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The Post-Standard from Syracuse, New York • Page 18

Publication:
The Post-Standardi
Location:
Syracuse, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I I i ii It THE POST-STANDARD Monday, April 11, 1949 Dr. Confer, Four Others in Area Win Fellowships Five professors in the upstate area, including Dr. Carl V. Confer of Syracuse university, have been Guggenheim memorial memorial fellowships, it was an- nfcunced in New York city yesterday. A total of 144 fellowships with stipends totaling $395.000 were announced by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial foundation, which was established by the late Sen.

Simon Guggenheim and Mrs. Guggenheim as a memorial to their son, John Simon Guggenheim. The latter died as a young man in 1922. Dr. Confer is assistant professor of history at Syracuse university.

His fellowship project will bcj the preparation of a book on onialism in France from 1870 to! the present. HAS PHD FROM UP Before joining the faculty of Syracuse university. Dr. Confer taught at the Drexel institute, Hartwick college in Oneorita', Salem college in Winston-Salem, N. Moravian college for Men, Bethlehem, and the University of PLAN HOLY WEEK SERVICES IN DE WITT--Planning services to be held during Holy week from 8 to 8.30 a.

m. daily in DeWitt Community church are (from left), Dick Charlton, Marilyn Mawson, Christine Wulfetange, Robert Lindeman and the Rev. Alexander C. Carmichel, pastor. These services are being sponsored by the youth fellowship of the church for the church membership.

Soloists for the services include Marilyn Gay, Carolyn Gay, Gail Faulkner, Janet and Connie Olander and Lois Connelly. Military Funeral Wednesday for Nurse Hallinan Second Lt. Agnes K. Hallinan, an army nurse, daughter of Terry and Delaware. He has a Ph.

D. degree Mary Crean Hallinan of Loomis from the University of Pennsyl- Hill rd Qnondaga Hill, who was rti JT killed in Lemans, France, on March Other fellowship winners and 27( 1945, while serving with the vama. projects they will undertake follow; Dr. Simon H. Bauer, associate professor of chemistry at Cornell university--Project: A study of the mechanisms of vibrational energy transfer between molecules upon collision and the writing of a book 177th General Hospital unit, will be buried with full military rites Wednesday.

The Rev, George W. Casey, pastor of St. church of Rockport, and the former chaplain of Lt, Hallinan's unit, will officiate at a solemn high mass of on physical methods for the deter- requ i em a 10 a. in mination of molecular structures; Pe church. Split Rock.

Rites Dr. Paul W. Gates, professor of history at Cornell university--Project the writing of an agricultural history of the United States from 1815 to 1860. PROJECTS OUTLINED Also, Dr. Raymond A.

de wee will be at 9.15 a. m. at the home. Father Casey, who will fly to Syracuse Tuesday, gave Lt. Haliinan the last rites of the Roman Catholic church and officiated at her burial in France on Wednesday of Holyi nai B'rifh Urged To Continue Tine Record of Service' More than 100 delegates to an upstate conference of B'nai B'rith were urged yesterday to carry on "your fine record of service to humanity in general' 1 by Quincy Abrams, recently elected president of District 1, at the Hotel Syracuse.

The president's address closed the two-day session and highlighted the final parley in which officers were installed and incoming president, William Fineman of Albany urged the delegates "to expand our program to every community with an appreciable Jewish representation in it." Abrams reviewed the work of B'nai B'rith during the war and cited the awards which were made by the war and navy departments to the organization for "its humanitarian service in wartime." 4 'We must now reassure ourselves that in the peacetime period we are carrying forward this work. I feel that we. have done so in the past four years and have thus aided democracy by being good citizens," he added. Abrams also acted as installing officer for the ceremony which saw retiring council president R. Raymond Rothman turn over his office to Fineman.

Other officers installed included Jack Cohen of Rochester, first vice- president; Henry Radin of Elmira, second vice-president; Mrs. Mary Greenberg of Buffalo, third vice-j president, and Sidney Goldstein. Fallsburg. treasurer. The council meetings were attended by representatives of the 21 lodges and 10 chapters from Kingston to Buffalo.

Joseph Einhorn of Albany and Arthur Goldberg of Buffalo were elected as delegates from the upstate area to the general committee meetings. Residents Divided On Radio Buses WASHINGTON. (NANA)--Capital Gentlemen, You AH Are Out of Order WASHINGTON. (NANA) residents are about equally divided parliamentary procedure of in their opinions on music in buses, house calls for members to refer to One company, with 21 radio-equip- each other on the floor as ped vehicles, reports letters from 72 on( an wn en two members ig- of the expenment dfly they reaction i drew the ire of Rep. Clare Hoffman as "overwhelmingly I nf Mt Letters to one company from per-', "The gentlemen are out of order sons who have not yet ridden the in usi( the term buses were 14 for and 42 opposed other, he snapped.

Complaints mostly are directed at to parliamentary principles, too full volume, while some persons! Up leaped Mississippis Rep. John have requested certain music or'Rankin. "Yes," he said. certain types of programs. ought to say 'you all'." to 4each "It is contrary Your indulgence please In observance of Holy Week No Dancing in TRAVEL ROOM Dinner and Favorite Cocktails Served Until 10:00 P.

M. Beginning Saturday, April 16th NINO MORALES And His Continental Orchestra Featuring Lovely MARIA MORALES DIRECT FROM THE SAVOY PLAZA NEW YORK CITY v. PLAYS GOLF. ON 80th BIRTHDAY--Mrs. Bertha B.

Pulver, an avid golf fan, celebrated her 80th birthday yesterday by playing nine holes at the Bellevue country club with her Fred Sr. and grandson, Fred Jr. All reside at 805 Comstock ave. Bumpy Air Starts Airport Restaurants airport dining rooms. He sold his restaurant interests.

Cream, butter, onions and garlic are Dobbs 1 four ingredients for suc- cess in the restaurant business. I i i them you can make a variety of unusual and tasty foods. If Jimmy PAT MILLER V. PRES M'lxTG. DIR HUB PANTS -IT -II7 -D associate professor of economics at Wells college--Project: study of Other officers of the mass will be the Rev.

Paul Keefe assistant pastori Lt, Agnes K. Hallinan the operation of commercial capi-j j. st Patrick's Syracuse, a talism and of business or- Hallinan. who will ganization the Middle Ages; Dr. deacon; and the Rev.

James Meegan.i Ruth Allan Mclntyre, assistant pro- pastor of St. Peters church, sub-j fessor of history at Wells college (deacon. i Project: the writing of a book The Henry Makyes Post 1101. On- the role of the English merchant, ondaga Hill, under the direction of class and of certain individual mer-ic omman der Ray Sprague. will con- chants as promoter of early military rites for the former century discovery and colonial en-! nurse in St.

Agnes cemetery. Her- terprise. bert Steer will be chaplain. Dr. Bauer is consultant to the Brookhaven national laboratory, the Sinclair Refining and the Cornell Aeronautical laboratory.

Dr. Gates holds a Ph. D. degree from Harvard university and formerly was on the faculty of Harvard. native of Belgium, Dr.

de Roover has an MBA degree from Harvard and a Ph. D. from the University of Chicago. Dr. Mclntyre has a Ph.

D. from the University of Minnesota where she formerly taught. She also has been on the faculties of Wells, Hunter and Mount Holyoke colleges. OCEAN NOW POSTMAN BECKENHAM, England. (-3P) On the firing squad will be Harry Cowan, Arthur Meade, Neil Bake'r, and Neil Baker.

Jr. Ernest LaBrake, Carroll Robinson, Andrew Caruthers. Thomas Reed, Clinton Drumm and James McCollum will be active bearers. Members of the Agnes K. Hallinan post of Cortland named in her honor, will be color bearers and guard.

Friends may call Tuesday afternoon and evening. Lt. Hallinan, the first nurse to be returned to Onondaga county, went overseas to France on Oct. 13. 1944.

Trailer Nomads Pose Problem for License Bureau were to add a fifth fundamental it Bumpy. wou id be moderate price. weather bounced Jimmy Dobbs into; "We can't lose sight of the pub- the airport restaurant business. The lie," he says. "In the automobile the upstate area are between Dallas and Wichita usine dealers forgot that scheduled for Mav 1 in Rochester; was rough.

An airline hostess. new' fa( Ineyre paying lor it now. and May 4 in Albany. The New, to her job. was taken ill.

Dobb Jimmy recently pioneered a new York state bowling conference 01 volunteered to feed the passengers. in catering hen the organization has been scheduled Catering wasn't altogether new'TMA started low-priced flights be- for May 15 in Albany, Fineman an- to him. James K. Dobbs is a nounced. Shortage of Salt In Salt Lake Area Kansas City and Los Angeles, dcalcr but he also a chain meals ab Tar th lane were ehm- of successful restaurants.

The meals Instead Dobbs prepares aboard the plane didn't impress lunches to be sold at the field him. "I could do better than that." when th a transports land. he told himself. When he returned Hawkers board the Planes, selling to his Memphis home, he made a their wares much as Thomas deal with the airport manager. i son did when he sold sandwiches SALT LAKE CITY.

Because of war-time shortages, all and magazines on trams. you've ever driven or ridden a equipment Jimmy had in Mem-; With the arrival of the robins, niillions of tons of salt Great Salt Lake and Bonne-j his was 12 left-over stools. Today 1 India now has two women sher-' 'ville salt flats of here, you is the nation's leading airline 1 iffs and one woman magistrate i probably know they hold countless: caterer. At last count, he had 28: Delhi. i i Yet this city had a bit of a salt that portion Onondaga county shortage this i nte r.

Not the kind population who make their use i cooking, but rock salt where they park their trailer, re Snow piled higher than for many i either on the move or preparing to years. Motorists and household-1 in record smashing numbers. jers bought out supplies of rock, Records in the office of the They wanted it to scatter on! ty motor vehicle bureau show thatjslippery walks and sprinkle on ice: 255 licenses for trailers were snow for traction for stalled; during the first sbc business days of the month, the largest number in.I Just when winter any seven days in the history of the office, Director Meyer Prowda said, beating last year's record number Gilbert West, merchant navy cadet, a Bother, Robert Hallinan of Onondaga Hill: two sisters. Mrs. Willard Bakeman of Syracuse, Mrs.

Glenn wrote a letter to his mother here, from Antwerp, and threw it into the sea enclosed in a bottle. The She was posthumously awarded the period by 29. The number of bronze medal for meritorious serv-. sa es the order of days re, 27, ice. f48.

85, 50, 18 and 27. Besides her parents, surviving are Likewise, with the arrival of robins and other sure signs of Porter of Onondaga Hill; and her bottle was picked up on the Eng- ma rnal grandfather, John Crean of Syracuse. lish coast and the letter delivered to Beckenham within five days. UNCLE RA Y'S CORNER Over the surface of the continents there is a covering known as nnn m. "soil." This covering is only a Sahara desert may conceal a i.uuu Equipped i all conveniences inches thick in some places, but itjOOO-square-mile underground iaKe.

permanent residence--with the 7 a i Underground Lake Beneath Sahara NEW YORK. (NANA)--The vast worst, fire destroyed part of the largest salt factory near the lake. Another salt maker stopped producing because of troubles with zoning regulations. If you dipped a bucket of water out of the vast lake and let it evaporate, you'd have about one-fourth of a bucket of salt in the bottom. spring, the sale of passenger car lt wouldn be rock salt, tho.

That' censes spurted with runningj a a tured. And the sun wasn't helping much with evaporation in January and February. The stuck moiorist had to use so far ahead of expectations that the director said a i they continue at or near the pace of the past two "weeks, it will be necessary or look for big fellows who order more tabs. icould push. Sale of trailer licenses have been' running ahead of previous years since January, revealing the increasing number of people who are meeting housing shortage by turning to the modern-day home on wheels.

DID YOU GRADUATE FROM IIK-BI SCHOOL? If your answer Is ThjIS IS FOR YOU. If you want a high school diploma to obtain a job, for job promotion or for personal satisfaction, you should know that an adult resident of New York State can acauire a New York State High School Equivalency Diploma by taking a series of examinations. Several hundred residents of this area have already done so. The next series of examinations will be held April 25 and 26. Why not take advantage of this educational opportunity? For details, contact: EQUIVALENCY TESTING PROGRAM, BOARD OF A I OFFICES SYRACUSE, N.

Y. r.w i Smartly styled with expert hand tailored a i that add greatly to comfort, wear and appearance. Choose from the largest assortment in New York State! And $7.95 up to $12.75 HUB PANTS 104-106 W. Washington St. A RELIABLE PLACE TO BUY PANTS! is many feet deep elsewhere.

(according to a Professor Savarnm, 1 t7 4 4 1 ij LJ i 4 Men who study geology say there I leader of a French hydrological expedition, quoted by the important Madrid weekly, Semana. It may possible to use these water re- was a time when the earth was without any soil. In that period, they add, solid rock existed on the in all places except to resurrect the great em- covered by water, jpire which, Egyptian Chaldean What turned the upper surface of and Greek legend relates, once the rock into soil? That was chiefly the water and wind. When rain comes down, it can do something to wear away rock. Bit by bit, little streams of water carry rock to rivers.

Cracks appear in and water seeps into the cracks. The water may come from rain, or melting snow. If it freezes, an important thing happens. It expands. A quart of water will make more than a quart of ice.

When milkmen deliver milk during cold winter weather, the milk "may freeze before it gets inside the house. In that case the stopper is pushed up from the top of the bottle, showing how the milk expands when it freezes. flourished in this region now cov- work by sand and barren rock. i Prof. Savarnin is reported to have said that the existence of the first was suspected when drillings at Ghardafa brought an unflagging jet of pure water.

Subsequent borings showed that the water layer extended from the southern foothills of the Atlas range to Lake Chad in the south. In the east, the supposed subterranean lake reaches to within 200 or 300 miles of the Egyptian border. French authorities already have embarked on a program of artesian wells and general irrigation in the Sahara, destined to create some exception of space--and with well equipped trailer camps established at convenient points for commuters, trailer dwellers declare they have the housing problem beaten to a standstill. Prowda revealed that the new 1949 tabs issued in place of plates have not been working out as well as had been hoped. Records show that up to this month, 435 passenger car and 187 commercial tabs have been reported lost or stolen.

There is no way of checking how many of the tabs have been stolen and put to use on unlicensed ve- "hicles, he said. Every lost tab adds profit to the state vehicle tax fund, however, as it costs the loser $1 to obtain a new tab to replace the one lost or stolen. ner men Smugglers Trapped A camel that walks with a heave new oases, A center has been is not unusual, but one that walks established at El Payan to train nomadic desert Arabs and prospcc- In the same way water expands'-j tive settlers from other North when it freezes inside a pipe. Some-(African regions in exploitation of times the pressure becomes so; these oases. strong that it bursts the pipe.

The freezing of water tends to force the cracks in rock to become larger. In time the pressure may break off chunks of rock along the sides of a mountain or hill. This goes on today on mountain sides where bare rock is exposed. Winds also play a part in break- CITIZENS. BE GOOD STOCKHOLM.

village of Vaggeryd in Southern Sweden is depending on its citizens to behave. Because of the acute housing shortage, one of the village policemen is occupying the jail. with a weave must be assumed either drunk or bilious--except by customs inspectors along the Egyptian-Palestinian frontier, who recently extracted 14 pounds of opium from the stomach of one such I bucolic bactrian. The usual device had gone wrong when the camel's strong gastric juices disintegrated the cork holding some of the drug in a tube --producing the weave that gave the heave (into jail) to that sinister Egyp-ti-an. India decided to limit dividend ing up rock.

They carry dust and for awhile to curb i 1 A rhino charged men fighting other particles which strike against flation. bare rock, and tend to wear it away. Dust from the rocks may be dropped by the wind at a distance cf manv miles. Plants and animals tend to enrich the soil. Among the animals which help it are the lowly earthworms.

They work their way thru it. and break it, up. They might well be called "Nature's plowmen." (For nature section of your i ire at JVIeru, in Kenya. 'i Detroit Survey Shows to have your FURNITURE and RUGS Interesting life stories of Mozart, Beethoven, Chopin, Brahms. Strauss and Liszt are told in the illustrated leaflet called "Masters of Music." This will be sent without charge to any reader who asks for it and encloses a stamped, scH-addresscd envelope.

Address your letter to Uncle Ray in care of (his and allow about 10 days for reply. Mexican miners throat entvi a general strike to got another pay hike. A I I This famous cleaning; process not only removes dirt and grease safely, but also kills moths, restores the natural color and brilliance, adding years of wear and beauty to your rugs and furniture. Play safe with your valuable and furniture and let year's of experience be your assurance of satisfactory work and service. Just Dial 2-9291 i If you live in Cortland Call Ccirtland 107 RUG LINOLEUM CENTER 2033 Park Street, Syracuse, X.

V. 'Open Mondays and Fridays Til MORE AUTO ENGINEERS USE SUNOCO MOTOR (ML THAN ANY OTHER SUNuCO Motor OH Motor Oil Motor Oil Motw Oil I a i a i monf 513 in the Detroit area, ifcowi them ait SUNOCO Mot.r Oil ii thtir can thai brand meter Here are the leading brands motor oil that Detroit Automotive Engineers use in their own can. Motor INI IF YOU WANT your car to give longer wear with less repair, follow the lead of the men who design and build America's Use the oil they choose over all others--Sunoco Motor Oil. Get a Sunoco Spring 10 services at a combination price. To prolong the life of your engine use SUNOC Motor Oifs DYNALU0C MCftCURY MADt ll.

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About The Post-Standard Archive

Pages Available:
222,443
Years Available:
1875-1978