7 - y MAGAZINE Vol. V, No. 7 Sunday, April 19, 1959' SPRING WEEKEND AGAIN CRITICAL LOOK AT LIFE By Donald Yates MOST CONSERVATIVE OF By David Tarr Page Two CONSERVAtIVES . Page Two Page Three' Oplllloll (Continued from Page 81) that space, a more -rapid use- of those resources is bound to effect that standard. Statistics showI how disproportionately well off we. are when compared to the rest of the world. The average'daily diet in India (1,590 calories) is less than half that in the United States. The United States per capita consumption of energy is double that of Britain and more than 20I times - that of India. We use 80- times more iron than India per capita and nearly two and one- half times more newsprint per capita than Britain. Americans use nearly two thirds of the world's production of oil. Still, the problem of overpopu- lation in the United States is not essentially an economic one, not a matter of the quantity of our food, would be an immense block of houses stretching 50 miles from: the center in all directions, he may have been a bit pessimistic. But in his description of the peo- ple as "uniformly clad, municipally lodged, governmentally forced in- to schools'and training establish- ments all of the same pattern," he hit upon= a noral. A mass society of countless but numbered persons will probably be much as Sir, Albert describes it, much as Aldous Huxley pictured it in his "Brave New World." In such a society, man's soul, that is his imaginative, his inflec- tive and most human part, cut off from nature and the possibility of solitude, will become, through lack of use, as vestigial as his little toe. It' is doubtful whether any degree of freedom, bound as it is to the ideal of the importance of the individual, could survive amid such a faceless mass. Can the United States do. any- thing? Of course, as far as build- ing goes-better use of the decay- ing centers of towns, more and larger parks, arts councils to en- C .,, v 1 'C t 1 I t l { A R i 1 , C 1 i I OPERATION BOOTSTRAP By Thomas Turner Page Five WORST ALONENESS-OF ALL By David Lowe__ ______ ACADEMIC APPREHENSION By Guy E. Swanson Page Eight Page Nine Factories Dot the Countryside Today Lyn q Weekend ,'~am A TREASURY OF ART Page Twelve t t :i t '1 A PERSONAL TOUCH TO FOREIGN AID By Charles Kozoll clothing or shelter, but a matter of the quality of our lives. The great danger here is to our very selves, our souls, if, you will, and to the most precious ideals of our society, And because this threat is not yet dramatic, be- cause Ann Arbor, for example, can grow a great deal without effecting our basic necessities, the problem of population in America is gen- erally thought to be a theoretical one. But this is not true.. WHEN Sir Albert Richardson, past president of Britain's Royal Academy: recently predicted that by the year 2000 London Page Fourteen MAGAZINE EDITOR - David Tarr PHOTOS: Cover: University News Service; Page 2: top, bottom right- University News Service, bottom left-Daily-John Hirtzel; Page 5: Puerto Rico Economic Development Administration; Page 6: United Nations; Page 8: bottom right-State of New York, others -Daily-Allan Winder; Page 9: University News Service; Page 11: University News Service; Page 12 and 13: Fred Anderegg; Page 15: Daily-Allan Winder. FOR THE NOVELIST: Critical Look at Life w0 NOVELS of recent date make possible an observation 4 concerning the problems of the p young writer engaged in his pro- fession. "The Dud Avocado" by Elaine Dundy (Dutton, N.Y. 1958, 255 Pp., $3.50) is a first novel by and ° f about an American female who Sspent some time in Paris "getting educated." A kindly and not over-protec- M_ ntive uncle has subscribed to the a " expenses of Sally Jane's educa- tion abroad, and throughout her adventures it is only to him that Sally Jay feels the least bit ac- countable for her behavior. CU ALL-F ~S 4 s OUR PURPOSE HIRT ROBES- ...for .. streetwear, < lounging, . rketing, all-day wear 5.98 ~me The inhibiting influence of this facto- is indeed slight - which, the reader will conclude, is all for the best. For Sally Jay is, quite delightfully, a law unto herself. THE STORY opens at a good moment: the period of adjust- ment and acquaintance is past; she has been around for a while and has accepted Paris student life for what it is.' With this background, she meets once again a young American art- ist whom she had known briefly during her first days in Paris. To the accompaniment of extravagant physical responses, she falls in love. This is the initiation of Sally Jay's "vie amoureuse." She is an irrepressible, liberal- minded, uncommonly consistent, and completely believable young American girl. Her Paris esca- pades, which lead up to her mar- riage and settling down back in the United States, could have seemed immoral committed in the person of anyone but Sally Jay.. In short, the novel is written in terms of truth and understanding that can only come from enlight- ened observation of life itself. ANOTHER matter is "A Legacy of Love" by Edwin Daly (Scrib- ners, N.Y., 1958, 310 pp., $3.95). The promise of his first novel, published in 1957 when he was 22, has not been realized in the second. The story deals with Susie Churchill and Buddy Masters, two college students who have been dating, and Phil Doyle, another college boy with whom Susie falls in love. A secondary romantic situation is developed between Susie's fa- ther, a high-school teacher, and Buddy's mother, wife of the rich- est man in the small Michigan lakeside town.. The relationships of the younger threesome are never well-estab- lished. Susie and Buddy seem vaguely believable, but Phil Doyle, who dies, fails tot gain the stature of characterization required by the principal role he occupies. The af. fair involving the grown-ups, al- though treated frankly and in adult terms, is seen as a fuzzy movement of shadows backstage to the young people's drama. -The conviction of reality, which a youthful writer of realism needs so desperately in his early work, is seriously lacking. The sense of authentic experience was found in the author's first work, on which he labored for over five years. Daly appears not to have lived enough to have done, within a relatively short time, a second novel. Through the varying degrees of success of the two books reviewed here, one may. perceive the vital need, on the part of the novelist, of critically observed life experi- ence as a basis for his fiction. -Donald A. Yates ICHI(GAN DAILY MAGAZINE Puerto Rico (Continued from Page 5) most industries, Moscoso explain- ed. The Development Company sometimes makes loans, he said, but most often this function is carried out by the Deveopment Bank. By no means all of Fomento's activity is confined to plant de- velopment, Moscoso is quick to point out. Extensive studies of inter-related industries, such as the various aspects of food pro- duction or of chemical prpduction, are carried out; new industries are created (use of sugar-cane waste as paper pulp is an example), and local industry is stimulated. Ramey Air Force Base and Roosevelt Roads Naval Base cooperated, to illustrate the latter point, in a program to give them specially de- signed new furniture, made in Puerto Rico to their specifications. PROBABLY the most spectacular area of Fomento development, at least to the visitor, is the tourist business. Indeed, "ten years ago," as Fomento literature points out, "Puerto Ricans never thought of their land as a tourist center, and certainly almost no one else did either." Fomento had no place to accom- modate businessmen it brought to the island after the war, and when no one was willing to risk a hotel project Fomento had the Develop- ment Company build one. The result was the plush Caribe Hilton, 95 per cent Fomento-own- ed, and one of the nation's finest hotels. Instead of meeting the de- mand, however, the Caribe stimu- lated it; the San Juan Intercon- tinental and La Concha hotels have followed (among others), the latter opening only this past winter. In these Fomento owns a lesser share, Moscoso notes, having fulfilled its role by stimulating growth. STILL FURTHER afield from in- dustrial growth is a project administered under a wing of the Development Company: Festival Casals, Incorporated. This Spring's Casals Festival will; feature, in three weeks of music from Vivaldi to Mendels- sohn, musicians suc r- as Isaac Stern, Eileen Farrell, Eugene Is- tomin, Jesus Maria Sanroma, and the Budapest String Quartet. And of course Pablo Casals, the world's greatest cellist, will play and con- duct. Concern with the island's cul- ture marks more than further stress on the already booming tourist trade, according to Gov- ernor Munoz. In his opinion, a new concept of the role of government in Puerto Rico is emerging, and with it a further justification of the Com- monwealth status. "We want every Puerto Rican to -know that rising prosperity is- not an end in itself. It is the servant of a spiritual purpose. You can see the signs already. After little more than 10 years as a Commonwealth, a new creative up- surge is being felt in Puerto Rico. Our people are no longer despond- ent, They are proud." FOLLETT'S Kodak Pony 11. Camera - high-precision, high-prestige 35mm miniature . . . but easy to use as a snapshot camera. Makes black-and-white and colorsnaps as well as color slides. "Adventures In Color Slides"- 65-page booklet of tips on color-slides. PLUS complete "how-to- do-I" instructions for all items TWO Cartonsc flashbulbs -f door shots " Type F" film, Kodak Pony 11 F lustre, full .top- leather case. of M-2 Kodak PocketViewer-lets for in" :you show color slides any- with where. Folds to fit pocket or purse, Meld Case - high Kodalite Midget Flash. aramn mahoLUanUnolder - screws right Makes it EASIER to step up to t COLOR-SLIDE PH( Kodak 300 a brief cas sharp; an life-itself. gicur mauu a ry onto camera...makes flash shots easy. Kodak M guard - Midget - slips *Ss D iVnce Kodachrome 135 Film, Daylight Type - for outdoor picture-taking ... 20 exposures. reflector. Okly Flash- s over 0 so small a price for the busiest, most versatile shirtwaist you've ever worn all day long! and so well constructed, too: permanent collar stays, action back, shirtband closing with reinforced buttons, three-way self belt! woven stripe cotton seersucker, cotton baby cord, silk-viscose solid or ornel- cotton check. pink, blue, maize, shrimp, turquoise, Kodaslide Ready-File Kodachrome 135 Film, safe, convenient color-slide items-. Type F-for flash shots storage for 200 col- 1 and when they're ..... . . makes 20 expo- or slides; Index on t made-hy-Kodak, y sures. cover. K, know they're goodi COME IN...PHONE... WI . ACT RIGHT OFFER OPEN FC WRITE OR WIRE... MUI M IN W UlMITED TIME 01 champagne. small, medium, large. O LET ~4 ~ Lingerie } ,~~~ s ' ~ 4 ~ ~ ~ ~ W i'i'..'~I~IW K V/ PHOTO DEPARTMENT State at North University THE N