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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." …

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…

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…

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…

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…

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…

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…

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