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Show r-- r ," ,.'--a 4. ., 5, '' Vrrr4r' ,v "' rv i ?! I .' I !1 ti "1 Lj - , ?, : 1 Ioniil Writ" Humt Writrr-jihotoryj.ls- 'T ;, Jf 'i,- ) "River Running, " - b batk, Verne Huhor; Henry Kegnery Co 2H , pp is4 U. 4., -- o ra V 'U r V v - -:f : i r k or some such near Echo Park The dunki ig was mild, in retrocpect, compared tc the hours of shivering in drenched clohes and a chill canyon wind before the boat could be beached Foil wing Verne Huser's dear, (oi.cise instructions might have prevented the mishap of 21 years ago. It is hard to think of any situation related to river trips not covered in this relatively thin tome And wen for one who r lias uo iire.srnt pluuS to the Whitewaters of the Salmon, Snake or Colorado, "River Hanning, " is as meticulously packed vvitn interesting information as the articles llu-e- r crowds into a rubber raft Jluser's credentials for this how to manual are impres sive Now a resident of Salt Lake Ciy he has lun riveis throughout North Anu-ruboth as am iteur and piofov sional. is a dedicated naturalist and a colorful writer and photogiapher Photos of boating under ad conditions, most of them taken ly Huscr, drawings and chads add to the useful ness and mlcrt st ol t!)' tmek "Be oigamed to the point l 11 In mg iser 01. u . k' "4 V - Wr V- , ' ' . i c, r ir l;i. V f's V a 7 7 Of;. ri ' v?s $3 rH Hubert Loris Stevenson," Jan.s bv Tope Hennessy ; introduction by Nigel Nicol-soSimon & Schuster. 320 pp., $!) !ij. The duality of peisonahty lhat possesses us all is sure'y no better exemplified than by he .1 ull. or of 4st AR : i5W1 I 4rT "The Strange Case of I)r Mi VS, and Jekyll 'set. Hyde--an- the A sub-J- i ct of the late It It? v ? flennessys final - K James Pope ttrfv' t" biog- A rs Vf, raphy A sube tle and writer jrJ a whose own life was rich m amhiguitior. Pope ffennessy - very much at home with flie enigmatic and often elu Mve Robert Lewis Balfour --z .Stevenson litS Fluctuating Attdudns Stevenson has been the t of flmtu id mug attitudes b biographers Largely as a risult of his widow's mflu t ace he was sugared in the ear's l'Knis In the rea turn of the 'J'K to Victorian notions, that one dimensional picture of the novelist essayKt and poet was turned around to an isjually one dimensional per li jv ai of him as a roi teru.g I.ohemian w !m had ook.Ioi his low tastes in a cloak of 't - Overuse Can Kill Itiver Stevenson life duality; : as in Jekyll and Hyde frV :.;: , V Jr & JL i j( ' --. fi bu "p'J, v4 cA rcS. SWT hi jKien-- v Takmg advantage of re cenlly available SievuiMin he was a piodignnis leliers V? -- tsks .rtv; -- corn and a eon sciei.'ious leading of .steven spondc rd rncssv soils pope olfeis its a more compitx. .convoluted dnd c led.ble per su'l lie does not solve all tne contrddntiuas but he due. lead Us to Ihe Jet ll and II., da natuie of Steven on's life and of how il Wa . rson.ihtv it tl e so t'v ,ni.i p impels j son of ,1 m, tg ms ji.u - 11 u Pn prosoerous ki,i the y'c ri.m jum. ed some mu ir os f a me o' !,,eialurc ,,m! fuaiiin and how he acipnied ifirec mottle f' ore of whom i. ime h s w fe tp sir me c in mils', , s Pc rsisieiit Du am I de n s 1 v ? c 11 Ill Ot Mi v s, n c vc s tv oi his s . , pers'sitim 's , an (beam life , o , i re. hi He ,,.u n earn s me nihe red nut a s use da m t. ,r to" " 0 rud f vune ! h !u in r ; ..1 u s si jn ,t. dre, n.s Pope 11, m ssv le w as n elii g a MS's vc liii h d 'id !. s( t ot d I an 1. lull .is leal 1, n tll.il d iV tune 'iv it s n w s ' la '! s '( ,c 01 ty 1 c c 1) 1 t v: I vc i c I T. i f i ' ! r 1 I' I" which was part of his double personality Although he was not a mil fledged Caliban, he was an-ur- Make a Dr Jekyll edher not a 1 inlro-duein- senger as well as the devious forgo!' n 'relouehed publicity elliVcs in s. jiii'4 'Very po e of ei,'upme..t ir. a "(a ne Kelly," by (.'live HirschhnrnHenry P.egiiery ilA pp., (.live Ikrsglth'.rii s Gere Killy" is a celluloid blog a two dimensi otal laphv poi't nt of tlie sorg and d tP.ie man who libel ale d tne h"iw,H'd musical front its stem red sli.rlo vi ess ar.d r jsi'J it vc pit drammie Iite ( (i ul i ah. plai " in tl tu in ; their, ull ciown cm eru i Tvihirg w i'll at mp and the a si ei mg ike c ,u v s Tie every tiling down but the people he urges and cites some chilling examples as to why every passenger shmBd he free of ropes that might cause him to ' e (fragged under pufn o- - 1 1 they met when he shared his bed lx lore their marriage m lsxp, but apparently less so as a Fanny divorced her husband to marry Stevenson, their union, with Us dwindling sensuality, constitutes one of the major enigmas of Stevenson's life, a pule made more knotty by the menage in which the S'ewnsoiis livid in the South Se.t Fati.iy, her beam lul Although and Stevensons mot her He a, k.iow K ruefullv dal's a b.t tn.it perhips River Running" wll add to already too numerous river buffs crowding the Streams, inn i.uc spersed wth eioimsiasue desclip tl'iils of the jovs of river running are sermons against carelessii ss and un'idmes-- , the Ovt use can fill a river as surely as any other iorm id the author war ainist . i rinrti'dable ( hallenee Since partners to a n.ir-riag- e M'hii.m disclose Hum elves fully least of all t a biographc r s each o lit r most f irnoduble challenge is to probe and exjlam the character of the union And v.hen the marnage. , with li'.t o' lie Steve llsoils m volus both a malt rial and uvirmus boi'al a tuorraphor fe.il s li) l Pope lien noss takes n- - as far ni'icb Hie nun e'e as the x.s'mg r anry sought to c idc nee .Tii'ne (be maiiiage a'lel Evin s,i nine of .he , d ddi act one foils vs Hit li or. the en'oy nit i.t of u superlative. m..rn would sa incomparable, eutcloi r " F. U. experunci I. mho d ie-si- lit-- ,i , A f.rsi'h c s ei id He re i.es on luteiv lews Kei.y : t h a n d Kelly's w hut fa is to pume !i i , !; non h to ret re ate the r. , , f the man i r the i ; i i" n o' i.i'i In i e f los f 'v "itii ;m is am sl',s S i li st tv'i.v u Uc ! l.aiy t ri. lit r t.U'ba'ds 'i.gli' i" ills second wife .La ne Give, I, u;)l d l.ke the plot iJ a !') n . i r sc film music al 1 lie He ch aigeii i'v ai J sty ,e liie face of musical film and l.fuse it wnh an eo! iarti e It Tart ly aC UO'U 1! sc lihoi n loohs ai Gene K'd'y tht ouchout the ho k in dn s, me gi andiose w is I i IK is sc sp ve 1 mtiojs am left ,.:.d t.mtalunig cc tiu in p'i ssii in that b .a l. w js dc voted hut that St'U n nl often wisUed 'hut hi h.ul iiot hem u nrpulu nati a s ntoi g's I This W 'i ft TV 1 i Sh ( 1MH t n h I.III'N Mi t i.vin k irtu r tn ti iu s rtUcl O'ji l f t1 ill s t r it 4 a in chit of Ha nun artist Time nil 1 iti l.i ,s ,e in lit it uii.dysis c f the , vtis the essays 'some of iinsh ji't est m f Ha u ,1 e! surne of Ha re'd you :! ver 1,, tu Ik O" ss s I " n .'Poll ot S'l vellsou S lift' IS so di f'' wr tit n g h s. in il it wi'i 'an tempt it ok rs to cn 10' it e m m ; oi t rv ud p 10 AifK i urk 1 nrx Ti 01 I H& fro h iffs,X Hrp H ' ap'I . f ViV t s finid Gus F k ! i h .1 tlaPi ' I.U . u Ju t r r "I t t. t! U .t . 'I .a h ;i.e r.i Ui.i'e Fa''y ta t.i li "111 sii.ilioW spec ta. tl Ills d( I'll.. ,1 II h il ,i s 11 U I irtrw r Ovrrcn A PQ ,t f VcH ' ! s avc Hu ui: ! i g t tin! st li ,t "un il"!,,' i .Ill') v :n 1,.,'V 11 Be w th .,1 'MU e s i f Hr d'xh spel "Crazy Salad " Some Things about Women:" bv Sbe is fcu.iiiino, in Jt propte-tion- Finger on Fact feminism "ms not keen her from woodming win her oar secret xuai font nx can cur catch up j, lie'- - will tie omen's tiiic VV 1 Ul,. pol.u (iu 's t 1 1 t 't id lali'hl lit t! f sexes i to be an mb gr il o,it w w s! " 1. e I i il J J July . Iv quite a few man I know Sue is the soil of woman who can !o ironical without seem mg a n t i a p h r o d l s i a c ' cast! utmg " Enorinous Legacy His legacy is cimnnoas Mau, believe1 that Gimie and Ium.shment was his greatest or woik most Erotic Intellectual She is intellectual in what I will rashly cal! a r.cllier erotic wav. appearing to c npiy 'be shape, the fee ot an idea as mull as its sigmh cauce If you wue talking to her, 1 think you nneht occasionally fop'rt 'hat she is a woman and then suddenly member it with pleasme Stic has the ba'aoce of an a, robut a tal U:t we an nc ed davs I ' whole inioiile of f hs enough t veil foi a Wetmie Jac k Sc hroeder. !' Broyard, New York Times. 7UY' k -- ? ih it in --X I ic?: 7 k tY k Pi'.Aerf'il ff Att'inont of Potoot'vn and Love fer Dcmnrrcitic Pr '.r nlos A 7; jK -- D s .1 c ' k . - & s. r m 0 SV otkx A 1. -- V k v USi "aYskv V. -- C? ! 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T Tf e 'r ltSl a' Cp,( J h p.f 5' e 1 p a ai J an -- S bf'O vr o Cm feet Vis Fa i k k k k v 1 Cl it LncA p H "k .1 P ; Mi A r A' s IBl $. Jj July 7, Vot'd Co'CfH Pkl,t G Zn - i O' his lie i aide An Roskolmkov with powerful character O'hers subscribe to Brothels Karamazov Some allude lo his 1ushkin memorial speech Some readcis have lavoiite passages or a single line such as "The woiid will hi saved by be autv The two concluding lines ot one of his los! r works hit" Nuji's, a.o a pi l son,. io I these !xot row Aiihmigh he was ailernate loved and despised fa Russians in his bfet.me Dos tuevsky left an indelible mark in the li'e: my work He s' i oi' lo tin1 e ui u v a m gicatness since 3k p n. of Jm 27 of Ism whin he Dr c'.i hed ti,s ki't brea h it I! a? is K ii ur.azov is a m",luy consummation of the wmk ol a titame inaster A bard liiuscs Grossman sim mg of Russd'.s soriows The best tiling aiHiut Gra.v .salad" is the implicit portrait of Miss Ephieit herself In mans way. sta' might modal for a kmd of who pit-uemitemporary would please and relieve JuSy 12 Ui C, Kti r0 ; to G July T c k w Ju s Calendar cf Events for t i it re L'lothi'-- s the paradoxes ih.it cause pensive revolutionists to "slop lor oratieiadc," as ut I Russias exposing e.iC poet 111 . lai,e alisit.n tius and el Snowbird Summer Iris Institute j tHi 1 i Universiiy of Utah u a t Os oi ('(''l-- 1 LZ -- ' ri ai !n k s pu'dislu'd mas!!,. (uc loit siej re aivi i i. la- -, zoic an laTZ ,u d '71 II..' sui'ects of ihe-- n CO 1 " all mm one Salad . az t1 50 $PJ July 11 x tv cf gores cap" r ition mov r hat w ill happen to the ' i laiurc id the past m the light ! the fatuie1, she asks, pi. nog her finger on the fact w July 10, ? j i 1 s 7 TRACK vw j state garded as th da-sim e r. t on a rge breast fc tishism In this case, though. think that Miss Ephron has bun disproportionately praised W hile there are good things in the article she is too often cute when she' is capable of Ix'ing prof" ind In "Truth and Consequ e.aes " Miss Ephron makes no hones about a subject that is tiMidly swept under the iin the fact that women v i King of other women otien put sisterhood before hon est cH'irmni The auth.ir doc ' net I ess Than Enchanted While she apparently ad uints Glen la S'einem, sh is k ss than enchanted with her pn.se style In "The Hurled Ashtray Miss Ephron squarely feus and fairly admits herself defeated by, the question of how husbands should hi have win n their wives aie insulted by ether men m public Ihis piece is ,1'iottar m stance of her taler t for tn 'K mg huh- - one reu drun as oat that haltered word si.ise and a regular fellow at the -- ame time I would even say ore of the b ys " if I wue imt afraid of firing misunderstood She is tender and tmith, sent. mental and cynical, old fashioned ard mod ern in tost about the1 n'.t VioaD ,I . wh. li'lied 'We will rob.iblv never knew th" fourth ehaptc r of Grim' and Iums'm cut a Dostoevsky originally wrle ,1 " laments Grossman I)o.-- ! toe v k wa paid the meager sum of no roubles fur ever? 24 pages of manuscript for this wors Eis concluiiuig gieat woik was Brothers b 'r imaov the epic novel that had been liis dream for veins it van tn I Dost"! vskv to no".- lit ci I.1 i c Jldy 9, all linqs s r, c Aestii k. Rv j fust piece m the booh V ords Ah at Breasts," is aheady re- attractively the obsolete ( I Book Few A of Whitman, LITE Sribnnr he The men ard women Ror 'V ry; -- and m ldlsbury Hake-of- i most of them the author genera'iy manages to accomplish what all good journal I'ts try for to do just.ee to a particular phenomenon ar.d to hitch it up to a universal Tee ( ute Nora F.phron; Alfred Kneph, Inc., 201 pp , .7,95. Wide she might be a b'l startled to hear it, I think that Nora Epnron comes pretty clo-to exemplifying the andrevy nous ideal that some kmun.ts advocate as the solution to the wai between j lines u(t lake .Mlii.r a '. , vc riv al- - aljf K it -- nw I W ! v nl M tit !' g s e s I) o m "s Lrcnvef on h, i. d , W V r4 ji nia. F hv Tht fytmyou Tr TM 1 'l,e si," . 1 & " "i i , .q i i Kisi'H hi inn ! Mar m v on lie Russia s intellect jals ana was cast itto a Siberian prison as an enemy of the (artst i ect. no llis four ye ais i.t penal 'J :'"aies range from vruumi n deedor a .is to tie 21th '1 Ut r h O' u in ' m : i m i11 . W ' Ay vvt th i t ( a; i S ' Aided .1,' Is KsMifteOv ! w. iks New A Am T r4n r, p fvVv'",' . , .vu'st Aj F r ' nr mm Vv'T GENtRAw Prtvch 0 4 fh . has Ait should always be keeping with man's goals and should not be at variance with las lnteicst Pieau'y, be said "is use ful simply because it is beau " Dostoevskys unhappy ty hist marnale, Ills epilepsv and const art poverty eroded lio poison,.! li'e imt mvir detracted ficin In hti'iary 'k.lls He drew oil hi' own miserii ' for riutei 1. f diturN Bite The average witter wim j.xiiv thu vf'i.j nt thi np ediior's pc ned .should not fee aioi.e Dostoevsky's giua novel, Glint" awl Puitisfi ntc n' was edited heavily m dit"! Ri pl.ii I' by tin Ul Some slraiirlil talk about women o tied v.u h c be"' m i r, k pra- y of . so vi r seal 1 hho"i, wit ttit and the Injured and actually ketched out, mentally at least, an outline for Brothers ( the K esun people at h.s h'ait, so was tus While ad," intones Grossman Zooming to lecogml.on in the HJtis Wih his iirst pule ltshed storv Boor Folk. Dos loev sky .soon fell m vvttn y Grossman While in prison he conceived Moles From the House of the Dead and The Insulted fought poverty, epilepsy, frustration ar.d tne insatiable urge to tluow Rs ntoiuy away on the gambling tables of Europe ( !k i Cr Ts iud' v 4 t oiei i f ' Tp 0 , on I li rro yr 'rt JC, Thv ur, .Old the ,ie nu ' c F - r! h, k ss Hirst i"tt the a rue t dg,e h.st r ii'K ils fD ran a ufiiX54 f i In heatre nuisieals r 1 rni Vi -- V , i c is He cnou to lo .k Character in Fraginents Kelly s i harm Ur emerges Ulllfl co'-fm tiagmwits del t ruthless, c gotlstlC ill . but also unique d. namie i. dented and perfections' In Hg is Hirschhorn s view. one oi ihe i are handful of ongma'is who hroi" ht to "e :i,r: .m irem t iiukvi laal I1 - fails blogtaphe hind the fui aiie of information Kedy has provided to !,'ui motives and reactions As a result, hs pictuie of killv the nidii is little mme Ih.m a ic touched publicity st.l! - c per-- r lo ' j p, tsy B.a.r seems ei n ai eiool i'i',lev s do ni, i. oi H's mar - s- !,av, idm c ' Yazv Marriage tis; m.irr'ac s life his means,' continue . 1 ' ilii II. bteg-taph- All sv inbuilt1 i I'll its 1 Bc- -t tipord'ch to a.ai uispjsnon-d- il lends : 111 in Ki !! I li- - 1 img, puiHtuation and grani-ir v dl be row drill'd nee rs may also End p ciiseoneeit.ng to discover a dustbin is really a garbage cun ot cjuaint ta learn that Judy Gat la:, i lost a couple of stone' durm ; the filming f Summer Sbx k " Dc ptle tlie absence of human cpial go's m the book, the is a colorful chrunoio lv of the musical genre of the American motion picture thiough the lff's and 5!'s ilcy Gibson. 1 "A whole decade of suffc The mg was left behind resurrection of the man, the ci'izin and the arbst lay Karamazov From that dav socui of questions st rugs' e Dostoevsky re a I'topmn moralis m one and a Christian who wanted fiveduin and happiness for the people hut insisted that they he achieved bv peaceful suggested h vould everyone to their experience it in with m lifetime He left it n luctance, however ahe a Social Struggle In lie a good idea for "To write well it is necessary to sulfur, to sutler." Dostoevsky once intoned until the And suffer he did day of his death Fought Povtrty It was an inauspicious betie ginning for Dostoevsky w as bom in u chanty hospital and there mav be something di')d-'iunil- ." Pi Ison nt Tim gave fie times Mary Madder's translation is the first English version of the biography. Kelly biography seen lhlst1 Jt daughter fa cause it iisui'y t!i .t s a a thiiig , s opura'or. Fanny wife ist I " Make a list of c erv t.a.g e"d for you might pos'dby the trip, ct'oen. it bifoie vou leav e home ,uul dmiide-- i h k at the r.vi'I ' 'Ibis Is g."i advice f.ji the p.yiig pus Although Stevenson had what '1 mry James c ailed a "heartless independence" g Dom the necessi'y of femalu characters mto his stories, his life was another matter His mother coddled him and he fled from her for a time, he fell 111 love with Frances Sitwell, niar ried and 14 years his senior, whom he came to address, as mother" in a pa .sionate but noneorporea I rel at ion h p . and Fanny Van de urift 0 Jvouiiie. 11 years hi.s elder and (he mother of three, whom he married was d sels a-- II, WOiks, P h a '!!, ( t in f--5 pictured wa.'S He never really resented his stay in prison At later Grossman, a distinguished Russian literary scholar, who died in 15 gives the reader a look at the tortured world of Dostoevsky in clear language and with an unbending sy for his character. Overdue Aeceptame l! seems odd in a way that although Dostoevsky's works wee never actually bannei in Russia, it wasnt until the death of Stalin in 19fs5 that the w i Ltr w as accepted by the Russian hierarchy. materialize by accident He was born from the rhythm of time, his life shaped again-- t a thundering background of political rebellion and his genius wrenched from the innards of a frail, complex ami symphatheue man Perilous Russians urn r ''id Gene Kelly rhanged Musical film a cv S"V. V i i Vu nc Htiser: v & " x Void just didn Dostoevsky ears A Li the perfect a sort cf paternal guardiunxh'o servitude changed Dosloev sky s i le and his phihsopiv stand tig'tr men of genius better lhar. the Western world. So it is tewardutg, at the very least, to read Leonid Gross man's immense biography of his personal literary hero. ll Cun-(pie- J ' s. "Dostoevsky: llis Life and Work, by Leonid Grossman, translated by Mary Mackier; Bohbs-MerriCo., !nc., kvt pp., $12 30. On first acquaintance with Pushkin, Dostoevsky and Tolstoy, a reader might suxpert that these l'fth Century literary giants sprang forth 111 some great Russian parthenogenesis. Rhythm of Times Eut Fyodor Mikhailovich was limited to one trip, in Ul.r)4 down liie Vampd and Green rivers, climaxed by going oveiboarl in the icy foam of Mitonshine Rapids, $10. This reviewer's experience with the subject of this book paner- - illus., , r; hardcover, $4 s Russian from translated life story Dostoersky manual how-t- o River-rumie- rs writes of novelist Gro-isina- -- as" is. T B- - .,v k at |