Page Four mmmrinrmum -ana "-PRESENT THIS COUPON wom --m-mmemmm BEEF-N-CHEDDAR FRENCH FRY ONEDESSERT LARGE COKE COMPLETE MEAL ONLY $1.75 PLUS TAX GOOD ONLY AT ARBY S OF MD N ANN ARBOR YPSILANTI WASHTENAW AVE. WASHTENAW AVE. U 1 / mile west of Arborland Across from K-Mart near Golfside rWM.----.WOFFER EXPIRES NOVEMBER 30, 1973-mm aw=m--m= THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 11,,1973 ' BOO-KS MIXED BAG Barthelme: Defying frnrdifirnril U ndrlcriep GENEEN & Co. Dealing, duplicity and deception: A chilling story of UT 1 1 fr -\/ 1 1 1 E 1%04 1 SADNESS, by Donald Barthelme. New York: Farrar, Straus and IGiroux, 183 pages. By EUGENE ROBINSON ESPITE THE contradictions inherentin this statement, it's true: Donald Barthelme can al- ways be depended upon to be an innovator. His work has become predictable in its unpredictability, and it has become a rule of thumb that his next story or book will be nothing like the last. Barthelme' s chameleon - like approach to writing seems not to be his way of groping for the right style or the right themes. Rather it is a conscious effort to be different, a denial of the le- gitimacy of sameness. Over the years in his stories, published in the New Yorker and in his own volumes, have found many good styles and many good themes. But as yet, none has significantly slowed his pace of innovation. Any distillation of Barthelme's overall style would have to ignore at least some of his work. But it can fairly be said that his stories are generally non-linear, depend- ing not so much on a coherent plot as on little snippets of ev- eryday life for their effect. Most of them flit like a firefly amidst a forest of ideas, shedding a bit of illumination here and a bit there until finally a pattern emer- ges. THE FRUITS of experimenta- tion are many, but so are its perils. Barthelme fittingly reaps both in his latest book of short stories, Sadness. He alternately shines like the beacon of a light- r-r .r I I % - I I v house and stinks like rotting New England cod. Barthelme is at his best when dealing with the ponderous bum- mer of just trying to maintain "noromal" and "healthy" human relationships. The first story in the collection, Critique de la Vie Quotidienne, is a sterling exam- ple. He leads his two characters through the traumas of marriage, children and divorce, and finally into unhappy isolation and loneli- ness. The Barthelme twist is that he tells the story in a style that is outrageously funny. There is a wonderful juxtaposition of emo- tions: The reader giggles and guffaws through the story's lit- tle puns and ironies, realizing only at the end that all along he has been reading a tragedy. If there is a theme to this col- lection of stories, it must be this unholy merging of comedy and tragedy. It pops up in Perpetua, another amusing story of an un- happy marriage that ends in an even unhappier divorce; in De- partures, a collection of bitter- sweet goodbyes; and in The Ge- nius a hilarious take-out on a man who is blessed" and cursed with talents considered exception- al. PERHAPS THE most successful piece in the entire collection is The Sandman, written in the form of a letter from a man to his lover's psychiatrist. The story is a near-perfect comment on the current human condition, Ameri- can style. The most significant aspect of the story is its happy ending, which amounts to a re- UAC presents HOLIDAY BOINANZA jection of our neurotic modern values: The hapless letter-writ- er's lover, it seems, has decided to spend her money on a new piano rather than the continued services of her shrink. When Barthelme is bad, hap- pily not often in this collection, he is very, very bad. Stories like The Temptation of St. Anthony and The Flight of Pigeons from the Palace try hard, but fail al- most completely. These stories are Barthelme at his most ex- perimental, attempting to braek through traditional boundaries of fiction. They can hardly be call- ed stories at all, in any classical sense, but neither do they fit any other available definition. Barthelme discards traditional notions of theme and character, but has nothing with which to replace them. FOR NOW we have a book which is three-quarters suc- cessful. If Barthelme can ever infuse his most experimental stories with the kind of life and dimension he has his other work, he will surely stand as one of the world's leading modern fiction figures., THE SOVEREIGN STATE OF ITT By Anthony Sampson. New York: Stein and Day, ??? pages, $10.00. By CHUCK WILBUR t I 0 MINDERBINDER is alive and well and working for ITT. Few readers will miss the comparison between Anthony Sampson 's portrait of the Inter- national Telephone and Tele- graph Co. and Joseph Heller's Catch 22. But perhaps the com- parison is unfair,' for even Milo's mind would boggle at the du- plicity revealed in this book. Like Milo, ITT, an American corporation, refused to let the second world war stand in the way of its international busines.. This "open-minded" attitude cre- ated a situation in which "ITT Focke-Wulf planes were bombing allied ships, and ITT lines were passing information to German submarines," while "ITT direc- tion finders were saving (Allied) ships from torpedos." War is risky business, how- ever, and ITT took its share of lumps. Its German holdings, in= cluding the Focke-Wulf bomber f a c t o r y suffered considerable damage from the Allied air cam- paign. The financial blow was softened, however, by the $27 million the corporation won from the government in a suit over bomb damage inflicted on its holdings during the war. Milo eat your heart out. ITT'S ROLE in World War II is one of many amazing accounts which make the Sampson book TO S U FIRST TIME EVER SONESTA BEACH HOTEL & GOLF CLUB '60s POLITICS The movement: A self-indulgent memoir read like a corporate theatre of the a b s u r d. Sovereign State traces the development of ITT from its origins as a small Puerto Rican telephone company to the recent government scan- dals involving the corporation. It is the story of Sothenes Behn, the founder of ITT, who accord- ing to Sampson "gave the com- pany the reckless spirit which has never left it." It was Behn's "chameleon business philosophy" that created ITT's unique war- time position. Following Behn' s retirement in 1956 Harold G e n e e n became ITT's new president. Under Ge- neen's leadership, the conglomer- ate has risen to the number 11 spot among the world's multi- national corporations, with an- nual sales totallingnover $7 bil- lion. While Geneen expanded ITT's overseas h olId in gs, his main accomplishment has been the enlargement of the corpora- tion's Ame r i ca n operations. Through a series of mergers, ITT absorbed Avis Rent-a-car, Shera- ton Hotels and many smaller companies. Federal anti-trust ac- tion, however, blocked ITT's merger with the A m e r i c a n Broadcasting Co. in 1967. A sim- ilar attempt to check ITT's growth in 1970 led to the scandal that has earned the corporation much of its current nortoriety. THE STORY, of ITT's merger with the Hartford Insurance group makes up the lion's share of Sovereign State. The intricate details of corruption and abuse of power Sampson provides defy summarization. What is apparent is that ITT, through a variety of means, sought to stop anti- trust action against its merger with the Hartford. Among these means was the corporation's pledge of $400,000 to help bring s power the 1972 Republican convention to San Diego, Richard Nixon's favorite city. Evidence linking the favorable treatment ITT received from the Justice Department's anti-trust division to corruption in the Nix- on administration is still coming to light. Even without this new evidence, Sampson provides a fascinating and essentially sound picture of ITT's ability to bend government to its will. Sampson also reveals the be- hind the scenes story of how ITT attempted to use American for- eign policy to protect its interests in Chile. Fearful of the election of Marxist Salvadore Allende as Chilean president, the company pledged up to a million dollars to help the CIA prevent the elec- tion of a socialist government. Negotiations between ITT and the CIA were not difficult, since John McCone, former head of the CIA, now sits on the ITT board of directors while simul- taneously serving as a consul- tant to the secret intelligence agency. Throughout The Sovereign State of ITT Sampson vividly portrays the personalities and policies that have made ITT the corporate Frankenstein it is today. Where his book falls short, however, is in analyzing political economy that has created the giant multi- national corporations. He ex- presses doubts whether any gov- ernment can control the huge conglomerates while the crucial question is whether any West- ern government really wants to curtail their actiivties. The reason for this reluctance may lie in the fact that the multi- nationals represent the most ef- ficient means for a nation to exert its economic muscle abroad, particularly in pene- trating the developing economies of the third world. SAMPSON EMPHASIZES that the sheer size and strict plan- ning of the multi-nationals has made them oblivio'is to the hu- man element in their operations. Here he clearly misses the mark. ITT's size and efficient planning are merely a means to an end: huge profits.aIt isthe fiever end- ing pursuit of this financial goal that has led ITT to regard gov- ernments as useless stumb~ling b 1 o c k s or acquiescent junior partners, while relegating human happiness to nothing more than a potential byproduct of its empire. Chuck Wilbur is-an editorial page staff writer for The daily. DECEMBER 30-JANUARY 6 " Round trip jet Windsor/Nassau * Choice of air-conditioned accommodations * Full American breakfast daily " All transfers & baggage handling * Private beach, free golf & tennis $230 plus $14-DOUBLE $220 plus $14-QUAD FOR MORE INFORMATION UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER TRAVEL OFFICE 2ND FLOOR, MICHIGAN UNION PHONE: 763-2147 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12 Last Day for Applications BLOOD DUES By Dotson Rader. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 211 pages, $6.95. By TONY SCHWARTZ T HAS BEEN three years since Kent State and the invasion of Laos - events that perhaps symbolized the last gasping hur- rah of the student movement. The death symbols abound. Most of the Chicago 7, it was learned re- cently, have turned away from political action. Four per cent of the University of Michigan campus votes for student govern- ment and even a tuition strike can't get off the ground. To say activism is at a standstill has al- most become a cliche. For now, a tendency toward reflection seems to have set in. Former activists, clever exploit- ers and historians are all at work trying to put some of the dec- ade's events into perspective, to dissect the movement in such a way that both its early power and its later demise become comprehensible. Dotson Rader's Blood Dues is one of the first of a spate of 'movement' books which will surely spill forth in the coming months. Rader's credentials are impressive: more than half a decade as a leader of the anti- war leftamuch of it in SDS, both as a Columbia University stu-- dent and later as a left-wing writer. Much as I'd like to understand the rise and fall of a movement which was made up largely of friends and people my age, and helpless as I feel to explain the collapse to adults who look to me for answers, I think I was predis- posed to like Blood Dues. I thought it might have the ans- wers I didn't, could offer me an insider's insight. The approach seemed good: an attempt to in- tertwine vivid personal experi- ences of the divisiveness, confu- sion and hypocrisy which vitiat- ed the left's collective power, with a more detached, theoretical explanation of "What It All Meant". WELL IT didn't work. What Rader spouts passionately about the logic and theoretical attraction of revolutionary vio- lence rings hollow next to his admissions of personal failure. His explanation for that failure -and implicity for the failure of others - is pointed and graphic. Rader says that insecurity about sexuality and a tendency toward violence were bound up inextric- ably. Revolutionary violence was merely the means to assert the manhood one couldn't prove sexually: "It was difficult to posit manhood in America, for the valuesthat corporate capi- talism intruded into the culture and the social institutions it cre- ated were inhuman and anti-sex- ual." This kind of violence - which caused harm to people and institutions merely to satisfy one's own neurotic needs - be. came terribly difficult for Rader to justify. But what made it more diffi- cult to justify was the related insight: "I was not born a vic- tim of America, and yet I need- ed the existence of victims ab- solutely in order to make rebel- lion to become a man. And if there were no victims and no op- pressor class, I would have to create them." Rader's cause is admirable, but what impact the effort might have held is badly compromised by his driving need to find yet another macho role to replace the one -as revolutionary - that he here gives up. Rader is at such pains to make Blood Dues a writer's masterpiece that he drowns genuine feeling in grat- ingly self-conscious style.- He has figured out too well how to come up smelling like roses, how to ex- pose vulnerabilities while simul- taneously cataloguing strengths. And all of this is done amid long conversations with the superstars of the sixties. Rader's offhand, and perhaps unintentional name- dropping, runs the gamut from .Jacob Javits to Abbie Hoffman, Tennessee Williams to Paul Goodman, and Andy Warhol to Norman Mailer. THE IMAGE Rader paints of sitting opposite Tennessee Williams ("I had known (him) for a long time, we were close friends . . ."), writing together from dawn till noon, isn't going to make us believe, by analogy, that Rader is a writer on Wil- liams' level. He's not. Nor will he be seen in Norman Mailer's intellectual light by saying, in his painfully understated man- ner, "So Mailer and I argued about history and about the po- litical uses of violence." The writing in Blood Dues is so pur- posely tormented, stylistically re- petitive and perhaps unconscious- ly pretentious that it ends by hav- ing the opposite effect Rader al- most surely desired: a sense of unreality. Rader does not finally attend to the political reasons for the movement's downfall, except to mention, in passing, the most obvious ones-police repression, division in the camp, outnumber- edness. Nor does he look in a systematic way at the progres- sion of his personal feeli'ngs. In- stead he depends on flashy styl- istic images and antecdotes to tell his story. Despite the failures, there are flashes of insight and some well written passages here. Divorced from the intense need to prove himself as writer, Rader's book might have been both more read- abl and more rigorously con- ceiv'ed. To RADER'S defense-and to the defense of many Water- gate-saturated former activists who are a bit disillusioned and baffled by it all, the last impo- tent message in Blood Dues speaks graphically to the diffi- culty Rader must have had in saying anything substantative, in retrospect, about the experience of the sixties: "I have learned one thing of importance to me-one has to act-write-against what is hlirt- ful to one's friends. And its co- rollary: there is little one can do to much effect in any case." J I POT POU RRI Notes about a happy children's magazine r 4Centicore Bookshopsj 336 MAYNARD-663-1812 1229 SOUTH UNIVERSITY-665-2604 CENTICORE HAS BOOKS ON A RCHITECTURE AND DESIGN4 MATTER BECOMING SPIRIT by Poolo Saleri ARCHITECTURE WITHOUT ARCHITECTS ...........by Bernard Rudofsky MONT ST. MICHEL AND CHARTRES ...............by Henry Adams ADHOCISM b . .. ..........................y Charles Jencks THE NUDE ............................... :.... by Kenneth Clark4 AND4 Featuring the newest book by the inventor of the geodesic domes THE DYMAXION WORLD OF BUCKMINSTER FULLER "CRICKET, THE MAGAZINE FOR' CHILDREN", Clifton Fadi- man, senior editor; Open Court Publishing Company, La Salle, Illinois; volume 1, number 1, 96 pages. $1.25. By PATRICE RINALDO I HAVE SEEN only this first .issue of "Cricket" but if the others bear even a crude resem- blance, it will be an important crusader for the ever-struggling cause of literature. It is funny, and moral and beautifully done. Some impressive features: poems <. . , l~ r: . ' '. 's;, ^5 '- F° _ i. m.: ,r : . lr :. .: : ' r.::#' :ar SUSKET MASS MEETING FOR "GYPSY" and "COUNTERPOINT" ACTORS and CREWS amy66& _ I __I I ACADEMIC RESEARCH MATERIALS THOUSANDS OF RESEARCH STUDIES ALL SUBJECTS Catalogue Containing 10,000 Listings Now Available Send for FREE Details or Telephone (312) 427-2840 -----r...... -s------A---------w --- ACADEMIC RESEARCH, INC. 431 SOUTH DEARBORN STREET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60605; YOUR NAME * ADDRESS________ ___ __ CITY & STATE___ _-__ --m bmmm mmmm mmmmm - mm- u THIS IS IT FOLKS ! LAST CHANCE to have your SENIOR PIX taken Mt''WIfAY 11 --------- ----PRESENT THIS COUPON---" ----- M - "M r O SUPER ARBY'S FRENCH FRY' LARGE COKE; ONLY $1.50 PLUS TAX GOOD ONLY AT ARBY'S OF MD ANN ARBOR YPSILANTI ' WASHTENAW AVE. WASHTENAW AVE. f !,z mile west of Arborland Across from K-Mart near Golfside ; ----------- OFFER EXPIRES NOVEMBER 30, 1973 ----mm-- m Grow We Must By HARVEY WOOD, C.S.B. -A CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LECTURE- scinso~red hby by T. S. Eliot and Nikki Giovanni, book reviews, talking insects that say things like, "Yeah man" and "far out", and a wonderful editor's note"that recommends reading the stories out loud with the family. So, who wants to be bothered with morals? I do, when they are the kind that "Cricket" teaches. For example, one musthave an open mind, and accept the char- acteristics that make one human, such as fear and sadness. One must have a sense of humor, and a keen awareness of life's pri- vate pleasures - such as little bigs, one's own special place, poetry. And one must respect oneself. All this comes across in an es- say about the drums of Africa, a plea for news of readers' fears as well as the smell of their favorite holidays, a dialogue among bugs in which it is learned that black, brown and white (shedding cric- kets are beautiful - and so is a polka dotted ladybug. Gwendolyn Brooks writes a poem called "Rudolph Is Tired of the City". There are nonsense rhymes and a very silly story about a man who saves his farm from drought by popping his onions (they're "A little smaller'n a cow shed") so the "skeeters" (you use chicken wire to keep 'em away) will cry. There are mudpie. recipes and young reader contributions. YOU MAY wonder why I am re- viewing a children's magazine in a college paper. The answer is just this: The time to turns