Eugrav.d ColiI.gCards, 00cêrds with plate, $2.50 1724 Orrhugten Avenue Gr*. 02 flhe'Iam*an Hotel bide.. Est. 1994 GoIIeales PIFCTVRE FRAMING R.psirini and Regilding ]Painting& Restord Fer dWte 'ph-*M~n ulve Uni. 0770 or Lon~. 1500 L7299 Sherman Ave.,, Eve 1nston ton), published.April 14 by E. P. Dutton. Theme of the stôry is the. resentment and eiscontent of. a grounds. superinten- dent, a. janitor, a handyman., a stenog- rapher, a waitress, and a c afeteria man- ager toward the upper crust - both faculty and students. Lack of nioney and inability to shape their'l ives'into satis- factory~ patterns on the 'part of these people furnishes, the author xith a mis- cellaneous assortmnent of malcontents and cranks.I Flashes of optiniism glow ini the ro-I mnance of Mary,- the waitress, and, Bi*h Peterson, captain of the ýfootball teatu and son of the university night watch- man; and in the elopement of Miss Hor- tense Jones, manager of the cafeteia, and Lester Driew, accountant for the university. Elsewhere is ennui and un- --tor, infla fire it t< TI clim Tôloff Photo; Vary Jake Ward u'hose new bogok, "The Trec Has Roots," Pub- it6hed by E. P. I)iittoii, las beeni terrned "a realistic ,,ovl of Amieri- tan University if e fr.onmail eoti4reli afnd perstanal f nrWlis mi fEvanston authoreçs., A LII3RARIAN'S I DA Y BOOK I plot construction or its in the lives of the Aui Whitmcks tJei. The 'scene, of course,' is Spai; the time is 'the eve of the revoluitioni that swept Alfonso from bis throne and set, in train the tragic events% of today: the author, is a Rus4ian-bor *.Ameérican, educated -at 'Corneli,, in Paris, and in Madrid; the' book. is such. a narrative. as Proust, might have written f rom Paris ini 1789 or. Virginia Woolf from St. Petersburg in 1916. .Spanish ýPrýebde is told in the flrst person by an imaginary narrator. ' -t carnies the reader to typical. sections of Spain, the countryside, Madrid. Bar- celona, and co ncludes at, the Escorial. Tt introduces vividly, humorouslv, a host of characters: villagers, servants,. professional men, 'Café Revolutionists, women of.àal classes, some real. .ome types. Thje sto.ry qeal on th'e, surfac with what the author has called "the shivering things of the moment," but beneath the surface tuoves the ground swell of Fate. Jenny Ballou is a truc stylist, fired with Flaubert's ambitioni to write a book that will support itself by the in- ternai force of its style as the earth is held i the. air.. "There is an inner drama.'" she writes. "a real conflict that MUSIC and This week .very weeka page f eath = in j sL I rI and a full ire tF1 - îeepmng cvents ruvin'g in apia se-ofThi e Asiatics, received one, j esse quence, and an appreciat.ion of the value Hilton Stuart who won such critical Alan Villiers' new book Cruise of thte of "human interest." Ccli ihM> ih h ~d-o u onrad: A Journal of a Voyage Roun Miss Ward is a graduate. of North- Plow and Head of W-HoIIow will study thte World Unertnaken and Garried Out western, wbere she received both the arts in Scotland. . in the Ship "Joseph Conrad," 212 tonçi, and science degrees. Later. she gave up Men of Matheinatics by E. T. Bell in, thte Years 1934, 1935 and 1936 by' Way, music and art whicb she had studied besides being a most entertaining book of Good Hope, the .East Indies, thé there for short story writing, ,and for of the extraordiîiary personalities of South Seas and Cape Horn, was pub- two years was short story editor of the miathematicians has w-on the award of lished by Charles Scribner's Sons on New-l.de. te . .eqgt -d hook of the tnu. th- April 2. The vum irne ) wwfusialus-~ lite ana actera. ne rallier than 'plot and char-