-f 7 Page 6-Sundcy, February 3, 1980-The Michigan Daily t Psok The Michigan Daily-Sunday, F A boring, treacherous life By John Goyer SMILEY'S PEOPLE By John le Carre Alfred A. Knopf $10.95, 374 pp. G EORGE SMILEY, occupation: spy. He stands in the rear court- yard of Cambridge Circus in London, headquarters of British Intelligence. It is shortly after 11:30 p.m. on a recent autumn evening. Smiley is consciously taking leave of "the Circus" for the last time; janitors inside observe the old man staring for a while at the building where he worked for two decades. Smiley is also watched by a group of inexperienced tails assigned to observe the old spy. Smiley jumps the leash, walking out of the courtyard and losing the tails easily as he travels by cab and then by train. He's gone to visit his estranged wife to say goodbye, just as he's said goodbye to the buildings. Now spies don't generally say good- bye to their wives before they leave for a mission. But George Smiley, a figure in several of John LeCarre's novels, is not like most spies. By Ian Fleming standards, this Smiley is a dull flop-he never shoots anyone, he doesn't even carry a gun (In fact, he's retired). He has to catch his breath after climbing more than one flight of stairs. In Smiley's People the spy comes out of retirement to hunt his arch-rival and opposite behind the Iron Curtain, a spy known as Karla. For Smiley the search is more than usual business, for Karla has defeated Smiley in the past. Karla engineered the planting of a turncoat spy in the Circus, one whom became good friends with Smiley. Under the guise of British Intelligence the tur- ncoat slept with Smiley's wife and tran- smitted valuable information to Moscow. Once, some twenty years ago in a prison in Ne'w Delhi, Karla and Smiley met face-to-face... With Smiley's People, these career disappointments and personal failures contribute to Smiley's image as a morose-but not self-pitying-person, given to burying himself under mounds of books in medieval German in order to escape the loneliness of retirement. Smiley is a dull, plodding, intglligent man who has worked hard for years and gained little by way of reward but the chance to indulge his germanic need for precision. IT IS SMILEY'S precise, thorough nature that allows him to add up clues that expose a chink in Karla's armor, a weakness to exploit. He adds up the clues not through daring exploits in foreign capitals, although he visits sources abroad, but through persistent search for inconsistencies in stories everyone else assumes are plausible. Smiley spends his time combing files and memories, not minefields. LeCarre point, as Smiley draws nearer on Karla's scent, he requests files from the dusty shelves of Cambridge Circus, and his security clearance is questioned by the younger, current masters of the Circus. But their chief knows Smiley from way back, and bellows at the suggestion of denying Smiley access to the file: "God Almighty, man, he wrote the damn thing in the first place, didn't he? If George can't read his own repor- ts, who the hell can?" The ignorance of the present, younger spies casts Smiley in the role of neglected sage. -Smiley's lack of self-pity gives the aging scholar/spy role its finishing touches. Perhaps LeCarre restrains himself too much in his desire to avoid over- romanticizing Smiley and blowing the balance. Clearly, the old spy rarely loses his cool. But LeCarre has been clever enough to add a few inconsisten- cies to make the character believable. Questions about Smiley's unfaithful wife, for example, merit a sharp reply to one of his friends. These brief glim- merings of temper or disgust make Smiley's cool the rest of the time seem much more convincing. He's real, he gets sick when he sees a dead body. But there's not enough of these moments in the book for the reader. You feel that you want to know Smiley, hear him say more, see him react. As the reader you are one of Smiley's alienated friends, who he has offended without warning: not with a burst of temper, but with an unexplained, muted reaction. Smiley's People is narrated as if the spy's biographer were telling a tale pieced together from the loose and scat- tered memories of Smiley's friends. Daily night editor John Goyer has severa howling buddies thought to be working fo the C.I.A. -- r '-Y l frequently harken r episodes in Smile character a touchin s back to previous y's life, giving the ng continuity. At one But LeCarre floats somewhere above; only occasionally descending to say he knows what Smiley thinks, he quotes Smiley's friends, also at times at- tributing some of our impressions of Smiley to the remembrances of friends for the sake of lending a feeling of nostalgia to the narrative. Smiley's individualism is heightened by the lack of an omniscient, Charley's Angel authority figure to plan his moves. The spy makes the decisidn himself Ao come out of retirement. While he is respected by the younger generation of spies at the Circus (which, one gets the ifnpression, Smile thinks of as if it were a dorm he lived in as an undergraduate) Smiley does not agree with his successors' methods nor with modern politics. So the new Circus gives Smiley a free reign to hunt his old enemy/friend, but it keeps an eye on the old guy just the same. TeCARRE SUCCESSFULLY renders Smiley in a down-to-earth fashion also by describing the scene honestly and without atteippting to impress the reader, as some spy novelists do, with names of streets in Berlin or knowledge of the different types of sidearms carried by a Soviet officer. Vis the set- ting for a meeting between Smiley and a contact: "The town was leafy and se- cluded, the lawns large, the houses carefully zoned. Whatever there had been of country /ife had long since fallen before the armies of suburbia, but the brilliant sunlight made everything beautiful. Number 8 was on the right hand side, a substantial two story residence with steep Scan- dinavian roofs, a double garage, and a wide selection of young trees planted much too close together. . James Bond spies for thrills, Treva- nian's protagonists do it for women and riches. In Smiley's People, many spy because they are blackmailed-thus one so often depicted as a person of ac- tion and power becomes a victim ren- dered helpless. Blackmail is the way Smiley "turns" Soviet spies; they are approached, and then muscled into working for the West. LeCarre's point is that spies love, and thus they can all be induced to change sides. By loving his wife Smiley was defeated, the conclusion being that loving and hoping are dangerous things that can preclude one's downfall. In Smiley's world, to hope is to open oneself up to the possibility of black- mail. To a precise man such as Smiley, the knowledge that there is nothing per- fect in the world is daily agony. The fact that so many of the book's characters spy because they are forced to tell us something about how Smiley has managed to stay alive through many years of "intelligence gathering," as we Americans call it. Smiley keeps his nose clean, he doesn't go to nightclubs, his wife is- probably the only woman he's ever slept with-all of which leaves an enemy lit- tle room for blackmail. Karla, however, in his thorough manner, once beat Smiley throdigh his wife, and Smiley can never forget it. See SMILEY, Page8 - - ~ - ~>~f . ' AI-, w tMi( )vIpaw,_ "' rt By Lorenzo Benet WITH MORE universities and colleges per square mile than, any other city in the nation, Boston is probably the center of education in America today. Certainly, a pair of mega-centers for the intellect such as Harvard and MIT garner for the region a maximum of public atten- tion. But recently another nearby university has been the prime focus' of public scrutiny. For what many faculty and students consider to be the most un- fortunate of reasons, Boston University has emerged in the news in recent 'weeks as possessing the most con- troversial figure in Boston academia today. That person, by far the most hated man at Boston University, is President John Silber. Silber has been likened to an army general by both faculty and students at the University. His name and reputation have been lambasted on numerous, petitions, and John Silber surrogates have been burned in effigy,y often in private. The Massachusetts Civil Liberties Union has attacked him. Since he took over the reins of the university in 1971, Silber has always been to some degree or other un- popular. However, the current tumult makes all previous conflicts seem as if nothing. Last spring, a ten-day faculty strike was followed by an organized walkout by secretaries and librarians. When Silber attempted to terminate the tenure of five professors for allegedly honoring picket lines the clerics had set up, the outrage began. Crouching by the wide, dirty waters of the Charles River, Boston University lies three miles out from the heart of Boston. Across the river are B.U.'s more prestigious and wealthy siblings, Harvard and MIT. Students at the university enjoy an open city campus, conspicuously lacking the trees and lawns found most everywhere else on the Eastern collegiate scene. Most live in university-owned brownstones, while others dwell in off-campus apartments' nearby, And, like many students, those at B.U. confront the typical troubles in- volved with adjusting to the rigors of life in a new city and the impersonal Lorenzo Benet covers Academics for the Daily. atmosphere of a university that educates thousands. But for the more than 24,000 at B.U., life is made even more difficult by the persistent conflict between Silber and the faculty. "It's difficult enough with grade competition and the decreasing job market," comments Renee Werlin, who graduated last spring from the univer- sity's College of Liberal Arts. "I think most students try to put the turmoil in the back of their mind. But it's not that easy." M OREOVER,, many have refused to put it out of their minds. The student newspaper, as well as student political groups, have supported the faculty con- sistently in their disputes with Silber. The student government has even draf- ted and passed resolutions calling for the removal of Silber and the dropping of charges against the five professors - dubbed the "B.U. five." "Tenure was designed to protect academic freedom and prevent someone from firing you because he Photo of John Silber courtesy of Boston University; "'l', and clerics courtes of Bostn University Free Pre Why do, so manyin Bost hate B.U. s John' Silber disagreed political be] ce professo B.U. five tl mination. dividuals wl cross a pick honored our Silber, ho the profes: classes at tf they have ix strike and v the universi quick to po either suspe On the st Zinn appear man who we anyone. But Silber" and over his fac sity like an oblivious to procedure.' But the 5 two of whic did about hi university.]F is no good i Silber point ced budget, and donatio among its tactics hav of the univer Silber, a of his life ii torate in Ph sity. His frie articulate, t the other hK med him autocrat. "During t pus in the e call the pol their preser riot," obser Vietnam a seemed to r went on." Zinn has I Silber duri, president. H below the a professors ih Liberal Arts "Silber 1 salary belov published te largest sect Sei 'We have a faculty union at B. U. because of John Silber. I've been here for two and a half decades and we didn 't have a union until last year. Silber has created the union through his grossness, his disruption, his vindictiveness, and his arbitrary behavior.' -Murray Levin, Political Science professor --- 699 vs.Spy