SUNDAY, APRI - 1,;1923 THE MICHIGAN DAILYFA Eil' . _ ... . PACE rIVE AWorld Language LIONEL G. CROCKER UhsiF'ay oat 19iloiai In a certain smal town of Michigan,! to English. A Japanese stdet who the high. wnool students are saking' was a private English pupil oi mine, Stheir onk reports from uch epto'e- as soon to leave for England. Pre- meral stories as "Freckles," "Potty-' partory to leaving, he had also stdiC area," ansi so on. Wihen I asked my leI Foench in coltege and had empoyeod couin ociny shec sas reading tlhis sot a prate teacher. A farewell party of ltierature in preference to "Lora wse toe gioveo to him ty his reto.- Doone," "Ivanhoe," "A Tale of Twosstives sant friend at a contry vila Citie," andthe ls rest of the usual run ner E''anra, to wich tisi French of require'd ooks for otside rao-- 'sadame 'a'd myself were invited. The ing, she replied to tioe effect ta0tolylha reviousoly'taught her native her teacher wanted thens to enjoy thir oonsgaae in Vadistok, lit swhen the reading reports! eusoian distrtbances beamea, there If this sort of thinig keeps up, itowos nooe time fee te study of will not e long until the Oriental01,ee - ose loudto leave - peoples ailite coming to fleUiffed aod su~otol.1u'ing ohoger sty in States to teooch us aotorosn that city oeeI sehdstde' literature; for ilb Waseda University Englsh aneetvr oraloe lortohled in Tokyo t found the goeat naster- pieces of'Engisho proear bleiog thatlsalocio, for, as seldone tos translated: "Cranford," "Henry Es- tis grden paty, ale old not toave mod" "Adam Bede," "Lorna Done" lesoo to ,each l-rslcto if sheh aintof and the oher books of this ctaracter. I rotss ftgliel. 'iis tla' and I Not only were prose masterpieces te-! wee the onloy foreigners at hi lug odevouo'eod word for soro, btotfle egatherig. I founod000odiffl t at workos of fle great dranatists were al in covesing with te Japanee also econing otpar't of fle Jopano-'ooen. pAfter afew s's oof reetong es student's knoswledge of-the Eog- io Japanese, flheooy J, p 00 Io at halo language and literature The 00v-I understoo, the conversotion lapsed erage student spends fromn ten to0 fi- into English. As I recall, there oas teen hor. a oeek in the study of only one gen temoan wo could spek English. Thi.'isnot surprising viiin Frenchoandto' poor rencttonaam, it is realizeod that the ulk of the Japonot knowing ay Jatanese, was force] anese foreign-trade is swlfto the Engliso to tall in "uncowth" Engish. speakingpope. Asis oell known the Geroman language wa. muoch 000 Not only is there toisiterst in vogue during one terioub f te ap- I'EngitontoJapa, hoot fle oducatedl anese Renlossan e. The only stuoent 1 as of (lins hodles English, it is ini Japan wtoowu doelierately studes sadawihore flucocy than dothefl tierioan iii preference to Egli'sh isJapaones. illy pal ano I walkeot into one who is preparing for medicioe fle dining car of the express Ifromo Tfhe Jatanese government has boolth %atkien to Pekio. Glancig through' up an exceptionally fine systemooof 'he car',se saw that there were only neoical schoolsthtlroghlouftcflo ' s two oac'nt chair,tese swere 'at a pire During the early clay' of tes tabtle already partially occupied by af schools iiwass not uncomnmaon to have laiovth a large ottle of beer and professors imported froon Gernmany a Chionese youth dressed laishly in and now and then one may see Gen-'Cincse solks. There sas nohinog te; man nmagazinws and ooks eing r'oo-do bot il down in tois uninviting at- on the street cars, There are s~il' !00', ter of tier aid te Chinse wall. night schoolsvhere German is taught On aproachinog necc, I noiceitao, hut these can le counted on toe fing'ItheladIyita. oGermian extractioon es, whera it would take the fing" ntl asIsat down ne t to hrI ers of a dozeno individual, to count th aought one or twoswsords oGr- schools that attrat fle appireonttce00man; at Ieat I thought they swere Ccci nn' I remnomberid oe or lwo clerk, or lades'n hovlois seekoo praenhtgal erel nGr a knowledge of Engioh to add a e lhrs taThdlandinG - yen to lis monthly stitend. Ii noan class iii high scool ando I treo nt an iofrequent occurrence oe ap-Ilohese awtto success. Dt after this anese oys to offer theoseelvesas little salyvwhihhone sos rater household servants, doing such 00 tuuilossocoidtloo(npefc > FoEglsh, sae for the Germana inflec- ial tasks as blcking boots, pressnog o reAorcnaeyu clothes, loookingoafter the aby, taking ion, "YOo rcestion fromsothen care of the garden, and shuttiog the nt u ovrsai windooo on acototfrost onoroog w0 as n English; and on inquiring wnoso acodfrsy origfor fle advantage of moinging owotho swheter the coversaton I ash over- Englisl-speaking people. It is ot hoaro] etween the Coioese oy and ain txaggco' tion to say that on' ' I fheloetdy awas in Germoan or not, I w as spaks REnglishs woudl ae little itoh old that iof hailbherous Eiglih. I ,scupty in findoing is way aroundool furthoer learneoh thatothfle Cine.e a' the mo.st renmote sections of To'voi a rpresentative of fle Stanodaro Oil oc ustere is always somseone inth Complan. neiglhorhood whlo understanotssound Bandero Matthew says i ios "s- speaks a litle Egish This unioersl says on Engish," that as long as fle - interest too English nakes the sojoun-oo ngls h tpteaking peotle oo thoeirshar cc in Japano feeIlflat he lnas a mothoo 'i of tine soork 000 the wvorlo,fle Eglist tongue of aloe and importasse. language soill flourih.Juging fronm French at one time hailthedito the extent that English is' spoleos in; tinction of eing theneduom of world0 the Orientooe woulo gather that', 'peach, While I oa inTokyo, I hail that bhare at present i a large one- occasion to secure concrete evioene and that Fnglih i' the prevailin that Frencho is gaciousy giving way' orold language. IN DEFENSE OF TRADITION (Coninued from Page Two) essays on Emerson, Hawthorne and erson stresse' his unorthodox rei- the Adanoce. Dr. Eliot has reenotlyI gious views auth points out that the declared that "Poritan 000n sawvno sac ormrlperfection wass noth-{ ing pcuiar to Ness England bur- tans, hootig rn ihe twd 1tnbt has mnotivated great out. In dingo on funeral.s"ond hat at Harvardb all ageto, Comoenemetob."groaduates i fle u1rofessor Sb c nan' chief aset as college yarod -aecreso oorunk anobioou - ca moofis oilnsooevatismoolis ain!! that sheriffs of too counties wiohboohipoem000 adroites. b-is is a pen large possea were active'y enmpoye'b" IN-, ck cao aroouse violent antagonisms. Profes sorShernman now loforno s 1"Amoer ins" aa already een ex- that Johon Quincy Adams was "empted; ccratd hy crtics of sle Meooeitken; to frequent truancies fromonoefloetw! school te Byrose usdoecots,j reading "Tomo Jones", in unparden ,,ords ctizes," pos arrBlosevists - stle 0010) ansI Rousseau'so "ciiifosoaloi ,"and cynical egoists iocouoltedi witho shootinog, hplayligthe..flute,ovisiting,,Ike virs of niitant Prussiano "klt-- hreqouently danocing ,until three, occa 1000u." 1hssoptposition sos1 cert'ainoto atonally dirinkinog until dtawno." tHus'- ;eoou'e a salutary reaceton towarods thorne who is generally' envelope'ohin lProfe'-saorShermano's attituode; for lis a cloudt of inuxorhbe gdoom appear-000 inA ieieancani diittremit froom that to have seen thec nost benig'n ansI josy- - shoutedl 000the politicalI areona both ioo onsof omen. 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