Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1949 — Page 8
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ST
THE
ry
. Author Warns World § . Again May Face War
To Save Democracy
"MODERN ARMS AND FREE MEN" By Vannevar Bush. New York, Simoni & Schuster, $3.50 : : By EMERSON PRICE Book Editor, The Cleveland Press THE VOICES of the war dead, choked off with sudden and brutal finality in battle, may now feel no urgency in ut-
tering their protest, as hoarse roars of hatred fill the ircad
spaces of the earth so short a time after the guns have been
made silent. And little children who perished in flames in-|
duced by fire bombs may make no further plea for pity. They had learned, these ~~ — — ——
tiny ones, all that may be tens us, we must, in the course of
known in this century of man- normal events, uickly| a8ainst the latter.
exhausting their small store of This Is simply because the cre-
childhood language, they fell to ative «talents of free men are screaming as they carried their Subordinated only to individual
cruely acquired knowledge into disciplines. They do not tremble flaming death, under the tyrannies of dictators
Little use to tell them at tue Who specify, out of limited intel Jast that in the days before their|!ectual resources, what the scienbirth men were devoted to noble/tist Or artist may discover or ideals: that men were honorable create. Democratic endeavor must and creative and given to gener- therefore bear vastly greater ous moods; that they were borne [Fults than those of its narrow down in grief by tragedy; that antagonist. This was made apparthey were touched. beyond the ent during the last war when Hit. measure of anger or tears by ig- '¢F expelled the greatest minds noble offenses against their kind. from the Reich and lost the race
».. 8 {in scientific discovery. BUT MEN had lately perverted . 8 8 their creative talents; their minds THE AUTHOR tells us the squatted upon haunches as the hn with destructive \deas... talitarianism with the subsequent and with leath. Sensibilities were enslavement of the human mind dull and apathetic, as in the time and human effort, or creative when men were not far removed democracy. from the beast. They had de-| Despite its fearful theme--mod-
: wr f we keep our heads clear, he
win any war|
lines are now clearly drawn: To-| Feorce, $6.50.
Taos
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Scene for John
Collier Book
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| A scene int Taos, N. M., is one of more than 100 drawings and lithographs b IragMashowits hag for "Patterns and Ceremonials of the Indians of the Southwest.” With a text by John i
PHN ah
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or and’ | ©
"U. S. Camera Annual 1950' Pays Belated
pean Predecessors
Tribute to Its Euro
"U. S. CAMERA ANNUAL 1950." International Edition. Edited by T. J. Maloney. A U. S. Camera Book. New York, Duell, Sloan & [room atomic clouds (pages 348.
{the
an introduction by John Slodn, the volume has been issued in a limited edition by Dutton ($15).
By STERLING NORTH | IN CELEBRATING its 15th anniversary with an international edition, “U. 8, Camera” is paying long overdue tribute to the sources {of its original inspiration, such superior European predecessors in| ion field as Photographie in France and Das Lichtbild in Germany, |
| Author Treats On AC at th wl Al of His Life ughtful can forget those mush- “THE UNIVERSE OF GBS." By William Irvine. New “York, Whittlesey House, $5. By ETHEL COLLIER
349); the memory that in our time there were such concentration) camps as Margaret Bourke-White/ pictures (352-353), and other eviINSPECTION and evaluation dences of cumulative retrogres-| : the quality of thought and lit.
Luckily however, this “U. 8.|erary output of George Bernard
graded themselves by making ern arms, dreadful as they are— rts. her greatest pl aphers
soul war asain both jen andi bore is hope in this book. For! oe rme ated and conditioned by the from their own progeny in a furious, insane yearning to destroy
themselves forever.
Such is the nature of total war./be averted altogether. But there We may have to endure it/is no time to lose
again
We may have to endure it in preserve some final shred of the last hope of this an-
an attempt to cient
THAT DEMOCRATIC government is the only hope of free men in a most intelligent and scholar-| 4 is the beliéf of Vannevar Bush, |/ly manner, but with a well devel-| wire scrubbing her front steps, a whose “Modern Arms and Free oped sense of imagination In|wind.gwept headland or a weary
Dr ah has dome Suggestions sister crafts of water color, paint1 honesty believe that if they M8 In ofl. etching, lithography 'were to be followed, war might and even sculpture than have ! American photographers. Certainly -the addition of 100 fine European pictures chosen
{from over 5000 forwarded by lieves that democracy can sur Walter Herdeg “U. 8. Camera's”
vive another modern total war. This Ldoubt: indeed, T doubt that| Lone in o'er, has given the International Edition more real humanity can survive it in any- quality than any previ i thing approaching a civilized : state,
However, the author also be-
2a X superlative pho THE DECADE between 1830 land carry an a
and 1840 was a tremendously im- seldom equalled by any American’ portant and exciting one in the photographer.
hs of Eng-
history of America, and Robert & % E, ‘Riegel deals with it hot only] SELIFIAE & aream=like. brooding.
Men” is a wonderfully lucid ex- “Young America” (University .of miner bicycling home across the
position of human freedom, plus Oklahoma Press, $3). This —— > - He) ate t becom ull pire nows b During the: nt power were ing fully of the aft t 8 war he was chairman of the Na- apparent to the ordinary citizen, °F . Pag bE
It was a time when growth and apn4 descriptive lens speaks gently
Here, too,
tional Defense Committee out of which resulted “in a thoroughly deeply felt, sharply portrayed.
which grew the atomic bomb.
vocal ‘nationalism, But it was The arid poverty and sun-
While his book Is not meant so, more assertive than aggressive; It drenched, ~ubistic dwellings of it is in many ways a frightening was very much like that of the ancient Spain: the overwhelming one, However, he tells us why we individual who understands hel Alpine peaks and glittering snow| have not so much to fear, per- has something of great quality in|of Switzerland dwarfing the lit-|
haps, as ws have believed. In any case, clear how far we have until his neighbors admit that this lik gone in the art of destruction, ; nor, wy ae . and how far we have gone along
the way of countering it.
Most important, and most hope- prosaic record. We see the Amer-| France has its poetry of decaful, is his comparison of demo- ican farmer restless under en- dence, Italy its passionate pov-
cratic and totalitarian methods.
ACCOUNT
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{ The author does not confine|their clothes off for the man with
{his household and will not rest tle mountain climbers and the | the humor I true. I, ries. almost as This book deals as much with vital as Breughel, aimost as customs as it does with the more sharply in focus as- Vermeer.
{forced barter of an earlier day, erty, Vienna its tender despera: {and yearning for a genuine cash! tion. And what has America? crop. Labor was becoming more} Well, among other things we jand more conscious of its cash/seem to have youth and hope. | value, More pretty girls willing to take
‘his survey—a highly interesting -
{one—to single localities, but cov- * {ers the period sectionally, so that Mrs. Keyes Revises
the reader may understand a com-'S4, T plex national picture. which prom- S Therese i
ised the great fulfillment - 8 ot mod written by St. Theresa have come
ern times. ! ba to light since Frances Parkinson IF THE U, 8. government has Keyes published “Written in Heavbecome so complex in recent years en,” the story of The Little Flower as to overwhelm ordinary under- of Lisieux, in 1937. Mrs. Keyes standing, so too has the report- therefore felt the need to revise Ing of news at the nation's capi. her story and especially in view til, Thus we Have still another|of what the invasion of Normankind of newspaper book this week, dy did to Lisieux, the setting of and one that makes quite in- the story. formative reading. It is titled). The new book is “Therese, ‘Dateline: Washington” ( Double-| Saint of a Little Way.” It will be| day, $4), and it is edited by Ca. l8sued next -spring by Messner. | bell Phillips. | Mrs, Keyes is also working on an-| | This work was: conceived by Other novel for publication by {the officers and board of gover- Messner next fall. The tentative nors of the National Press Club/titie is “Joy Street” and the setat Washington. It is a co-opera- ting is Boston. tive effort and includes 18 chap- ET XX Sty, | the authors of which are ‘Jubilee Trail’ Picked established Washington corre- * . spondents or widely on colum- As Guild Selection { nists. You are likely to find your, The March selection of the Lit- | favorite among them, erary Guild is “Jubllee Trail,” by | In a very large sense the work Gwen Bristow. The story conis a history of every phase of cerns a New York girl in the hews gathering in Washington, !1840s who traveled to California including, even, the evolution of with her rancher husband by boat the business press and modern and mule team from New Orleans | methods of gathering material for over the Jubilee Trail. The book {the various newsletters which are will be released by Thomas Y. read avidly by bysiness execu- Crowell Co., Feb, 6.» ¢ 1 tives throughout the nation. If teeter aditoeovp— you've wondered about how the 1 whole thing is done you will find Domestic Economy Irvine the answer here. There's a bit of and Rachel Miligate (Harper,
humor here and there $2.00) bases a plan for low-cost
y . ps living on extensive use of deep Albert Schweitzer
freeze cabinets and buying foods 4 in. quantity, The authors have Autobiography Jan. 14 done much experimenting on A biography of Albert Schweit- cooking, packing and storing of (xer will appear on Jan. 14, Mr. goods for home use. | Schweltzer's 76th birthday. “Al sets bert Schweitzer: Life and Mesi + sage,” by Magnus Ratter (Bea- New Jackson Book {con Press) includes his visit to] A new book by Charles Jack-
Perhaps because Europe is older and richer in all the graphic)
misty winter day or the humble ,¢ {ose 22 faces—soldier, civilian, rediscovered gnity of a young London house- |. woman and child, the im- Seals, polar bears, dogs, mounprint of worry.
| blackened moores, his sensitive .... is registered on the slightly make to their readers is a change
Camera” does not dwell Iman’s ultimate destruction. It
seem to nave been more deeply the camera, deeper monkey-piles/8hows a strong desire to get back]
Shaw is the achievement of Wilk upon, liam Irvine in “The Universe of
Professor Trvine takes us from
of bronzed humanity at Coney|to sanity, both on the political] . {ld Shaw, bred to skeptisland, better fed children, even and the artistic level. jie. hid his development
in the scenes portraying poverty, | "= ® » better homes, better clothes, big-| ger buildings and more smiling ingless abstractions, fewer “what-| faces. . » ”
BUT WE, TOO, are becoming
'cabbages fewer Surrealist traceries of the
ARE as a hater of poverty, a leader THERE FEWER mean- oo ir. Fabian Socialists, a de-
ter; art, music and
{zit?" pictures of cross-sections of th critic, and his emergence as the and halves of walnuts, most significant English playwright
since Shakespeare, and
more contemplative, perhaps more| Klee and Miro variety. To a much .., o mia] gadfly of the British
frightened “Street Corner” by
Barney Cowherd of the Louisville/sues, this edition remembers that
greater extent than in recent is-
may have seen it in Life maga-|
light to change. And on every one War pictures. But they have also happy childhood,
tainss waterfalls, birds in flight
Even more grim is a picture of tnd sand dunes. the late James V. Forrestal. Con-! A further concession they might
Ralph J. Bunche. photography may be interested in
Probadly none of us. who are the fact that the sexy pictures of spondence with Ellen Terry is in- lain of the Senate until his death ¢luded in the volume, as well as this year at the age of 46, was! anecdotes of Mrs. Patrick Camp-/| bell, Mrs. Anne Besant, Shaw's late wife, and various other women to whom he paid special at-
But most readers (male, that tention.
~~=——— Winnie Garrett dancing her strip- ’ » tease for Philippe Halsman were Ramblers’ Relic 'made in his studio “in front of a : : {brown paper background, with y £ {five speedlig ts, and a Rolleiflex,
| stepped down to 1/22”,
"|is) probably are more fascinated by the girl than by the camer |technique. Seriously, many of © {these prints would become much'® = ‘more memorable if bolstered by * |a few humanizing words conoernling the subject and the situation|
taken. . » .
‘ant in view of the rich feast of prints prepared for lucky owners of the new U. 8. Camera. this is not only an artistic and historic record of our time, it is . a challenge to see the world anew, to find composition, form, design
One of Alice Caddy's drawings for "Everywhere | Roam," Ben Lucien Burman's new novel, shows the ancient auto in which Mr. Burman's family of charac-
scene that comes before our eyes.
artist:
art. And by this definition, our great photographers are as truly artists as any novelist, painter or composer. Photography, In fact ‘has come of age. y
ters tour the South. “Everywhere | Roam” will be published Monday by Doubleday.
Out Tomorrow! . . . Another Big
Sunday Times
The BIGGER Indianapolis Sunday Times is going over BIG! It is being widely read, received with enthusiasm;- thoroughly enjoyed by thousands of Hoosier families in Indianapolis, Marion County and throughout Indiana! And no wonder! It now includes PARADE MAGAZINE, a big, exciting, colorful Sunday Picture Magozine; 12 FULL PAGES OF COLORED COMICS, 36 great comics in alll. . . adventure, romance, mystery, fun and entertainment for every member of the family; o big 4-SECTION MAIN PAPER, with more news pages than ever before! . . . complete sports, special features for women, outstanding local, state and national news coverage, editorials, columnists, pictures. If you have not seen a copy of the BIGGER Sundoy Times, you're missing something GOOD! Make sure you get a copy tomorrow by havigg it DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME. It's only a dime! Just call Riley-5551 and say, “I want to start THE SUNDAY TIMES.”
state
fairly respectable |ing typical.
{ im .|chronicled |ungracious and rather unimport’ wo, vg by Stephen Clissold, to,
be published by Philosophical Li- —— For brary in January. said to be a direct observer of the) events described and a partici-| pant in them.
”"
Influences of Karl Marx and
r - ~ FOR INSTANCE, Bill Brandt's Courier-Journal is probably the the world has much that is beau- John Stuart Mill are delineated, most significant American photo-|tiful (as well as much that is "0. oo suggestions from the ic magicigraph in the whole volume. You ugly and tragic). hies of Wagner, Nietsche | Four years after V-J Day the Pe ae Ibsen, Lam-| Whether he is/3n, 22 people waiting for a street editors are still including a few :
SHAW'S GAY
» inconsistencies
Part of Shaw's famous corre-
The book is written with con-
a siderable humor, Shaw's “decay f costumie” in his obscure years, nd a little later, his “look of a plasterer,” be-|
under which the picture was Observer Traces Tito's Rise to Power
Mr. Clissold is
and significance in every passing New Book on: Tito
Louis Adamic has written a
For that is the function of the ,.w hook, tentatively called * “Tito To give new form, new \feang Yugoslavia,” to be pubmeaning, new integration to the jisneq early next year by Doubleworld through the medium of his day.
Go
“It's easy to serve
Borden's Ice Cream | at home. Just keep a big economical
the United States last Summer,
Pens Handicraft Survey | A complete survey of all handicrafts practiced in the six New
_, convenient banking con be. {England states will be found in
fcher {Handicrafts of New England,”
ok : {by Allen H. Eaton (Harper, $5). fi. {The text is very long and the vo)A " [ume carries scores of illustrations, {many in full color.
!
i
TAKE YOUR FAMILY FOR ‘4 FARE 14th YEAR OF PERFECT SAFETY
EDERAL REAERVE BYaTEM E01 DEPOSIT INSURANCE, yor A
son, author of “The Lost Weekend,” “The Fall of Valor" and {“The Outer Edges," has’ been scheduled for publication next March by Farrar, Straus. It is {tled “The Bunnier Side: Twelve Arcadian Tales."
Book on Predicting | The scientific forecasters, Edward R. Dewey and Edwin F.
will be published by Holt Nov. 25. Of immediate Interest is what
business in 1950.
: NEZUELA | they say is around the corner for ll Flights Each Way Every Day |
118 E. Ohio
“| Dakin have brought their book, {“Cynles: The Science of Predie-| b= | tion,” up to date. The new edition’
ue uss |
Call RI-5551 Before Midnite Tonight! And The Big Sunday Times Will Be at Your Door
Tomorrow Morning!
| half-gallon in your freezer compartment or food locker!”
MORE THAN YOUR MONEY'S WORTH IN SUNDAY NEWSPAPER READING PLEASURE FOR EVERY MEM-
BER OF THE FAMILY! . SANDS SAY ABOUT THE
Sunday Times
« « THAT'S WHAT THOUBIGGER ae
he Universe Yu
of G.B.S.' Out 3
of many illustrations in color for "Christmas," annual collection of Christmas literature and
arck, Ruskin and Samuel Butler.
are treated by the author thus: | ; “He yells anarchy from the foot-| ($2) bindings. ‘lights and intermittenly whispers) self-control from the stage.” As 3 person, it is said of him that he pompous visage of Dean Achicton.in the nature of their. gaptions, has no enemies, but almost none. Of Senate
| : n ae other nations compassionate and intelligent Those of us who {661 SEES TI of nis friends like him.
art published by Augsburg Publishing House, Minneapolis, Minn. Edited by Randolph E. Haugan, the 1949 collection comes in paper ($1) and cloth
le Scene
Lo i
—
On the Air
TWENTY QUESTIONS — Gov,
. |Alfred E, Driscoll, of New Jersey,
will be the guest panelist for this week's session of the “animal, "game. 4. WHO SAID THAT? —Com-poser-pianist Dscar Levant, news
A ‘man Bob Considine, and Lillian
The Adoration scene is on
Print Prayers, Sermons
Chaplain
Hellman, noted theatrical producer, join regular panelist John
{Cameron Swayze. They must
identify quotes taken from the week's news or pay a small fine,
{veo WFBM-TV 8 p. m.
SHEBOYGAN-OLYMPIANS Luke Walton will describe the action from the floor of the Butler Fieldhouse when the two probasketball teams meet. . . , WISH 9:30 p. m. : MEET THE PRESS-—-Rep, Emanuel Celler, of New York, head of the House Judiciary Committee, will be interviewed by Henry Hazlitt, of Newsweek magazine; Lowell Limpus, N. Y. Daily News; C. Norman Stabler, N, Y, Herald. Tribune; and Lawrence Fertig, columnist on economie affairs. . . . WIBC 9:30 p. m,
Saturday, Nov. 26, 1949 PM
4:30—Foolball Scoreboard 4:55—Program Preview 6:00—Kukla, Fran and Ollie
The Rev. Peter Marshall, chap-
noted for his pithy and homely |
|prayers. One of his prayers toi open a Senate session asked God!
6:30—ToloNews | 6:40—Senny Kendis 6:55—Chuckwagon Toles $:00—Whe Said That 8:30—Wings fo Mexico 9:00—Covalcade of Stars
to “save us from the sin of wor. |0:00—Pegram Preview
{badge of our lack of faith.”
{the Rev. Mr. Marshall prayed, “Give us clear vision, that we may know where to stand and what to stand for-—because unless we stand for something, we shall fall for anything.” A selection of the Rev. Mr. Marshall's bu {sermons and prayers is published | BUT SUCH CARPING seems Marshal Tito's rise to power i8/ this month by the Fleming H. in a volume called Rove) Co. under the. title, “Mr. Jones, Meet the Master.”
|
During a debate on foreign aid,
FERN,
Beauty Softens
rying lest stomach ulcers be the 10:03—Sign Of
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HEAVY town during a brand-new Dramas Thursday), (Loew's, Th Friday) anc (Coronet, Fi Indiana 1 will be a ligh Hutton starr and Blue,” op Something 1 audiences will of that Sat plague, the h Making its fis Friday at the Hoosier Cars: WLS Nationa Red blanchar« and a wide va acts, Local acts v tinental Four Times sponso at the Coliseu The show wi half hours in | Another fea ly Talent Que: teurs a chanc
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