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September 20, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 3) • Page Image 4

…"I Think We've Managed To Save His Face" .1) Iat4 ''ppnhln, ,p l. Sixty-Eighth Year |- EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN one Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN…

… CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ill Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors…

…. This must be noted in all reprints. Aradull 20, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL KRAFT Union Incompetence Costs Students Money "TEANNE EAGELS" is the chronicle of a great actress who mi d well have been…

…'tragedy. p.m. Thursday, Sept. 26, in t ee Student Publications Build The oodis ombe, he ate Anyone interested in revie" theme omnipresent,.(and'in the ing for the Daily or in drawl case of Jeannes' walking…

… day old, eady one of the largest campus stu- tizations has fumbled the ball on two gest annual projects. Few student igs on this campus have the poten- as important. to the -student finan- >es the Union…

…-operated Student Book And seldom does the Student Gov-, ;ouncil delegate anything as big as run student charter flight to Europe. ,use of poor organization, inadequate ient peresonnel, and a complete lack t and…

… planning, both student-spon- acts have earned classification among fallures of the organization. Not only failed to achieve their goals of satis- student's needs and saving him ey have actually and acutely…

September 19, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 1) • Page Image 4

…t.C [t MYi Mt l, , : " nions Are Free Will Prevail" Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS…

STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 printed in The Michigan Daily express the individuatopinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SEPTEM1ER…

… but so is the caution beaten into any- ho has ever gone into the prediction busi- or any length of time. 'A safer approach be to describe a few trends noticeable University and student scenes and sug…

… education is ng, that there are trends toward larger ,fewer faculty members per student, lore of the University's top professors ng all or most'of their time to research- aduate teaching. Exact figures…

…'s honors council,, ident, in other programs as well. There seen some signs, e.g., in Student Gov-, nt Council's recent activities in the area; nig enrollments, of questioning the as- on that the University…

… by ecent SGC activities, Is toward greater t involvement in the educational pro- the policy level. Two student members' ecently added to the University lecture ttee, and there have been pressures for t…

… participation on the Honors Council nore meaningful participation on the in Control of Intercollegiate Athleti'cs. THIS INCREASED student involvement has been accompanied, or perhaps permitted, by a greater…

… tendency toward cooperation and away from hostility between the students and the administration and possibly within the student community. Ever since the demise of. the Student Legislature two…

…-and-a-half years ago there has been no major conflict between the student government and the administra- tion. On the student side it has been due, de- pending on who is describing it, to a greater amount of student

… responsibility or a lesser degree of student gumption and courage. SGC has followed a national .trend away from con- .cern with "social action," and has listened quite carefully ,to advice from its elders. On the…

September 24, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 6) • Page Image 4

…r ' v__. sixty-.Eigt hYear EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ree UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH…

… serious there has been any "progress" lege educational system. More- growing feeling' that we might, loving in the opposite direction he intelligence levels of students rades, from senior high school…

… rgarten. ,DUCATION has long been criti- oducing students who, at college erage of two years behind stu- ime age in Britain, France and a countries in intellectual' ma- cational ability. Educators have t so…

…, life in continually ead and easier - to - understand At is that the once-wise writers ur so-called literary heritage go unread and unexperienced by students until much too late in their education…

….e., with the intent of subtly gaining the student's attention and interest and then driving home the important, basic, simple facts of the particular study. No longer can the individual be trusted to attain…

…, on his own, the wealth of meaning in the great writers of the world. Most serious of all is that school is becoming. "easier" for students. Even the layman is aware of this, as indicated in a recent…

September 22, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 5) • Page Image 2

… actions within the last year r for. a start on have brought the problem into wilding ' program diplomatic focus once more. In the eriod. first and better-known of these, ed that building Israel and the Arab

… had to foreign ships in the future. from George S. Israel claims the gulf is an r of the State international w a t e r w a y, Arab >riculture, asking states bordering on the gulf, Egypt willing…

…, according to the 'Ensian staff. , Seniors may sign' up for ap- pointments with the 'Ensian Staff at. the Student Publications Build- ing, 420 Maynard, from 3:00 to 5:00 daily. If appointments are broken…

September 27, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 9) • Page Image 1

Student Paas oon Hits Y, Base Authorities, Take Elsman From School wit South. After worried huddles. with oth- er officials, Brucker issued this statement last night: "I learned today of a precau…

… I answered two questions: "Do I have a new student to- day?" (Looking at me.) "No Ma'am." "Do you belong here?" "No ma'am." Whereupon followed a beckon and a reminiscence -filled trip to the principal…

… with the only ly-younger students. Throughout homeroom period the school's cheer were darting from room to room, rousing the spirits of preparation for today's football game. Although it m have been…

… off ted China coast. struck at . about 3 a.m., and ,ll clear was not sounded until J J SA UD ARBITRA TES: Top Arabs Fear Syria, s Future Tinder BoX DAMASCUS, Syria () - A new Arab summit conference…

… yesterday, the Middle East, but is reported President Eisenhower made his- deeply disturbed 'at the split in tory in being the first president to Arab ranks over Syria's leftward ride a nuclear-powered sub…

… cimens sent there as Asian flu. Mhe flu outbreak continued to ead over Texas. One school in uston was closed yesterday. afore than 1,000 of Baylor Uni- sity's 5,000 students at Waco e ill with an average…

… of 200 orting on sick call daily at the krmary. f " - + r r. oar Attendance was somewhat higher yesterday than the day be- fore. About 1400 students came to school, as against the 2000 who normally…

… those in Western State High in Kalamazoo, may oe deceptive. The school's prettiest girl may devote several minutes to helping a shy Negro boy in the back of the room with his schedule. The white students

September 27, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 9) • Page Image 4

…I,, Oxf a uo r.te Sixty-Eighth Year - EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Preval" STUDENT

…: RICHARD TAUB - ; " . « 4 .MO WihU.S. Universities (Editor's Note: This is the second of two articles comnaring Britain wit the United States, written by a graduate student in history at the Universi who…

… philosophy. Oxford has 7,000 students and tutors of philosophy. The United States has never produced a Shakespeare or G. Shaw in theater, nor a Malthus, Ricardo, Adam Smith or Lord Keyn in economics, never a…

…. More American Negroes go to College th the entire British student body. The 18-year-old student who com Facts on the Flu:. They Don't Justify Panic n that the latest ian Flu, has been ease make it much…

… Syria or David or anyone else should covet it. Flying in a rickety Arab plane which gives the impression of be- ing held together by baling wire,, you look down on vast stretches of desert. Here and there…

… time as it does to fly from New York to Wash- ington. When you study the map of the Near East, however, and know something of its history, you un- derstand why Jordan is the most coveted of Arab states…

September 22, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 5) • Page Image 4

…Sixty-Eighth Year . EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN re Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS -eval" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR…

… ,SURE. of historic irony, the )mobile Workers recently pur- er home of Edsel Ford in east g to convert it into a student AW also bought another man- which belonged to the Chrysler ons are tied in with the…

… take the initiative in ,bringing about wholesomeness in labor, and an awareness of its economic responsibilities. A minimum program should include the training of union-sponsored students. In his reply…

… time the movie starts, this reviewer sug- gests you, do so anyway. You will be greeted by 'an imitation of T.V.'s Miss Monitor done by a University speech student. Dulcet and suggestive tones will greet…

… the Arab world really is. he current charges being hurled between a and other Middle Eastern countries, prin- 1ly Jordan, have created a situation not lly unfavorable to the West. nce the crisis of last…

… from 'the rest of the Arab world, whose leaders claim, at least, great fear of Red domination. E VEN COL. NASSER must fear being sucked into the Eastern camp, an event that could easily push him into…

September 26, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 8) • Page Image 4

…You~ I/ *,. Ittff Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN one Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS il Prevail" STUDENT

…' ' .Y - _ .p Fysb6 i4fc Student U.S. with. Britain 26, 1957 * NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN WEICHER (EDITOR'S NOTE: Robert H. Whealey is a graduate student in history the University. He spent a year in Germany…

… (1955) with the United States An and, after discharge, a year at Oxford University as a student. Following is first article of a two-part series.) By ROBERT A. WHEALEY FOUND the British the same as the…

… told of onal Student Conference's strong- nouncement of racial segregation I States. The action preceded the ,t Little Rock but grew from simi- ensationgd incidents around the -. artening to consider…

… kicking Negroes and crying for the Lord to save them from the plague of dark- skinned people. It is difficult even to expect the educated in' foreign lands, such as the youths at the Inter- national Student

… ourselves caught in a ries of dilemmas-France and the Arabs, 1 and the Arabs, Pakistan and India- e, we are damned if we choose and damned shrink from choosing, and where neither native is so noble and so…

… foreign affairs. Fellow ships are available to college seniors graduate students, young faculty mein bers, and interested persons .w hay already received their doctorate.A plicants should be under 40 years…

… Offices of t Graduate School. For applicalon write to the Ford Foundation,44 r Madison Avenue, New York 22, Ne York. The fllowing student sponsored o cial events are approved for the corn ing week…

…-end. Social chairmen are re minded that requests for approval fo social evets are due inthe Office of Student Affairs not aer than 12:0 noon on the Tuesday prior to th event. Sept. 27: Kelsey, Mosher. Sept. 28…

…, Graduate at dent Council, Haven-Taylor, Huber In ternational, Students Association, Kap pa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha, Nu Si ma, Nu~, Phi Epsilon P, Phi Gamin Delta, PhiDelta Phi, Phi KappamT Phi Kappa Sigma…

September 29, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 11) • Page Image 4

…Wul a1 . ..A. N V4 Sixty-Eighth Year o'EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS revall" STUDENT

… respects. He compares Michigan's 23,00 students and nine professors of philosophy with Oxford's 7,000 students and 66 tutors of philosophy. But there are more than nine teachers of philosophy at Michi- gan…

… and only four Oxford philoso- phy dons with the title of "pro- fessor." Again, a better compari- son would be between the number of students of the humanities in the two universities. This' would still…

… lectures is false: in full term there' are lec- tures from 10 a.m. to one p.m. and seminars.in the late after- noon. The students Ire not re quired to attend these, but I can testify -that they were well at…

…, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1957 VOL. LXVI, No. 10 General Notices All students who expect education and , training…

… she joined the Baghdad Pact, now reached an agreement 1 the new Syrian regime for coo: atlon on major all-Arab poli Except for Jordan, the A are uniting to defend Syria aga the Western estimate that she…

… trievable. Syria and Egypt, , though the other Arab states, still claim their belief that Wes imperialism is responsible for t troubles. They don't mentionjE sia. But they are disturbed cause the United…

September 28, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 10) • Page Image 4

…"How Do You Get Him Back In?" Sixty-Eighth Year "EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG…

… States appear to be the friend of the Arabs, the champion of un- derprivileged people. Personally, you believe this to be true. But what can you write or say to con- vince the Arab public when it is faced…

… with pictures of a Nashville, Tenn., schoolhouse bombed and blasted because one Negro child was admitted, of a lone Negro child sitting in the back row of a Tennessee classroom, of Negro students in…

…: At the Student Government council meeting held Sept. 25, Galens' City Drive was calendared for Dec. , 7. Ushers for the 1957-58 season for the Choral Union Concerts, the Extra Sh- ies Concerts and for…

… Geology, Ge- ology of Fuels General Geoloy, and { SGC COMMENTARY: Responsibility of Representatives to Students -A. TODAY AND TOMORROW: The President's Address By WALTER LIPPMANN THE PRESIDENT…

… of representa- tives toward students. The treatment of this issue de- noted a taint of irresponsibility or lack of thought on this problem by some of the Council members. Statements like "I don…

…'tbelieve in the voice of the students so whole hog"; or "I'm not so hot on student opinion myself"; "It would be embarrassing if we had to re- verse the students' decision"; and "We are student opinion," seemed…

… in some cases to denote a some- what jaded, cynical attitude. * *" * ON THE other hand, one Coun- cil member felt an honor system might just be a "whipping boy" which the students really aren't how…

… elected him and he knows how they would want him to vote on many issues. He also advocates a "district" type system of representation, ANOTHER problem when one tries to get at "student opinion." On a campus…

… party guilty of discrimination to modify his stand. * * IN SOME instances, the Board sets up test cases to see where dis- crimihation exists. Membership includes students, some Ann Ar- bor residents, and…

September 22, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 5) • Page Image 1

… rkansas School waits Negroes esidents Now Hold Key to Peaceful elution; Students' Act Uncertain 'LE ROCK, Ark. (M-With National Guard troops no longer ing Central High School and all legal barriers cleared…

… not prevent in-but he declined to ific details of his plans. ssuing a statement at a' ference. here, Mann was tly whether the police on hand to prevent inte- f Negro students try to school building…

… State John Foster Dulles of distorting Syria's position in the Middle East political conflict and of attempting to impose American will on the Arab world. But the tone of the 64-year-old Kuwatly, known as…

… West of attempting to deny Syria and Arabs the right to arms for self defense "against the treacherous Israeli enemy" while concentra- ting on giving that enemy all means to carry out an aggressive…

…. Bureau station at Willow Run pre-, They wanted to postpone the- re- dicts. sponsibillty until the convention. Students: hopeful for some relieff [NG .tiin cues as Greeting to University Students Sol…

… company by trying out for C eration magazine. Generatipn, the campus ir arts magazine, is holding its out meeting tomorrow at 7:30 in the Generation office of Student Publications Building, Maynard St. No…

September 27, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 9) • Page Image 5

…." anxious to -do s with the stu- says. She would lave them visit a more com- and a friendly ;ut students at oflie, is an im- French house- rench gets off "Sky" becomes rsational piece. educators and has…

… included some "skill tests," with which all physi- cal education students at the Uni- versity are familiar. Dr. French will have little trouble deciding how to spend her free time. She has already been…

…. --- ------------------------ o Jewelry from India Art Shop, ti 330 MAYNARD STREET (3 ",O- o o '>o< O <="">o<" 4'O - ==>C< =>O V Last spring members of the Muslim Student Association were presented a prayer rug by King Saud of…

… Saudi Arabia. In answer ter a request from the students, King Saud sent them aJ Persian rug. Measuring 15 feet square, the rug hs a green back- ground with an oriental design in blue, pink and tan. This…

… rug is used for congrega- tional prayer °t 12:30 p.m. each Friday. 'Between 20 and 30 Mus- lims join in prayer to Allah, which is the Arabic word for God. Iman, the name of their prayer leader, then…

…' Idelivers a sermon. The sermon is based on their Holy Book, Koran, and the tradi- tion of the' Prophet 'Mohammed. Part of the sermon is spoken in Arabic, while the remaining may be spoken in any language…

…. Praying together on Friday are Muslim students from Indonesia, Pakistan, Turkey, Afganistan, Iran, Syria, Jordan, Egypt, Iraq, Ethiopia, Libya and Canada. The rug will also be used for their three festivals…

… ** INT A er IEALMt ASK FOR A 7lie14" c cohtep SREATH.TAKING I DEMONSTRATION 300 South Thayer . . . NO 2 THE MAN FROM WESSTER w i it #, RGraduate Student Mixer Saturday, September 28... 9:00- 12…

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