Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1951 — Page 19
.
“ “i.
5
}, 18 SUNDAY, NOV. 11, 1951 : THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ PAGE 19 Ee /Goings on Behind This Bisgraphy period and / . Us a iIstor % ae fr Door Arent Ve ry Nice |THE bb OF 4 4g unt Ps 3 | AN UNFOUND DOOR. A novel. By Al Hine. Boston; Little, Brown, on
onds left to
‘New Forster Book
ENGINEERS
Maxmillan, $6.
| $3.50. By MAXWELL RIDDLE
WITHOUT HITTING the stratum of Thomas E. Wolfe
: Southern o)’ 4 \writing, from which he takes the title of his first novel, An anonymous reader says on the team H d R J J = | Al Hine pictures a stratum of Pittsburgh society from 1912 ihe Hust Jacket of THE Avro. id O S ewar < / | ’ treo of) ;RAPHY OF AN UNided by the p - . (to 1946. The author does, however, achieve a simplicity of KNOWN INDIAN by Nirad C. orian, com- : HN ~ {style that makes for remarkable| Chaudhuri: “If this isn't a masdiffers \ ~- {enjoyment of a straightforward|®f Mama Ida, the most forceful torpjece of autobiography and the differs 7 { character in the book. Ida stalks ’ - . / ; novel-biograph history, 1 don’t know a master 1S. a er ~- graphy. around in an aura of noblesse piece when I sea it.” — ~ The heroine, sometimes hard|oblige while her servitors call her This ' is hardly an over-state-TWO CHEERS FOR DEMOCRACY. By E. M. Forster. New York, {fl - {to find among the branches of a “Handout Hannah” .since shel. ." chaudhuri subordinates his Nr Harcourt, Brace, $4. =~ solid McLaughlin-Buell-Ferguson|SPlurges only on their generosity. jire story to that of the histofy 2 BY EMERSON PRICE — Gee | family tree, is Ginny McLaughlin. | Azeniolel sua dialog are some. of India with startling effect. E. M. Forster, in his first full length book in 15 years, i | She and her correct group of won| es Siloed gi. pl Ro, eer ype si a Speing Salen st expresses the belief that democracy rates but two cheers: : YA 5) temporaries adolesce through the tainly didn't live that way. Ginny ie ne i vy iy ar, “One because it admits variety, and two, because it per- ¢ [torrential 20’s—that is, they be-|finally Marries, Dots Blroad, reno less than to rise and achieve mits criticism.” i i "i = 3 {gin to patronize bootleggers at Marries and 8 maintains re- greatness; to his final guess at CHEERS FOR aE ii fille of 110 yolme > fi 0 . | L > By Pe their elders close Spect for the philandering hus- India’s future, the -book .is full T would not willingly reiss|OMCers and soldiers, he hias one ) |the eye that isn't fastened on the Pand of her first child and for of unusual and’ cogent observanding thi Be ngly miss gionificant thing to say—and it = | ehuiraly From there to the de. Berseif. tions. A&M Fea re ®t : bo k. Page after shoulq4 convince anyone that the rid . | pression and through the war. | If the plot were a painting, it Page of it bubbles with the au-/pyggjans did not win the war a ~~ , . Ginny is the girl of good fam- Would resemble Corot’s “Feeding More Book News ors Swen futguilen ideas. He with her land armies; it was won ; ® fly who tries to break away from Her Birds retouched by Picas- LAL ; 00ks deeply into many of the py American alr power. With = [the tamily, makes good in New| $0.—D. D. K. A on Page 20
. ; major problems of our times,|the author's quotation, I conclude and writes of them lucidly, beau- | tnis review. ? ’
: tifully and with great compre-| «when in tact, despite the bo hension. bomb-shattered, war-torn Ger- 2 isk Ta lobe 1 ro py many, despite the lost war, lost COOK—With her electrical engineer's diploma prominent on the wall, the busy cook works with | About Mac : mot through Stalin's Givisions BIL! ndless gadgels | dern kitchen. The cartoon by George Price is one of many in WE BUY OLD | by : ; -" . endless gadgets in a modern kitchen. The cartoon by George Price v i { OE ar That 7 fot nim lsclely and exclusively through GOLD, the first collection of Mr. Price's New Yorker cartoons in six years. It will be published to. _ THE GENERAL AND THE
York fashion circles, but returns {home to snuggle under the thumb
RANE TAA
hmas
T
/ rnis a Sat) ne Frist the Sha tering gaumer blows of morrow by Henry Schuman ($2.95.) PRESIDENT (Farrar, Straus & 4 3 S€— the U. 8. Air Force, there lived, sixes - - the growing belief that complex deep down in every German, one ; Young, 33.75) 1s an atiemp! 4 ds ELECTRIC 31H MACHINE on State ideas may be expressed in stac- great hope; the United States of events since his time that few Elting E. Morison is now en. SQUARE DEAL (Harvard Uni- fine and evaluate the issues of the ® GUARANTEED FOR LIFE > cato phrases and a limited voO- America.” save historians are aware of his gaged in collecting the letters of versity Press. 2 vol. $20). This MacArthur controversy. cabulary, both of which ignore Theodore Roosevelt was the influence upon the destiny of our Mr. Roosevelt. Two volumes were work covers the vears from 1001 The authors are Richard H. AVAILABLE IN INDIANAPOLIS AT 8 the power and effectiveness Of 26th President of the United country. Ghost-writing for states- published earlier and two more es Rovere, a Néw’ York magazine . . . the richest language on earth— gtates, his administration lasting men had not in his day become are ready. Under the: genera} '© 1905, and the letiers tell 2 writer, and Arthur M. Schlesing- H LY LITER EY Appliance a LTT Co. our own. , i i “ story almost as consecutive—in ’ i £ ; from 1901 until 1909. Born in an accepted deception in Ameri- title of “The Letters of Theodore Stor) er Jr., Harvard history professor. Forster emphasizes what he jg58 ne died in. 1919. History can life, and the papers he left Roosevelt,” the present books some cases more so—as an auto- They aren't MacArthur wor- EAE Edel dle YR MA. 4393 has to say of prose by discuss- ,, heen so crowded with dire behind him are his own. bear the over-all title of THE biography. shippers. me ing the work of George Orwell, er bos en — . b of whom he says: : ASM “He (Orwell) was passlonats -
over the purity of prose, and in . another essay he tears to bits some passages of contemporary |
; Mary writing. It is a dangerous game) me --the, contemporaries can always retort—but it ought to be played, . for if prose decays, thought de-| State cays and all the finer roads of|
communication are broken. “Liberty, he argues, is conme nected with prose, and bureau-| crats who want to destroy lib-| erty tend to write and speak] badly, and to use pompous or wooly or portmanteau phrases in which their true meaning or any | meaning disappears. It is the duty of the citizen, and particularly of the practicing journalist, to be on the lookout for such phrases or words and to rend them to pieces.” This book holds for you a great many rewards.
way 70 TIME -PROVED POWER{/Zz :
AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
~ *= = Erich Kern, a Nazi storm trooper who fought the Russians for four years, is the author of DANCE OF DEATH (Scribner, $3), which describes his personal experience in the struggle. It is one of the most significant books —-and I think from almost any
standpoint one of the most interesting—that I have read in some time. The author's reasoning Is sometimes so completely free; from logic as to place him in a! l position resembling innocence. He | 3 views with horror the dreadful brutalities of the Russians—as he should—but he frequently excuses or ignores the crimes of the Nazis against humanity. Yet his reporting of four years of fearful warfare on the Russian _ front is so full and complete that it chills the blood to read it. It is clear and beyond dispute that the masters of thé Kremlin are barbarians and savages equal in cruel and amoral behavior to any that have gone before in history. The author tells us that when the Germans invaded Russia they were met by an oppressed people who greeted them as saviors, He regrets now that the Nazis did not treat them with kindness, which would have won the war for them. Thus his regret seems unrelated to morals: it expresses | his conviction of political error. While complaining of the. vie-| torious Allies judging and pun-| ishing the behavior of German |
9¢4 Always
VACATION TIME
Happy is the owner of a Powerglide Chevrolet!
And, it's no wonder! Here's how it works. Set the lever to “Drive.” Just touch the accelerator and steer, That's all there is to it. Use the accel-
y erator to go—the brake to stop. And you're off for J 2 . ! the greatest driving thrill of your life. 0
Ask any of the more than 500,000 motorists who have proved Powerglide over more than a
billion owner-driven miles. That's a record no other automatic transmission in the low-price field can
touch. And ask them, too, about the satin-smooth performance, the velvet pick-up and the extreme ease of handling at any and all speeds which make Powerglide driving the outstanding experience it is
If you haven't yet tried Powerglide, don't wait any longer. Come in soon for a “discovery drive.” Find out for yourself the new happy way to drive with time-proved Powerglide.
)0
“*Combination of Powerglide Automatic T ransmission and 105-h.p. Vaive-in-Head Engine optional on De Luxe models at extra cost.
POWER Tle Automatic Transmission*
“First , . . finest . . . and only fully proved automatic transmission in the « low-price field. Gives you simpler, smoother, safer no-shift driving at lowest cost. No clutch pedal-no gear- ~ shifting—not even a hint of gear changes in forward driving!
a
Extra-Powerful 105-h.p. Valve-in-Head Engine
Oil Does it All!
Oil replaces gears in the Powerglide Automatic Transmission. There's ne direct mechanical connection between engine and rear axle. You have an in" _ finite number of drive ratios, and the ‘engine automatically selects the right one —for finest no-shift driving at lowest cost!
EconoMiser Rear Axle
Still another feature of this automatic power team is Chevrolet's EconoMiser Rear Axle. Rear wheels travel farther at each engine revolution . . . fewer engine revolutions and less gas used at highway speeds. This means traditional Chevrolet economy in over-all driving.
Powerglide is coupled with the most powerful engine in the low-price field— Chevrolet's extra-efficient 105-h.p. Valve-in-Head Engine. It marks the highest development in Chevrolet's nearly forty vears of concentration on Valve-in-Head design—trend leader for the industry.
SEE YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER FOR ALL YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS! ge
’
s < : : i if . . oa .
