THE MICHICAN DAILY i Moslem faith, and during which the i me.,r,,rwanuvnm ' fA.C 1 1d111f1#Ib/h.I11iNN,?111111NI1 I:1 I111 IICIAL NKEWSPAPER OF THE UNNUERSJiiT Of M1UBIGA' ciblied = R6y roring excet SMo lay1 n th itv Y~ar )y the tg-rol of Studern Publications ietnher of Western Conference Editorial oiatkO. he Asociated Pes is sclusi ely en- d to the use for uhlicaton of all news atcies 'credited to it or not oterie s ., ited in this paper pnrU the local nes ah ed "thereii.1 nrEl >Ct the postofliC at An Arbo higan, as. send c as nmater Special rate potg ranzted by 'fid Asstar; tot- sfeBn~raL. phscr ptioa by carrier, $.5o, by rmil Ann Aibor Vres bfuidinm May- d fltsett. x sacs; lytar ial 244 and 176-; Tiisi i 44 ccpimunlcatrfls. not bc ciut 30o ai waifl e puhsbd iie ai F id e n titl ~ l . y { a l .. w 11 b EDlITOILIAIL ST AFF Telepboues, 2414 and 176-M l - - AANAGING EDITOR ;BARRY D. ROBYt wt Editor................Robt. B. ),rr it h& iBoard harman . . . C. Mori.ty yEditir .i..._....G. Garinouse Night Editors 1. Aes A. II. Connte e A. iiilin lron . . iske ry 4r Clark P. M Wagner ats Editor..............alph N. Ber tmetn's Editor........r.oa libbard Ida du.azu...Editor.. FL..t L wen etf 14 ,r r ..f.am y E441ocalBoard7 UV Einstein Herman Wise azdrew Pr pper G. Bae4 3 4a nt'- el rman Bic'r: C ,herna Mo an rgaret 4Mn ne Iaar~ld Moore ten Bro *n r 'CarOliadiher- nadette y fe ti a , a 4, X e~ W. Dans gina Rechman m rtod Ehtdbii.r-x cmutr lt latauder ~. Her C.A. Stevens, ity I-ined dW.t. + 't"S nmitia.1 nning usewotrthF 1.- 2,1S'At'ee' nthv Iain 1, Mare Reed' ias Kendall N.' l .tal eph Krugr W. J. Waltour zabeth Lieberman BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 9 0 BUSINESS MANAGEI LAURENCE H. FAVROT vertisng..........,.. O pnne lverrs .. . . j Perry . Hayden '.ertisin ..........W. ikosser vertising..... ......... .W. t.c $eerer counts ................... .. . L.{ale -culation .,.. g. ...... C .Purd ne (a~iaae Harold . I' a s. Champion Byron Park , - to tCo I-rll. E'Rose nis M. Dexter A. J. Seidman st4AJ tn - Geo... A.-Stracke tid A. Ikx Will Weise , E. Holana R. C. Winter UW EDAY MARCH 1 92 SH. n-e -- oAal T SERVYC AU.hougli' if 'is litti' realized, G ists here at the University hospital' dcpk t w en t 'thiut is Orastanding in tportance uc se o the kind of rkii thu 1... C u; ofic ll own as e social service depart (nt of the niversity hospital, it is verthIles~s of e en greater worth to e public than its name would sig- y -Here are engaged a small group selected men from the University ho have been active in teaching asses, directing manual-training >rk, and in raising in general the >rale of the youngsters with whom ey come into contact. It is a use- I and precious work that is being rred on by this small number of diyiduals who are willingly giving their time and ability in order to ake the lives of others a bit more erful and interesting. Therefore is deserving of notice and of actual pport. The field because of additional re, onsibilities and wider ranges of >rk is now in a position to be great- extended. But in order to under- ke any such plans it is of the ut- )st importance that a number of n offer their services as leaders. The S. C. A. has issued a call for n, experienced or inexperienced, to can devote one or two hours a ek to the work .of teaching and iding these youngsters. Here is af- ded a splendid opportunity. The ,tre of the work is pleasant and1 ves an individual the chance of serv- g his community in a fashion that worthy of the highest praise Par- ;ularly to the students in the Schooll Education will this work be of an raluable nature for, future pur- ses. A BOLD STEP When the youthful and determined- progressive Turkish republic at .gora promulgated a decree depos- a and banishing Abdul Medjid, Ca-f rh or religious leader of the whole >hammedan faith, abolishing the Ca- hate, and confiscating all the enor- us wealth which accrues to this of- e, it performed an act which left world aghast-and left more than .)_000.000 Mroms.withouit av. ri interests of the faith have almost in- variably come first, the country of the Bosphorus at last stands on its own feet politically. The world is ask- ing what the result will be. Will the little country, shorn of its religious prestige, sink to the status of a third- rate power? Or will it, by means of i , control of the Bosphorus and its freedom from religious fetters, be aule to command a new position of power and respect among nations? Time, 1 lone can settle the question. A review of the part which the Cal- iphate has played In Turkish politics ddring the past few years makes evi- dent the enormous consequences which must follow the new republic's ac- tion. Time and again it has brought the mnfluence of such enrormous bod- isas the Moslems in India and' those in Afghanistan to the support of -a country which the forces of the pro-, gressive infidels of Europe were threa- tening with extinction. WE S JUDGE EDITORIAL COMMENT SWASHBUCKLING IN THE BALKANS ALWAYS THE BETTER GRADE (From the Christian Science Monitor) For days the campus has been agog. When Bulgaria signed the Treaty of Who, asks each man of his neighbor Neuilly, she was given to understand just before he dozes off in lecture, is that her sovereignty would be fully going to win the cup awarded by the protected by that treaty and by the Butterfleld Interests? And each neigh- League of Nations. But when the rep- bor would make answer, I don't know, resentatives of the great power ap- Cowles is still - deliberating. j pended their signatures to that instru- The neighbor is wrong. We have ment they left Greater Serbia out of ii ot been deliberating at all. We have account-or, rather, one of the great been waiting for the other judges to powers did take Greater Serbia coin- make their decisions on the best pletely into account for her own pur- booth., so that there ;will begno mixup. poses. Bulgaria is carrying out, after the results were announced last I scrupulously and prccisely, every pro-f night, however, Cowles began to de- vision of the Treaty of Neuilly, begin- liberate in earnest, you may be sure. ning with the reparational feature, And after about an hour's delibera- with which she is complying on the' Lion, he came to the conclusion that days designated and to the full amount all thnthkind hPa tr ine to. win I if d GRAHAM'S BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK .. l aul ne oon s ao Ueen yn gU il At the treaty of Lausanne the in- his cup, and not the gaudy mugs pre- fluence of the 70,000,000 Moslem sub- sented by Wolify's and Wahr's. In jects in India gave Turkey a hand truth, the competition for the cup of with which she beat Europe at her the Butterfield Interests was disgust- own game. ingly keen: Think of the Great Egres- And now, after wringing all pos- sum, that crafty gype; think of the sible advantage from the prestige obscene police court, dragging in cus- which the Caliph's religious power has tomers against their will; think of given her, this brave little republic dancing Claribel, who turned out to has turned around and denied it ab- be a garter snake; reflect on the rank- solutely. It has found that the weight1 ness of the Style Show, which proved1 of the Caliphate was burdensome, and to be three or four mediocre-looking that it was a block which was hinI l.ads dressed in costumes not even me- dering the foreward march of its newi diocre; consider the vile -Medicine principles of progressive government. Show, which was free on the outside And it has found that the new Cal- y only; think of King Tut's Tomb, which iph, who had been iarbitrarily ap- was nothing at all. pJiflted upon the abdication of the last And then think of the hordes of Sultan, was not so pliable in its hands gambling gypes: the ring the duck as had been expected, It has found proposition, which the ducks had re- that the Caliphate and the non-relig- I hearsed through painful hours Thurs- ions Angora government cannot live day night; consider the Ring the Peg in the same house together. concession, in which the rings were So it -has calmly turned the Caliph- hauled from the pegs by powerful ate out, leaving the vast body of some magnets, even after they had settled 3.00,000,000 Moslems to blunder about over the peg; consider-but why con- without a prophet. It will be inter- sider? Everyone, it was plain, wanted esting to watch this country in its the same prize-the Butterfield Cup. efforts to find itself anew. But we proceeded ,very logically. What was the worst general feature AN ANNUAL FAIR of the Fair? The noise. Who made the noise? The barkers, inside and School spirit, esprit de corps as the- ---A specinea. But that does not deter Serbia from gross interference in the internal life of Bulgaria whenever it suits her pur- pose to do so. The nature of the pre- text is an entirely secondary matter. Whenever Bulgaria does anything that DETROIT UNITED LINES EAST BOUND Limiteds: 6 a. m., 9:10 a. m. and every two hours to 9:10 D. m. Express: 7 a. m., 8 a. m. and er-y I two hours to 8 p. m. Locals: 7 a. m., 8:55 a. m. and every two hours to 8:56, p. mn., 11 p. M To Ypsilanti only, 11A p. m., 12:25 a. m. and 1:15 a. m. WEST BOUND Limiteds: 8:47 a. m. and every two hours to 8:47 p. m. Express (making local stops): 9:50 a. m. and every two hours to 9:501 p. ,. Locals: 7:50 a. mn., 12:10 a. m. 0 .i c t t x Rea the Wa-nt A ds f, E ; i E t 2 it b French have put it, the common feel- ing of cooperation and morale that are essential for the success of ,any organization whether it be an army or a iniversity, needs all the encour- agement >ossible at Michigan. In the old days it was, a simple thing for ev- ,y student to know everybody else, at least by sight. Joe's, the Orient and i hpI -,were common stamping ds li the comparatively fev s nts could gat er together. An at- here of god fe lowship and an spirit prevailed. Today the task is not soimple. Be- ors; the completion of th Yost field use, the largest buildingon the cam- pas could hold oily one half of the nti restudent body. The University a grown. The curriculuini in the 1'arious schools and colleges offer such a variety of courses that we find men l r;;uing a wvide divergency of inter- F,6ts. Between them is th one mutual bond of Michigan. If this is not en- couraged they will graduate in their separate groups instead of as one Michigan class. The question is, how can we furth- er the feeling of unity that should ex-! ist between the members of a class and of a student body. Traditions help it to establish stability. Events that take place year after year give com- moon experiences to .all undergradu- ates. Also such events as the Un- ion Fair will develop the esprit de corps by uniting the campus for one cause. If the. Fair was to become a traditional affair there -would be one- more link in the chain of college me- mories that mean so much to a grad- uate. Oxford and Cambridge have theirI traditions. They have grown up with the moss covered buildings through six hundred years of history. Michi- gan is now rebuilding her campus. The traditions that spring up around it should be of the right kind. Why not make the Union Fair one of them? T wenty-Fdive JYears Ago At Michigan From the files of the U. of I. Daily, March 12, 1899. The Freshmen trimmed the Sopho- mores to the tune of 36 to 27 points in the annual Fresh-Sopli meet in Wa- terman Gymnasium Saturday after- noon. About 800 spectators witnessed the meet, including a large number of young ladies from the two classes re- presented. Manager jConnie Mack of the Mil- waukee Ball Club has signed for the coming season outfielders McGinnis and Davies and pitcher Iehr, mem- bers of the U. of M. baseball team. Preidehnt Vain Derheek of ithe DA.- outside the concessions. And what was the greatest noise-making device at the Fair, even surpassing the Mox- ie-vendors and the untiring imnpresar- ios of the Great Labryinth, who beatu a board unceasingly 'with baseball bats. The inotorcycle at - the Motor- drome. And there weretwo motor- cycles. One inside and one outside., It Was advertised as a race. "Some- one mnay fall -ofZMiny minute and be' killed," read the sign. And from with- in cane the fetching sund of explod- - ing cylinders. And what was inside? A motorcycle on a stand, and a couple of buddies running around on Kiddie Kars1. . . . We take great pleasure in awarding this handsome cup, the gift of The Butterfield Interests, to Theta Xi fra- ternity, proprietors of the Motor- drome. * * * There were once three brothers nam- ad Jascha, Toscha, and Mischa. They lived in a little house near the edge of the Black Forest, not far from the main road to Schwarzburg. Every lay they rose at five, ate breakfast, and then drew straws to see which1 one was to hunt in the forest, which to be a robber on the road, and which was to stay home and feed the cat. This drawing of straws was always rather an excitng business, because no one wanted to stay home and feed the cat, whereas all three of the broth- ers liked very much to hold up wealthy burghers who travelled the main highway. Well, one morning Jascha, who was the boldest of them all, drew the cat ,.after a straight week of brigandage. He was in a rage. His brothers, after having taunted him with his luck, gathered together the things they would need for the day, and left him with a final "ya-a". He sat all morning chewing the corner of his red mustache and evolv- ing a plan of revenge. Finally he got up with an ugly snarl, rearranged his mustache, and fed the cat. "I," said Jascha, "will make those fellows sorry they ever left me at home with this wretched animal. I shall pour the Bourbon I got from that Friar yesterday into his mlik. When they come, the cat will be as drunk gas punch." And so the wicked fellow poured in the wine, and then, hitching up his belt, sat down to a game of snap with himself, for snap was at that time a favorite game in these parts. When he had won 35 kronen from himself, he went to see how the cat was faring-and lo! There was no cat! -And no Bourbon! He was ov- ercome. He sat on the floor and wept copiously for an hour. Then he went out to find his charge. Walking into the fields he called "Come to papa, catty watty"-,but there was no an- swer.. . . . I He had searched for perhaps half! an hour when he suddenly discovered, behind a hillock, his two brothers, each mugging a nifty nymph. A third Serbia can twist into a menace to herself, the swashbuckling in Bel- grade begins. The pretext may be the! overturning of an intolerable govern- ment, or it may be the suppression of a revolution directed from abroad. The rattling of the saber is immedi- ately heard from the Greater Serbian capital. Just now, Bulgaria having obligated herself to pay over to Serbia a quarter of a billion in addition to the Serbian share in the general re- parations, Serbia is making - difficul- ties with the Macedonian question as a pretext. Recently, Bulgaria so far renounced the sovereignty assured her by the Treaty of Neuilly that she pro-' hibited the holding of a meeting by Macedonian refugees, called to pro- test against the destruction of their nationality by Serbia in violation of the Treaty of Neuilly and of the ver-j dict of twelve centuries of history. .She forbade it because Serbia eith- er expressly informed her or intimat- ed that the holding of the meeting would be followed by dire punish'- ment for Bulgaria. And there was ev- ery means at Sofia, a few kilometers from the Serbian frontier, of know- ing just what Serbia contemplated in the event of noncompliance with her wishes of repression. The Btlgarians know perfectly well that Greater Ser- bia is armed to the teeth, while they themselves are stripped of arms un- der the provisions of the Treaty of Neuilly. . Similarily, she is knuckling under in every instance, either under direct menace from g1lgrade or under the terror insp redTby the knowledge that a pretext is the thing that Greater Serbia is awaiting. The presence in Sofia of a Serbian army is an event- uality that every Sofian has in mind when he or she retires at night. - It would interest the peoples of long-suffering~Eur ope, and of sympa- thetic America, to know whether the Treaty of Neuilly is a measure of ter- rorism or of peace. Is a nation that is loyally living up to its utmost pro- visions to be protected in its rights, or is it to be left to the mercy of an implacable foe, which regards the very existence of Bulgaria as an unfor- givable offense? i 9 13 11 Ia 13 ~ 16 17 " 19 £ I 2. 23 1 21 ;2 523 2 ?0 31 Save a )o"Jir cr ore at Our ifgh LIas' Work in Cleanihlg and Re locking FACTORY hAT STORE 617 Paclklrdi St. 2Phone 1792 (Where 1). U. I. Stops lit State) t Oranges - Bananas C~ rape Fruit - Lemons- Cookies - Cakes - Soft Drinks STAPLE GROCERIES Monroe Street Grocry B. F. Sibley Phone 117"0J 812 Monroe St. ;; itil11t alliltllIflitilltfli l~ a: ''onigut: the panish Olub presents "Donna Clarines" by the Quinteros in Sarah Caswell Angell Hall at 8 o'- clock. Professor Hollister will present a bill of four one-act plays tomorrow ev- ening in University Hall auditorium as the first of a series of five produc- tions. The cast of Lady Gregory's "The Spreading of the News" will include Alva Johnson as Bartley Fallon, Wil- liam Viola as the Magistrate, Joan- na Dewitt as Mrs. Fallon, Barre Hill as Jack Smith, Stanley Knapp as Shawn Early, Robert Jones as Tim Casey, Angus Babcock as JamesERyan, Helen Martin as Mrs. Tarpey, Ernes- tine Roe as Mrs. Tully, and David Bramble as the Policeman. In "The Sunny Morning" by the Quinteros Ellura Harvey will play the part of Donna Laura, Edward Gibson the part of Don Ganzalo, Crosy Reese, Juanito, and Ruth Sauer, Petra... '' The next number, "Mrs. Harrison" by John Masefield, includes Stanton Ellot as Harrison, Lillian McEachearn as Mrs. Harrison, Earle Fingerle as Tom Constable, and that veteran ham actor, Robert Henderson, as the Par- son. Unfortunately the Tchekoff play, "A Marriage Proposal", has characters with impossible, unpronouncable Rus- sia names. Giving you about half their The success of the Arcade is really not so amazing, for it's only natural that people eat where they get best foods at lowest costs - _A ... 7 1 .p_