.4 N° ~~*LURPA., MRCIAt{, ~)} 'T'N F. MTCH 1C; A N nATT Y q ENGLAND TREATY V ELOPS tr(*at Brilailn I eads F. S. Ini Sep powier Atrms Agreement Gives Birth " To New Type Ofj Warinaker U. S. CALLED DEFICIENT1 With a flaw in the Washington dis- armament treaty allowing the unlimit- eA construction of light cruisers, . ~Great Britain is widening the gap be- tween its sea forces and those of the U lnited States in the niaval standings, 11those close to the situation say. W hile England and Japan are keep- L ing as close to the mark as they can, . Anierica is not preserving the 5-5-31 Sratilo of navail power established un-v de lcr the IMra iig 4likfhiiistraton. With ~th ( present econom~y program in force,, ~if. is predicted that Japan may soonj Wheonie the equal of the United States t ~on the high seas.I T~i) 'Washington treaty imposed a I it i t on the construction of fighting * ili'is above 10,000 tons displacement, but no limit was imposed on "auxil- iary" ships of 10,000 tons or under. i As, a result, the battleship is tending o go into reserve, while the so-called .r. ' "auxiliary" is biecoming the principal ¢ tlype of fighting ship, with no tonnage ,. a'ratio limiting its construction. SAt the time the treaty was drawn 1t up, most of the light cruisers being HMSSfokf (-%onstructed were "under 8,000 tong.cuiesBtani :)a)pan was building four which had critsaide n ung A been planned to displace 7,0070 tons itngland.e lnewe .~ah but as soon as the treaty was widen the distance bet .{ 'igned they were redesigned for 10,000 standings of U~nitedl S , iOtis displacement. The other signa- amn considerably. +toriess followed suit, for it was ob- ; iiously unsound policy to build fight- 101ng ships inferior in strength to those o cf foregn contemporaries. ',The "treaty cruiser" is developing d into a 35-knot ship with a battery T yof eight or more 8' inch guns deliver- ing a volume of fire of thirty roundst - a minute. With such tremendous I B A C r lroadsides, it will only be the high BX.t y speed of the cruiser. that will enable! a d l anunarmored enemy to face them. P robable results would be that a few , ~hits would decide the issue, and naval __________ ~action would be the variety which inaval officers describe as "short and Admettin the deficiency of I i; an sea power, naval authorities are lecoing optimistic over the proposed i 79Nrt i N ependiture of $100,000,000 on naval!79NrhU ,:uviation. If the United States rebuilds 'its air thoblces to this eet they pre- TI-ILI TIICAN lT LA UNCHES NEWCRU~ 'AL 9UMNf APPROACH QUOTA FOR LEAGUE completed their quota. This they are Alumni M ust Pay Tamong themselves, it was announced planning to pledge or underwrite at a. at Yale tonight for itself and sister meeting to be held Friday, March 19. $j5 For Big,,lTh"ree 'universities. This is an increase from This will make them the first alumnae l 1, ~ I$3 a ticket to alumni while by the group to comhplete its, pledge which is Football IialfeS agreement single tickets to "tmemibers considered an important step in the ____of the university community" shalt be national campaign. Mrs. W. D. Hen- (By Associated Press) $2 or one dollar less "than heretofore." derson, executive-secretary of the NE AVN Cn.,Mrc _ Increase in revenue sought by the NEW1-JVEN Con.,Marh . - alumnae council stated, "As Ann Ar-i change in prices will be applied "sole- bor goes, so goes the nation in re- Five dollars, hereafter, will be the ,l nmitnneaddvlpeto sipect to the University of Michigal ;1price to alumni for single tickets to:Igeneral athletic facilities and noct to Wbm__ren'tgs eaguie building." Mrs. i football games played by the, Big liner easing budgets of intercollegiate tI c nleson left yesterday for Toledo Three, Yale,. Harvard, and Princeton, athletic teams:" where she will meet with the alumnae I grouphre to assi ~istt Ihem with their !DRUf-GS VA AV Ann. Arbor Women. Hope To Subscribe Riemainder O iLcaeiauTiliding { unto At MTeeting Miarch 119 $12,000 STILL N LEDED One third of the remaining amount Idrive and help organize their financ of the quiota for the Ann Arlior branch ^ ampaign. L'ater she Fwill go to Cleve- of the Alumnae associat ion was pledg- iland and Grand Rapids for the same edl yesterday at a luncheon given' et hiurpose.\ f he Lantern Shop for those who had I T here ;are 45 presidents of alumnae ~I been working on the campaign. This [groirps; 45 couci horad180 cam-I 1means that the women of Ann Arbor phiign chairman w orking on the na-J have $12,000 o raise before they have tonal diive th oughout the country. (A D IiiM a i ®a®inM 0 M am 0 0am m. S, A evchat P leasndes TUTTE'S **{ I L LUNCH ROOM 338 MAYNARD first of five new building, taking at Portsniouth, crusiers wllI tween the naval ' Wd+na'i, .i/:Wooan ®.l1~d1 tx.- d" did.rdd./d.J:/ 1I DETROIT THEATRES T THIS WEEK a TED O~N .ches iversity IG AR icK Eves. - 50e to $2.50) AR RIO Wed. Mat. 50C to $1.50 Sat. Mat. 50c to $2.00 The Big Musicomedy Hit!f she.r Kittl ely Direct~rom1Eiaht Months Run on Broadway i With Or1einaI Cast t.1 3A~Nigh1ts 75C to $1.50 J. and Sat., 50C-75C Woodward at Eliot Tel. Glendale 9792 jThe BONSTELLE CO- I In Geo, N. Gohan's Comedy-Drama "The SONG and DANCE MN" Schubert Laay"ye'e at h .Sat-Nlat. 50C- $2.00 'Pop. Thurs.Mat. 50C to $2.00, plus tax. Cad. 8,705 Triumphan' Return-OneWeek Only, GREEWI CH VILLAGE FOLLIES America's Greatest Annual Revue-All New St New Chevrolet Closed Gar Sh ow Now On OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK SUNDAYS TILL 4 P. Mi. 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