7 BOOKS OF THE WEEK Country to London ... Wonder Hero. By J. B. Priestley. Harper & Brothers. $2.50 The light satiric vein so preva-' lent in J. B. Priestley's previous stories is concerned here with the blatant methods of newspaperi men. The story transplants a young country fellow and girl to the bustle and roar of London. He is the "wonder hero" of Utter.a ton; she the winner of a provincial beauty contest. They meet, are run ragged by irrepressible news- paper men, and fall, true to Priest- ley's method, wholly in love with each other. They retire to the' non-descript existence they knew before they became worthy of1 publicity and exploitation. . Priestley inevitably establishes1 a contrast of good and bad in peo, ple and he adds Ida Chatwick and. Charles Habble to the long gar- land of characters who are in part latter-day emanations from the pen of Dickens. The satire of Priestley'is never very biting nor does he mean forl it to be. His attacks are done humorously rather than detri.' mentally. The manner in whichl he moves his puzzled characters1 throughout the book at times ap- proaches the ludicrous. The character of Ida Chatwickl the heroine is drawn in proportionl with life itself. There is an ex. cellent touch of pathos in herr helplessness and worldly inno- cence. We felt her uneasiness as we turned the pages and found Mr. Priestley spinning his inter esting tale.! Although the author's methods are mechanical, he fabricates plots and situations with a great degree of skill. He has cut down the number of words necessary for him to tell a story without sac- rificing in any detail his famed knowledge of how things are go- ing on in the world. Psychological Self- Appraisal... Homecoming. By Floyd Dell. Farrar and Rinehart. $3.00 The more careful reader is al- ways interested in knowing how much of his own life a fiction writer projects into his work and how m u c h he manufactures synthetically. By c o m p a r i n g his autobiography "Homecoming" with Floyd Dell's novels we see that certain incidents have been juxtaposed and remodeled to fit the situations he has created in his novels. "Homecoming" not only reveals the sources of his novels but ex- presses his philosophy as well. We see him as a helpless child in a sinister, overbearing world. His poor parents can do very little for the infant who can do less for himself. When he arrives upon the threshold of maturity wholly un- prepared, and faces two major problems, work and sex, he strikes a bargain with life, only after many struggles, mistakes and sor- rows. For those who are still caught in this maelstrom, Floyd Dell's honest self psychoanalysis should prove worthwhile and comfort- ing. "OLD RAGS, BOTTLES, RAZOR BLADES, BOOKS?" Everything from texts to shaving equipment was exchanged among the students of New York University when they opened their own "Curb Market" on their campus. Barter figured largely in all of the transactions, despite the fact that many cash sales were made. Following the open- ing of the "Exchange" students hurried from group to group in a mad effort to find the highest bidders for their belongings, while customers resolutely stuck to their low offers. The photo shows a general view of the "Market" and the large crowd that attended the sale. Acme Photo PEP ORGANIZERS supreme, these mem- b e r s of "Tassels", University of Ne- braska women's group, would cheer anybody into buying tickets for anything. Right now they are leading a drive in support of the Corn- huskers' stud en t theater. We have pic- t u r e d here, (upper x row, left to right) Ruby Schwemley, Vi- olet Cross; ( l o w er row) Laura McAllis- ter, Maxine Pack- ;~wood,, Val e nt i ne Klotz, Thelma tSter kel, Anne Bunting, Florence Buxman. u rut:a~fdxpt , , td. a & tu odjQim rcrvbLdud4of kcl- y f hiaftcllumka f h/uI/otu i 7~ al. l'm cudaraatz tWlk f ha a W. cuofcazlgc/tc apt nrd s6f4ck# wof cu ppoz at c t or * /au f/ku it- actoev ctu p~a- ptctdofrufc. Tid/op&'owc~c i lg e P D/Ot5 ie xi ct &tyca~1tcn Qplt a&t c wAr bfl ilitbi 46/a ttkhfom&? cotomtSp mlo7 Gr a4, 4ck00/ tWc ,a& d a to 1 Q,, a II adA t t l t 77111c (fa- 7 t~ flyk I ;a drl,et ad j~h,//,wfx .! * Acme Photo oU POISON TO COLLEG Max Knecht, cousin of M =-- -star boxer on the Univer team, as he appears to t - .., while battling his way to 1 collegiate Heavyweight c hits equally hard with eit WITH AN AIRPLANE FOR A CLASSROOM, Miami University- students, with diving helmets and air com- delivered knockouts with1 pressors, fly out into Biscayne Bay to search for rare fauna. They fly to class each~ morning in this 22-passenger plane. mot.. _ 4