SEVENTH CRISIS
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP75-00149R000500440033-6
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
4
Document Creation Date:
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date:
December 29, 2003
Sequence Number:
33
Case Number:
Publication Date:
April 12, 1962
Content Type:
NSPR
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
CIA-RDP75-00149R000500440033-6.pdf | 479.56 KB |
Body:
REPORTER APR I? 19 6 2
Approved For Release 2004/01/16 : CIA-RDP75-00149R000500440033-6
CASSIL111
the foremost name in foreign
language dictionaries
SPANISH
ITALIAN rINUIERMAN
LATIN
FRENCH ? $5.00, INDEXED ? $5.75
OTHERS ? $7.00, INDEXED ? $7.75
WOTE! After May 1, 1962 prices of all Cassell's for-
eign-language dictionaries will be $7.50,lndexed $8.50
at all bookstores
FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY, INC.
Read
and watch
your
world grow
National Library Week
April 8-14
arched trees of a forest, with any cry
of pain or any burst of laughter sub-
ordinate to the sound of rustling
leaves, to the sound of spring water
entering a forest pool. To talk about
it that way would leave the discre-
tion, the tenderness, the wisdom of
this book untroubled.
Someone might say he came from
North Carolina, too, and that is how
it really was on back roads in sum-
mer: "'ihc road narrowed as it went
till it was only wide enough for one
thing going one way-a car or a
truck or a mule and wagon-and it
being July, whatever passed, even
the smallest loot, ground more dirt
to dust that rose several times every
hour of the day and occasionally-
invisibly-at night and lingered
awhile and at sunset hung like log
;111(1 if there was no breeze, settled
back on whatever there was to re-
ceive it . . ."
Or someone would say do you re-
member Rosacoke when she went
alone to represent "die white friends"
at the Negro servant girl's funeral:
" 'Miss Rosacokc, will you kindly
view the body?' ... They had laid
Mildred in a pink nightgown that
tied at the throat and had belonged
to the lady she cooked for, but she
had shrunk to nothing this last
week as if her life was so much
weight, and the gown was hall
empty . . ." Mildred was dead in
childbirth with no father to give his
name to her child, and it was with
Mildred that Rosacoke had first
watched the deer cross the (,lusty
road leading his does into the woods
to drink at. the spring.
Mildred's name would be enough
to tell all that is needed of the story
which begins at that Iuneral. "It
was 'Precious Name, Show Me Your
face' and it was Jesus they were
singing to-meaning it, looking up
at the roof to hornets' nests and
spiders as if it might all roll away
and show them what they asked to
see." But Rosacoke looked out the
church window at Wltesley, wanting
him to stop wiping the dust off his
brand-new motorcycle, wanting him
to come into the church so that she
would not be alone, wanting him to
stay with her always so that she
come home and calm down and
learn how to talk to me and maybe
even listen, and we would have a
long life together-him and me-and
be happy sometimes and get us chil-
dren that would look like him and
have his name and answer when we
called.''
But then it would be good to hear
someone say that it's not just that
she wanted him, not that at all; this
story is not just about a girl wanting
happiness. It is about a girl who sees
beyond happiness, who will make
the hold leap from the happiness of
receiving to the joy of giving, who
will accept the selflessness which
alone creates the enduring self. It is
fitting that she discovers this all-sur-
passing love during the Christmas
pageant in the Delight Baptist
Church, sitting there as the Virgin
Mary. She holds the Child, Macey
Cupton's ugly child, in her lap, and
within her she bears the child that
is "her secret and then her hate,"
white the shepherds and the kings
advance in procession singing the
simple words of another story.
Facing An Urgent Matter
THE REAL MEANING
OF COMMUNISM
AS A CHALLENGE
TO AMERICAN PROTESTANTISM
by Ellis H. Dana
Executive Vice-President
Wisconsin Council of Churches
A NEW STUDY with TIMELY ANSWERS
A 50-page booklet; copies at 500 each plus postage
please write the author at his residence:
1001 Seminole Highway, Madison 5, Wisconsin
' [,4(,'V. Bohb),, Pat, Sargent, Ethel,
Jackie. C.iroline artd note T'eddl. tits. Ed-
urarl Al. As needy is a candidate for the
liniied Stats'r Senate front At,rimchusetts.
lie i.r 30 Fears old, has a y'ear's experience
in a minor position in the state Qoz,et'n-
nrent, spcut Conte time last iunloler travel-
ing through Latin America a, a sort of
rtno/Jicial Sontetbing or Utter. Ile is a
hrother of the Pre
ri-
.
From th rren
:lent, Ile is a hrotAp r1Q1~ealFAQt~E
of the President. Ile Write to Dept. P-3,
it a hrother ..." 150 E. 35 St., New York
MENVA" 16, N.Y.,for free copy.
would not he alone, wanting, hop- on's career, (lo not lose any of their
ing, with her desire endlessly re- dramatic impact in the retelling: the
fuse 1 (~t1 /~1~j 11 e
1 1 s t the Eisenhower
a. #n P1 ' it s`T ' a 5 an 9 e~ ~4 t1ic spitting episode in
Seventh Crisis
(pia CttIsns, by Richard M. Nixon. Double-
) day. 55.95:
It was President Kennedy, the author
reveals in his preface, who advised
him that every public man should
write a book "because it tends to
elevate him in popular esteem to the
respected status of an 'intellectual.' "
Well, Bedell Smith once wrote
about L';iscnltower'.s Six Great Ileci-
viorts; now we have Richard Nix-
on's Six (:)ises. VVriting the hook
turned out to be the seventh ma-
jor crisis of his life "and by far the
most difficult from the standpoint
of the mental discipline involved.''
For a politician, it is a brisk,
tightly constructed book, although
tile tone, which has the ring of au-
thenticity, is embarrassingly egocen-
tric. The six crises, all familiar to
anyone who has followed Mr. Nix-
Approved For Release 2004/01/16 : CIA-RDP75-00149R000500440033-6
A Pictorial Biography
by J. B. PRIESTLEY
THE
R E A D E R
"The author has skillfully selected from
a wide range of materials and has in-
cluded some excellent and unsuspected
Sonl'ceS.- -I ICNRY J. CADBURY.
Miss West's introduction is a history of
Quakerism as well as an interpretation
of its beliefs. 56.95
who wrote as nattl-
r_IIIy as he breathed."
--.7()I IN K. I Ii`I( HENS.
ririv output, (11 it nlaII
of the tumultuous
life, the increilihly
"('Umevs a full scnSC
SeIected and Introduced by
JESSAMYN WEST
author of The [=rierrdlp Per.iNa5io2
The brief text is hiilliantly supported by
the illustrations, tchich arc numerous,
mostly well-chosen, and beautifully re-
produced."-rnanlt I(1IINS1N,A'.Y.Tinle.r
A guide to the successful
overthrow of government
A Study of the Coup d'Etat
by Major D. J. Goodspeed
"Niciely as condensed popular history,
his hook is lively and interesting. And its
cold-blooded insights into the techniques
of political conspiracy and of murders
for reasons of state ^rc provocative of
thought."-uRVI 11H PRt-SC0r7 r, AN. Y.I'inlec
INtt.%tratrd $5.00
"The stories-private,
utterly leisured-are like
charades played by
angels--albeit rather
sardonic ones."
-DAVID HUGHES, London 77mes
Of these 14 stories several
have appeared in 77u' New t raker.
ti3.75
STORIES BY
Sylvia
Townsend Warner
The Collected Letters
of D. H. Lawrence
The definitive collection of 1200 letters,
largely hitherto unpuhlished or uncol-
lected. "These letters arc so x?is-idly .dive
and are so accurate a sellportrail of thi-
truly extraordinary and complex person-
ality, with his tips and downs, his love;
and hates, the beautiful 'light' side and the
repulsive (his own word) 'dark' side."
--RI( I1AI1IJ At DING I ON, Smut-dar Rerielr
2 rahtrrle.i, bored $17.50
Edited by HARRY T. 1IOORE
"A last look at the
ancient ltcaurt of Nu.
1, ia, with its wealth
of I'haraonic, Ro-
nian, and Carly Chris-
tian archaeological
treasures, hefore it
Vanishes forever."
I'he New Yorker
32 pages of pholo-
grctplts; ru