May 20, 1939 (vol. 49, iss. 167) • Page Image 4
…0 THE M I C.HISA N DALLY, SATURDAY, MAY -O, 1939 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I r1 11 Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board ii Control of Student…
… was just such an instance of a near sighted foreign policy. Palestine is another. Chamberlain, hoping to weld the Arabs and, therefore, the whole Moslem world solidly on the side of the British, or at…
… least to a position un- friendly to the fascist poWers, welched on her promises to the JeWs to make Palestine a "national= homeland' and swung solidly, in line with the extremist Arabs led by the Mufti…
… the war, have ever been hypocritical. It is that hypocrisy under which all of Palestine was promised almost simultaneously to both the Jews and the Arabs which has been mostly responsible for that…
… breath-taking. That, however, is not so new. Secondary school students tamper with that sort of thing. The program writer deals in great subtleties. For example, note the careful distinction in the use of…
… Star-Times conceivable, also. that the situation might ulti- mately exist where students could leave the{ room and converse with fellow students during AS OTHERS SEE IT WPA-As Mayors See It Waste and…
… college men. They have represented a strange thing called "culture" ob- tained in voluntary or involuntary doses. It has been the old business of students as inactive consumers and professors as persisent…
… producers. The Carolina Arts group, recently formed and already the source of several good speeches, presents James Boyd Monday night. Students are reaching out to this thing called "The Arts" and bringing it…
… blame must dump itself in quite unpretty fashion right back upon the student body. Members of the faculty-particu- larly the humanities-sometimes be- moan student disinterest in their subjects. Now no…