Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 June 1947 — Page 14
) im taltoks for lack of Support Com-
‘moves in. This is the explicit warning with which hn Hughes sums up his Report from. Spain, out
Oa j ih
fr. Hughes was press attache at the American embasy 4 during the critical days when Gen. Francisco
© SOUNDS ‘WARNING —Emmet John: Hughes, whose “Report from Spain” warns Amerans . to support democratic stitutions in foreign countries igainst. Communist encroach-
left have hunni and debated the possibility of a Monarchic restoration, one that would guarantee essential human liberties and assure a truly parliamentarian government. . . . The critical doubt has arisen ‘over whether a king would sincerely establish such a regime and.whether the reactionary forces behind him would allow him to do so.”
» ® -. HE DESCRIBES the distortion to which press dispatches from the United States are subjected in Spanish newspapers, and prints extracts from the “classic Spanish catechism, used -in all religious instruction” in which freedom of the press is defined as “the right to print and publish without previous censorship all kinds yf opinions, however absurd and corrupting they may be.” The catechism says the government must suppress this freedom by means “of censorship.” Subscribing to a liberal newspaper is described as‘a sin, because the subscriber contributes money to evil and places his faith in jeopardy. To worry about communism is negative, says Mr. Hughes. To make democracy work is the only positive and effective antidote,
‘Notre Dame Educator
Plans Poems Publication Times State Service NOTRE DAME, Ind. June 21— “Thou Art My Strength,” a collection of five religious poems by Norbert A. Engels, professor of Bugush at Notre Dame university, will bel,
Prof. Engels’ poems are based on the five principal parts of the mass.
{Tower Books Repririt {More Popular Novels
World Publishing Co. of Cleveland!
announces a series of new titles in the “Tower Books 49-cent reprints for publication June 25. Included in the new list are: “The Blue Cloak,” by Temple Bailey; “The D. A. Draws a Circle,” by Erle Stanley Gardner; “The Snare,” by Rafael Sabatini, and “Desert Pury,” by Ramona Stewart.
uriiversity library, Bloomington, examines a rare copy of “Lyrical Ballads,” poems by Wordsworth and Coleridge
the late Oscar Watkins of Indianapolis.
RARE BOOK—Miss Geneva ‘Warner, curatoriof special collections at Indiana
started a famous literary controversy. A recent gift to the I. U. library bythe Indiana foundation and the alumni, the volume, believed to be one of 11 or 12 in existence, rounds out the university's Watkins collection of Wordsworthiana, amassed by
|r
SRE
ainghart $3.50. THE OTHER
S old favorite of boyhood—Edgar lian Poe's story, “The Gold-bug.” h never-failing popularity is based,
came tradition. Today “Massa” talk has disappeared. 1 - " = PERHAPS THE NEXT Dbestknown cipher story' is A. Conan Doyle's “The Adventure of the Dancing Men,” which came 60 years after Poe's Gold-bug.
MOUS STORIES OF CODE| | CYPH Edited by] 2 AND Bond. New-York,
‘DAY I reread an}
{no doubt, on the fascination that||
GOVERNOR'S PALACE—The famous governor's palace in Williamsburg, Va. one of the 308 drypoints, photographs and sketches by Samus! Chamberlain for * Behold Williamsburg: A Pic-
torial Tourof Virginia's Colonial Capital.” (New York, Hastings Mouse, $5). \
‘Biography’ of State College
This was a Sherlock Holmes story and the little figures furnished the principal clues. “This promises to -{be a most interesting and Sites 30) case,” says Sherlock Holmes, | His anthologist, Mr. Bond, has discovered that in both the Poe and the Conan Doyle story the ciphers were ered inaccuratefy; Poe made corrections, but Sherlock Holmes did not. Mr. Bond understands how such errors can be perpetuated through numerous editions, but he can find no excuse for! “the cold composure of Holmes.” Among other good stories in this book are Melville Davison Post's “The Great Cipher,” R. Austin
the revised first edition of whose publication in 1798
Martha Albrand's New Novel
“IIs Good Summertime Reading
| "WHISPERING HILL." A novel. = By Martha Albrand. New York,! § Random House, $2.50. By HENRY BUTLER “Whispering Hill” was evidently written with one eye on “Q-W-E-R-T, Y-U-1-O-P” and the othér on Hollywood. From typewriter click to camera) click is often a rapid transition. Martha Albrand, who has pre-| viously written of espionage in foreign settings, returns to northwest-| ern New Jersey with a novel about! a possessive mother, her son and his girl,
* » ”
NORAH SEDLEY (I can see Joan |
JEALOUSY THEME Mar hs
1 ™n respondent. She knew happiness , .. 4, “Whispering Hill,” Norah's when lou Sedley was alive and... ocfate in New Jersey. Even { While he still loved ‘her. But LOU. | though they have the privacy of a with characteristic suddenness, one |. ated wing of the old house, day announced he wanted a divorce, |}, young couple are subject to wanted to marry Betty Penton. | Norah’s jealous machinations, Norah refused to give him up. y =» From then on, Norah transferred | CUTTING REMARKS, subtle perher affections to her son, Luke, To secution, the myriad ways a de- | | put it more accurately, she found termined mother-in-law can dream lin Luke’s company the only effec-| {up to make her daughter-in-law feel tive relief from the pain Lou unhappy and out of place—Norah caused her while ‘alive and the uses them all. But Liz is stronger
Freeman's “The Puzzle Lock” and tales by Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, O. Henry, E. C. Bentley, |
Book Unfolds New Wrinkle
"AMERICANS ONE AND ALL." Edited: by Harry Shaw and
Torre—H. H.
« Ruth Davis. Foreword by Louis Adamic. New York, Harper, $3.50.
A new wrinkle in anthology-mak-{ing is “Americans One and All” |edited by Harry Shaw and Ruth | Davis.
{brought a history of the first. 75
Alfred Noyes and Lillian de la”
{both in Indiana and the Unitéd
‘Omits the Childish Pranks
"HISTORY OF THE INDIANA STATE TEACHERS COL. LEGE: 1865-1945." By Wil. liam O, Lynch. Terre Haute, Indiana State Teachers colfege. $2. By SEXSON E. HUMPHRIES COMMENCEMENT season has
years of Indiana State Teachers college. It is written by William O. Lynch, himself a former student of the college and later a member of the faculty, now professor emeritus of history at Indiana university. Dr. Lynch has written a solid biography” of the school. It is not a story of youthful pranks such as alumni tell at reunions. Instead it fits the development of the school into the history of educational ad- : vancement in the past 75 years! COVERS ERA—William O. Lynch, emeritus professor of history at Indiana university, whose "History of the Indiana
State Teachers College: 1865.
States.
INDIANA STATE Normal school was founded by law in 1865, but did not start its classes until 1870. The name was changed by law to In-
i ks. diana State Teachers college in of college boy pranks
1945" omits the usual accounts ;
~ lracial types that have contributed
cod he uy 5 Sil AS hh | newspaper owner, widow of a one-| px 1 i time daring, sensational foreign cor-| = Whispering i
| Here is a collection of 23 stories, {each about different national or
{to our great cultural melting pot— | Irish, Negro, Indian, Russian, German, Slav, Czech and many others. The stories have been selected as, portraying people as individuals. | ‘They are not speci® pleading or propaganda. They show not only the differences, but also the fundamental resemblances between people, a ppint always neglected by jingoists and racists. ¥ . = » ” AN INTERESTING and recurrent theme is the struggle between the older and younger generations of “imported” Americans, with the | oldsters striving desperately to pre- | serve the old-world way of life. and { the youngsters rebelling against the | parental culture,
William W. Parsons — served as| president from 1885 to 1921.
{member of the school's first gradu- | faculty in 1875. It is therefore {a large extent the story of Presi-
{Terre Haute school.
< + jto th rta "LITTLE MOHEE"—One of mace So Inportag
Bernard Brussel-Smith's wood [members of the facyity.
lating class in 1872 and joined the trated courses,
1929. out also the contribution made te The school has had only five the school’s personality by the type presidents. - Its greatest leader— jot students who have customarily
gone there—young people training themselves as educators and theré-
PRESIDENT PARSONS was a|/OT® more purposeful than the stue
dents of colleges with less concen
|proper that Dr. Lynch's book is to| Publish Philosophy
“Existentialism,” Jean-Paul Sars
dent Parson's influence on the [tre's own description of his muche
debated philosophy, will be pub
| But it also gives full ‘attention [lished July 28 by the Philosophical contributions | Library of New York. r distiguished | work is translated from the French It pointsiby Bernard Frechtman.
The brief
engravings for "Sing of America," folk tunes collected and | . A arranged by Tom Scott, which |BLOCK'S BOOKWORM Crowell will publish next Tues- . :
day ($4).
will fill your order for any
Ho ;
anguish she suffered aftef his trag- than her mother was. She won't be! “Don't you be such a Dutchie!” Book-of-the-Month ic death in a plane accident. driven, as Betty was, to suicide by!'says Ella Keper to George Vander Selections Announced | # = = Norah's = diabolical of Berg in “A Trough of Low Pres-| The Book-of-the-Month club's here.
book reviewed or advertised
‘attempted, Yet whom should we | support? | FI a { oi THE GIRAL GROUP of Repub-| lican exiles in Paris is considered a useful gpposition, but unlikely to| lead a government, for it would revive the cleavage of the civil war, This which would drive moderates and independent conservatives into Gen. Franco's ranks again, - Mr, Hughes declares the civil war cannot be described merely as a i Fascist-Communist war, nor can the i, Nationalist cause of 1936 be made} “a mere spearhead of Naziism.” Basic in all struggles is “the Spanish | reaction,” which remains pretty | ich what it was before Hitler and | took advantage of it. ““In the search for a practical escape from their dilemma,” writes
a
Semen
TOUGH PATIENT—Onre of Robert P. Hooton's drawings for "My.. Danish Father,” by Karl Eskelund, shows the’ author's father, Danish-born dentist to the court of Siam, having difficulties administering professionally to a rich, haughty Siamése ex-queen. (Doubleday, | $2.50).
h. CROSSWORD PUZZLE
4 Award Winner
Answer to Previous Puzzle
OID he)
‘WHEN LUKE returns from world war II and falls in love with Liz
history seems to repeat itself. Norah can’t bear to lose Luke, least of all to the daughter of Betty | | Fenton.
prolonged rolonged honeymoon, they come
technique tormenting, ’
The conversational battle of
Fenton, Betty's orphaned daughter, the Amazons and its not too un- story is an excellent treatment of
expected conclusion should provide | good summer reading. Certainly it doesn't tax the in-| | telligence, and it should give Holly-
|. Luke and Liz elope. After their wood a minimum of trouble to! sermons, each of its stories opens
produce.
Writer's Perley At |. U. July
BLOOMINGTON, Y June 21°—| { Indiana university's annual writers | conference will open here July 6. The program of lectures and | workshops will be administered by | a staff including: Carl Carmer, Frances Cavanah, David L. Cohn, | Howard Fast, Brendan Gill, Horace | Gregory, Rolfe Humphries, Randall | Jarrell, Meridel Le Sueur, John R.
Tunis, Ann Weil and Marya Zam-|
! renska. Indiana authors day is scheduled | for Sunday, July 13, with James A. Stuart, editor of the Indianapolis | Star, as principal speaker at the { luncheon. The conference will con- |
lishers.
|
GUILD CHOICE—Arthemise
|
Goertz, whose . new novel, "Give Us Our Dream,”.is the | Literary quild selection for
July. The story of characters ‘in a New York suburban apartment house will be published Monday by Whittlesey House ($2. 75).
‘Book Discusses
obs for Women The problem of the older woman suddenly faced with the necessity of earning her living is the subject of Julietta K. Arthur's forthcoming book, “Jobs for Women Over 35.’ To be published Aug. 25 by Pren-tice-Hall, the book discusses possi-
worked before. It devotes a section to considering those fields where | gray hair is an asset rather than | a liability, according fo the pub-
enim
| sure,” David Cornel DeJong's story of young Dutch-Americans. The
the impact of grim, Hollander puri- | tanism on teen-agers exposed to the “laxity” of American life. And while the book preaches ho
up an area of human experience lalien to most of us whose ancestors | have been here longer. “Americans One and All” is ai
{ valuable contribution to the grow- has reduced
ing literature of understanding and |
tolerance,
Publication Is Set
For Book on Lincoln
“Lincoln: The Liberal States- | man,” by J. G. Randall, professor | lof history at the University of Illinois, will be published Monday by Dodd, Mead & Co. Also on that publisher’s list for { Monday are “The Campbells Are | Coming. the story of the Campbell. family and their part in the |history of the British empire, by | Glenn H. Campbell, and “The La- | bors of Hercules,” new Hercule Poi- { rot mystery by Agatha Christie,
\Pottery, Porcelain Handbook Prepared
Tudor Publishing Co. will issue next month “A Handbook of Old Pottery and Porcelain Marks,” by Jordan Thorn, | In addition to about 4000 marks and signatures and the informatiom|
dual selectioh for August will be| Bruce Marshall's latest novel, “Vespers in Vienna" (Houghton Mifflin) and Rus H. Trevor-Roper’s “The Last Days of Hitler," (Macmillan). Lecomte du Nouy’s “Human Des-
tiny” will be the club's August- |}
September dividend.
}
Omnibook Price Down | Omnibook, the: book-magazine, its newsstand price] from 45 to 35 cents, effective with | the July issue, according to M. M.! Geffen, publisher. Abridged in the | July issue are four current best-! sellers, including “The Vixens" and “The Walls of Jericho.”
I | |
Block's Bookshop, South Mezzanine
Mail this doupon te THE WM. H. BLOCK CO. BOOK SHOP
Indianapolis 9, Ind.
Please send the following for which | enclose:sssessaersnncee Charge my regular account. Print titles of books wanted. .ceeessasansensssseesocsacnss
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* AUTHOR EDITOR Re“ = John Fischer, author of "Why They Behave Like Russians,” who has just been appointed chief editor of general books at Harper & Bros.
about them, the book contains illustrations of some of the finest examples. of pottery and porcelain | from various American collections,
bilities for women who have hever including those of the Metropolitan |
museum, Springfield museum and! several others.
‘New Novel Is Frank.
ELIARIOMAIS | Une through July 26. BARI ITIEEAVIAIT ——— HORIZONTAL = VERTICAL paRBLt gO "The Hound" Author P 1,7 Pictured 1 Treaties Wi award winner 2 Egrets 2 LODER SETS yng Fellowship 1 Antenna 3 Satiric BS! ETNINIU | | a Co. announce the | 14 Ascended : Si mrs END award of the annual Intercollegiate | 4 Mouth part £08 LR ise Literary fellowship to Frederic Eo 5 Indian army EA SERE | Morton, member of the class of 1947 18 Sharp cry (ab.) ¥ |at New York City college. 18 Lath 6 Fold 25 Furnished 40 Any | Mr. Morton's prize-winning novel 3202000. pounds 7 Race course = with oars 41 Note in is entitled “The Hound.” both title “21 Volume Midi 31 Grnove Guido's scale and theme having been suggested 2 at 8 Vigor 31 Handled 44 Winglike part DY Francis Thompson's poem, “The | : Ho bl 101sle 32 Confer 45 Inquire Hound of Heaven Previous win eatoix 11 Approached 34 Chests 46 Spri ners of the Dodd, Mead award Cicatri Appro Chests prite rx . include: Karon Kehoe, for “City in | Screen star 12 Penetrate 35 Type of poem 47 Man's name the 8 y in i , 9 Symbol for 17 Type measure 36 Mohammedan 49 Lloyd's bo un’ Constance Beresfordve * ruthenium 18 Behold! scriptures regisipr (ab.) Hoe for ne Oniyeasoning 5 24 Paris 38 Wharves 51 An (Scot.) ’ aureen aly, fo Py i measure ee en ; S “Seventeenth Summer.” i " 0 [i _—— i 1! 3 ' Ea “ adie 11 [19 S : e
aaa lk &
« Veterans, high school
oe
college students will enjoy ahead start” by availing themselves “of thé advantages of summer school. Classes noy faring. !
«+ Bulletin & Requegf™
Central Busin
r School
arodunieh and former
Andre ' Maurois’ latest novel,
J1“Woman Without Love,” described
as a “frank and mercilessly realist history of a frigid woman,” will be published next Wednesday in World Publishing's Forum books. Also to be added to the $1 reprint series is “You Are Younger Than “You Think,” the story of how medi{cine is lengthening life expectancy, (by: Dr. Martin Gumpert, a New York physician.
ANY BOOK Reviewed on This Page Is Available
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