Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 May 1948 — Page 8

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i) Ne ERAT ih

TE PR

Modesty Kep

“a

written in the third person.

Operation Bolero, ~ Winston — Churchill;

* Churchill,

question.

i os Ti min SE i = ; 3

“IE RST READER—By Harry Hansen

Mr. Stimson and Gen. Marshall) velt had been working for an inva-| sion of Europe by the American Army in 1943 “originally called)

“British! been oppos- it couldn’t be done, Prime MinFhinie Minister, had Meaitoren. | ister Churchill had agreed with nean-Balkan campaign. At Teh- him. But at Quebee the specious ._ran the “blunt firmness” of Mar-| argument that the destruction of shal Stalin’ eiped to defeat Mr. the Ruhr would enable England]

cuss the matter Then Marshal DE. dent's bad-

“Stair “emphatically. .stated.. would not consider the Overlord

‘promise défnite until a supreme Sommander had been appointed.”

+ Marshall

From Leading Invasion Of Europe, Stimson Savi

_ "ON ACTIVE ope IN PEACE AND WAR." By Henry L. Stimson with McGregor Bundy, New York Harper, $5. THE MOST modest military man in history is General ‘of Army George C. Marshall, who wanted to lead the invasion of Europe but wouldn't say so, because he couldn't boost his own stock. This is disclosed by his great admirer, Henry L. Stimson, Secretary of War during the war years, in_ his personal story, “On Active Service in Peace and War,” written with McGreg"or Bundy, . The memoirs are

J re———— ha

| jective, historians.

|" The worst shock came to Mr.’ Stimson when President Roose-| adopted the| { Morgenth# plan for converting the German Industrial Ruhr into

at Quebec,

a pasture. Mr. Stimson had argued that

[to sell goods without. competi{tion won over Mr. Churchill. Mr,

MR. STIMSON Wanted Gen.| Roosevelt had said earlier: “EngMarshall to lead Operation Over-| land is broke.” Jord in France, but the latter's . “gensitive personal integrity kept ivi him.. completely silent about the .Except oh one ‘occas ‘sion when Mr, Stimson drove him jo admission that ‘any

” ” » . MR. STIMSON. never makes the quarrel personal. When the Morgefithau plan was

this story modestly and without FubbIng It TE" bat it was a; hard: *I blow for the Stimson group, Mr, Stimson blames the Presi. heaith-.and- his. fear, of a possible revolution in France. | After the President had heard] the counter arguments a

a ——

| cisions ‘Wacks up other, less ob-

accepted at) Quebec, Mr. Morgenthau “told

0di to he sure that decisions would

. & Sunuine Polish goverment and

He became a ‘“cancellationist”

-+hert Hoover, (debts could be played ERO on

@

_.party who do their duty consci-

grinned and looked naughty and sald ‘Henry Morgenthau pulled a boner’ and . ... that tho Dad fo

It wasn't possible for anyone

be kept. Toward the end Presi--dent-Roosevelt “wholly Jost sympathy with the Russians,” and thought the failure to construct

“aggressive tactics of the ei were unjustified and

{were inherited - a . ” . THE STIMSON memolta’ are invaluable for’ a study of policy. They show. that his realistic warnings after the first world war were disregardéd by a nation

city planning.

signer, which gives a broad survey of Le Corbusier's versatile genius. With chapters by Joseph Hudnut, dean of Harvard's. Graduate School of a Dr. 8. ‘Gledion, also of Harvard; 3 Fernand Leger, French

are ainter-and town-planning

ad be

maximum Jing bersfit i i

Papadaki’s "Le Corbusier’ Very Tinaly Today When World Is Sorely i in Need of Rebuilding

(“LE -CORBUSIER: ARCHITECT, PAINTER, WRITER." Edited by Stamo Papadaki, New York, Macmillan, $7.50. ”

By HENRY BUTLER ; THE PSEUDONYM “Le Corbusier,” adopted in 1920 oo Charles ¥douard Jeanneret, has become almost a saint's name. For Le Corbusier, like our own Frank Lloyd Wright, is one of the great Imaginative personal--_{ities in architecture, design and Stamo Papadaki, himself a dehas assembled a book

muralist; J. L. Sert, authority, James Thrall Soy, art critic, the handsomely illustrated volume

that believed everybody's word and falled to protect itself, They disclose his recognition| "of Russian

28

calls Mz. Roosevelt the fin. ‘Commander in Chief the {Army has ever had, To George 1C.-Marshall he said: “You, : the finest soldier T have ever known.” In an atmosphere radiant with friendliness, Henry L.

nl. Large for example, should be completede- | Ing and rebuilding should be done

sr' Albert Sears’ Film

deals with all phases of Le Cor |busier's Salve activity. r . THE BOOK IS timely, not only in Bifope where #6 much rebuilding, is needed, but also in the United States. We; too, have jour millions who might as well be ‘homeless as live in the miserable, obsolete dwellings they inhabit. areas of Indianapolis,

ly cleared and rebuilt. The clear-

without delay, and done with no more complaining about cost

Producers Plan |

Millen Brand's novel about

Stimson, liberal Republican, said ciates.

and differed with President Her: in: whose eabinet he was Secretary of State, that i8e agains

sa , interest ibe loans made in emergency conditions for emergency purposes could ever be repaid by one government to ‘another. It simply could not be done; politically, ced th

world recovery and not in small| debt payments grinding to an em-| bittering halt ‘after 10 to 20! years”

MR. STIMSON has a | high 4 gard for Americans of whatever,

entiously. "There “are” no" spiteful’ disclosures in his book. He credits his opponents with honest, if mistaken, intentions. He admits that a man can change his mind, for he himself has done so. Yet his description of how,

President Roosevelt reached snap| first world war were disregard- |

Judgments and ‘Wobbled in de-

REALISTIC—Henry L. Stimson, whose memoirs ''show that his realistic warnings -after the

ed."

SUMMER SPECIAL SUMMER §

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TIME TO MAKE PLANS FOR THE SUMMER

JUNE 14 — JULY 24

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goodbye to his Democratic asso-|

Negroes, “Albert Sears” (Simon & Schuster, 1947) may yet be |screened, according to Paul 8. “Books Into ¥ilms" col‘umn in Publishers’ Weekly, l Adrian . Scoft, who produced! “Crossfire,”

[Nathan's

I dependent company, - Sentinel Pictures, Inc, with

{scheduled f for production. Accord-

housing - discrimination against!’

and Edward Dmy-| © [ry k, who directed that contro-/, " roRrsiar TI NEVE Formed an tne

*ATbErt Sears” & ws

large Speriment projects,

DESIGNER — Le Corbusier, famed French architect . and city planner, whose work is surveyed in "Le Corbusier: Architect, Painter, Writer."

cally go to war, Figures have bedn given elsewhere and could be given here to. show that slum clearance would actually pay in greatly reducing the cost to the community of crime and disease. oe) This is a hard idea to sell the ‘public, especially real estate owners. Le Corbusier blames specilation in land values, which developed enormously in the 19th

| “insist that if they can't get al

ition charinels they will road-show| it themselves.” Messrs. Scott and Dmytryk are | "two of the 10 Hollywood "person-| |alities fired for refusing to di-

1 their political affiliations.

Dr. Margaret ‘Mead Plans New Book

“Dr. Margaret --Mead,. .. .noted| | anthropologit and writer, who| recently made a screen debut in| [a “March of Time” film on mar-| {riage and divorce, is planning a new book for fall publication. To be published by Morrow, Dr. | |Mead's book will present a new| |discussion of the sexes in a changing world.

Announce Publication

Of 500th Title

Pocket Books, Inc., publishers of 25-cent paper-bound books, announce the publication of their 500th title this month, It will be| “The Sexual Side of Marriage,” plain-spoken presentation of &ex-

M. J. Exner, and it will have an initial printing of 600,000 copies.

ling to Mr. Nathan, the producers;

{release through regular distribu-|

| vulge to the Thomas Committee Seven Sheezes.”

4 ion Conger,

al

ual problems of marriage by Dr.

SIN SEINN SES

SNEEZER—The r ragman whe

1s shown Th sre~ 5F-Tibor Core gely's illustrations = for - "The by Olga Cabral, a recent addition to Simon | & Schuster's Little “Golden Books. Other new children's books in the "25.cent series include: "Little Peewee or, Now

Open the Box," hy [rE

Kunhard Miller;

pictures by J. P. ‘Circus Time," by Marpictures by Mr, and Walt Disney's and "Pinocchio."

| Gergely. | "Bambi"

Library Compiles . |

Bestseller Listing The Indianapolis

braty, currently celebrating

for each year since 1873. Titles of the

tudes,” $3),

‘in Amerita.

at tt T ; »,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

DESIGN FOR LIVING —This hotograph of one of Le Corbusier s architectural models shows ‘the gre planneris.conception. of the correct use of ground space” for

Century, for the horrible conges- |

tion of modern cities, In this country, however, one of the greatest obstacles to progress in building and planning is the building industry itself, which ‘persists in using obsolete methods and materials and charging for resultant waste, BEY Rd EE frvess ONE OF Frank Lloyd Wright's favorite comments used: to be: “When you drive your car up to your house, aren't you ashamed __of your house? It's Corbusier, who has invented many such phrases, Mr. Wright

insisted the home should be A

“machine for living.”

Despite the blessings of technology in other fields, our homes, save for plumbing, wiring and heating, have changed relatively little since the 18th Century, And. customers still go for “museumpiece” architecture.

Some of Le Corbusier's city-|

- planning ideas already are obso-!

lete—notably the building of su-| than we utter when we periodi-|per-skyscrapers. Two dreadful

plane skyscraper.

building. | And from the standpoint of -human comfort, decentralization probably is better than further increase in city size. But Mr. Papadaki’s book is inspiring as showing how a great artist and creator can combine all the important elements = his designs for living,

Griswold Book. Comes Out May 6}

“Farming and hn vay by A. Whitney Griswold, a new examination of the American thesis

wiGriswold. concludes that ~replanning of ‘American farming!

the backbone of democracy, will be published May 6 by Harcourt, Brace. According to the pubisher, Mr.

American farmer needs a tis et

to fit the needs and receive the

sheazed seven disastrous sneezes |

Public Liits 75th anniversary, has compiled a pamphlet listing some bestsellers

full benefits of 20th century de- | moeracy. "

Book Find Selection |

“Our Plundéred Planet,” by [Fairfield Osborn; president ‘of thei: New York Zoological Society, has | {just been chosen by the Book | Find Club. for May 5 distribution. The book concerns . world-wide | exhaustion of hatural Tesources.|

costumes

a Echoes of. Past— 3

Novel fers

|Local Color From 1920's

“TOBIAS BRANDYWINE." A

York, Morrow, $3.

THE STRANGER-in-the-house theme in literature is older than the hills, Once in a while, a ‘writer comes along who can redeem it fromy its feustomary atmosphere of mingled sentimentality and superstition, «Dan Wickenden with the old idea in “Tobias Bran-

combines sure-fire popular elements with wit and keen observation. The result Is a * Hignly readable novel,

{fanciful alias of a one-time cele-! brated ‘comedian ‘who. shows one winter morning at the kitchen door of Sen. Windrow’s mansion

kitchen meal appropriate for a penniless wayfarer. Then, when he collapses from fatigue and {liness, the Windrow family more or less adopt him. He adopts them, actually, and Mr. Wickenden has a good chance

readers—the theme of the visitor who stays on in the big house and always seems to know the right

. answers in family crises,

THERE'S EMmy, “the old-maid daughter; there's Cedric, the almost equally old-maid son; there's Anna, the married daughter who

itive---resource...in.. NQ other people's troubles.

far less effi-

broke away from the old and 3 Senator's benign. tyryi anny.

They all have their problems. 180 do Anna's’ children —anotier| |generation, Mr. Brandywine has!

Precocious Gladys, Anna's {daughter, at 13 writes a novel {with Mr. Brandywine as the werewolf hero. At 22, owing largely to Mr. Brandywine’s kind and thoughtful advice, she sells a commendable novel.

ao SCOTTY, ANNA'S SON, George, Anna's husband, get|™ help-from- Mr. Wickenden’s mod-. s est hero, who, incidentally, never makes much impression as a personality—at least, not on me. The novel is nicely: written, 0 with a lot of careful and accu-|%f rate local color -from the 1920's.

pat and artful, climaxes.

his literary and musical allusions, “Tobias Brandywine". could be a «decidedly superior movie.—H. B,

{that the independent farmer is

ART SCHOOL

JOHN HERRON ART

Set June 4 Publication

“All About Marriage,” a new {novel by Ethel Hueston, h announced by Bobbs-Merrill for {June 4 - publication,

Cit

oo... Also Available in Our Neighborhood Stores -® 4217 College ® 5539 E. Wash. 0 SOL San Mail Orders P

"Coe

novel. By Dan Wickenden, New =

does. a. good job pyr

In Wanhope. | Mr. Brandywine first gets alwas

10 exploit the theme that delights]

It has good, though maybe too mens tn ees fon

servations and the good taste of

NVA Naa

New York, Doubleday, $4.

an g

[cravvns Pinties; ai

¥

Lochner. ini Rs Hitler's chief zealot, the little

(urged complete extermination for

[the Jews and poured out his & TOBIAS BRANDYWINE is the| POISONOUS propaganda. | The Russians, says Hugh Gib-| up! son, tossed the

Nazi records on {the ground and sent home the! empty filing cabinets. They had no truck with what written thereon. These pages become available by consent of the Alien Property Custodian,

neither yea nor nay. The originals go to the Hoover war library at Stanford University.

~ . »

WHY SHOULD we want to read “The Goebbels Diaries”? Partly because this is the inside story of what the Nazi leaders knew and planned while we were fighting their worst submarine attacks and throwing them out of North Africa. Partly to determine how: human beings could give

gy

ols Diari es, Give Inside Story oF Ness

“THE GOEBBELS DIARIES, 1942-43. 44 [Edited by Louis P Lochner,

sheets of ‘containing approximately 750,000 words set down a the greatest enemies of the human race—Dr

THE FRONTISPIECE pictures |

bels. could disclose bet-| dywine.” Mr. Wickenden skinrally ter the hyena-like features of |

man with the twisted (oot Whol

® ini ’ | political leader.

with the State Department saying!

_ saTumDar, a way 1 m0

ARE tuto om

Te Be

the London radio as a complete

surprise. Hitler proposed a parachute |rald on Rome to capture the king and Badoglio but only the libera. tion of Mussolini came off. Badolio was everywhere denounced.

» ~ r , MUSSOLINI HAD lost pres. tige; the Fuehrer treated him | well, but with reserve, for Mussowas no longer a great Goebbels realized that the Nazis must make peace with one of their enemies, but which one? Hitler thought it might be easier to deal with the British than with Stalin, who could not deliver what Hitler wanted. The Japs put in their advice, saying Sicily must be-held at all costs. 80 the Axis was worried plenty, Hitler began to fear an Anglo. American invasion in the west, where the forts were strong but

{had only a thin line of reserves

behind them. The Allies must not be allowed to gain a foothold! (But, a year later, they did.)

|their lives to the Nazi myth. Partly. because At gives. us a

chance to gloat. - Goebbels was realistic and contem He was de-!

ptuous.af {voted to Hitler, yet took Htliler's,

| inexhausttble tact and imagina- | most ‘extreme statements with -with,

| NSEr vations. “9, "1943; being missing. Covered are the fall of Bataan, | Whiieh Goebbels applauded, mock-| ing Gen.

The diaries end on t- “Pages

of the Army Douglas|

MacArthur's promise to return; [the American expedition into North ‘Africa; the defeat of the Nazis in Africa, which Goebbels

me), shifted at the request of| Mussolini, am Tehran,

THE SITUATION Bo

Spender of Italy is the -climax the book. The Nazi leaders

locke

INSTITUTE

SUMMER SCHOOL—June 14-July 23 Watercolor Painting—Drawing—Ceramics Graphic Arts

Teachers’ Course—Children’s Class 16th & Pennsylvania Sts.

75 books listed! are drawn from .“ Golden Multl-| by F. L. Mott (Macmillan, | recent history of bestsellers

END in MAY

Butler University's

FoFor Half A Century INDIANA CENTRAL COLLEGE

has given education with sivphd:. sis on the individual development of character and ability to the people of Indiana,

Summer Term Begins

* Indiana Oentral Soller oY

Day or

be ready to take your place world. ‘The opportunities ambitious, success-seeking

June 14

Por Further Information Call or . Write to;

The Director of Admissions - 3

Pe

- Central

3 “Indiana Business JL tee. Meridian

ASt. Clair.

Make Summer Months Count

You may enter now and attend, without interruption, until your course is completed, as the school is in con = } tinuous session. The sooner you start, the sooner you'll |

and promising. This is the Indiana Business College 4

; of Indianapolis. . The others are at Marion, Muncie, . Logansport, Anderson, Kokomq, Lafayette, Columbus, ‘Richmond and Vincennes—all approved for G. I. Train. Jng. Interested persons may contact: the schools of their Tespietive preferences; or Fred W,

Business Colleg

Oo! Bulldih Si a

Evening

as a beginner in the Pusiness in this

young

eld. for competent, ple are numerous

Case, Principal

LL 888Y

others an opportunity to earn three hours of graduate or undergraduate credit preceding the start of the regular Summer Session,

Pre-Summer Session May 10-28 The Pre-Summer Session offers courses in Botany, History, Psychology, and Education for those Interested in working "toward a ._ degree or teaching certificate. For

the Director, Summer Session, * - : HU. IME

For Teachers Whose Schools

Pre-Sume-mer ‘Session offers to teachers whose schools end in May and to

further information write or call

|

TT

ian ti

The book ring-bound to lie flat when open, with

step-by-step illustrations and photo.

A raid on Essen Krupp production 100 per cent, LIne, BH urg.. A. million = were "homeless. “We are faced with | problems almost impossible of solution,’ rats. De. Goebbels. ivi

AS THE DANCE “ot death be. (comes more furious, Hitler takes Goebbels aside; ~-talks--of good | times to come when they can remove their field-gray coats, be civilians again. go to the movies {and gather with their cronies in the bierstube. And the bombs come closer, What can we learn from this book? Possibly that a few men

and|blames on the removal of Rom-|fijed with hatred and venom, can

bring suffering to millions, sending nations to their deaths. Does it tell how human beings can combat such monsters? -Not ex-

by the fall of Mussolini and the|plicitly. Only by implication. But

to be

that lesson will have a sn ole H.

learned.

of kitchenstested recipes,

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22 Near (ab) __ ) king 28 Nimjgle 48 Pairs (ab) 23 Vends 8 Basebalt sticks x Lukewarms {49 Aicul 27 Tops of h “9 Bitter vetch nset “La 30 fui ¢4% 10 Railroad (aB.) 36 Concursy 0 Sain Lea . 11 Equipment ~ « 37 Peruvian 82 310d 12 Leveled mountains (Scot. 32 American

34 Small island 35 Lamb's pen

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'

Murat "KID" ORY

Winifr To Be

Clarence | To Sing §

EXCEPT F formances at th Clarence E soloist, give. th

INCIDENTAL) have read in The cancel all her su will not be heard tion of “Carmen” who appeared wi Indianapolis Sym gram, will sing tt

THE JORDAN Sunderman, direc conducting, will g morrow in World be Eugene Kilinsk to tie Jordan fat Mentioned . ab Btars show has a Ark passenger li King, the vulture Publicity, even th: mountain lion, ai and tame when ferocious for mos

EDWARD “KI Baad will give a | day in the Murs Bertha “Chipple” Pianist, and Lo vocalist, . Martip Marks, Presg in a fre aodntaday in Wo lis Matinee