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May 10, 1953 (vol. 63, iss. 152) • Page Image 4

… "marriage is like a dull meal. with the dessert first," and his antics-with a cog- nac-filled cane. The Challenges, Attitudes Facing Student Legislature etterJ to (fet 6d'itor EDITOR'S NOTE: The following…

… is an excerpt from a speech made by outgoing Student Legis- lature president Howard Willens at the SL ban- quet Wednesday night. The remainder of Wil- lens' speech dealt with specific SL accomplish…

December 10, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 68) • Page Image 1

….S.tPolicy i Africa, Near dEeatt minor $(EDITOR'S NOTE: Joe Collins, Student Government Council president, Ada 4 participated in a seminar held in Accra, Ghana under the auspices of behin World University…

… Set ' such basic issues as the Arab refugee problem, the Suez situation, and perhaps most important, our own segregation problem." …

May 10, 1958 (vol. 68, iss. 158) • Page Image 4

…lb Wer 3Mibiigan Bait Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN…

… in all reprints. TURDAY. MAY 10, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP MUNCK Two Looks at Course Booldet PRO ... STUDENT Government Council's plan to pub- lish a course evaluation book is basically sound…

…- ions on courses, they question other students about the merit of a certain course, teachers often ask for anonymous course evaluations by their students at the end of a semester. It would seem then, that…

… published evalua- tions, easily purchased by all who desire them would give both students and faculty access to information that could be obtained, but not nearly to such an extensive and unbiased de- gree…

…., These evaluations can serve a three-fold purpose. 1) They aid orientation of students, primarily incoming freshmen, to University courses. 2) They can create interest in courses which might not otherwise…

… a service to students of the University involved. Indeed, if it were financi- ally possible to make this a non-commercial endeavor, it is certain the Council would "clear- ly" approve it. As it is…

…*cessarily the best courses, will be en- couraged. Others say that it will not be an evaluation, but rather it will turn into a "criticism" in which as one educator so aptly put it, "the students will be trying…

October 10, 1958 (vol. 69, iss. 21) • Page Image 2

Arab state. He feels quite strongly about France's dissolution of the Al- gerian Student Union, Bel Khodja emphasized, since their Tunisian and Moroccan counterparts have had to carry the fight to get…

…, ., _._ Continuous Daily from 1 P.M. "Brigitte's Best To Date!" -Daily-Robert Kanner TUNISIAN ON CAMPUS-Ahmed Bel Khodja, only student at the University from his North African country, puts in a good deal of time in…

Student Government Council offices in the Student Activi- ties Building, working for jthe National and International Com- mittee. Ahmed Bel Khodj a Holds 'Activities Man' Scholarship By THOMAS TURNER…

….M. "ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT" with Lew Ayres, Louis Wolheim, Slim Summerville SHORT: "The Floorwalker," with Chaplin ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents Most students on this campus have presumably come…

…, having spent four years of graduate work in Middle Eastern studies at the University of London. Student Leader For another, he is the Univer- sity's Foreign Student Leadership Project representative, sent…

… to educate and be educated in the area of student government. While at London University the 30 year old Tunisian headed the Tunisian Students' Union chapter in Britain. He writes and speaks DIAL N4 2…

…-3136 German; French, Arabic and: Eng- lish,. and has put these languages to work in jobs such as with the Tunisian Embassy in London. With this background, Bel Kho- dia clearly met FSLP's standards and was sent…

… here by the United States National Student Union's FSLP program with the under- standing that his time would go in large measure to work with students. Represents NIA So Bel Khodja represents Stu- dent…

… Government Council's Na- tional and International Commit- tee on the Board of the Interna- tional Center. And he is in charge of the SGC committee's forums. Bel Khodja stressed the idea that students rather…

… problems of nationalism and of international student activity are also in the works, the energetic Tunisian said. Bel Khodja has already partici- pated in a Political Issues; Club discussion on the French…

March 10, 1955 (vol. 65, iss. 109) • Page Image 4

… Existence Quietly: Why? "Don't Even Think About It" v W ITH A BANQUET, Howard Nemorovski, and six speeches, Student Legislature left us last night. And Student Government Council stands poised to take over…

… next week. By their overwhelming support for SGC last Decem- ber, students are apparently willing to let SL slide quietly out of the University student gov- ernment picture. Except for a few critical…

… a mistake. IN THE week-long vacuum between the last student government and the next, we might remember a few things about SL. We might remember that it was hampered by a contrary philosophy on the…

… thinks students on this campus are so many machines to be refuel- ed at a spotless human filling station and then hurried on their way. The art of enjoying a good meal in comfort- able surroundings is…

… Union kitchens with his face glaring up at him from a plastic table top? If the Board took a check of student opinion they would find that the poor quality, of food in the cafeterias, not their physical…

… be the social center of the campus, It has been fishing around for ways to lure the student back within its ivy clad walks. One of the most obvious lures has been avoided like the plaque. A rathskeller…

… of social get-together a large portion of the student, body over 21 generally favors. A trip to student- frequented down town drinking spots any night bears this out. Such a tap room would represent a…

… refresh- ing change from the present Victorian attitude' the University takes toward student social life. The tap room would be a locus for the develop- ment of spirit and tradtion on campus. It would be a…

October 10, 1954 (vol. 65, iss. 18) • Page Image 4

…. National... BARRIERS: Student strikes swept through the cities of Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, Md., as high schools attempted to integrate Negroes into previous all-white classes. Demonstrations in which…

…, Formosa and the battle for Germany that growing tension between Israel and the Arab states has attracted little attention. Oddly enough, the tension has increased in almost direct ra- tion to talk of peace…

… to the Arab states.. On Sept. 17 the ambassadors of the eight Arab states appealed to the great powers to give them great military and economic aid to deter Israel from any attack. On Oct. 21 Britain…

… non-aggression pacts with the Arab states guaranteeing territorial integrity and political independence, banning all hostile acts and agreeing to settle all disputes through negotiations. The only Arab

… there it is. Israel is convinced that the Arabs are interested in arms solely to put themselves in position to resume the war which was halted in 1948 by a UN-negotiated armistice. The Arabs are convinced…

… that Israel's immigration policy seeks to concentrate most of the world's Jews in Palestine and that eventu- ally the new state will tend to burst its bounds, impinging further on Arab lands. They see in…

… open to all. The Jews say the Arabs killed off that idea, as they did the original partition plan of which it was a part, when they resorted to war in 1948. Jerusalem is now divided, with the Jews…

… holding the part in which they are most interested. One thing needed in connection with the new arms shipments to the Arabs is a renewal and new emphasis on the Anglo-French- American post…

…, instead of selling arms to the Arabs, put them on a lend-lease basis with a threat to yank them out if they are used for any aggressive purpose. j Baxter Case, .. To the Editor: ON SEPTEMBER 21, Bolza…

… the common student to criticize the writers of Daily reviews; the reviewers, how- ever improbable their names, are carefully selected for their abili- ties, and generally know what they are talking…

October 10, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 20) • Page Image 4

…Es mtditgan Baffy Sixty-Eighth Year E EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THEDUNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS rmll STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG.0…

… NEWS: U.S. Defaulting Mideast to Reds BEIRUT (P) - Victory in the Mideast is going to the Communi -by default. The United States is losing some of its last remaining Arab frienc Only courageous…

… restudy of all United States policy regarding t Mideast. Disillusioned with the United States, Arabs have a new cha pion waiting f6r them in the wings. For the Soviet Union way 0, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR…

… efforts tare made to keep the fac- ent ratio constant and classes small. time soon arrives when it's easier to few more students in a class rather d another instructor, or assign 50 a seminar instead of…

… between person on is destroyed. Already, thpe invaluable 1 contact between student and pro- fading away, and the bright beams of e tube.will not-bring them any closer. D THE SIZE of an educational institu…

… Serra) still keep the door slightly ajar, apparently in the hope they 1will iot be obliged to slam, it completely. Communist agents are busily at work all over the Arab world ex- ploiting hatreds and…

… frustrations which lodge in the Arab breast. But it is not Communist activity which is costingthe United States its friends. It is a growing atti- tide of hopelessness that Wash- ington will make a real attempt…

… to understand the Arab world and approach it with some show of sympathy. THE PRESENT period of calm, in the Mideast may be brief. It appears to have been purchased by the pro-Soviet Syrian regime…

… heroism, now for an Arab to express pro- American sentiments. An editor- ial favorable to the United States can mean a bomb for a newspa- per plant. A gesture toward Washington can invite political suicide…

…. Once the most-hated name in the Arab world was Truman, who was blamed for the creation of Israel. Now it is Dulles. He-is'coli- sidered responsible for the Eisen- hower Moctrine,'which the Arabs

August 10, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 34) • Page Image 4

… Sources;" "Student Li- brary Assistants-Selected Refer- ences;" and "The Vertical File- Sources of Free and Inexpensive Material."d p ow All of the 75 Arab students en- rolled at the University will at…

…- tend the sixth annual Convention of Arab Students in the United States beginning Sept. 2 at the University of California, Berkeley. Traveling on funds provided in part by the Organization of Arab

… the con tion, as well as American Nor Einstein, brother of the late bert Einstein. ,, y ANNUAL CONFAB: 75'U' Arab Students Will Attend Convention OFFICIAL Just the fashion lift you've been dreaming…

Students, the University contin- gent will embark by car and bus Aug. 24 and spend several days sight-seeing on the vay' to the West Coast. DAILY .Questions which will be cussed are: Imperialism and onism…

…." the ,Algerian Quest the Arab stand on commun the question of territorial w: and the Oman situation. Several Arab personalities cluding Mehdi Ben Abboud, l occan ambassador to the Ur States, will address…

… notified that books are due Tues., Aug. 13., tudents having special need for a books between Aug. 13 and 6 may retain such books for that by renewing them at the Charg- esk. he names of all students who not…

… Admin. Bldg., ext. 3371. The Bureau has a request for a wo- man to work in a school office in this vicinity. Handles student registration and details of the business office, and supervises several girls…

October 10, 1956 (vol. 67, iss. 19) • Page Image 4

… Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2…

… SGC and Sigma Kappa: A Clarification AS STUDENT Government Council meets to- night to consider Sigma Kappa and its membership policies, there is need for clarifica- tion of SGC's responsibility in the…

…- lation of University regulations regardless of whether the national cooperates. SGC was recognized as the new student government at the University as a result of student body elections and Regental…

… approval in December, 1954. Its powers and operating procedures derive from those of the defunct Student Affairs Committee and the outgoing Student Legislature. SGC was substituted for SAC as the…

… organization responsible for grant- ing official recognition to student groups. IT ASSUMED the rules set down by SAC as precedents for its own decisions on whether to grant recognition. One of those rules…

….to meet the require-. ments for the maintenance of recognition the Committee on Student Affairs (now SGC) will assume final judgement." r'HE LOCAL chapter of Sigma Kappa was re- 'activated on March 18, 1955…

… available information. To date, the national has refused to cooperate not only with students and administration atI this University, but with the.student govern-1 ments, chapter officials and administrations…

… on which to set our sights. Population along the Nile is increasing; the stan- dard of living decreasing. Arab populations are restless. The situ- ation between Israel and the Arab states has been…

… supply Europe. Seventy per cent of the world's oil supply lies under the arid sands of the Arab countries, most of it in Saudi Arabia. That oil is ' essential to Europeon in- ,dustry, and the increased con…

…, however, only incurs greater bitterness from Arab neighbors. Saudi Arabia is rolling in oil royalty money, so much that King Saud doesn't know what to with it. Egypt in contrast is poverty- striken. Its…

January 10, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 83) • Page Image 1

… history department said last night. Arab leaders do not want to "drive Israel to the sea," but they do want a satisfactory treaty, Prof. Clark Hopkins of the classical studies department declared. "Let us…

…- pressways. Detroit police termed the pile-ups among the worst in the history of the expressways. Student 'Cuts' Tit New High Attendance in the English de- partment reached a low, of 30 per cent of normal on…

…. preparations for the tenth National Students Asso- ciation Congress, to be held here in August, could be seen in com- mittee apl~intments made at yesterday's Student 'Government Council meeting. SGC named…

… President Bill ,Adams, '57BAd, Anne Woodard, '57, and LeAnne Toy, '59, to serve with Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis, James D. Shortt, managing supervisor of University Relations Field Serv…

…- ices, Leonard A. Schaadt, Resi- dence Halls business manager. and;, one member of the National Students' Association as an advis- ory committee to the NSA Con- gress. David Grupe, '57E, was nomi- nated…

… appoint- ments are invitational and the students have no vote. Treasurer Lew Engman, '57, was named to the Loan Committee. Robert Anderson, '57, has been appointed editor of the next edi- tion of the "M…

… was to establish a bi-partite state in Palestine, run by both Arabs and Jews. . Prof. Slosson indicated the UN should "maintain real force in that part of the world," and re- main until a satisfactory…

… extreme economic difficulties of the Arab states and mistreatment they have received at the hands of. imperialist countries. Although impressed in a visit to Tel Aviv in the 1930's by the vast economic…

… improvements the Jew had wrought, Prof. Hopkins had been disturbed when he no- ticed the street signs were in He- brew. "All communication be- tween Jews and Arabs was cut off. "What Arabs needed - doctors…

… plane- crash near Greenville, Miss. An instructor and a student in! the second plane were injured. While he was at the University, McMillin belonged to the Air Force ROTC unit and was a member of Alpha…

May 10, 1951 (vol. 61, iss. 152) • Page Image 4

… humble request of the samra claims that Israel antagon- editor. We feel that the comic ized the Arabs by performing their strip, "Barnaby," contained on this improvements in front of Arab page is an insult…

… to the consider- eyes. He claims that it would be able intelligence of the students of more advantageous for Israel to the University. Therefore, we pro- consolidate their position and re- pose as a…

… replacement, that most frain from antagonizing the Arabs. subtle and witty of characters- His logic is wrong because Israel "Pogo"-a 'possum and a gentle- has been doing exactly that. They man. are…

… refraining from antagonistic lightful commentary on the ways acts by sharing their benefits with of man and beast, to peruse over the Arabs. My conclusion to this our morning coffee. problem is to have the…

Arab League How can we respect the opinions take advice from Israel and co- of those astute gentlemen of the operate with them in order to bet- press, the Daily critics, when they ter their living…

… conditions. Israel ignore the most wretched specimen has no time to waste in waiting for of the arts in their very back yard the Arab nations to equal, them in -"Barnaby"? Reform, like charity, progress…

…. However, I believe Israel should begin at home. Give us a will more than be helpful in show- comic strip worthy of this great ing the Arab nations how to create university, and we will willingly en- a good…

… combat soldier by July, 1951, and to 1.13 by July, 1952 . . . . Congressmen, who have been stalling Indian famine relief, please note: Robert Gemmill, A G.I. student from Cambridge, Mass., has donated his…

… available. On the other side of Israel's border, the Arab leaders look on with resentment. Perhaps they are afraid of a duplication by their own people of Israeli pro- jects. To offset this, the Arab lead…

….m., Angell Hall. Mr. Edward M. Lewis will give a short illustrated talk in room 3017 on "Close-ups of the Planets" Fol- lowing the talk the Angell Hall Student Observatory, fifth foor, will be open for…

October 10, 1951 (vol. 62, iss. 14) • Page Image 4

… FOUr, THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1951 _ ---- - NSA & Student Legislature Suez Seizure THE SITUATION in Egypt could lead to wai. Observation Post TONIGHT STUDENT LEGISLATURE…

… will be asked to renew for another year their membership in the National Student Association. Unfortunately, it appears that this approval will be granted with little ques- tion. There are two reasons…

… well for both groups to remember that British troops in Egypt will not be passed off simply for what they are. To Arabs throughout Islam those troops will represent the West attacking the Arab World, the…

October 10, 1951 (vol. 62, iss. 14) • Page Image 5

Student Religious Association and members of the Arab Club, will feature Arab food, music and dis- cussions of the culture of Arab lands. Mohammed Hassan, president of the Arab Club, will lead the dis…

… the Student Legislature, Foot Bowl Set F ' '' ' Q For 'ickoff' The kickoff for "Kickoff" will take place at noon today on the diag in front of the library with an unusual kind of football game…

… an easy time in the final pull, and due to the mix-up, won the 1949 tug. * * * AT A MEETING of the Student Legislature in December, 1949, a proposal was passed revising the Tug Week program. It was…

students. I I Metal Experts Tour Country- Visit University The University College of En- gineering was host yesterday to 44 foreign metal scientists from Mar- shall Plan nations on an educa- tional tour of…

…- cussion Saturday night. Other members of the club will prepare the Sunday meal. A meditation h o u r, during which students may think about the problems discussed or find out more about faiths other than…

… participants in the Student Religious Associa- tion's weekly Saturday noon lunch. The lunch and discussion group meets at Lane Hall every Satur- day at 12:15 p.m. and on football weekends the discussion ends in…

… time for students to attend ,.the game. Rev. Frank J. McPhillips, Dr. Douglas Williams, Leonard Wilcox, '52. and Ann Cotton, '52, will be among the speakers scheduled for the luncheons. Reservation…

… Pruit. The Lane Hall Coffee Hour, from 4:30 to 6 p.m. Friday will be in honor of foreign students this week, according to Doris E. Reed, protestant religious counselor for international students. "This…

… Coffee Hour, a special event at the beginning of each se- mester, affords an opportunity for both the newly-arrived students from other lands and those who returned to campus from previous semesters to…

… become acquainted with the student directorssand the members of the protestant student groups at the University," she said, About 45,000 persons are ex- pected to attend. Both the Detroit meetings and the…

August 10, 1952 (vol. 62, iss. 205) • Page Image 2

… Press News Analyst THE UNITED STATES idea of a Middle East command has run on the rocks of Arab opposition, the Arab states have or- ganized a group of their own and the Al- lies are conside'ring another…

…. It may not be one of the world's most pressing situations, but it is one of the messiest. One reason the Arabs would have nothing to do with the original Allied plan is the po- sition of Israel. They…

… reverse of the coin, the UiS. fears to arm the Arabs lest they attack Is- rael. That is going to be the greatest block which the New Egyptian Government and the New Arab Collective Security group will have…

… defense flounder amid the distrust between Arab, Jew and Anglo-Saxon, of Iran as a base for a communist thrust at Suez, by-passing Turkey, the only real power in the whole area. MATTER OF FACT By JOSEPH…

… departments wishing to recommend tentative August gradu- ates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and the School of Education for departmental honors should recommend such students in a…

… Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public Health: Students are advised not to request grades of I or X in August. When such grades are absolutely imperative,the work must be made up in…

… time to allow your instructor to report the make-up grade not later than 11 a.m., August 21. Grades received after that time may defer the student's graduation until a later date. Edward G. Groesbeck…

… Phonemic Distribu- tion: Closed circuit broadcasts of origi- nal student scripts. 3:00 p.m., 231- An- gell Hall. Modern Views of Man and Society. "Modern Viewvs of Man and Society-A Summary." Maurice…

… activities in the East Conference Room of the Rack- ham Building on Tuesday the 12th of August, at 8:00 p.m. Graduate students in Sociology and staff members of the Sociology Department are invited to at- tend…

….m. Chair- man, K. Litzenberg. Concerts Student Recital: Grace Miller, pianist, will be heard at 8:30 Monday evening, August 11, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, presenting a program in lieu of a thesis for the…

March 10, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 107) • Page Image 1

… support of the present fall rushing setup. Majority Report Presented A four-member Panhel-Assembly gushing study committee Wed- nesday night presented to Student Government Council a majority report calling…

… practices governing the conduc of undergraduate courses." Concerning class attendance th booklet reminds teachers tha "students are expected to atten classes regularly." 'Reasonably Accurate' Records The…

… should be effectively proctored; in no cas should the room be left unattend ed. (In the opinion of the Board whenever feasible, there would b two proctors for every 25 to 5 students, with a proctor added…

… fo each additional 50 students.) ,Alternate Seats 2) When space permits student should be asked to sit in alternat seats. 3) .e. the instructor should re quire that all books, notebooks extra bluebooks…

… and papers of any kind be left in the front of th room. 4) The instructor should an nounce at the beginning of th examination that students ar expected to remain in the room until they are ready to turn…

… to Jordan CAIRO--Syrian Premier Said Ghazzi flew from the conference. of Arab chiefs of state to Amman in Jordan. There the Syrian sought to persuade young King Hussein to accept an Arab subsidy to…

… replace the $30,000,000 a year Britian has been paying to support the Arab Legion. Court Requested To Return Lucy BIRMINGHAM () - Federal District Court was asked again yesterday to return Autherine Lucy…

December 10, 1958 (vol. 69, iss. 69) • Page Image 2

… here unenforceable Speaker: Dr. W. F. Puchwein (Univ. of yesterday, the Democrats said, Graz), 'Austrian Christmas Customs.""the eocrare sid Christm of being told that the art of get- Graduate student

… include assurances that this mathematics is essential for any Russian student, whereas in the United States students can grad- uate from high school without solid geometry or trigonometry, The Russians…

… University of Washington re- cently denied the fact that the house practices discrimination by refusing to hire a Nigerian student as their house boy. She said the charge was a result of misunder- standing and…

… lack of communica- tion. The problem was dissolved when. Delta Gamma hired the Ni- gerian student, the president not- ed. SYRACUSE, N. Y. - The chair- man of Joint Student Legislature committee on local…

… and national affairs at Syracuse University said that the Student Government will never accept the confiscation of student's registration and li- cense plates as a possible penalty for parking offenses…

…. * * * ITHACA, N. Y. -- A strong cen- tral student government, with the power of review over groups such as the IFC, Cornell Panhellenic and Women's Student Govern- ment Association, is being pro- posed by the…

… Committee on Re- organization of Student Govern- ment at Cornell University. The Student Government Or- ganization will have, according to the reorganization group's pro- posed delegation of powers, au…

…- thority to delegate jurisdiction to student groups and to review their decisions. CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-In an oyer- whelming majority vote last Mon- day ,the Men's Independent As- sociation of the University of…

… Il- linois approved the Student Sen- ate anti-discrimination bill. The Student Senate bill would amend the Code on Student Af- fairs to withhold approval fron new student organizations which limit…

… membership on the basis of race, religion or national origin unless approved by the Senate. * * , MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. -- The coordinator of student religious activities at the University of Min- nesota…

March 10, 1959 (vol. 69, iss. 113) • Page Image 4

…The Good Earth Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "When Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATION$ Trth Will va STUDENT

…." United Press International, seeking student and But nothing like variety . .. since previous faculty reaction to the article, found one major raids have stemmed from pep rallies, demon- theme running…

… attend: that this whole show was a big propaganda effort of the Arab countries. They admitted it privately and one of the delegates even told me, rather naively: "I would have been a fool not to use such…

… an opportunity to make oropaganda." I can understand very well why Arab peoples can be so emotional when Algeria is con- cerned; some Frenchmen are. But this is the best way toprevent any possibility…

…. Pinay's opin- ion!) but on the contrary because today, independent or not, Algeria simply cannot live without French aid. The other Arab states seem to ignore entirely the Algerian situ- ation; they are…

… letter I feel that I am expressing the opin- ions of many other students on this campus - concerning the "wonderful" institution named Health Service. Having had the need for medical treatment sev- eral…

… term pro-Nasser refers to Arab Nationalism of the international type the Cairo leader supports. Yet there is Arab nationalism throughout the Middle East which is not pro-Nasser. The Baghdad government…

… appears to be more -nationalist than communist, yet in com- petition with Nasser for Arab leadership in the traditional Iraqi fashion. International Communism, which for a time against western interests…

November 10, 1955 (vol. 66, iss. 40) • Page Image 4

…T I .p Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH…

… humiliating stage of a pious wish. The actual intigration loss. is a long-term project. Of course, a ticket sales campaign cannot It depends entirely on the will of a people, be intended for the students

… has been A sale of 75,000 admissions-enough for a carried out, it has been relatively successful, new record-is certainly possible. Indiana However, not a large majority of Negro students drew 85…

…,938 here in 1947. All that's needed now are involved in the programs. It still remains a Is some student spirit to promote what should future problem. be a popular item. -DICK CRAMER -5iii-s+ i[TI K ~)I t s…

… disturbed even elementary students in music ap- preciation. -David Kessel, Grad. London Orchestra Enthralls LAST night Hill Auditorium's audience witnessed that pe- culiar gender of performance that occurs…

…, but still change. Students at the University of Mississippi had recently joined in to finance a memorial schol- arship in the memory of "Blind Jim Ivy" a long-time Negro football fan of Ole Miss teams…

… which they are to bq introduced ... All students planning to meet the Directed Teaching requirement for the Secondary School Teaching certifioate' during the Spring Semester 1956, must file their…

…, jealous of their independ- ence and eager to make Egypt the leader of the Arab world if not the whole world of Islam. THIS GOVERNMENT showed great promise. Its leaders were reat promise. Its leaders were…

… nationalistic coun- try. The defeat of the Arab world at the hands of Israel still smarted. The chance to join the Sudan to Egypt in a lasting union that might guarantee Egypt's' interests in the Nile waters for…

December 10, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 68) • Page Image 4

…a I Strength Enough If Pulled Together 54y m hign aily Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MAI3HMAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS…

STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MIcH. * Phone NO 2-3241 en Opinions Are Free uth Will Preail" ' ' " AT THE CAMPUS: 'The Phantom Horse' Of fThe Trc THE ANN ARBOR PREMIERE of "The Phantom Horse" at…

… their peak during dress rehearsals, as most any speech department student can tell you. The months of stag- ing, memorizing and emoting to an empty little room are just preparation for getting up on that…

… "Rashomon" had stuck more closely to the standards of their former work. -Jean Willoughby On The Left THE BITTER feuds and ruthless rivalries among the Arabs down to the time of the Turkish conquest form a…

… background for the revived struggles once the Arabs were freed from the Turkish yoke. Nationalism awoke the sleepers more than a century ago, but it is a nationalism without unity or singleness of purpose. Now…

… ancient Syria has split the Arab camp wide open by throwing its alle- giance to Soviet Russia. The old Arabic name for Syria was Esh Sham, meaning "the land on the left." It was the land on the left for the…

Arabs coming up from the desert to the south. Now Syria is "the land on the Left," in the modern sense. And recalling the recent syn- thetic war scare one might make something of that "Sham" also. --New…

… and fast adventure series, filmed in semi-documentary style, and filled with names and places familiar to all students of the home-grown school of robbery and murder. The beginning is of the tradi…

… Sunday Daly due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1957 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 68 General Notices President and Mrs. Hatcher win hold open house for students at-their home Wed., Dec. 11 from 4:00 to 6…

… Christmas will be expected to work the day before New Years Day. Chicago Area Students are invited to the luncheon meeting of the University of Michigan Club of Chicago on Dec. 30 at 12:00 noon at Henrici…

January 10, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 83) • Page Image 4

…1 "Well, It's Sort Of New With Us" I Ghe arhian 4Bad Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS…

STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phowe NO 2-3241 "When Opinions Are Free Trutb Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the…

… all-star games in which college football Sports Editor players can participate. Three are the over- lapping "North-South" games - Blue-Gray, Aid to Refugee Students North-South, and Senior Bowl. Groups…

… and gratifying. The students, two of whom are of the Jew- ALL-STAR bowl games are fine in themselves, ish faith and one Catholic, applied for scholar- but one has to wonder whether the proper ships to…

students. see potential material in game action when Benefits from these charitable offers will most of the players are already ranked high in accrue not only to the students but also to the talent standings…

… this example when other refu- pation in any post-season game. gee students have the opportunity to come to As some Eastern students have complained, the University.. this seems to be restriction of the…

… stands to reason that Israel will iumn at the chanc- if in fact gotiating with the unaligned Arab countries. It is in.Egypt and Sy- ria primarily; to some degree in Iraq, that the SovietUnion is extending…

… address. For he has put the whole project in such a way that it will be very diffi- cult for any Arab country to ac- The Daily Official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University of, Michigan…

….m. for an appointment. Student Accounts: Your attention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting on Feb. 28, 1936: Students shall pay all ac- counts due the University not…

… later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation; how- ever, student loans not yet due are exempt. Any…

February 10, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 92) • Page Image 4

…"You Got Elected, Didn't You?" Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG…

… Vfst u s . iii----- I Politicians N SIX WEEKS students will elect representa- tives to the Board in Control of Intercollegi- ate Athletics. If the usual pattern is followed, several big-name varsity…

… athletes will vie for" the student posts where two football players now sit. There are compelling reasons for not per- mitting varsity athletes to run for the Board. As long as varsity athletes are eligible…

… to serve on the Board they will be elected, because their names are so well-known. Constantly in the public eye, athletes have a vote-getting power no other student can match. And be- cause the chances…

March 10, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 116) • Page Image 1

… the ink was hardly dry on his signature on the new Middle East resolution when Israeli Am- .CAIRO, Egypt ()-President Gamal Nasser told Palestinian students from Gaza yesterday Arab nationalism had…

…, on Mat, in Gym -4', Mississippi State Board Fires Otis Alcorn's Striking Students Expelled By The Associates Press JACKSON, Miss. - An all-white Mississippi State College Board yesterday expelled…

… the striking stu- * dents at all-Negro Alcorn A&M~ College and fired J. R. Otis as president. The Board met in emergency session following reports that all of the approximately 585 students of Alcorn…

…, Miss., A&M College left the campus Friday after failing tc get the resignation of Prof. Glen- non King of the history depart- ment. Approximately 95 students were reported to have returned to classes…

… immediately." Prof. J. D. Boyd, ' previously named to succeed Otis, was put in charge. All students who "defied" the board's order to return to classes were expelled. The announcement made no reference to King…

…, whose articles were blamed by the students for the walkout. King dealt with segregation in his articles and criticized the Na- tional Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People for having done…

… nothing locally for Southern Negroes. Attacked NAACP The students accused King of getting the college into a contro- versial situation by writing a series of articles in which he attacked the NAACP, and…

…" by his discharge as head of the 86-year-old land-grant col- lege. He had recommended King's dismissal on grounds similar to the students' complaints - that King had involved the college in contro…

…- versial issues. Otis said 489 of the 561 students had signed "final withdrawal" slips but a number had asked to retract that action. Otis told reporters an undeter- mined number of students, possibly as…

… liberated the Gaza Strip and "will help us win back all of Palestine." Nasser spoke to a thousand students who assembled at the presidential palace to hail the president as the liberator of Gaza and to demand…

February 10, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 92) • Page Image 1

… discussed at a Student Govern- ment Council Forum at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Union Ballroom. Former Joint Judiciary Council Chairman Mike McNerney, '57L, will moderate the discussion. Prof. Marcus L. Plant…

…'s history-24,387 -was announced last night by Edward G. Groesbeck, director of the Office of Registration and Records. This compares with a final fig- ure of 23,319 credit students in the Spring of 1956. 21…

…,000 at AA The expected final enrollment figure will include approximately 21,200 students receiving resi- dence credit in Ann Arbor, 187 at the University's Flint Branch, and 3,000 taking credit courses in…

… University centers throughout the state. Last Spring's final figure show- ed 20,101 residence credit students, and 3,218 in the Michigan com- munities in which the University maintainshinstructional centers…

…- istered in September.- Small Res ponse T'o SGC Pro grain Student Government Council has found little response to its speakers' program among campus housing units. Less than one fourth of campus housing…

… to second place. In third position is Purdue, who was knocked off by Iowa. Then come 'U.S. Seeking S , O g pi Latement Intentions Won't Break Cease-Fire Arabs Say Israel Still Demands Egyptian…

…. Arab-Asian delegates at the UN Assembly who disclosed the American move said they were not certain the Egyptian President would make any statement but they were absolutely certain he would not break the…

…- ade Israeli shipping at the Sharm el Sheikh entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba and that Arab commandos no longer can spring from the Gaza Strip into Israel in destruc- tive raids. Gaza, Aqaba Left The Gaza…

January 10, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 73) • Page Image 1

… was a medical student. Johnson is listed in the city di- rectory as a doctor for the Na- tional Research Council, but Uni- versity officials .were unable to find any record of employment or to identify…

… Unknown The neighbor told police Johnson had originally been a chemistry student but had switched to medi- cine. He said he believed Johnson' had been expelled from the Uni- versity medical school for…

… Baghdad Pact. American and official sources said the 14,000-man Arab Legion, Jordan's crack army, was in firm control and the country calm after a weekend of rioting and demon- strations. Only minor…

… hold a new gen- eral election in four months, re- signed Saturday. El Rifai also promised not to lead the country into any pacts, to restore order and to uphold the Arab's place in Palestine. In his…

… instructions to the new premier, 21-year-old King Hussein also told him to safeguard good relations with Arab states and all friendly nations, build up defense forces to' protect the country's borders and clean…

… specialists. University Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis will speak on the possible study of international students and their Withdraws Name, place in the community. From Primarv The…

… TOPS: Music Students Win T11 By RENE GNAM A - medley of show tunes won' first place among Ann Arbor talent at last night's television auditions, held in the Grand Ballroom of the Michigan Union…

November 10, 1955 (vol. 66, iss. 40) • Page Image 1

… withdraw within three Enkemann said he could not tell tive war before her Arab neigh-' months. whether the men were placing bors grow too strong. Reduction of Armed Forces faith in possibility of a further…

… yesterday's meeting of Student Government Council's driving ban study committee. Basically, any student over 21 years old but not in academic dif- ficulties would be allowed to oper- ate an automobile in Ann…

… Permission Student not 21 would be able to operate cars only on permission of the Office of Student Affairs. Present driving ban rules limit student operation of cars to two general groups: those over 2$ years…

… en- forcement penalties. Violation of all but one driving rule would be considered "grounds to send the student home for one full semester." SGC Report Due Nov. 22 - . - 1-A - -- ; 2. Reduction of the…

… founding of the UN 10 years ago. The United States, among 13 caused many students to look upward yesterday. It was not a student sitting on top of the main University Flag Pole (in front of the Library) but…

… a painter giving the pole its yearly coat of paint. SGC Hears OSU Rally Proposals By GAIL GOLDSTEIN Plans for entertainment follow- ing the Ohio State pep rally were heard at Student Government…

… the '55-'56 fiscal year excess funds of the Council should be used to absorb Student Book Exchange deficits. A Cinema Guild report was ac- cepted by the Council with recom- mendation that the summer…

… oper-' ation of the Guild be considered in the future. in their appointment of the study group, which consists of, prominent city officials and busi- nessmen as well as students, fac- ulty and…

… proposition passed by the committee was that the Regent's By-law, Sec. 8.05. be changed so that "No students while in atten- dance at the University may op- erate motor vehicles except under regulations set…

… down by the Office of Student Affairs." Present By-Law Explained Present By-law regulation- states: "No student while in at- tendance at the University shall operate any motor vehicle. In ex- ceptional…

April 10, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 125) • Page Image 1

… open to the pub- lic without charge. Soon - Saarinen Appointed Arcshitect 2,000 Students will Be Housed By LEE MARKS The University'sfirst coed dor- Itory, a $9,000,000 structure, will be completed on…

… North Campus within two or three years accord- ing to Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis. The Vice-President said it was likely construction would start within the year, much sooner than…

… be done by,a student committee of 10 men and eight women. The coin- mittee will work with Saarinen. . Lewis pointed out this is the first time a large coed studen% committee has assisted with pre…

… liminary planning of housing. Student To Help Plan He also said there would be a student representative on the com- mittee of University administra- tors and housing personnel that will plan specific details…

…, Meridith Tigel, '56Ed., Elinor Plimack, Anne Cohn, Alice Basford, '56, Elaine Nash,, '58, Evelyn Gabai, '58, and Arlene De Cook, '58. Two Students Die During Vacation Two University students lost their lives…

… Press J1USALEM-Israel charged today that roving Arab suicide squads under Egyptian army orders inflicted a third straight- "night of terror" on Israeli settlers yesterday. Border clashes between Israeli…

… opening later in the day of the top-level United Nations effort to arrange a long-range peace between Arabs and Israelis. The United States moved again yesterday to back Hammarskjold's efforts. In Augusta…

… University students whiled away the all-too-short days of spring vacation, the City of Ann Arbor saw some noteworthy changes. In the annual election, Republi- can incumbents Wendell B. For- sythe and Russell J…

April 10, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 125) • Page Image 4

…Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2…

… instructor may arrange with the student for an alternate time, with notice to the scheduling committee. Evening Schedule for Degree Candidates AI WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Do-Little CongressPredicted"~ By…

… Regular Mon. Exam June 11 Time 9-12 A.M. Mon. Special June 4 Period 710 P.M. Each student should Mon. Tues. June 11 June 12 2-5 P.M. 9-12 A.M. Tues. Wed. June 5 June 6 7-10 P.M. 4-10 P.M. receive…

… between France and the Algerian Arabs, in the Palestine dilem- ma between Israel and the Arabs, in the Bagh- dad dilemma between Iraq and Egypt, in the Editorial Staff DAVE BAAD, Managing Editor MURRY…

… knowledge at all. Survey courses are fine in that they give the student some idea as to how broad and vast different fields are. However, they give a student con- versant and spurious phrases in- stead of…

…-5 Sociology 1 Group A, 60 Saturday, June 9 9-12 Sociology 1 Group B Monday, June 11 9-12 Spanish 1, 2, 22, 31, 32 Monday, June 11 2-5 *This Group B exam. is open only to students having a *conflict with the…

December 10, 1953 (vol. 64, iss. 66) • Page Image 4

… Upsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Chi Sigma Delta Tau Tau Kappa Epsilon Triangle Fraternity Trigon Zeta Beta Tau December 13, 1954 Arab Students Club Delta Theta Phi Geddes House Helen Newberry Phi Delta…

… an ir- refutable break between the French and the Germans. (Copyright, 1953, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) Sorry, No Lines WITH THE permanent conversion of the dormitories to hold more students, the…

… discouraging task to reach a party in one of the hill dormitories during the peak hours. Students wishing to call out must often wait twenty min- utes for the operator to answer. On fin- ally obtaining one. the…

student is often greeted with, "sorry, all our outside lines are busy," and a quick click of the re- ceiver. If she still has the desire to make her call, she must again wait a long period for an operator…

… size families. Even most rural phones are not so overburdened. If the dormitories have been converted to house more students, facilities should be in- creased accordingly. Two or three more ex- tensions…

… Ccomplaint of the foreign students. CADEMIC Freedom Week is ov- The Daily has previously publish- er. Some 600 students parti-. edeioilatce n etr cipated in the meetings and many ed editori ubearticl remind…

…Dettr more read, heard and discussed the International Student Organ- questions raised in these meetings. Kahn, a resolution was passed by But this is only a beginning. ization (the body representing the Since…

… what happens to academic foreign students) not in the dis- freedom affects us all, it is im- tant past, asking Dr. Gale to re- portant that all of us at least sign on a certain issue. Moreover, have a…

…. What out of the thousands of foreign are the facts about the cases? students that have gone through What will be our reaction to this this University. Dr. Kahn could committee? only have gathered a…

… smattering The Academic Freedom Sub- of the problems concerning these Commission can continue to help students. This could hardly give bring the various viewpoints to him a comprehensive perspective the…

January 10, 1953 (vol. 63, iss. 77) • Page Image 1

… organizations in Ann Arbor and at the University. The series will continue Tuesday.) By ZANDER HOLLANDER Daily Feature Editor Domination by the Labor Youth League faces two prominent University student groups…

…: close to 100 interested students jammed the March '9 meeting, dozens paying membership dues and passing the amendment by a slim margin. Although since then the club has taken a liberal course, its active…

… with more and more of her friends and the other kids have stopped coming." Miss Schectman's "friends" are expected to put her in early next n THE YOUNG Progressives, warned last month by the Student

… are YP's too, along with the ubiquitous Ed Shaffer and seven of the ever- circulating personnel from the Society for Peaceful Alternatives. Unlike most student groups the Young Progressives make use of…

… non-student members, apparently to comply with the 30- member minimum required for SAC approval. The non-student proviso was originally inserted in the University regulations governing student

… organization membership to accommo- date the non-student wives of veteran students. Since the rule was not nade specific on this score, University officials feel that the YP has violated its spirit if not its…

… letter. One such non-student member is Omar Kidwell, LYL organizer from Jackson. Kidwell's efforts to establish a League unit at Jackson Junior College fell through when government agents infiltrated the…

May 10, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 158) • Page Image 9

…- AMERICAN SOCIETY OF TOOL ENGINEERS - James M. Hardy, '58E ANT H R O POLOGY CLUB - Frank Livingstone, Grad. ARAB CLUB-Ibrahim A. Hazi- mah, Grad. BACTERIOLOGY CLUB - Jo- seph H. Kite, Grad. BAHA'I STUDENT

… eal Here Today ,J Congratulations Each year the day of the Honors Convocation is justly dedicated to students who have achieved a supe- rior academic rating. In Hill Auditorium this morning hundreds…

… honorary societies. To these people, and to the ones who serve without public recognitiorn, we extend our congratulations. Outstanding Students Win 'U' Awards Scholastic Ability Determines Choices Tangible…

… as well as intangible rewards often come to students who have distinguished themselves academically. Alumni and friends of the Uni- veresity, wishing to recognize the values of scholarship annually add…

student of a nationally prominent figure. Paul Hindemith, and a 1958 winner Following the organ postlude, the of a Carnegie Grant for special audience files out to catch the study on the organ of the 17th…

…- at the end of this academic year. ,nod . Rsi,', wilrpe coni-th d-iraf hnri d nnti- SGC Ends Second Year, Establishes NewStudies Student Government Council enters its third year of existence with the…

… April 17th meeting are the most recent developments in a busy year. Following is a list of the mem- bers of Student Government Council for the year 1956-57: Elected Members William Adams, Grad. Joe…

…, Roger Seward, Francis Sowersby Shak-I Engineering deserving students living in Michi- Charles Homeister, Jack Hovingh, lee, Charles Richard Sharp, Peter Richard Russell Coller gan. Judith Ann Huber…

… Smith, Janet Elaine Damn Glen Fitzgd ase enma, Gloria Dean Johnson, Harold Snow, Karen Venessa Snyder, Lee Raymond Ivan Knight average. Gerald Louis Zyskowski Following is a list of students John Johnson…

… Engman, Marguerite Lee Nitz, Ronald Paul Nordgren, play in those sports has not been FORMED STUDENT GUILD - Ann Erickson, Delores Levyonie John Thomas Ohrenberger, Janet completed, Larry W. Wiedmayer, '57E…

March 10, 1959 (vol. 69, iss. 113) • Page Image 1

… pushed out of the window. In any case, thepolice were waiting for him }Y oun when he arrved.R e "First West Quad students were gin inasoblbtleVm engaging in a snowball battle ,~" ' " among themselves. Then…

…- "This revolution has now spread ington. He talked in Moscow last all over Iraq," he declared, and week with Soviet Premier Nikita Arab tribesmen are on the move Khrushchev. to help rebel troops afield. In…

… highlighted the is- "The British are definitely not sue of Communism versus Arab in favor of disengagement as that nationalism of UAR President term is used in some quarters to Gamal Abdel Nasser's brand with…

…- mean a complete withdrawal of in Iraq, an oil-rich nation that forces," he said. once was the staunchest Arab sup- . The French spokesman said: porter of the West in world af- "This aspect of the problem…

August 10, 1956 (vol. 67, iss. 33) • Page Image 1

… weeks to heat up melters that have cooled since the strike and get them back in full production. Student Housing Shortage Seen Lewis Doubts Serious Problem, Town Resources Not Exhausted By LEE MARKS Daly…

… Managing Editor Housing in Ann Arbor will definitely be tight this fall according to Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis. But the Vice-President said he doubted there would be a serious…

… shortage and predicted the community would be able to house all University students. As of the first of the week all applications from transfer women have been cut off because of lack of housing. There is no…

… with temporary "pools" of about 100 for both men and women. Vice-President Lewis noted that the temporary "pools" are not unusual. 22,300 to Register An estimated 22,300 students will register this fall…

…. Last semes- ter with only 20,654 students, more than 1600 less, there was a critical shortage. Of the 1600 more, 300 will -be housed in the Northwood Apart- ments for married students. Addi- tional…

… University will again issue an ap- peal to local residents to house students, Resources Not Exhausted He said he did not think the resources of the community had been exhausted and that although there would be…

… some initial tur- moil; students would find housing. The number of students who will be unable to attend the University because of housing could not be estimated at this time, Vice-Presi- dent Lewis said…

… early as last June warning letters were sent to prospective students, notifying them of the housing conditions.' Most recent letter, sent this week, "definitely discourages" un- dergraduate women from…

… planning to enroll this fall. Despite administration claims that the community will be able to absorb the overflow, students looking for apartments have re- ported considerable difficulty. Stassen Sees Even…

… members of the Co'mmunist bloc, several neutral states such as Finland, Austria and Burma, and every Arab state from Morocco to Iraq. She also suggested that the con- ference date be postponed from next…

May 10, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 151) • Page Image 4

…clr1r c1igwn Ball Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR…

… ever increasing number of the 6,314 students in the Literary College are beginning to question the practicality of a liberal education, the con- ference is necessary. Its value, however, will depend on…

… whether or not its participants, especially the well- versed panel, can reconcile the idealistic ad- vantages of a liberal education with the practi- cal situation a student confronts on leaving school…

… standpoint. NO WONDER it is difficult for so many liberal education students to understand why they are receiving something more than the typical product of one of the "practical" curriculums. Tonight's panel…

… wrong into the students, at the expense of teaching the three R's. IN EFFECT, the schools seem to be taking over the practices that are ordinarily con- sidered to be the right of the child's parents and…

July 10, 1959 (vol. 69, iss. 13) • Page Image 2

….1 Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSIrY OF MICHIGAN 2L~ i Ihen Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Trntb Will Prevail…

…" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints…

…-the-spot reaction of students' the razing of the ROTC Rifle Range which s elegantly smashed between the West En- aeering Building and the Undergraduate Li- ary. First the Romance Languages Building, en the…

… employment for the eyer-expanding population. Above all, there must be money in the Israeli bank in case of attack by the Arab nations. If Premier Ben-Gurion's action was "ma- terialistic," such materialism…

…." Student Observatory, fifth floor, Angell Hall, open for inspection and telescop- ic observations of the Moon, Venus, and Jupiter. Children welcomed, but must be accompanied by adults. Lectures conference…

… Hall, Aud. C. Concerts Brandenburg Concertos: The Six Brandenburg Concertos by Johann Se- bastian; Bach, Rackham Lecture Hall, Sun., July 12, at 3:00 and 8:30 p.m. Student Recital: Willis Patterson, bass…

…, Wed., July 10, 8:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angeli Hall. Student Recital: Jerrold Lawless, clarinetist, July 11, 8:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall, in partial fulfillment: of the requirements for the degree Master…

… of Music. Student Recital Postponed: The pi- ano recital by Laurie Lindemulder, ori- ginally announced for Fri., July 10. has been postponed until Sunday, July 26, at 4:15 p.m., in Aud. A; Angell Hall…

November 10, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 47) • Page Image 1

… ride herd on the proposed new agency, and handle science legislation. The founding of a new Academy of Science, patterned after the military academies, to train gifted students in advanced science…

… world. Arts Magazine Ready for Sale, The autumn issue of Generation, the student inter-arts magazine, will be on sale Wednesday and Thursday, according to David New- man, '58, magazine editor. The…

… in Michigan on a so-called per stu- dent basis without taking into ac- count the special 'needs and facili- ties of such institutions whose per student costs are substantially higher." "We dare not be…

…-have sent pleas to President Gammal Nasser of Egypt to stop what they called a vicious campaign against young Hussein. The Egyptians seemed to be making an outright appeal to the Jordanian Arabs to consider…

… Featuri Concert Tod The Cleveland Orchesti present the fourth concert Choral Union Series at 8:3 today in Hill Auditorium. The orchestra will play Reds P DURING CAMPAIGN:ti SGC Hopefuls Review Student

… Representation I (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of a series of articles de- scribing comments of Student Gov- ernment Council candidates at the pre-election open houses.) By RICHARD TAUB The composition and…

… size of Student Government Council has Administrative Wing should be added to the Council. At Chi Ome- ga sorority, he said that such ac- tion would decrease the represent- ativeness of the Council…

… before and after class. Mort Wise, '59, favors expand- ing the Council. "The number of students . . . should be increased, but enough so that the represen- tation would be more equalized." He does not want…

… it to reach the and that members writing edi- torials which could be distributed to the students. That way, the communications would be im- proved. Agrees on Expansion Dan Belin, '59, also said the…

December 10, 1955 (vol. 66, iss. 62) • Page Image 2

…Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2…

… a conflict, the conflict is resolved by the class which conflicts with the regular schedule. Each student should receive notification from his instruc- tor as to the time and place of his examination…

… charges and counter-charges circulating throughout the political world these days, the campus polititcal clubs are rather conspicuous in their silence. Except for the noisy Arab-Israeli debate sponsored…

… campus political group, the Student League for Industrial Democracy, has been completely disbanded mainly on the grounds- that all they can do is sit around and discuss ideas that probably won't be adopted…

…-. ism. The college student is taught to accept party conflicts and hatreds as well as the rules of political expediency as part of the game. He learns to rationalize various corrupt practices as part of…

… an "ends justify the means" philos- ophy. And somewhere along the line the student is convinced that the common belief of "telling the people what they want to hear" is in all cases the wisest…

August 10, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 34) • Page Image 1

… is "not the kind that would get into trouble, but he might if he goes to Red China." Schwartz was an all-'A' student at Utica High School and was a straight 'B' student at the Uni- versity. He received…

… re- frained from action that might' result in the death of many Arabs. Taleb ben Ali, vigorous leader of the rebel forces for his brother Ghalebben Ali, Imam of Oman, is reported dug in at Firq with…

November 10, 1956 (vol. 67, iss. 46) • Page Image 1

… before, appar- ently were being held up by Soviet censorship. For the second consecutive night the Israeli army reported a series of Arab commando raids. Six Is- raelis were wounded in six differ- ent…

… only win camp againstf -Daily-David Arnold BONFIRE HIGHLIGHTS RALLY-Shivering students enthusiastically gathered around a huge bon- fire in an effort to protect themselves from icy Ann Arbor blasts. The…

… Marching Band and the cheer- leaders participated in last night's Michigan-Illini Pep Rally, which included a tribute to the graduating football players. The feared, panty raid by overzealous students was…

… told on a visit the official view is that student marriages "end with undesirable results" World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The State Department yesterday announced1 successful…

…-Egypt, Israel, Jor- dan and Syria. EAST LANSING - The State Board of Agriculture, governing body of Michigan State University, approved the establishment of an Honors College for students of superior scholastic…

… provide special opportunities for students who show promise of high achieve- ment in all fields. $REYKJAVIK, Iceland - Ice- land's Independent party called on the government to reconsider its international…

… des- cended on Ann Arbor with their glee club, their 190-piece march-. ing band, innumerable students, and, of course, their football team. Orange and blue rooters were quartered last night in South…

December 10, 1959 (vol. 70, iss. 65) • Page Image 3

… approved a 24-nation resolution aimed at keeping the Hungarian question. alive at the United Nations. The 10 Communist nations-the Soviet bloc and Yugoslavia-voted no. The abstentions included all the Arab

…... and they'll like your business too. Matter of fact, Greene's has a free Travel Case for home-going students just to prove how much they like your pre-Christmas business. If you'd like vmir ~ct~1Pan-d t…

July 10, 1959 (vol. 69, iss. 13) • Page Image 1

… Summer Students -David Giltrow OPEN AIR--Summer Session students were received by University President Harlan Hatcher and Mrs, Hatcher (insert) at their home last night. Guests heard evening music from…

… or $5 mediating the Arab-Israeli con- million, of the capital outlay ap- flict, said Wilfred Burglund, presi- propriation.) dent of the club, advised him the Common Victory club's policy excludes both…

April 10, 1959 (vol. 69, iss. 132) • Page Image 1

… in Asia, Islam is a strong political. force, Prof. Grassmuck continued. He spoke at a meeting of the Muslim Students Association. Unfortunately, he noted, there is no single Islamic bloc in sight at…

… error by Wol- lations with the Arab states to verine pitcher Bob Stabrylla. He keep tensions down, he said. promptly laced a line drive down Conflicts such as Nasser's attack the left field line that gave…

Student Affairs; Kent Leach, Director of the University's Bureau of which is presently in charge of accreditation; and Anderson of the education school, who chairs the Michigan State Committee of the North…

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