rirTHE MICiHi(. N DAIL4Y ~J i.V, IN., B. r~ I N THE WO)RLD OF _. _ SILONE . Produces A Devastating Analysis Of Dictatorship .. . THE '- OOL FOR DICTATORS, by I;. o Silone. Translated from the :~. '.n by Gwenda David and Eric M1: 'acher, Harpers, New York $3.00 ', JOSEPH GIES Silor e west book is the cleverest and m,: tntertaining piece of writ- ing thc't t. have s1 far read on the subject o ictatorship, and consider- ing tht .ame of material that has fallen in :_r this heading in the past few year that is saying something. Silo: e t isn't discussdictatorship; he dissec it; and though his satire is bril .iht, his analysis is coldly critical. ',What the book constitutes chiefly is a study of the folklore of fascisrr. ir more thoroughly than one wcvtw,. cxpect in 336 pages, Silone probes ppychology of the leader, the ci. tstances which give rise to fascism., 't:( iideology of fascist move- ments. tt: relation of social and econoricc orces to fascism, tech- niques of ascist propaganda, fascist party ro ,' cs and many other mat- ters. Eu t.1e most important thing about tc )ook is not what it says, for I doeu: if there is anything abso- lutely crn iial in it, but rather how it is said Other writers on fascism may be eperts; Silone is an artist. clsists Of Dialogues Struct u' ly, the book consists of a series .dialogues, or trialogues if there is , -A a word, among three men; M ,V., the future dictator of America ;ofessor Pickup, his advi- ser; and 'i mas the Cynic, an exiled intelleci;L l i.e., Silone himself. The scene is >vitzerland, where the Cynic lives ai±t hich the other two are passing _W ough in the course of a secret tc : of Europe undertaken to. study t .x 4echniques of dictatorship at first :iid. Professor Pickup acts as a so of straw man in the con- versatio a constantly setting up tenets } fascist orthodoxy for Thomas to kock down. Both utilize abunda;i.t quotatioris from fascist texts; E i e, who is something of a scholar, of.arly ,knows his subject backwa and forwards. Per o:tal Traits Important The 1 sor al qualifications of the fascist dictator, Silone holds, are, most ini m rtant for his individual success. .3- must be first of all ab- solutely t rt on gaining power and have n ot icr strong interest in life. He must lhv been frustrated in the ambitio.' f his youth, and he must possess : ;lit personality which en-; ables hir o be thoroughly, sincerely insincere id hypocritical. Any weak-; ness dr a c his struggle for power may com tmin his chance for dicta- torship. 'T is is not to say that the imperfei;ie ns of the leader will wreck :e fascist movement, how- ever, fo: iat is solidly founded on the soc 1chaos of a declining eco- nomic ssi M. "The birth of fascism," the cync , ys, "presupposses the fol lowing ;- oiltions: in the first placeI the state i .ust be in a state of crisis, that is to ay, radical social changesj must he ve taken place which are ut-I terly irroc ,ncilable with the old po- litical s:r.t 'm; in the second place the crisis o t e state must be of such1 4a natur ' a; to be of most immediate -benefit too ne Socialist movement, toa whi h e nasses must be irresistiblyc drawn, fe ing it to be the only movem ni capable of creating a new world; n the third place the Social- ists, w n confronted with their re- sponsib itis, must turn out to be utterly in dequate to the arduous task befork them and do nothing but' increase the general confusion, com- pletely 'ailing to fulfill the hopes re- posed in them. When these three con- ditions are fulfilled Fascism appears{ on the .i ne as tertius gaudens, the interloper who steals the plum. Un- less its leader is a complete idiot, its prospects are excellent." Mr. W. then asks why it is that the failure of socialism does not help democracy instead of fascism, and the reply of the Cynic to this ques- tion is both enlightening and inspir- ing. Victory of fascism over' demo- cracy, he says, does not mean that the democratic idea is exploded. Even if. fascism is established in the coun- tries with long-standing democratic traditions, "it will only mean the po- litical defeat of one definite historical form of democracy. I believe the democratic idea will survive all the political forms with which it has so far been identified. The difference, between the democrats of the present' day and their ancestors, who fought in past centuries for popular liberties, for equality before the law, for po- litical liberties, and risked their lives on the barricades, in civil wars and wars of independence, is very great indeed, and it has nothing whatever to do with individual psychological properties . .. the democrats of the present day no longer have an ideal to realize. They are traditionalists, conservatives. They live on the yield of their ancestors' conquests. A class in the ascendant, a class fulfilling a revolutionary function, increases the ;stature of its representatives, gives them the preeminence of Cromwell, Jefferson, Mazzini, Lenin. But a democracy in decline, maintaining itself by compromises and retreats, [:can only be represented by such peo- ple as Giolitti, Bruening, Laval, Chamberlain; and it is to be feared that the more time passes the steeper is the decline . . . the leaders of! European democracy show all the characterictic signs of a political class that has exhausted its mission." This is Slione's message. It is, as I indicated before, not startlingly new. It falls into place beautifully, however, with the analysis of the1 roots of dictatorship in the economic, social and psychological instability of our times which comprises the! material of the books. ----------- to the Pacific Coast. The last offer I had of a review of Gone With The Ex Libris Wind was in November. Some of the books reviewed here are the gifts of publishing companies. By JOSEPH GIES These institutions on the whole, how- -I ever, are decidedly snug with their The difficulties of getting books re- property when it comes to publica- tions the size of the Daily, and gen- viewed on time for this page have erally send only their weaker items, been getting on the book editor's forcing this department to fall back nerves lately. Even if rlobody does on various other methods of obtain- read them, I still like to have at least ing books. These include practically a couple of them appear every week, everything short of stealing. and the new low reached by today's page is definitely discouraging. The Well, maybe better luck after ex only excuse I can offer is the one that has been offered to me for the past fortnight: that exams are coming. Possibly the studies which prevent my reviewers from writing reviews will also operate to keep readers from noticing their absence. When I first became editor of this page a couple of years ago most of the reviews were being written by faculty members. This seemed to me to be a slightly anomalous situa- tion, for the Daily is after all a stu- dent newspaper; so I have gradually eliminated faculty-written material. NEWS FLASH FROM NEW The quality of the reviews has na- YORK: Mrs. Dillon of the DILLON turally fallen off as a result, but up SHOP is in New York picking out to now I always consoled myself with the latest in formals the thought that at least ,the student so that you will be reviewers didn't call up at noon Sat- the 1939 Fashion urday to say they wouldn't be able to Parade at the J- get their copy in for this week, as the Hop. She has sent faculty men used to have a deplorable /back some of the habit of doing. But now this regret- new models already table tendency has appeared among and here they are: the student reviewers.- - A floating marquis- Af V. F. Calverton Sees Optimistic Trend In Modern Literature By ADRIENNE The tradition of optimism and faith in the future of America expressed in the writings of Emerson and Whit- man has evolved into the modern trend toward Socialism in literature C. F. Calverton, editor of Modern Monthly told a meeting sonsored by the Young People's Socialist League yesterday at the 'Union. The Romantic pe ilod in America is notable for its lesser pdets such as Lowell and Longfellow whom Mr. Calverton characterized as sixty- third and eighty-second rate poets respectively. Mr. Calverton was of the opinion that the most important. productions of the Romantic period were Whitman and Melville. The writers of this period composed "per- haps the most optimistic literature the world has ever known," he added. All were imbued with the dream of the West. Calverton compared this period in American literature with the period following the Revolution in Russia. The faith and hope of Russian writ- ers in Communism are expressed in their literature, art and cinema achievements, he said. In America the Romantic era of achievement and hope was over- whelmed by the' disillusionment and hopelessness which followed the Civil War period, he said. The glowing pictures of the West were shattered by the realistic school of writers who described the West as it had become with the predatory methods of big business. Frank Norris, in Octopus, which Mr. Calverton termed "the first authentic and well thought out picture of what had happened to America," was to literature what Bryan was to politics in the '90s, Mr. Calverton said. The trend toward Socialism in3lit-' erature was first expressed in the opinion of Calverton in the early writings of William Dean Howells. Another tendency at this time was toward what Calverton called ur- banized realism. Theodore Dreiser interpreted this trend in his writ- ings. The disillusionment and pessi- mism of American thought is also re- flected by Thomas Wolfe, Sherwood Anderson and Eugene O'Neill, he said. The depression, he said, forced American writers to take stock of themselves. This "re-inver tory," he1 added, }has resulted in a strong So- cialist trend on the part of many writ- ers best exemplified by Clifford Odets' tendency on the,stage. This "rebirth" Calverton concluded, is a continuation of the tradition of the great writers of the nineteenth century with its emphasis on group salvation. Cooperatives Fill Yacancies New Members Accepted' By Two Houses The Girls Cooperative and Roch- dale Houses last week admitted four and three members respectively to fill the vacancies to be created. next semester. Those admitted to the Girls' Co-op are Ruth Wellington, '40, Helen Cor- man, '41, Marion Lendred, '42 and Genevieve Wood, '40. Boarding members will be chosen next week. Raymond Otis, '42, George Baum- garten, '42E, and Alex Shulman, Grad., were chosen for membership in the Rochdale house. The cooperative houses are run ac- cording to the Rochdale principles which include democracy, one mem- ber one vote, and no discrimination on racial, religious or political grounds. The iay observer might think that nothing would be easier than getting three or four book reviews together every week from a campus as large and literate as this one. On the con- trary, however, such is not the case by any means. Nearly every week some- one asks me if I want a review of some book which appeared on the market 10 or 12 months previously. Seldom, however, does anyone offer to review a book which has not already been through the best seller hit -parade and pronounced fine or terrible by every book critic from Harry Hansen; Why Carry Your SHOES? 0 FREE CALL and DELIVERY r COLLEGE SHOE REPAIR 611 E. William Phone 3400 et tein Hyacinth blue; Turquoise chiffon, pleated within an inch of your life; chart- reuse chiffon shirred and shirred; Taffetas that look like Dresden china prints; the new shade topaz; and a real fore-runner of spring, Navy marquisette with tiny peter pan collar' and pockets of that filmy white lingerie trimmed lace. Many more will be here before this even goes to print. J-Hop means splendor from tip to toe and the tips of your nails must by no means be left out; in fact we're telling you to high-light them with Peggy Sage's luscious colors found at CALKINS-FLE- TCHER. Listen and ye shall hear some of the possibilities: intage (deep Amer- 1can Beauty tone), dose Pearl (Lumin- a ascent rosy shade perfect for formal occasions), Pimento, Red Banana, Fiesta, Fushia (stunning with black). If you're the type to really l1 A PRRQUISITE for Passing Exams .. . For- .. DANCE and HOUSE PARTY INVITATIONS see Ramsay- Kern. Estimates given cheerfully. See Tom Harmon a of phone- ohne RAMSAY-KERN National Bank Building Phone 7900 t c::=> (sOc c0C=> (QO O Studying, OF COURSE but ac fresh, clean, cornfor table 111 artlett & Robertson "THE BEST LOVED PIANO DUETTISTS IN THE WORLD." -Boston Transcript WEDNESDAY, JAN.* 25 8:30 P.M. ;{ L Notv t< t 2 $ it is conducive to careful studying. No extra charge for twenty-four- hour service . lounging robe or pajamas in Hill Auditorium Taking the place of Budapest Chorus- Please use Coupon No. 7. is I ... . I. -- ~, ~. .' ~ -