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June 01, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 161) • Page Image 1

… the rally which is open to all students and faculty, an informal tea will be held from 3 to 5 pam. Monday in the Iternational Center, and under the auspices of the Center. Faculty members and students

… are invited to attend this reception. Hold Discussion Group A Tuesday discussion group from 10 a.m. to noon in Lane Hall will be held for student leaders who wish to meet with the group. Following thib…

… Would Be Basis for World Economy Jabri, here enroute to Cairo for a meeting of the Council of the League of Arab Nations June 4, charged that France was aiming at domination of Syria, either by mandate…

… -' . Koryama Seri Of Japan Takaoka -TaHt ONSHU: Kaanazawa Mato ~k ' .x Uedaoy ~.-.? 3.06 S:.Mi51 Sq.Mi. 'Koh, ul -- TTAK 1 27SSYOoha WWI sue q~i 3.3 Iq.M; Increased Operational Costs Force Raise in Student Fees…

… Summer Session Charges Will Be Higher For Non-Resident Students A new schedule of raised tuition fees, expected to increase receipts from this source by approximately 10 per cent, will become effective at…

… said. Smoothing out cer- tain inequalities in the differential between resident and non-resident fees was given as the second major reason for the revision. Under the new schedule, full program students

… in the Literary College, who are residents of Michigan, will pay $65 instead of $60 per semester and non-resident students will pay $110 instead of $100, Resident engineering students will pay $70 per…

… semester, an increase of $5, while non-resident students' tuition will be $130, up $10 University income from tuitions has declined more than $500,000, taking the years 1940 and 1944, thus in part…

… poli- tical domination and tended to in- crease bilateral trade. "A reduction in the volume of world trade result- ed," he declared. Summer session fees remain un- changed for resident students except…

… for a 10 per cent increase in law and music. All fees were raised by that amount for non-resident students. Fees for reduced p±'ograms in all schools were increased approximately 10 per cent for…

December 01, 1945 (vol. 56, iss. 24) • Page Image 1

…'s first assignments after he graduated from the Univer- sity of Chicago was the Arab-Jewish hostilities in Jerusalem in 1928. Other events he observed in his early years were the occupation of the Ruhr, the…

…'s Judiciary Council president, announced yesterday. Originally set for Wednesday, postponement of the election will allow students to pick up their identification cards before voting. Identification cards or…

… cashier's receipts will determine voting eligibility. In addition to presenting their identificaton, students wll be required to sign a tabulation sheet. P DISCHARGED SOLDIERS IN WARD PICKET LINE…

Student Pub- lications: Carsten Orberg, Harvey Frank, Paul Sislin, Kenneth Bissell, Monroe Fink and Evelyn Phillips. Union vice-presidents: Combined schools (business administration, music, forestry…

… for the office. Statements should be mailed to The Michigan Daily, c/o Arthur Gronik, Student Public at ons Building. Joan Wilk, H. Thomas, Lois K. Iver- son, Pat Hayes, Joan Buckmaster, Connie Essig…

…; Students Studied in Caves, Temples (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a series of articles on the foreign uni- versities slated in the campus election Wednesday. Information for this article was supplied…

… by Hsu Lo, a student in the University engineering school.) Once the University of Tsing Hua was located in Peiping, having been established there in 1912 with the indemnity returned by the United…

… morning the students would go out to clear away the rubble and bury the dead. One day the United States Army Air Forces came to Kunming and based its planes there. And the Japs flew overhead no more. For…

… four years the students took notes and passed blue books with 'Riri+ rinriPc inn1rinonr n ctartler h this neusrt of wnrshin in their …

February 01, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 73) • Page Image 2

students of the University 6f Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Evelyn Phillips ,, Stan Wallace .. Ray Dixon Hank Mantho . Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy…

…, will not be 4 Univrs :ity L~ecture: Dr. Gustav E. von Grunebaum, Professor of Arabic, University of Chicago, will lecture on the subject. "The Arabian Nights and Classical Literature" at 4:15 p. i…

…- teriology, will start on March 5 and will be given on the spring term schedule for the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts. Bacteriology 111, laboratory work for medical students, will start March…

… Tower. H. Kraus Student Recital: Jerry Pickerel, pi- 4.UOralert. Canist, will present a recital in partial University Council-Professor H. fulfillment of the requirements for { M. Dorr I Ut 1n t L li1. f1…

… will be open to the general pub- lic. Tea at the International Center, 'very Thursday, 4-5:30 p. m. Faculty, foreign students, and their Am'erican friends are cordially invited, Vepartment of Chemical…

… Senio' Society at 5 o'clock, IGANENSIAN must return contracts Friday, Feb. 2. Anyone unable to at- to the business office of the Student tend call Cornelia Groefsema at Publications Bldg. by Friday of…

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