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Corpus Christi Caller-Times from Corpus Christi, Texas • 22

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Corpus Christi, Texas
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22
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'rryrTrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrri THE Am THE OVTS Book Leans To Style (ocos Treasure Tale Good Though Dubious Party System Useful Two NT llerald Tribune Sen-Ire TARTIES AND rOLITIOS IN AMERICA Fjr Clinton Rom) Irr Cornell University Tr" UW (rlothhound) ItfiS election frenzy less than two-thirds of those eligible to vote will do so If the electorate runs true to form To all of which a footnote may add that Rossiter's THE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY ilfltf) a similarly lively srhn larly and altogether engaging work has recently reappeared In paperbound form (Harvest vote Republican than mm Winston Count' Ala i taunchly Republican aa Westchester Seventy-five per cent of voter vote a their lather did And on Jiit by hit a the sturdy old erazy quilt take form One more statistic initely there la doubled not at ail by Ralph Hancock veteran Central American new-pnper correspondent who with the late Julian A Weston aim a journalist shlded the Goroa Island legend (or many years No spoilsport I trust is going to challenge them It is of course Com Island a ron man's dream and the No stop on any armchair fortune hunter's circuit Here now Is the first hook that gives Its history In fairly complete detail and it will be a pretty sluggish reader who comes to the end of it without making certain plans of his own Bullion ahoy Cast off mates Why even within the lat quarter-century the presumed loot hidden there has grown in value It used to be fixed at a mere 363000000 That it def amd It ian't Just everybody even now who goes out of hi wy to get into an argument with that formidable founding father George Washington But boldness dwells among us still Listening to President Washington declare In his Farewell Address that "the spirit of party" ia the "worst enemy" of popular government Clinton it iro Rossiter rises to enter a dis- SUNDAY JUNE 12 10(50 and an appalling one Thia year for all the rreidentil 5Jc-r5rwwallfr'ZiuifS Till- Kcsl In PAPERBACKS llerald Tribune Rervlre TIIE MIST TREASURE OF COCOS ISLAND By Ralph Ilnnrm-k and Julian A Wes-Inn Nelson $5 On a rainy rocky ral-infoxt-ed Pacific island 325 miles off Cos I a Rica lies treasure estimated at $100000000 or maybe aa far as anybody knows for sure there isn't so much as a dime or a doubloon there Of all tliose who have broken their hearts and lost their bankrolls looking for It none have come up with anything at all BRONZE HEAD OF taken from death mask 1 PA) bi 1' (ZVX II ll 1 11 ItLlMUd Life Full of Color Work Books 112)) amplified revised tourfied up with second thought and reappraials A you can see one firm vote la eaat her and more than that if the poll watchera aren't watching for the wiae good-humored man of Ilhara who sees so dearly and write ai well By John Ilutchen Art TAGE 22 BEST SELLERS The weekly coast-to-coast survey of the leading booksellers by the New York lrratd Tribune shows the following hooks currently at the top of the best seller list: imoN I ADVISE AMI (TIN-SENT Drury UUII Michener TIIE I EOPAIU) Dl Impcdusa I TRUSTEE KROW THE TOOLROOM Shute 5 TIIE LINCOLN LORI) Hawley I TIIE CONSTANT hi-AGE Davenport 7 TIIE AFFAIR Snow OURftELYES TO KNOW O'Hara I MRS 'ARRIS GOER TO NEW YORK Galileo 111 TIIE CHAPMAN RETORT Wallace nonfiction 1 IY THIS HOUSE RE SAFE FROM TIGER King Folk MEDICINE Jar-vi 1 I KID Tor NOT Pasr 5 TIIE LAW AND DIE PROFITS Parkinson Dorn Free Adam-on 7 THE ENEMY WITHIN Kennedy 5 GRANT MOTES SOUTH Catton ACT ONE Hart 10 DIE STATUS SEEK-ERS Packard BOOKMOBILE SCHEDULE CITY La Betama Public Library's bookmobile schedule for the coming week 1 a follows: TUESDAY a Den Garza Tark a Crowley School 31-tmnn Ebony Acre School WEDNESDAY: 930 915 Travis School 10-noon Portoii THURSDAY: 8 HI 10 am 213 Stage Gardendale at Moore School 4-6 Tarkdale Plaza FRIDAY: 10:3011:13 am WimMr park Srlionl 6:30 pm Alameda Shopping Center SATURDAY 9-nmm Tark-dile Tlaza 'Ol'MY The bookmobile urtwiule for Nueces County Library MONDAY: Hearn Bd (Little Residence) GiKh Park Arlington Heights Bluebonnet Hill TUESDAY: Highway Village Harrington Drive WEDNESDAY McNorlen Addition flarkwood rich Residence Gibson Lane Forest Ixinr Thole Rest Home Reg-mund Residence (Farm Road 663i THURSDAY: Pefionila School niakeeleo Residence Dari Residence Willoughby Residence iFarm Road 665) Kastor Residence FRIDAY: Rolling Acres No 2 Bervnnne Terrace REGIONAL Tbe bookmobile schedule for the (Viastal Rend Regional Library demonstration: WEDNESDAY: am Pni itv Dance Hall at Annnrose S'ore nt (3rgg pm Aw all Residence at Mapea Church at Simmons Midway THURSDAY: 9 9:30 am Springfield Ay cock Oil Co at San Diego FRIDAY: 99:30 am Sun Oil Co La Gloria 31:20 11:30 am Seeligson pm Palito Blanco 3-345 post olfire at Ben RolL SATURDAY: am Community House at Riviera 31:30 noon Cliurrh at VaR-innnville pm Loyola Beach 2-2 43 Picardo Sstifl Ailwnliirr (OnvOaW iwi York TiniM Nn Vrvir) A(T OF MERCY a novel by Fiam-i Clifford will he published hy Coward McCann July 13 The tory tells of Ihe advrnturc of a young English rnuple unintentionally caught up in Ihe dangerous affairs of a South American riunlry swept hy revolution Ibe novel presently will he filmed In England 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Herald Tribune Ren Ire RET DIM HOUSE ON FIRE Bjr Wllllem Rty ron Random House $595 "I BKLIEVK In the value of a handsome style said William Styron in an interview anmo time after hi firat novel ME DOWN IN DARKNESS (1951) put him In the front rank of young American writer whose future wns to he awaited with hope His own style a evrn the less enthusiastic critic of that book noted wa a handsome one indeed shining flexible and vigorous and from one line to another it remains ao in his first major work since then RET DIIS ROUSE ON FIRE "There's only one person a writer Avuild listen to pay any attention to It's not any damn critic It's Ihe reader" Styron went on to say In the same interview The general Intelli-gent appreciative non-caviling reader he presumably meant By a furious Irony it Is precisely this worthy kind of reader whom Styron now slights I not a novelist entitled to write for himself? He certainly i But there is a sort of egoism about the writing of SET THIS HOUSE ON FIRE a sense of an author indulging himself to the point of obsession In a writer less gifted in a novel tea significant in purpose this would matter little it at all But this i a man of talent writing a book whose potential was great HE 18 ON the trail of something important and in his own fashion ho reaches it: The nature of corruption in man the multiple shading of guilt in us all the attainment of grace through selflessness Hi scenes hla people very often have art's wonderfully satisfying actuality even a it so often is here the aetua'l-ty i a dream And there I that style variously soaring and intimate with that music in it whirh wrier bred in the Smthern rhetorical tradition seem to carry in their Mood Terrihle events you learn almost at once have occurred two year before in the village of Sambuco on the Mediterranean coast south of Naples A rich American Mason Flagg was found dead at the foot of a cliff Suicide or murder? An Italian peasant girl was ravished and slaughtered Peter I-everett Flagg' friend and In its early stage the nar-rstor had horn there then So had an alcoholic American painter ('as Kinsolving There 1 then a mystery In he unraveled a tale to be told and those largo theme are waiting to he disclosed Rut fint there is a long trip into the pat with Peter leered returning to ihe days of h' school hoy frienddiip with young Mason Flagg always charming and evpn then enr-nipt a compulsive if rntrrtain ing liar a satyr and a he grow older increasingly predatory in hi passion for enslaving other and cynically directing their lives and destinies When Peter Ievrrrtt arrives at Sam-huco for what turns out to be a nightmare visit Flagg ha characteristically reduced the drunken poverty-stricken Cass Kinsolring to the degrading bondage of a court fool HOW HE DID IT and what happened then dominates the eeond half of Styron's king hook and it Is her that ho moves slowly toward the concept of divided responsibility for evil Cass Kinsolving Is a victim hut hi own weakness his will to have invited Ihe rvil that afflirt him If Flagg violates life Kinsolring denies life Who 1 the more guilty? Styron dor srrive finally at thi momentous question hut only after a stupefying mass of preparation The hallucination! and poisoned dream of the demented paintrr run on in sequent after long sequence Insistently repetitive TV irrele vaneie pile up as in Ihe talk of the autointoxieated And finally one cornea to fee that Styron as author Is himself suffering from a torm of verbal intoxication He can take the hreatli away with a memory of the Virginia Tidewater country's still beauty and then deaden the mind with every last sweating detail of a hangover every squalid touch of a dirty hotel room or a bitterly worded quarrel The best of RET THIS noURE ON LIRE I brilliant Overshadowing it and virtually drowning it 1 all that ia overdone and unnecessary Like no many failures in art the failure here ia one of proportion By John Hulrhcn Srulpltirr Society Will Mcrt Today The Roiilhwest Sculpture So-nety will mrei today in Ihe gallery of the Art Building of Ihe Frank Smith Fine Arts renter at Texas AAI College at Kingsville Don Bartlett of the ALI Ari Department will he in charge of the meeting LIKE OTHER Cocos chronicler they accept the three-part origin of the treasure the greater part of It brought from Lima in the British ship Mary Dear In 3921 when San Martin'l rebel army came up from Chile to overthrow the old Spanish order in Peru the rest ol It stashed away hy the pirates Benito Bnnito and Edward Davis Our sleuths are chiefly concerned with the huge haul from Lima and they have news for the biggest scoop it says here in all Cocoa Island legeiv dry All Coco buffi know how Capt Thompson of the Mary Dear who was hired to sail round with the Lima treasure until the revolution in Peru subsided aaw to It that the Spanish soldiers sent aboard as guards were murdered and then made off for Cocos Island and how twenty-odd years Inter or someone pretending to turned up In Newfoundland and left treasure maps to a man who had befriended him But wait a minute say Hancock and Weston For one thing they doubt that the Newfoundland Thompson waa the Thompson For another thing they claim it was the Mary Dear's first mate a Scottish doctor turned sailor who supervised the massacre of the Spnniib guards and the burying of tha treasure And who was he? He (in this telling) was no less than Alexander Forbes later a wealthy and much respected California industrialist At his death this version continues he left to his son a map of Coco Island documents describing the Lima treasure arrival there and instructions for finding it The son of the old (or he can be called only wasn't much interested But his great-grandson James Alexander Forbes IV cares a great deal and even now is still seeking the pell at ter two or three fruitless expeditions THE REVELATION about Forbes would be rather more convincing if the Hancock-Wea-to i team had quoted from the Fmbcs documents or given evidence of having examined any p-irt of tlipm But tin detracts imt at all from tlirir hook's real interest which lira elsewhere It fascination is the stop lea of men like August Gissler most persistent of all Cocos Islam! dreamers who spent seventeen years and SiOnOO there hiw saga was told also in the excellent DIG FOR Tilt TE TREASURE hy Robert 1 Nesmith admiral of the Four Anchor Arrhivesi such rascals as Petrus Bergmans and Capt A Arthur who preyed on the avarice of distant investors aurh romantic adventurers as Sir Malcolm Campbell and Count Felix von Luckner I'h rough the years Hancock and Weston in Central America watched these comings ant) goings and all the drama and hanky-panky and a most fetching account it so fetching lhat your correspondent may be taking off any day now armed with information just acquired Irom a crystal gacr howing that if you taka a posuion on ihe inner point of Nun Island and follow a lint 20 deg Very dangerous tins kind of literature By John Hutchens Johannesburg's business district They recreate the African world for but in a broader sense they a ft universal Young would-ho akin divers have just the book been waiting for in THE FIRST FIYN FATHOMS photographed hy Mike Wilson and written hy Arthur Clarke Ihe use of snorkel mask and fins are described and illustrated and there Is an excellent and informative section on water pressure and how it affects man's ability to breathe under water also one on the operation of tho Aqua-lung Parents will be glad to note that emphasis is placed upon safety A NEW LIFE IN Ol'R IA-TER YEARS Is hy the noted German biologist Dr Heinz Wol-tererk Woliererk maintains that aging hi not to he considered ns a calamity but as a part nl the normal life process that ho-gins at birth 'Die development of human personality its rliinax in old age which la blessed hy Ihe possibility of Ihe highest forms of human achievement" TIIE NEW LIFE IN YOUR LATER YEARS la rounded discussion of Ihe phenomenon of aging MiniELWOKIA) hr Panicle de Ynltcrra domes or writing poetry he was sculpturing his favorite among all his talents Morgan allows him a friendship with Tomasso Cavalier! a handsome youth but a purely platonic relationship Morgan is sure and he also notes his deviation to Victoria to whom he wrote sonnets lie lived under a tot of popes and work ed for many of Julius 31 Leo Clement Vll Paul and a'ond up to them daimtlessty though as this author Justly observes he could turn tail and run as he did from physical danger in Florence and again in Rome A subject go richly documented a Michelangelo must surely he harder to write about than one relatively unknown In Ihe first place what is left to say that's new? Secondly life mvcr'ng almost a century In the incredibly jumbled sotting of the Renaissance requires so much research that most biographers might never get around to the writing But Morgan studied and wrote and though he'a a eoltege professor at Amherst he leave no telltale pedago giral stiffnesses in his pages Thi is not a new interpret! t'on but there are lively prose pictures of the pictures in ml and some scene of local life and character come through vividly By Rogers sent The political party is a fine device Cornell John Senior- professor of American institutions in-sts Indeed he doesn't know how we could get along without it Admittedly Rossiter has the historians' benefit of hindsight when be refutes one whose valedictory has come down as a sort of secular Holy Writ And certainly our dissenter Isn't saying that everything shout our political party system is quite perfect But on balance it has worked So while those hotel rooms In Chicago and Is Angeles are waiting to fill up wiih summer smoke and weighty decisions Rossiter mounts a rostrum of his own and gives a sprightly lecture parked with Information and entertainmrnt for young and old that could scarcely be better timed ARE YOU A maverick who sees no special virtue In either the Republican or Democratic party? If you are thinking of getting up a party of your own you will learn here why its chances are slim At least two reasons are psychological (we tend toward the duality of For or Against In nr Out) and sociological (radical splinter movements Banner or later get swallow-ed up in the abundance of the American economy) Are you a cynic who says that the two major parties are as Tweedledum and Tweedle-dee with little to choose be-tween them? Rossiter grant that they do Indeed overlap that they are "vast gaudy friendly umbrella" each sheltering ahout every Interest you ran think of Behold the Congressional coalitions in which nominal friend regularly teama with nominal foe for mutual advantage And it is Roes-ter's contention tht his broad appeal this Tweedledum Tweedledeeism as often as not has proved benevolent By processes of compromise offensive to dor-trinaires it has nvtigaipd "th dvislve thrust of cla and calling" Even a deal shoddy as that In whirh Ihe Southern Democrats sold out Samuel Tilden In 177 in return for a finish 'to Republican Reconstruction ultimately served the Union well And finally and most important of all in their cumbersome way the parties channel power a a charae teristirally felicitous Rossiter phrase has it "in the form of that traditional quadrille In which the la and Out rhange piserjs from time to time on a signal from the voters STILL HE demonstrate there ARE pronounced differences between them historically and today Summarily and always keeping exception in mind: "The Democrats are a party of the South the city the poor the unions the hard-luck farmers the immigrant and their children Ncgror white so-p-emaeists the young the et educated and the most educated the Republican a party of the North the country suhurhia the rich the middle class the business community the good lurk farmer the old stork the middle-aged Sind th college graduate Statistic drawn from such fart-finders as Lloyd Warner and Samuel Luhell support most of those generalizations and some other of varying significance Tarty allegiance has declined notably since 3946 Women are more Inclined to Story Hour Will Begin Tomorrow The Nuere County Library summer children' story hour program will begin tomorrow The a'ory hour are designed to appeal to children in the frt three grade of school Mr Frank Hankins county librarian said The story tellers w-lll be Mrs Dorri Hasten Mrs Kay Ileistand and Cara Annette Fprenccl The schedule of story hour follows: MONDAY: 3-10 a County Building Agia Dub 2-3 County Building at Anna-vili- TUESDAY: 9-10 am County Building at Bishop WEDNESDAY: 9 10 Youth Ontpr at Rohstown THURSDAY: 910 Methodist Church Driscoll FRIDAY: 910 am School Building at Hour Bluff "The Preconditions for Take-Off" they are ahle to exploit Ihe fruits of technology and science ward off dim inuring returns and enjoy the benefits of compounded interest Societies in the stage of "The have finally Tid themselves of old bloc and hindrance to economic prog-res Growth becomes their steady condition "The Drive to Maturity" occurs over an approximate sixty-year period and i characterized by the society's pru-uc-five output surpassing its increase in population Finally "Tlie Age of Mass Consumption" a time in which a society shifts it productive emphasis to durable consumer good comes into being The 8 8 Rt Rnetow emphasizes is technically ready for Mils stage The United States however reached this point the 1321)8 and again in the immediate post-war years- Beyond outlining and defining his theory of pcm Cro-vth the author relates it to surfi current problem the nuclear arm race and the organizing of a world that soon will contain many newly-ma-ture natm Further Rostow differentiates between his stages of growth theory snd Marx's theory which the author believes neglects some important human considerations From the time of hi winning the IKS Nobel Prize for literature to hi death May 30 Boris Pasternak lived a life unique in literary- history Hailed throughout the world for his prize-winning Pasternak In hi native land was held a dishonored citizen denounced by Premier Khrushchev and hi Soviet writing colleague His literaiy character had been Ipss than enchanted wiih the social "reform'' in the A Western award for a novel dealing unfavorably with the Soviet system represented to Kremlin thinking little more than a cold war device While Pasternak suffered in planned obscurity and dishonor in tlie land he ao deeply loved the free world became acquainted with a contemporary literary genius Here are paperback volume of Pasternak's work that did so much to acquaint thousand of Americans with this master: DOCTOR ZHIVAGO Die New American Lihrary-Signet (75 cents i SAFE CONDUCT The New American Library-Signet (50 ePnt) An aiitohiography poem and short slopes THE LAST RUMMER Avon (50 certs) A novelette and vignplie that serve at groundworks to "DOCTOR INGRID BERGMAN AN INTIMATE PORTRAIT hy Jo-seph Henry Sleoie Popular Library (50 cents) An account of one of tha most controversial public lives in recent year A POCKETFUL OF WRY by Phyllis McGinlry the Universal Lihrary-Groiviel Dunlap (95 cent) Ught verse rich with wry meaning in (hi collection of contemporary American poetry- CHOCOLATE FOR BREAKFAST hy ramola Moore Bantam (35 cents) An eightcen-year-old girl's novel about teenagers forced te fare adult problems of sex love end morality IS GREAT RIO KIES OF SCIENCE FICTION edited by Groff Conklin Faw-rett 35 rents) A lueky buy for science fiction fan TIIE GOLDEN ARGOSY edited by Cartmeli and Charles Grayson 50 eeni An anthology of the English language's most lamoua short storirs By JOHN CLARK Herald Tribune Service THE STAGES OF ETONOM-1C GROWTH by Ho-slow Cambridge University Press (1145) One of the most vital of current world drama continually unfolding in the pres Is the striving of societies to effectually allocate limited supplies and goods and service Whether a society will devote most of it resources to producing machine tools and tractors or washing marhws and automobile will depend considerations of ideological and political nature Generally speaking the social conditions that prevail in a given society can be expressed in terms of economic growth stages Currently the so-called underdeveloped nations those lagging behind the rest of the world in economic growth look to the more effluent countries roughly divided into capitalist and authoritarian socialist camps for assistance Which method of economic development i more attractive to these awakening nations '-ill determine much of coming history In STAGE 07 ECONOMIC GROWTH" Professor Roatow of Massachusetts Institute of Technology generalizes the course of modem history by establishing five economic categories into which all societies can be fitted His first stage of economic growth is called "The Traditional Society" one in which a ceiling exists on attainable per capita output due to the unavailability of scientific and technological potentialities When societies experience MR PAGES Explores New Books For Children at La Retama Public Library Hi boys and girl! I hear you are getting a good start on the World Traveler Reading program New books are arriving each week ao you will have a good selection Clinard and Newby are the authors of THE IriDEY HOLE an exciting story about the mystery of the old Winslow homestead When Merry found the old family Bible In the attic she and her brother Jack started on a hunt for more dura (Grade 5-7) BAILOR TOM by Edna Bout- ell tells about a saury black seagoing rat who proved to the crew of the Bouncing Bet that a smart cat can be a very lucky thing to have aboard (Grade A 6) Set in the year 2017 IiST RACE OF MAM was written By Robert Silverberg Dr Chsniheri took his family with him to spend a year on Mars Sally and Jim helped their father eolve the mystery of the disappearanre of the original race of Martians Leonard Kessler made the black and white drawing (Grades 4-6) THE BURRO RKNEDICTO AND ODIER FOLK TALES AND LEGENDS OF MEXICO hy Philip Jordan will help to learn many things about our neighbors to the South In Mexico story telling Is almost a way of fife This book contains some well known stories but many of them have not been published before (Grades A-1 and for reading aloud) Folk tales from a far-off land are told hy Verna Aardema In TALER FROM TB STORY IIAT In West Africa there is a story-teller who wear a brimmed hat of straw with many tiny carvings in wood and ivory hanging from iis brim Whoever wants a story picks an object from Ihs-hat and ihe story-teller tells the taie it represent The Illustration hy Elton Fax will add to your enjoyment of the book (Gradrs AS) 4 4 4 4 4 4 By The AMnHated Tres THE LIFE OF MICHELANGELO By Charles II Morgan Reynst $4- Ihe Sistine Chapel ceiling and the Ist Judgment at the Vafi-can the David In Florence the Burge Madonna and other Madonna sculptured and painted the Roholi slaves Ihe in Rome St Peter's snd the Dome the tomb of Julius is there no end to the Immortal monuments in alone sod on canvas left by Michelangelo? To he sure he lived a life long enough to accomplish a great deal of work Bom near Florence in 1473 he died in Rome in 3564 and he never wasted a minute of all his year II he wasn't painting or ren-stiuciing fortifiration or put-ting up churches to crown with (larr Novel (Cipyrloh ItM Nm York Timti Ncwi Servlet) A new suspense novel by John Dickson Carr will be issued June 22 by Harper Tilled IN SUITE OF THUNDER it will mark the thirtieth anni versa 17 of the publication of the author's first book IT WALKS BY NIGHT Rinre then he ha written more than 50 work of fiction and nonfiction under his own name and the pseudonym of Carter Dickson and Carr Dickson YOURS New Ry The Library fUaff IN THE THIEF IN THE WHITE COLLAR Norman Jas-pan discusses America's most resourceful and successful crook the employe who sir! from the company According to insurance company figures about four million dollars In cash and properly are being stolen thi way daily and by tlie end of this year such thefts will reach more than one billion dollars a year As one of the country's foremost management consultants Jaspan has frequently been rallpd in to reorganize companies where whits collar theft have occurred He pinpoint the motives and methods of the white collar thief in this hook If you would learn the origin of Coleman's mustard and IYak Froan's hlscuils and you wish to know whose tea was (hmped Into Boston harbor al the famous Tea Parly read IIIK GOOD FAKE AND CHEEK OF OLD ENGLAND hy Joan Parry I union If you hair been lahoring under tho misapprehension that the English are poor cook this book will change your mind and make your mouth water Recipes are included one could with that American dtps FOR THE ASKING Hook al Ii Rrlama Library and tablespoons had been substituted for English pounds and ounces A literary history that ia both readable and entertaining la Priestley' LITERATURE AND WESTERN MAN Triest-ley puls the emphasis more on Western Man" than he dor on "Literature" "If a twenty-volume history of Western Man were being issued" he says "then thi might lie the volume devoted to his literature" Beginning with the Invention of printing Priestley traces the expression of thought for the next five hundred ypars The last section Modern" will be particularly valuable This is not an much a hook for the student as it ia for the mature general reader wanting to Inform himself or to refresh his memory Nadine (Ion Inner i known a one of the most prrrrptive writ-era about Afru-a particularly South Africa where she was horn and still lives Her new book Is FOO I I'RINT twelve stories and a novella dome of which have appeared in American magazine The atoriea take place In Cairo in read camps tlveia In 1.

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About Corpus Christi Caller-Times Archive

Pages Available:
2,028,010
Years Available:
1910-2024