September 18, 1934 (vol. 45, iss. 1) • Page Image 4
… suit students of widely varying interests, it is still much more than the whim of college professors who have lived too long. Probably no;freshman :will realize ,until next semester and the several…
… leftto his own devices; he will be one more or less among a student body of eight or nine thousand. After this one week the University will no longer come to him; he must go to the University. The Figures…
… Can Do No Wrong.. . (N ALMOST every University office I administrators and clerks have been hopefully peering since early summer at every set of figures that might give some hint as to the student…
… enrollment for 1934-35 With registra- tion actually underway, the situation is bound to become even more alarmingly tense in the next week or two. Students, faculty, alumni, and towns- people will daily peruse…
… the latest statistics, trust- ing that in the end the University may record six more freshmen than ever before, and that the literary college will number 53 students greater than last year. "Early…
… index of return to more normal times, both on and off the campus. No one holds any brief for the continuance of depression years. They have worked great hard- ship on students who have had to struggle…
…, depression years-have not been all bad. In many ways they have been saner ones than those that went before. Certainly they have been interesting and challenging to college students. Michigan's name has become…
… no less famous because it houses fewer students or treats them a little less royally. Whatever the outlook for the future as regis- tered in this year's figures, at least one more year of hard times…
… NEW STUDENTS You will be impressed by the kind of Service you will find at the Uni- tarian Church. It Is intellectually progressive and emotionally sound - Bring your honest doubts and your most…

