Page Ttaii THE McHENHY PLAINDEALER Thursday. August 22. 196$ ' McHenry Library Otraer Mala and Orcen Streets HOT7RS Omlty, indudinir Saturday: t to 5 p.m. Friday Evening*: 7 to 9 p.m. "DAO HAMMAItSKJOLD, SERVANT OF PEACE." edited by Wilder Foote. A selection of the speeches and statements of Dag Hammarskjold. There was world-Ntflde grief and tribute when Dag Hammerskjold died in an African plane crash the night of Sept. 17-18, 1961. Leaders of nations and men in the street alike recognized the loss of a man of rare mind and spirit who had rendered great service to the cause of peace. . . Dag Hammarskjold served as secretiity-xeneraJ of the United Nations from 1953 until his death. During this crucial period he initiated constructive action in the Suez crisis by creating the first emergency force formed and directed by international organization; he made possible the solution of the Lebanon-Jordan crisis in 1958, and he launched the UN operation in the Congo. He is rightfully revered by people throughout the world as the marr who, more'than and other, made the United Nations an effective international force. "I WALKED WITH HEROES,". hy General Carlos P. Romulo. "A small jnan from a small country" is how Carlos P. Romulo describes himself, but this "small man" has, in the coarse "of his life, helped lead hfs country's struggle for freedom, presided over the United Nations General Assemby and the Security Council, fought against the Communists, authored ten books, and become an hscolc symbol for the world* wide -struggle against inequaK ity. .7 " . " . Not until he was almost 50 was General Homulo able ofr breathe the free air of his own country. Until that time he fought, for Philippine independence -under such leaders as Manuel L. Quezon, Sergio Osmena, Manuel A. Roxas, and his own father and grandfather. As htf gained in stature among his own people, he nonetheless turned down the opportunity to b£Come president* 6t the Philippines in order to serve In the-liirger arena of the United Notions. In his account, interspersed with recollections of happy family life on the Island of Luzon, are intimate glimpses of international- • exchanges with heads of state, climaxed by his'dramatic triumph at the historic Bandung meeting, where'he was forced to cross swords, with Nehru and Chou En-lai. "I Walked with Heroes" is the autobiography of a hero. But even more, it is a great man's philosophy of love and compassion for all people-- grea£ and small, white and black in this fat-tightening world we live in. "LADY RICH," by Elizabeth Boatwright Coker. A novel of Penelope Devereux at the court of Queen Elizabeth. Against the colorful background of Elizabethan England, Eli/.al>eth Boatwright Coker unfolds her most ambitious historical novel to date -- the romantic story of Penelope Devereux, one of the most beautiful and spirited women of her age. Penelope Devereux came a noble heritage. The daughter of the Earl of Essex, she was descended from the Plantagenets on her father's side and through her mother was related to Queen Elizabeth. But more powerful than either her beauty or her heritage was her enemy, the queen's favorite, Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester. It was Leicester who prevented her marriage to Sir Philip Sidney, who composed his great sonnet sequence, "Astrophel and Stella," in her honor. And it was Leicester, too, who kept her from marring Mount;joy, the man she loved since childhood, the man whose eight children she bore. At Leicester's intimation and by court decision, Penelope Devereux was forced to become the wife of Robert Rich, the wealthiest --and the most licentious--man in London. With its brilliant masques, precessions and balls, its Court intrigues and affairs, "Lady Rich" offers a stunning pageant of the court of Elizabeth. But even more, it offers an unforgettable love story involving a celebrated and bewitching woman and the most famous figures of her day. "THE KING'S PERSONS," by Joanne Greenberg. - It was June of 1182 when Jheff" first refugees from a massacre in Paris were received by the Jews of York, then at peace with the Christian community. England was in the throes of change. The barons chafed under the growing power of the throne, the postponement of the Crusade spread frustration among the people, and suspicion and discontent were the mood of the land. Scarcely a decade later, at the coronation of Richard Coeur de Lion, the lestering emotions of the mobs erupted into a mass attack against the King's Persons (Jews under the protection of the crown). With increasing strength, the violence swept northward, where in the late winter of 1191, it culminated in the massacres at York. ^ One of the least known, most fascinating chapters in English history has lieen brilliantly evoked through this chronicle of the Jewish community of York its citizens, the fabric, of medieval daily life, and the harrowing events that took place at Passover during the siege against York's Jewish population. Exploring a wealth of original source material-British, Hebraic and Ecclesiastical -Joanne Greenberg has re-created a shattering drama in terms of the men and women who actually experienced it. What emerges transcends the historical ncvel in its costume sense to become a poetic reconstruction of an unforgettable time that was contorted almost beyond human recognition by the strange forces that .shaped it. Although it deals with tragic happenings, "The King's Persons" is that rare book which reaches beyond tragedy to leave its readers with a profound sense of ho{>e. In so doing, it realizes beautifully that spirit of man which, in the midst of destruction, can rise to an affirmation of life. "HERE TO STAY," by John Hersey Studies in Human Tenacity). In "Here to Stay," John Hersey tells of episodes in the past twenty years in which man has courageously risen above desperate situations and shown his determination to survive despite fhe threats of the nuclear age. Mr. Hersey first tells the story of an old lady marooned on a rooftop amidst floods caused by a hurricane. He ends with his famous Hirosima, the story of the survivors of the first atomic bombing, written from personal investigation, with horrifying detail and compassionate indignation. Between these two pieces we read of John Kennedy's heroism in rescuing the crew of his PT. boat, sunk by the Japanese, seventeen years before he became President; a Jew's sufferings in Auschwitz; a crippled G. I. 's difficulties in adjusting himself to civilian life; the rehabilitation of a soldier parnlyzed with fright; the adventures of two Poles who survived persecution; and a most moving account of an escape from Hungary in 1956. All John Hersey's books have had a serious purpose. "A Bell for Adano" drew attention to Italy's plight; "The Wall" studied the Polish Jews' struggle against tyranny; "The War Lover" exposed the war mentality; "The Child Buyer" showed up the exploitation of talent. "Here to Stay" is a stirring reminder of our inherent ability to meet the challenge of extinction which now faces the world. "THE GREAT PHYCHOLOGISTS," Aristotle to Freud by Robert I. Watson. This is a history of the fascinating and swiftly advancing science of psychology, told in terms of the men who have made the greatest contributions to it. On the theory that modern, concepts in psychology had their beginning in the work of ancient philosophers, the author gives the first half of his book to the pre-Socratic Greeks, the work of medieval theologians, and the systems of later philosophers. In the second halfi he traces the lives and throughts of the principal architects of today's science of psychology. Mr. Watson relates the major advances in the field to the personalities of the men who innovated them. He covers the significant facts about the lives and works of Descartes, Locke, Hume, Wundt, Mill, James Fechner, Watson, Freud, Jung, Adler and others. He also 71 describes in detail the emfi'N gence of psychology as a separate discipline and, in doing so, includes source material from medicine, philosophy and theaU ogy. "The great psychologists" wflj make good reading for every* one who is interested in the dramatic history of psychology and the men who have leaders in the field. OPENINGSEPT. 3rd JANE'S BARBER SHOP RIVERSIDE HOTEL (Formerly Rudt J. Studio) FREE PARKING COMMUNITY AUTO SUPPLY SPECIAL! r ALL TRANSISITOR IGNITION SYSTEM for CARS -- BOATS -- TRUCKS Saves Gas • Improves Performance Increase Spark Plug Life 5-10 Times Eliminates Point Replacement Eliminates Frequent Motor Tune-Ups All-Weather Instant Starting for Longer Battery Life. only 95 The Largest Stock of MUFFLERS and " TAILPIPES in McHenry County. Open Daily! 8 a.m. io 6:00 p.m. Sundays: 9:00 a.m. io 4:00 p.m. REPLACEMENT PARTS & ACCESSORIES 3021 W. Elm Si. East of Bridge PHONE 38B-0778 A&P'S SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY FRESH. 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