October 05, 1960
(vol. 71, iss. 14)
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… hitting the country hard, and that he believed there was "less chance than in the past" that the South would break up as the tradttional Democratic stronghold. SGC Meeting To Consider 'Liquor Sales Student…
… people taking an active interest in politics. "When I went to school," he said, "even with the Roosevelt campaigns, the students didn't get very excited about the Campaigning. b 'U'Studies Year Abroad By…
… would study course offerings, their content and pre-{ requisites, testing and grading1 procedures, prices, living facili- ties, advice students would need, and would establish language tu- tors and credit…
… equivalents' with American schooling. To Avoid Mistake The University hopes to avoid the mistake of establishing ai "little Stanford abroad," as Dean Robertson termed one programl which has its students living…
… ''most of faint- hearted praise" in endorsing Vice- President Richard M. Nixon's de- cision-making experience, Nixon's Plan Acceptable-r To.Hubbard Would Aid Students By Providing Loans By ANDREW HAWLEY…
… The University medical school would certainly be willing to par- ticipate in a Federal program pro- viding aid to medical students, such as the one recently recom- mended by Vice-President Rich- ard M…
…. Nixon, William N. Hub- bard, dean of the medical school said yesterday. Saying that "some such plan is essential," Hubbard pointed out that while over 95 per cent of the graduate students in the physical…
… sciences in the United States re- ceive some kind of fellowship aid, very few medical students enjoy the same kind of financial assist- ance. Nixon's suggestion for federal assistance, presented Monday, is…
… school in. question, providing encouragement for the expansion of facilities. The rest of the fellowship would take the form of a loan to the student. Nixon also proposed that the federal government pay a…