SUNDAY, JANUARY 15, 1922 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE 7 imagine him chuckling over Thack- and should not be allowed to influence XREISLEIt IS INTER1IEWE D eray's genial platitudes, while doubt- the thinking of normal, healthy-mind- BY A MAGAZINE ItEPORTER less before he was far in his 'teens ed people through the press, even in (Continued from Page 3) he had gone through the entire lot of a free country! in Austria, he made a tour of America Dickens. If "An American Idyll" is trash, before he was 20 and then, returning "Once Aboard the Lugger" is not by then the lives of all such glorious to Austria, studied and graduated in any meana a great novel. I even ques- young people as Carleton and Cornelia medicine, following which he studied tion if it is a good novel, since it Parker are insignificant; love and art in Paris and in Italy. le is a violates all those stringent precepts service, ambition, struggle and achieve- pianist of great ability, said by some which belong to the "moderns"-and ment are meaningless, and a book to be almost as great a pianist as vio- yet withal, it is primarily interesting, which expresses the finest and best in linist. His war experiences, during because in it can be found the pure American life today is no contribution the period when he was with the and unalloyed enthusiasms of the to American literature. Austrian army before he was wounded young writer. All of his boyish loves ROSE B. PHELPS. read like a novel, and his 20 years of in literature have found their way triumphs following his mature debut, into his conscious and pedantic style would make up more than one story -perhaps we can little understand Note: I ask the readers not to send of captivating interest. how difficult a matter it was for him in letters defending or favoring me. to give them up, as he found, sorrow- I have all that I can do to get space fully, I can imagine, that the public for my antagonists. Several letters, In ommemoration of the centeruary was no longer interested in Victorian- both pro and con, have had to go into of Gustav Flaubert, famous antlior of isms. the waste basket for lack of bona fide "Mtadame Bovary," a statue to him has Those who read novels simply for signatures. G. D. E. been unveiled in the Luxembourg the narrative element will be more or less interested in "Once Aboard the Lugger," though they will be bored by many parts of it. Others, reading for new experiences, will find in the book a refreshing sense of buoyant youth, difficult to discover in the mass of " modernistic fiction. 1 'HE (AMPUS PASTIME To the Editor of the Sunday Magazine: In "The Michigan Daily Magazine" for last Sunday, "G. D. E." makes the statement that "An American Idyll" "was mostly trash." Now I do not wish to take G. D. E.'s criticism very seriously. As usual, it hardly merits that. Moreover, I am too busily en- ga ged in the business of study and elf-support to enter into any lengthy controversy with him or anyone else. But a mixture of curiosity and indig- nation prompts me to ask why G. D. E. considers "An American Idyll" trash. In the first place, this statement seems to me decidedly irreverent and unchivalrous and can indicate nothing but a lack of sympathetic appreciation on the part of the critic. Anyone who can read this touching revelation of a woman's heart, this de- scription of an ideal life, these pages from which the brilliant and intensely human personality of Carleton Parker shinea forth like a lighted lamp, and renain unmoved and uninspired, dis- missing the book with the single com- ment, "mostly trash," is not normal1 MICHIGAN BANNERS, PENNANTS PILLOW COVERS, AND "M" BOOKS ON GREATLY REDUCED PRICES WAHR'S University 2Ilook Store Not even the fact that the ground is frozen and chill winds blom can k4ee p thoughts of spring modes from a woman's mind-es- pecially when she has heard hinted that Hutzel's spring shipments are already begin- n1g to arrive. Capes seem to have spread themselves and drawn every- thing fashionable within their flowing folds. Spring suits make extensive use of them as a third party. Smart spring styles will bring sport skirts into full view again. The popularity of pleats seems to be on the wane, basck~ and f r o nt boeadths being quite plain. Glace Taffetas are excep- tionally chic. Frocks of jer- sey are straight and boyish. Others of shaggy Kasha cloth often have black satin bodices-but it is no fun to give away all the secrets; you must come and see for your- self. JLl,'ttIV AT NtIMN ! S ,G { '} ii it i { ! i r,, } !{ 4{ I I _lllItIIII[Ill IIIIIIllIllI[Ill IIfIIIIIIIIIIfIllIIIIIIIfIIIIIIIIIIfIIIIII Ill III III IIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIUIII111111111IIIIII111tlillllNtltIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIll IIIIII1= - r .. .. Are You As Good a Man As Your Father Was? YOUR father has been a successful man but when you stop to think about it, wasn't he rather consistent in the practice of thrift as a young man - and doesn't he keep a business- like record of his accounts today? Let us help you start the practice that your fath- er has had for so many years. The ANN ARBOR SAVINGS BANK RESOURCES - OVER $5,000,000.00 E A