Search Results

Search Constraints

Search Results

January 11, 1953 (vol. 63, iss. 78) • Page Image 4

…'s immediate problems are two- fold-improving its economy and its rela- tions with its Arab neighbors. Israel needs money to realize extensive industrial schemes with which it hopes to raise the country's living…

…, the biggest block to Israel's economic welfare still lies in the fact that Israel cannot trade with its Arab neigh- bors. The members of the Arab League have maintained a fairly effective embar- go on…

… states cannot be resumed until a peace treaty is signed. Central to the entire situation and ren- dering it particularly difficult of solution is the problem of the 800,000 Palestinian Arabs displaced by…

… the Israelis during the war of independence. These Arabs, after fleeing Israel, created a severe problem in the Arab states and are now living in camps where they have proved fruitful pickings for…

January 13, 1959 (vol. 69, iss. 84) • Page Image 4

…Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND NIANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICII. * Phone NO 2…

… members default the proposed rebirth of the student exchange program with the Free University of Berlin? Can it be that SGC cannot af- ford the relatively small sum it would cost to send two of our students

… to Berlin In exchange for one German student? Certainly the cost cannot be too great for a University of our size and repu- tation, or is it? Could it be that our student body is indifferent to the…

… distributed from Mon., i 1 INTERPRETING THE NEWS: 'Reds Gan in Near East i By WILTON WYNN Associated Press Correspondent CAIRO - It is clear that the Arab world is more gravely threatened today by Com…

January 11, 1958 (vol. 68, iss. 82) • Page Image 4

…I "Yeah - I'm Still In" Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVE~RSITY OF MICHIGAN When Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICAONS Truth ,Wii…

…I Preval"' STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. " Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This ius t be noted in all…

… considered by the Commission. Foreign students from Asia, Africa, and the Middle East have long faced the problem of finding living quarters in Ann Arbor. -JAMES BOW 4 QXrN i - nAS 4 LCrO Pm"G WASHINGTON…

… at all between meetings, could fail to know the time of the symposium. But because they, at least, were not there, two of the legislators most sympathetic to students' problems could not help but be…

…-scale inquiry into United States monetary policies since the Aldrich Commission of 1908, which laid the foundation of the Federal it I LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Arab-Israel Debate Continues DAILY OFFICIAL…

…. LXVIII, NO. 82 General Notices The next "Polio Shot" Clinic for stu- dents will be held Thurs., Jan. 16, only from 8:00 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. and 1:00, p.m. to 4:45 p.m., in the Health Service. All students

… whose 2nd or 3rd shots' are due around this time are urged to take advantage of this special clinic. Students are reminded that it is not necessary to obtain their regular clinib cards. Proceed to Room 58…

… women guests must remain open during the hours of the Hop. and the chaperone- in-residence mustbe at the house. Regulations for Parties 17) Student groups wishing to have parties during the J-Hop period…

… are instructed to seek approval from the Office /of Student Affairs following usual procedures. Requests for approv- al for specific social events should be filed on or before Friday, January 17…

January 04, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 78) • Page Image 4

…I Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO…

… university campus such as this one, students themselves set the standards of per- sonal freedom, expression and education as high or as low as they may be. Perhaps the greatest student expression of last year…

… freedom fighters, Mich- igan's food rioters look like seventh-grade pupils in the shadow of true university men and women striving for education. truth and freedom. UNIVERSITY STUDENTS on this campus Uare…

…. The rush of water dropping 1,300 feet would supply electric power for all the indus- tries you needed. "I would make Israel the indus- trial country of the Near East, then let the Arabs raise crops to…

… average high school graduate. Any freshman counselor in En- gineering school will tell you how poorly prepared the average high school student is for an engineer- ing career. It's timhe a little learn- ing…

January 09, 1958 (vol. 68, iss. 80) • Page Image 4

…Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2…

… must make increased efforts to bring students and citizens from these countries to the United States, both to educate them and to provide for cultural exchange - as we must increase cultural exchange…

…; Lot No. 32 at Randall Lab oratory; Lot No. 31 at West Engineer- ing; Lot No. 40 at Clements Library. Auxiliary signs are posted at the en- trances of these lots. Student Accounts: Your attention s…

… called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting on Feb. 28, 1936: "Students shall pay all ac- counts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each se- mester or…

… the letter published in your Dec. 19 issue of The Daily concerning the Palestinian Arab Refugees. I would like to take the opportunity and point out the fallacies in that letter which are always used by…

… Zionist Propagandists in trying to justify their deeds in Palestine. 1) The letter mentions that before the Arab States attacked Israel on May 5, 1948, there were no Arab Refugees. I am sorry to say that…

January 12, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 75) • Page Image 6

…j six E MCMGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JANTIARY 1Z, 1959 SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1956 VET WORK SIMULATED: Speech Students Broadcast Y By DONNA HANSON -Daily--Sam Ching "But Doctor…

…, you must save my son!" Awais Says Arab People Not Against Americans "Operation 4006 is on the air." Dubbed 4006 because it is the room number of the two speech broadcasting studios in Angell Hall, the…

… operation was an exer- cise in practical radio broadcast- ing for students in the speech de- partment. Beginning the broadcasts on a closed circuit at 3:15 p.m. yester- day, the programs were carried through…

….m. until 1:45 a.m. Under the direction of the Speech Department staff, Opera- tion 4006 is put on yearly as a practical laboratory exercise. Not only do radio and speech students act in these programs, but…

… quiz program. The behind-the-scene picture of the studio broadcast was one of pacing students, nervous studio engineers and cigarette-smoking clock - watchers. Students were scurrying between studios…

… pointing out that the Arab peoples, of whom the Jordanians are one, have no hatred for America now nor have they in the past. The violence in December and this past week has been a protest against the…

…, .1 the entire dispute over Israel and Palestine, he explained. "Right or wrong, the feeling amongst the Arabs is that Ameri- ca, in helping to create the state of Israel, gave away Arab proper- ty and…

… affronted the dignity of the Arab people," Awais continued. For the last eight years, this feeling has been building up under the surface and is just now com- ing to notice. Such factors as the Palestinian…

…, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. r WHAT'S THIS? For solution see paragraph below. I ,t ?..:. : ;:_.., e-. ,._.,.r'.-,.,-.. If students find themselves af- flicted with a headache after a study…

January 10, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 83) • Page Image 1

… history department said last night. Arab leaders do not want to "drive Israel to the sea," but they do want a satisfactory treaty, Prof. Clark Hopkins of the classical studies department declared. "Let us…

…- pressways. Detroit police termed the pile-ups among the worst in the history of the expressways. Student 'Cuts' Tit New High Attendance in the English de- partment reached a low, of 30 per cent of normal on…

…. preparations for the tenth National Students Asso- ciation Congress, to be held here in August, could be seen in com- mittee apl~intments made at yesterday's Student 'Government Council meeting. SGC named…

… President Bill ,Adams, '57BAd, Anne Woodard, '57, and LeAnne Toy, '59, to serve with Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis, James D. Shortt, managing supervisor of University Relations Field Serv…

…- ices, Leonard A. Schaadt, Resi- dence Halls business manager. and;, one member of the National Students' Association as an advis- ory committee to the NSA Con- gress. David Grupe, '57E, was nomi- nated…

… appoint- ments are invitational and the students have no vote. Treasurer Lew Engman, '57, was named to the Loan Committee. Robert Anderson, '57, has been appointed editor of the next edi- tion of the "M…

… was to establish a bi-partite state in Palestine, run by both Arabs and Jews. . Prof. Slosson indicated the UN should "maintain real force in that part of the world," and re- main until a satisfactory…

… extreme economic difficulties of the Arab states and mistreatment they have received at the hands of. imperialist countries. Although impressed in a visit to Tel Aviv in the 1930's by the vast economic…

… improvements the Jew had wrought, Prof. Hopkins had been disturbed when he no- ticed the street signs were in He- brew. "All communication be- tween Jews and Arabs was cut off. "What Arabs needed - doctors…

… plane- crash near Greenville, Miss. An instructor and a student in! the second plane were injured. While he was at the University, McMillin belonged to the Air Force ROTC unit and was a member of Alpha…

January 08, 1953 (vol. 63, iss. 75) • Page Image 4

… that vital area. The stakes are high. In the past four years the Soviets have made considerable headway among the Arab states, and the possibility of a major explosion-perhaps in Iran-is an excruciating…

… thought to State Department and British diplomats. Arabs, oil, the Suez Canal, trade, warm- water ports, air-lines-all hang in the balance. But the salient importance of the area is its strategic location…

… the Arab politician, who will ordinarily prom- ise the sun without procuring a mote. Un- like his fat predecessor, Naguib appears to be a realist with whom the West can bar- gain. Fortunately, he is…

… makings of a compromise. What form that compromise might take is not yet clear, but it is certain that concessions will have to be made on both sides. Egypt, as the leader of the Arab states, must be…

… his powerful paintings and drawings, the professor was well known on this campus as a warm, friendly person who was admired by both his students and colleagues. Prof. Lopez's untimely death at the age…

student then: "Ah. the moon is a wound against the sky tonight. It looks like a cold sore on a piece of black velvet." The impact of the depression of the early 1930's on a fine, sensitive mind is shown in…

… -David Cargo DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Five students (women) placed on so- cial probation for one week anda warned; four students (women) placed' on social probation for two weeks…

… and warned, For drinking by minor and using false idenkification to purchase liquor: One student fined $20.00 ($10.00 for each offense) and warned. For drinking in automobile and pro- viding minor with…

… intoxicants: One student fined $25.60 (second offense) and warned. For participating it unauthorized party and providing minor with intox- icants: One student suspended indef- initely (repeated offenses); one…

student fined $20.00 and warned. For participating in unauthorized party and driving after drinking: One student fined $25.00 and warned. For participating In unauthorized party: Two students fined $10…

January 11, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 74) • Page Image 1

… explosiveP quarrel between Israel and her qure ewe saadhrArab neighbors has kept the Mid- dle East neighbors in danger- Student-Grad The rest of the East Coast got ous farment. It has been inten.si- from…

…. The illegal drinking occurred Dec. 15, the day before: Christ- mas vacation. Police report they checked a car at Fifth and Wash- x ington and found five students who had been drinking. Four of them were…

…, '58, 19 years old, Y Albert' Meyer, '57, 20 years old, David Zolotow, '57, 20 years old, Andrew Baumer, '58, 19 years old. In. another drinking Incident last Friday, a University student was ftarrrested…

…, by' police in front of a ocal restrant for drunk and dis- orderly conduct. To Court Today, The student, Gordon Black, '57, was released on $50 bail. His case comes to court today. £ When arrested…

…'t have any trouble with students as a general rule." Clint Caster, owner of the res- taurant where Black was arrested, said Black never got in. Police Press Charges "We didn't have anything at all to do…

… with it. The police arrested him in front of the restaurant and x they're the ones who are pressing charges," Caster said. Caster went on to claim, "We are continually having trouble with students trying…

… realize their lia- bility. "Seldom does a student come in on a false ID and have a drink by himself. When he sits down with his friends he impli- Cates them." 'Further, Caster said, if a student who has…

… anti-American rioting in Jordan by elements which oppose that Arab kingdom's joining the Baghdad Pact. 'Precautionary' Move The War Office announcement called the move "a precautionary measure" to…

… first progress report dur- peace moves to end the Palestine ing the Student Government Coun- dispute will be discussed, too. cil meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in Eden Conterrs the Union. Eden conferred at No…

January 11, 1958 (vol. 68, iss. 82) • Page Image 2

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY Scholarship Established For Journalism Students Acceptance of the gift was an- nounced yesterday by the Regents of the University. Fund trustee Chesser M. Camp- bell, president…

…, students in journalism who possess superior ability." Journalism department faculty members will choose recipients of the scholarship, which will be divided to benefit as many worthy students as possible…

… also acce 'the Middle or 'Near East Arab the Regents.- An anonymous donor also con- Books, pamphlets and tributed $20,000 to be used'to de- countries were provided by $5,000 scripts valued at $2,150 we…

January 09, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 82) • Page Image 4

…I %g trichigalt Bailp Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN…

… that Russia is interested in direct aggression in the Middle East-her influence there is already strong and to resort to direct means would be to face the fires of nationalism. Since the Arab states are…

… proposal included in Ike's plan. But it seems doubtful that we can persuade the Arab states that American motives are entirely altruistic. They have already charged us with interference and imperialistic…

… WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Congress Must Back Ie By DREW PEARSON, Had Your Polio Shot? DECENT TRENDS discovered in the study of a polio should be very interesting to the University student. While polio…

student can receive the polio innoculation for 65 cents. One would not think such a nominal fee (which covers the cost of the material used only) would be so prohibitive as to prevent a young adult from…

… getting almost infallible protection against polio. SO FAR only 2700 of a student population numbering nearly eight times that amount have taken advantage of the protection offered by University Health…

… Service against polio. Although the number of inoculations is greater than last fall, far too many University students are without immunization. "Inexcusable negligence" for their own phy- sical well…

…-being was the tag placed by Dr. Dickinson on students failure to take advan- tage of inoculation. Dr. Dickinson also has cited the facts that when college-age students do contract paralytic polio is is…

… usually more severe than in young- sters and that cases of extreme paralysis are even more prevalent in young adults than the lower age groups. ONE WOULD THINK the "aware" college student needs no more…

… stimulation to get polio immunization than cognizance of the facts. Though these facts have been made known to students. 19,000 "neglectors" must still be waiting for further proof. A trip to the University…

January 11, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 84) • Page Image 4

…"Darnedest Game ,I Ever Saw" Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG…

… noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: CAROL PRINS Lecture Committee Study Justified Despite Student Apathy ~1 -4' £~4~N. '-~,- /-. .- - .~,. -~ ~5S. ~ - 1, * p.-.- AT HILL…

… order to use University facilities, any off- campus speaker must be cleared by the Lec- ture Committee, a five-member faculty board with two non-voting student members. This board, through an informal…

… procedure, deter- mines the degree of "safety" or advisability in student organizations' requests to bring speak- ers to campus. Since the origin of the Lecture Committee, there have been few cases in which…

… an organ- ization's request has been refused. It is also true that the student body has not been par- ticularly concerned about the powers of the Lecture Committee. Nor has there been any sentiment in…

…, rotation or not, the students have no effec- tive means of expressing their opinions. If there have been any meetings this year, the students have not been informed of them. What they would do when they got…

… outlet for expression. RESTRICTIONS upon speakers imposed by the Lecture Committee indicate more the immaturity of the Committee and the Uni- versity than that of the student body they are seeking to…

… sterilize. We hope that the current study of the Lec- ture Committee justifies itself on these grounds and not on the apparent lack of concern by the student body. -RICHARD SNYDER Editor AT THE MICHIGAN…

… of the area, including the blockaded Suez Canal, the Arab-Israeli hostility and the problem of possible subversion of several im- portant Arab governments. On the subject of disarmament, the President…

… Notices Pictures rented for the Fall ternu from the Student Art Print Loan Col- lection must be returned to 510 Admin- istration Building between 3 and 5 p.m, from Jan. 10 through Jan. 16. Life memberships…

January 10, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 83) • Page Image 4

…1 "Well, It's Sort Of New With Us" I Ghe arhian 4Bad Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS…

STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phowe NO 2-3241 "When Opinions Are Free Trutb Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the…

… all-star games in which college football Sports Editor players can participate. Three are the over- lapping "North-South" games - Blue-Gray, Aid to Refugee Students North-South, and Senior Bowl. Groups…

… and gratifying. The students, two of whom are of the Jew- ALL-STAR bowl games are fine in themselves, ish faith and one Catholic, applied for scholar- but one has to wonder whether the proper ships to…

students. see potential material in game action when Benefits from these charitable offers will most of the players are already ranked high in accrue not only to the students but also to the talent standings…

… this example when other refu- pation in any post-season game. gee students have the opportunity to come to As some Eastern students have complained, the University.. this seems to be restriction of the…

… stands to reason that Israel will iumn at the chanc- if in fact gotiating with the unaligned Arab countries. It is in.Egypt and Sy- ria primarily; to some degree in Iraq, that the SovietUnion is extending…

… address. For he has put the whole project in such a way that it will be very diffi- cult for any Arab country to ac- The Daily Official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University of, Michigan…

….m. for an appointment. Student Accounts: Your attention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting on Feb. 28, 1936: Students shall pay all ac- counts due the University not…

… later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation; how- ever, student loans not yet due are exempt. Any…

January 08, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 81) • Page Image 4

…I 04r :ftrigant HlJ Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR…

… established on a co-operative basis, with students working at "local industry." Ford is lopated at Dearborn. The Dodge gift is going toward a branch school to teach engineering, business and the arts-in that…

student teacher ratio at a respectable level. Can the state afford to take the responsibility for two new schools and maintain high standards of education? ADMITTEDLY, BOTH NEW institutions, or branches…

…, will provide educational oppor- tunities for many more students, students who might have been unable to receive them without the schools. But, the University has been expanding steadily to accommodate…

… more people. Projected plans call for 40,000 students by 1966, and the engineering college has recently announced a vast expansion program. This expansion is being attempted without sacrifice in quality…

… To Put Fund To More Worthwhile Use? ONLY 33 to 40 per cent of approximately $1,000,000 available to students in the form of loans is being used for that purpose. At the present time a study is being…

… carried out by Frederick Oliver, general accountant in the business office attempting to discover ways and means of making loans more interesting to students. Perhaps the best answer would be to convert the…

… loan money into a scholarship fund. It must be acknowledged that a loan fund is necessary for students who occasionally feel a financial pinch. But why is such a large fund not being used? The University…

… to make the funds available in the form of scholarships would certainly be better than allowing dollars meant for students to be used for other purposes. -THOMAS BLUES "However, We've Been Pre tty…

… ... To the Editor: T THE present time, the Medi- cal Library often remains un- filled because medical students do not itilize the facilities. Neverthe- less. when students enrolled in schools other than…

January 06, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 80) • Page Image 1

… school and Bitar sid in Damascus the Arab already appropriated. Buyer Resistance n sneealg D eardet en esog s ar occur-; The Prime Minister defended college students in 26 instrumental states were opposed…

… "Eisenhower Doctrine" the Middle East but there wa; echo from the Arab world. Britain "We welcome this evident; the President's intention top United States resources behin( security and development of nations…

… their view President Eisenho attacked the symptom instead the disease. They said the syi tom was Communism and disease was Palestine. Syria Perhaps the tenor of react from Arab states friendly to Eg was…

… structural box office. Special student tickets Blatt; and the Michigan Singers, the final form of any resolution edged, too, that it will not s little effect on the new car market. needs or might like to have…

… Heu sai action, woldbav wt beET U A:of the Senate Republican Policy between Israel and the Arab St Tax ut ossbletaken very soon, probably withinI HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS: There is talk that the govern…

… single- gression rarely if ever succ rebuyers, dealers are said to the city and returning it as sewage due to lack of student interest mately $1,000,000 available isaain package declaration "of practically…

January 13, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 86) • Page Image 4

…'You Must Tell Me About Your Work Sometime, Dear" :x T r mtrligatt Uatig Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF…

STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 When Opinions Are Free Truth Wil Prevail" 18 ; Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual…

… of the present Univer- sity Calendar is making itself felt more and more among students, faculty and administra- tion. No one appears satisfied with the compromise plan, in effect for the first time…

… this year, which has accomplished nothing more than to restore a full 15 weeks of classes to the fall semester and legalize the single-day study period prior to final examinations. Students, insisting on…

… except students, and particularly not the present calendaring committee, is anxious to sit down for two more years and study the whole calendaring problem all over again. The majority of members of the…

…. Even if a rev calendar could be worked out this spring, t T arliest it could be used would be the academic year, 1958-59. Time, therefore, is important in a considera- tion of the calendar. Student

…-duck" period of classes disliked by faculty members and students alike. It also could include "dead period" at the end of Christmas vacation be- fore final examinations. Under this same plan, the second semester…

… would begin in the middle of January and end late in May. Students from the University would get first preference at summer jobs, being able to start early and still work to Labor Day. Academically, this…

… during the Christmas vacation. The compensa- tion for this is, of course, the longer summer and the two or three-week head start on summer jobs. THAT REPRESENTS the sacrifice students would have to make…

… If the 'calendar -is to be changed, some weather conditions. definite, workable plans must be advanced, In particular, the University has many and students must recognize they are going to capped…

January 10, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 73) • Page Image 1

… was a medical student. Johnson is listed in the city di- rectory as a doctor for the Na- tional Research Council, but Uni- versity officials .were unable to find any record of employment or to identify…

… Unknown The neighbor told police Johnson had originally been a chemistry student but had switched to medi- cine. He said he believed Johnson' had been expelled from the Uni- versity medical school for…

… Baghdad Pact. American and official sources said the 14,000-man Arab Legion, Jordan's crack army, was in firm control and the country calm after a weekend of rioting and demon- strations. Only minor…

… hold a new gen- eral election in four months, re- signed Saturday. El Rifai also promised not to lead the country into any pacts, to restore order and to uphold the Arab's place in Palestine. In his…

… instructions to the new premier, 21-year-old King Hussein also told him to safeguard good relations with Arab states and all friendly nations, build up defense forces to' protect the country's borders and clean…

… specialists. University Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis will speak on the possible study of international students and their Withdraws Name, place in the community. From Primarv The…

… TOPS: Music Students Win T11 By RENE GNAM A - medley of show tunes won' first place among Ann Arbor talent at last night's television auditions, held in the Grand Ballroom of the Michigan Union…

January 04, 1950 (vol. 60, iss. 71) • Page Image 4

… the reasons for the increase in scholastic dis- honesty. Crowded classrooms, extinction of the personal relationships that used to ex- ist between students and faculty, the re- quiring of subjects that…

… are contrary to a students' interests, and overemphasis on classroom grades all lead to cheating. Our own Dean Peake was quoted as remarking "Overcrowding is undoubtedly one of the most significant…

… reasons for the increase in cheating. The student feels he is a very little fish in a very big ocean. Imperson- ality results, and the student loses his sense of ethical responsibility." Instead of talking…

… licking the cheating situation by using an honor system. This places the student on his personal honor not to cheat. He also must report all of- fenses- to a student honor board, that is made up of students

… the House to meet Catholic objections. One concession will be an amendment pro-, viding bus transportation for parochial as well as public school students. TAXES - the House will pass legislatioN4…

… control of Christian, Jewish and Mohammedan holy places. The other called for inter- nationalization of the whole city. This, the stricter plan, was pushed through by the Soviet Un- ion, the Arab countries…

… except Hashemite Jordan, and a bloc of South American countries, accord- ing to Sunday's New York Times. The Arab countries are plainly jealous of Abdullah, who may in- tend to set up his capital in his…

… the drudgeries and frustrations of "seat hunting" on crowded trains. Other student honorary societies should follow the lead of the Vul- ca-ns, and look for concrete oppor- tunities to serve University…

… the Deermouse, Peromyscus Maniculatus", Thurs. Jan. 5, West Council Room, Rack- ham Bldg., 2 p.m. Chairman, L. R. Dice. Directed Teaching Qualifying Examination: All students expect- ing to do directed…

…., Jan. 7. Students will meet in the auditorium of the University High School. The ex- amination will consume about four hours' time; promptness is essen- tial. Bring bluebooks. Students who expect to do…

January 15, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 87) • Page Image 4

…Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2…

… touch of humor. John Paxon, who looks and tries to act like Jack Palance, is a rather mature-looking A ft, )AY, JANUARY 15, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: DONNA HANSON Solving ousing Problem Needs More Student

… Initiative A NEW ROLE of responsibility in helping plan and operate the University has been opened to students this year-and it would appear they are falling short of accepting this job. The recognition of…

student participation in this area-housing-undoubtedly has its roots in the past, but has come into full bloom this year with the student committee's work in helping plan the new Residence Halls for North…

… Campus. This committee is the big precedent for student participation in housing troubles but they now must take a tighter hold, on the opportunity and make their influence felt in other aspects of this…

January 15, 1959 (vol. 69, iss. 86) • Page Image 1

… EIGHT P4 SGC Tables Idea Of Larger Board Herrnste 1,Noskin Oppose Motion; Council Seeks More Information By PHILIP MLUNiCH Student Government Council last night tabled the motion on increasing the number…

… of non-athletic students on the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics with a request for more information. The two present student members of the Board, John Herrnstein, '59, and Stan Noskin…

…, '60, both told the council they did not favor the idea. Noskin said he couldn't see how a student not connected with House Selects GOP, Pear Takes sasS Reins #OF Ipe aker ---------- I…

… of the Board well enough to make a good contribution to it. "I think we are fortunate," Herrn- stein added, "to have even two students on the Board." 4He said the decisioyis of the Board are usually…

… never close enough to be decided by one vote and that the Board mostly fol- lows the "recommendations" made by Athletic Director H. 0. "Fritz" Chrisler. Replying to charges that the student members of the…

… Dule many meetings this was. side Comn Herrnstein is in the second year Germy of his term and Noskin is in his Grmany. first. Student members of the Sec. Dull Board are currently elected for ican peopl a…

January 05, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 69) • Page Image 1

… loopholes through which private dealers were able to send surplus British arms to Egypt. The wisdom of the government's approach to the Israeli-Arab prblem also is quest- ioned. Conservatives said the…

… swayed by congressional pressure, then we say to Mr. East- land and his counsel that they are wasting their time. This news- paper will continue to determine its own policies. ARCHITECTS SKETCH - Student

… Activities Building will be located behind the Administration Bldg. Scheduled for completion in early 1957, it will house student groups, deans. By TOM BLUES groups that will be available when ro After only…

… one month of con- construction is finished. It struction the Student Activities Panhellenic President Debbie in Building, new location for all stu- Townsend, '56, commented yes- be dent organizations…

…, is rising rap- terday, "Here is physical proof of idly, Lynn Fry, supervising archi- the University's endorsement of sid tect for the University said. student activities as a natural and stv Located on…

… Jefferson St. be- important part of a student's is hind the Administration Building career." Of the new center is slated for com- Many small groups will benefit ou pletion on Feb. 1, 1957. greatly by having a…

… permanent ta The excavation is almost com- meeting place instead of using any ha pleted, cement footings for the!I e Csoo om available at meeting time. is hoped that student interest joining campus…

… with the secre- riat separated from them by alf partitions. . the new driving ban proposals were drafted at last night's Student. Government Council meeting in the Union. Passed on straw votes after…

… and chairman of as presented by student members the department of anthropology of the office of Student Affairs and sociology at Brooklyn College, committee established to draft conducted the survey and…

… project on time, Mills said.'I When it is finished the build- ing will contain offices of the deans as well as facilities for stu-! dent organizations, which include{ Student Government Council, In…

January 10, 1953 (vol. 63, iss. 77) • Page Image 1

… organizations in Ann Arbor and at the University. The series will continue Tuesday.) By ZANDER HOLLANDER Daily Feature Editor Domination by the Labor Youth League faces two prominent University student groups…

…: close to 100 interested students jammed the March '9 meeting, dozens paying membership dues and passing the amendment by a slim margin. Although since then the club has taken a liberal course, its active…

… with more and more of her friends and the other kids have stopped coming." Miss Schectman's "friends" are expected to put her in early next n THE YOUNG Progressives, warned last month by the Student

… are YP's too, along with the ubiquitous Ed Shaffer and seven of the ever- circulating personnel from the Society for Peaceful Alternatives. Unlike most student groups the Young Progressives make use of…

… non-student members, apparently to comply with the 30- member minimum required for SAC approval. The non-student proviso was originally inserted in the University regulations governing student

… organization membership to accommo- date the non-student wives of veteran students. Since the rule was not nade specific on this score, University officials feel that the YP has violated its spirit if not its…

… letter. One such non-student member is Omar Kidwell, LYL organizer from Jackson. Kidwell's efforts to establish a League unit at Jackson Junior College fell through when government agents infiltrated the…

January 09, 1953 (vol. 63, iss. 76) • Page Image 2

… class has developed to take over the government of their own affairs. The issue of colonialism vs. nationalism reached a crisis last month when' a bloc of 13 Arab-Asian nation succeeded in raising the…

… fell'again when this country opposed the Arab-Asian proposal calling for interference by the UN to "establish normal conditions and normal civil liberties." Deceptively identify- ing itself with the…

… experienced men wishing to be Orientation Leaders during the spring semester, may sign up at the Union Student Offices on Wed., Thurs., or Fri., of this week, from 3 to 5. Only men with previous exper- ience…

… will be considered. Recreational Leaders. St. Francis Junior High School is interested in ob- taining the services of a college student to supervise a lunch and play period from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p…

…, and at the university. Employment Registration. Those seniors and graduate students who have not as yet registered at the Bureau of Appointments are urged to do. so .as soon. as possible. Assistance…

…, we.are. told, student govern- ment has proven ineffective, and much effort has been wasted in a hopeless cause. I do not think we have lost, re- gardless of the Regents decision. I am convinced that…

… fellow-students and future fellow-citizens. The awareness of and loyalty to a cer- tain set of ideals is more, import- ant than the reform of a particu- lar committee structure or pro- cedure. Every…

… political club on campus, from the Young Republicans through the YP's actively attack- ed the five man faculty group. Last April two-thirds of the vot- ing student body offered their crit- icism of the…

… restrictive powers of the Lecture Committee. The Student Legislature, de- spite delays and counter-propo- sals, stood steadfast to the cri- teria of individual guilt, judged after the act on specific evidence…

….m., Kellogg Auditorium. No admission charge. SRA Coffee Hour, Lane Hall, 4:15- 5:30 p.m. Canterbury Club, co-hostess. All students invited. Sophomore Cabaret Central Commit- tee meeting at 4 p.m., in the League…

January 14, 1951 (vol. 61, iss. 81) • Page Image 6

… veloped the campus, the only sign Tarquin Sextus. The woman of life coming from dormitories _kse_ Sis a tells her husband and father where students are dusting off what happened and then com- textbooks and…

… pub- lishing house. After a short time in this posi- tion, the changeable Cerf helped SHINING Balding Student Meets' Red Tape, Bald Doctor By CAL SAMRA If you're going bald, go bald and live with it…

…! That was the advice of one University student who at present is plagued with a receding hair- ,line and doesn't know what the future holds in store for him. * * * THE STUDENT, who preferred to remain…

…% cents, 90 Tickets for the lecture are. 60 cents and $1.20. Wednesday and cents, $1.20 and $1.50. The box Thursday, students will be able office will be open from 10 a.m. to buy nearly any seat in the to 1…

… p.m. tomorrow. Tuesday the theatre at the special student hours will be the same, except rate of 60 cents, that tickets will be on sale fromThe production will be direct- 2 p.m. until lecture time at…

… again. * * * HE DID just that, the student admits. And also he went back to the massage treatments, the shampoos and the hair tonics. But still his hair fell. Finally, in desperation he de- cided to…

student set out for the Univer- sity Hospital. But once there, he encountered an elaborate system of red tape, 'which shocked a few more grains of hair off his noggin. In succession, he registered, got…

… pre- scription for a shampoo and a hair ointment. The student figured out his balance sheet as he ambled home from the Hospital: assets: a 'bot- tle of shampoo and a bottle of hair ointment; liabilities…

… American representative at an International Labor Organization committee meeting in LaPaz, Bolivia, Tues- day through Jan. 27. Prof. Miner is in Africa study- ing Arab living. He will interrupt his study to…

…) Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- Lent Club: Supper-program Sun- day, 5:30 p.m. Sound, color movie: 'Dust or Destiny." Westminster Student Guild: 5:30 p.m., Fellowship Supper. 6:80 p.m., "The Church Unites." Re…

January 20, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 82) • Page Image 4

…Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2…

… and teaching methods, they serve as a valuable stimulus to students. They are beneficial to both groups. It is surprising neither faculty nor students of the business school have evidenced any in…

… serves, in the eyes of many students, little worthwhile purpose. More than that, it would be a ser- vice to both faculty and students of the school. -LEE MARKS ,,:- . s......s..... .i r 4 i r ti F r A…

students in discussion meetings, large and small, in "off the record" conversations and con- sultations. Never have I noted the least tinge of protective coloring in the factuly, nor the hostile admin…

… Michigan. The Daily underestimates faculty integrity and courage in assuming that intimidation would be allowed to exist for a year and a half. It under-rates the students in as- suming that the non…

… Recognition'.. To The Editor: A RECENT anonymous letter to The Daily bemoaned the hesi- tancy on the part of University students to take definite stands on political questions. It is perhaps unfortunate that…

… political alertness of University students," but rather to the sobering of their attitudes caused by the examination to which their traditional beliefs are being subjected. In the Detroit high school which I…

… attended, every student had a definite point of view on political questions, which they noisily spouted as the exigencies of argu- mentrequired. It was easy; one had merely to critically examine the facts on…

… both sides of an issue to find the truth. Thus my fellow high school students were capable of exchanging their own brand of ignorance on a wide variety of issues. At the University students have begun to…

… appreciate the true com- plexity of life and of political is- sues. Although there is social pres- sure to hold a personal philos- ophy so that one may be thought intellectual, students have tem- pered their…

January 11, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 74) • Page Image 4

…r i MIir4gatt Datg Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR…

… estate profession-is landlords have raised their rents in the middle exercised many will find the economic pinch of a semester, knowing the student had little unbearable as rents continue to rise in the…

… believe the versity students, as well as placing themselves, housing shortage will loom larger next fall' the city of Ann Arbor, and the realtors in a and the fall after and the fall after that. bad light…

….r THE CAPSTONES of their junket were aid offers to India, Burma, and Afganistan. Shortly before, Egypt had agreed to do business. The foot was now in the Arab-Asian door. On the other hand, American…

… generation of crime writers , making their presence known, things are as lively and spirited as ever, For the temptation of the cramming student, then, whose reading interests could easily turn,j In…

…., Feb. 2. The final day of regularly scheduled classes is Sat., Jan. 21. There will, for this semester, be no "dead period" between the end of classes and the examination period. TO: All students who are…

… Selective Service registrants. The Selective Serv- ice Qualification Test will be given on campus Thurs., April 19, 1956. Students may apply for the applications between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon…

…, 1956. To be eligible to take the Selective Service College Qualification Test, an applicant, - (1) Must be a Selective Service regis- trant who intends to request occupa- tional deferment as a student

… February Graduates: Col- lege of Literature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public Health, and School of Business Administration - students are advised not to request…

…, instead of Jan. 30, as originally published. Grades received after that time may defer the student's graduation until a later date. Correction: Note Change of Date: Recommendations for Departmental Honors…

January 04, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 78) • Page Image 2

… Israel but also with Arab Iraq. Egypt conducts active propaganda warfare against a number of countries. It plays an DIAL NO 2-3136 i) f f active role in international af- neutral or neutralist powers…

… graduate Student looking for an apartment: 2-7664. )L6 PERSONAL VETERAN STUDENT over 30 wants to hear from woman over 25 interested in going dancing Friday nights. Box , the Michigan Daily. )F96 CONVERT your…

… Piano and Theory, Graduate Student with Master's of "Music Degree. NO 5-6776, eve. )J39 SIAMESE-Stud Service. Ca]l Mrs. Pe- terson, NO 2-9020. ) B136 TYPEWRITER REPAIR & service pick- up and delivery…

…-3225. )A73 ROOMS FOR RENT NORTHWOOD Apartmetns - One-bed- room apartments are available for second semester to any student or faculty member who is married and is not assigned an apartment in either the…

January 21, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 83) • Page Image 4

…4ecHi44 t n tBatt Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR…

… problem last semester, a and student body weret down at the Michigan st last November. And, w panty raid which didn't big black front pages aro Lastly, the faculty ran over a seeming lack of con an area in…

… team cerely into this unfortunate present-day prob- a little too emotional lem. edium on a gray day The panty raid wasn't too important, and no kell, we had another one was hurt. Yet, the student

… criticisms arose, We'll s h ing ontheir part he problem. The ad- see what happens next semester. )lans for a new dormi- lment received a full THE THING I'm trying to point up, old grad, is that the University-students

… invigorating discussion on "in- tellectual curiosity" brought out a fine crowd and some important ideas. The Arabs and Staf Israelis tore into a critical problem while we ......Managing Editor listened and…

… learned. Edity ditor Our new student government made some sub- .......Magazine Editor stantial progress in liberalizing our driving ..........Feature Editor ban (have any trouble getting a horse and…

… course our main business is education. ssociate Women's Editor We worked at that, too, each student to his ..... Chief Photographer own extent. The opportunity, that wonderful SIaff chance to learn, is be…

…'coming more and more SBusiness Manager widespread and more and more students are ociate Business Manager learning its advantages. Handy Guide... To the Editor: S "FAITH and intellectual hu- mility…

…" incampatible with the compilation of student opinion? Professor Blake claims that our university has sunk to a new low as the result of the faculty evalua- tion. The Harvard Crimson, the Daily of Professor Blake…

…'s Alma Mater, publishes a booklet entitled, "The Crimson Guide" What is this guide? Every course and every instufttor are evaluated from the reslts of a thorough student nol. telow Is a samnle entry…

January 17, 1959 • Page Image 8

… than ia Rabat, of sails, olive trees and vibrant and Tunisia is moreover caught light, vestiges of Rome, Arab between the exigencies of Algeria Ribats, Turkish citadels and Span- oroo and Egypt on the…

… at the University this year as the Foreign Student Leader- Tunisia has organized an efficien ship Project representative, the traffic police march in the 195 Page Eight As soon as Tunisia achieved…

January 17, 1959 (vol. 5, iss. 4) • Page Image 16

… sails, olive trees and vibrant light, vestiges of Rome, Arab Ribats, Turkish citadels and Span- ish forts stand outlined, bearing witness to the many waves of in- vaders which have come to her shores. For…

… this year as the Foreign StudentLeader. skio Proiect rebresentat ve. into the official fold, pledged to support the government. The more serious attack on the regime was attempted by the ex- treme…

…-minded minority who attack the com- placency and the closed-in quality of the life around them. Or, as in the case of American writers and students, who aren't mad at anyone, it may involve a movement away from…

… and scientific reviews, both in Arabic and in French, are published in Tunis, and the city is host to numerous lectures, theatrical per- formances, concerts, and art exhi- bitions. A vigorous school of…

…-understanding. As a result we often find college students bored by discussion, tired "a studs 4, of asking questions. Give us the word, they will say. You know more than I do, what is the an- swer? Tell me. R, ON…

… THE other hand, stu- dents will say - What is the point in so much student self-gov- ernment? We had all that in high school. Let's get on to the more interesting things, I don't have time for making…

… rules about cur- few and bicycle permission. In some colleges the machinery of student government has run. down simply because many re- sponsible students do not wish to run for office. They would prefer…

… an orderly arrangement of stu- dent life which worked fairly and automatically. They would prefer to have some one other than inex- perienced students do the ad- ministration of student affairs. Having…

…. ANOTHER STUDENT, among those at Princeton who have, been said to be the unsilent gen- eration, states a common ideal! for young and old alike when hel says: "Success for me would mean 1 a job that I could…

January 15, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 87) • Page Image 1

… F qqw I V6-Nod Sales, ightBills Rise: Finals Loom Nea Sales of coffee, cigarettes, no-nods and kilowatt-hours zoomed as that semi-annual phenomenon of student life, exams, roll around…

… about!" The comment of one graduate student was a bit difficult to catch, since he was. lying with his head on the floor and his feet propped against the wall. "Blood circulation. Good for brain effi…

… Michigan cut fror Hungarian students have been sported, and this hurt them. Ron pre-dra made available for second semes- Kramer and Pete Tillotson were to take ter, University President Harlan the…

… the Middle East held by Britain and France and of interfering in affairs of Arab states. After Kuznetsov finished, Lodge, obviously angered, said the charges against the Americans came from "the…

…-cancer. Kappa national time to answer a TH diedar1t his home s t the a~e juici inuinrniv . N reunly vac, va- orce Ban on Studying Provision for those who know English well enough to begin as half-time students

… has been made. Any student with complete profic- iency in the language may enroll as a full-time student in regular, By JAMES BOW ing restrictions varied from sug- Strict enforcement of the Union l…

… times found it dif- into effect immediately after the ; ficult to study elsewhere. I can see that students do get in the way." "Let students study in the South Cafeteria, and restrict studying in the…

January 13, 1954 (vol. 64, iss. 81) • Page Image 4

… appeal of the inter-semester per- iod is greatly lessened. Only a superhuman student would deny that some rest is help- ful, if not essential, after final examinations. "Spring" rushing prohibits this rest…

… Israel and the Arab states, of Italy and Yugoslavia, of France and Ger- many. Is it at all evident that the initia- tive is becoming ours and that our policy is free to develop along lines of our choice…

… tory, in Los Alamos, Mexico, has an- nounced additional positions which i _ - --- _ _ _ - will be available to undergraduate and graduate students through the Labora- 1VASINGTON-Senator Knowland of…

… defense will also have several positions open contracts to unemployment areas. A lot of people wondered why. Here at both undergraduate and graduate is the inside reason. levels for students majoring in…

… Metal- lurgy. Graduate students in Physics, As Senate majority leader, Knowland made a gentleman's Chemistry (other than organic), and agreement last July that he would use his influence to prevent…

… had bid low. students interested in supplementing South Carolina's Sen. Burnett Maybank, whose state produces tex- theirtincome through sales work, Con- tact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 tiles for…

… open froh 10 a.m. until i p.m. All seats are reserved. Ukrainian Students' Club. Meeting will be held this evening at 7 p.m. in the Madelon Pound House (1024 Hill St.). Hillel, 3:30 p.m. - Class in…

… served. All members should attend. Coming Events Episcopal Student Foundation: Stu- dent breakfast following 2 a.m. service, of Holy Communion, Thurs., Jan. 14, at Canterbury House. Roger Williams Guild…

… Science Organzation. Tes- timony meeting Thurs., Jan. 14 at 7:30 p.M., ]Ireside Room, Lane Hall. All are welcome. Wives of Students and Faculty, Schol of Conservation and Natural Resources. Meeting on Thurs…

…'Neill. The topic: "Suggested Plans for Use of the Ann Arbor High School Building by the University." Faculty members and graduate students of the various lan. guage departments are invited. Sixty-Fourth Year…

January 15, 1953 (vol. 63, iss. 81) • Page Image 1

…For_1953 S Students will have a chance fo fame and possibly fortune as the Union Opera opened its 1953 scenario contest today. The annual competition, which has enabled many aspiring writ- ' ers to gain…

… experience in show bus- iness, is limited to all scholastical- ly eligible male students. Scenarios should include a com- Legislature's Session Opens LANSING-()-The 67th Mich- igan Legislature rolled into…

Arab nations, the Malayan s peninsula and India strong and y on the side of democracy. P Sometimes shouting, and using - the dramatic gestures of a skilled speaker, Rep. Judd said it took" a - genious…

…Series By HARRY LUNN Parlimentary entanglements prevented a vote on a motion to censure The Daily for its series of articles on campus Communist activities in the final minutes of last night's Student

… chairman ,? McCARRAN REGULATION S: New Act Seen as 'Fair' to Students By VIRGINIA VOSS The omnibus McCarran-Walter Immigration Act is now in effect with most of the foreign student provisions local…

student who will have to pay the $500 sum." Another Foreign Student Ad- visers' recommendation which INS has not accepted was one asking "that an educational in- stitution be permitted to appeal …

January 09, 1952 (vol. 62, iss. 77) • Page Image 4

… the Middle East, about all that can be said is that the United States is a little less hated than Israel in the Arab states, and a little less hated than Britain in Egypt and Iran- hardly a major…

… played and discussed. SLMeeting. 7:30 p.m., Stockwell Hall. Women members of the SL will not need late permission. All interested students are invited. Delta Sigma P1, professional business fraternity…

…. Business meeting at the chapter house, 1412 Cambridge. Coming Evenits International Center Weekly Tea for foreign students and American friends, 4:30-6 p.m., Thurs., Jan. 10. U. of M. Sailing Club. Meeting…

… Fubright Act, Mr. Harold H. Benjamin, Graduate Student, University of Michigan. All education students are invited. Michigan Actuarial Club: Thurs., Jan. 10, 4 p.m., Room 3D, Union. Mr. Rob- ert J. Myers…

…. Chief Actuary, Federal So- cial Security Administration, will speas on the subject, "Opportunities for Ac- tuarial Students in Government." Re- freshments and informal discussion fol- lowing. Gilbert and…

…. Business session will be followed by talk by Prof. Lionel Laing of the Political Science Department, chairman of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Grad. History Club. Meeting, 8 p.m., Thurs., Jan…

… Mi- chigan is anything to go by, were I an instructor I would curl up my toes and die! Students seldom think of how they must appear to the instructor standing before the class. Should the class be…

… is a pre-class pep rally with the University of Michigan band, after which all students would march 'to their classes with their emancipated instructors. -Naeem Gul Rathore * o 4 ffitlgal Dil Iette…

…- tecture" show in the South Gallery has just gone up; it was delayed a few days in transit, and I haven't been able to study Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan…

… under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Chuck Elliott .........Managing Editor Bob Keith................City Editor Leonard Greenbaum, Editorial Director Vern…

January 04, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 78) • Page Image 1

… situation in the state capital. Daily Kansan Must Enforce Neutral Policy Editors of the Daily Kansan, student newspaper at the Univer- sity of Kansas, have been rebuffed in their fight to express political…

… issues in their paper. Although the student board which controls the policies of the Kansan voted to rescind the poli- tical neutrality clause, Dean Bur- ton Marvin of the journalism school has objected to…

… the decision, Since the paper is the laboratory for the journalism students, Dean Marvin serves as faculty adviser to the Kansan. "It is absolutely essential that the Kansan, as a laboratory for…

students and as a publication representing the university in the eyes of students and Kansas citi- zens of varying political leanings, remain neutral in all political sit- uations on or off the campus," Dean…

… over the area in the waketof the Christmas holidays as the the Israeli-Arab troubles and thej Democratic candidate for mayor British-French invasion of Egypt of Ann Arbor in the April election. following…

January 12, 1956 (vol. 66, iss. 75) • Page Image 1

… Soviet resolution because, it is stronger. An Israeli spokesman refused to comment on the Western proposal. He termed the Russian resolution "a, bid to woo the Arabs and a trap to get the West to follow…

… who have thus far agreed to sponsor the survey. A survey of the problems relat- ing to the University's 1400 foreign students was suggested by Vice- President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis. He…

… spoke of the disadvantages of "having to house so many students under adverse conditions" in Ann Arbor. Paul Wagner, a local business- man, described the self-survey's greatest value as deriving from…

January 17, 1952 (vol. 62, iss. 84) • Page Image 4

…PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 195Z - - - - - - -- - IU Ike's Voice MATTER lOFFACT By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP "rm An Old Arab Tentmaker. Slip This On For Size" WASHINGTON…

….m., 2054 Natural Science Bldg. Graduate Student Council. Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Graduate Outing Room, Rackhain Bldg. U. of M. Sailing Club. Meeting, 7:30 p.m., 311 West Engineering. Marlin- spike seamanship…

… will be practised. International Center Weekly Tea for foreign students and American friends, 4:30-6 p.m. Graduate Political Science Round Ta- ble: 7:45 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Dr. Angus Campbell…

… pass an examination on the content of these lectures. Transfer students with freshman standing are also required to take the course unless they have had a similar course elsewhere, which has been…

… Intonation Patterns", Fri., Jan. Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Chuck…

January 11, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 84) • Page Image 6

… technician, and a staff of four part time assistants supervise the lab and distribute the required records to students. Expansion Planned Plans for laboratory improve- ment include. extension o' the present…

… lah into the next room and adding.50 booths, and a mas- ter tape system whereby the, same lesson could be piped out to many students simultaneously. New laboratory facilities will also be provided in…

… include: U.S. ctizenship; bachelor's degree by date of departure; demonstrated organization1 Notices.I Congregational and Disciples Student Guild, pizza party, 7:30 p.m., Guild House. -Daily-David Arnold…

… LANGUAGE LAB-Two students make use of the linguaphone facilities at the language lab in Mason Hall. The lab now accomo- dates 100 students simultaneously at tape recorders and phono- graphs. Plans are being…

…- mesters, the School of Music will be able to accept a limited number of applications for voice lessons from students in other units during the 2nd semester. Those interested in en- rolling for voice…

…:0( p.m. at the Women's Athletic Building. Counselor Education Course: Students wishing more information about the Work-Study Program in Counselor Education offered at the National Mu- sic Camp during the…

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan