Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, May 25, 1968 DO SbOOkSbooksbooksboob Gaibraith s Triumph ':A hollow victory A Jewish problem-for Jews 0 By WALTER SHAPIRO The Triumph, by John Ken- neth Galbraith. Houghton- Mifflin, $4.95. : John Kenneth Galbraith, re- garded by Time as America's reigning intellectual, has made a bold attempt to join such quasi-political figures as Ben- jamin Disraeli and Gore Vidal as best-selling novelists. The transition can be con- sidered highly successful in the sense that the Galbraith of fic- tion mirrors Galbraith of real life - engaging and yet to- tally infuriating. Using a style _ alternately reminiscent of Anthony Trol- lope and Eugene Burdick, Gal- braith slowly unfolds the slight- ly disguised and revised, fic- tionalized tale of Juan Bosch's adventures in thee Dominican Republic. The Triumph tells how the built-in mediocrity and the stale anti-Communism of the State Department destroy the efforts of Miro, a progressive social reformer, to bring prog- ress to Puerto Santos after the 30-year reign of the slightly comic-opera President Mar- tinez. It is difficult to 'be critical of an author who laces his fic- tion with such a hefty supply of erudite one-liners and politi- cal epigrams.hAnd while one could fault the awkwardness and implausibilitw of Gal- braith's conclusion - Juan Martinez, the dictator's son, re- turns with State Department encouragement to usher in the triumph of Communism in Puerto Santos - It is difficult to deny its impishness. Yet despite his wit and not inconsiderable literary talent,, the current chairman of Ameri- cans for Democratic Action, Melanie meets the.. 0 that growingly irrelevant bas- tion of unsullied liberalism, is in the end damned exasperat- ing. Not because of the shock- ing boldness of his ideas, but rather on account of the gall- ing timidity of his vision. The fictional format of The Triumph presents, a public fig- ure like Galbraith with a cer- tain freedom of scope and ut- erance not found at the lectern, where his every inflection is subject to analysis from the perspective of ADA Chairman, K e n n e d y intellectual, and Book-of-the-Month Club econ- omist. Galbraith could have used this liberty of media to explore the wilds beyond the foothills of pragmatism, or to add some much needed leavening to con- temporary political thinking by indulging in a little imagina- tive utopianism. Instead, he has chosen to assail that neme- sis of the New Frontiersman, the State Department Estab- lishment. The copious memoirs of Sor- ensen and Schlesinger long ago made the retrograde nature of the State Department all but public domain. As accurate as his picture may still be today, Foggy Bottom provides Gal- braith with little more than a hastily conceived straight man with which he can grapple wittily.- The thesis behind Galbraith's analysis is that the State De- partment as a rigidly hierar- chical institution places greater weight on position and senior- ity than it does on Intellect. Unfortunately for Galbraith. the whole point was far more effectively made, using the Army as the subject pool, by Joseph Heller in Caten 22. The other prong of Gal- braith's attack on the State De- partment is the contraproduc- tive stranglehold which anti- Communism has on the Ameri- can political intellect. While such a contention would have been refreshingly new in the mid-fifties, today it is at best a standard weapon in the ar- senal of even moderate critics of the Johnson Administration. Yet Galbraith doesn't even bother to make the State De- partment's villainous opponent of the Miro regime a subtle anti-Communist. Rather, As- sistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs Worth Campbell still believes "that whatever the disagreements be- tween Communists, they are united in their intention to de- stroy the free world." Galbraith's real enemy in The Triumph is stupidity. And often his wit in ferreting out inanity is arresting, such as when he mentions the invita- tion to "Professor Daniel Es- cobedo to spend a year in Puer- to Santos making a study of the criminal code" because "somewhere he got the impres- sion that Escobedo was Dean of Harvard Law School." But underlying all this wit is a reassuring, yet highly dan- gerous, simplicity of analysis. According to Galbraith, all that is necessary is to end the reign of stupidity and bureaucraUc, ineptitude at the State Depart- ment which enables a Worth Campbell to thwart a well- meaning President. Then, American foreign policy will rest secure in the expert hands of the Schlesingers - and the Galbraiths. As the massive folly of Viet- nam is playing havoc with the prevailing notions of America's place in the world, Galbraith, by carefully restricting his fire to the easy-to-tackle Yahoos in the State Department, hlas managed to pull off a master- piece of evasion. He has writ- ten a political novel about for- eign affairs that scrupulously avoids every major sector of American foreign policy. For example: Conveniently, "foreign investment has been negligible" in Puerto Santos and one can easily sidestep the .intriguing question of the de-, gree to which American busi- ness interests and pressures dictate American policy in the Third World. By focusing on the damage that the Colossus to the North can do by withholding its rec- ognition and minimal economic and military aid, the novel also avoids any discussion Hof what further constructive role America can possibly play in Latin America. Galbraith's novel slights all, major foreign policy issues ini an attempt to illustrate the massive gulf between the cal- lous and ignorant, and thd in- telligent and sensitive in to- day's hardnosed political world. Take away the wit and the edi- fice crumbles. One cannot avoid noting that The Triumph exudes local cul- or. Fortuitously for his educa- tion, Juan Martinez "was stu- dying recondite subjects of so- cial consequence at the Univer- sity of Michigan on a bribe, more or less adequately dis- guised as a scholarship from a, large American oil firm of u.- questioned rectitude."' While not being called upon to conjure. up any more of Ann Arbor than Mike Nichols used of Berkeley in "The Graduate," Galbraith 'avoids major errors of fact. His minor errors are of the marginal variety, like assuming from his Harvard ex- . perience that the University also has a plethora of endowed professorships. Galbraith rings most untrue when he tries to capture col- lege life, '68. He describes one Sunday morning in Juan Mar- tinez's Ann Arbor apartment long after "both occupants of the bed had discarded their night attire, if indeed, any had been worn." It is at this stirring moment that Galbraith's i n s a t i a b l e craving for the bon mot gets the better of him. His nubile goed says to Juan, apropos of almost nothing, "It must have been only a rumor that John Lindsay was born in Bethle- hem." . So that's what they say iny swinging Ann Arbor on Sun- day mornings. I never would have guessed. By NEIL SHISTER The Passionatp People, by Roger Kahn. Morrow, $6.95. To be a Jew in America, or at least to be con- scious of being a Jew' in America, is to live in a ,-- curious, self-imposed limbo. By and large, the al- most 6 million Jews in this country have arrived, possessing collectively much wealth and some power in a society where blatant and even discreet anti--Semitism appear genuinely on the wane. Yet if they have arrived, it is doubtful if they are ful- filled., They are privately confronted and secretly haunted by the problem of whether they are morej Jew or American, and their irreconcilable dilemma j is that they want to be equal parts of both, yet they understand that such a blend is impossible.l To become too secular is to abandon the faith 7 and the sense of pride which the heritage instills in its believers, yet to be too faithful to tradition is to deny the reality and opportunity of the j American context and invite social isolation and probable recrimination. Roger Kahn, an editor-at-large with the Sat-+ urday Evening Post, undertook the gargantuan project of trying to describe what it is like to a Jew in America. His book, The Passionate People, is an attempt to reduce the abstract questions1 which trouble American Jewry into a collection of unusually compellings and interesting portraitsa of fictitious character drawn from four years of research and interviews. If especially readable, however, one' hesitates to call it important with the same relish as doesc its publisher on the front flap. The book suffersa from its own ambition, and in the end must be reluctantly called a success at first-rate feature writing (or pseudo-fiction), but a failure at telling us something substantive about American Jews other than that they are very diverse, subject to many different influences, and unified ,only in their opposition to anti-Semitism. Although, on second thought, maybe this, is all there is to tell. Quite obviously, -this is a mixed review. As a writer I can appreciate and pay praise to the skill Kahn has with words, and above all his extraordinary talent for bringing his people alive. Indeed, he writes brilliantly with a delicate sense of nuance and detail. He has also experimented, quite successfully, with the new form of- non- fiction-fiction, impressionistically telling his story in bits and pieces, cutting away. from one scene to introduce some history, then returning to the present to continue his examination of a partic- ular moment, much like in documentary film. But if an author intends to write impres- sionistically, especially if he is not dealing with an actual event that occurred and has innate structure in its linear unfolding, (e.g. Mailer, Armies of the Night), he must have a clear sense of his overall purpose. It is here that Kahn fails. He has tackled an immense -project, but has not really defined it. In other - words, too often it seems that while the vignettes are fascinating, they are not realy contributing to a total work nor illustrating more general points. Rather, the book reads like a collection of individual pieces. It might have been a great book, too. It isn't, mostly because of its structural deficiences. But it Is important in the respect that it shows the capabilities and potential of impressionistic re- porting coupled with serious purpose, if not grand design. By MARCIA ABRAMSON The Magic Toyshop, by Angela Carter. Simon & Schuster, $4.50. An overabundance of melodrama and imagery nearly stifles the -15-year-old heroine of The Magic Toyshop, a second novel by Angela Carter. The Magic Toyshop begins with the stock situation of litera- ture designed for the impressionable adolescent girl, in the Ann of Green Gables tradition, modernized and grown up by adding sex and eliminating any moralistic leaning. Daydreaming, spoiled, naive-Melanie is orphaned (of course) at 15 and forced to leave her English countryside home for a flat above a toyshop in a decaying section of London. She is at once confronted with tyranny, attacks on her inno- cence, attempted murder, incest. Her uncle is a threatening despot; his wife lost her voice on the day she Inarried the monster; and the aunt's two wild Irish brothers drink, fight, and never wash. By the book's end Melanie has graphically discovered her aunt's lifelong love with the oldest brother along with her own undeniable linking to Finn, the younger of the pair. When the terrible uncle finds his wife and her brother together, the entire house literally explodes, leaving only the still 15-year-old Melanie and her Irishman. Yet Miss Carter has still managed to catch the young girl with many patterns of insight. Melanie's imagination is the 15- year-old. "I wish I was 40 and it was all over and I knew what was going to happen to me . . ." she thinks. She wonders constantly about the mysterious realm of sex; she constructs an imaginary lover and wonders if her parents had pre-marital sex. She is totally immersed in her world of Melanie, until the horrifying events draw her out. Often Miss Carter is incisive as she relates Melanie's reac- tions to realities she has never imagined: "She remembered the lover she made up out of books and poems she had dreamed of all summer; he crumpled like the paper he was made of before this insilent, offhand, terrifying maleness that filled the room . . But the failing of the book, aside from the incredible plot, lies in the continuing, often unnecessary stream of metaphor: "Since she was thirteen, when her periods began, she had felt she was pregnant with herself, bearing the slowly ripening embryo of Melanie-grown-up within herself for a gestation period the length of which she was not precisely aware . . ." In addition, most of the other characters are very flat. Alto- gether The Magic Toyshop fails to transcend the over-pervasive imagery and melodrama. Melanie herself, though, is very much what she should be. Pan Am Group Flight 'Det roit-Lo-ndon Jet Round Trip $325 Children $180 July 28-August 31 For information, call sponsor Vins de France, 1900 W. Stadium Call 761-4146 days-663-3969 after 6:30 the real" blues NEXT WEEK Azinna Nwafor on "Contain- ment and Revolution," editedt by David Horowitz, and Urban Lehner on Nicholas Von Hoff- man's "We Are the People Our Parents Warned Us Against." MI'STER FAMILY RESTAURANT " HAMBURGERS T=SURE CHIEST " CHICKEoN IM r " CONEY ISLANDS " Jui~dOYs "T * .iu~o~sSMILING, SPEEDY SERVICE CARRY-OUT SPECIALISTS NO WAITING - PLENTY of PARKING INSIDE SEATING OR EAT IN YOUR CAR OPEN 11 AM DAILY 662-0022 3325 WASHTENAW RD. ANN ARBOR 2 BLKS. W. of ARBORLAND Hillel graduate council PICNIC Sun., ayf 2'6 leave from H illel at 12 noon for Silver lake. Transportation provided. Hamburgers, Hot Dogs, Pickels, Chips, Soda $1 members $1.25 others r Em WORSHIP CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William-on the Campus Terry N. Smith, Minister Family Service-8:15 a.m. Regular Service--9:15 and 1 1:00 a.m. Communion Meditation. HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH Presently meeting at the YM-YWCA Affiliated with the Baptist General Conf. Rev. Charles Johnson 761-6749 9:30 a.m.-Coffee. 9:45 a.m.-U. Fellowship Bible Discussion. 11:00 a.m.-"The Expression of Genuine Faith." 7:00 p.m.-Worship with New Hope Baptist Church. 8:30 p.m.-College and Careers Fellowship. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenow (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 'dfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 9:45 a.m.-Service. Sunday at 11:00 a.m.-Bible Study. Sunday at 3:15 p.m.-Outing. Wednesday at 8:30 - World Council of Churches Bible Study. Wednesday at 10:00 pm.-Midweek Devo- tion. ST. ANDREW'S EPSICOPAL CHURCH 306 N. Division 8:00 a.m.-Holy Communion. 9:00 o m..-Holy Communion and Sermon. 11:00 a.m.-Morning Proyer and Sermon. 7:00 p.m.-Evening Proyer. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Phone 662-4466 1432 Washtenow Ave. Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm G. Brown, John W. Waser, Horold S. Horan SUNDAY Worship at 9:00, 10:30 a.m., and 12:00 noon. Presbyterian Campus Center located at the Church. ALDERSGATE STUDENT FELLOWSHIP and THE ANN ARBOR FREE METHODIST CHURCH 1700 Newport Road David E. Jefford, Pastor 945 a.m.-Discussion. 7:00 p.m.-Vespers. For transportation call 663-2869. PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH Southern Baptist Convention 1131 Church St. 761-0441 Rev. Tom Bloxam 9:45 a.m.-Sunday School. 11:00 a.m.-Morning Worship. 6:30 p.m.-Training Union. 7:30 p.m.-Evening Worship. ST. AIDEN'S EPISCOPAL CHAPEL (North Campus) 1679 Broadway , 9:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer and Holy Com- munion. 1 1:00 a.m.-Coffee in the lounge. THE CHURCH OF' CHRIST W. Stadium at Edgewood Across from Ann Arbor High Roy V. Palmer, Minister, SUNDAY 10:00 a.m.-Bible School. 11:00 a.m.-Regular Worship. 6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship. WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.-Bible Study. Transportation furnished for all NO 2-2756. ' services-Coll FIRST METHODIST CHURCH AND WESLEY FOUNDATION At State and Huron Streets Phone 662-4536 Hoover Rupert, Minister Eugene Ransom, Campus Minister - Bartlett Beavin, Associate Campus Minister SUNDAY. 9:00 and 11:15 a.m.-Worship Services. Dr. Rupert: "The First Full Measure of Devo- tion." would you believe woAWinged Horse in Vietnam? VIETNAM TRIANGLE: Moscow, Peking, Hanoi Donald S. Zagoria Improving prospects for a negotiated settlement of the vietnam war make all the more urgent a. clarification of the relationships of the different Communist factions involved. VietmanTriangle is perhaps the most thoroughly informed' and documented analysis available on this. complex matter. "A plea for understanding that there are a variety of plausible options open for peace in Vietnam. Few American experts are more qualified to examine the alternatives to present United States policy in Vietnam than Donald Zagoria, now -Director of the Modern Asia Research Institute at Hunter College, and author of The Sino- Soviet Conflict, a classic on the crack-up'of the Communist samp." -The Washington Post 8 pages. $6.95, clothbound; $1.75, paperbound In a Ghetto? THE POLITICS OF POVERTY John C. Donovan "What ever happened to the War on Poverty? John C. Donovan's analysis of the conception, evaluation and eventual enfeeblement of Lyndon Johnson's offensive leads one to believe that nothing is likely to revive it. Chairman of the Department of Government at Bowdoin College and a' former New Frontiere an, Donovan served as an aide to Labor Secretary Willard Wirtz from 1962-65 . .. he communicates something of the sense of urgency and desperation that was shared by so many of, theanti-povert .workers who enlisted for what they, thought might be a glorious fight." --The Newo Leader "Highly recommended. The flames of Detroit have shown dramatically how vital it is for us to understand, why the Negro poor are angry. Mr. Donovan's book is one that will help us achieve that understanding." 4 -The Library Journal 160 pages. $5.75, clothbound; $1.45,'paperbound i . SIn a Breadline? YEARS OF PROTEST A Collection of American Writings of the 1930's Edited by Jack Salzman with Barry Wallenstein The excitement, the anger and the anguish of the Depression Era, its issues, struggles and movements, are magnificently evoked in this illustrated anthology of stories, songs, poems, plays and reviews by leading writers of the period, aniong them Agee, Algren, Anderson, Benet, Caldwell, Cowley, Cummings, Dos Passos, Farrell, Gold, Hayes, Hemingway, MacLeish, Maltz. Millay, Miller, Odets, Pound, Saroyan, Stevens, Steinbeck, Wolfe, Wright, Vorse, West, and others. With photos, cartoons, paintings, and drawings of the period. "A collector's item . . required reading for anyone studying that period of our history." -The Chicago Tribune Useful and faithful . . . the heart of this liteiature lies in its protest -against the men and institutions that made a national disaster out of greed, inertia, and mendacity." -The Nation "A brilliant anthology."-The Pittsburgh Press 448 pages. $7.50, clothbound; $2.50, paperbound On a Peace March? THE WAR MYTH Donald A. Wells "An incisive attack upon modern war-making, an attack aimed not so much against the methods as the attitudes of the war-makers." -The Los Angeles Times "Equally at home with Dr. Strangelove and St. Thomas Aquinas, Wells quotes pertinently to prove his point that war must be made illegal if, the human-race is to survive. Perhaps the most appalling part of this history of 2,500 years of war is the demonstration that Christian leaders, .hnr,, +it .. heeshave anvta~lied fn and defended their nations' 400 UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH~ 1001 East Huron Phone 662-3153f Ministers: Calvin S. Malefyt, Paul Swets 10:30 a.m.-"Wholeness Through Suffering," Calvin Malefyt. 7:00 p.m.-"Your Other Vocation." f t k BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Telephone 665-6149 Pastors: E. R. Klaudt, W. C. Wright FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, - SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. SUNDAY 10:30 a.m.-Worship Services. Sunday School LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL National Lutheran Council Hill St. at S. Forest Ave. Rev. Percival Lerseth, Pastor SUNDAY 10:30 a.m.-Worship Service. 11 9:30 and 10:45 o.m,-Worship Services, 9:30 and 10:45 a.m -Church School. CANTERBURY HOUSE 330 Maynard Armin C. Bizor, 11 l A