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…