ow F wEEK BOOK OF THE WEEK Handled With Care .. . Glass. By Howard Stephenson. Claude Kendall. $2.50. The author has selected a frag- ment from the history of the be- ginnings of America and has made of it a ground upon which he cre- ates an edifice compounded of the sufferings, victories and defeats of those early pioneers in the first days of industrialism in our coun- try. This novel is the richly human story of a lone giant of the earth,+George Rood, who wages a single-handed fight against a glass manufacturing enterprise w h i c h springs up across the toad from his farm upon the discovery of natural gas in the vicinity. George Rood loses his wife in childbirth at the time of an explo- sion caused by the tapping of a gas well almost at his front gate. Embittered by this sad experience and alien to the despoiling meth- ods of the new enterprise, he raises his son as a true child of the soil, mothered only by Mamie, a young servant girl, and Aunt Fanny, a woman already well on in years. "The man and this habetic image of himself walked the straight ways" refusing to be- come wealthy by selling the farm as the Karchers had done, in cause of the industrial venture. Early in the book we have a premoni- tion that little Georgie will fol- low, tragically, in his father's footsteps when we read Aunt Fanny's words, "He's jest the spit of you, George. He's jest like you was starting all over to be my little one". And George Rood re- peated "Jest like me starting over again". His sudden love for Mamie, by whom he has another son, but whom he loses to the dissolute Jake Karcher, and the mocking success of the hated "hell-hole", incites him to a deeper love for farm and Georgie. There is a pathetic truthfulness in the fath- er's struggle and efforts to keep his son's attitude like his own when he early realizes that the lit- tle fellow is not entirely out of sympathy with the glass industry. He tries to pass this off and the simple defense mechanism in his words "You and me is farmers, nothing else" is strikingly touch- ing. The now grown son, like father, ironically enough, loses the woman he loves to his half brother, and the elder Rood who pays doubly for his sin when Georgie becomes a prominent en- gineer in a glass works in another city, spends the sunset of his life with Mamie, after Jake Karcher meets his death at the hands of his wife's son. Howard Stephenson calls upon his vast knowledge of provincial country folk and factory workers, gathered while living in small towns in Ohio and Indiana where he became acquainted with glass- blowers and learned of the gaudy boom days in that region, days which belonged to the generation just previous. His particular qual- ity is an ability to secure and hold a dramatic movement through the medium of his delightfully infor- mal style and this together with the fineness of the use of dialogue, makes of hisa characters living people. He extracts the essen- tials of episodes and scenes, and delicacy, charm, brutality and courseness come alike in the pic- tures written out by the aut-hor. This is one of the finest novels of the new year. It expresses, like none other, the loamy, heartfelt, antagonism of those simple people who believed the new industrial era was an infringement upon their honest lives and labors. - X U U Below you r pon which check, clip, We will foi quested lite as soon as p Travel Bureau, Box 472 Madison, \X/isco Gentlemen: Please send on the following MEMONOW LI LI LI LI LI LI LI LI LI Yellowst Alaska Rocky M Dude Rar Europe Zion Nat Hawaii Glacier !t Banff-Lak( Other - "THANKS FOR THE BLOW"-and we're also doing a little tooting for the annual production of the Notre Dame Linnets Club. It lampooned campus customs and personages. WORLD'S RECORD HOLDER Johnny Morris, Southwestern Louisiana Institute, who does the 110 meter high hurdles in 14.3 seconds. I expect to trave L railroad L plane (NA MILITARY ROYALTY-Alyce Connoly, Vin- cient J. Buck, Cecil Olson, and Hartley C. Eck- strom last week led the Military Ball at North Dakota State College. WHEN IT COMES TO HOCKEY-These co-eds at the Washington State Normal at Ellensburg are the champion sportswomen of the northern institution. ORATORY AND TRACK are the specialties of Larry Magee of Ari- zona State Teachers College at Tempe. (HOME