Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 February 1951 — Page 8
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“THE FAR SIDE OF PARADISE." New York, Houghton, Mifflin, “TENDER
Giant Books, $.35.
a Cycle A biography. By Arthur Mizener. 4, .
IS THE NIGHT." A novel. By F. Scot Fitzgerald, Bantam
By EMERSON PRICE
.« A SHORT TIME AGO Budd Schulberg’s “The Disen-
chanted” (Random House,
$3.50) appeared, and has since grammatical translation, is an-
Jumped into the best-seller lists. This seems to emphasize
two things.
Schulberg has written a novel which a great many| As a youngster in’ Soviet Rus-
readers are finding highly entertaining.
* There is among present-day readers a considerable inter-
o i est in the life and work of F.| Scott Fitzgerald. The novel is based upon his life. In a new blography of Fitzger-! ald “The Par Side of Paradise,” by Arthur Mizener, we learn that, he died b#lieving that he was a]
Language arrier “TROUBLED SLEEP." A ncvel. By
Jean-Paul Sartre. New Knopf; $3.50.
York,
Taming of the Arts’ Reveals
In Moscow's Theaters and Music ~~ -
By HENRY BUTLER i
{"TAMING OF THE ARTS." By Juri Jelagin. Translated from the
Russians by ‘Nicholas, Wreden. New York, Dutton, $3.50.
“TAMING OF THE ARTS,” py Juri Jelagin, is a study |hips {of what happehs to art when it's controlled by limited per-
|sons with unlimited power.
important than what he tells us of pre-World War II Russia. Mr. Jelagin, trained in the USSR as a concert violinist ‘and aided by the German in|vasion in a miraculously lucky lescape from behind the Iron | Curtain, now is a member of the {Houston Symphony's first violif® jection,
His story, coming to us in a ipedestrian and sometimes un-
{other chapter in the disturbing {book we'fe beginning to know by theart and know to our sorrow.
isia, he had lucky breaks, and friendly influence where it counted. Otherwise, he couldn't have overcome the handicap of having {had a father with “pre-revolu-tionary” background, and, still worse, a grandfather who had been a small-time capitalist, n » ou
THE JELAGINS were listed as “class enemies.” In August, 1935,
Juri Jelagin !
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___
| That lesson in Mr. Jelagin’s book’ is perhaps even more much the same, That bad error
A
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7 |. SATURDAY, FEB.3,195t
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or / Stooge RA OGRAMS toog ot LENE EVENING ee nT — "_ (WFBM 1260 WIBC 1070 WIRE 1430 = WISH 1310 WXLW 159 wiv 70 ‘Like their fellow-artists in Nazi of CBS MUTUAL NB 3 Es re aia - Germany, they had to learn that ~ 100 Wake Mine Music Easy Does If WIRE Star Time or News Mike Duns © News—Molody Trall political talk was dangerous. g§ * ~ sy tu I Hall of Fame Melody Trail Young Jelagin once nearly got his 3p» - ow - a Mike Dunn and W at Sik] J. EL rl i TT mo r th a A BA TR TR a hanovism and the: American in- Music With Girls Pres. Toman Sports Review Sucinatiog X70 Sign Off i -News-Brown the ae Chal ercoc| 9:30 Wake Mise Music Caloris Caravan + Music by Jogger Rury Wisner Midwestern Howide almost cost him the training he| 45 Winpicker Cub .° _. Mawdpaty Cb a wanted in the expellent Moscow 2 aw Sibut fas, Collins Column Salute fo Reservists Lake Wefln Ta conservatory, argely pre- : for Moderns Jimmy Dorsey Folger ; revolutionary faculty. > 6s. Vaugho Monroe Show News—Toung © Music for Saturday Rep. Brownson People Ars Funmy an aa acta tells tha] ee SL Ea lr ussia, as . Je e TD aaa An Yuieniv Ouestion sel Your the Moon Jad storys Wia that all the Humor; ‘f bots ay Teen hi Moat You, x tub Tome . Giles 1 ess heels and untalen per- . Comedy Errand of Mercy Man Jorduss 3hd Somipusety Wie eoula iH Hoptiong Castidy “ of Errors Man Called 1 This Is the Story . - ‘ eep right on the dot BIRY et iee e———h ee ed — bar changing’ Communist doctrine 00 Gang Busters Tune Crier Rit Parade nericas Dlavny Wry stole the show. They knew the 5 i. : Capi Clow! Dennis Day ' . right answers, and they got the :30 My Foverlle Husband ~~ Dennis Day -« im dy jobs ith power, Then they could 45 : . x. . Judy Gn snoop and spy and denounce and ~ :00 ~ Midwestern Hayride © (anova a " raise cain with any kind of cre- He "a wl. \ hugy Sano .- ’ ative effort. :30 “ - . - - Grand Oh opry . " » Grand Ole Opn ney were Stalin’s boys. They dy mon Here's fo Vols . .*" a elevated stoogism to a kind of | —— | io ye EN infernal religion. Whatever Stalin, 100 Nows-Gilbort Forbes Hows by George oy ities Silver Serenade Bucprond with his limited, provincial back-| ():!3 Mmm Deer - Gees Sir jue oy Rhythm Club ground, seemed to enjoy became 30 Oscar Dumont Orch. bot Bund Magic: Mus Dance Band Melody Trail the Big It in art. Mr. Jelagin,| #4 Sglonte ~~. D iin sy J RR who saw Stalin only a couple of "100 Million Dollar Party Record Party News: Varlgly Hour .. News-Moon River times, isn’t trying to put all the i ir. Magic Music . : blame on Uncle Joe, though hel 1 ig t. . a at o Open House does tell anecdotes illustrating] Hs... =n a Yi» Stalin's crudeness. {
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failure. Mnd certainly he had B > Jelagin Sr, an engineer whose Of the 1030s killed both free-|that Stalin was Mr. Big, as other i SATURDAY cause at the time to believe that! In WAARWEL RIDDLE {worst crime seems to have been Minded people and free thinking. [observers have agreed. The reall J jvid War Tale P.M. 7:00 Paul Whiteman nothing falls like success, i / LEEP,” Jean-| ip + he couldn’t glibly talk the Curiously enough — and it's a|point is that the system created | 4:00 Amateur 8:00 Inside WFBM-TV—Channel 6 His personal affairs were in a Paul Sartre writes a tragic novel party line, died in a Siberian con- tribute to the Russian ingrained an immense army of stooges “WORLD WITHOUT HEROES"| Revue Detective SATURDAY sorry mess. He faced enoromous| Of. the soldiers of France at the centration camp. By that time, |Teverence for art — theater,/whose joy in persecuting their (Whittlesey House, $3) is the| 4:30 On Stage 8130 Madison Sq. 4:00 Plain Clothes- 7:00 Ken Mur : debts and had long been losing|time of the surrender to the Nazis. Jelagin Jr, as an orchestra Cinema and music preserved amore talented fellows supplement-| of ap infantry squad's costly Cincinnati Gaden x | UC on 8:00 Cavalcade of his fight against the advance of| Imusician in a privileged ‘Moscow degree of independence for still ed their wages. So when Uncle! .5:00 Six-Gun 10:00 Wrestling 5 : nlcoholiam. His. wit | The action begins with the fall|y, eater id influence enough to Some years. .|Joe didn’t like Shostakovich be-/advance into Germany in the clos- Theater 12m. Boxing 4:30 Groucho Marx - , Bands alcoho ’ 8 @ Was COn-i.,p paris. For the most part, #t|zet~g " 9 =n : cause his ic didn’t sound like! ing days of the recent war, It is| i 0% 5:00 Burns & Allen 9:00 Wrestling fined to a mental hospital. His + ttiget™a passport permitting his] Rw RTus und like | 6:00 Holiday Hotel 1:05 News, Sports, 30 Ai i earlier books, which had once|inVOlves second line troops who aged mother to come and live ARTISTS Wk RE privileged Sousa, then Shostakovich -was|the first Bovel by Arthus & eas 6:30 Stu Erwin Sign Off 530 Ailes JO Dice Shoihost , y 8 s - = | 2 = ; 30. carried him to the peak of popu- have not fired a shot. They are With him in the city, instead of Gn Bt phi oi bromplly Hi He doghbuse, with a fosmer THsman ya a >| 6:00 oa 11:00 Red Top a , larity, were out of print. | poorly trained, poorly armed, and Pending her last few years ing. .;.q high incomes, lived in the “This is ora HUbIng. “ai | Fields gives generous and some-| WAJC-FM—91 9 Mega. Party Theater Now, 10 years after his death; their oféicers have deserted them.|lonely and starving exile. newest apartments, shared “rest Stalin or the USSR ‘But Sots times shocking details of combat| SATURDAY \ 6:30 Wayne King 12m : Sign OF more of his books are in print Some must fight and-die to regain - There's plenty of drama in all homes” remodeled from pre-|imagine Old MacDona.d, who had incidents: Crossing a river under P.M. 7:00 Sport Talk | ‘sa = = than at any time during his life. their self respect; others believe Mr. Jelagin tells us. He takes us Lenin estates, enjoyed the free- a farm (“He-ye, ee-yi, oh!”), being|heavy fire, capture and pillage of 5:30 Duo on 7:13 Pop Tunes WLW-T by | -- And Mizener believes that he the Nazis will turn out fine fel*|backstage in the various Moscow!dom to patronize “restricted” made Supreme Commissar of a city, terror of some men and Delaware | 7:30 Music You =T—Channe 4 will be ranked among the fore-| ows. EE ' theaters he was associated with. hotels, restaurants, night clubs Music. It could happen in Russia. bravery of ‘others. 6:00 Proudiy We ~~ ° Want P.M SATURDAY . most American novelists, A most Communists work among the He shows us the steady decline and food shops. . In a milder way, I sometimes The author feels that the latent Hail 8:00 Olymps- : 4:00 Sports Revue. 6:00 One Man's ¢ interesting biography. troops, trying to nerve them to|0f artistic independence, both in| A very few won the tremendous|think it's happened here, certainly evil within each man is nurtured 6:30 Diner Mouds Minnedbolis 4:30 Nature of Family #5» tight and to hate. Their efforts|theater and in music, following distinction of being permitted toon the radio, with good things|DY War until it must be satiated 10:00 Sign OF Things 6:30 Midwestern PUBLICATION of the Fitzger- are unsuccessful until one of their|the golden late 1920s—the NEP travel abroad. They were sent on|being continually edged out and|by killing. Around this theme he T D A d 4:45 Bob Considine Hayride ald biography coincides with the men is needlessly shot down. ~ |era—when Russia seemed likely|a kind # lend-lease basis. (With bad things being continually pro-|builds the book to a gruesome roy Urama Approve 5:00 Voice of 7:30 Show of Shows appearance of an inexpensive edi-| “Trqubled Sleep” is the third in|'0 combine capitalistic and social-|a vague memory of having heard moted by the sponsors’ poll-taking|climax—the death of one GI at| Arrangements have been com- Enquirer 9:30 Wrestiing tion of his “Tender Is the Night.” Sartre's set on “Roads To Free- istic practices in the same setup. Prokofiev as soloist with the New|stooges, . : * the bayonet of his buddy. pleted with Bobbs-Merrill giving! 5:15 Industry on 11:30 News Thus for a small .sum vou io |dom.” It seems to this reviewer| Inat period colildn’t last, if| York Philharmonic in the early| . The Russians may claim to have : : Andre Roussin, famed French| Parade 11:40 Midnight Introd urself to bi you R ay he has ah important story to tél. only because (doctrine was too|1930s, I wonder why he didn’t bite invented everything else, but they Role of Vatican playwright, permission to drama-| 5:30 Say It With Mysteries uce yourse 8 « fiBut millions of the people who /MiBhty. Stalin's purge-massacres|the hand that led him.) , certainly didn’t invent stoogism. 3 ’ «py. 12¢ John Erskine’s “The Private Acting 12:55 Wedther— You have not read Him previously, should learn that story will bely go ° _ to \az 02. 1 ee ok Dr. Oscar Halecki's i iLife of Helen of Troy.” : Sign Off ] i * a : : i ' . 1 Io : P is : \ So he Surprised If Jou disco VT repelled by Sartre's language. Indianapolis Writer's ‘White Hope’ Fall to Bring "World Eo che Sots ot being man- ; , The novel first appeared in 1934,) Not even Norman Mailer speaks Book Wins Honor | Of Robert Flaherty ufactured. This analytical ac- A NEW CLASS 1 and that depression period seemed so frankly. Sartre would argue,| .p .... kn;nown As Johnny| o . : \count of the Vatican in world af-| ; 1 o to have scattered his readers. It/perhaps, that he has captured ex- Appleseed,” the latest book by| Duell,” Sloan and Pearce an- fairs from World War I to the % did not enjoy a ‘large sale. I read act soldier's language. But others Mabel Leigh Hunt, Indian apolis| nounce for fall publication “The present, will be published on Mar. : it again this week, and it seems to| —Stephen Crane and Erich Re-\ ji... 10. heen selected by the World of Robert Flaherty,” to be(l6 by Creative Age Press. | C ARTOONI 1] stand up very well. It is as inter- marque, for instance have writ-| , oon Institute of Graphic) written and compiled by Richard Dr- Halecki is professor of Eu- 4 r esting today as it was 16 years| ten realistically without the use oh 2 : iropean History in the Graduate b Ye): TY] [BEIER of such lab A Arts as “one of the most distin Griffith, assistant to the director gipool of Fordham Universit ‘ 180. ahguage. guished children’s books published | Sof the Museum of Modern Art chose. Sopdnam J Yh ; Sm The work concerns a group of from 1945 through 1950.” ! of ; : . C \mericans living abroad in the|{ Jo kn avn Photo An exhibition of the books se-| jem libkary ana soawthor of Yivv WV Vv Saturday Mornings € nerjod ‘between the two great lected will be shown in triplicate’ “The Film Till Now.” AoE 9:30-11:30 Wars. Tere 3 a lave triangle; : at -the institute headquarters in “The World of Robert Flaherty" FAMILY INNER, $1.00 il > : VIO] ou will fin rama and suspense New York, the New York public | Every Eve a Different Dinner : aplenty, and there is tragedy. But library, and the Little Bookshop, will contain, in addition to many Zfiiuneiive ia Deliciousness bat | Learn How to Draw ing the ¢ .he story is chiefly concerned with Macy's, New York. Later the ex-| hitherto unpublished photographs : sa Bo and Sell Cartoons on the fir a man who became—as Fitzgerald hibit will tour the country. | “|chosen from more than 10,000 in BEFORE 8°? c Register Now Here Sten QescHibes Nimael{--an “emo-~ > Miss Hunt's Publishess are J. > . {the private collection of the dis-| £7 70 4 24 . 9 Helmet” onal bankrupt. ppincott. ‘Better own 8 tinguished film director and ex- : : £ Johnny Appleseed” is as inter- plorer, selections from Mr. Fla- John Herron Art School day), an Vi ews FBI esting to adults as to young herty’s Arctic diaries. | - 642 East Maple Rd. Indpls. : O'Malley readers, , : — - ’ i : : (Loew's, snticall Guild Selecti : i +i a uild Selection - : ee Coming ep c y The Literary Guild June selec-i = ——— 0 ~ gagements “THE FEDERAL BUREAU OF IN. tion will be “The Foundling,” . = == = —J. Byes Ex VESTIGATION." By Max: Low- Francis Cardinal Spellman’s novel ' : : ouble h % will about a boy who is abandoned as Geoffrey Cotterell's latest —t > —_— H | S 1S TH REE CORNERS! - ITS NOON -AN ITS QUIET! dad” and ghihal ew too, ham a baby in a cathedral, is befriend-| 4 1 vgiraicht and Narrow," CF S s PART oLPD A PART MODERN mes (Lyric, Mo : one a A ed by a young veteran of World ook, : 9 a ’ I SU PPO E IT L ND —_— is slated tc RMAN War 1, and grows up to become a will ‘be published by Lippincott sam : ' ms its on Fr MAX LOWENTHAL, a New musician. : or Fk . . ed rs contid —— === AFTER ALL, THERES A TELEVISION SET IN BERTSs = a ar “The Foundling,” which is Car-| « 1% - -— I 3 po.” views the ee : : a dinal Speliman's frst novel. willl ggg thy young “white hope" = BLACKSMITH HOw —BUILPINS KINDA ET glee TOADSTEOLS, x? in his 500-page “The Federal Bu- Be Published by Smarles Scribner's, amon British novelists Ea eve Mc CALLS FEED RARDWARE. ese MIN S rR TAURANT... Occupat idaho Bi, RR ec ih —— iCALES CLIPS BARGER SHOPPE —AN' WEED'S = THE This is a volume you'll like if is hitherto unknown photo. i — ENERA iL. m— — the second you don’t like J. Edgar Hoover's) graph of Abraham Lincoln is | i \ [ AT WEED'S YOU'LL FIND A POT- BELLIED STONE ng year wher FET it Voss wed ss the frontispiece, of | cu Are AMBA! | | === AD A CHECKER BOARD HANDY FOR. LOAFERS! = beat the bi ng the and want to read| wy. : : wu ih - those who are against it as well Td he a oe i . | -l i — KNOW SOMETHIN T —CITY PEOPLE EVEN DRIVE OUT. to the pun xs thoe wo are objective, Thi ¥} SERS be Pek || + YEAR-OLDS. Thin vial, quick tang wn ney | —= To WEEDS JUST TO BUY HOREHOUND OR. PINK. pla fn ored with strong views and| Marshall DeMotte of Oakland. | jou in War or peace. | -ry WINTERGREEN CANDIES TO CARRY BACK HOME IN = film patror “documented” by quotations| Cal, revealed it to the world | ®¢ YOUNG WOMEN. High-grade ‘stenographers and i eee: . 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