Sunday, September 8, 1963 BOOKS Bn ** v *V dM' : - jWjHBBSk jL ■ j.Tf>i;C:, Jacket Drawing For ‘Rascal* Rascally Raccoon: Boy’s Best Friend RASCAL. A Memoir of a Bet • Era. By' Sterling North. Illustrated by John Schoen her. Winner of the 1963 Dut ton Animal Book Award. 189 Pages, $3.95 . The relationship between a boy and an animal is always interest ing. Perhaps that is why the boy and the dog are part of the traditional boy - dog - Abraham Lincoln-doctor sure-fire cast of characters. Rascal is no dog, however. Rascal is a raccoon. After Mr. North’s memoir, a rash of pet raccoons may break out across the nation, and neighborhood veterinarians may from time to time find them selves facing masked patients. There are in “Rascal” over tones of Kipling’s mongoose “Rikki-Tikki-Tavi” and Saki’s ferret "Sredni Vashtar,” but without Rikki-Tikki’s atmosphere of incipient violence, or Sredni’s sinister note of malice afore thought. In fact, one reason the country stands an even chance of being overrun with pet raccoons is that Rascal is as gentle and innocent as a kitten—baby rac coons are called kits—and gentle ness and innocence in an omni vorous wild animal is strangely appealing. Mr. North, whose memoir is true, found Rascal, not yet old enough to fend for himself, in May during World War I in the Wisconsin woods. Mr. North was twelve then, and from the mom ent of Rascal’s discovery and adoption into the North family, Mr. North’s trick of writing total fH| CURRENT BEST SELLERS Fiction 1. The Shoes of the Fish erman . . . West 2. Elizabeth Appleton . . . O’Hara 3. The Glass-Blowers . . , DuMaurier Non -Action 1. My Darling Clementine . . .Fishman 2. The Fire Next Time . . . Baldwin 8. The Whole Truth and Nothing But . . . Hopper WILLS BOOK STORI Lakewood Shopping Center Durham Shop Monday. Thursday Friday aighto til • EVQYTHIKG 111 BOOKS TIE INI IXGMRGE -The South’s largest and most complete Book Mere" AT FIVE POINTS DURHAM, N. C. ly without stylistic gimmicks im merses you in nature, which is also totally without gimmicks. Mr. North’s writing is not un like hominy: unpretentious but highly satisfying. In an odd sort of way, “Ras cal” both has and has not a story line. On one level it is no more than a series of mem ories of a peculiarly delightful pet. On another level, “Rascal” is a touching essay on how much an animal can mean to a lonely child. Sterling North’s mother is dead, his sisters have grown up arid left home, his brother is in the trenches in France, and he lives alone in Brailsville with his kind, indulgent, wise, but slight ly distant father. There are other animals in the family, among them a crow; there is a half-finished canoe in the living room, and Sterling’s father is usually engrossed in endless re search for a novel about Indians, which for some reason was nev er published. Sterling has friends, both adult and contem porary, but he is a solitary type. After you get the whole picture of his personal situation, you be gin to feel that his life was never really complete until he found Rascal. The setting of this little stage provides the book’s only sustain ed note of tension. Rascal raids neighbors’ gardens, but that is solved; Rascal steals a lady’s engagement ring, but it is found. All of Rascal’s other habits are hijjily endearing. The boy and the raccoon become one, inter dependent and inseparable. The raccoon deserves (and gets) as much respect as an individual for his adaptation to life in a human context as Sterling North does for his love for and under standing of nature (Mr. North writes about wild places, birds, animals, fish, and even weather with the same trenchant lucidity with which Hemingway wrote about war). But despite all the pleasure and delight of that year, you know the situation cannot last A boy and a raccoon cannot re main together indefinitely. What will happen? Toward the end of the book you discover that throughout the story of Rascal’s discovery and absorption into the North family, there has been an underlying note of sadness, and that this note is gradually becoming more and more important. The war ends. Sterling’s brother is un harmed, everything seems fine; but something isn’t At the very end Sterling's solution to the in evitable drawback of developing a love for a raccoon is wise but heartbreaking. You find your self weeping inside at the end , of page 189—but not entirely in \ sympathetic grief. You are also weeping because there was a time when a boy could have this kind of experience, and you know what the experience meant You have just been through it yourself. —JACP The Tract Is Showing Racial Ferment In Africa A TIME TO SPEAK. By June Drummond. The World Pub lishing Company. Si 9 Pages. fi.SO. By MARTHA ADAMS Highly controversial and emo tional contemporary situations are often rather risky subjects for novels. There is the danger of an overwrought harangue countered by the opposite hazard of a chilly objectivity which, while avoiding excesses, also avoids any feeling on the part of the reader, and turns a novel into a social tract. Such a subject at present is South Africa and its policy of racial separation or Apartheid. June Drummond has tackled just this slippery subject in her third novel “A Time to Speak.” She is herself a native of South Africa, and a graduate of the University of Capetown, although much of her life has been passed abroad. Her novel attempts to explore the reactions of a small, sleepy South African town symbolically known as Peace Drift to the in creasing tensions of a country wide crisis with international re percussions. The vehicle of her observations is a young doctor, bom and raised in the town but resident in England for many years who returns for one month to help in a vaccination cam paign—and to resolve his un certainties about his much-pub licized native land. The reader is presented with Peace Drift as a typical South African small town or “dorp”, complete with its social and political hierarchy in both races: the patriarchal and powerful Segregation Troubles In Kansas THE LEARNING TREE. By Gordon Parks. Harper and Row. 303 Pages. $1.05. By BETTY SMITH This is a deceptively under written book about how a grow ing boy feels when *he realizes that he is a Negro and will al ways be a Negro. The author makes use of a fresh locale not the patronizing North nor the uneasy South— but Kansas; a state that has never been seg regated where the Negro has all the rights his white neighbor has, technically speaking. Also there is a freshness about the theme being carried by a child rather than an adult. Newt Winger is thirteen years old. He lives on a farm with his parents and numerous sisters and brothers. It is a happy home. The father is a decent, hard working man, Sarah Winger is a gentle and understanding moth er, Prissy is an affectionate bro ther-teaser and the brothers are like the father honest and hardworking. There is always plenty of good food, adequate clothing and warmth in winter. The Wingers are not at all what social workers call underprivileg ed. Why, they are just like white people except that they are black. Another refreshing thing about this book: It is not "stacked”. The white people are not all fiends and the Negroes are not all noble. As Sarah Winger said: “Some of them are good and 1 mSmm ' 1 f*,, aWwi.?’ ip|sp'sypr,' tVI? ?’• 16 v - * n lfA hT’ *€'**<-P* - j ?* 5 ~, IBf! ||3f pMm w§y Brinkley (Left) AndHuntleyAtWork THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY landowners, the salt of the earth, steeped in tradition; a red-neck storekeeper; the philosophical local factory owner; the preach er; the resident doctor, a cynical German bound only to medicine; the proud, but “reasonable” pa triarch of the surrounding Ban tus; and the local, hot-blooded representative of nascent African nationalism. Miss Drummond's novel be gins as two figures arrive in Peace Drift the same day, the young doctor who marvels at the detachment of the citizens in die midst of a national crisis and a sinister “agitator” who settles himself in on the cliffs overlook ing the town and leers down on unsuspecting humanity below. The “agitator’s” first action is to job the red-neck’s store, kill ing in the process the owner's much beloved dog and setting off a chain reaction of racial sus picion and violence which nearly wrecks the town. The obvious moral is that things were not so peaceful in Peace Drift as they seemed on the surface, particu larly since the “agitator” turns out to be a simple criminal with the mind of a twelve-year-old. Against this background, auth or Drummond seeks to present all points of view on the African crisis while not hiding her own stand, personified in the young doctor who holds out for a mod erate multiracial culture and at times borders on the lyric in its exposition. The other positions range from the militant but honestly based Apartheid doctrine of Peace Drift’s main political figure and the Vulgar hysterical racism of the shopkeeper through the mod erate, traditionalist position of some of them are bad.” There are wretchedly bad white people and quite a few wretchedly bad Negroes. Newt is a typical American boy —a little more perceptive perhaps than the ordinary boy. He loves his family, he enjoys his aged blind uncle Rob whom he leads around, confiding his hopes and dreams. Should he be a composer or a scientist when he grows up? He even loves Clint, his wild brother-in-law who when he gets a jag on, chases his wife and children back to her parents’ at gunpoint, then shoots up at the sky trying to kill God because He is white. Newt likes school too, even though one of his teachers never lets him forget that he is a Negro. He has his boy friends, Beansy, Jappy, Skunk McDowell. They swim together, hunt, or just walk around or lie on the grass talk ing boy-talk. They are much bothered by an older boy who sometimes joins them uninvited. Marcus Savage is a foul-talking, murderous Negro. Eventually Marcus is put in jail for a year for attempted murder and the boys have him off their hands. All of this sounds sunny and serene, doesn’t it. But there are times of sheer horror. One day, the boys were down at the swimming hole. Some Ne groes were shooting craps up on the hill. Kirby, the town law, crept up on the gamblers and all but one, a man known as Doc, the preacher and the town’s ma jor landowner to the bitter re belliousness of a young unedu cated Negro leader. Although no one not well ac quainted with present-day South Africa can judge the true accur acy of Miss Drummond's presen tation, her account of the posi tions of “white” South Africa is clear and generally convincing. Although liberals may gag at the Apartheid philosophizing of some of the characters, no one can ac cuse the author of impartiality on this score, even while she counters with her own argu ments. The touch is sympathtic and delves deeply into motives and historical explanations. Less might be said for her treatment of the Negroes who admittedly she deals with in less depth. Here the cards seem definitely stacked against what might be called the “activists”. Where the prodigals from the goal of harmony in the direction of Apartheid are let off with a stern, but understanding lecture on humanitarianism and a devout wish that they wake up to mod ern times, the novel's Negro na tionalist is blasted and held up to scorn as a demagogue whose only constructive act is burning half the town out of spite for being fired unjustly. The Ne gro heroes seem to be the old chief who proudly, but philoso phically, waits to be thrown into a reservation, and a self-educat ed mechanic who solaces his lack of opportunity for advance ment by locking himself in his shack and reading while he waits for the white moderates to pro duce multi-racial harmony. This is not to say that author Drummond should have written a book damning the right-wing got away. Doc jumped into the river. The law ordered him to halt and fired a shot over Doc’s head. Doc ducked under the water. The law fired thre shots and waited for Doc to surface. Dob bobbed up to the surface for a second or two. “He wasn’t swimming just floating.” He went down and remained down. Newt saw it all and began to learn what it was to be a Negro. The firemen came and drag ged the river from a rowboat. No luck. “You fella’s want’a make two bits apiece,” grunted Kirby. “Do’in what?” Newt asked, “Divin’ for Doc.” “Not for no lousy two bits,” Newt said coolly. “You gittin’ real smart, ain’t you, Winger? Could run you in for swimmin’ naked out here, you know.” The boys dived several times before they located the body. Hooks were lowered and the boys fastened them to Doc’s overall suspenders. “Newt got a good look at Doc as the pole drew him up through the murkiness ... his eyelids pushed back, left the dead white balls staring blankly . . . The arms and legs, limp as a rag doll’s, swayed grotesquely . . . the corpse began a twisting mo tion although it were coming to life , Newt had bad dreams all that night. Yes, he was learning very fast how it was to be a Negro. The book has two more harsh whites and weighed in favor of the black revolution, but the reader has a right to demand equal time for the extremes when the dust-cover announces impartiality, or so it would seem. One might also criticize her failure to deal with some of the economic and class issues which underlie much of the current South African situation. If “A Time to Speak” stands at least half way on the level of a tract on the social and ide ological divisions of contempor ary small town South Africa, it limps decidedly as a novel. The trouble certainly does not lie in the writing of the individual sen tence, for Miss Drummond’s turn of the phrase is often ex cellent. Rather it seems to be in the author's overbearing pre occupation with making the vari ous opinions of her countrymen crystal clear which reduces the bearers of these opinions to little more than cardboard figures who argue, hate, and understand among themselves according to the needs of the author’s exposi tion. The same can be said of the plot and Peace Drift's impend ing tragedy which after the first few chapters interests the read er only as a device for provok ing new opinions and evolving new ones. The work is too did actic to produce more than a purely intellectual involvement in the fate of small, typical Peace Drift and its representa tive inhabitants. In short, those who wish to read “A Time to Speak” will find illuminating, pleasant read ing on a part of the South African crisis, but not another “Cry the Beloved Country.” episodes which complete Newt’s education of how it is to be a Negro. They are more forceful than the others and like a good craftsman, the author has saved them for the ending. This book is written with so much simplicity and so much, i for want of a better word) heart, that it has the ring of bitter truth. Unlike other books based on this grievous theme, it bangs out no message. The message is inherent in the writing. There is no loud off-beat sex used to prove absolutely nothing. But this sim-' pie story of a Negro boy grow ing up in the white man’s world has more impact than those an gry books. I can only compare it to the March on The speeches were wonderful and all that. But it wasn't until Mahalia Jackson sang a simple song in her glorious voice that the tremendous impact of the March on Washington got to me. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Gordon Parks, a Negro, grew up on a Kansas farm. He was the youngest of fifteen children. His mother died when he was sixteen and he left home to make his way in a world of white peo ple. He made it. He is now a famous photographer, a member of LIFE’S staff, a composer whose concertos have been per formed in Venice. His first nov el, THE LEARNING TREE, in dicates he also has the makings of a fine novelist. Duke’s Fred Chappell .. . Author Os ‘lt Is Time, Lord’ An Unquiet View In The Piedmont IT IS TIME, LORD. By Fred Chappell. Athcneum. 183 Pag es. $3.95. By W. H. SCARBOROUGH “You don’t plow with a tiger,” James Christopher mused all to himself. There are other things you do, also at great personal hazard. Among them he might well number lying, indolence, adul tery, and the demon rum. But these hold less terror than the blbtting of memory or attempt ing to re-arrange the past to create a present that holds more than a husk of existence. Chris topher’s present is a thing to be fled either forward or back ward. Toward the past in a fan tasy of what should have hap pened in a sequence that would have led him to be a comfortable, undisturbed Methodist minister. He would, too, but for that Me dieval monster of the soul we call the Unconscious; it is not a tiger broken to the harness of reality, and its furrows are to be found on man rather than on the fields he tills. But for it one might whip the past into shape. Not that Christopher doesn’t try. Late at night in his study, sur rounded by boyhood debris and science fiction he types spora dically on a manuscript recount ing The Way It Really Was. He is not succeeding, however, “for the rich money of dreams is generally debased by the coun terfeiting of memory.” To es cape he throws himself into a passionless dalliance, gets drunk in the company of evil companions and attempts unsuc cessfully to pretend his stub bornly undemanding wife is not there. Another man would have gone barrelling to an analyst. Christopher goes home. Whether salvation awaits him there he hasn't the remotest suspicion. This is not to give a resume of a novel, but rather to attempt a tentative understanding of what is the most bemusing piece of WUNC-TV To Carry Huntley-Brinkley The Huntley-Blrinkley Report will be broadcast over WUNC TV. Channel 4. the educational television station of the Univer sity, it was announced here to day. It will be a non-sponsored program, without commercials. The National Broadcasting Company offered the 30-minutes NBC newscast as a public serv ice. The first half hour Huntley- Brinkley program of the season will be heard on Channel 4 to morrow at 7 p.m. Prior to the regular season's program, there will be a special “Huntley-Brink ley Advance” tonight at 6:30. NBC offered the program to WUNC-TV as a public service to the population of central North Carolina. No other TV station in the Research Triangle area now carries the program. Approval for the right of Chan nel 4 to present the news re view by David Brinkley and Chet Huntley was secured from WSJS-TV in Winston-Salem, the nearest primary NBC affiliate in North Carolina. Educational television stations are not permitted to carry com mercials. Therefore, the Hunt ley-Brinkley Report's regular commercials will not be seen and heard on Channel 4. The American Telephone and Telegraph Company had tech nicians in Chapel Hill today in stalling new receiving equipment necessary to take the NBC beam for the program. David Brinkley is a native North Carolinian, a former Wil mington newspaperman, and studied briefly at the University here. WUNC-TV, Channel 4. operat ed with 100,000 watts by the Uni versity since 1935, otters educa tional, cultural and public pro writing to come from any North Carolina novelist, ever. One’s first temptation is to call it the last gasp of Surrealism and let it bother the mind no further, but this will satisfy none of the disturbing perceptions that have insinuated their way past one's mental pickets. It is almost as meaningless to call it a graphic representation of Freudian theory. Freudian theory is present, applicable but insufficient. Symbols don’t abound in every line, but they are strung across the narrative like rabbit snares—signs of the Zodiac, shapes of leaves traced in the patterns of pieces on a chess board; tongues of flame, childish monsters intermingle with moments of shame or of fear. This, Mr. Chappell appears to be saying, is the price a man of thirty pays for abnegating where he came from. If one comes from nothing, one has nowhere to go; man takes his wages in mad ness, fear and desolation. In effect one must follow Mar cel Proust, one must root out the past and string a bosun’s chair between it and the present. The message itself, if message it may be called, would not and could not stand independent of a great imaginative force. Fred Chappell more than adequately supplies that, but he demands a comparable act of imagination from his reader. As a literary virtuoso there is no one in North Carolina who can claim to be his peer, nor for that matter are there appreci able numbers outside. Some will quarrel with the manner in which he uses his resources and com plain that he is giving them too little sustenance for too much work. But no one would be wise to say that his book, if worked at, will not yield a disquieting view of that terrible, largely unknown landscape in the nether regions of the soul. grams in central and Piedmont North Carolina, to about 1,6,00,000 people in the area. During the school year, WUNC-TV, which has studios in Chapel Hill, Raleigh and Greens boro, presents programs about 60 hours a week, generally from 9 to 1 on weekdays, reaching public schools classrooms, and from 5 to 10 in the evenings. On Sundays, telecasts ere from 3 to 10 p.m. Baptist Sermon Topic Announced “Heaven on Earth” is the topic of the sermon to be preached at University Baptist Church at the 11 am. service today. The Chancel Choir will sing a Choral Introit from “The Chenibic Hymn” by Bortniansky, "To God on High Be Thanks and Praise” by Decius and a Hymn-Anthem “Thy Word is Like a Garden, Lord.” Dr. Henry E. Turlington is pastor and Mrs. William C. Bur ris, minister of music. While the organist is on vacation, guest organist will be Mrs. James O. Cansler. The Sunday evening worship services will resume tonight at 7:45. Dr. Turlington has chosen as his topic, “Grieve N6t the Spirit!” The choral call to wor ship and the anthem will be sung by the Chapel Choir. You will always be pleased with the results that come from using the Weekly’s classified . Page 3-B