Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, ;January 26, 1974 F_ Satuday 2.Jnuay 26197 W. Somerset Maugham: Anti-Solzhenitsyn drive mounts 100 .-years of Editor's note: Former Reuters Editor Ranald Mac- Lurktin writes about W. Somerset Maugham on the 100th anniversary of the renowned author's birth. By RANALD MACLURKIN LONDON (Reuter) - Was he a literary genius or only a second-rate popular writer? Will his works survive or soon be forgotten? One hundred years. after his birth on January 25, 1873 the critics have still failed to make up their minds about the English author W. Somerset Maugham, one of the most fascinating characters of 20th century literature. THE ARGUMENTS about him are raging more fiercely than ever during his centenary year. Dur- ing his long lifetime he gained the admiration of fellow-writers such as George Orwell, Theodore Dreiser, Cyril Connolly and many others. But, at the other extreme, the noted American critic Ed- mund Wilson would write of him: ". . . I have never been able to convince myself that he was anything but second-rate . .. a half-trashly novel- ist who writes badly but is patronised by half-ser- ious readers, who do not care much about writing." A trouble about assessing William Somerset Maugham - "Willie" to those who knew him per- sonally - was that he lived too long to allow the present generation to take a really objective look at him. He died only about nine years ago aged over 90, leaving behind him an unwholesome bog of per- sonal prejudices, petty spites, grudges and feuds involving those whose intense dislike of him as a person was too overpowering to allow them to de- fend him as a lasting figure of literature. CYNIC, AGNOSTIC and despiser of humanity in controversy the mass he still insisted on clinging to life-even to the verge of senility - by such devices as trav- elling to a Swiss clinic for regular injections of goat hormones. From what has been revealed about him since his death there is little doubt that, behind a certain contrived charm of manner, he was a curious, twisted and bitter character. He was small in sta- ture, he had a bad stammer, his childhood had been unhappy, he had been bullied at school. He was a homosexual, ashamed of it and terrified that the knowledge of it would ever leak out to his enormous reading public. Yet, as he spent his days in luxury in his French Riviera villa, it was this compound that helped to make him the writer he was. The one thing that everyone is agreed upon - and more so than ever in this centenary year - is that Maugham was a master craftsman in story telling and the use of words. WHEN I WAS Editor of Reuters I used to encour- age young journalists to read Maugham's short stories and, in particular, his writer's notebook, the selection of his jottings on men, women and circumstances he had made between the years of 1892 and 1944. Many at first looked askance at be- ing advised to read the work of a fiction-writer to befit them for international news agency journal- ism, a task which demands flawless accuracy, ob- jectivity and impartiality in the reporting of world events. Nevertheless, I think most soon came ta realize what I was driving at. Maugham's attitudes to human cause and effect and the way you reported See CRITICS, Page 8 MOSCOW (lP) - Children licking ice- cream cones, housewives burdened with their shopping and old-age pensioners out for a stroll were all drawn yesterday to the latest attraction on Gorky Street- a huge poster complete with skull and crossbones, attacking Russian author Alexander Solzhenitsyn. The kids gazed and laughed at the 6%- by-9 foot drawing, prominently displayed on one of the city's main streets, clearly oblivious of its meaning. The old men stared at it silently. Some shook their heads. THE HOUSEWIVES, grateful for an excuse to put down their loads, chatted in groups of three and four. They didn't appear overly concerned. Erected Thursday just a couple of blocks from the home of Solzhenitsyn's wife, the poster depicts an orchestra of sweaty, fat capitalists playing "anti-So- viet" instruments and holding high a banner emblazoned with a book called "Works of Solzhenitsyn" with a yellow skull and crossbones on the black cover. The Solzhenitsyn poster was the latest move in the government's offensive to discredit the 1970 Nobel laureate and his book on Stalinist police terror, "Gulag Archipelago." THE POSTER was installed in a glass case next to other less captivating plac- ards extolling the virtues of the Soviet working man. Young men passing by appeared more interested in news of Thursday night's hockey game in a display of the na- tional sports paper in another case. The usual method of attacking internal "anti-Soviet slanderers" continued una- bated in the press with letters from "in- dignant" Soviet citizens assailing Solz- henitsyn. PRAVDA PUBLISHED pne from the poet Rasul Gamzatov who declared that "if; Solzhenitsyn does not like our sys- tem, our life, our country, we really can- not help him. Let him go to where he would be comfortable." A student from Minsk - ostensibly in- spired to complain about Solzhenitsyn after reading a Pravda attack last week -asserted the writer "has crossed the line beyond which he lost the right to consider himself a Soviet citizen." Since "Archipelago" will not be pub- lished here, the student had only Prav- da's word that Solzhenitsyn has "slan- dered the Soviet state and people," and that he is an "internal emigrant" and "traitor." IN A MOSCOW regional party paper, Vechernaya Moska Evening Moscow, factory worker N. Afanasyev wrote that Solzhenitsyn "lies and slanders. I do not understand how this servant of im- perialism can look into the eyes of hon- est people whom he has betrayed and slandered. Historic new world map may be phony 'Deal on Nixon papers illegally advance dated Re: Dylan Concert Tickets We have received information from some ticket holders that indicates dissatisfaction with the seats they have received to the Dylan concert. We are very upset at these reports since we took great care to ensure proper handling of the orders at our end. Therefore, we would like our patrons to be aware of the extent of our envolvement in the ticket handling process. Our contract with Dylan's management required that a, bonded ticket agency fill the ticket orders and the Civic Center Ticket Service in Detroit was their choice. Our only envolvement in the process was the collection of ticket orders. Great care was taken to ensure that the orders we received at H ill Auditorium were bound and numbered in the exact order received. These orders were delivered personally by UAC-Daystar to the author- izd representative of the bonded ticket agency in Detroit. By our contract with Dylan's management, our envolvement in the ticket process ended there. Civic Center Ticket Service filled the orders and are handling mailing and refunds. UAC-DAYSTAR NEW HAVEN, Conn. (MP)-The Vinland map, thought to be the earliest representation of the new world in existence, may be a forgery, the Yale University Library said yesterday. An analysis of the map, given to Yale by an anonymous donor in 1965, indicates the ink was made in the 20th century, five centuries after the map allegedly was drawn. NONETHELESS, library Di- rector Rutherford Rogers said the discovery "doesn't alter what seems to be historical fact"-that the Norse were on the North American mainland long before Columbus. The world map, 11-by-16 inches, was drawn in brownish yellow ink on vellum. In the upper left- hand corner is an accurate out- line of Greenland and to its left OPEN DAILY HURRY! 12:45 ENDS SHOWS AT 1, SUNDAY 3,5,7 & 9P.M.H 231 S. State Program information 662-6264 a large island labeled "Vinland." Scholars thought a Swiss monk might have drawn it about 1440, 52 years before Columbus sailed from Spain. When the map was first made public, the Italian Historical So- ciety of America said Yale should have investigated more thoroughly. USING AN electron miscro- scope, researchers concluded thal elements of the map ink "were characteristic of a pre- cipitated product and indistin- guishable from commercial pig- ment as first made during the 1920s." "There's always the possibility that someone will challenge these findings and we don't mind," li- brary director Rogers said in an interview. "The evidence, how- ever, seems to be pretty strong that this ink is 20th century." SACRAMENTO, Calif. (P)-The deed for President Nixon's dona- tion of his vice presidential papers to the National .Archives was dated a year before it was actually signed, long after his eligibility had expired for tax .~deductions he claimed, the Cali- fornia secretary of state's office said yesterday. Deputy Secretary of State Thomas Quinn said principals in- volved in the case have told him the deed dated March 27, 1969,. actually was signed and notar- ized more than one year later, on April 10, 1970. A LAW that went into effect July 25, 1969 would have severely limited the amount Nixon could have claimed for a tax deduction from donation of the papers. Quinn said the information came from Frank DeMarco, Nix- on's California tax lawyer, from DeMarco's secretary and from others. Also, Quinn said his office has proof that the deed was typed on a typewriter that was not purchased by DeMarco's law of- fice until 'July 1969, four months after the data on the documents. THE OFFICE of Secretary of State Edmund Brown, a Demo- cratic candidate for governor, has been investigating the case because it oversees notary public activities in California. _ "The deed could not have been prepared before July of 1969," Quinn said in an interview. He said the April 21, 1969 dale notarized by DeMarco was "ob- -viously false." DeMarco was not immediately available for comment. But he is tentatively scheduled to make a formal deposition next Wed- nesday in Los Angeles, Quinn I said. VEEP GERALD FORD ad- dresses the Columbus, Ohio, Touchdown Club last night. He took the opportunity to again decry President Nixon's inno- cence in the Watergate scandal and subsequent coverup, de- claring that leading Republi- cans now have evidence con- tradicting the sworn testimony of John Dean who implicated Nixon in the coverup. Tml nAE!IFP I was executed in April 1969, be- fore the expiration of the tax law that permitted Nixon to claim income tax deductions. But DeMarco said he had no copies of the original deed, Quinn said. The deputy secretary of Rtate added that neither' theoriginal nor any copies had been located. The White House has disclosed the President claimed deductions of $482,000 over the past four years for the gift of the papers. Thatenabled him to pay less than $6,000 in federal income taxes the past three years, on total income of more than $800,000. In releasing Nixon's tax data, the White House did notacite the deed to justify the deducation but noted that he papers had actually been turned over in time to qualify Nixon for the deduc- tions. However, that point has been disputed by some experts and the matter is under investi- gation by the Internal Revenue Service and Congress' Joint Com- mittee on Internal Revenue Tax- ation. IN A RELATED development yesterday, the Justice Depart- ment told a federal court in Washington that executive privi- lege continues to shield certain White House documents in the milk case despite a presidential white paper making some of the details public. It Is a Joy" -Judith Grist,. New Ybrk Magazine Bursley Hall Enterprises presents HAROLD AND MAU.DE SATURDAY, Jan. 2-900 p.m. Bursey WEST CAFETERIA ADMISSION $1.00 FRIDAY Promptly at 7&9 p.m. 1214 South University SAT. & SUN. PROMPTLY AT 1, 3, 5, 7, & 9 P.M. (no short subjects) 668-6416 THE BEST LOVE STORY OF THE YEAR -AND- THE NO. 1 HIT ACROSS THE NATION! STREISAND & REDFORD THE WAY WE WERE COLUMBIA PICTURES w RASTAR PROOUCIIONS Pnet A RAY STABS-SYDNU LLACJ hwom p I. QUINN SAID DeMarco told the secretary of state's office that an original deed actually I i I WOODY ALLEN TAKES A NOSTALGIC LOOK AT THE FUTURE. N: "4'," r I MICHIGAN THEATRE 605 E. Liberty Dial 665-6290 Based on the controversial book that shattered conventional theor'es of history and archeology TECHNICOLOR0 r Rleased by Sun ernahonj PRskrl k o NOW THROUGH TUESDAY AT BOTH THEATRES: WAYSIDE Theatre 3020 Washtenaw Dial 434-1782 Nf yuWrerolling cigaretts likeuve got 5 thumbs well give you a handL . - No more feeling like to a rude clumsy oaf. e-2 wier: No more sticking We're the original high together 2 papers "1quality, slow burning and hoping that paper' of double width. while you're "oling CTry e-% wider paper There e don' sli t .bigpenough.o you only lick mo&o open again. With *-azvwider e&..i b m mda s, IbL you can roll a fihne .. "d w. 1i smoke every single time, double width paper. a ... r100tom C'Woody'DiaI1e cA11CL andatOlln le e I r P'G , M FaIFTHFOUM{ Un d 210 S. Fifth Avenue Dil761-9700 mediatrics presents HELLSTROM CHRONICLE Friday and Saturday-Jan. 25 and 26 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. 4