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June 27, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 173) • Page Image 1

… of TPearce Arab League, Israelis To Consider Advice RHODES, June 26-(IP)-Count Folke Bernadotte is expected to complete his initial suggestions for Palestine peace talks this weekend. Jewish and Arab

… experts, who are here to give information to the United Nations mediator, plan to leave for Tel Aviv and Cairo Monday. Arab experts said the Count's suggestions probably will be carried by members of his…

… leaders to come to Rhodes to discuss permanent settlement of the Palestine ques- tion. With the four-week truce more than half over, it may be the end of next week before Jews and Arabs decide qn peace…

… talks. In that event there would be only one week of the truce remaining. But if agreement is reached to hold a peace conference here, Bernadotte is expected to ask Jew- ish and Arab military forces to…

… extend the truce. Truce Extension If the Count's suggestions for talks are rejected, there seems little likelihood that the Arabs and Jews would agree to a truce extension. Col. Count Thord Bonde, Swed…

… radio re- porter and story teller, will deliver an address on "It's All One World to Us" an International Center program in the Michigan League ballroom today at 8 p.m. Seven foreign students at the…

… spices his talks and nar- rations with behind the scenes human interest tales. Esson M. Gale, director of the International Center, will direct the program. The student speak- ers will discuss current…

… addition to the usual listing of students' names, home addresses, local ad- dresses and phone numbers. Phi Lambda Theta j Pi Lambda Theta, education sorority, will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the West…

June 27, 1958 (vol. 68, iss. 4) • Page Image 4

…Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND \1A"AGED BY STUDENTS OF THIE UNIVERSITY OF MICH3IGAN, UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MicH. * Phone NO…

…. Rejecting the idea of separated schools for the "gifted student," the report says the advantage of the conception of equality of op- portunity is that it recognizes dif- ferences in abilities and motiva- tion…

…" application of test judgements and then only as on criterion of a student's pos- sibilities. Identification of talent should be no more than the first step, the report states. It called the fact that a…

… substantial boost be given teachers salaries. Stiff courses in high school for the academically talented student were prescribed - with four years of English and mathematics, three to four years of social…

… Hammarskjold has provided time for all to see where they are heading. If President Chamoun asks for intervention by Britain and the United States, he will be cutting his relations with the Arab states, which are…

… closely tied to the Lebanese economy, and throwing himself on Western charity. The Arab-Christian split in Lebanon would become complete, whereas now its overtones are primarily those of a pre…

…. Everybody stands to lose unless the Anglo-American posture it- self can hold down the rebels and produce an atmosphere for free elections before a fatal outbreak or fateful physical intervention. If the Arab

… Beirut. One of the great questions was whether the United Nations could and would act quickly enough to give the organization's name to , e coupled with Arab nationalist agitation aggravated by Syria and…

… Egypt. If Britain and the United States answered the call, sending in troops now poised not far offf- shore, they would face a complete break with Arab nationalists. Western interests would become i…

June 27, 1967 (vol. 77, iss. 35) • Page Image 2

… powers them- "The speech at the session of ! picious. Algerians and Syrians, the farthest left and most loudly "anti-imperialist" of the Arab bloc, will entertain doubts of ' long-range Soviet intentions…

…. Kosygin hardly made the Arabs happy, for example, by conceding, that Israel had a right to exist. - China will accuse the Russians of under-the-table deals looking to- ward a future Vietnam settlement. But…

…:....._._. _ ____ _ __ __ 'CHARGE POLICE BRUTALITY: Student Death May POSiTiON OPENINGS: therapists. Public Health Nurse, $$ de- grEe plus certification. 10 mos. terms of LCamp Fire Gxirls, lnc.--Opeinigs at duity. Detroit and…

… this era of wars, the death of one man can go unnoticed. But the death of a West German student from a West Berlin po- liceman's bullet has brought to the surface boiling discontent among students across…

… the coun- wild West Berlin demonstration against the Shah of Iran are but one indication that for the first time since World War II a na- tional German student movement is in the making. Exactly what…

… happened when Ohnesorg was killed may never be made clear. filled eggs, vegetables, sand and and lowered the American flag to try. It is enough for the students Solidarity marches from Bonn that a police…

… paint- stones. A score of policemen were injured as well as about 24 dem- onstrators. According to their own state- ments, the students now are pro- testing what they consider an overly authoritarian…

… the students want to break away from. Add to this the division of Ger- many, the unnatural position of Berlin, the legacy of guilt from Nazi times, concentration by gov- ernment and the mass of the pop…

…- ulation on "wohlstand" - pros- perity - and what bothers the students becomes a little clearer. On the government side, there is some resentment that the stu- dents use state funds to study and then…

… visible. University students always have felt them- selves to be something special in Germany, where most workers leave school at 14 even today. For a worker, faced with his own problems, the disruption of…

June 27, 1961 (vol. 71, iss. 1) • Page Image 4

…Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN here Opinions Are FreUNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT

… rejection of anti- semitism. Also, and somewhat contradictorily, they wanted to warn their Arab neighbors and assorted others that it doesn't pay to kill Jews. Thus, while they appeal to our decency in hoping…

June 27, 1938 (vol. 48, iss. 1) • Page Image 4

…THE MICHTGAN DAILY MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1938 .. __.. . . a MICHIGAN DAILY As Others See It rc- American Rights Edted and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of…

… the Board in Control of Student Publitions. Publishec every morning nxcept Monday during the University year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusvely…

… institution, and has gained a reputation which now draws students from all parts of the country. The 45th Summer Session opening today promises to be the largest and most distin- guished in the University…

… men is one of the chief attractions for degree students coming here. Besides the 30 Summer Session lectures, which will cover a variety of subjects from social'phil osophy to Egyptian archaeology, the…

… annual pro- gram of sulmer tours will be conducted to var- ious points of interest. The Daily welcomes to Ann Arbor all students new to the University, in the hope that they will be able to make the most…

… inspected once a month. An Arabic moving picture produced in Egypt and entitled "Yehia el Hob" (Long Live Love) has been exhibited for six weeks in a leading theater of Cairo, giving four performances a day…

….m. Social Evening. (Michigan League Building.) July 16, 8-10 p.m. Visitors' Night, Students' Observatory, Angell Hall. 8:30 p.m. "Shoemakers' Holiday," by Thomas Dekker. 9:00 p.m. Social Evening. (Michigan…

…:30 p.m. Francisco de Vitoria and the Spanish Origin of Interna- tional Law. James Bown Scott, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. 8-10 p.m. Visitor's Night. Students' Observatory, Angell Hall. 8…

… Trip to the Caucasus Region and Nova Zembla (Illustrated). Professor Donald Chapman, University of Louisiana. . 8-10 p.m. Visitors' Night. Students' Observatory, Angell Hall. 8:30 p.m. "The Whiteheaded…

… Boy," by Lennox Robinson. 9 p.m. Social Evening. (Michigan League Building.) Aug. 6, 8-10 p.m. Visitors' Night. Students' Observatory, Angell Hall. 8:30 p.m. "The Whiteheaded Boy," by Lennox Robinson. 9…

June 27, 1925 (vol. 16, iss. 8) • Page Image 1

… by Mr. Jump. Spirt. Parable in Sedgwick's "The Lit- French -irl." Congrogati~nal cli. -Open forum. Kelleth Chang of a on "The Far East 'Today." -regational church. Student supper at Conggrega- t church…

… further opportunities for researches as well as for advanc- ed instruction in Arabic and other languages of the Near East. Professor Worrell was born, in Tol- edo, April 28, 1879. He graduated from the…

… carrying through the press a volume containing fifty letters and documents written in Hebrew char- acters but largely in the Arabic lang- uage. These range in date from the tenth to the fifteenth century and…

… to Inspect Ford Motor Planlt WILL VISIT LIBRARY More than 100 students had signed up yesterday afternoon for the second1 excursion of the Summer session, which leaves for the Ford Motor com- pany at…

…, this number being made up of 23 from the literary college, 30 from the Graduate school, and two from the School of Education. Word from the Geology camp at Mill Springs, Ky., showed that 40 students have…

… wounding British subjects. Amoy, China, June 26.-(By A.P.)- Some minor anti-foreign demonstra- tions took place here Thursday and the student element, agitating for a general strike and boycott of foreign…

… several tours for faculty- student parties under the direction of professors familiar with the places visited. Prof. Arthur S. Aiton and Prof. William S. Frayer of the history department are directing such…

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