Search Results

Search Constraints

Search Results

January 15, 1960 (vol. 70, iss. 82) • Page Image 8

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY' T'IDAY, THEMIHIANDALYFRDA,,A. Travel; Cagers Play Host to Minneso 4. reactivated its gymnastics squad, now in its 13th year under Loken, who was Big Ten and NCAA all- around champion in 1942 at Min- nesota. First of Four The Wolverines tackle the Gophers in the first of four meets between now and the start of the second semester. The other three occur after finals are over, at Southern Illinois Jan. 29, Illinoi...…

December 15, 1960 (vol. 71, iss. 71) • Page Image 8

…THE MICUIGAN DAILY. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 7Y Ic4 " 7___.____e_ ___m_______a________ DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN l . S' f "............. °" .w.'r---M 1 Bacteriology major (10-15 hours per week). 1 Experienced camera repair work (2 hours per day, plus all day Satur- day).. 19 Psychological subjects (hours to be arranged). FEMALE' 1 Switchboard operator (11 p.m.-12:30 a.m., Sunday through Thursday) 4 Girls for light houseworwk (hours to be arrang...…

January 15, 1960 (vol. 70, iss. 82) • Page Image 9

…15,190 THE MICHIGAN DAILY BMIEGLMNcoach Amo Bassone's r ecoard His successor, Eldon VanSpy- When Michigan's Wolverines against Michigan teams coached brook, has not quite filled Selin- ace Michigan State's hockey team by Al Renfrew a winning one. In 'd .re tonight it will be a battle be- the eight meetings between the ger s place as he has allowed an ween the top and the bottom two schools since Renfrew took average of 5.7 goals per game. His...…

January 15, 1960 (vol. 70, iss. 82) • Page Image 10

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY FR EIDI Smyd Set r SGC To Open Exam Files in UGLI ACKNOWLEDGING OUR DEBT TO THE PAST Hark we back to those first far-sighted, penniless collegians who realized the folly of retaining their textbooks after examinations. These were the standard-bearers, the pathfinders, of a new era in progressive stu- dent self-service; these were the men who launched Student Book Exchange on its long and checkered career in the between-...…

January 15, 1960 (vol. 6, iss. 5) • Page Image 11

…KU 7 N at PON* RON* - . a. ^ . a S. 4 IS CD L. a C 0 -_a L. 0 0 d N PMNN* S. a Z -' %/1 0i ~0 CL c 0 40 Er C x WU W .c -I =a W Z z W LA W1 W LL. 0 Q. H 1 E -!L L3 _ p - w 1 wv (U0. 1 V/ -4 #I- I #- R3I I a L.- /U {.% ...) NU I 3#I-E U.(1- tEUEUU 0 1 ()CN # - *-U IIr% 1 E > O ; :1 U- E _ 0 __1--a -II C>I I,(I 1 v U :3I:3 Z -C v -C 5.. maiimmmaara inammmmiinuminnamm eam im iniain mninm Qiimnm mma. mmmaaLmmmmaam!ma ",. 1i .L ...…

January 15, 1960 (vol. 6, iss. 5) • Page Image 12

…N .. N 0 0 0* 0- nr O 0D a a. C I- m 0, r D 's 1A0 0aq0 OxI. So 000 CD000 4 0 4 z" FT .0 3 A w w~ P ~ ~w 0PC+ P~~0 0 ~0 0 ~tq ~ t.4 -Un 0 0o Al 04 o o' ID cta- C+ C 00C 0 0mod 00 o a-,' M S0 2 0 4 - o m. :') M c m C + p C + e + Ga a i " 5'° 0 C '1 CAi C+, WI t+ i O ' 1t.It DM'y . C+ k fp m. ' 0 e49l-015..0 om BC 0~-C a 0 , ~' a a) Ii -''-4 a-. CA ~ Vl- 0 e+~ CA h0 t" 02 D D 00D 0l .40 C GSA . CA 0 t1 M - wl0IC OQ ...…

January 15, 1960 (vol. 6, iss. 5) • Page Image 13

…r, 1 Hunt Works To Prevent, Find and Mend Athlete's Injuries Continued from Preceding Page must estimate the seriousness of an injury," he explains. "Primarily, however, our job is to repair athletes physically," he adds. That means he does much of the work that would be too routine and costly for a doctor to do. As he spoke, he was rubbing down an athlete's back muscle in his training room which projects a heavy odor of balm and alcohol. ...…

January 15, 1960 (vol. 6, iss. 5) • Page Image 14

…cracy, and the national law, to produce a mystery-chiller. First novelists Misses Hutchins and Weston derive a sometimes less-than-suspenseful, but never unelaborwte melodrama while ig- noring any pathos or tragedy in the social situation. Accepted as such, the book moves rapidly along, with only occasional lapses of credibility. Mathew Scott, the main char- FAC. await nJuS reprieve ore ome a martyr. About here, even a re- viewer becomes con...…

January 15, 1960 (vol. 6, iss. 5) • Page Image 15

…)rvoir Continued from, Page Five The heart of Brazil, the vast Amazon basin, has yet to be fully explored. The -league of Nations once reported that -the Amazon basin could support 900 million people. Only four million occupy the area now. RIHIN ,untapped resources, it holds reserves of oil, gold, iron ore and manganese to name only a few. Today, Brazil is faced with the problems of getting these minerals out of the wild interior of the Amazo...…

January 15, 1960 (vol. 6, iss. 5) • Page Image 16

…l rAC I l tnven .erica S'a Oman'S 'I The President Emeritus Spends Leisure Time Taking an Active Interest In University Affairs By NAN MARKEL HE MAN WHO guided the "mother of state universities" through 22 years of crisis finds he is "somewhat disillusioned."-- "I thought when I retired I would have the leisure I didn't have as president," former University President Alexander Grant Ruth- ven says. But he really doesn't want that ...…

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan