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May 25, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 165) • Page Image 1

…. Students will be required to reg- ister their cars before any driving can be done. Victories Cited By Both Sides In Holy Land Fighting in Palestine Continues Unabated By The Associated Press Both Arabs and…

… northern part of the new city, Arab shells set afire Jewish targets near the Russian cathedral. SL Committee Chairmen Named Chairman of special action committees of the Student Legis- lature were named in a…

… on Speech Ban A majority of the student body-62 per cent-does not approve of the Board of Regents' action regarding political speeches on cam- pus, an independent, scientifically-controlled srvey by…

… the Bureau of Student Opinion has disclosed. However, interviews with more than 400 students by the Bureau produced evidence that many students either knew nothing whatever about the Regents' decision…

… or misconstrued it. Only 12 students among those interviewed understood exactly what the decision was until Bureau interviewers briefly explained it to them. In the second phase of the Bureau's poll…

…, students were asked if UN Delays Cease- Fire Deadline in Palestine Battle - .:. Truman Asks Wider Social SecurityLaw Says Action Needed In Time of Inflation WASHINGTON, May 24 -- (P) -President…

… the highest levels on record." Announcements Senior Literary Announcements' for students with names from L through Z will be distributed from 1 to 5 p.m. today in University Hall, Penny Klausner…

… approved or disapproved of the Regents' decision to prohibit public meetings in support of a particular candidate or platform. on University property. By their action, student organizations were permitted to…

… hold private meet- ings to further candidates, how-! ever. The Bureau, which is directed by Survey Research students, con- ducted its poll by valid sampling methods, applied to the student population. A…

… representative sample of students, chosen at ran- dom from University files, was compiled. Students thus selected were questioned by trained and impartial Bureau interviewers, and the results were carefully tabu…

May 21, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 162) • Page Image 1

… Construction Bill --4-, Better Food Hoped for in Board Boost Dorn Reaction To Hike Mixed Residence hall leaders yester- day echoed a general sentiment among students in University dor- mitories that the…

… announced raise in room and board rates "won't be so hard to take if the food im- proves." And most students queried by The Daily expressed the belief that the food and food services would be bettered next…

…, Buck Dawson, 'Ensian managing editor, announced yesterday. More than 3,000 copies of the 451-page volume were delivered to the Student Publications Building last night and another 2,000 are expected to…

… arrive Monday, Dawson said. "Student subscribers whose last names are from A through F will have the first opportunity to pick up their 'Ensians from 12:30 to 5:30 p.m. today, on the first floor of the…

… the letter was sent. Arabs Claim Steady Gains In Jerusalem Britain Charged As 'Belligerent' By The Associated Press Trans-Jordan's Arab Legion claimed possession or access to 80 per cent of Jerusalem…

May 01, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 147) • Page Image 1

… faculty members. A student chairman will preside over each meeting. >competition with left-wing dem- onstrations. The VFW has desig- nated May 1 as "Loyalty Day." Only observance of the day in Ann Arbor…

… will be a May Day breakfast sponsored by the Wash- tenaw County section of the Com- munist Party. Students To Attend Ernest Ellis, student director of the CP at Michigan, revealed that students from…

… other schools in Michigan had left for New York to attend the celebrations. He knew of no Ann Arbor students in the contingent. Contrary to popular teaching, May Day as a labor day is not a foreign…

…- aly Plant. Jews Surround Main Arab Strongpoints InJerusalem Battle British Commissioner Threatens To Throw All Forces into Action JERUSALEM, April 30-(/P)-Jewish shock troops threw a headlock tonight…

… around a string of Arab strongpoints in a 22-hour battle for Jerusalem. Fighting in the southern section of the Holy City halted for a time when Arab fighters asked for a truce. Then the struggle was re…

…- sumed as two heavy explosions rocked the battered Katamon Area. Fifteen Jews and 30 Arabs are known to have been killed thus far, Just before the brief halt in the struggle, a Jewish Agency spokes- man…

… mathematics and the subsequent shooting. She is pictured above with the detectives who guarded her. STUDENT, FACULTY REACTIONS: Campus Opinion Divied on Anti-Communist Mundt Bill By ROMA LIPSKY A sharp…

… on the Jaffa-Jerusalem highway. An iron ring thus has been closed around the Arab port city of Jaffa if Yazur as well as Salama now is in Jewish hands. There were reports that the threatened invasion…

… of Palestine by regular army troops of neighboring Arab states was underway. An Arab news agency dispatch received in Damascus said troops of Iraq and Trans- Jordan entered Palestine this afternoon…

…. There was no im- mediate confirmation. The Sy- rian army moved southward to springboard positions from which it might lounch a drive into northern Palestine. Arab commanders rushed rein- forcements of…

May 26, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 166) • Page Image 1

… the newly-elected president. Mundt-Nixon Bill Is Forum Topic , L 1. 5 OPINION BUREAU: Gauge Women's Hours, T icket Set-up Attitudes By MARY STEIN Students are about equally divided in their…

… satisfaction with present hours for women, with a somewhat larger percentage appear- ing to be dissatisfied, according to a representative survey by the Bureau of Student Opinion. General satisfaction with…

… present methods of distributing foot- ball seats and registration materials was evinced in another phase of the Bureau's carefully controlled and unbiased poll. Basketball Tickets Students were also divided…

… Recognition Changes Submitted to President RuthVen After two hours of wrangling, the Student Affairs Committee yesterday passed and sent for ap- proval to President Alexander G. Ruthven a revamped set of rules…

… for recognition of student organi- zations. The revised recognition rules set up standards to be followed in recognizing student groups. For the first time standards for with- drawing of student groups…

… months of work on the part of the SAC. Much of the Student Affairs Committee's wrangling in yester- day's discussion of the recognition rules centered about the method of presenting the recommendation to…

…- ministration. However remaining members overrode this objection, holding that such a statement would un- dermine the power of the Student Affairs Committee. 'U' Implicit Veto Right They pointed out that Admin…

… Inter-Racial Association's constitution. VU Student Injured Usha Trivedi, 20, of 338 E. Jef- ferson, a University student from India, suffered a broken leg and lacerations Monday when the car in which she…

… was riding hit a tele- phone pole, on Stadium Blvd. The driver, Jayant M. Parekh, 19, of 726 Packard, a Hindu Uni- versity student, received minor cuts. Both were taken to Uni- versity Hospital. that…

May 23, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 164) • Page Image 1

… default." This was his first all-out campaigning for the 1948 nomination. Willow Dorm Units To Close For Summer West Lodge, single student dormitory area in Willow Village, will close for the summer, but…

… although the West Lodge Area was closing for the summer, it was each resident's responsibility to give a three day notice of intent to vacate to the West Lodge housing office. Women Students Women students

…- ority houses for non-members, either with or without meals. Men students can obtain listings from Esther C. Griffin, housing nspector, in the Office of Student Affairs, Rm. 2, University Hall. West Lodge…

…- cepted from advanced students or campus dormitories. She said hat all entering freshmen were equired to live in University resi- [ence halls on campus, and had o be given priority. House 7 j18 Year Olds…

… enforce- ment agencies," Matthews de- clared in a telegram to Chrysler "officials. Summer Daily .. . A meeting for all students, with or without newspaper ex- perience, who are interested in working on the…

… Palestine War. Instead, it issued its second demand on Arabs and Jews to cease fire. It fixed a deadline at 36 hours after midnight, Eastern Standard Time, tonight. The final vote on a much-amended resolution…

… for the truce conunission to expedite a truce for Jerusalem, and a call on Arabs and Jews to work with the UN mediator, Count Foke Bernadotte, of Sweden. "We believe the security council should order…

…," Austin said. A UN observer speculated that the Arabs might not accept the cease-fire order when Faris El Khoury, of Syria, abstained on the final vote. El Khoury told the delegates earlier that the Arabs

… de- dlaresa threat to peace exists in Palestine. Austin declared that the Arabs say they are in Palestine to make peace but actually they are waging a "bloody war."1 Mahmoud Bey Fawzi of Egypt replied…

…, to Austin that the Arabs are not aggressors. He insisted they merely were trying to restore order at the invitation of -Pales- tinian Arabs. In London, the United States and Britain sought a solution…

May 27, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 167) • Page Image 1

…- ecutive order abolishing Army Jim Crow." GoVerniment R.R. Rejected WASHINGTON, May 26-(P)- Nationalization of the railroads is Student Majority Okays DormitoryFood in Poll A majority-67 per cent of both…

… men and women dormitory resi- dents consider the food served at their residences either "good or sat- isfactory," according to a survey conducted by the Bureau of Student Opinion. In the final part of…

… their comprehensive student polling, Bureau researchers also found that about one-fifth of the students had at- tended a League dance five or more times this year, and that the same was true of Union…

…- ated students eating in fraternity and sorority houses either are served good food or are reluctant to criticize their organization. They were the group with the largest proportion of those who thought…

May 14, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 157) • Page Image 1

… Plans for a combined city and campus drive against the Mundt Bill now before Congress were announced yesterday as a third protest telegram was sent off to Washington by faculty, students, and townspeople…

…-chairman, announced yesterday. The )ther chairman is Prof. John L. Brumm, retiring head of the journalism department. A public organization meeting of the Students Against the Mundt Bill will be held at 4:15 p.m. today…

… on the third floor of the Union, Jean Fagan, chairman of the student group announced She urged all campus and city organizations to participate in the rally today. The telegram yesterday assert- ed…

… also deny them government jobs or passports to leave the country. Draft-Age Males Urged To Step-UpEducation By JAKE HURWITZ Students who may be subject to the draft law now pending in Congress were…

… advised to proceed as far as possible with their edu- cation by Prof. Louis A. Hopkins, Summer Session director. "If I were a student today, I would make as much progress as I could, not to avoid the draft…

…, but to get closer to graduation in order to make the best use of my education," he said. If there is a draft, students must be prepared to render real service, Prof. Hopkins declared. Present Facilities…

…,000, and predicted a smaller proportion of veterans, but a larger number of teachers and graduate students. Post-Summer Session Abandoned Prof. Hopkins explained that boards of education and academy…

May 28, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 168) • Page Image 1

Students To Publicize * Phoenix Plan Project Outlined By Dean Walter Homeward-bound students yes- terday were urged to give the widest possible publicity to the University's newly - announced Phoenix Project…

…. Pointing out that the Univer- sity's 20,000 students hail from every part of the nation and con- stitute a powerful public relations force, Dean Erich Walter asked that they distribute information about the…

…. Students wishing to secure cop- ies of The Daily's special issue an- nouncing the project may pick them up free of charge at the Office of Student Affairs or at the Student Publications Building. Daily…

… experience is necessary. On the editorial staff, political and radio columnists are needed in addition to regular reporters. Columnists should submit sample manuscripts to Miss Dailes by June 23. Students are…

Student Pub- lications, was presented by Mr. and Mrs, Jack Gronik of Milwau- kee, in memory of their son, Ar- thur, a former Daily staff mem- ber who was killed in an auto- mobile accident last summer. Only…

… staff to handle display and classified advertising, circula- tion and promotions, according to Bob James, business manager of the Summer Daily. "Students can learn the know- how' of layout design, copy…

… read-' ing, salesmanship, accounting and general office work," James said. All students interested in try- ing out for positions on the sum- Last Daily The Daily ends its publica- tion schedule for the…

May 09, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 154) • Page Image 8

… time to make their debut at IFC Ball Friday night. The propeller-topped beanies are also top-flight apparel for casual wear, as shown by bleary- eyed students who wore them to Saturday classes. Their…

… 'Ensian Picnic The 'Ensian staff will hold its annual picnic Tuesday 3 to 9 p.m. on the Huron River Island for all 'Ensian staff members and those connected with any other Student Pub- lications Building…

… Diagonal, as announced earlier by the Wallace Progressives. If there is a sufficient demand busses will be chartered to take students to Detroit. 4 JEWISH PRISONERS GUARDED-Four Jewis h prisoners (center…

…) are marched to headquarters of Fawzi Bey Al Kaukji, Arab leader, after their capture in northern Palestine. Arabs said the Jews were wearing Arab dress and would be tried as spies. t. GUILD NEWS New…

… officers for Inter-Guild elected at the Spring Retreat are: Don Palmer, of Congregational- Disciples Guild, president; John Voltman, Lutheran Student Asso- ciation, vice-president; Eva Glas- ius, Canterbury…

… Camp. New guild of- ficers are: Harold Carver, presi- dent; Carol McCrady, vice-presi- dent; Ralph Shively, treasurer; and Mary Shawley, secretary. 'a-. A panel of foreign students will discuss…

…, na- tional student director of the Congregational-Christian Chuches and Rev. John E. McCaw, stu- dent work director of the Dis- ciples of Christ, will meet with the group. The Grace Bible Guild will…

… meet for a cost supper at 6:15 today in Fellowship Hall at the Church. Wins Fellowship Jean Gringle, '48, is one of 15 women college students in the na- tion to win a Danforth Fellowship for the coming…

May 13, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 157) • Page Image 1

… -UY Jews Ready For Capture Of Arab Jaffa 1 British To End Rule Tomorrow TEL AVIV, Palestine, May 12- ()P)-The Jews announced today their readiness to take over virtu- ally deserted all-Arab Jaffa as…

… major Palestine developments: 1. Haganah, the Jewish army, stepped up its fighting pace in southern Palestine, reportedly in- vaded by Egyptian volunteer troops. 2.Arab infantry and artillery again closed…

… vot- ing will be from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Students may vote only for a candidate listed on the ballot un- der the school in which he is en- rolled. Location of the ballot boxes is as follows: In the Union…

… north en- trance of West Engine, on the sec- onid floor center of West Engine, and at both entrances of East En- gine. Ballots will be of the write- in type. The Election Committee of the Student

… Rackham Lecture Hall. Men's Council Petitions Due Committee Schedules Interviews Next Week Students interested- in obtain- ing positions on the Men's Ju- diciary Council may pick up peti- tion blanks at the…

Student Affairs Office. Petitioners should have at least 60 credit hours and should have a background in campus affairs. Council members will be ap- pointed by a committee composed of the male members of…

… the Stu- dent Legislature cabinet. Inter- viewing will be held next week, with petitions due at the Student Affairs Office by 4 p.m. Monday. Formerly under the jurisdiction of the Student Legislature…

May 05, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 150) • Page Image 1

… United Nations today the calamities in Palestine will reach a pinnacle of horror after May 15. The Trans-Jordan monarch hinted his British-trained Arab Legion will attempt to seize and pacify Palestine…

… Palestine mandate May 15. Trans-Jordan formerly was part of the Palestine mandate area. Persistent report from the Middle East say Abdullah has been picked by Arab countries to command an army that may enter…

… a tag, help send the kids to camp" will be the campus watchword today as 750 students man collection posts for the Fresh Air Camp tag day sales. A goal of $5,000 has been set by the drive committee…

… for student and faculty contributions to the camp. It is also support- ed by the University and by cooperating scual agencies. Tag day is an all campus project foi the first time this year. Previously…

… it was run by Assembly, but with expanded interest in the camp as a student recreation center the executive iI committee was enlarged to include representatives of major student organizations including…

… morning hours today. Urgent Whoever "borrowed" a black and white bicycle near the Chemistry Building recently didn't know one thing. The University student who owns it is an amputee, and the bike saved him…

May 20, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 161) • Page Image 1

… action to stop war in Palestine. The British proposed instead that the Security Council appeal again for a Jewish-Arabic truce t and peaceful mediation by the United Nations in Palestine. The United States…

…. Meanwhile, in Israel, Trans- Jordan troops slashed deep into modern Jerusalem today while in the old city a small Jewish garrison was bombarded at in- tervals for 15 hours. A high Arab official said Arabs

…- Jordan's crack Arab Legion troops. A Damascus dispatch said Syrian and Iraq motorized forces fanned out from cap- tured Safad to the north and Beisan to 4he south. Safad and Beisan are strategic Jewish…

…-held bastions in northeast Israel. (The dispatch said the Arab forces bypassed Tiberias on the western shore of Galilee but it was under plane and artillery assault. Capture of all three places would give the…

Arabs control of the fer- tile northeast sector of Israel. Big Phoenix Plan Response Exceeds Hope An initial wave of telegrams. letters and personal pledges of support for the Phoenix Project exceeding…

… the most optimistic hopes has descended upon The Daily and the office of Erich A. Walter, Dean of Students. Eliot Charlip '51 announced + that Lloyd House had distributed special editions of The Daily…

Students, re- vealed that Alpha Phi Omega, na- tional service fraternity, had of- ,.fered its aid in sending Daily spe- cial editions to the next-of-kin of the University's war dead and in spreading news of…

… already considering the possible effects of the measure on this campus. "We are now collecting data on the ages and service experience of male students, which will enable us to estimate the bill's effects…

… freshmen first," Miss Dunkirk explained. "After that, room assignments are made progressively, and students having low credit hours are given preference." The existing uncertainty about the draft legislation…

… of the ROTC reported that he has had no in- formation yet about the status of ROTC students under the pro- posed legislation, but that some clarification would probably be forthcoming as soon as the…

May 22, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 163) • Page Image 1

…W ALLAC E c(O-p Seet Pate 4 Y LwP.h Duii4 FAIRA LITTLE CHANCE Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 163 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, MAY 22, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS Dewey Arab-Jewish M…

… Battle Rages In Holy City Egyptians Clain, In Tel-Aviv Bombed CHIC CAIRO, May 21--(P)-Arab le- diers stri gionnaires tonight hemmed in zation of Jewish troops fighting a last againsta ditch battle in a 10…

… universities and col- m all over the country," . "When they report back campuses, the news may I to as many as a million lf students." Starts Campaign hile, activities on a" maller scale were being into shape at…

… Shapiro, chairman of the Student League for Industrial De- mocracy and MCAF representa- tive, said. Marzani had appeared in Ann Arbor in December with Gerhard Eisler, avowed Communist whose scheduled speech…

… here was pre- vented by a student mob. George Shepherd, chairman of MCAF, commented, "We were bringing Marzani back to the cam- pus in order to give the University the opportunity to take the black mark…

… Communist Party should be outlawed in the United States. HOPE FOR AID BILL: Telephone Executives Defend Workers Extension Program Jewish Planes Strike at Arab Coastal Area' TEL-AVIV, Israel, May 21--') -The…

… Jewish air force raided the Jerusalem area and the Arabs' coastal stronghold of Gaza, Is- rael's military command an- nounced today. k Arab planes again struck Tel- Aviv, Israel's capital. A flight of two…

…. The Jewish air strikes were made last night. Fires were set in Gaza, which Egyptian troops have occupied, and an attack was made on Arab troop concentrations near Shu'fat, a northern suburb of Jerusalem…

… be provided for Tel-Aviv. Ask UN Halt Palestine War LAKE SUCCESS. May 21-('- Andrei A. Gromyko demanded to- day that the United Nations stop the Arab-Jewish war in Palestine wi +hnri i fiith+ ci.Ane t…

May 18, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 160) • Page Image 1

… Proj- ect hit the campus. Standard topics of conversation were forgotten temporarily as !I students, impressed with the importance of the announcement, gath- ered to discuss the event that had placed Ann…

… Arbor on the front page of every newspaper in the country.- A spot poll, taken by The Daily a few hours after the news broke, revealed that only one of the 52 students interviewed had no idea woalimn la…

…. I'm proud to be a student at a university that is taking such * *progressive steps."Iy I k-- ,l * * * * 4 viets (claims i s srmes Israel Recognize juwiSh State . LS&A Ilaicllly Will Support…

students of the University give * eWS the project their full support and rFZl make the rest of the nation con- r Dro scious of it." Billy Van Dyke '48: "Sounds MOSCOW, U atomic-I'm willing to give my last…

… undertaking Soviet Foreig will be carried out." Molotov replie Betty Clark '49: "The students Shertok that" should really want to pitch in and of the U.S.S.R help, with the promise of such recognize offic…

… magnificent results in the offing." Israel and its Meanwhile, Dean Erich A. Wal- enment." ter suggested that students do as Meanwhile, A much as possible to further the f rom Cairo said Phoenix Project. He…

… Minister V. M. d in a note to "The governmentj . has decided to ially the state of provisional gov- Arab dispatches d today that Arab penetrated north- Wallace Note To Be Basis Of Discussion Stalin Calls…

… order importance of spreading the news the war stopped in Palestine. of the Project far and wide. He U. S. Delegate Warren R. Aus- recommended that students write tin, with last-minute instruc-1 letters…

…'tJiisnounced that "up to 500 Arab1 troops were drowned" when theI Jews opened a hydro-electric damt Coming close on the heels of and flooded a plain south of the the announcement of the Phoenix Sea of Galilee. The…

… source said Project, a discussion of atomic en- Arab soldiers with tanks and1 ergy provided a timely program heavy equipment were trapped byt for last night's meeting of the As- the flood.) sociation of…

May 09, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 154) • Page Image 1

Students' Is Parley Topic Representatives of 20 foreign countries and delegates from some 200 colleges and universities will gather in Ann Arbor tomorrow for the three day Conference on International Student

… Exchanges. Sponsored by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, the conference will discuss the opportunities and problems of foreign students in this country, with emphasis on the recently passed Fulbright and Smith…

…-Mundt laws. These meas- ures provide for financial assist- ance to American students abroad, 'and to foreign students in the United States. Main speaker of the meeting, which will bring together over 300…

… professional student exchange leaders, is George V. Allen, assist- ant Secretary of State and former ambassador to Iran, who will lec- ture on 'Continuing Partnership in Educational Exchange" at 11 a.m. tomorrow…

… on the topic "U.S. Students in Foreign Policy." Tuesday's and Wednesday's ses- sions will consist largely of tech- nical discussions concerning prob- lems in exchanging students. Flanders Says UMT…

Arabs and Jews, protected the Holy City and its shrines tpday for the first time in five months. It went into effect at noon (5 a.m. EST), and not a shot was heard in the first hour. The arrangement was a…

… walled area and the deportation of foreign Arab fighters from the Holy City. Gen. Sir Alan Gordon Cunning- ham, Palestine High Commission- er, negotiated the cease fire at a meeting in Jericho yesterday…

… with Arab leaders. The Jews did not attend the Jericho talks. Egyptians Advance Earlier today, the "Command Volunteers, Southern Front Pal- estine" issued a communique say- ing volunteer Egyptian forces…

… front to help Arabs repulsing Jewish attacks on Iraq Suweidan, some 50 kilometers north of the Egyp- tian border town of Rafa. UN Moral Backing At Lake Success it is realized an emergency control…

… AT HILL: All-Student Agenda Features Symphonic Swing Premiere Student batons will set the pace for the student-composed, student-arranged, and student-played Symphonic Swing -Orchestra's premiere…

May 02, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 148) • Page Image 1

…CAMPUS OPINION See Page 4 wY~~ 4f t43UUa~ I 1 FAIR NO CHANGE Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVII, No. 148 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 2, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS Regular Arab Armies Roll…

… Into Palestine Armored Forces Hit Settlements JERUSALEM, May 1-(P)-The regular armies of Arab nations of the Middle East invaded Palestine today striking in the north anc south with troops and armorec…

… Hike Fatten Slim Pocketbooks By JAKE HURWITZ That added currency in the pocket certainly jingles a merry tune! The nation's 52 million taxpayers and 1,500,000 student vets prepared to let a notch out of…

… million people from the tax rolls. The raised subsistence payments provide an additional New Opinion bureau Polls 500 Students Plan To Represent Campus-Wide Views Five hundred people can't be wrong…

…-not when they're scien- ifically quizzed by the Bureau of Student Opinion. The newly-set up Bureau has nicked a chosen half-thousand students from the University's 19,- 500-odd population. Their answers to…

…. Answer for Others Each student polled will be an- swering for 35 others. The student statisticians who are in charge of the Bureau emphasize that every one of the 500 must contribute his opinions for the…

… poll to be success- ful. The Bureau was created as an adjunct of the Survey research Center when the Student Legisla- ture, the Union and The Daily wanted to find out student opin- ion on various…

May 06, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 151) • Page Image 1

… in Palestine has been ad- vanced by the Arabs but has re- ceived little support among the delegates. The Jews have an- nounced plans to proclaim a Jew- n excellent opportunity for students +)to learn…

… Annual Spring Parley with a speech on the possibilities of world peace. Then, at 8:30 p.m., interested students will meet in the Union for the first in a se- ries of panels, on the general topic "Trouble…

… her mandate over Palestine on May 15. Meanwhile, violence broke out briefly in Jerusalem tonight as ef- forts to engineer an Arab-Jewish truce in the Holy City apparently bogged down. After a peaceful…

… that the suggested emergency ad- ministration would not be a UN trusteeship, advocated by the United States, nor a permanent answer to the Arab-Jewish dead- lock. The idea of a single independent country…

… days, recaled how high student enthusiasm was at some of the first meetings. "At one of the panels," he said, "students directed so many ques- tions at. e speakers that individ- ual questions could not…

… be distin- guished. We had to have students write their questions down and bring them to the chairman." First Series The first series of panels starts at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Un- ion. Under the…

… World Peace." In three separ- ate panels, students will discuss world trade agreements, the world bank, the UN, and cultural and re- ligious exchanges. Short Talks Panel leaders, to be announced tomorrow…

…, will give short talks on the, nature of the individual problems. Then students will join in an open discussion. AVy C Opens All-oCamps Book Drive An all-campus drive to collect books for a recreational…

… the diagonal, in Mosher-Jordan, the East and West Quads. Union Petitions Petitions for student vice- presidential positions in the Michigan Union will be re- ceived from 3 to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow…

… at the student offices. The petitions should bear 200 signature and specify the school or lege the petitioner intends to represent. BREAKING UP TRIESTE DEMONSTRATION-Trieste police grapple with a…

May 16, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 159) • Page Image 1

…, Page 8 Students Present First Video Show Students may watch the Uni- versity speech department's first television play at 3:30 p.m. to- day on the video screen of the v e C 4 Y f z 1 'M' Nine Tops…

… Orchestra" which will be pre- miered tonight. Student Composer James Wolfe, who Atudied com- position here, wrote the "Sere- nade" last spring before receiving ,iis master's degree. The pre- miere piece was…

… playing "Prelude and Allegro" by Walter Piston. Emil Raab, music student, will conduct this work. Members of the orchestra are Charles McNeill, Catherine Jean Morgan, Nina Goehring, Carl Williams, Genevieve…

… the "Children's Crusade." SAVE A CHILD- UNI Crusade for Children, Will Arab Armies Drive into Israel Meet Resistance from Haganah Wage Cut Start oft Cam19 Can you spare a dollar to help save an…

…'s Arab Legion shelled fo settlements on the Jordan valley frontier. The Egyptian Army said two columns of troops Invaded Southern Palestine and one de- stroyed the Jewish settlement of Al Dangor, 13 miles…

… southeast of Gaza. This would be in the territory of Israel, as defined in the United Nations decision on partition. (The Cairo newspaper AlAssas said Gaza, Arab city 20 miles in- side Palestine on the coast…

… bridge Qver the Jordan River and knifed into the area south of the *,a lee, also inside Israel terriory on the East, a dispatch from Damas- cus said. (Farther south King Abdul- la's.Trans-Jordan Arab

… WASHINGTON, May 15-(AP) --President Truman may lift or modify his embargo on shipment of American guns, bullets, planes, and other weapons to warring Jewish and Arab countries in the Middle East, it was…

… announcement last night of American recogni- -tion of the new Jewish state of Israel. (Meanwhile, Israel called upon an extraordinary session of the UN Security Council to stop Arab invasions of Palestine by…

… sanc- tions or actual United Nations military force. (Arab spokesmen countered with declarations that they con- c.ri.r yi fh a Jmxc o n ..n THE HIGH COST OF GOVERNMENT: Higher Taxes, Deficit Spending…

May 13, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 157) • Page Image 4

… members at this University, and a small percentage of the students, came out against the Mundt-Nixon Bill. But this product of the Un-American Activities Committee can't be brushed off lightly as the work…

… addressed immediately to your congressman on the floor of the House may be in time. --Harriett Friedman. Experiment in Generality STUDENTS ON CAMPUS missed an op- portunity to win a brand-new Capital…

… mind that the de facto government has grown out of ap- parent indifference by the United States and the UN to the fate of the Jews in Palestine and the submission to Arab blackmail. Since the passage of…

… spite of numerous warnings to the contrary, that partition could be effected without armed backing. There was no bluff by the Arab League; its members were in- tent on preventing partition and would have…

… embargo to Palestine Jews. There is still no bluff in the threats of the Arab nations. Invasion of Palestine by the British-trained, British-subsidized Arab Legion of King Abdullah of Trans- Jordania is…

… certain. Other invasions in the near future are likely. The inescapable conclusion is that the eventual goal of the nations of the Arab League is to wipe out every Zionist in Pales- tine. The Haganah and…

… Institute being held in Ann Arbor. The general public will be admitted without charge after 7:45 p.m. Student Recital Shirley Fryman Goldfarb, pianist, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the…

…, Beethoven's Sonate, Op. 53, and Grieg's Bal- lade, Op. 24. The public is invited. Student Recital: Francelia Whitfield, pianist, will play com- positions by Bach, Schubert, Brahms, Lee Pattison, and Wilbur…

May 16, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 159) • Page Image 4

… PASQUALTTI behind it, the United Nations is once again in whole-hearted support of the partitioning of Palestine. But Friday, the Arab League began its holy war. The Egyptian Army entered the Holy Land…

… disputes, they, the Arab nations, must be made to abide by the decision. Some of the responsibility lies with us. Our momentary shifting of policy led the Arabs to believe we backed their ideas. It is…

… was University day at Ford Airport as 130 students were guests of Ford-Stout Air Motors. Special rates were offered for 25 minute plane rides in 14 passenger cabins. INTERNATIONAL ... A New Israel As…

… Britain surrendered her 25-year Pale- stine Mandate at midnight, Friday, the in- dependent Jewish State of Israel was al- ready a fact. President Truman surprised the Arabs and threw the UN into turmoil by…

… recognizing the state and Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov gave an. unofficial echo of the President's announcement for the Soviet. A week of fierce fighting, climaxed by Haganah's capture of Jaffa and the Arab

… Communist parties, was brought out on the House floor this week, was greet- ed with animosity locally. Faculty members and townspeople joined forces to telegraph Congress opposing the bill and a student group…

…, Students Against the Mundt Bill, was organized to fdrmulate a student protest. LOCAL Expert Opinion Prof. James K. Pollock, chairman of the political science department, left last week for Berlin, Germany to…

… which skyrocketed Michigan to th top of the BigNine within two years, left to take a job as basketball coach at the Uni- versity of Minnesota. * * * Benefactor The University student body as a whole…

…, scholar- ships and rewards of merit for University of Michigan students. - * More Polities Campus political groups were assured this week that the Student Activities Committee would not release information…

… regarding student membership in a political group unless specifically requested to do so by the student. At the SAC meeting, Tuesday, the way was potentially open for large scale political rallies, as a…

May 19, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 161) • Page Image 1

… is needed right now to bring the Army up to authorized strength. Fall Advisors Needed by SL Student experts are needed for rnext fall's course content student advisory board program, accord- ing to…

… Blair Moody of the Student Legislature. Advisors should be juniors or seniors with at least a 'B' overage. Students with wide experience in their field of concentration are desired. Members of honor socie…

… new k stqd nts. Student advisors will help familiarize strangers on cam- pus with the choices of courses that are available. Interested students can contact; Moody by calling 2-4551. The legislature…

… a group of Arab fighters. Council'Probes Palestine War' State To Act On''Funds For Buildinow Legislature To Neet Tomorrow The State Legislature recon- venes tomorrow to take action on University…

… building appropriations and to resume the trial of James Zarichny, Michigan State College student charged with contempt of the Senate. The Legislature failed to agree on funds for the Maternity Hospi- tal at…

May 04, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 149) • Page Image 4

… sand on its bearings rather than oil. Their reasons for dismissing the United Nations are as weak. as that. It is for students who do not understand the workings of the UN and those who want to know more…

…-Security Council, General Assem- bly and committees. Students will partici- pate by taking the positions of delegates from each of UN nations. The problems of setting up and operating a UN organization will be…

… verge of demanding the reform of U.N., with the veto power removed, so that it can act, don't you see, act But much the same segment of Ameri- can opinion also cherishes Arab friendship ship and perhaps…

Arab oil, and on this question it seems to desire a UN which will roar you as gently as any suckling dove, as 'twere any nightingal We are throwing away U.N. prestige and power by double handfuls on the…

… of its veto, and we don't seem at all to want to proceed against Arab disruption, even when we have a majority and when nobody has vetoed anything. To jump to what may seem an unrelated subject, but…

… of doubt, doubt as to whether we ought really to trust in other agencies, from U.N. to Western Europe, to keep us secure, or whether we just ought to gather up Arab oil and keep our machinery, and go…

… necessary, for those students. In the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts, the times for special examinations for those graduating in June for certain courses are indicated below. Each student

… of the Committee on Examina- tions. The graduating student should also check to see that his examinations are to be completed by June 5. TIME OF EXERCISE TIME OF EXAMINATION Monday Monday Monday…

… to their activities. In Palestine months after the Arab states had publicly declared their aggressive plans we plea for a truce, the perennial cure-all, ig- noring the invasion that has oc- curred. The…

May 15, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 158) • Page Image 1

… move that surprised the world, tonight recognized the new Jewish state of Israel in Palestine a few minutes after it was proclaimed. The news caused intense elation among the Zionists, stunned the Arabs

…- duced by Rev. H. L. Pickerill of the Congregational Dis c iple s Guild, and was sponsored by In- ter Co-op Council, Student Re- ligious Association and Hindustan Association. A tea, open to all students

… K. Littell, Student Religious Association director, will be the presentation of a Jewish flag, made by IZFA members, to Dr Max Weinreb, Palestinian dental student. On March as Mandate Ends Egyptian…

… came into existence. The newly-born Jewish state faced an almost immediate threat of blood as Arab nations of the Middle East, awaiting the end of the mandate to launch their regu- lar armies on an…

… defend the Jewish nation against the bloodiest Arab attacks. (In Washington, President'Tru- man announced U. S. recognition of Israel.) (Andrei A. Gromyko, a Soviet representative at the United Na- tions…

… by Aug. 1. A hint of trouble to come was seen in Tel Aviv last night when city officials ordered full air raid precautions in expectation of a major Arab drive for control of the Holy Land. MCAF Calls…

…. May, affectionately called ;Doc" by thousands of students and alumni, died March 28 in Ann Arbor. Dr. May and Crapo Cornell Smith, whose bequest of $1,000,000 was recently announced, were neighbors at…

May 04, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 149) • Page Image 6

…, ouse ATO's in Huron River By LEON JAROFF While students all over the vorld tripped lightly around May wles last Saturday, two deter- nined groups of men were locked n mortal combat on the shores of he…

… unloading of supplies from boats after hazardous journey from Haifa. The town was cut off after Arabs established road block at Acre. Townsmen were forced to make journey in boats. Th" town's power was cut…

…, write: Dept. "C" SPANISH STUDENT TOURS 500 Fifth Ave., N.Y. 18, N.Y. +, i i I _ A4 I II w Beginning tomorrow a local representative of the United Na- tions Appeal for Children will ap- proach…

… all University faculty and administrative personnel in an ex- tens've campaign to provide food and relief for the millions of starv- ing children in war devastated areas. Students, the only University…

… rapport, Dr. Erickson explained. College students make the best subjects because they are inter- ested, intelligent and cooperative. VETS CHECKS Checks being held for the fol- lowing veterans at the Ann…

May 12, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 156) • Page Image 1

…- tuted a frank statement of policy on each side. They pointed out that there was a great gap be- tween the American statement I and the Soviet statement. One-Act Plays ToBe Given Tomorrow A bill of student

… night. Outsiders attending games will ,ontinue to pay fifty cents but students may present ID cards at the time of purchase for the price reduction. The method of choosing Men's Judiciary Committee' was…

…, May 11s-The Jewish Army said today its fighters had captured Beit Mah- sir, main base for Arab forces in the battle for control of the vital Jerusalem-Tel Aviv highway, WASHINGTON, May 11 - The American…

… in the spotlight at the Student Affairs Committee meeting yesterday as the group ruled not to release the member- ship lists of campus political clubs and again tackled the problem of political…

… speeches. The SAC moved that student membership in political groups shall not be released except by specific request of the student involved. The ruling was an outgrowth of a request by Max Dean, chairmain…

… potential employers or other persons asking for student rec- ords would not have access to po- litical club affiliations unless au- thorized by the student involved. The "speakers ban" was again in the news…

… to organize their group, The two students said they were unfamiliar with the accreditation procedure and made arrangements to reorganize through proper methods. Yesterday the Student Affairs Committee…

… Needs Money For Additions Possible Student Fee for Games By HERB RUSKIN A recommendation that the Board of Regents take steps to finance badly needed athletic fa- cilities was made yesterday by the Board…

… prices. They advanced the possibility that students might be charged admission for football games epring Concert at 8:wl and other lniversity athletic elli, will play works by events in their annual report…

… second issue of The Daily's literary supplement, previously scheduled for May 28, will not ap- pear until the fall semester be- cause of previous publication re- quirements. Students who have contributed…

May 26, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 166) • Page Image 4

… general library, I heard the clerk report to a student that the books on Marxism which he had requested were not on the shelf. "What has the library done," he asked with some indignation, "burned all its…

… of notification not later than Wednesday noon. Approved student sponsored so- cial events for the coming week- end: May 28 Class of 1950, School of Nursing. The Americ an Agricultural Chemical Company…

… Angell Hall. If this time is in- convenient, see Professor Fischer at 3016 Angell Hall prior to the scheduled time of the examina- tion. Concerts Student Recital: Students of composition with Homer Keller…

… written by Leslie Bassett, Jack Hodin, War- ren Benson, Joanne Baker, Ed- ward Chudacoff, Anita Dennis- ton, Dean Nuernbergetr, Robert Buggert, and Grant Beglarian. The public is invited. Student Recital…

… for stop the outbreak of a world war in 1914. Words did not stop Hit- ler's annexation of Czechoslovakia in 1939. And words will not stop the similarly aggressive action of the Arab nations against the…

…- pend on the personal desires of a selfish few. Only force can settle this issue, for the Arab nations give no indication of halting their attack, and Israel consequently must continue to defend. Ifthe…

… proper action is not taken now, then all I can say is-League of Nations, move over; you are abot to be joined by the United Na- tions. -Manuel Rosenbaum. V ets' Feelings To the Editor: SOME STUDENTS wonder…

… you may be sure I shall not forget your viewpoint regarding this matter." So AVC's resolutions do let Wasihngton's policy-makers know how organized student -veterans feel on current issues. And, if the…

…- days 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Events Today Radio Programs: 3:30 p.m. WKAR-The Hop- wood Room-Programs of inter- views with student writers, pro- fessors and guests. Conducted by E. G. Burrows. 3:45 p…

….m.WKAR-The School of Music. 5:45 p.m. WPAG - Gardening Program - Lenore Thompson Bingley. 8:30 p.m. WPAG-FM-Student Recital. Students of composition will hear their works performed by other students. Delta Business…

May 06, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 151) • Page Image 4

…., May 7, East Lecture Room, Rackham Bldg. Mr. H. F. Nixdorf of the No-Sag Spring Co. will talk on "Recent Developments in Fur- niture Construction." Wood Technology students are expected to attend. Other…

… program will open with the Minuet from the E-flat Symphony by Mozart, Prelude 4, and Giga, by Corelli, followed by Lefevere's Allegro, Al- fred Bells, Intermezzo, and Ma- zurka. Student Recital: Betty…

… LIKE to suggest that letters concerning University policies and reactions to those pol- icies be turned over to members of thebStudent Legislature, when they warrant such attention. These members could…

… names and along with the precipitating letter. I feel this would establish a sounder basis for student par- ticipation in University affairs and would create a greater faith of the student body in the ef…

…- fectiveness of their elected repre- sentatives. By delegating the va- rious investigations throughout the Legislature, some of the un- desirable factionalism, which ap- pears to be entering our student

… or woman who doesn't like to hear glor- ious male voices raised in song! The students of Michigan are in for a treat this Saturday night if they will attend the annual Varsity Glee Club concert at Hill…

… from a se- curity standpoint. Up until now all the Arab states have beer friendly toward us. In view of the tense situation with the So- viet Union does it seem that our best national interest in the…

… Middle East lies in making en- emies of the Arabs by forcing them to cede land which has been theirs for two thousand years and take the chance that they will turn to the Sovi'et Union for friendship and…

… consideration in dealing with in- ternational problems must be that which is best for our security in case of war. Whether we like the Arabs or Turks or even Greeks is at . . . this time immaterial; for if the…

… full, what we get is simply a half-worthless compromise. The fact of the compromise in turn par- alyzes other essential efforts. Not nearly Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan…

May 02, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 148) • Page Image 4

…SUNDAY, MAY 2, 1948 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I Campus Opinion SOME students who voted in the Student r Legislature elecion picked their choices from the mass of unfamiliar names by not- ing the…

… viewpoints expressed by each hope- ful on six questions asked by The Daily. As a handy guide, the answers given by the 71 candidates were published on election day. For math majors and students who be- lieve…

… percentage for the whole candidate list. The positive and negative difference in percents determines to some extent whe- ther students were favorable or unfav- orable to each candidate's ideas. Here is the…

student opinion on the basis of this analysis but some interesting inferences can be drawn by the imaginative.... -Craig H. Wilson Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The…

… Commissioner was threatening to shell Jewish sections of the Holy City, had already done so, supported by planes, in Jaffa. While the Arab states were threatening to move in their armies from nearby Syria…

… among students at the University as he polled 1,515 preferential votes and 2,617 as most "likely to succeed" in The Daily's presidential straw vote. Mich- igan's Senator Vandenberg was second. Henry…

…- lahan Committee was illegal, and Sen. Stan- ley Nowak came to the defense of the youth. The trial was finally adjournd until May 20 by a Senate vote. * * * University A record turnout of 5,756 students

… elected twenty-three new members to the Student Legislature., At the first meeting of the new group it was decided that the Legislature will choose the University delegation to the National Student

… campus, when the Student Affairs Commit- tee gave recognition to the, Student Demo- crats for Douglas. Tennis A solution to the tennis "hot potato" was reached with a decision to adopt a com- promise plan…

… quorum. Shelved, were proposals to increase student representation on the Fi- nance Committee, to changes in the pro- cedure for selecting Union vice-presidents and to givet tdtnt -majotity on the se…

May 23, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 164) • Page Image 4

… reach it. Back in the house, the radio mentibns that the Jews have started a new state, which seems good. But then it says that the invading Arabs are in. Something like the rain that is pelting the…

… greed underneath. While Arab legions, in many instances lead by British reserve officers, invaded Palestine, Sir Alexander Cadogan, Brit- ish delegate, mouthed: "Juridically, they (government leaders) are…

… current ruckus. (Copyright, 1948, New York Herald Tribune) IT SO HAPPENS *It's the Weather Sipping Cider? Six sober young men stopped at the Lea- gue cafeteria the other night - graduate students, we…

…. Duringb the week, Congressmen had been shoWered with petitions, includingv those from two local campaigns against the bill-that of the Washte- naw Committee for Democratic Rights and Students against the…

… Mundt Bill.v m r * * James Zarichny, Michigan State College student who refused toq tell the Callahan Committee if he were or were not a Communist, wasI convicted of contempt of the State Senate Thursday…

… exclusively to exploiting the peace- ful and humanitarian applications of atomic energy. The Phoenix project, which is to be supported by the students and alumni had been originated back as far as 1946…

…. Response was unexpectedly good. Student organization were hard at work by week's end spreading the news of the project and stimu- lating public interest. Nationally, the center had the endorsement of the…

… going up July 1st, the student body learned Thursday. High cost of operations in the university's self-sup- porting dormitories had brought on a $55 increase in the semester's bill. The increase would…

…, Burton Memorial Tower. Student Recital: June Van Met- er, organist, will present a recital n partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music at 4:15 p.m., Sun., May 23, Hill…

… Mascagni. Open to the public without charge. Student Recital: Sarah Cossum, violist, accompanied by Jean Far- quharson, will play a program in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements f'or the degree of…

May 01, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 147) • Page Image 6

… remotely con- nected with alumni. "Alumni interest is one of theI big reasons that the University has always had a strong student body," Tapping says. He works closely with alumni interested in getting…

… promising students tol come to Michigan. On the other hand, he helps soften the blow for alumni proteges. who can't meet the entrance requirements. Other jobs taken on by the alumni office include last year…

…, evidently interest- who had some dye left over from ed in the color scheme of the the war, or a chemistry student. campus, poured green dye into the The green color will fade as the waters. Whoever the color…

…- lows, 25-year-old Hampton keeps his classes lively simply by follow- ing his pet theory-if students are interested, they'll learn. "They can't help it, he grins, and cites students in his practice…

… semester though -- just "Oh, we talk and they write papers . .." Once on the subject of student produced, directed and acted films, Hampton can enthusiastically rat- tle on for an hour. He can't un- derstand…

…. Friends claim Hampton has a boundless capacity for alcohol and coffee. He denies this with "I only drink beer." They also tell the story that "because he was in an Arab prison on his twenty-first birthday…

…, he can't drink in Ann Arbor because his liquor card is in Arabic." Caii't Win1 LAS VEGAS, April 30-The rover boys of the roulette table learned it the hard way today: Albert Hibbs, 23, Chillicothe…

May 04, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 149) • Page Image 1

…,000,000 men. Men from 18 through 30 woul have to register with those fron 19 through 25 liable for two year yrservice. Most veterans would be exempt. College students would b allowed to finish an academic year…

… «Seeking: (1) A temporary draft and (2) A longer-range system of universal military training unde which younger men would be tVained in a new system of camps and other institutions. These UMT students would…

… committee planning the project. "Student representatives who participated in the successful Model General Assembly held April 21 and anyone interested in learning how the UN works may attend," Miller said…

… Collegiate Council for the United Nations. Students will take the sides of various nations and discuss world issues on an unbiased basis, ac- cording to Miller. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in…

…. Students are requested by Tom Murray, chairman of the cam- paign, to contribute any kind of readable book, either fiction or non - fiction. Veteran patients' reading preferences are more ma- ture and…

… a truce between Jews and Arabs in the Holy City's battered Katamon quar- ter. Jerusalem had its quietest day in months. PORTLAND, Ore., May 3---Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York tonight demanded that…

…, medical per- sonnel, transportation and other expenses is contributed by Uni- versity students and faculty dur- ing the annual tag day. A goal of $5,000 has been set Marble Aces ToCom-pete Ann Arbor's crack…

… developing the camp as a student recreation center. Dur- ing the spring and fall camp fa- cilities are available to student groups for picnics and dances. Loeal Citizens Protest Arrest 0 aa a m Of Sen. Taylor…

… direction of An- thony Pasquariello of the Spanish department, and makeup, props and costumes have been handled by the students. The action of "Nuestra Nata- cha" takes place in a Spanish uni- versity and in…

May 05, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 150) • Page Image 7

… matches that Illi - nois .was able to squeeze out Kalamazoo team. It was the third year in succession that the Ka- zoos had fallen to the Illini by a 5-4 score. I-M NEWS The Turks defeated the Arabs, 4…

…-1, in an International Center soccer game Sunday, May 2. Both teams were previously undefeated, and the winner stands a good chance of annexing the Interna- tional Students Association soccer trophy. The…

… continuous rainstorm, Besin Tan and Nick Kamaryotis scored two more for the Turks and the Arabs' flashy outside left wing, Tashak, scored his team's only goal. On May 8 the Indians will play the Latin…

… Americans in a game beginning at 1:15 p.m. On May 9 the Chinese will meet the Arabs at 1:15 p.m. and the Turks will face the Indians at 3:15 p.m.' replace Doherty who Seek Mentor AS Doherty's Time…

May 12, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 156) • Page Image 4

… negotiations to secure at least a temporary Arab-Jewish truce in Palestine were then in progress. Only one point re- mained in dispute. Probably no truce could in the end have been secured, since there was…

….m. Saturdays). * * * Notices WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1918 VOL. LVII, No. 156 Student Tea:. President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students from 4 to 6 o'clock this afternoon. D)irected 'T'eaching in the Fle…

…- Inentary School: Students who in- tend to do directed teaching in elementary education in the Sum- mer Session of 1948 or the Fall Semester of 1948-49 must make application before May 28. Forms are available…

…, East Council Room, Rackhamr Bldg. Chairman, G. E. Uhlenbeck. Students, College of L.S.A.: ' Advistory Sgries of Professional' Schools: Wed., May 12, 4:15 p.m.' Room 231, Angell Hall, "Law as a Profession…

… connection with the Adult Educa- tion Institute being held in Ann Arbor. The general public will be admitted without charge after 7:45 p.m. Student Recital Shirley Fryman Goldfarb, pianist, will present a…

… Mozart, Opus 76 by Brahms, Beethoven's Sonate, Op. 53, and Grieg's Ballade, Op. 24. The public is invited. Student Recital: Francelia Whitfield, pianist, will play com- positions by Bach, Schubert, Brahms…

… wish to thank the 750 students who worked on the tag day and the many stu- dents, faculty and townspeople who, by their contributions have helped make camp possible for 240 children. The serious interest…

… of the many persons involved in the Camp program gives assurance that the money will be spent wise- ly on behalf of the youngsters and of the community as a whole. The fact that many student or…

…- ganizations cooperated on this all- campus charity drive deserves at- tention. We are especially happy that student interest extends to the actual planning and conduct of the Camp program through the nine…

student representatives on the Camp Executive Committee. It is our hope that the students have a feeling of satisfaction by reason of participation in the planning, execution and management of a major…

May 07, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 152) • Page Image 4

… themselves to blame if the world says they do so because the Jews have re- fused to surrender and because the Arabs are losing)-and they wouldn't have to do any of these things, or look so nervous, i they…

… will be held May 13. Women students attending eith- er the "Ensemble '48 Ball or the Inter-Fraternity Ball, Fri., May 7, have 1:30 a.m. permission. Calling hours will not be extended. Approved student

…-I ed to call at thte Office of the Dean of Women for their certifi- cates by May 13. Letters to the Editor ... - i 14 Women students enrolled in the Red Cross Water Safety Instruc- tor's course have…

… strdent who is a true student gives not a tinker's damn-m for sev- eral paltry nights sleep (consecu- tive nor for such worldly knick- knacks as grades. The tru r stud- ent pursues knowledge for itself; a…

… and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff John Campbell .......Managing Editot Dick Maloy…

May 25, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 165) • Page Image 4

… following requirements must be dividua met: make t 1. Completion of Math. 54; for Ch 2. Fulfillment of the Group Re- It is quirements; that so 3. Completion of sixty hours of student credit; igan w 4. Passing…

… the examina- Busines tion. wouldb its ow Concerts more e that ed Student Recital: Harriet Boden, cialized mezzo-soprano, will present a pro- pay its gram in partial fulfillment of the of the…

…: Students of Ever t composition with Homer Keller ment? will hear their works performed in first cr a program at 8:30 p.m., Wed., May if they 26, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. else sh They will be played by…

… diplomacy in the Security Council. In the dreadful, petty legalisms the British are using today to justify their material and moral aid to the Arab law- breakers, one catches again a breath of the air of the…

May 19, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 161) • Page Image 6

… Szold Lecture on "America and Palestine" at 8 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium. Van Passen, a world wide trav- eller, has made several tours through Arabic territories and has visited Palestine seven times…

… recent poll of pre-medical students made by the Society. All pre-medical and medical students were invited to attend the meeting. held at 6 p.m. Saturday in the Union, will see the resurrection of the…

… final meeting of the semester for student song and lyric writ- ers working on the 1948 Union Opera will be held at 7:15 p.m. to- day in the Journalism newsroom of Haven Hall. Dave Leyshon, chairman of the…

… orchestra, composed of more than one hundred students, will be conducted by Wayne Dun- lap in a program of Bach, Debussy, and Brahms. The Women's Glee Club under Marguerite Hood, will assist in the Debussy…

… organization, pre- sents the first in a series of articles on registration laws and voting re- quirements in the 48 states, as a serv- ice to the students of the University. States are grouped according to re…

… days preceding an election. 13uiS/I ( [Sict er Terror Students planning to attend the business administration summer school must classify with their ad- visors in Rm. 108, Tappan Hall, by the end of this…

…. Final meeting of semester. Radio.- 3:30 p.m., WKAR - I)opwood Room; Toby David, disc jockey, 6:15 p.m. WHRV. Students Against Mundt Bill- m pm., third floor, Union. Pre-Medical Society-7:30 p.m., Rm. 305…

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