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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

November 14, 1918 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1918-11-14

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

NUAL TO APPEAR IN
ONE YOLUME NOT TWO
E WILL BE INCREASED, BUT
PRICE WILL REMAIN
SAME
he 1919 Michiganensian War rec-
will be published in one volume
tead of two or three as planned.
e signing of the peace terms is the
se of the change in plans.
he Michiganensian was planned in
or three volumes this year be-
se it was expected that the per-
nel and activities of the University
ild change at the end of each term.
smuch as all war plans have been
,nged it has been found advisable
the managing editor to publish the
ord in one volume of 700 or 800
es. This is about 100 pages larg-
than the former Michiganensians.
e board of editors hesitated to
nge the plans, but believed that
campus would be better satisfied
h one large complete volume than
,h two editions each of which would
incomplete.
Subscription Price Same
'he subscription price of $2.50 will
ain unchanged. Those who do not
scribe will be charged $3 per copy.
imited number will be published,
hose who do not subscribe at once
y not be able to secure books.
raternities, sororities, honor so-
ies, and other organizations on the
Qpus must have their copy at the
ces, Press building, by Dec. 1.
hing will be accepted .after that
e. It is expected that the book
1 be published early in January.
s is a more satisfactory date than
in June. It has always been cus-
ary to have all copy in by Janu-
so that the only difference in the
k will be that it will be published
ner after the copy comes in than
nerly. Nothing will be omitted in

classes of the University." This is
partially due to the fact that the book
is a record more of the whole Uni-
versity than of the senior classes
alone and partially to the fact that
the managing editor is a junior and
not a senior as has been customary
in the past.
"French Demand
r
Stronger Terms"
France will not be satisfied with a
peace that will not break down the
German people as well as the German
government," said Martha Jouard
when asked to express what she be-
lieved to be the opinion of the French
people in regard to the present peace
situation. Miss .Jouard entered the
University this fall, coming directly

from France, where she saw
h of the war and the devastated
try.
)u American people know the
nans as they are in peace time.
ar they are different. They and
r government are synonomous.
treaty that will not prevent a
bility of the Germans from re-
ng what they have already done
not satisfy.
o our French soldiers the Hun
ars as a criminal who has mur-
: women and children. The
chman cannot kill the criminals'
ren nor can he tolerate the idea
ving the murderer associate with
:ty. You people would put the
y man in prison and not free
until he had proven his fitness
given liberty again.
tr people want the German put
robation and not allow him to as-
tte with society until we are sure
he can do so without further
wing the world.
f course the Frenchmen desire
ght the Germans in Germany but
thought of revenge is not as great
otivating force as the desire for
ce in the future. We would like
ensation for the economic dam-
done but a total repayment is
ssible. The greatest losses we
suffered are of a kind that we
ot hope to have replaced. With-
severe economic decision to lim-
em, the Germans would soon be
owerful as before the war, and
py the same position they ,did

"President Wilson's 14 articles are
terms written by a man who has not,
seen war in his own counttry. They
are the ideals towardtwhich we are
working and hope to accomplish
eventually. No Frenchman will ad-
mit they are the terms for the present
conditions.
"The Germans realize first, that
they can deal better with the Allies if
the kaiser is displaced and second,
that it is best for them to continue no
further in the war. As yet they really
have not been beaten and a peace that
would not bring justice for posterity
would not be considered by our peo-
ple.
"It is my personal opinion that the
revolution may be the last and great-
est trick of the Germans. It is an
effort to gain as much° as possible."
U-NOTICES
Open house will be held at
7:30 o'clock Saturday evening
at the First Baptist church to
which S. A. T. C. and naval men
are especially invited.
Classical club will hold an
important business meeting for
all members at 4 o'clock today
in Professor Kelsey's room, Al-
umni hall.
A meeting of the Cercle
Francais will be held at 3
today in Sarah Caswell Angell
hall. The Abbe Felix Klein
will speak in English- to the pub-
lic which is invited.
An open meeting of the
Christian Science society will
be held at 7:30 o'clock tonight
in the Sunday school room of
the Christian Science church.
Every member of the editorial
staff of the Students' Directory
report this morning for import-
ant work.
AMERICA WILL EDUCATE
ITS DISABLED SOLDIERS
(Continued from Page Five)
skilled or unskilled hands are not al-
ways going to exist. They are soon
going to shrink to normal conditions.
What then? The answer is unfortu-

nately very simple. The law of supply
and demand is not going to stop work-
ing because there have been some
men who have been soldiers and who
incurred disabilities in defense of the
country. If there is only paying work
for so many hands, the supply of hands
must be cut down. When this hap-
pens, the man who cannot turn out
as much or as good work as a sound
man is going to lose his job, because
of his deficiency, and the sound man
is going to keep his job. That means
the disabled man will be out of a job
and will drift about from one tem-
porary employment to the other, meet-
ing rebuff after rebuff apd becoming
of less value as time goes on.
"The antidote for such a condition
is offered free by the United States
government."
Daily want ads bring results.
GO TO
The Mayer-Schairer
Company
112 S. Main St.
FOR
Fine Stationery
Engraved Cards
Die Stamping
Printing
Ruling
Book Binding
Leather Goods
Office Supplies
Filing Devices
Desks
Chairs
Book Cases

PIANOS, VICTROLAS AND RECORDS, MARTIN
GUITARS, MANDOLINS AND UKULELES
AND ALL MUSICAL SUPPLIES AT
Schaeberle & Son's Music House
110 S. MAIN STREET PHONE 254-Fl

Look

for

Quality

Don't pay too much at-
tention to the price ticket.
Buy from our large stocks of
HART SCHAFFNER &
MARX CLOTHING
You will have to pay a
little more than you did last
year, but you get quality,
style and wearing service
that you can not get from
any line that is sold for less
money than what we ask for
this make.
We have all the late
styles, the finest assortment
of fabrics you ever saw and
nothing more could be .de-
sired than can be found in
our range of colors and pat-

',( Py
: 5
.
"
"' , _, ,
r $ ,
J
S
f

More Complete justic
'he Michiganensian will be plainer comp
more complete this year than ever age
ore. An effort is being made to impot
-e everyone on the campus repre- have
ted in the book. It will be more cann
a campus publication than a senior out a
ss annual. This is the first year it the
t the title page says: "Published as pc
the students of the University of occup
:higan" instead of by the "senior then.

terns.

REULE, CONLIN

& FIEGEL

THE BIG STORE

Southwest Corner of Main and Washington Streets

- _I

The

Ann Arbor

Dairy

Company

extends a cordial invitation to the public to inspect it's new
Plant, corner Fourth Avenue and Catherine Street, Thursday
and Friday afternoons and evenings of this week.
This beautiful outfit pronounced by competent critics to be
one of the two finest in the United States enables us to distri-
bute the satisfactory product going from the new building out.
We want the young men and women in the University to
know that this inviation includes them too. S.A.T.C. men
whose hours prevent them from coming on these dates will
be welt me during any other working hours.

+i

T e

Ann

Arbor

Dairy

Company

Phone 423

. _
l

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