September 17, 1952
(vol. 62, iss. 205)
• Page Image 8
…tC'M THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1952 I I 'Aers aged goods Open JiStudents famed Avery the first ma ,crary field for iters. ttial monetary early literary mark of suc- icck, some…
… who & _d the ladder to S trMiller, '38 who w York Critics ice. Miller also itzer prize in ' a Salesman." e vious winners 7 Angell Hall, ,iversity grad- :.:.duate students ip zes for fiction, and the…
…, business administration, in- dustrial relations, anthropology, journalism, marketing, chemis- try, botany, sociology and psy- chology. Then there are the American Ordnance Association, Student Science…
… Society, Foresters' Club, Student Bar Association, Michigan Actuarial Club, Michigan Crib for pre-law students, Pre-Medical So- ciety, Pre-Dental Society, Ameri- can. Pharmacy Association, Gal- ens Honorary…
… Medical Society, and an honorary Barristers Society for law students. * * * WITH STUDENTS from all cor- ners of the earth at the Universi- ty, many clubs have sprung up in which foreign stduents get to…
…- gether to bring into their college life a bit of their native land. Among these are clubs repre- senting the Arab countries, Pak- istan, China, India, Hawaii, Turkey, Armenia, Japan, Po- land and the…
… Philippines. Work- Remodeled LibraryReady A completely remodeled General Library, with improved lighting facilities will be ready for student use this fall. According to Warner G. Rice, director of the General…
… total 1,512,382 volumes. ing in conjunction with these are a Council for Displaced Per- sons and a Committee for In- ternational Living. Students from the Upper Penin- sula get together in the Hiawatha…
… Club, and British Commonwealth Students belong to the Beacon Club. ENTHUSIASTS of French, Ger- man, Spanish and Russian lan- guage study have formed groups in which the foreign language is exclusively…