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

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THE FIRST REA ‘Eisenhower Speaks’ Shows

“EISENHOWER SPEAKS."

_ these papers is that the General ‘speaks t

"aE

_he_ understood the problem of relations with the Russians,

tions that produce

She

READER—By Harry

a

Hansen

General as Representative Of Non-Military Nation

Edited by Rudolph Treuenfels. New|

York, Farrar, Straus, $3. v | "THE INCREDIBLE Sg0SaY." By Barry Ulanov. Naw York, Whit-|

WHAT Dwight D. Eisenhower has expressed in speeches and messages ks up as pretty sound American doctrine. He has no words-to waste, no. vain-glory to parade. He sizes up current affairs with common sense, If you have lost track of what Eisenhower stands for, and what his views are, consult “Eisenhower Speaks,” an inspiring collection prepared by Rudolph L. Treuenfels, First impression on reading

{ | category of the inevitable into its proper position as af evil, subject’ to prevention, or at least control.| “During this probative period {of the United Nations), the American people should “be| last to doubt eventual succeps and should be the foremost in| combating pessismism about the United Nations future, { “Until all nations show a posi-| tive willingness to discard arma-| ment, the security of the United States must remain firmly, | grasped in our own hands.”

» n " THERE IS NOTHING timeserving or. politic in the Eisenhower credo. His optimism is a healthy. expression of work and fain. He speaks for the indiual freedom of a “prosperous |g hat” citizenry.” He is convinced th

as a civilian, He is a rep-

the imperfec- : tions in a demo- Gen. Elbe cratic nation, and eager b correct them. 3

pear a House subcommittee “on dissemination of information abroad” in May, 1947, and his tes there shows how well

qat “out of freedom was born creative capacity to overcome obstacle that confronted

us.” Vik It uld be a great loss to He ‘sdid ‘that in Berlin he had invited each of the other commanders to send. 10 officers into the American area, and in return Americans - would. visit other

on Morningside Heights, handin them. se AN ADORING and tireless bi

tains practically | trots Bong | friends. We have trained every oc 1° | {sings, and they soldier that everybody is{ %'" hyo “go. I

scribed. There is | + us a list of every pu down as freely: cord and there are plots of | Bing's “films, In theevant you To have forgotten —— 1 “The image of Bing Crosby

. = GEN. EISENHOWER ex- ,” . writes the .author,

either of themselves, if they are male, or of their broth

8 was, trying to J» EN sey will celebrate their 27th wed-| C says he; any farmer can learn ment it pion i 3 and half- A na they take on Bing's ding anniversary, probably at | O V lume pudding, concocted like spice, ;o gor only ignorance and way basis.” glamour and enjoy themselves,|[1320 E. 1st St, Bloomington, in n ne Oo ‘cake, contains grated carrots, abuse had deprived the: nation of "This Russian knew American “It's not hard—it's painfully|the attractive eight-toom brick OF CLARENCE raisins and spices in addition 10/0. 4 00pm Jand. : history, and asked about “someleasy. For Bing is the auarage House they built 21 years ago. Li ho York Knopf, $3.75 Bows. oo ..u..8 ; ‘of’ tt» 8 «EN . : abe 1 Apts Of Or Pate American, and therein lies. his| - 0 PRIATELY enough, the| CLARENCE DAY never ex-|. SHE LIKES to knit, but only) LIFE ON MALABAR Farm

HIS POPULARITY fs undimin He also!

¢ “assumed sinister proportions.” “They even went so far as to prepare a movie roughly paralJeled on his life, with some effective distortions of “the true Crosby story, to undermine his career.” Although they spread — rumors that Bing ‘was through, he made no comment, while his “|audience never knew he was being attacked. : : While this book tells everything we are, {about Bing, it also characterizes

therefore the less we would have An era of good-natured comedy in| to pour into armies and navies and such other sterile organizanothing for this country. : : ~ “War is not a natural vil; it is man-made. The tragedy of war is. multiplied .by acceptance of its

made friends everywhere. His| thuge success -has- not spoiled a genuine fellow. -

society, whose goal ers > the Ica is really the land of oppor-| The Kinseys' three children, ality. fed by luxuriant planting. They] ~0f 8 * hope. he tudividual {Unity.” says Bing; “Look. at us.inow. -all away from home, rel... #6. &.. ; {now have close to two and a half developmen the "Where else could a plece of two daughters: Miss Anne Kin-| YOU GAN get it all in one acres of property. Situated as it

community and national attitudes| that will remove war from th

(up. with 0 much gravy?" = Vi ILincoln Editor Set “To Release Book

| Paul M. Angle, editor of “The| {Lincoln Reader,” which became a

Rutgers University Press. | According to the publisher, the,

8g" out diplomas with ribbons on

America’s fortune to have him sit!

4 “IS there a MRS. Kinsey? "Peter “Arno cartoon: in- last Sat-

'm : 'the publication of the Kinsey Re-

Bing Crosby held by most Ameri-and ¢ “is (Wayne, whose Clara Brackeri McMillen. hers, fathers Next month,

Kinsey romance began in Scie Hall on the Indiana vray satisfaction that would have beer!

vard eling fellowship.

was in Bloomington for a few days consufting about a’ post on the IU faculfy, to which he was appointed that fall.

McMillen's plans for a career. She had intended going on with graduate work in science, and she particularly wanted to fake [young course in entomology. \

{course,” she says, i American acting. Bing's personal-| Kinsey proposed to me before- memories of living Americans ity has dominated the screen and hand.”

_ ., |mained unfinished, Mr. Ulanov describes the banter marriage in June, 1821, T got too decades. : {that {is perennial around Bing. | liuived in. home-making and baste human wants, needs, likes More of music. Wi ia 5 Pre mar --1 especially: when Bob Hope and heiraising. a family . to. continueiand dislikes reappear, and. the inevitability. We heed &n Otgan-1, o.. oeqling each other. “Amer- study,” she explains.

spaghetti and a meat ball wind sey, Mrs. Robert M. Reid, Blooming-|Clarence ton, | sophomore at Oberlin College.

Were

species of gall-wasps, the tiny in-{out Words.” sects that produce what people Booksofthe:Month Club selection; {call “oak apples”=:those remark: has compiled a new book, “Gettys-|able ping-pong-bali-sized growths Thurber's art. burg,” to be published May 24 by on oak trees or scrub oak.

[forthcoming book is a day-by-day took him to places like Mexico {acrount of the battle drawn from! and Guatemala.

By HENRY BUTLER 2° tdafly carries his Junch-in-a paper sack to his Science Hall office. “ x Bool... B.... i ra - “THEY MADE me spread out a typical lunch on the table so they could photograph it. ~ It looked like one of those scientific

That question, caption. .of

day's New Yorker, i8 one of the jer gags that have followed

wer is: There is a ~-ghe's a friendly ifor one day,” she said. - - g Hoosier from Ft. maiden name Was!

and Dr. Kin-

Best of Day

nce |perjenced the full measure of

mpus: That's where Clara his had he seen the tremendous

was on & Sheldon trav-|amiging sketches for magazines for & number of years, and an earlier collection, “God and Father,” \had been widely .appreciated by. editérs, critics and friends, but<had not reached the general publid; : When “Life, With = Father” caught on, Clarence Day was at the end of a longiperiod of suf-1 fering from arthritis. He died in 1935, at 61. Ne . . LJ WHILE MUCH. of the popu“I never did get to take" that|larity of the élder Day's" antics “because "Dr./and the Day family is based on

It was in 1920, and Dr. Kinsey

The romance changed Clara

Dr. “Kinsey's advanced

{who were boys ” # ” HER GRADUATE work re--stortes-witi-last longer than -any

Manners change,

a Chicago dress designer; volume now, Day,” and a son, Bruce, who is a|Knopf.

| Te

-In the years when the children Father,” “Life With Mother,”

WrOWINg up; DF Kiisey- Was and This Simian World,” and’

suggest: a kinship with James D: | Both authors de-. {veloped in the same period and | 2. (practiced the . same

DR. KINSEY'S collecting trips sketching.

Besides “galls,” alike.

vity. ting at home just knitting” she But it's something to do

The _' Kinseys'

« “‘PROK’ never informal cards.” Mrs. {ing that the nickname he ' B kD Their humor, however, is not/Was given Dr. Kinsey years ago | Lippy $ DOO ue Mr. Thurber's is the more PY boys in summer camps where |

SUNDAY PROGRAM—Mrs. Alfred C. Kinsey of Bloomington, wife of the now famous chief author of the Kinsey Report, selects recordings for one of the

» 35 - There Ki At Bloomingt There IS a Mrs. Kinsey—At Bloomington J; when she told them Dr. Kinsey sandwich with lettuce and dressing, plus a cookie and some fruit for lunch, Mrs. Kinsey says. He eats. more heavily at dinner, preferring pork to beef, disdaining potatoes, and enjoying a great variety of* vegetables and salads, He ‘also likes stale bread, particphotos of the diet of a white ratiularly Vienna bread. | Mrs, Kinsey, who likes to cook Dr. Kinsey likes a cold-meat “better than anything eise around; : the house,” also is. expert with {desserts and makes things like persimmon pudding and, believe it or not, carrot pudding. Carrot

~ » .

Pha

+ Don't fool yourself; ‘listen to

1 . 4

[PART EXULTATION— |g

'MalabarFarm'

Can Be Read As Text, Novel

"MALABAR FARM." By Louis Bromfield. New York, Harper, $375 pavement 80 YOU think butter and eggs. come out of the back room of your delicatessen, and there is plenty for everybody? And that|

Farmer Louis Bromfield. He knows that everything we eat! comes “off the farm and that many people don't get enough to eat at all. : oe

loves farm efficiency. He works|| one of the finest farms in Ohio. He writes about it lyrically, in “Malabar Farm.” . You can read it as a novel, or you can read it as a textbook. It's both. It's inspiring. With a healthy indignation against poor farming and government sub-sidies-—for which you have to pay in taxes—Farmer Bromfield describes good farming, and prac. tices it. A How his farm is ‘worked coloperatively by several families he told in an earlier book, ‘Pleasant Valley.” - The new one is part} diary, by a man who enjoys working the land; part argument, to

areas, “I Kinseys' regular Sunday evening sessions of music. One of the Russian officers, ographer, Barry Ulanov, has writ- ® ® ® . 8» . nn friendly to Gen. Eisenhower, |ten a full length book about Bing| _ . r i 5 raise objections. oid wir; Croeey,_caled, “To lncrae Deter Arno's New Yorker Cartoon Answered—

as an accompaniment to other ac- has many compensations. Young “I wouldn't be caught sit- fellows love to work as farm

discloses that Bing: t then ‘an IU student, met, of With Father, (Says. Bul it's . ep] Cat a Jive C. "Kina fo. Who had re- a book are » while talking or listening to muhe £ of &icently won his Ph. D. from Har-| ‘fe had been writing these sie: ~ !

Listening to music has beén a major recreation in the Kinsey household for years. By actual measurement with a yardstick Mrs. Kinsey kindly provided me, there are 26; feet of record albums, all good music, on shelves in- the living room, Dr. Kinsey's study and Bruce's bedroom. Every Sunday evening for more than 15 years, the Kinscys have had eight or 10 faculty friends in for a session of Bach, Beethoven, Brahms and lo other composers. -

A TYPICAL Kinsey Sunday |i) e rescue of the horses f in the 1890s, evening begins with an hour and| ooo rege ® NOSES Tom the ‘there is good reason that these a half of music, pauses for a des-| : Part, which occasionally may bel. te he grows indignant. Sew“After our humor written in the last two|carrot’ or’ persimmon pudding, age, full of precious mineral mat-

but and winds up with-half an hour: yor, 18 dumped. Into rivers and

interesting but | . : , oe tof wealth in iron, copper,.alumis Day household is close to actu. | unpretentious house is surround-|, ... anq timber was transferred ; by lend-lease to all parts of the globe; "we have. received nothing, the Hitle” I8 a tie : or next to nothing fn return for claim that the title” is a true in “The Best of|is in one of Bloomington's quiet-|, . “conservation is the great record of the length of time they|. published by|est sections, | H. . This includes complete, SMAll-Scale estate; restful to the

|“God and My Father,” “Life With eves: SN

the property is a

ts of

iprove what can be done; part exultation in the results obtained by careful “use of the soil. ” Ey . % =» i : CONFUCIUS WAS right, says Farmer Bromfield; “the best fertilizer on any farm is the footsteps of the farmer.” He tells how wornout soil has been reawakened to productivity. He declares that in the New Agriculture, integrated into the national economy, the proper use of land becomes important to the individual farmer and the nation that lives by his - products, Specialization is often the answer, when the general farm no-longer can pay its way.

how erosion was halted, how grass proved “the great healer”; how blighted farms were returned to productivity by common sense. He pays tribute to the “universal law of fertility, the cycle of birth, growth, death, decay and rebirth”. There is nothing mysterious about reclaiming land,

hands: making, building; lime corn-cultivating. summer life. “With mechanization they don't go to work until 8 and are finished at 6 with all the long summer evenings free. There is swimming, fishing and riding. What they like best is tinkering with the old cars and motors in the farm repair shed.” ; Farmer Bromfield doesn’t kill off all the woodchucks, which have their uses, too. He watches the balance of fish life in the ponds. He studies the weather. {One -of his best chapters deals {with a cloudburst and a flood and

“They help with" haystraw - baling, fence -

spreading and It is a good

‘He writes with enthusiasm of which are the chief claim to fame! a

because he lf}

SCARED {Reha Speedway photograph for-Life by: Leon: ard McCoinbe shows a young starling frightened -by the cars thundering by. It is one of the 100 news pictures in “The Great Pictures: 1948." edited by Clifton C. Edom, which" was" pub-lished-Monday by Garden City ($3). :

‘Love Is a Four-Letter Word’ Bodes Ill for the Male

"LOVE IS A FOUR-LETTER ever “to any woman, when if WORD." By April Taylor. New clings to her own man, another York, Beechhurst Press, $2.50. {her nostrils.” You know what MY" - suspicions were ‘aroused April means; that's merely her when I saw the title of April'siway of turning English around. book. I knew that it boded iil. As| April éounts ‘it a virtue in a hardened book-reviewer I have Woinien that ha they Ma up. a 3 ; by a male the ance on s had to become acquainted with "head and shoulders, whereas it is

great many four-letter . WOrds, | ones in ‘men that they start

! t the woman's ankles. Men's alf-baked ts, Love is| of hal. iked Hovells + LOVE.N ankles are nothing to look at,

says she, and she has somethi In April Taylor's book love aS Se ng.

described as matrimonial piracy, 2 = = husband's deceitfulness, bache«| sop “TAVIOR is Fight lor’s wolfing and a general dis-| pout the contradictory habits position to ‘lie, theat and flatter| , ,. hands. For instance, in an . for selfish- purposes and other-| i oir a husband keeps his hat wise take advantage of the fe- ; ps . male species on when with his wife, and reyi : {moves it when another woman “All men tell lies to all women,” enters the cage. He sits around begins April. “Any man may take unshaven in the house, apologizes Sageption to iol initia} premilss. for it when a woman caller enwe y rove we're ters, wrong. And we don’t have to prove . we're right. Everybody says: “Now John, don’t get up.” knows it." “I can reach it.” “Don’t bother poctee” What can you do. with|aearie™: The Wife: of course. 8 ? at can you ! : hy course. that sort of closed mind? But April, any bride who reads . n= your hook will get the fear of the THE DEPARTMENTS of in-/male run like mad from the’ quiry opened by April show how altar. You have made males so far the current tendency to de- vile that nobody will tolerate One stroy reputations has gone. April around. You have even forgotten Taylor not only lists all the usual that males are sometimes pretty complaints—the married playboy umetul as breddwinners. Or is that whose wife won't give him a di-|a Subject ‘too crass for us to vorce, the flatterer who marries mention? H. H. a trusting girl for her money, the {man who isn't understood by his ~ ag wife, . ° ; * {A Religious Center With a April also admits that womeén Civie Circumference are . partial to. strong per- ‘ fumes, and that they prefer this to the natural odor of men. How-

But when he ‘thinks about

isent to the sea. A vast amount

‘Gardening used to.be my nus- Delays Publication :

: 8: relaxation and. exerci... The publication: {doing important. work collecting selections from “Thoughts WD Denda Rows a he garden as Slonimaky's “A Thing or Two } » a y About usic” has been postThe drawings in the final pages able to get together,” Mrs. Kinsey, oped until May 25 on account of " “ii large pre-publication” demand;

told me. - Towne & lished May 17 by Prentice-Hall. | \ ‘CHURCH It will contain an introduction by] UNITARIAN :

¥ » J

hs;

oo. . learned to play, or ’ Kinsey said, explain-} Heath: the “publisher.

X 5,

‘REPRINTED — John Steinbeck, whose best-selling novel, “The Pearl” is a recent addi- » fiea to the Bantam Books 25cent reprint series. :

FoR AY

4 Knopf.

|contemporary writings—diaries, he started collecting .pieces of letters and memoirs. native pottery, The Kinseys now have a large assortment of ceram-

New Book Discusses ics, which -they prefer to use in place of conventional china-

Lincoln's Politics ware | “Lincoln and the War Gover-| «gne good thing about having {nors,” by Willlam B. Hesseltine,|,qq pieces instead of -sets of |will be brought out May 24 bY|gighes is that if you break a piece, Prof. Hesseltine's book you're not breaking a set,” Mrs. “tells fhe little-known story of Kinsey says. {Lincoln's manipulation of politi-| McCall's magazine is bringing {cal opinion in the North,” acéord- out a feature story on Mrs. Kining to the publisher. sey, possibly in the August issue,| “Europe On the Move,” by EuRR ———— The McCall's people asked a great gene M. Kulischer, a new analysis Set Publishing Date many questions of Mrs. Kinsey of the causes of World War II, Margaret Mayorga's annual and were “especially : intrigued” will be published May 19 by Cocollection of “Best One-Act| Fm w————————

lumbia University Press. Plays” will be ready for publica- According to the publishér, Dr. tion by Dodd, Mead on May 17. It will contain complete one-act! plays, chosen as the season's - |best, most of which have not| previously appeared in book form.

and developed anecdotes

in ‘the New it betrayed a!

writings appeared Yorker, he never

reader.

come close to folklore. —H. H. - |Kinsey Report.

"Europe on the Move’

which owns the hook.

living room is a present from

movements are the major cause of [stamped with gold. war.” J » Its title is: “Sexual Behavior

the, Human Male.” Publication Date Set “Seeds of Liberty: The Genesis | of the American Mind,” by Dr.| Max Savelle, will be published May 24 by Knopf. The author finds in the century from 1650 to 1750 the origin of “our.national character and faith."

OUR PIANO LOUNGE 1S AVAILABLE FOR

PARTIES AND BANQUETS

FOR RESERVATIONS CALL WA-0388

YOU ARE INVITED-To

by doing.” This is the

of ‘Indianapolis, The others

1

|" YIPER—Joseph Goebbels, vi- | perous publicity -chief of the | Nazi Party, whose reminiscences, "The Goebbels Diaries,’ a Book-of-the-Month Club selec. tion for May were reviewed on this page lat Saturday. . i

802 N. Meridian (

|Lsecen

into pounded of “Prof” plus “K" for] short stories. While some of his |Kinsey, and the family still uses

Mrs. ‘Kinsey asked me to emtendency to be superior to the|phasize a point The Times menMany of his sketches tioned in its original review of the |

| | “We don't personally get any | {royalties. - A lot of people have {had the notion that we were get-

Analyzes War Cause |ting tich," she said. Royalties all| go to the research corporation|

One deluxe item in the Kinseys'|

bookbinder friend of Dr. Kinsey's in New York. It's a magnificent

Kulischer “states that population|Volume bound in crimson calf, _

indiana Business College .

port, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond and Vincennes—all approved for.G: I. Training. Interested persons may contact the schools of their res ive prefer. ences, or Fred W, Case, Principal rie i

Central Business |

‘according to. Allen,

“Prok” |

sophisticated; Clarence Day|Dr. Kinsey used to serve as na-|and Me” is announced for. May 18

|

raised no supercilious eyebrow |ture-study counselor. It's com- pyplication by Ziff-Davis.

~daterof-Nicho

Leo Durocher's “The. Dodgers

Californians Write

On Golf Troubles

“Seventy-three Years in a Sand. Trap: Or, To Hell With Golf!” has been signed for fall publication by A.A. Wyn, : The authors, Fred Beck and O. K.. Barnes, are Californians who

9:15 A. M. SUN.—-WFB Dr. E. Burdett Backus - = Speaks on. “Success in Marriage”

: 11 A.M. AT THE ss CHURCH

have, between them, spent in sand

traps. -

Writes Book on Succ

Claude M. Bristol, a study of the use of auto-suggestion to achieve personal. success, will be

- ALL.SOULS

.| Palmer Hoyt, editor and publisher |

of the Denver Post. 1453 N. Alabama St.

* CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Answer to Previous Pussle ;

A v

~ |

in

High School Graduates

visit this school; see. it in nor-

mal operation; discuss the courses offered; learn of. the opportunities for its graduates; note’ the scope and thoroughness of ifs free placement service. “set their .own pace” in the major subjects. Personal- -* progress methods make this possible. They “learn to do

Here, students

are at Marion, Muncie; Logans-

CANNAGIAN Ambassador AT REA TNAGE = ERENEAPE = RIOT PAC [EASES EIN HORIZONTAL VERTICAL [RICE ANTEITIC 1,7 Pictured 1 Open (poet.) =) Bl Te 2 British 2New Guinea [ERASE ETON ambassador to port UE = es ait U.S. Sir=—3 Sickest PE OE NS 4 Huge TREAT SES

13 King's home ESIEINTTT | IMIEINCT

S$ Out of (pre " 14 Island group é Outol (9 8x) 23 Grew wan 46 Half-em 15 Lampreys 7 Detonate 24 Anoint 47 While 16 Mimicker 8 Registered , 26Employers (oy 19 Winglike parts _hurse (ab) ZLREEETog pon 20 And (Latin) First man: d ; 10 Indian 30 Mine shaft hut 50 Harvest 21 Dreadful antelope 31 Onager ° . goddess 228ymbol for 11 Parrot ' .,, 32 Exclamation 51 Moist magnesium 12 Compass point 38 Horn 54 Piece out 23 Dance step 17 Jumbled type 40 Mulct 85 Hops' kiln 25 Diving bird 18 Symbol for ~ 44 Small island - 57 Electrical unif 28 Caper erbium - 45 Youths 59 Size of shot 31 Vituperate 33 Frénch article 34 Thus 35 Symbol for samarium 36 Eye (Scot.) 37 Puff up 39 Keen 41 Low haunt

42 Manuscripts

(abs): 43 Palm lily 45 Jump 49 Symbol for selenium -

woman's perfume is a stench in

Alas, that is true. But who

4 Lik

MU ( Civic Wayr Is Bo THE |

~ duction, of

“I Lik IT CON Europe whe home of a enthusiasm

“Hréfiges "sets

even in the Evidently the - “Servant to be .hilari Davis, Just) Hartman, V Percy Weer, Otherwise in this livetwo popular Murat.

THE FI show at 8:30 advance publ the show nu

‘and his orc

radio und re

The othe: Monroe's. M the Murat f P. m., Sunda) INDIANA Is putting on ton starting 5:1 Pp. m. recital of the Dr. William -AB you've

, famous .one

cago. It's