The title prepares one for outdated stories, but this isn't quite the case. Technology often outstrips sci-fi writers, but White is mostly writing about ideas and social interactions, anyway.
Not to say that that sort of thing can't become dated, as well--but that's rarely so with James White, and mostly not so in these stories.
Table of contents:
I Spacebird (A Sector General story)--This fits in just after Star Surgeon. The title (and the cover picture of the collection) tells the story: Space. Bird. Spacebird. A spaceship without metallic content. It's a fascinating idea, although the cruelty involved is more than a little disturbing. I understand that it was an emergency, but even so, couldn't they have come up with a less barbaric method?
II Commuter--What kind of luggage can a time traveler carry? And what must be left behind, if the return process fails?
III Assisted Passage--Think Starman, except that the stranded wayfarer doesn't have quite so serious adaptation problems. But Allen still wants to go home.
III Curtain Call--A fairly desperate attempt at disarmament.
IV Boarding Party--Contact with the Rhagman is almost certain death. But to make peace, it's an unavoidable necessity.
V Patrol--Earth has been invaded by insectile intelligent life. Making peace will involve, for one thing, abandoning the war against insects that ALREADY exists on Earth. Because these insects shoot back...and they're winning...
VI Fast Trip--An accident aboard an early passenger flight to Mars looks as if it will result in the loss of all aboard. It's not just that the fuel is critically low and the other consumables (food, air, etc) are not sufficient. The main problem is that spaceships are precisely tailored to their operators, who are able to achieve superhuman reflexes as a result of their conditioning: but who can't adapt to other ships. And the pilot is incapacitated, and the only possible substitute is positive he can't adapt in time.
VII Question of Cruelty--The basic premise of this story (that all but one starfaring societies are so rabidly, inescapably violent that the one 'sane' society has to spend its few remaining years committing wholesale genocide) is so absurd that one has to suspect the executioners of being the worst offenders. If their assessment of the mental capacities and nature of a spaceship pilot test monkey (a rhesus monkey, from the description) is in any way indicative, they attribute inescapable malice to creatures with no real basis. At least, the aliens do have some qualms whether they are obligated to strip Earth's atmosphere, to destroy humanity. But will they take the sane route, for once?
VIII False Alarm--(a sort of sequel to Assisted Passage)--so why WERE Allen's people in the Solar System?
IX Dynasty of One--The immortality process in this story causes obsessive reliving of one's own history. The little guilts, flaws, and failures are almost always fatal--and the process is not permanent. The process has to be gone through over and over... To date, only one person has repeatedly survived the ordeal, and there's no guarantee he can go on doing so. But is there new hope?
X Outrider--A disabled space traveler is the only hope of survival when a ship's electronic 'eyes' are accidentally burned out. But it's almost certain death for him...