P~ACE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WVEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1925 Published ever morning except Monday during th-e niversity year by the Board in Cotntrol of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. iThe Associated Press is exclusivelyen ~~en- d to the use for republication of all news d~ipatchets credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Vntered at the postoffiice at Ann Arbor, V ichiigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage: granted by Third Assistant Post- n~aster General. Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, $.00o. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- ea: d Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF .Telephone 4625 MANAGING EDITOR GEORGE W. DAVIS k"Oirman, 'Editorial Board... .Norman R. Thal LuEYEitor........Robert S. Mansfield E Editor ...........Manning Houseworth I s f;' iii or,........... Helen S. Ramsay- I;3t ':itoi ...............Joseph Kruger <"-i~ 4p5 ditor....:..... William Walthour' 4w anD rama ...Robert :B Henderson Nignt Editors Hi~1I. Cady Lecnard C. Hall Wiiaid B. Crosby Thom~as V, Koykka .:;1c(: T. DeVore W. Calvin Patterson Assistant City Editors SoOlian Frederick H, Shillito AssistantsI highly deserving of all praise that they may receive on their work as members of the champion *WoI vernes, it seems a trifle too much that th,,y should be asked to leave the Univ4er- sity for an extended tripl. This new idea should be discouraged at once, and the papers responsible for such action made to realize that college football players are also college stu- dents and that the football season occupies all the time they can afford to spend on the sport. STUNG ! !!I There is a limit to everything ; sometimes that limit is set by statute, sometimes by convention, and, in ad- dition to the numerous other ways, sometimes by common sense. 'Such a limit, that is, a c~mmnon sense limit, is ordinarily apllied to business deal- ings. If 'we regard post-war repara- tions as business dealings, and they surely should be that, we find a sur- prising lack of good common sense in one of the provisions of the repara- tions pact between Germany and France. France insisteud that Germanly, in her invasion of France, had destroyed 30,000 colonies of bees, andl insisted that Germany indemnify her with a like number of colonies. Recontly the! bees were transported from theo Lu ne- burger heath in North GermanyI to France, and the only thing they would do that goodl and proper bees should do w?, sting-they stung the French. At least that was true figuratively, for they refused to gather honey. Germany has settled that part of her reparations; Germany is out noth- ing. France has been paid the 30,Q00 colonies of bees demanded and France; has nothing but a lot of empty hives' to show for it. And all because France, wanted to impress Germany with the fact that a Frenchmnan arous-1 ed is a dangerous person-(Germany would have seen that anyway had the matte~r been delayed until after M. Caillaux's visit to America. The German people aren't broken- hearted because the bees have refused to work; in fact, they probably sang' "Deutschland uber alles" when they heard that these little insects hadj been loyal to the traditions of the "Fathreland" and stung the French. The French people tried to set their rE ,u e -r \lnaas00afra firsato itn the perfpyormanc ol twhastiht)paticia cied t besa meiocre ly a pt abes in ftheiren- l ightenedIItwsipokAnniArgo, ai nin e hunredMonana, et;,for PCan avo id the preie reith as mh en-e no-one atint vs to be here onhegrand frs otatitesi a porermance.o 1athi ightobeviously un~trefo te cat many we pas, itAyd upto inthe hig-j ight.eeyhaoenheaddeAincebo, ntie the wantingoa oLorev itewtoand o ning ustrewadt wetil rve tople thei biggrieestwitndsosive hrd-to Ther a teyn dlymtobeycemorethn. hanfulhof poductiwo as genallye noughwastoobeleethetewhen the cr- taeingis 'Mstobajewosho itc s the1 frstonm that it sas ev's nper-c formed ciso ipltlyuntruevenrbeoreast benhitnesasbedn byhaingaily lar amnay eesighteydTo ,toeteven ghmore etitweekonthe choeun guetstil nthee ey(haveeth erforma ncetiof This nisnot antindanyvense ast ranzorna piecehaofprogandabet th aigst ianatherscriesagleocif Theroca hadi y ejmre tan. fis ie sha wit justeo emoe day AMDSIC o ln s League and Interm DRAA C hu rch m'wza TIS AFTERNOON10A': .rie _3atinee ! 1-BAROUR GYM. . M1usicalOle prseits the-i shlu1ic( 'Ihrio in ____________________________________________ o'clelk.= (Curtey ofGraham's) gouriosgrand a ner i ofbak the -I dayihen aisrecycleshanhd K~, yTe a h Cfshook"has'gainred to immortimwen teteia otalr; ORFA TOYIS prouce Te Bohminstrl"tand -7X.ie s ily Ayed Pholity12 - ''TIhe Prtndentf Pisn" aopfnedhanciaaola o or t h golire inher v gabone,1 Lthe'~ ioge Na's followmed itpera nthaie I (_r .U 1.SosatSaeS. :U-UU proaak e 'iete. -. ' TodyBob heParkercyce oatthMi nsailletrti hecod staTicketssatoSlate, aftBookwShop andeat that1xe1111111 Goodycarlae isDrive Co., M in t- "ACT11Y1MAD .I iiIIIlIIli U111 iili I moe -nhina n4 n teA a d11a sSil a d D aiyE w .GAN I vilas awas a.© nutc ios IurShp "The Stuent;Price" pend te Sae a Kolar r Moe a th .,e rtl e E. Bailey xilini T. Barbour .:ha !c5 Rleiner ' illam Brerr ' .: ickingha'n :,.~ton Chainpe ugene Hl. Gutekunut T ,- _glss Doubleday h;ar-y Dunnigan JesT, Herald Eli abeth S. Kennedy M\larion Kubik v. aiter H. Mack oisR. Markus Eli erry FeeiMorrow Margaret Parker Stanflord N. Phelps Evelyn Pratt Marie Reel Simon Rosenbaum. Huth Rosenthal Wilton A. Simpson Janet Sinclair Courtlawvi C. Smith Stanley Steinkei Clarissa Tapson Henry Tburnau David C. Vokes Chandler J. Whipple Cassamn A.Wilson Thomas C. Winter Marguerite Zilszke BIIINESS STAFF Telephione 21214 BUSINESS MANAGED BYRON W. PARKER Advrtising..................... J. Finn Advervtising..............T. .D. Olmsted, Jr. Advertisings.......... ....Frank R. Dentz, Jr. Advrtsig....... .........Win. L. Mullin (irculationi............ L. Newman Publication...............Rudolph Bosteoau Accounts ................... Paul W. Arnold Assistants Ingred M. Alving F. A. Nordquist tGeorge H. Annable, Jr. Loleta G. Parker W. Carl B~auer Julius C. Pliskow 1 ohn H. Bobrink Robert Prentiss W. T.Cox W.. C'Pusc~h NTH I -W M ON S RAISIN BREAD Fr esh raisin bread made with Sun-Maid Raisins, is our regular Wednesday fea- Sture. .fie CITY PASTRY SHOP I l' 1 I I Marion A. Daniel Franklin 3. Rauner ow uiso omo e e n gtR~~11~i1 Id.i11in~.IIi raes. R. DePuy Joseph Ryan stung; can any of the rest of uis fare tc'a hin iithe fait hope thart that Tr- FJ , Magaet L. Funk MVargaret Smith tanGier Mance Solomon any better?j key will still be fortheomnin, ent ae hmsSneln E. Little Win. J. Weinman f Irank E. MosherANifr) 'O 1SS:OR :'FM$ tI14JRE Dr. Harley A. Haynes, d(irector of I IA SS IN OREJ~TO AL'',A1e IN SIDE 5110W OF LOt "AL the new University Hospital, an- -- p~~~~founced in yesterdlay's :Daily the es- t ";c, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1925 tablishmilent of inspection trips through the hospital for Students and EF W1T L l ;Sti B ,'S iielXmnr Night Editor-WILLARD B. CROSBYDail1 rle °___________________citizens of the 'city,. Trained guides . I:ht' 1 '1 IThe PI'rnd ess in "Tamnbourinle" will conduct visitors throuigh all the " h ate a ant itl r n eCS c ed n the weak: suecess of ison te redm f eanig s departments of the Hospital, explain-1 Ann Arb~or, Dvilch. Dlec. 1, 1.)25.--ccedn has ontheir urposeoandfo retioingMis EleSop eetyeiold"'Tickled To Death," it seemed that the inngperel. pThesScopes caseio next be modellednoraftercthey ehappy" ipei.TeSoecaehs Guests are invited to view the extoen- Ifresihm at h Vixnexit o li~'i Opera wouldi retuirn to Amer'icaI won ts ay t th Suremecout. live work being done in all bralnclhes Layr aeiteetdntintn p eal service. g'nu, antd membecr in excellent et and-fschool of "No, INo, Nannette." lBnt f'undtamen talist-modernist debate, Such a policy 'is a far cry fr((i ing of every campus honor soc- iet r(hectors often see beyond their noses, bt in whether the liberty of the oddy witod nitrechad 1.1 the exception of i1hliucs, meim'srand failures being made to be forgot- teacher to teach and of the child oddywhnclinif'rc adhroiior;ry cdramic clb, wich he tellanothemcr ronmantic setting was curt refusals w ere the usual lot of an t e r s i p i e y t e T n p n d f e i s T o o w S o e c o e n T i b u i e " t e d s to larn s imaird bythe en- interested visitor' to most of the h-Im 1)liat'r isDoth onIctse in Tabune" hedhI nessee statute."-Chester I. Long piaso:h onty orey n had been mIacic the only femhale iflt'11- anid color of Slavonia replacing the of Kansas, president. of the Amer- b er, has 'received permission from "pnk of China. Ipleasantness, as manifested by the sever'al of. thle countless Deans hre So the Opera this year opens in a iaBaasoito.Hospital staff at the present time, cen- ab~ot to become a member of the vlaesur ihrdtof n taily will react favorably toward that! sophomnore class in order to in .vlag surewt rdrofad A1LL-AIMERIC.ANS isiuio.Get wows t nwhr peruz ntecicsx ick i tueshut ters, and a palace with buir- ~c1tF:ail, at the conclusion of the something of the workings of such an 1hrapaac ntecru i gund izitey crarpet d on its golden staircase. ''uP s'son. sports writers and extensive organization as thene that Organization 'will put on shortly. 'ther are villains, cruel and given to etes interested in collegiate football University Hospital will find amp~le IToei ag f h !.inaiz og lc uenwonae h ngge in the ridiculous practice of opruiytganschnfmtionug the great ha ndicap they suffere'd1 plot go round and aL Prinecess who has 'bo>ing all-American football teams.DrHynsito)0cgata because the streets were not, wide her Captain of the. Gxuar. l here is! -'.e;ardess f th fac tha tech.av i nough to permit the import ationi of! hunmhon, too, in a(diplomat and theI Iegrle of ef ht tesoheynhae ;in elephant, invited IMliss Snorp to cm V,,( ;[Ai riche from Idaho, and there :iaction, and -relying, entirely on l oin. The oh epltiant which it. was is a< chtorus, trained to do its ro~utine If prssreports that record the gain DITORAL C MM NT originally planedt to import fromz even in their dreams. frmthe spectators viewpoint. and j_____________________Iam num and(, Bailey, another sinaller --l. B. 11. no.t from that of the players and I circns enterpmrise, in the East, wxas to * ., c°uces themselves, they arbitrarily THlE (CO11 G SESSION jWo the heavy hauling which the ten-! JOSEF IPWM ANN 4tt det eleven men as the best football (The Kas City Times)totrcs(011ntudrak.TsejAeveIyI daKan lirs in America. The country has been without a j in. charge are overjoyed at the accepit- , A. modest, unpreaumniutg lit tleeman, It is true that certain men stand Congress for nine months now, andi#aamte of Mtiss; Snore. a lar-ge head, ant zecalnug person- out during the season as being pro- naturally is in a pretty bail xay. Not "I have never been in a. circus bie- ality ..- the. ianioitelle lfofn-ann. I - emiinently successful at the art of hit- in such a bad way as Congress though, fore",' said L+ ie, at, a. late hour this All too seldom are wve grantedt then - ting the line, hurling forward passes' for wvhile the country can get alon, morning, '"bec ausec I always wanted to pi vilege (if listening to one of the . wtith accuracy, or holding the line at a pinch without a ConIgress, there be a bareback ride nd I could never wvorld's greate'st pianrists. Mur. C'- i~tteice fteopsto.is no way in the world Congress coil tend a horse tha:t could rstand the briloxvitsch gave his ThanksgivngC They know they are good, and receive: get along without a country. That's, tai.Iredi oc ht-wl, Il 'adec ocr ob een new m spaper publicity during Iben 'the c'ountry elect. Congress, omit tihe gory details."-.Iiteanlsotmel- ~ eason to last an ordinary man; and if Congress didn't meet once in