speaker is a graduate of Mich.

He holds master's and Holland, doctorate from the University of Chicago where he taught for 26 years. He is a former research director of the Committee for Economic Development. Sammy Cahn, Wife Reunited. PALM SPRINGS, March 1 Cahn (AP) and his Song writer Sammy wife, Gloria, are back together after after a fourmonth separation. They were married 16 years and have two children, Steven, 15 years old, and Laurie, 12.

Nurse of Year MISS GRACE BEHRENDS A nurse at Deaconess Hospital, who was named Nurse of the Year by the Council for Health and Welfare Services of the United Church of Christ in ceremonies yesterday in Chicago. Miss Behrends, Warrenton, was graduated in 1961 from the Deaconess Hospital School of Nursing. F. H. ELZEMEYER DIES, BOX FIRM PRESIDENT Frederick H.

Elzemeyer, president of Service Paper Box 2506 North Broadway, died yesterday of heart disease at St. Luke's Hospital. He was 66 years old and lived at 5 Algonquin Estates road, Glendale. Mr. Elzemeyer was born in St.

Louis. In July 1931, he and others founded the Service Paper Box Co. Surviving are his wife, Mildred; a son, Robert F. Elzemeyer, and a sister, Mrs. A.

W. Zukoski. Funeral services will be tomorrow at 2 p.m. at the Lupton undertaking establishment, 7233 Delmar boulevard, University City, with burial in Oak Grove Mausoleum. INGMAR BERGMAN MOVIE "The Seventh Seal," a Swedish movie written and directed by Ingmar Bergman, will be shown in Brown Hall auditorium, Washington University, tomorrow and Saturday at 8:15 p.m.

and Sunday at 3 p.m. Tickets costing 50 cents may be purchased at the door. Sponsors of the movie are the St. Louis Film Art Society and the University College of Washington University. FUNERAL TO BE TOMORROW.

FOR JOHN EDWARD MARKS Funeral services for John Edward Marks, co-founder of the old Marks-Weber Furniture and Undertaking Edwardsville, will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the First Baptist Church of Edwardsville. Burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery. Mr. Marks died Tuesday in St.

Joseph's Hospital in Highland of infirmities. He was 89 years old. Mr. Marks operated the firm from 1901 until his in 1925. He operated livery stable in Edwardsville and served as deputy coroner of Madison county.

He lived at 210. North Kansas street, Edwardsville. Surviving are two sons, Lesley M. Marks, Edwardsville, and Merlin E. Marks, Fort Lauderdale, and a daughter, Mrs.

Edith M. Morgan, San Diego, Calif. PART OF $19,865,479 AVERY ESTATE FOR DAUGHTER HERE Sewell L. Avery, former board chairman and president of Montgomery Ward left an estate valued at $19,865,479, an inventory filed in Chicago showed yesterday. A principal beneficiary is a daughter, Mrs.

W. Benton McMillan, wife of the president of Hussman Refrig erator 38 Brentmoor Park, Clayton. Expenses amounted to 855, including $10,403,502 in federal inheritance tax, $220,659 in Illinois inheritance tax, attorneys' fees and other costs. The other principal beneficiary is another daughter, Mrs. Nancy Follansbee of Evanston, Ill.

Avery died Oct. 31, 1960. FISCHER LEADING IN CHESS INTERZONE TOURNAMENT C) 1962 New Times News Service NEW YORK, March 1-Bobby Fischer of New York played 1 24-move draw in the twentieth round of the world interzonal chess tournament and gained another full point in the Nineteenth round, it was reported from Stockholm yesterday. With three more rounds to go and a score of 15 to 4, the youthful grandmaster is conceded to be certain of capturing first place. Ewfim Geller of the Soviet Union is in second place with 13 to 6, two points below the leader.

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Pages Available:
4,206,434
Years Available:
1869-2024