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October 04, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 15) • Page Image 4

… entrench the idea of student government and respon- To the Editor: IN YOUR October 1 issue the editorial "Syrian Revolt: End of Pan-Arab Nationalism?" ap- peared. The writer Harry Perl- stadt, accumulated…

…- Seventy-First Year ,_ .. EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN )fs Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS u Prevail STUDENT PUBLIcATIONS BLDG…

…'S NOTE-The cupola of the Student is Building, pictured above, whose in- s are lined with'the names of past Daily ors, symbolizes this new column writ- e 1961-'62 senior staff. Appearing twice VERTIME…

… there, if the size of classes is kept down. The literary college gets a little bit bigger every year.. I suppose the faculty-to-student ratio stays the same, but I always wonder about those figures and…

… to keep recitations down to 15 students apiece and there will still be only 14 rows in Auditorium B and only 100 booths in the Language Lab. We appear to be saturated this year. THINGS MIGHT NOT be…

… this bad again. A lot more students returned this year than expected and I suppose by next year the University will have us reserve places so they can tell exactly how many upperclassmen there are going…

… Pluriversity of Michigan, but that's meat for another day. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Prospects Enhanced For Arab Unity PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS: SGC in Retrospect Important meeting T GOVERNMENT COUNCIL faces ry…

…- . Student ,Organizations ineligible to ncil concurrently. lready been shown that a Saturday erformance of Gilbert and Sullivan's inafore" would not seriously conflict. irangle Christmas dances, and that ave…

… to notice how they in cast their votes. -JUDITH OPPE HEIM (EDITOR'S NOTE: The author of the following, article recently re- signed from Student Government Council to devote full time to her studies in…

… the Law School.) By MARY WHEELER Daily Guest Writer AS ONE who has recently been a member of Student' Govern- ment Council, I have a very real regard for this body; possibly more than those who have…

October 16, 1966 (vol. 77, iss. 39) • Page Image 4

…Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED By STUDENTS OF THE UNIYERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS wnere Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARDST.,, ANN ARBOR, Mici…

… United Nations from its preoccupation with Viet Nam. Behind the typical Arab and Israeli charges and countercharges lies an ingrained hatred and the specific knotty question of water rights. THE MAJOR…

…; and between Iraq anj Turkey for the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. But the Jordan River continues to be polluted with Israeli-Arab mis- trust. The Jordan rises in the foothills of the Anti…

… stor- age point for the entire area. As its share, Israel was to re- ceive 39 per cent-a figure which did not sit too well with Arab leaders who sounded like they were intent on destroying the in…

… proposal. THE ARAB states have been opposed to the plan since its in- ception and have sought to frus- Israeli-Syrian Controversy trate Israel's claim on the waters. In December, 1963, the military chiefs…

… of 11 states agreed on a united plan of action, and in January, 1964, an Arab :3ummit meeting was held. President Nassar of the United Arab Republic urged a cautious approach to the problem: the Arabs

… defense system-since Israel can mobilize some 300,000 men in 72 hours. THE NON - MILITARY p 1 a n agreed upon was a diversion of the rivers which feed the Jordan from the north. The Arabs would shut the…

… taps on Israel by dam- ing the Baniyas and Hasbani rivers, tributaries which originate in Lebanon and Syria. In addition, Jordan wanted to completely dam off the Yarmuk. Arab engineers at that time con…

…- tended that Israel's Negev plan would leave the lower course of the Jordan Valley destructively saline, thus hurting some 200,000 Arab farmers. BUT THE Jordan government's diversion of the Yarmuk River for…

… the Canal had brought about de- st;fictive salinity in certain areas anyway; and Arab farmers had to be reimbursed with large outlays of East Ghor water. (The Johnston plan would have provided the…

October 24, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 44) • Page Image 6

… preceding publication and by .? p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sun- day. Items may appear only once. Student organization notices a r e not accepted for publication. For iniormation, phone 764-9270. FRIDAY…

… evening, Oc- tober 29 at 7:30 to meet with students interested in the study of law, A re- presentative from aCse Western Re- serve Law School will be in the coun- seling office on Monday, October 27…

…. Students wishing to make appoint- merts should contact Mrs. Towle at 40312 or in 1223 Angell Hall. Placement Service. GENERAL DIVISION 3200 SAB ANNOUNCEMENTS Vista Week - next week. October 27- 31: If you…

… remodeled Dale Carnegie program", says Ned Dougherty, Assistant Di- rector in the Office of Student I Organizations who heads the program. Rather, he says, it 1 resembles a T-group sensitiv- I ity weekend…

… myself as a dynamic group member." Chris Kahan, former president of Stockwell, said that her group "just flipped out." Tom Clark also assistant director of the student organi- zations office, says he…

…. STUDY SHOWS FRICTION WITH ARABS: 0 Soviet power uncertain in Mideast I for leadership MAR' i International Affairs Committee cordially invites you to a reception for a group of U.N. 'Delegates…

… from Arab governments, a report pub- lished by the Institute for Strate- gic Studies has revealed. The report suggested that the; Soviet Union's Involvement in the Arab-Israeli conflict has placed new…

… responsibilities on the Rus- sians without gaining them a cor- responding ability to control events in the region. But the study by Robert E. Hunter said, "The Arabs-though still to Russian minds an a 1i e n people…

… Ethiopia Cyprus Poland Finland Equador Brazil Malta United Arab Republic Denmark Norway Argentina Libya Freland Spain of their being drawn into crises and wars not of their making or choosing, or even…

…. 26, 1969, 4to 6 P.M., Lawyer's Club, Law Quad __ __ ' STUDENTS Find Out What Is Happening on YOUR Campus! TUNE IN THE NEW "CAMPUS NEWS" 8:30 A.M. as much as $2 billion if bought sn the West. He…

October 09, 1968 (vol. 79, iss. 35) • Page Image 10

…Page Ten THE Mir HIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 9, 1968 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 9, 1968 Auditor withdraws criticism of funding WELL ARMED, FINANCED: Arab guerillas vow to…

…, o P i enlarg esn , Voice split (continued from page 1) almost unanimously, to take part in sponsoring a Nov. 4 teach-in on the national elections. The group also called for a student strike on…

… adopt guidelines for the expenditure of student fees. "If the Legislature were to say what student fees could be used for, it would be a serious problem for the Regents asfar as their authority to run the…

… shouldn't have them." Smith defended the authority of the Regents to determine the way student fees are spent. "The dele- gation of authority to the Regents to run the University was done to provide…

… are currently about 3,000 strong, with no shortage of recruits or money to buy weapons. Jordan officials describe them as a problem for the Arab gov- ernments. Leaders of Al Fatah, most effective of…

…- ly engage in sabotage and fight- ing with the Israelis. "If we lose two even five, men for every Israeli it doesn't matter," said the Al Fatah spokesman. "There are 100 million Arabs and only two or…

October 03, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 14) • Page Image 4

…Folded Tent Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 'Where Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail…

…" 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 must be noted in all reprints…

… carefully defined limits, and the rea- sons for this lie in the stagnant academic state of the high school. This middle ground scholarship can be at- tributed to the upbringing of most high school students

…. Their adolescence has been directed in a single cultural direction. Their relation- ships have been with students of the same age, the relatively same economical level, the same neighborhood. And so the…

October 30, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 49) • Page Image 4

… 94P Amidsgan Baiy Sevent y-n ine years of editorial freedoinm Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan Violence and By MICHAEL DAVIS the death of the 420 Maynard St., Ann…

… unconstitu- tional. HE REASON given by state legislators, who voted in favor of the residence Miseonception THE FUROR at Cornell University, roused last spring when black students toting unloaded guns occupied…

… for the major protest in April. It contributes no new analysis to the area of student protests. In fact, if anything can be gleaned from the findings, it is that a disruptive hard core is being phased…

… out of the leadership of student movements. FROM THE CORNELL survey, it should not simply be noted that a lot of students are now willing to condone dis- ruptive action by their peers, but rather that…

… chose violence, arguing: --that nonviolence had failed to achieve the ends already set for it (full civil rights for Blacks, power for students over their own lives, and decent conditions for the poor…

… directed its organizing efforts toward two groups notably less, verbal and more vio- lent --- poor high school students a n d w.rking youth. The move failed. Black high school stu- dents could be organized…

… around Black Power, though the demands had a mid- dieciass ring. And middle class high school students could be organized around stu- dent power and the war, though only in the way their older brothers and…

… for any refusal of all out sup- port, and were not surprised when liberals stopped supporting them. The New Left had depended heavily on money given by radical Jews. But, since the Arabs were friendly…

October 26, 1967 (vol. 78, iss. 49) • Page Image 4

… Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLJCATIONS THE VIEW FROM HERE UA Presents…

… senselessness of the twenty-year old struggle between the Israelis and the. Arab Nations. The destruction of Egyptian petroleum refineries at Port Suez in retaliation for the sinking of an Israeli destroyer will…

… the loss of human life. The Israelis and the Arabs will con- tinue to inflict atrocities upon each other until a permanent peace is established,. a proposition which will require. changes in the…

… positions of both sides.: Any real solution must be based on the recogni- tion by the Arab states of the right to existence of Israel. It also would require that Israel return the territory it con- quered in…

… little faith they had in that international body and consider Thant himself an overt ally of the Arabs. To propose that the Big Powers take the responsibility for solving the solution is equally…

… confidence of both sides. However, the one thing which is cer- tam is that the status quo can not re- main. Israel cannot allow over one mil- lion hostile Arabs to remain within its territory and the Arab

… solution. If the Arabs and the Israelis really wish a permanent solution, (and it is questionable whether the Arab leaders really want peace) they must realize that significant compromise is essential to any…

…-mache Royal Thai airplane (guided by University of Michigan radar), as it strafes a guerilla enclave in Southeast Asia. NOW THAT ALL THE STUDENTS have been drawn into the excitement of the classified research…

… countries colored in receiving American counter- insurgency aid. After the scavenger hunt, students are invited to Island Park, the traditional site of the tug-of-war across the Huron River, where a team of…

… 'U' researchers from Willow Run Labs battle an all-star SDS unit from across the state of Michigan. By this time enthusiasm will be at a fever pitch, and all students will gather on the Diag at 4 p…

October 12, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 22) • Page Image 3

… President John F. Kennedy. * * * KNOXVIILE - Negro college students marched in orderly lines to the box offices of three down- town movie theaters Monday in their unsuccessful efforts to pur- chase tickets…

… hand." ing the level of general and spe- cialized education; and shaping w , ,. Communist man with a Commu- R usk * t nist world outlook and morality. f % Rusk Suggest- Students Subjected T Some…

… secondary schools, For Arab World Unification where the stress will be on generalC L education, combined with one dayL I TLsse haben lodfrmIL U'. of manual work. Kaai sa t DAMASCUS (MP-The, newly independent…

… government of Syria system had been developed from yesterday launched-its own movement for uniting the Arab world. the Soviet model. The movement clearly was intended to take some of the magic from the name…

October 31, 1967 (vol. 0, iss. 53) • Page Image 3

…. JERUSALEM (6P) - Israel is strengthening its cease-fire lines and intends to retain most of the Arab lands it won in the six-day war last June, Prime Minister Levi Eshkol indicated yesterday. "Peace is the…

… two proposals, tried yester- day to agree on a plan the coun- cil could adopt to send a peace- maker to the Arabs and Israelis. Israel informed Secretary-Gen- eral U Thant yesterday it would make a…

… special contribution of one million Israeli pounds-$333,333- to the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Arab refugees in the, Middle East. One major difference was over wording of instructions to the proposed…

… U.N. special representa- tive concerning withdrawal of Israeli troops from captured Arab lands. A Canadian-Danish draft said no state in the area should "per- sist in refusing to withdraw troops that…

… South Vietnam. In his inaugural address he asked for direct peace talks with Hanoi. SPACE RENDEZVOUS: Soviets Dock Two Earth Satellites FORTIFY DEFENSES: Eshkol Says Israel To Retain Conquered Arab

…. An Israeli military spokesman in Tel Aviv denied that any of his coun- try's aircraft had flown over Syria or had been shot down. Israeli Claims The Israeli army said Arab in- filtrators bombed an…

… half a dozen recent sabo- tage attempts in the valley. Eshkol said Israel will not per- mit "the restoration of the situ- ation prior to June 5th" on Sy- ria's Golan Heights, from which Arab gunners…

… looked down on Israeli farm settlements. "Nor will the situation in Sinai, the Gulf of Elath and on the Suez Canal be restored to what it was," he declared. Because of the Arabs' refusal to negotiate peace…

October 19, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 40) • Page Image 3

… demilitarizing all Arab territory that Israel oc- cupied in the 1967 war. RADICAL JAPANESE STUDENTS invaded Prime Minister Eisaku Sato's residential compound where other student mili- tants were under arrest…

… Union may be Boa] a place for student organization Th offices, the bookstore, and regu- from lar after-class coffee breaks. " ' .,This is the "new Union" image runI presented by UAC President Wally to s…

… orga services than the Student Acti- ni to vities Building,' says Stromberg. tern The SAB would become an 8-5 " office building giving additiinal ona space to such offices as housing tow and admissions…

…. take A special study is now under the way to consider methods of gov- ion, erning the Union, and ways to as e finance its activities. Currently "B three students chosen by the UAC, stru three alumni, and…

… can be 8-studen to serve the people its meant board. erve is to have students, fa- The U y, and alumni in control," is the U Stromberg. primary owever, a committee headed Two y George Ladner '70 will…

… begin berg, th ting next week with student its food anizations, faculty and alum- The R o discuss their ideas for an al- bur Pie ative governing system. Financia We're basing much of our work re…

…-organ assumptions that the changes food sere ard greater student use will Harla place," says Ladner. He cites and me discount store, the credit un- studying and maybe the new bookstore the adm vidence of the "trend…

… o ° 'I THE 'WLAM WY[ER O 0 o FLAY STARK PRODUCTION Admission Today't $1.75 ~ ecommended that the Un- restructured to encourage by students and improve ncial status, suggested an t, 6-faculty member…

… responsible ebody," s a y s Stromberg. for students SUNDAY at 1:30 P.M. and 7:30 P.M. the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service ASPEN JANUARY 3-10 TOTAL COST-$230 (plus food) FINAL…

… phased fulfill- ment of an Arab-Israeli peace. The U.S. is keeping the door open for agreed adjustments of the Israeli-Arab frontier and a new status for the Gaza Strip. It has also suggested…

October 01, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 13) • Page Image 4

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

… Crutch ... AT VARIOUS TIMES in the next two weeks, several hundred men students will find themselves in an upstairs room of a fraternity house with several actives standing around them demanding an…

… existence. It is true that, as the fraternity man will contend, people generally want some group identification. But there is no need for a system of identification so com- plete that the studen't is…

… ... LEADERS of the fraternity system, in an at- tempt to make affiliated living more palat- able to the American student and the general public'have attempted to create an image of the fraternity as an…

… to offer the student. A person living on campus often finds the University large, himself small, and therefore wants to find an enjoyable group of friends. These the fraternity can provide, if the…

… right house is chosen. Or possibly a student lacks what he considers a good social life, caused perhaps by the ab- sence of alcohol which he is unable to pro- vide himself. A fraternity house, with an or…

…% SYRIAN REVOLT: End of Pan-Arab Nationalism? By HARRY PERLSTADT Daily Staff Writer THE CAUSES of the revolt in Syria are not yet fully under- stood. But the obvious result is the destruction of President…

… Gamal Abdel Nasser's United Arab Republic and a death knell for pan-Arab nationalism. The revolt itself was overtly car- ried off by several army officers who promptly turned the coun- try over to a…

…- percusions in Western foreign policy. The effect on the UAR is most apparent. Nasser's dream of Arab unity has suffered a defeat and his left side of the middle of the road neutralism has been shaken. The…

… stature of Nasser as a voice of Arab nationalism and a force in the Afro-Asian block is sub- stantially reduced. He will con- tinue to develop Egypt along so- cialistic lines, but will not person- ally be…

October 24, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 32) • Page Image 4

… have a hollow ring.. -PHILIP SHERMAN City Editor LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Arab Students Reject 'Any. Interference' To the Editor: N AN ARTICLE published in The Daily (Oct. 19), Mr. Storch failed to do…

students at the U of M reject any kind of inter- ference in the Arab domestic af- rairs by any group or groups of interested or non-interested par- ties." To an intelligent reader this means that Mr. Storch…

…'s conten- tion of no "burning Arab letters" on this score concerning Hillel is false. It is well understood why the Zionist Student Organization, as it turned out to be, was the only body interested in…

…1' TUITION HIKE: Smaller than You Think Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 'Where Opinions…

October 03, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 14) • Page Image 1

… Syrian revolution- aries seized control of this northern segmient of the now collapsed United Arab Republic. Syria To Adopt Neutral Policy Problems of Faculty Enrollment, Facilities Face 'U' in Future By…

…-' sort of continuing fedleration with Egypt in the United Arab R1epub- lic and said Syria now regards Egypt in the same light as any other Arab country. Syria also has applied for mem- br si of th Arabe

… Faculty Members 'Kuzbari said~ a letter sent to the United Nations Saturday was a formal application for member- ship in - the name of the Syrian Arab Republic The United States State Depart- ment reported…

… request. It arrived in Washington Sunday trugh the American consu gen-' Knight.- In Beirut about 500 young men demonstrated last night in support of Nasser. They shouted "lotig live the United Arab Republic…

…," "down with separatist movements in the Arab world." honored yesterday fobrst h e ire achievement and service to the University. .. F 1 v e received Distinguished Achievement Awards, consisting of a…

… estimates show a dro of 415 from 3,165 to 2,750. Sault Branch However Michigan Tech's bdranch at Sault Ste. Marie has Increased ts students body by' 13 from 487 to 500. IMichigan Tech's budget de…

… 5,038 to approxi- mately 5,300.- .astiern Michigan University also rose to approxi mately 5,300 from 5,121. Following the general trend, Western Michigan Universityin creased by 173 students, giving i…

October 13, 1967 (vol. 78, iss. 38) • Page Image 2

… luncheon, Oct. 13, Student Zionist Organization and 12-1:00, 802 Monroe., Mrs. Wyona How- Hillel sponsor Orthodox High Holy Day ard. G.R.O.W.: "Community Organi- Services and Conservative Services, zaing and…

… would * * * like to form a discussion group please Student Zionist Organization. Suk- call: Philip Coates, 763-1688 or Greg kahi Raising. Oct. 15, Hillel, for thc Armtrong, 665-2866.I time call 663…

….a Jui AlmOLLC O NN _________________G"Wibt uim ei ts a aa Nff'k kARAMOIIT ' t PYCTUR4 Saudia Arabia Blasts Israel As Cause of Arab Turmoil 1:00-3:00-5:00 7:15-9:20 Dial NO 2-6264 JJeATE UNITED…

… NATIONS, N.Y. (JP) - In one of the toughest Arab speeches of the current UN Gen- eral Assembly session, Saudi Ara- blia declared yesterday it would never accept the existence of Israel. "It will continue to…

October 26, 1967 (vol. 78, iss. 49) • Page Image 1

… refugees in Israel, he felt. "The only hope for the refugee problem lies in a generous policy by the Tsraelis to the disnlaced Arabs." By MARGARET WARNER The Student Government Coun- cil committee on course…

…. Mounting opposition, by both professors and students, to the Vietnam war and to war-related research is spurring the trend. But just as significant is increas- ing faculty concern that classi- fied contracts…

… projects outside the uni- See MORE SCHOOLS, page 6 In dollar terms, the total of FBI QUEST IONS STUDENTS: Protestors Conscientious Objectors March On Counseled by Clergymen By The Wire Services…

… offering counsel to conscien- tious objectors, and the FBI is questioning students who partici- pated in the draft protest in Washington. The FBI is also questioning' students who turned in their draft…

… and Massachusetts. Students reported being asked1 whether or not they had their Society, currently being held in Detroit. "The churchmen are putting themselves on the side of civil dis- obedience as…

…- one, demonstrators or reporters from Wayne State's student news- paper. was allowed inside. Violence developed when a group of demonstrators followed a businessman attending the con- ference around to a…

… back door guarded by other conference par- ticipants. When denied admit- tance, the students surrounded the businessmen and shouted "Big firms get rich. GIs die". Police attempted to apprehend a man who…

… men in front of the building, re-1 draft cards, and if not, for wiat By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN ' Council members proposed hav- reason. One Yale student said: 'ing elections over a two day per- "They didn…

…'t browbeat me or Petitioning for candidacy in the iod elcins ora twday per- anything, but God - it sort of Ielection of six at-large Student liod hoping more students could shakes you up." d Government Council…

students tions have yet been received even et ftettlUiest n of their right to silence, and of - Ithough next Tuesday is the last ei day for filing petitions to run in On Nov. 14-15 the polls will be it. next…

October 11, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 21) • Page Image 4

…Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "Where Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS TruthWiPeai" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS…

Student Publications Building, pictured above, whose in- terior wails are lined with the names of past Daily senior editors, symbolizes this new series of col- umns, written by the 1961-162 senior staff. Ap…

…-m, - -~ _~ - \ 04 -_ - -n _ "-i-- . -/ -_ -- ~ r --- SYRIAN REVOLT 7.7a a---- - 4hdar ti- -. x _ : UNITEDCAR-- -- - - - - S -IS-P-A-E ASSA-S-N--E-. H.S-EIN Uniy~ luiv in ArabWorld - - -- -_-P- - -- a SY.11--.N REVOLT…

… the infant United Arab Republic is but another sign of Arab disunity. Time and again Arab .leaders proclaim their supra-national bro- therhood only to have their words of fellowship snarled in intrigues…

… troops of Iraq after Premier Kassem threatened to annex that tiny but oil wealthy sheikdom. Jordan has been a prime ex- ample of the Arab states' failure ,to live in peace with one another. In 1958, just…

… two weeks after the United Arab Republic was pro- claimed, Jordan and Iraq merged into the Arab Federation. Unlike the Egypt-Syria UAR, the new Federation had a common border, similar peoples and…

… snnkeman for the Arab termination to be as strong out- side Egypt as he is in it. U.S. Marines landed in Lebanon the day after Kassem's purge at the request of then Lebanese President Camille Chamoun. Cha…

October 19, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 28) • Page Image 4

… seminar on the crisis in Syria. The Arab Students Club protested, claiming that it would be "pre- mature" and "speculative" to hold a talk on th situation. The Arabs were upset enough contemplate sending…

… harmful for the "premature" and "specu- lative" events to be interpreted to one group of students who are in need of much deeper understanding of the Arabs' culture and poli- ties.i Apparently President…

…"Pst Want To See Some Poems?" Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG…

… option of keeping undesirable scholar- ships or losiilg the financial aid. Gagged Panel INTERNATIONAL Students Association was planning to invite two professors and two students to participate in a public…

… copies of the protest resolution to University President Harlan Hatcher and 'the' Office of Student Affairs, as well as to ISA. The protests would have been sent except that ISA officials then with- drew…

… the plans for the panel discussion, be- cause the Arabs' objections in regard to "pre- maturity" seemed to be "reasonable," mainly because all the facts about the Syrian crisis were "not yet known." ISA…

… divergent views were presented, the seminar would not have been "premature;" but very timely and noteworthy. I T IS ALSO interesting to note that the Arab club did not plan to protest againt a lecture by Prof…

…. George Grassmuck on the same topic to Hillel the other night. If the Arabs claim it would be harmful for the subject to be discussed in front of an inter- national audience, it would certainly be much more…

… Hatcher and OSA received no burning Arab letters on this score. ,'Tt is undeniable that ISA should not "an- tagonize" any cultural group. ISA has suc- ceeded in placating the extremely irritable Arabs, but…

… Graduate School prefers that the A.M. language require- ment be satisfied at least six (6) weeks before the end of the semester in which the degree is to be taken. Students are advised to communicate their…

October 29, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 37) • Page Image 1

…'s quadrangle rooms within certain time limits and contingent upon a two-thirds approval by the individual houses. Student Government 3) That student government should play a large, if not all pervad- ing, role…

… in formulating regulations within the quads.. Additionally, the conference attended by approximately 90 quad- rangle residents, student government members, faculty members and administrators…

… arrested A.rab :league Accepts ~ Syria CAIRO (JP)-Newly independent Syria was readmitted to the Arab League yesterday. The action came a month after Syria broke away from its union with Egypt - in President…

… Gamal Nasser's United Arab Republic. All but the Iraqi delegation at-; tended a special meeting of the 11-nation League that approved Syria's readmission application.- Syria was readmitted to the United…

… of Flint is mounting against Flint Junior College's re- cent stand against the House Committee on Un-American Ac- tivities. This is the report of members of the Flint JC student govern- ment. Flint JC…

… was the first'college in the country to unanimously pass the United States National Stu- dent Association's resolution favor- ing the abolition of HUAC, Gary Scott, student government mem- ber…

… Flint and attempt to bulk of the student government arouse anti-USNSA sentiment at favored USNSA, but voted in ac- the school. cordance with the campus prefer- Lewis is currently on a nation- ence, as…

… shown by the referendum. wide speaking tour both endorsing At Oklahoma the referendum HUAC and opposing USNSA. He was a straw vote, not binding on was not available for comment the Senate. Student body…

… presi- yesterday. dent Jerry Gamble, who person- Scott said Flint JC's student ally favored the USNSA alliance, springing from meglomaniac au- sponse from Vance Bourjaily. thors living in a world where…

October 26, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 46) • Page Image 2

…. Items may appear only once. Student organization notices a r e not accepted for publication. For information, phone 764-9270. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26 Day Calendar { Controversy '69: Senator George Mc-j Govern…

… Swope has a lot of dead a i r. Frequent scenes in which Putney is confronted by the Arab, an agency dissident, become tiresome. But, this real- ly doesn't hurt the film severly. I don't think anyone…

… aircraft exploded o v e r broadcast. ;the Great Bitter Lake on the Suez Street warfare in Lebanon's Canal. Israeli jets intercepted the northern port city of Tripoli en- Arab planes o v e r Great Bitter…

… tered its second day. Arab guer- Lake and El Qantara and drove rillas and their supporters were them off with the support of anti- reported to have occupied a num- aircraft fire from the ground, the ber…

… Lebanese troops last week sparked the cur- rent crisis, Arab guerrillas were reported in control of .Bint Jbeil village. But the PLO said the ar- my killed two guerrillas and took 27 prisoners in repelling a…

… force The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor,j Michigan…

… SCHNEIDER WESTERN SUPPLY 2635 Saline Road Ann Arbor, Mich Ph. 663-0111 I CENTRAL STUDENT JUDICIARY Announces Open Petitioning Grads and Undergrads for SEVEN SEATS Sign up for interviews at SGC offices, 1 st…

… University Towers mI I I personal profit, but to reform the whole housing market. This is the purpose of the strike 763-3102 Sex, Students, and the New Morality Brief reviews of some important books…

… terrain of moral issues that all must travel." Reviewer-Lloyd W. Putnam, Actinq Director, Office of Religious Affairs November 6-"Living with Sex-The Students' Dilemma" (Hettinger) Reviewer-Leonard Scott…

October 09, 1968 (vol. 79, iss. 35) • Page Image 3

… joined the Wallace ticket was that Repub-X lican candidate Richard M. Nix-t on plans to stack his cabinet witht "left wingers." Police battle students University students clashed with police in Lima, Peru…

… nine- point plan for peace with the Arabs that stressed readiness to negotiate immediately the issue of permanent boundaries, but made clear its intention to retain the Old City of Jerusalem. In a policy…

… Palestine refugee problem. H said the conference could be called in advance of negotiations. Eban asked further for a non- aggression pact between Israel and the Arab states, the setting up of open frontiers…

… and free navigaton in the Suez Canal and the Gulf of Aqaba. The Arab nations, with support of the Soviet Union, have been demanding that Israel 'give, up Arab territory won in the war of June 5-10, 1967…

…, the peace envoy of Secre- tary-General U Thant. Eban expressed Israel's willing-. nress "to seek agreement with each Arab state on secure and reog- nized boundaries within a frame- work of peace." He…

October 26, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 34) • Page Image 4

students, I feel itis my duty to clarify a few points. Just because the Arab students in particular and the ISA in gen- eral did not feel it was their posi- tion to discuss the Syria-Egypt split, does not…

…Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions-Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN…

… Michigan and the students at its greatest center of learning have as little political power as the voteless Negro populace in Fayette or Pike counties, Southland U.S.A. It is true enough that the citizens of…

… this state democratically elect eight other citizens to serve as Regents of the University and con- trol its policies and operations. The students here have the opportunity-twice a year-to elect Student

… Government Council members to represent their views. This same group casts ballots for <student members of the Board in' Crontrol of Student Publications, which pub- lishes this newspaper, the Ensian…

…, Generation, the Student Directory, and-when the reins are loosened-the Gargoyle. A somewhat smaller constituency , (ie., the hale student) elects in a democratic fashion members to the Union Board of Directors…

… reached in a private "committee If the whole?" 'ONTIRARY TO THE REGENTS, Student Government Council holds the majority f its meetings in public session with fully rmed and uncensored Daily staffers observ…

… usually con- sist of the chairmen of Homecoming, Michi- gras, Musket, etc., some junior executive offi- cers and a Daily reporter. STUDENTS on the athletic board are usually top name sophomore athletes…

… publications traditionally become the nucleus of student membership on the publication board. They have a knowledge of the inner workings of the publications and (usually) a belief in editorial freedom for the…

… press. What the members of these :boards do in the closed chambers of the conference room once a month, however, is a mystery to the students whose votes put them there. An elected position has lost its…

October 15, 1966 (vol. 77, iss. 38) • Page Image 1

… by Arab terrorists four miles inside Israel. Israel hinted military retaliation might be imminent. The Syrian government had warned Thursday that any Israeli aggression over the border would lead to an…

… territory and otherwise violating the U.N. charter.) Israeli officials said the terror- ists were members of the fanatical Al Fattah Arab commando organ- ization. They said the commandos entered Israel from…

… held Monday afternoon. NEW ACTIVIST TRENDS: Dissenters Put Down Picket Signs, Shift Emphasis to Political Activity By ROGER RAPOPORT more sympathetic to their views The student protest movement is and…

… working for the 18-year-old shifting gears. Across the country vote. And on campuses like Stan- activists are turning away from ford, activists are taking over the protest demonstrations to get in- student

…. Cynicism According to Phillip Sherburne, president of the National Student Association students are "growing cynical about demonstrating be- cause they see little impact result. They are getting involved…

… with electroral politics to have direct access to the political process." An equally important reason why students are turning away from protest is that they discover they aren't needed for civil rights…

October 06, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 17) • Page Image 5

…) "Procelytizing" Protestants IQC Jazz Show, which'in previous ing speed limits. can be expected to be rebuffed by years has featured such per- Foreign students, in general, most Arabs, Indians and many formers as…

….for the coming academic, year. ", f students: 1) Differences among forelgn .Miss Fisher's job entails plan- students as individuals, even if ning and coordinating various they come from the same country…

…, ADC activities and, projects which ca econsiderable involve the whole of the student j 2) Violations of moralstandards body. 2)yVeilatis ofaoralstan-dsThe first of these special pro- may be Indicative…

… meo office oa n commi :verydifferent, Arabs too strict, chairmen of the women's resi- Turks and Latins too lenient on dente halls, problems encountered dain the various jobs are discussed "y V…

… Fisher ROBERT KLINGER of modesty involved in such group will be responsible for the organ- ... researches morals , living. ization of the Assembly-Inter- 6) Most foreign students severely Quadrangle…

… asked, all of which were par- ticipial phrases describing hypo- tlietical "offenses" committed by foreign students here. Each response was scored as to its degree of feeling--from 1 ("you; feel this is…

… was in attitudes toward premarital sex relations. The survey reported that South American and Turkish students tend to view premarital relations -or a situation when a single person goes out with a…

… person of the opposite sex with, the in- tention of sexual relations - in a more favorable light than do Americans. Neutral Attitude Klinger also found that most foreign students had a neutral attitude…

… toward inter-racial mar- riage, while Americans had a "moderately bad" attitude. Arabs, Indians, Chinese, South Americans and Turks, in that or- der, are "most different" from Americans, although they are…

… Vaughan; Williams House, Corridor Party, West Quad- rangle; Zeta Phi, Record Dance, 1443' Washtenaw. Summary of Action Taken by Student Government Council at its Meeting of October 4, 1961. Approved as…

October 21, 1962 (vol. 73, iss. 32) • Page Image 4

…k Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are eSTUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN…

…, OCTOBER 21, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: ELLEN SILVERMAN "You See Anything Real Plain Yet?" INDEPENDENT STUDY: Undergrads Need Research Work Flint Students Rediscover Freedom of the Press ON OCTOBER 5, the Flint…

….; Dean Louis Fibel spoke and answered ques- tions, trying to clarify and justify his action to a large student audience. Two Daily staff members arrived toward the end of his ad- dress, bringing with them…

… 300 copies of The Daily. Fibel's closing remarks went unheard in the rush as crowds of students came running up to grab Dailies and then proceeded to rattle hundreds of pages at once, looking for that…

October 25, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 45) • Page Image 1

… curriculum, of icouraging innovation," he says. ut he adds, "Students should not issuing credit to students." Among he seven courses be- ig taught this term under t hie tle "College Course" are Arab- ;raeli R…

… are studying," says head freshman coach Louis Lee. A sec9nd study hall had to be opened aftvr South Quad Director John Lindquist received complaints from other students that the foot- ball players were…

… excessively noisy. The "play- er's" study hall is still officially open to other students who want to use it. "A few times we have gotten out of hand. but everyone does when they're studying," ex- plained…

…* he was never in favor of allowing football players to use separate facilities because it "segregates" them from other students. "We really don't get to meet a lot of people," freshman player Ellis…

… be chock full of tape labs and classrooms for the use of literary college students, and will take over the job of of By MICHAEL THORYN The LSA Course Mart, an ex- )erimental curriculum program hrough…

… which students can de- ign and initiate their owtn sub- ects, is under revision b h c,1- 'ge Curriculum Commee. Course Mart corse ,,ffredfor tie fir'st time a yeavr a re us:- ally two or three hours…

…, explains iat the Curriculum Committee., hich consists of six faculty .embers and three students,. ants to "tie down more firmly e responsibility for courses." "The course mart is a way of >ening up the…

… supervise a course. Chairman of the Course Mart, Bruce Astrein, '71, tries to co- ordinate student interest with a faculty member who will take re- sponsibility for the class. Astrein says he is open to any…

… teaching courses," Astrein says. Persons interested in suggest- ing, coordinating, or enrolling in experimental courses should go to the Student Counseling Office at 1018 Angell Hall, Astrein says. _1U ' 1…

… Ykl the Frieze Building, which can be seen in the background. ST tDY DECISION-MAKING SACUA to meet with students to improve communications The Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA…

October 16, 1960 (vol. 71, iss. 24) • Page Image 1

…' attitudes about college for their children, and probed the anatomy of college costs, from the parents' point of view. They found that the average cost for an American student to attend college for one year is…

… $1,550. Of this amount, parents pay the major share-$950. The student himself earns an additional $360. Another $130 comes from scholarships, and the final $110 is paid from "other sources." These…

… pro- posed to add. The issue will come up soon in the Assembly's Political Commit- tee, when a Soviet resolution is pending to put Ghana, India, In- donesia, Mexico and the United Arab Republic on the…

…. C. to "/coordinate the activities of the students who participated in lunch counter sit-ins and other protest demonstrations. Expand Impact Among the significant confer- ence developments so far is…

… the indication that Negro adult com- munities are preparing to poin students in expanding the impact of mass action. Rev. Ralph Abernathy of Mont- ,;gomery. Ala., one of the leaders of the Southern…

… Christian Leader- ship Conference, said yesterday that Southern adults will be "pre- paring to join in a massive flesh and blood action by Jan. 1. "We have been idle too long while the students have acted…

…." Martin Luther King, head of SCLC, and symbol of Southern non-violent direct action, also sees the need for more adult in- volvement. "There is a danger in the 'student movement' since it suggests that…

… original center, the lunch counters. "This is somewhat good," United States National Student Association Pre- sident Richard Rettig feels, "since --Daily-Jamies warneka FULLBACK TALLIES - Bill Tunnicliff…

October 30, 1960 (vol. 71, iss. 36) • Page Image 3

…)--Wherever he saw an "apartment for rent" sign, the African student knock- ed. The answer never changed: No vacancy. An Arab, in America studying political science, wrote a letter to a newspaper disagreeing with…

… ith claim that Arab nationalism and Communism were identical. A few weeks later the student received a letter from the State Department telling him to cease all such political activities or face…

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY obutu Vows ITTV P "IW' ARNS 'INVADERS': 1o P J t BIAS, HYPOCRISY: Foreign Students Learn Bitter Lessons By CHOON WHA LEE Associated Press Feature Writer SYRACUSE (P…

… deportation. These are the bitter lessons that some of the 50,000 foreign students in the United States are -earning. They come to learn of American democracy, of freedom. Instead some find bigotry, cen…

…- sorship. America can do better. Student Survey And in many instances it has. A survey by an Indian journalism student at Syracuse University where I also studied, Saaduddeen M. Saleem, found that what im…

…- pressed foreign students most about Americans was their friend- liness. Next in order of approval were the Americans' high standard of living, opportunities, informality of the people, dignity of labor, in…

…- dividualism, equality of men and women and the ability of their professors. In describing Americans they MEET PREJUDICE-For many of the 50,000 foreign students in the United States, exposure to democracy may…

…, technologically advanc- Why should Americans be con- Can Be Different cerned about the impressions for- eign students have of America? But for some it can be lonely, For one reason, many of the frustrating…

…, humiliating. students will some day be in the For instance, the African high echelons of their respective dhre Iwentoecountries. The ,attitudes they as- three weeks to get an apartment. sume toward America…

… derstood in its true light. on him for this one year of train- And what group pf foreigners inA. would one expect to understand Another African student, newly Americans better and more sym . arrived in…

October 11, 1967 (vol. 78, iss. 36) • Page Image 3

…WEDNESDAY, .OCTOBER 11, 1967 THE 311CHIGA3'1 DAILY PAGE THREE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1967 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE 0 Soviet 'Defense To Bolster Arab States, SNorth Viet World Tension Cause…

… , Of 15 Per Cent Hike Over Previous Budget MOSCOW (A') - The Soviet t Union announced yesterday one of the biggest increases in defense spending in its history to bolster North Vietnam and to aid Arab

… individual con- duct regulations with the mandate that they actively solicit advice and counsel to faculty, administration, and student organizations." INTERESTED? Attend the open meeting of the Board of Gover…

October 05, 1960 (vol. 71, iss. 14) • Page Image 1

… 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…

October 11, 1963 (vol. 74, iss. 35) • Page Image 8

… to divide the country, the na- tive Algerian asserted that "one side is not willing to fight the other. Both are convinced that civil war should not take place." The dispute is not between Arabs and…

… Split Ait - Laoussine charged that "some powers have wished that the Berbers and Arabs would fight each other. France has long argu- ed that they would." Ait-Laoussine explained that the causes of the…

…-Laoussine Downplays Arab Revolt i if Collegiate Press Service RBANA-The executive secre- of Young Americans for Free- a national conservative youth nization, said in an interview Tuesday that he is "extreme- eased…

… election 11 delegates to NSA's annual >nal Student Congress. wis, a former research director he House Committee on Un- rican Activities, has been ac- since 1961 in a national con- tive campaign against NSA…

… possible he congress to accurately re- national student opinion." t true representation will not ossible at the congress, he until all delegates are actual- acted by their student bodies. CHARLES S. BLONDY…

… jobs can be made in the Part-time Placement Office, 2200 Student Activities Bldg., during the following hours: Mon. thru Fri., 8 a.m. til 12 noon and 1:30 til 5 p.m. Employers desirous of hiring…

students for part-time or full-time temporary work, should contact Dave Lowman;, Part-time Interviewer at NO 3-1511, Ext. 3553. Students desiring miscellaneous odd jobs should consult the bulletin board in…

…, both on and off campus. 1-Administrative Asst. Must be grad student with Industrial Relations background either through course work or experience. Will be writing job descriptions. HILLEL SUPPER CLUB…

October 27, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 35) • Page Image 4

… published in The Daily of Oct. 24, signed by four graduate students with Arab names was quite disturbing. It ap- pears from that letter that these four students and the other mem- bers of the Arab Club…

…LETTERS TO TI u: t 19&u ad9 Seventy-First Year, EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN - UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUSLICATIONS pnions Are Free STUDENT

… lectures alone would not serve urpose, and a schedule of seminars was p to supplement "addresses by principal :ers. the end of each principal address, at- d by approximately 100 students and ty members, the…

… believes that, student participation in the series is essential to its success, the seminar program must be given thoughtful consideration. Without success in this aspect of the pro- gram, Challenge is…

… member' and officer of Student Govern- ment Council several years ago, I had the pleasure of knowing and working with Miss Bacon. We dis- agreed on occasion, but her open- minded intellectual integrity was…

… something which was a challenge to those who had contact with her. From my observations, Dean Bacon stimulated, not stifled, in- dividual expression. * * * ALTHOUGH the student sup- port which she enjoys may…

… the renewal of Syrian indepen- dence is a "domestic Arab" affair. It is precisely this contention that deserves discussion: is there such a thing as "an Arab?" who is to determine what areas are to be…

October 13, 1960 (vol. 71, iss. 21) • Page Image 2

Arabs that some did not consider it truly Arab, although Westerners thought it Oriental. YR's Take Stand On State Issues The Young Republican Club re- cently took a policy stand on var- ious political…

…, "Kassim's eventual assassination seems assured." Alternative Control Once Kassim is out of power, the alternatives for control of Iraq seem to be the Communists or an Arab Nationalist army regime. There…

… * OCT. 22 I U I Fri., Oct. 14 9-12 P.M. VFW CLUB ... 314 E. Liberty Admission $1 Per Person Presented by Grad Student Council lm N IC S 2 ShowsOnly s PHONE: TExas 4-1810 8:00 P.M. * 10:15 P.M. AN…

October 25, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 45) • Page Image 3

… battles The decision to commute the sentence was made by the governor with armed civilians and Arab because, he said he felt that life imprisonment was just as severe guerrillas. The boom of heavy a penalty…

… UNITOAScoTSj United AVAMBEO UNT[ ARM15EA rh ~ste By DEBBIE THAL University Young Democrats (YD) are currently mobilizing students to work for Wayne County Auditor Richard Aus- tin's campaign to become the…

… officer. "Canvassing is the most ef- fective political work, and col- lege students, being the most willing and knowledgeable, are the best ones to do it," De Grieck adds. YD became involved in the…

… in- volved chiefly because its lead- ers felt students in Ann Arbor had a special interest in the election since so many of them are from Detroit and its sur- rounding area, "We felt we should set up a…

… program to work in these last critical weeks, especially because so many of the students here are from the area and will be directly effected by the election," says De Grieck. x Austi~ But Yp leaders are…

… plan to have as many as 500 students canvassing in predominately white areas dur- ing the next two weekends. Furthermore, the leaders be- lieve the election of a liberal black mayor is of national im…

… Lebanon: In Tripoli, a city of 150,000 people and a hotbed of Arab na- tionalism, snipers turned their guns on Lebanese troops in the Chateau St. Gilles, a massive castle overlooking the area. Leba- nese…

October 09, 1963 (vol. 74, iss. 33) • Page Image 3

… Saigon's 5) Before court action could be- Saturday. gin, there must be a 30-day per- iod In which-the attorney general ' pamphlets called or a state or local agency would students to refuse attempt to…

… the gov- membership because of race, col- ldetaining students or, national origin or religion. dartiann lawdenas im-Senate leaders now plan to leave martial law was im- the committee's bill hanging and…

… and Syria, ruled by1 the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party,1 have been working toward a union since their plans for a three-way union with President Nasser's United Arab Republic '(Egypt) ,fell1 apart…

… Israeli territory next summer. Aref noted that the union was open for the UAR and the other Arab countries to join. Eisenhower Advises Unity GETTYSBURG P) -Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower disagrees…

… ACTIONS: Buddhist Movn Asks SaigonS By The Associated Press SAIGON-Pamphlets circulated in Saigon ye students, the army, civil servants and shop owners sitdown strike against President Ngo Dinh Diem's re…

… in central market The students on university; to go back to s sities, currently opened. They students to boy The pamphle ernment is still arrested after n posed Aug. 21 a fresh arrestsN out daily. The…

October 06, 1960 (vol. 71, iss. 15) • Page Image 2

… Series OfSeminars The dates for the second meet- ings of the Student Government Council Seminars were announced today by Roger Seasonwein, '61, SGC member. All the meetings will, be held in the Honors…

… second meet- ings and on the SGC table in the UGLI. ISA to Hold Dance Friday The International Students' As- . sociation will sponsor a dance at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Women's Athletic Building…

… joint planning for student recruitment, research in the administration of community colleges, program evaluation, placement of graduates and liaison. with interested educational agen- cies and…

… realize that for more than two years now, United Arab Republic President Gamal Abdel Nasser has violently repudiated Soviet-bloc attempts to infiltrate his country, and has taken a vigorous stand against…

… in Cairo and received a warm STOWE LECTURE: 'Nasser Repudiates Soviets' 'ta welcome, and a China-United Arab Republic friendship association was formed with Nasser at its head. Co-operated China and…

… Column Nasser declared that "The Com- munist parties are a fifth column . . they set out to organize an all-Arab Communist underground for subversion . . .the foundation was laid . . . according to our…

… Teachers As thednumber of students who wvant and are ready for a college education increase, a rising pro- portion of them will be found entering community colleges, Prof. Young predicted. "This will inten…

… administra- tors that leads to the doctor's de- gree. Prof. Young forsaw a rising enrollment in this program since the foundation grants will also provide five or six annual scholar- ships for students in the…

October 12, 1967 (vol. 78, iss. 37) • Page Image 6

… Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Oalendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more iniormation call…

….m. Student Relations Committee Meet- ing. Open meeting, 3 p.m., 3529 SAB. Dept. of Chemistry-Physical Seminar, -- Dr. Gundolf Kolmaler, "Ionic Crystals, Burroughs Wellcome & Co., U.S.A., Some Theoretical…

… to exist because she Vietnam, the Arab-Israeli war won that right in 1948 by secur- and violence in the cities. On communicating with the dead, Pike explained that it is possible for an individual to…

…, immediate amn- ,, ing her territory from the Arabs, Pike believes that when a nation is the victim of aggression, as Israel was in 1948 and in 1967, if she wins the war imposed on her then she has an ethical…

… right to the territory she might gain. Pike noted that the Arabs who left the area that Israel won did so on their own free will, and that those Arabs who remained will be better off in the long run as…

October 24, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 44) • Page Image 1

… Uni treatment of its three million Jews, and "to force the Soviet Union to grant concessions" to the Je IM CO)NiThVEIRSY-* SRC to study Upoics on lelvof-student fees se student ouncis Plans Viet…

… referendum By LYNN WEINER Student Government Coun- cii last night placed the con- troversial question of control over the allocation of student j fees on the November election ballot. Precise wording of the…

… referen- dum will be worked out at next week's Council meeting, but it was generally agreed that the thrust of the question Mill be whether students should have the power to either order or veto the use of…

student fees for University con- ei struction projects. The referendum relates directly to a proposal, now under consid- rtz, eration by the University admin- on's istration, which calls for the use s.of a…

… recurring fee assessment of MS. "up to $15" to pay for construc-p" tion of two new intramural build- ings. In a related referendum, also approved last night, students will be asked whether SGC's 25-cent per…

student, per term budget should be raised to 40 cents. Under present University reg- ulations, the Regents and the ad- ministration have complete con- trol over SGC's budget. It has been set at 25 cents per…

October 15, 1961 (vol. 73, iss. 25) • Page Image 1

… find a "scientific, systematic way of ap- propriating funds for state uni- versities." ISA Cancels Syrian Talk After Arab Group Protests By GERALD STORCH International Students Association has canceled…

… a proposed sem- inar on the crisis in Syria after a protest from the Arab Students Club. The Arabs' resolution stated that "it is premature and indeed harmful to find that ISA is exploiting the Syrian…

… grow sub- e needed to handle a split-third ncreased student enrollment. Heyns divides the problem of es: the teaching fellow and the has some kind of training pro- involve seminars and discussions means…

… invite two students and two professors from the political science department for the sem- dinar, ISA Vice-President . Jack roblems The University came in for at- tack also, however, when Boyer told the…

… shock of vast num- bers" of oncoming students and the mounting 'mass of knowledge and skills to be mastered must not undermine the quality of the Uni- versity, President Harlan Hatcher said Friday night…

…. The halting seemed always to come to late for the Wolverines. MOCK ATOMIC WAR: Defense Drill Proves Successful Public Colleges Urged To End Student Fees. Public universities and colleges should charge…

… their students little of no fees, the executive director of the Michigan Council of State College Presidents said yesterday. Merritt M. Chambers, a former University professor, told the As- sociation of…

… otherwise not be there." Addressing the association's 39th annual meeting in Lincoln, Neb., Chambers said selective awards only go to the top few per cent of students, but do not reach the other "millions of…

… oncoming youth Wolverines- Maier, '63, explained yesterday.. However, the Arabs' complaint was more than an attempt to stifle discussion. The objections seem' to be reasonable because all the facts about…

… astating that the Earth's would be uninhabitable years. task: design a survival to keep civilization alive ull century. t do you do? was "Project Noah," an ment handed the 83 en students at Harvey ed…

October 25, 1963 (vol. 74, iss. 47) • Page Image 1

…, said yesterday. The regulations must be approved by Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis within one week in order for Council to implement them. The version of Arab Union Anticipated…

… journal. Dr. Parker, whose final report will be made in December, said en- rollments of full-time students at 1,045 accredited schools had in- creased to approximately 2.5 mil- lion, compared with 2…

…,367,451 last year. Total enrollments, including part-time students, may reach 4.4 million, compared with 4,206,672 last year, Parker said. Early reports suggest that the increase in freshmen will exceed the…

…'s higher education system was proposed yesterday to give more students access to a univer- sity education and help the nation "meet the competitive pressures of the modern. world." An 11-man, government…

students. There are 216,000 full- time students now. The object is to maintain pres- ent standards but to take advant- age of the "immense reservoir 'of unused talent" that remains un- developed ,because…

… the Membership Selection Regulations approved by Student Government Council Wednesday night, SGC must levy all penalties prescribed by ' its Membership Tribunal, retiring President Thomas Brown, '66L…

… BEIRUT (/P)-The usually well informed Beirut newspaper Al Na- har said yesterday that the ruling Ba'ath Socialist party will an- nounce union of Syria and Iraq as the Arab Democratic Popular Re- public…

… doors for the last 18 days in Damascus and was attended by party representatives from all Arab countries. It ended its ses- sions Wednesday. A party state- ment said the congress resolutions will be made…

October 24, 1962 (vol. 73, iss. 34) • Page Image 3

… . inform the Foreign Relations Com- Asks Student Loan Fund Democratic candidate for con- gressmen-at-large Neil Staebler has proposed a federal self-liqui- dating loan fund for public and private students

… States and Russia forces the need for expanded education- al opportunities. Staebler said that he supports the Kennedy administration's pro- gram. "But in the area of helping students finance their…

… independ- ence. This Cinderella of Britain's col- onies lies on the tip of the Arab- ian Peninsula, hedged in by spiky mountains and fringed by sweep- ing deserts. Its bunkering port--7,000 ships a year…

…-is among the busiest in the world, its population has soar- ed and new buildings overlook graceful old Arab dhows along the waterfront. Tax Free Shops Camel carts and goats meander through the traffic…

…. Thousands of tourists flocking ashore from pass- ing ships buy radios and cameras, Indian silks and French perfume from a jumble of tax free shops. The city's 300,000 residents- Aden and Yemeni Arabs, Indians…

…,000 troops in the Middle East, defending Western interests and Persian gulf oil. Britain in- tends to hang onto it, but revolu- tion in Yemen to the north has bolstered Arabs' demands for in- dependence. As a…

… admission of an addi- tional 1,997 students in the four senior colleges of the City Uni- versity." In his decision, Dr. Gideonse was supported by Board of Higher Education Chairman Gustave Ros- enberg, who…

… explained that "to admit one student who gets a court order would flood us with thousands of appeals and similar cases. . . If we admitted them, just that many who were quali- fied by their 85 per cent…

… are having second thoughts. The pro-merger National Union Party was trounced in recent mu- nicipal elections. Arab nationalists are pressing for a referendum on the move. British Colonial Secretary Dun…

October 24, 1964 (vol. 75, iss. 48) • Page Image 2

… alleviate Prof. Robert Schnitzer, executive Arab Students will have a recep- gell Hall. "CHEERED some of the overcrowding prob- director of the PTP. The second tion to promote Arab-American 8 p.m.-A speech by…

…, to provide space jumae donations at the back ofp.m.- eFer for another 600 students. It will lumber dntosa h ako 150 students. Each pair of houses hav the s dena st the its chapter house. The guild…

… classroom Gomberg and Taylor Houses at located on North Campus, north facilities. Island Park. of and adjacent to the new School The cost per student is expected 9:30 a.m.-The Mudbowl at Sig- of Music and the…

… em bhers ta Chi. (Continued from Page 1) This orientation has led to the lowering of the percentage of out- of-state students on campus to the current 27 per cent. Meanwhile the resident enroll- ment…

… climbed to a new high of 27,388 in the fall of 1963, and the total number of students taught in credit and professional programs reached 42,246 last year compared to 41,957 in 1962-63. More Research Another…

… original scholarship, sub- mnitted in September, would have awarded a $500 scholarship an- nually for the. next decade to an indigent Negro student, preferably from Ann Arbor High School. The revised…

… scholarship accepted yes- terday maintains the amount and the school preference, but is de- signed to aid qualified students "who are handicapped by lack of funds." There is no mention of race. The University…

…'s executive off i- cers explained after the meeting that discriminatory scholarships currently on the books would con- tinued to be offered. There are currently stipends of- fered to students according to race…

…, national origin and locale. General Funds The University currently oper- ates a scholarship "program fav- oring Negro students from Detroit, but Heyns said the University pre- fers to supply this program…

… with general scholarship funds rather than discriminatory stipends. The Regents also accepter a recommendation from Vice-Presi- dent for Student Affairs James A. Lewis that The Daily editor's chair be…

October 10, 1968 (vol. 79, iss. 36) • Page Image 3

… government of Israel providing for the sale by the United States of such- number of supersonic planes as may be necessary to provide Israel with an adequate deterrent force ca- pable of preventing future Arab

… aggression by offsetting sophis- ticated weapons received by the Arab states and to replace loss- es suffered by Israel in the 19 67 conflict." Israel smashed most of the air power of her Arab enemies in her…

….M. Admission-$3.50 and THE HOLDING COMPANY Call 834-4904 ' with JANIS JOPLIN One Nith Only TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15 GRANDE BALLROOM Students For McCarthy Present TITICUT FOLLIES The Famous Documentary Filmed in…

October 06, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 17) • Page Image 4

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

… overt and serious cutbacks have een announced in two of the special reading nrses in languages for graduate students. he German and French faculties have slash- I in half the number of sections originally…

… Lanned, doubled enrollment in the ones of- red, and still been forced to turn away many idents. RADUATE STUDENTS seeking a doctorate ,degree from the Rackham School must ass reading examinations in two…

…. To pass the exams, many graduate students lect the 111 and 112 sequence in German and/ r French. If they pass 112 with a B or better, he language requirement is fulfilled. For those unable to get into…

… these classes, nd this means almost 300 students this fall, Wore timely and more costly alternatives are pen: independent study, private language chool courses, or election of the regular four emester…

… problems they presented. Now, with classes twice as large under normal conditions, there will be a much smaller percentage of the teacher's time avail- able per student. An abridged set of homework exercises…

… be adequate enough to pass the graduate school exam. More and more students each year arrive on campus with a good part of the undergraduate requirement met, and finish it off before they are…

… evolve as equitable and efficient a solution as the conditions will per- mit.' The fact remains, however, that cutbacks had to be taken and not for pedagogical rea- sons. Students were turned away from…

October 26, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 46) • Page Image 1

…:56 gone in the game. It Was the first time this season that anyone had scoredV Lebanon, Syria near conflict; Arab- Israeli air combat escalates BEIRUT, Lebanon (Y) - The' crisis in the Middle East…

… sharpened yesterday with re- ports of an armored force crossing t h e Syrian frontier into Lebanon and of an esca- lation in the Arab-Israeli air war. At the same time, the So- viet Union expressed concern…

… strikes against Israel The Wolverines quickly got another chance at the Gopher of Palestinian Arabs w h o were goal when running back Barry Mayer fumbled two plays later using Lebanon as a staging base. on…

… the announcement of big- aiming hydrogen-tipped missiles arsenal. tion. two arms negotiations was well at an enemy heartland from deep The Soviets have well over 1,200 As Arab guerrillas battled Le…

… units moved into drive. "Bptaraigh eeral Sovietthe village to block access routes, just doing the groundwork that Student leaders, faculty mem- officials led by Secretary Melvin but there was no report…

Student Gov- ment of Housing and Urban Re- However, Stokes has made missile force. its forces would not become in- state will then be required to hold ernment Council, will present a newal had gone to the…

students and fac- fun appov thct He has lo asembroled in a dispute with his { Iyih k re ring fellows. "The first milestone ulty. This committee would make won approval of a $100 million e di dp e w News of…

October 05, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 16) • Page Image 3

… month in salar- ies alone. NEW SEMES We will obtain any PAPERBOUND BOOK in print- list 95c & Up at 10% OFF LIST PRICE For students ar GLOBAL 4829 WOOWARD (nr. Wa Open daily 11A.M. to 5 P.M -AP Wirephoto…

… strongly they were on Egypt's payroll. The captives were in the pay of "those who claim Arabism, claim faith in unity," declared informa- tion minister Mustafa Baroodi in a statement broadcast by Damas- cus…

… radio. President Nasser of the now- sundered United Arab Republic is the No. 1 exponent of unifica- tion of all Arabs, from Northwest Africa to the Persian Gulf. Nasser has called the Syrian re- volt last…

… week against Cairo's rule a setback "which must be the starting point for destroying re- action and treason" throughout the Arab sphere. TER SPECIAL POWER ELITE by C. Wright Mills 50c I Supply Limited…

Student Government Council READING and DISCUSSION SEMINAR: I I I 11 …

October 31, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 50) • Page Image 3

… never seems to take a rest until spring. Consequently, classrooms become saunas and during a scant 50 minute class studen.ts feel compelled to peel off all the layers of ipage three clothes they so…

…-6264 where the heads of all nations meet SHOWS TODAY A C 1, 3, 5, 7, the news today by The Associated Prass and College Press Ser vice ARAB GUERRILLAS blasted a Lebanese mountain fortress yesterday and then…

… were driven back from storming an army stronghold, military spokesmen said. Rashaya, which has been under attack for three days, could prove a decisive factor in the conflict between the Arab guerrillas…

…,600-student college. A spokesman for the group said Vassar blacks VASSAR GIRL talks to self-appointed guards in a hallway of the Administration Bldg. The building is partly occupied by black women students

… immediately known how many girls took part in the seizure or how many male students helped them. The occupied section includes a cafeteria, the school post office, telephone switchboard and admjin- istrative…

… he devoted his efforts to pharmacy education and stu- dent affairs. He was a member of the Senate Assembly's Student Re- lations Committee. Dean Tom D. Rowe of the phar- macy school said, "Dr. Deno was…

… Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily…

October 09, 1963 (vol. 74, iss. 33) • Page Image 1

Students To Vote in SGC Election, Referendu < v Elections . By LOUISE LIND A campus-wide election today will select eight students to sit as members of Student Govern- ment Council and will…

…; Michigan Union stairs; Frieze Bldg.; Women's Athletic Bldg.; and East Medical Bldg. Present Cards To participate in the elections, students must present their stu- dent identification cards to be punched by…

… greater, participate in it. A two-thirds majority decides the referendum. Should the referendum pass, it would be binding on Council and would take effect in the spring. Several campus student groups have…

… President Thomas Brown, '66L, noted that recent action by the SGC committee on referral to "stay" SGC's motion "Mem- bership Selection in Student Or- ganizations" would have no effect on the regular seating…

… candidates' views: Douglas Baird, '66, defines Council as a "very powerful and effective legislative organization" which ought to work for modified change within existing student or- ganizations. Student-f a…

… c u 1 t y government should be viewed as "in its in- fancy," with the rise to maturity to be made through the responsi- ble selection of student represen-, tatives, he notes. Douglas Brook, '65, feels…

… that Council "as a representative body, must concern itself with issues and programs that are genuinely in the student interest." Council should try to strike a balance where the laws of Michi- gan and…

… the rules of this Univer- sity are respected, while at the same time respect for the import- ance of student activities is main- tained, he says. Scott Crooks, '65, makes a clear delineation between…

October 26, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 34) • Page Image 1

….'LEE . explains fee refunds U' Draftees .To Receive FeeRefund By SANDRA JOHNSON University students called to ac- tive duty by thearmed services will receive a full refund of se- mester fees, University Comptrol…

…- ler Gilbert L. Lee has stated in a memo to the billing office. In addition, they will not need to pay a service charge for this refund. Less than a dozen students have left the University this semester…

…- to assume active duty, Supervisor of Student Billing Neil M. Tracy said yesterday. Otherwse, students would re- ceive a full refund without a serv- ice charge only if the change in "fee status" were…

… brought by ad- ministrative action of the Univer- sity, he explained. Other Instances Tracy cited the dropping of a course or the removal of students from a class that is too full as instances in which such…

… a refund might be demanded. In all other cases a student .leaving during the first two weeks of school is refunded his entire fee minus a $30 dis-enrollment charge. If he is leaving during the third…

October 02, 1962 (vol. 73, iss. 15) • Page Image 6

…. Southern girls drive by in new cars sporting bumper stickers reading "HELP ROSS KEEP MIS- SISSIPPI SOVEREIGN," a n d "IMPEACH EARL WARREN." Watch Football Many Ole Miss students left the campus over the…

… weekend, to at- tend the Mississippi - Kentucky football game in Jackson, the state's capital. Many freshmena were in evidence, wearing the "M"; beanie with the confederate col- ors. The student newspaper…

… first class on the campus of Ole Miss at Oxford yesterday. given Mississippi Gov. Ross Bar- nett when he turned away James Meredith at the gates to the uni- versity the day before. The students I saw and…

…- culated in the student union. It had pages of signatures. Perhaps the most prophetic quote I heard was from the stu- dent who said "You know what tees all these reporters off? They want to see us throw some…

October 24, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 44) • Page Image 3

… illegal, whether or not the purpose is to protest U.S. war policy. He said such protesters are be- ing stripped of student and other deferments and put at the top of draft lists not because they are…

… desegregation of schools in the North and the South. but Mississippi presents complicated problems that can- -not be resolved immediately. '-However, his argument that the By The Associated Press Arab guerrillas…

… the guerrillas agai'st Israel since the six-day war of June 1967. Al Fatah, the Arab guerrilla organization, claimed responsibil- ity for the attack in a communi- que yesterday from its h e a - quarters…

… leftist leaders have in Amman yesterday in front of called for a nationwide general Lebanese Army attacks on Arab strike to protest the army's crackdown on the guerrillas. Reports from Damascus said Lybia…

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