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April 29, 1923 - Image 11

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1923-04-29
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'I'H;F MI-C141CA-N DAILY

SUNDAY, APRIL 29, 1923

TH-XC AN D IL . -DYA --2942

AMIOG THE TT CAZVNES
(Continued from Page Sevpen)
itter Bynner. I have seen and I hop)(-
see better D ubler Dealers.
The New Pearson's, on acco,,nt of
a'rt, its compositiocn, and its pa-
ris not enticing to the literary
id; :but its list of contents is quite
,tractive. Among the articles in the
pril number are Carl Van Doren's
L Note on the Essay", Frank Hiar-9
s' "Henri Matisse: Master Painter",
d Fiodor Chaliapin's "Pages Out of
y Life". All of these are, worth the
irchase price of twenty-five cents.I
her~e is also a popular' estimation of
the Art of Paderewski"; and a'
oughtful essay by Stanton Coblentz
lied "Human Molluscs". In addi-
,rn are book-reviews and another
bid defenise of Dr. Abrams. The
ewy Pearson's would be better, if its
art" was not smeared around 'so

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For Spring fever

Take- daily any lime betwieen
8 A. M. and 11 P. M. aU east

p AE

AW r naSUNDAY MAGAZINE

A

ANN ARBOR, MICHIC &N, SUNDAY, APRIL 29, 1923

one
PALACE of' SWEETS

SUNDAE

2The Reviewer commences with a
tintype of a Presbyterian Child by Jo-
seph Hergesheimer, rambles through
a list of Oriental names entitled "Ce
Que Je Peux Dire" by Achmed Ab-
du=llab, puzzles over Maxwell Boden-
he im's "Definitions", reads every word
of Louis Untermeyer's. letter about'
"Adapting the Afghan", and finally
finishes "Some Books and Sonme
Readers" by Hunter Stagg. This is ,
v.hat the reviewer does when he meetsr
with "The Reviewer". Between the
high spots are some good stories and
poems and essays, the least worthy of
whiMch is not Henri Waste's "Her Pot-
Boiler". There is also a brief psy-
Ccanalytical view of Poe (who is
being rediscussed now-a-days) ; and
a, homely sketch of Norfolk, the Flap-
per City of the South. The poetry;
seems to be on a level with the rest
of the April poetry-i. e. mediocre.
But, on the whole,, Th~e Reviewer is
ani interesting little quarterly, and
quite literary.
I have been asked if it is 'simply a
book review's paper. On the contra-:
ry it is a magazine of stories and es-
excluded. "Reviewer", means - re-.
viewer of art. It is' of the class 'to'
which The 'Dial belongs, although it
is far more modest; and is soothing
rather than vigorous. One can near-
ly feel the South through its p;ages,
for it is permeated with the-dream!z-
tess of the inuser, and the quietness
of~ beautiful 'instead of intellectual
transport.

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and Asiatic Christianity 'Suffers

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If; _ou'have not het- iried one

of our home made' Pie a
Modes, there's a surprise
stogye for y;ou. Drop in*

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SPRING

Barbarism Recoils and 'Strikes

TIME

FROCKS

For the College Girl

It is an apparent fact that when a
period of <several years has elapsedl
after the close of Any great wvar, oily!
those of the nation who have person-
ally come into contact with the ter-
rific struggle retain the vividness of
the conflict. Five years have passed!
since the end of the European Wfar, and
in that time, remembrances in the
'United States of 'the horror of the
conflict have grown ever fainter until
now only those who have engaged in
'the battles, retain vivid impressions.+
Not so aroun.4, the Balkans. The I
struggle there, if it does not continue
in deadliness, has left the land devas-!
tated and families scattered.'
Professor Francis W. Kelsey of the
Latin department, on his recent expe-
dition to Asia Minor for research work
in interest cf the University of Michi-
gan, learned of two ancient Greek
manuscripts near Smyrna. Unable to
go there, he asked the lion. George
Horton, '78, United States Consul Gen-I
,eral at Smyrna, to find some scholar!
w:ho could report upon 'them.
Along with the Russian refugees !
who had come to that land was a-po'
fessor, Greek by birth, Adamantios N.
Damantopoulos, and. his family. Mr.
Horton approached this scholar and
the report which was requested wvas
prepared excellently enough by this
man to show that he culd rank with
the most eminent historians o; this!
country..
'Recently, two letters have been re-
ceived from him by the T ni3,ersity in
which, aside from asking aid to send
hiF2 sons to an American coillege, he
teils with? the light of first-hand e.xler-
fence of the battle scc rgedl coulntr
o" Greece and recalls one to the her-
ror that still exists.
The content of the first letter is
l,,blished herewith:
'To the Honorable President of the1

JACK BERKMAN

r7 z _
d' tai
ANI

In "The Nation" for April 25 there
appears several editorial paragraphs
summarizing the prohibitory tenden.-
cies of -those in authort y over schools
and colleges in the country. Dismis-
sal by the president of the Univer-
sity of Tennessee was the desert of
the professor of :genetic psychology in1
that institution for the fiendish crime
of ordering copies of "The Mind in
the Making" for class-roomn use. In
Minneapolis, . the Presbyterian Min-
isters' association arose with the
wrath of the righteous and demanded
an investigation of the unversity on
the charge that it was wrecking the
~religious. faith of the student body by
permitting Van Loon's and Wells'
~surveys of. mankind to be read. The
Supreme Court of Arkansas upheld
the Poo-bahs of a village high school
when, exultant in their crusade for
virtue and well-being, they expelIled ' a
'high school girl for using face <ow-
:er. Prof essor .Van Tyne's text'books
are barred from the public-spirited
libraries of 'San Jose, Calfornila, be-
cause in the books '!certain' achieve-
ments of the American forces 'during
revolutionary times are 'belittled".
BARBARISM STRIKES
(Continued from Page One)
years ago, though this is on a smaller
scale and 'by its nature more concen-
trat-d, an intensely 'personal religious
and racial struggle which has been
srmiuldering for centuries. There has.
been no race intermingling here, and
instead of hyphens only generations of
fanaticism, hatred and fear. It is rti
for a sentimental purpose that this
letter is printed, but for whatever in-
erest it may have in bringing to our,
notice the condition of Asia at the
present time when the world, to most
of us, has shaken off the war like a
nilghtmare and turned back to the
work of peace.

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I the Christian world answered
of the unhappy victims of t
ian. May Christian America
ored!
From the preceding acc
can well imagine, gentle
hardships of all those whc
succeeded in saving their 11,
done so only at the expense
cumbing to dire misery. Ia
Ithese. An eye witness of the
l in its most serious details i'
possible for me to leave th
and pillaged city before Septo
Up to that date I have spent
nights in fear and despair,t
for the safety of mny family w~
sists of my wife, two daughte
een and fourteen years old,
sons, 23, 20 and four years 01
tively. Abandoning one sect
city after another, fleeing
flames devouring the build
from tho' frenzied soldiersv
stealing, bayonetting and ca
the young women and childr
refugees. I spent entire ni
hundreds of unfortunate v
the cemetery or on the wha
the crowding was so great tha
men and even women thr
selves into the sea in order
themselves from a cruel and(
able captivity. You can no
understand, gentlemen, or
'condition when whe were ifo
the Turks did not spareE
American school, located in t
bourg do P aradis" and direct
fMac laian whom the b
fwounded thuis repaying him
.well known kindness tow
IT,, kis h studeuts o the sh'
,' naiiv rsucceed ed in e barki
Pree. Deprived of all our b
e.ern to the most esenal on
out. blankets, dres, in our
clothes and withlot a cent t
cthers, we are installed in a
lighted room where we are r
the lo-west possible conditio
rnan existence. We seen on1
' c.run the 'risk of faling
iwant of sufficient quantity{
tious food, for want of linen a
clothes, and this in .a winter
exceptionally severe. Epidemi
follow similar calamaties hayf
miade-their appearance and c
the first victims. Thus the
for the future is'hardly encc
Mly own >condition is moe
"still'in 'that° n'ychlrEn~are,
jcontnue'their' studies. Isy
about my daughters who hav
their studies which they hafe
hegunn. As for ayslf Ihave
.,hitory :because f this 4ic
environment. "That is -whyI
iberty to= ,Iteal toyourkl'td
at least ;yor rapport i n :the
place ;my second 4on .in an '
"Polytec'hnc schl. 1 Tshall Il
co~bled 4tdli'in~tsly r t
n cceeici;; a, iig:'up lfli
3n'e-earatry- f l+wC 'k xe
$ 1[elee, "fi ;or heafts a
@$Io~gh to help} a -aher wba
Bekieving that .I llfxtn .
400et of-on wibapvpy 4aher,v
~one~ofthe reatst disates i
tory "f man, I begou, gelt
Capt the" expsio1n o0f ry'
6 pectful'snthneits, and 1?Yre
YWr servant,
Prof. Adamantlos N. 'amantew
Tis is 'wr. t is'"49 e~
[-what >e wtlt hhfie

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If :you've tired of the dull shades of 'heavy costumes, -want something delicate
antd lightsone, here are Springtime Frocks that will achieve an~ instant trans-
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aice)?

:. '

".ni versiaty of MicrA1513hi
Replying to your kind' gift of th:e
pub lications of the. University of M.,ichi-
igan, I promised, in my last letter, to
bring to your attention everything of
interest to the scientific - -'sent of
Christian antiquity!: is aMinor. Un-
fortunately this promise was destined
to remain unaccomplished. A flood of
unprecedented destruction swept ;away
the noble work of civilization begun
by the new political order which. the
Greek people, the most -ancient 'stand- ,
ard bearer of Christianity in the Orn- . - - _
ental world, instituted under the an1s-
pices of all Christianity. The 'lurk, FOR THE DLO R -Thawin by L4Vie
most savage- representative of -barba'r-1 _ reece in A~l
ism, had in the presenice 'of tih avl'.__________________________________
forces of Christian 'i~urope, completed1
the work he 'bad begutn 'fiv~e 'centwrses 'sympathy 'or the oppressed and hatred j tims were-put to was te, their sans aid
ago in the lands of 'The .most ancicixrt f r the .barbaarous: oppressor. .F daughters carried away. Green, 'Ar-
civilizations. Hie put to fire and swticd With the destruction of-Smyrna and 1'menian, Engish, reneh and;Italian
the flourishing city of St. Poiycarp, its vic;inity Christian civilization ha:, ! churches were 'destroyed. Nor were
the famous church- so nobly attested,; lost an incalculable number of inva..- the hospitals 'of these nations spnared.
by the Apocalypse. -uahle forces, material as well as spir . The sick 'and the nurses wera insulted.
The. descr-'ption of this act of bar- itUUI, which- guaranteed -the predom- [ Al that was not' consumed by the' fire
barism in."the World press in, no way [inance of truth- andf progress over 'liesj was destroyed by the dynamite, 'as for
corrs~Sndsto hathasactall ta- jand inertia. To achiev~e this thous- ! example 'the miagnificen~t marble sEte .-
en place in Smyrna. and its vicinity be- ands of men, bishops- and priests, pro- + ple of the Orthodox cathedral. The 1e
tween the tenth and the twnysitf essors and school teachers, -doctors;I heritage of many centuries--the 'great ,
of September. If 'one could take the, and other "scientific men" have giveni and rich evangelical librar'y and its
testimony of living victims who, dis- their unstinted effort. [archaeological mueuim, the wo'rk ofr
persed throughout free _ Greece, are. Now all 'this painful but fruitful( Greek friends of -science -anid letters,
still suffering. from the effects 8of a' work has been trampled under thie perished in the fire. The mnateial -loss
carnage that made no distinction andl heavy foot' of the Turk, at once th ;of commu~nities and private muts
pitied no one, as also'fro~m the horning e4nemy, f -rogress and 'of Christ. In l't the bluions.
of an entire. city where lived 400,000 the dimniess of a night lighted by' the "And now asil these people, '-yell to"'do I
G~reeks, Armenians, Jews, and Euro- flamies' of the burning city the barhear- i n ,ysterday, and °woiln'g for the
peans, one could. fill several -,volumes inns martyred the archbishop of Smyr-I welfare and progress of 'the entire Ori- ;
which, however, could' not sufficiently na, the blessed~ Chrysostome, indefa- ! ent,"a're' shelterless. They live "in thej
express the high treason and betrayal; tigable championi of the union of all'open at the mnercy olf all the 'vilcissi-I
of civilization by its very champions. ; Christian. churches. They crucified 'tudes o~f the 'refugee, 'in the streets of
The reading of such volumes could several priests and other dignitaries the 'cities, on the rocky islands 'of thre
niot fail to arouse the indignation of of the Holy Church. Several thousand mother Greece, 'poor now and power-~
all those Awho have not as yet aban- -hpossin men, women and children 'were sbht, !less' to help its nationals. It is' true
dopne'd the 'humanitarian 'principle "of 'te oss~ f the unfortunate~ vic- that on the morrow of this disaster

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