Wrind 1AV in MAGAZINE Vol V, No. 7 Sunday, April 19, 1959 SPRING WEEKEND AGAIN ....Page Two CRITICAL LOOK AT LIFE By Donald Yates Page Two MOST CONSERVATIVE OF CONSERVATIVES By David Tarr Page Three OPERATION BOOTSTRAP By Thomas Turner Page Five WORST ALONENESS OF ALL By David Lowe Page Eight ACADEMIC APPREHENSION By Guy E. Swanson Page Nine A TREASURY OF ART _ Page Twelve A PERSONAL TOUCH TO FOREIGN AID By Charles Kozoll Page Fourteen MAGAZINE EDITOR - David Tarr PHOTOS: Cover: University News Service; Page 2: top, bottom right- University News Service, bottom left-Daily-.John Hirtzel; Page 5: Puerto Rico Economic Development Administration; Page 6: United Nations; Page 8: bottom right-State of New York, others --Daily--Allan Winder; Page 9; University News Service; Page 11: University News Service; Page 12 and 13: Fred Anderegg; Page 15: Daily-Allan Winder. FOR THE NOVELIST: Critical Look at Life TWO NOVELS of recent date The inhibiting influence of this make possible an observation facto- is indeed slight - which, concerning the problems of the the reader will conclude, is all for young writer engaged in his pro- the best. For Sally Jay is, quite fession. delightfully, a law unto herself. "The Dud Avocado" by Elaine Dundy (Dutton, N.Y. 1958, 255 THE STORY opens at a good pp., $3.50) is a first novel by and; moment: the period of adjust- about an American female who ment and acquaintance is past; spent some time in Paris "getting she has been around for a while educated." and has accepted Paris student A kindly and not over-protec- life for what it is. tive uncle has subscribed to the With this background, she meets expenses of Sally Jane's educa- once again a young American art- tion abroad, and throughout her ist whom she had known briefly adventures it is only to him that during her first days in Paris. To Sally Jay feels the least bit ac- the accompaniment of extravagant countable for her behavior. physical responses, she falls in love. This is the initiation of Sally Jay's "vie amoureuse." She is an irrepressible, liberal- minded, uncommonly consistent, and completely believable young American girl. Her Paris esca- pades, which lead up to her mar- riage and settling down back in the United States, could have seemed immoral committed in the person of anyone but Sally Jay. In short, the novel is written in terms of truth and understanding ES that can only come from enlight- ened observation of life itself. t 4 ; ALI z It , S ' so small a price you ve ever worn all 1. permanent collar si reinforced buttons, 0 . ' y~x seersucker, cotto q , r cotton check r% S 1 5 ~ \. N 1 i4 OUR L-PURPOSE SHIRT ROB streetwear, lounging, marketing, all-day wear 5.98 for the busiest, most versatile shirtwaist day long! and so well constructed, too: tays, action back, shirtband closing with hree-way self belt! woven stripe cotton n baby cord, silk-viscose solid or arnel- k. pink, blue, maize, shrimp, turquoise, champagne. small, medium, large. ANOTHER matter is "A Legacy of Love" by Edwin Daly (Scrib- ners, N.Y., 1958, 310 pp., $3.95). The promise of his first novel, published in 1957 when he was 22, has not been realized in the second. The story deals with Susie Churchill and Buddy Masters, two college students who have been dating, and Phil Doyle, another college boy with whom Susie falls in love. A secondary romantic situation is developed between Susie's fa- ther, a high-school teacher, and Buddy's mother, wife of the rich- est man in the small Michigan lakeside town. The relationships of the younger threesome are never well-estab- lished. Susie and Buddy seem vaguely believable,dbut Phil Doyle, who dies, fails to gain the stature of characterization required by the principal role he occupies. The af- fair involving the grown-ups, al- though treated frankly and in adult terms, is seen as a fuzzy movement of shadows backstage to the young people's drama. The conviction of reality, which a youthful writer of realism needs so desperately in his early work, is seriously lacking. The sense of 1 authentic experience was found in the author's first work, on which he labored for over five years. Daly appears not to have lived enough to have done, within a relatively short time, a second novel. Through the varying degrees of success of the two books reviewed here, one may perceive the vital need, on the part of the novelist, of critically observed life experi- ence as a basis for his fiction. --Donald A. Yates Lingerie Page TwoTHE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE