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September 30, 1934 (vol. 45, iss. 7) • Page Image 6

… Rice and Betty Anne Beebe were also there. Architect Students Invited To Smoker A smoker for all students of, the Architectural School will be held Thursday evening, Oct. 11, at the Union. The officers…

… conclude the eve- ning. oreign Club To Hold First FallMeeting Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos, Hin- dus, Koreans, Latin-Americans, and Arabs will all meet together for the first time this year on Saturday, Oct…

…. 6, at 8:00 p. m. at Lane Hall. These students are all members of their respective clubs which together formf the Cosmopolitan Club. All foreign students and all Amer- ican students who are interested…

… Club whose aim is to have the foreign students of this university feel at home in Ann Arbor and meet each other and otherAmerican stu- dents so as to cement friendship be-1 tween them and their…

… dance to attend the opening meeting of Dance Club which is to be held at 10 a. m. Saturday in Bar our Gymnasium. Beginners and students advanced in technique will rehearse every Wed- nesday night and…

… promise in this art will be given special work. This selection will make it possible for these students to de- velop exceptional proficiency. Collin Wilsey, '35, creator of the Fire Dance and several other…

… alumni and faculty of the Dental School. New Formal Coats Feature Novel And Elaborate Detail Wednesday and Thursday nights will be the first occasion many wom- en students will have to deck out in formal…

student envious to own every new one that appears. Long wraps, instep length or trail- ing are being advised by Parisian de- signers to a great extent. Schiapar- elli evolved an instep-length coat of…

…, will speak today at serv- ices at the Women's League Chapel. one the subject "What the University of Michigan Offers to and Expects from the Student." Everyone is cor- dially invited to attend both the…

… in- spection tour at the Foundation and Dr. Heller's address, according to Ir- ving Levitt, '36, student leader of the Hillel Foundation. The plans for the year as outlined by Mr. Levitt, include a…

August 09, 1934 (vol. 15, iss. 39) • Page Image 1

… relaxation before hammering the final points of their courses home to the students. The students will be there for one last fling before ex- aminations. Lots of people will be there for the meal, which in…

… of their own. Everyone is expected to be at the Sunday night supper to bid one last lingering farewell to the joys of the Summer Session. Slit Throats Of 3 Children In Arab-Jew Riot' Mr. Roosevelt…

… evening the theatre was well filled with faculty members, students, and Ann Arborites. Many well-known persons from thex Summer Session faculty were present. Those especially noted were Prof. and Mrs. H. A…

…. 8. - (R) - The full horror of the riot- ing here between Arabs and Jews was revealed today by an official cas- ualty list which reports that the throats of three little girls were cut. These children…

…. The official tabulation still stood at 27 dead, but the authorities believed that the Arabs hid the bodies of many slain Jews. Troops continued to patrol the streets and funerals for the slain were…

August 08, 1934 (vol. 15, iss. 38) • Page Image 1

…. XV No.38 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS Last Summer I Commutes Sentence. i Arab-Jewish SpeechGiven By Muyskens 'Cave Canem, Or Meaning Of Meaning,' Is Subject…

… Arrested CONSTANTINE, Algeria, Aug. 7. - (W) - Fighting between Jews and Arabs has spread to towns surround- ing Constantine, reports reaching here today revealed, giving rise tc fears that the death toll…

… had no political significance, but was an outbreak of the anti-Sem- itism which smoulders among the Arab populace. About half the residents of this city of 100,000 are Jews. Austria To Issue New Silver…

…." Davis Speaks On Curricula In Education e g Six Trends Outlined By s Educator Which Indicat Reforms Students To Have Greater Selection Colleges Must Cater To The Individual Rather Than To Whole, He Says…

… Curriculum reform throughout the United States is following certain clearly defined trends which will ef- fect a greater individual liberty for the student in selecting his courses, Prof. Calvin O. Davis…

… old-time curriculum to certain classes of students could not be denied. Mental training, he added, was the primary purpose of education, but it was his view that such training might be overdone…

August 09, 1934 (vol. 15, iss. 39) • Page Image 3

… full amount. Attractive, All-White TAILORED GOWNS Many Massacred As Arabs Fight Jews In Algeria Johnson Seeks To Adjust NRA To Enforcement Code-Making Is Completed1 So Administrator Must' Make Industry…

… savage fighting broke out between Arabs and Jews. Martial law was declared in the city and in the nearby port of Philippeville in an attempt to halt the religious war. A general view of Constantine is…

… intervention in Latin Amer- ica. I NORMAN, Oka, Aug.8.-()- When the American flag is hauled Neal Myers, 21-year-old University of down at the barracks in Port Au Oklahoma student, must stand a dis- Prince Aug…

…, found it in clay Federal Funds To being excavated in the"shadow of city Aid Iowa Students hall. But it isn't enough to get excited j about, he says - maybe three cents' worth to a cubic foot of soil. IOWA…

… CITY, Ia., Aug. 8. -- (P) - Federal funds have come forward to permit some 500 students who could not otherwise continue their educa- tion to enroll at the University of ENT IRE STOCK Iowa here at the…

… average of $15 monthly to each student en- " rolled. The jobs available will include4 0 everything from clerical, stenographic and laboratory and research tasks to odd jobs entailing manual labor on the…

March 11, 1934 (vol. 44, iss. 116) • Page Image 4

Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service. m z0ciate4 o I i tate r¢ z 1933 NILE__ _34 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is…

…, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by mail, $4.25. Offices: Student Publicathms Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phoner: 2-1214. Representatives…

… concerning their purpose by the Arabs, who steal their horses dur- ing the night, making it necessary for them to remain where they are and wait. While waiting, the Arabs do away with them one by one until…

…. Louis Post-Dispatch Student Health TAKING ACCOUNT OF THE PHYSIOLOGICAL FACTS By MARGARET BELL EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is a condensation of an article written by Dr. Margaret Bell, director of women…

… better health of the student. In an effort to establish the posi- tion of physical educaion as a phase of educa- tion, however, there has been a tendency to mini- mize and perhaps to slight this emphasis…

February 21, 1934 (vol. 44, iss. 100) • Page Image 6

… of the University of Vienna; Dr. Frederick( Sarre, former director of the Islamic Art Department of the State Mu- seum, Berlin; Dr. Ernst Kuhnel, di- rector of the Arab Museum, Cairo; Dr. Albert…

… jambs, cornices, and similar Islamic frag- High School Students Construct Scenery For Their Own Plays Another advance which modern methods of education have made over those of the days of "the three R…

September 18, 1934 (vol. 45, iss. 1) • Page Image 4

… suit students of widely varying interests, it is still much more than the whim of college professors who have lived too long. Probably no;freshman :will realize ,until next semester and the several…

… leftto his own devices; he will be one more or less among a student body of eight or nine thousand. After this one week the University will no longer come to him; he must go to the University. The Figures…

… Can Do No Wrong.. . (N ALMOST every University office I administrators and clerks have been hopefully peering since early summer at every set of figures that might give some hint as to the student

… enrollment for 1934-35 With registra- tion actually underway, the situation is bound to become even more alarmingly tense in the next week or two. Students, faculty, alumni, and towns- people will daily peruse…

… the latest statistics, trust- ing that in the end the University may record six more freshmen than ever before, and that the literary college will number 53 students greater than last year. "Early…

… index of return to more normal times, both on and off the campus. No one holds any brief for the continuance of depression years. They have worked great hard- ship on students who have had to struggle…

…, depression years-have not been all bad. In many ways they have been saner ones than those that went before. Certainly they have been interesting and challenging to college students. Michigan's name has become…

… no less famous because it houses fewer students or treats them a little less royally. Whatever the outlook for the future as regis- tered in this year's figures, at least one more year of hard times…

… NEW STUDENTS You will be impressed by the kind of Service you will find at the Uni- tarian Church. It Is intellectually progressive and emotionally sound - Bring your honest doubts and your most…

November 18, 1934 (vol. 45, iss. 49) • Page Image 5

… meet on the scheduled day surprised more than one reader. Com- paratively few students realize the extent of the courses in unusual for- eign languages offered on this camp- us. As a matter of fact, the…

… major- ity of students think Spanish, French, German, and perhaps even Latin and Greek make up the entire foreign. language department. Just a glance through the catalogue will reveal the opportunities…

… offered are Hebrew, Assyrian, Ara- maic, Arabic, Coptic, Ethiopic, Syr- ian, Russian and Scandinavian. Of these, Aramaic was the language spoken in the time of Christ. Since parts of the Bible are written…

… in Ara- maic, many students preparing for the theological seminary take this course to interpret the Bible in its CHILD STUDY GROUP The Child Study Group of the Michigan Dames will meet Monday night at…

… Ethiopic was the sacred language of the Church of Abyssinia. Arabic, which embraces Arabia, persia, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, Turkey, Sudan and Northern Africa, has existed for 1300 years. The Russian…

…- dition to these unusual languages there are many courses offered stu- dents in the Scandinavian language department. . Most Students American It is an interesting fact that every year there is a supply of…

studentsI who take these unusual courses for their cultural and not technical value. The majority of these students are Americans, not foreigners, and strangely enough many of them who are working their way…

… through school have less time to spend on their work than the average student. It has been found that those stu- dents make the greatest success who have had no remarkable acquaint-' ance with foreign…

… Road., Even though the Ohio State game announced the engagement of her attracted a 'great many students t daughter, Virginia, to Richard Mont- away from Ann Arbor, the Union and gomery Shick, La…

… University last June, spoke at a will feature speakers of local promin. recent meeting of the Michigan Alum- ence. nae chapter in Pittsburgh. Guests Entertained- By Negro Students Night Life Dean Alice C…

December 15, 1934 (vol. 45, iss. 71) • Page Image 6

… extemporaneous speak- extensive collection of botanical books. ing contest between representatives A numbe ofthese bosdpcate of the various classes of students tak- EARL V. MOORE, Musical Director A number of…

…, according to Mr. Riley, MAURINE PARZBOK, Contralto n been placed in the Herbarium and in will pick one member from among A H HACKETT, T h the Natural Science Library. the students constituting the class to…

… ARTHURH K , nor represent it in the finals. The sub- STANLEY DEPREE, Base tsject will be, generally, "World Peace," PALMER CHRISTIAN Organist -1 Student ales but separate portions of the maul topic will be…

… Show In rease the beginning of the speeches. This t constitutes the extemporaneous ele- ti ~~~~ment, as no one of the representatives a-'a jfE @U Students are buying more this year will know beforehand…

… reporting have not yet been announced. e on their sales to students, said that --__ e they were selling more and better I r goods this year. One campus merchant reported' f that he was selling a better class…

… of oods to students this year and that s Army officers at Norris, Tenn., began an investigation of the fire which destroyed three barracks of a CCC camp near there, burning1 three boys to death and…

… celebration of the millenium of the great Persian opt. Firciand the A state museums in Berlin. and Gostor Wiet, head of the Arabic Museum it Cairo, were appointed to aid him, wit the cooperation of some 20…

…. E. Kuhnel, On Student Health director of the Islamic department of ;{ if .s Li credit references were easier to obtain. A jewelry store manager said that students seemed more willing to spend more…

… shelves of mer- chandise. Most of the dealers interviewed dis- counted the fact that students will be in Ann Arbor for a longer period this year than last as a factor in Lheir increased sales, saying that…

… of the University radio talks on student health. His subject was "Dentistry, Yesterday and Today." Noting first the fact that there are accounts of dental practice among the ancient people of India as…

January 10, 1934 (vol. 44, iss. 76) • Page Image 5

…, according to Steinle, she will be a regular feature of all Union dances. No selection has been made as yet but Steinle expects to have a singer by the end of this week. An Arabic manuscript of the Koran, hand…

…, R. , to John Jacob Astor III, has been announced. Oiarm no 'Date' Frocks Need Femiine (b evaiei"s Ruffles Fellowship Dances[ To End This Week The last of the Congregational Student Fellowship dances…

…' students will meet in the RussianT Tea Room in the League. about the wrists. This style of the chevaliers catches the very breath of the femininity movement still hold- ing the vogue. Or for those who…

…-eds are lighter eaters than men students. A survey shows meals at fraternities cost fifteen cents each per man and nine cents per head at sororities. SCHOOL OF NURSING of YALE UNIVERSITY A PROFESSION FOR…

… or philosophy from a college of ap- proved standing is required for admis- sion. A fexv scholarships available for students with advanced qualifications. For catalogue and information address THE DEAN…

…'s Club. It was the second of a series of six dances given for fac- ulty members, graduate students and alumni. Mrs. W. V. Marshall was chairman in charge of the affair. Women's Club Donates To Children…

November 07, 1934 (vol. 45, iss. 39) • Page Image 5

…," Behice Sadik, Barbour student dances, or alone, and Istamboul'with different persons during th Fifteen Organizations Are scholarship student from ning. There are more group f Benefited By Project…

… lame students go freely about, but in Turk- is glamorous and dramatic in effect ish schools you would not see such a and is equally smart in the bouffant sight as I see here Saturday night - styles or in…

… Nov. 17, as is a visit to sokert Dnt ito youn tela of rummage sales, mending of torn and the Arabic, and go back to the rich and Emil Jannings. An average itcheertDonat is too young tplay clothing, and…

… Welfare Committee of the Ann Ar- I man. I have too much respect for his type seem to be like searchlights igan Chapter Student B'nai B'rith straightforward, suspeiseless and bor Women's Club, Old Ladies…

… be limited to in- Mrs. Laurence C. Stuart, matron of Mrs Morris P Tille and Mrs. El The harem, subject of many ro- editor, will be the first press repre- dependent students only. Several honor at the…

… Club, an organization on the bac of students from Rochester, N. Y. and essentially environs, held initiation Sunday at tical and h 4:30 p.m. at the Union. A dinner fol- sewed und lowed the initiation and…

April 04, 1934 (vol. 44, iss. 136) • Page Image 6

… campus leaders at the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. Many students who refused to be quoted directly expressed themselves as disappointed over the fact that the Wisconsin campus. supposedly the most liberal in…

… University students have an op- portunity at this time to view a col- lection of ancient and oriental mathe- matical manuscripts equaled only at Columbia in this country, according to Professor Louis C…

… Constantinople. Dr. Max Meyer- hoff of Cairo gave valuable assist- ance there in selecting the Arabic manuscripts and works which consti- tute the finest part of the exhibition. The purchases were made possible…

… exception made under the express wish of Mr. Mc- Gregor. The visitor to the library will find in the collection, besides the first class Arabic display, Chinese, Hindu, Greek, Egyptian, and Hebrew manu…

… State Street Library._ ___ 4- 4 0ROUND TRIP Special Student Rate - Three Fast Deluxe Coaches Daily NEW LOW FARES TO ALL POINTS PHONE 9142 CAMPUS TRAVEL BUREAU - CHUBB'S 10 A.M.-8 P.M. h1, _______ II…

August 11, 1934 (vol. 15, iss. 41) • Page Image 4

… contributed a study "On Certain Ara- bic Terms for 'Rug.'" Pointing out how many English words have changed from their original mean- ings, Professor Worrell traces the etymology of the Arabic words for several…

… August 19, returning September 15. Box 11M, Michigan Daily. 72 WANTED: Girl student wants ride to Fort Wayne after Summer School. Share expenses. Call 5938. 80 WANTED: A ride to Bessemer, Mich. or vicinity…

January 16, 1934 (vol. 44, iss. 81) • Page Image 5

… he collected during his absence have been mostly written in Arabic and Egyptian. He succeeded in getting a great number of volumes containing valuable ma- terial on the sources of mathematics. During…

…, sponsors the organization.- and Harriet Hunt. A group of 580 Oberlin College students have formed the Oberlin The definite policy of the United Public Affairs Society, the purpose of States from how on is…

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