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July 08, 1938 (vol. 48, iss. 10) • Page Image 1

…. No 10 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1938 Ford Loses Fight Exile Parley Hu Shih Tells English Rush Roosevelt S Hears Nations Story Of Rise Men To Quell AgRefuse Shelter Of New China Jewish-Arab

… Bargainin Order For Ref ugees Vol.ntary Choice Of Ideas RaceRioting For Liber Of Western Civilization r._ _Myron C. Taylor, U. S. Characterizes Progress Arabs Mass On Palestine St. Louis Trial Examiner…

… Renaissance Students The scholar owes a debt of culture to the commercial book collector for having built up great libraries to fur- ther cultural research, Dr. Randolph G. Adams, director of the Clements…

… operating his own job-printing establishment. He was noted especially among the student journalists for his ready and willing assistance at all times and for his skill and speed at the linotype. Session…

… communication to the committee from the Arab National Committee there said a delegation was enroute here to argue against any increase in the Jewish population in the Holy Land. Senator Henry Berenger of France…

… prog- (continued on Page 3) Bloodiest In History JERUSALEM, July 7.-(,P)-Arab tribes from Trans-Jordan were re- ported massed on the Palestine fron- tier tonight as Britain sped warships and troops to…

… smash the bloodiest Jewish-Arab race outbreak in the Holy Land's recent history. Simultaneously, Jewish leaders warned their people against being "drawn into civil war." In a pitched battle lasting four…

… hours British troops fought a band of 600 Arabs said to have just brossed the border from Trans-Jordan, east of Palestine and a part of Britain's Palestine mandate but governed by a local Arab

… administration. No British Hurt Five Arabs were reported killed and eight wounded. There were no Brit- ish casualties. Total casualties in two days of riot- ing and battling were 33 killed, 11 wounded. However, a…

… number of Arabs were said to have succeeded in entering Palestine and to have joined their comrades in the hills fighting for "Arab independence." Tribesmen Mass The tribesmen were said to be massing south…

November 08, 1930 (vol. 41, iss. 36) • Page Image 5

…, president of the League, "Only the poorer women have will pour. any chance for social contacts. CONCERNING LII SPECIAL STUDENT RELATES FACTS J. Y YY! F Io i t 4 Y_,r YYX E OF ARAB WOMEN' They may see each…

… Education department, Dr. Margaret Elliott, of the School of Business Administration, and Professor Barbara Bartlett, of Pub- lic Health Department. Student guests will be Eleanor Cooke, '31, president of the…

… than the rest of the students TEA TO FOLLOW LECTURE to see this difference. For the last five years she has been teaching and nursing in Kuwait, Arabia, where Meetings Give Students Oppor- she has come…

… programs are informal and open to from total blindness through the Iany students who wish to attend jfo oa lnns hog h them dhelp and care of the missionary doctors. F. Jennings Heads Committee. "They are…

… highly seasoned, spiced, and contains much dehan, an Arab kind of shortening. Flat unleavened bread is placed upon the table, folded, to serve as both food and napkin. Their favorite sweetmeat is a sort of…

… Elects Esther Larowe, '32, as Representative To Wear With Your Daytime Dresses The purpose of the readings is not only to give students opportuni- ties to attend informal gatherings, but to acquaint…

… group, composed of students in the library school, is cataloguing all the books in the League library and will check them over periodi- cally. They are also considering a system by which books may be…

… checked out and returned through a desk in the library, as several val- uable books have disappeared. At present student librarians are in charge of the desk there throughout the day, but books do not go…

… and plans made for group rides. The officers to be elected arE president, treasurer, riding mana- ger, and secretary. Any woman student interested ir riding is elegible for membership in Pegasus, and is…

August 08, 1934 (vol. 15, iss. 38) • Page Image 1

…. XV No.38 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS Last Summer I Commutes Sentence. i Arab-Jewish SpeechGiven By Muyskens 'Cave Canem, Or Meaning Of Meaning,' Is Subject…

… Arrested CONSTANTINE, Algeria, Aug. 7. - (W) - Fighting between Jews and Arabs has spread to towns surround- ing Constantine, reports reaching here today revealed, giving rise tc fears that the death toll…

… had no political significance, but was an outbreak of the anti-Sem- itism which smoulders among the Arab populace. About half the residents of this city of 100,000 are Jews. Austria To Issue New Silver…

…." Davis Speaks On Curricula In Education e g Six Trends Outlined By s Educator Which Indicat Reforms Students To Have Greater Selection Colleges Must Cater To The Individual Rather Than To Whole, He Says…

… Curriculum reform throughout the United States is following certain clearly defined trends which will ef- fect a greater individual liberty for the student in selecting his courses, Prof. Calvin O. Davis…

… old-time curriculum to certain classes of students could not be denied. Mental training, he added, was the primary purpose of education, but it was his view that such training might be overdone…

July 08, 1937 (vol. 46, iss. 9) • Page Image 1

… Enrollment in the Summer Session yesterday passed the 5,000 mark as the total registration reached 5,026. This is the first time in the 44-year history of the session that more than 5,000 students have been…

… cent because of the numerous short courses. Engineering studentsin- creased in number from 309 to 339, and music students from 191 to 235. Several schools in the University reported decreased attendance…

… splitting Palestine into' separate sovereign, Jewish and Arab states was disclosed in a white paper which accompanied the 400-page re- port of the commission.1 Governs Holy Cities Under a new permanent…

…'s Automotive Engineering Laboratories in the West Engineering Annex last night. According to John Stevens of Ann Arbor, a former student now em- ployed in the laboratories to make commercial tests, he had just…

December 08, 1932 (vol. 43, iss. 63) • Page Image 2

… school); Wyandotte: Roosevelt; Ypsi- lanti: Roosevelt. Students who entered the University this year from Flint Junior Col- lege will meet with Dean Shattuck on December 8 also. Ira M. Smith, Registrar t…

…Upperclassmen: Former students of the schools listed above are invited to call at the Registrar's Office, December 8, to meet with the principals. If you will call Extension 373 you can learn at what hours your principal…

… 5 o'clock on Friday, December 9. Student identification cards and receipts showing payment of the dollar fee must be presented at the door. BE ON TIME. Ira M. Smith Notice: Tuesday, December 13, I am…

… again taking a group of students from other lands to visit rural and village schools. Others interested in such. a trip please call my office before 4 p. n. Monday, December 12. George E. Carrothers House…

… the Sunday School, where they are taught the Koran in Arabic. The services are held in pseudo-Masonic temples and before entering, everyone must give the password, a protestation of the Mo- hammedan…

… faith in Arabic. Although the exact figures are not known, it is estimated that Farrad has made "a lot of money" in the process of converting the negroes. Mr. Beyon explained that Farrad taught the people…

December 08, 1932 (vol. 43, iss. 63) • Page Image 1

…, with some knowledge of the Arabic lang- uage, learned the password and en- tered the innermost sanctities of a cult temple. The history and prac- tices of these cults in Chicago and Detroit is almost…

… rented a house to a negro family. One day while he was in the house, he came across several books written in Arabic. With the slight knowledge of the language which he had received while serving as a…

… Salaries Exceed Share Of Tuition Fee Student Employees , Get $7,000 Over The Sum Given By Administration Total Figure Set At More Than $41,000 Wile To Talk About Issues At Capital Delays Address In Order To…

… tests given during Orientation Period have been mailed to the principals who use this data and the opinions offered by the students themselves as a basis for their investigations. This year 381 first year…

students have been notified of conferences. scheduled with representatives of their respective schools. The meetings will be held in the offices of the registrar in University Hall and students who are not…

… for consideration, said Professor Bartell. Of these all but 25 were eliminated. More than $7,000 over the amount the Union received last year for maintenance from tuition fees was paid out to students

… in salaries, it was revealed by a recent investiga- tion. The Union received last year from the membership fees included in the tuition of all men students $64,000, of which $30,000 went to the retire…

…- ment of debts and only $34,000 was turned over to the Union for main- tenance expenses. More than $41,000 was paid out by the organization to students who work in the various departments of the building…

….' From 90 to 125 students are em- ployed at the present time in the Union, Paul Buckley, manager, said. Ninety have steady jobs and 35 more are on call for special occasions such as banquets, football game…

… days and other emergencies. Wherever possible, full time help has been dispensed with and the workI given to students, Mr. Buckley said. All full time workers took reductions last spring and substantial…

November 08, 1938 (vol. 49, iss. 38) • Page Image 4

students prefer the furore of enterprise to placid thoughts in the General Library, and others deem at- tendance at school an interruption of their various businesses. The subject of this piece, for instance…

… business manager was besieged by outraged subscribers, the carrier was forth- with discharged. It was afterwards reported that the student, penitent for his deed, sought solace in a whole- some philosophy…

… locked in, and the prospect of spending a chill night among bear-I skins and the like was too much-l hence the s.o.s A FEW YEARS AGO, a self-indul- gent student here was expelled rom the University for his…

… from Egypt-Dynastic, Grae- co-Roman, Coptic and Arabic periods' -from Seleucia on the Tigris and frnm Rnan Ttaomv Tn aodditinn a ciuszko Foundation will give the fol- lowing lectures under the auspices…

… this evening at 7:30 o'clock. T h e subject of discussion will be "Straw Votes, Polls, Pre-election Surveys and Their Significance." All graduate students in Political Science are ex- pected to be…

….'Science organization: 8:15 p.m. League Chapel. Students, alumni and faculty are invited to at- tend the services. Zeta Phi Eta: Members are re- minded of the regular meeting of Lambda chapter this afternoon at 4:15 p…

Student Senate will meet to- day at 7:30 p.m., in the Michigan Union, Room 302.. The public is in- vited. Coming Events "Psychological Journal Club will meet on Thursday, Nov. 10, at 8 p.m. in the East…

students of the University of ,n under the authority of the Board in Control of Publications. shed every morning except Monday during the ity year and Summer Session. Member,of the Associated Press…

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