Search Results

Search Constraints

Search Results

September 24, 1978 (vol. 59, iss. 16) • Page Image 3

…, af- ter all, and the Assembly members still reacted favorably to the Board's decision to retain a mandatory live-in rule for first year students. Also ten years ago members of the all-black fraternity…

…, Jewish graduate students have planned an informal discussion on marriage between Jews and non-Jews at Hillel at 8. Rah, rah Beethoven's Missa Solemnis may be Heaven to some ears, but it won't sell many…

… A vX n sinn hill The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 24, 1978-Page 3 ARAB ANTI-ACCORD PLAN FINISHED Egypt cheers returning Sadat CAIRO, Egypt (AP)-More than 100,000 cheering Egyptians jubilant over…

… the new prospects for peace with Israel welcomed President Anwar Sadat home yesterday. But in Damascus other Arab leaders put the final touches on a "rejectionist" plan to undermine the Camp David…

… in Damascus with Syrian President Hafez Assad. Vance, who is trying to sell the Camp David accords to the Arabs, toured Saudi oilfields yesterday. Assad asked him to postpone his Damascus visit un- til…

… today because the Arab hard-line summit ran overtime. Sadat was swamped by thousands of well-wishers at an airport reception at- tended by the entire Egyptian Cabinet and all 360 members of Parliament…

… days talking with King Hassan II without winning that moderate Arab leader's public support. In the Syrian captial, the leaders of the Palestine Liberation Organization and four hard-line Arab states…

… the new Egyptian- Israeli agreements-that they do not provide for total Israeli withdrawal from Arab lands or for the right of Palestinians to establish their own state in those lands. He said he would…

September 22, 1978 (vol. 59, iss. 14) • Page Image 6

… indecision makes the attitude of the Saudis even more impor- tant. As custodians of Islam's holiest shrines, they are regarded as religious leaders in the Arab world, and their oil riches and huge aid programs…

… give them considerable sway over Jordan and other poorer Arab states. THE OBJECTIONS the Saudis have expressed to the Camp David plan are the same as those voiced by Jordan's Ibrahim - that it does not…

… will take the approval of the Saudis, privately if not publicly, before Hussein would risk ID ills. Vance the wrath of more radical Arabs and join the negotiations. One point Vance was expected to…

…'- stress to the conservative Saudis was, that a collapse of the peace process* could result in Sadat's replacement as, Egyptian leader by someone aligned with radical Arab governments. THE CAMP David…

… !D. No. RULES 1. You must be a U of M student. 2.. You must choose your series in order of preference. 3. Married students may send applications together. 4. This application MUST BE POSTED BY U…

… clashes three years ago bet- ween the Gush Emunim and the Labor government of former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. The 1975 settlement attempts touched off Arab riots in the West Bank. But Foreign Minister…

… Moshe Dayan called the latest incident "in internal Israeli problem" and said it would not affect negotiations with the Arabs. Dayan said Israel would stand firm against unauthorized settlement attempts…

February 13, 1977 (vol. 87, iss. 112) • Page Image 3

…- ternationl discipline. * * * Guerrilla action BEIRUT, Lebanon - Arab na- tions imposed drastic new curbs on Palestinian guerrillas yester- day to try to bring the entire resistance movement under firm Syrian…

… and Lebanese control. The decision aims at ending Lebanon's role as the last un- restricted commando base, with far-reaching effects on Pales- tinian ability to wage war and influence Arab policy. It…

… Limited Scholarships Deadline: April 7 State-- Kichard For Advan Full 9 Week S t ankiewicz Fresco: illiam King ce Students ession Only to begin{ WASHINGTON - The United'State convention Steelworkers…

….()() /$5.00 0l.00of per seat for Students & SeniorCizens} Tickets: Liberty Music, Hill Auditorium, Jacobson's, Dance Dep. Infoirrrcrcm ;763-5460 Presented by the Schd of Mussk& Dance Deportwn t…

January 19, 1974 (vol. 84, iss. 91) • Page Image 3

Arabs might relent, the Federal Energy Office (FEO) announced that the Arabian embargo on oil impots to the United States was "nearing full effectiveness." The White House, meanwhile, an- nounced that…

… Secretary Ger- ald Warren indicted the speech was not intended to disclose any new programs, such as gas rationing. He also denied any speculation that the President might announce that the Arab boycott would…

… be lifted because of an agreement for troop disengagement in the Middle East. In its "petroleum situation re- port" for the first 11 days of Jan- uary, the FEO indicated that the "leakage" of Arab oil…

… Sawhill described the Arab boycott as "fully effective." But he held out hope in a statement issued Thursday night that it would be lifted soon. VICE PRESIDENT Gerald Ford also predicted Thursday that the1…

… embargo would be lifted because of recent developments in the Middle East. The embargo, imposed after the outbreak of the Arab-Israeli war three months ago, severely cut into the 7 million barrels of oil…

… that previously was imported into the United States. But leakage through third countries, which Sawhill identified as primarily Venezuela and Canada, continued' to bring Arab oil into the United States…

… during the early days of the boycott. Sawhill said that Arab oil em- bargo has reduced U.S. petroleum supplies by almost 14 per cent below expected demand. "Thus," he said, "while there has been some…

… "techni- cal" violation of a federal law requiring Martin to pay a trans- fer tax before selling the wea- pons. MARTIN, a premedical student at the University of California at Los Angeles, was arraigned…

… H I.GlAwj OPEN DAILY 12:45 SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, & 9 thws Casfed v~ c THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, Number 91 Saturday, January 19, 1974 is edited and managed by students at the University of…

December 11, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 79) • Page Image 3

… located on the 1 st floor of te, - ' THE MICHIGAN UNION st prints-pots-paintings-sculpture photography-weaving be# GALLERY HOURS: TUES.-SAT. 10-5I ala All shows are juried. Work by UM students, :)ol alumni…

… QUESTIONS NEW YORK WA) - A major pe- troleum economics research group estimates this country's fuel shortage due to the Arab embargo in the first quarter of 1974 willebe somewhat less se- vere than the…

… government's fore- cast. The Petroleum Industry Re- search Foundation, Inc., said yesterday it estimates the Arab shortage at up to 2.8 million bar- rels a day while the govern- ment's figure for the total…

… possible loss from the Arab embargo: Need Something Professionally Typed? Time Running Out! " Thesis e Dissertations -Loss of 1.3 million barrels of Arab crude oil a day that is no longeravailable to U. S…

…. refiner- ies. -Loss of up to 500,000 barrels a day in products from refiner- ies in the Caribbean area that used Arab oil. -LOSS OF 400,000 to 500,000 barrels a day in products re- fined from Arab oil in…

… of Arab crude oil at its East Coast refineries. -Loss of from 200,000 to 300,- 000 barrels a day of refined pro- ducts needed by the U. S. mili- tary. The total would come to 2.8 million barrels a day…

… at most, Goldstein noted. THE MICHIGAN PAILY Volume LXXXIV, Number 79 Tuesday, December 11, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class…

October 07, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 28) • Page Image 2

… said. McIntyre was in touch by tele-. phone with representatives of the countries involved in the fighting,' a member of the Australian mis- sion said. Neither Israel nor the Arab side asked for a…

… and ambassa- warfare in that part of the world.; dors of Arab nations met and au- The department spokesman, Rob-: thorized Saudi Arabian Miniister ert McCloskey, made the remark of State Omar Sakkaf to…

… from Page 1) have an all-out war with Israel. He saw the attack as an attempt to ob- tain partial gains in the hope that the United Nations would stop the fighting when the Arabs had gain- ed a foothold…

… on the Israeli-held Eastern Bank and made consider- able gains on the Golan Heights. Herzog, a former military intel- ligence chief, said the Arabs were not prepared for the Israeli reac- tion which…

… the fact that the Middle East was still in a state of war. He said they also assumed that on the Day of Atonement Israel would be the least prepared to go to war. Herzog said the Arab decision had…

students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard…

…, Linguistics & Humanities: T. van Dijk, Univ. of Amsterdam, "For- mal Foundations of Narratives," Rack- ham Amph., 4 pm. Music School: Doctoral Students in Organ Performance, R. Luther, R. An- derson, A: Cook…

March 25, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 123) • Page Image 4

… preparing to proclaim an independent state and maintain its bor- ders. Since Austin's statement, the Arabs have also continued fighting. The UN is now faced with two hostile forces in place of one. 'It is…

… might be the ultimate solution, but agreement between Arabs and Jews is necessary first." Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of…

… the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT WHITE Isely's statement is an obvious truism, There can be no immigration with Arab opposition and neither group will be sat- isfied with anything less than…

… of force by the Arabs to change the plan. The use of force is, therefore, outright blackmail to alter the mature considerations of men representing all nations to achieve justice and peace. American…

… knowingly, as man to man. But it was not for oil, not to please the Arabs so that we might have their oil, for there is not enough oil in the world to drown our fears. If the Great Lakes were full of oil. I…

… stirs in us can be started by the frowning face of an Arab chieftain, or a Greek mon- archist, or a Chinese war-lord, or some- times, one is almost compelled to think, by the popping of a paper bag. For…

… a few armed bands of Arabs and to turn, without dignity, against a pol- icy which has been formally accepted by the General Assembly. "Go back to the law!" we say to the world, "yield to the voice of…

students couldn't quite catch the name. Obligingly, he wrote the name on the board, admitting it was "rather fantastic"-S-C- H-A-T-S-C-H-N-E-I-D-E-R--it was. "But," the professor continued, "his books are…

… leaders, and the flood of protests hasehonm enogreat that now the rrP_ Looking Back From the pages of The Daily 50 YEARS AGO TODAY: The anti-Saloon League announced that nearly 600 students on campus were…

April 12, 1975 (vol. 85, iss. 154) • Page Image 4

… Committee reach- ed a consensus supporting Kissinger as fi r s t choice. Not the slightest effort was made to ascertain whether or not any of the graduating seniors want to hear Kissinger speak. STUDENTS MUST…

…Bt Eighty-Five Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan LIFE AFTER FAISAL Tension; uncertainty belie Saudi calm Saturday, April 12, 1975 News Phone: 764…

… investment and petro- dollars has forced the ruling elite to rely increasingly on bur- eaucrats recruited from the more cosmopolitant Arab world - including Palestinians a n d Iraqis. AS YET no member of the…

… the Arab world who see the Saudi regime and the other Persian Gulf oil sheikhs as re- actionary obstacles to a unified Arab nation - as envisaged by Saudi Arabia's radical Arab neighbors. Such a nation…

November 10, 1938 (vol. 49, iss. 40) • Page Image 1

…, THURsDAY, NOV. 10, 1938 PRIME FIVE CENTS British Gatherl Arabians, Jews In Coenference To Seek Peace Abandon Partition Plans; Migration Of Refugees Intensifies Arab Unrest Britain Threatens Enforced…

… Solution Poland's Alliances Safeguard h iz I IS t] CJ LONDON, Nov. 9-0P)--Great Bri- j tarn tonighgt sought peace for revolt- ridden Palestine through a plan to gather Arab and Jewish leadersa around a…

… up Arab and Jew-c ish states. Disturbed by general Arab unrest in the Near East and the growing Jewish refugee problem in Europe, Britain warned it would impose its own solution unless the Arabs and…

…. The Commission, headed by Sir John Woodhead, found imprac- ticable a plan to divide Palestine into separate Arab and Jewish states with Jerusalem and Nazareth remain- .ng under British mandate along…

… because Jewish and Arab interests were too firmly inter-meshed in the land where 1,317 persons have been killed and 1,141 wounded in violende of the past four months. Approximately 20,000 British troops now…

… are attempting to quell rebellious, Arabs in troubled Palestine. Plan London Parley The British Government plans to call a London conference soon with Arabs represented by their leaders both from…

… Palestine and neighboring Arab nations and Jews by the Jewish Agency, world Jewish organization empowered by the League of Nations to perform such a function. Government quarters said rejection of the…

… partition scheme did not rule out the possibility of setting up Arab* and Jewish cantons,.or provinces, in a federated system. Such a plan would leave Britain in control of the£ strategic country which flanks…

… recently pledged students attended the annual inter-{ fraternity pledge banquet held at 6 p.m. yesterday in the main ballroom7 of the Union, accompanied by the faculty advisors and presidents of, their…

… women's staff of the At Union Coffee Hours Daily in 1935-36, and acted as junior . night editor for the women's page in All men students interested in try- 11937-38. Miss Cuthbert worked on ing out for…

October 12, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 32) • Page Image 4

… A t srian tdg Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Electronics intrude into the courtroom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104…

Arab factions, the Israelis and the rest of the world community to make an earnest attempt to begin mean- ingful negotiations on the Middle East- situation. It should be apparent by now that war will not…

… for more than six years has been the land Israel occupied after the 1967 war. The Arabs have justifiably demanded that the land' be returned, and they found a continua- tion of the status quo highly…

… unsatisfac- tory. With no negotiated settlement even remotely in sight, Arab frustration is un- derstandable. NEVERTHELESS, WE. abhor the attack Initiatedby Syria and Egypt. Not only is such action morally…

… reprehensible, but the danger that the U. S. and the Soviet Union will be drawn into an un- wanted confrontation is great. The Arab forces seemingly have not launched a full-scale war bent on the de- struction of…

… in their present positions and negotia- tions to begin immediately. When the fighting finally ends, both the Arabs and the Israelis will have to realize, or be forced to realize, that con- cessions…

… have contributed to the Arab decision to attack before the areas were permanent- ly settled by Israelis. Israeli settlement and development of the areas only substantiates Arab claims that Israel is an…

…. The ideology of "driving Israel into the sea" is unacceptable. A concession by Arab governments that Israel has a right to maintain its political identity will be necessary to the production of any ne…

…- gotiated settlement of Arab-Israeli dif- ferences. The road to any negotiations will be difficult. The fact that the various Arab factions are not totally united will com- plicate problems tremendously. The…

… decryinig campus radicals and black rioters alike. Yet, the findings of the grand jury probing Agnew's gubernatorial years show that even while he was denouncing student protesters, the future Vice Presi…

May 29, 1968 (vol. 78, iss. 21) • Page Image 6

… Soviets reinforce influence in Middle East ''rMP, MOSCOW (P) - A year after the six-day Arab-Israeli war, the Soviet Union looms over the Middle East with greater influence than ever before. Its warships…

… political support is a mainstay of several Arab foreign policies. This position was salvaged from Arab disillusionment with Soviet inability - or unwill- ingness - to save them frpm defeat last June. Plunging…

… supply of arms to Arabs in an effort to pre- vent a new explosion, with all its dangers of escalating into a Soviet-American confrontation. In public, the Russians say the only solution to the situa- tion…

… created last June is a po- litical one. There seems no reason tp doubt that this also is the Rus- sian position in private discus- sions with Arabs. But it might not always be easy to tell this to Arabs

… - in sparking the war of last June 5-10 by feeding Syria and Egypt exaggerated reports of Israeli military preparations. Those reports encouraged Arab preparations and the closing of the Gulf of Aqaba…

… committees exist at the Sorbonne, at an annex on the Rue Censier and at the University of Nanterre, where Daniel Cohn- Bendit, best known of the student leaders, was a student. He has now been expelled from…

… health Student organization notices are services, planning, dev. and coord. pro- not accepted for publication. For grams. Assignments in 6 areas, limited more information call 764-9270. overnight travel…

June 12, 1965 (vol. 75, iss. 28) • Page Image 2

…Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ereopinions AreFree STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR…

… massive cut in the University's budget. This action is the result of a political football game in which the students of the University are the only losers. I A MAGNIFICENT display of enlight- ened…

… importance throughout the whole campaign. TODAY AND TOMORROW: How Europeans See U.S. Foreign ,Policy Israel-Nasser's Rationalization IN THE TEMPLE of Pan-Arab shibbol- eths, none occupies a more revered…

…' 'bout" and there is evidence that even the Arab's "common- ly-held" goal of genocide-or what some might euphemistically refer to as the "final solution of the Israeli problem"- seems unable to bring…

… 'about a fusion of the diverse and divergent interests of the various members of the Arab League. A recent Syrian proposal to unseat Tu- nisia's delegates to the Arab League-be- cause of President Habib…

…- proclaimed leaders of "the Arab people" that Israel is an accomplished fact. The issue of "Palestine," of course, has always smacked of the unreal. In Jordan, in Egypt and in Syria, it has functioned, more…

Arab world as a result of the various power rivalries within the bloc is a situation JUDITH WARREN C....... ......... o-Editor ROBERT HiPPLER...................... Co-Editor r vi pn T7 i.P.-,-r Y .C' N…

… questions of land tenure and popular democracy that are coming to the fore in the Arab world in spite of the manufactured hate and pstudo-nationalism which has been di- rected against Israel. These issues…

…-directly or indirectly- underlie much of the conflict between the Arabs themselves and between the Arabs and Israel. Nasser's "Arab socialism" is, as a so- cial system and mode of government, as incompatible…

…Ce ITEM: Staggering rate of high school drop-outs attributed to poor reading abilities, reflected generally in students' lack of in- terest in studies and difficulty in mastering their subjects. Item…

May 08, 1946 (vol. 56, iss. 134) • Page Image 4

…FOUR LE MIC H I G A1N DAILY WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1946 I . , - .. 1 1 1. . 1. ... I - - - - . , . TO MM MMU Fifty-Sixth Year £etteri to the 6citiEor 1.11 ti _ \ Edited and managed by students of…

… the University of 'Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Stafff Margaret Farmer . . . . . . . Managing Editor Hale Champion . . . . . . . Editorial…

… is marked by some significant omissions of facts. The admission of 100,000 European Jews against Arab protest is, he asserts, a viola- tion of the provisions of the Palestine mandate guaranteeing the…

… denied the right to speak their own language. Furthermore, bilingualism is not the real ob- stacle to Arab-Jewish cooperation-stable Switzerland has three official languages. Outside support for the Jews…

… of Palestine would bring continued disunity to that country, he declares. Are we to assume that support for the Arabs would bring unity? Since V-E Day the Jews have shown by underground aid to visa…

… am well aware that there are many people who believe that disputes could be settled by force, The Arabs will never give way to force as Professor Slosson says for right is might. Profes- sor Slosson…

… comments that "Arab prosperity has multiplied considerably since the first Jewish entry into Palestine" "I would like to ask all those who are under the same impression, the follow- ing question: Why are the…

Arabs of the republics of Lebanon and Syria, where there are no Jews far better off, more educated than the Arabs of Palestine? The Arabs have been an overwhelming major- ity in the Holy Land for the last…

… 1300 years. The population of Palestine at present consists of about 1,150,000 Moslem Arabs, 650,000 Jews, 135,000 Christians (mostly Christian Arabs). Out of the 650,000 Jews only 50,000 are natives of…

… at special periods as noted below the regular schedule. To avoid misunderstandings and errors, each student should re- ceive notification from his instructor of the time and place of his examina- tion…

April 18, 2016 (vol. 125, iss. 112) • Page Image 2

…-mail to all faculty signatories that stressed the University’s commitment to the Arab, Muslim, Middle Eastern and North African students and underscored how the administration has shown that…

… Reporter In the fall of 2016, a new tool will be available for students choosing their courses and professors. Based on guidance from the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs and Central…

Student Government, University Provost Martha Pollack has approved the release of course evaluations for the upcoming fall semester. The release of course evaluations has been a heavily…

… debated topic at SACUA, Senate Assembly — the full faculty governing body — and CSG over the last academic year. In an interview, Pollack said the initiative was largely student- driven. “It was the…

students who really pushed to have it released,” Pollack said. “We asked student and faculty committees representing student government and faculty government to get together. They came up with…

… what I thought were very thoughtful recommendations and a set of questions that are particularly tailored to student needs, and we’re gonna release it.” Several policies will accompany the…

… release, upon recommendation of two faculty and student committees. Only students with University e-mail accounts will be able to access and use the student evaluations, per committee request…

… on the letter, Prof. Evelyn Alsultany, Director of the Arab and Muslim American Studies Program, said the letter quickly gained traction. “The letter was first sent to History department, and…

… display of solidarity with Muslim students. The letter emphasizes the faculty’s support for the response to the chalkings a week ago, and explicitly opposes the nature of the messages written on…

… the Diag. “We stand with our friends/ students/colleagues and with the Central Student Government (CSG), Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA), and Senate Assembly in…

March 22, 1970 (vol. 80, iss. 140) • Page Image 8

…., before 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- tion notices a r esnoteaccepted for publication. F o r more…

… inform'a- tion, phone 764-4270. SUNDAY, MARCH 22 Day Calendar Arab Organization Symposium: "Pal- estine, the Arabs, and Zionism", As- sembly Hall, Mich. Union, 1:00 - 4:30 p.m. Recital: Marjorie Kilbride…

… most important. "Stu- system. dents have nothing." Black said, She also supports an "all-stu- referring to what he said was aI dent court for non-academic of- lack of official student voice in fenses on…

… running for the executive council on the "Edu- cational Action Committee" ticket. The candidates want exclusive student control in areas which concern only students, but favor sharing control with the…

… NEW GOVERNMENT: LSA student body to vote for president, executive council """"""""" I BACH CLUB presents The Bach Club Ensemble in its Second Annual Concert Concertos and Sonatas for Vio- line Flute…

… Page 1? explains. "We combine applica- tion fees with the damage deposit, as well as with a guarantee of, fulfillment of the contract." And he feels students are satis- fied with the current process…

… to allow it, but added, "the language is sketchy." Apply for Student-Faculty Committees in the Ed. School: On the chief thrust of their campaigns, the two "Blue Pan- ther" candidates differ. While…

… Dorman favors an emphasis on curriculum reform. Moher feels the new government should be used to obtain for students an increased voice in literary college decision- making Several candidates for the ex…

… the college involving large numbers of students." But he also believes that t h e matter of re-definition involves University-wide policies which, he says, must be changed. "Is it not acceptable, for…

… exam- ple, to evaluate a student on the basis of grades and tests," he says. Andy Weissman believes s t u- dents should pay moredattention to the realities involved in gain- ing curriculum changes. Thus…

November 10, 1948 (vol. 59, iss. 43) • Page Image 1

… Lectures on Marriages May Cease Fiscal Difficulties Cause of Trouble Rising costs and seeming lack of student support may doom the annual marriage relations lec- tures. Ivan W. Parker, chairman of the…

… faculty - student committee sponsoring the lectures, said yes- terday that the educational series has not been scheduled this fall. a. * * THE LECTURES could still be held next spring, but only if enough…

students and student groups show interest in supporting them, he said. Committee members fear that the series might go in the red this year. That nearly happened last year, when ticket sales lag- ged…

… perilously. A backlog of about $200 from previous years was all that saved the series from bankruptcy then. THIS YEAR rising costs in lec- turers' fees have underlined the need for student groups to back the…

… series, Parker declared. Their fees have gone up as much as $50, he said. Parker estimated the cost of the series at around $1500. When the lectures, designed to prepare students for marriage, were first…

June 08, 1967 (vol. 77, iss. 25) • Page Image 4

…x u1 4r _ Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS , _ . Where Opinins Are prrth 420 MAYNARD ST…

… be noted in all reprints. li. THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: JENNIFER RHEA Mis-Guided Mentor: Clark Kerr on Students ¢' i J \ f 1 f f ' +.... r i , 1 T O A LARGE PART of American liber…

… how it is, the exiled savant of Berkeley expounded his theory of stu- dent unrest in Sunday's New York Times. With a show of admirable self-restraint Kerr avoided calling today's students a "happening…

… be just rosy. Kerr facilely divides those students who "constitute a minority of all students, but contribute a majority of the off-cam- pus impressions and impact of the mod- ern generation" into…

… can- not deny the "real hold that this culture has on students." Rather than analyzing the nature of their appeal, Kerr merely pauses long enough to vent his academic spleen by calling their life…

…- ians." Lastly we come to Kerr's saving rem- nant - the "new collegiates." While sounding like the label within a ski sweat- er, these are students with a "sense of community service." Kerr estimates that…

… this group as the vanguard of the students saying, "New leaders are arising from what I have characterized as the New Collegiate group. The New Col- legiate type has as one of its character- istics…

… devotion to the campus and will- ingness to work through the campus power structure. The New Collegiate-lead- ers, including those active in fraternities and sororities . . . reflect the student in- terest…

Arabs are shamefully re- stricted in their movements and freedoms and that many Israeli Jews are wont to proclaim that "the only good Arab is a dead Arab." THE STATEMENT about Israe- li successes and Arab

February 15, 1947 (vol. 57, iss. 91) • Page Image 1

…I jr ws ziirn Latest Deadline in the State a' 40 CL COLDER See rage 4 No. 91. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1947 PRICE FIVE iterary College Students To Grade Facult -U…

… e-Senate ;et Men for Cut General Student Conduct Praised by Judge Payne Dean For] Tells Nee Instructoi City Jurist Points to Increase Only Rise in Arrests Involves in Sobriety; Traffic Cases…

… yesterday discounted reports of general misconduct among University students. Speaking from his observations from the bench of Ann Arbor Mu- nicipal Court, Judge Payne complimented students for their general…

… re-initiate student evaluation of*"faculty services" and committees are now stud problem of putting the plan in action, Dean Hayward Kenis nounced yesterday. Simultaneously, Dean Keniston announced…

… teaching staff," Dean Kenistor adding that "evaluation of fac- Ice Avalanche' Damages Vet Housing Units Children Narrowly Miss Serious Injury Ten University students and their families were homeless yes…

September 14, 1972 (vol. 83, iss. 7) • Page Image 1

… a plane to Syria in an air battle and newspapers in both countries issued calls to arms. Meanwhile, a small radical Arab guerilla organization has threaten- ed violence against West Germany. Both…

… reported in yesterday that PremiereGolda Meir' s warning that Israel will fight terrorism with all its power amounted to an "official declaration of war on Arab ter- rorism." Davar, Meir's Labor party paper…

…. VIETS, Page 10 SGC voluntary funds motion killed by esi By JAN BENEDETTI A Student Government Council motion to request the Regents to institute a new voluntary funding tion" of the motion. "The…

… Stern, said one of the jailed ter- Student Judiciary. rorists, whom he did not name, is CSJ, the judicial branch of SGC, a member of his group. also voted 3-1 to enjoin SGC Presi-' Military analysts in…

… Tel Aviv say dent Bill Jacobs from presenting Jerusalem may respond to future the plan before the Regents. SGC's Arab terrorism in surprising ways. motion, passed 6-2 at Tuesday's "Israel is expected to…

December 12, 1971 (vol. 82, iss. 77) • Page Image 4

… told me that the Algiers casbah was only a hun- dred- yards away. Have you seen the movie, The Battle of Algiers? I was scared by the dark, explosive pos- sibilities of this revolutionary Arab city. l So…

Arab women (they're untouchable), war, truth, and John Ford. When the sun rose I walked to to the tiers Daniel Zwerdling, Daily Magazine Editor in 1970-71, currently writes for the New Republic. This…

…. They're afraid. The Arabs in the casbah don't hate them, but they remember." He showed me the ruins of the house which French para- troopers blew to bits, killing the revo- lutionary hero Ali La Pointe…

…." Other men in the casbah eat with their left hands-an Arab taboo, but their right hands were chopped off. Has the Algerian revolution worked? Few people agree. The news- I 4 * iri$gun Baiti Eighty…

…-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St, Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editoriats printed in The Michigan Daily express the…

… still wear the ve and traitional Arab roles), all e t rehrenes to the im- . ir gessors and - is c rt (t which don't ng accounts of the Apolo suce roaram), and fervent arte abt dm ments in the -~r -o…

…, DECEMBER 12, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: CARLA RAPOPORT :m. ,: Alternative HE RISING COST of tuition is a very real problem facing students at vir- tually every college and university throughout -the land…

…. Attempts to cope with the problem range from standard- ized financial aid for especially needy students to innovative "graduated" and "deferred" tuition programs. Yet the'University, obviously the prime…

November 24, 1953 (vol. 64, iss. 55) • Page Image 4

…-cooked food and a four day Thanksgiving weekend tempts students, train and bus stations already are crowded and University residence halls are beginning to be shrouded in quiet. The cam- pus exodus has begun…

…: the four day week- end becomes a five or six day weekend for many vacation-hungry students. A reminder is due those people planning to be absent from classes on Wednesday and Monday, however. It is by…

… virtue of the Student Legislature's recommendation to the administration tlat we are having a Thanksgiving holiday at all. More im- portant, the four day week-end was grant- ed on a two year trial basis…

…, of which this is the second experimental year. The con- ditions offered students, when the trial period began were: Friday and Saturday classes of Thanksgiving week would be omitted if classroom…

… day to report to President Eisen- hower on the toughest of all diplomatic jobs-building up long-range friendship between Israel and the Arab states. Johnston was asked by Eisenhower to go to the Near…

… East as his special ambassador, officially to settle the question of Arab refugees, but actually to settle the broader and more basic problem of Arab-Israel friendship. What Johnston took with him was a…

Arabs and Israelis, the Jordan valley could be made to bloom like a rose, and permanent peace and prosperity would prevail in the Near East. Arab refugees could be put to work on the project, thereby…

… removing a difficult thorn in the side of Arab-Israeli relations. At present Arab refugees, some 875,000 of them, live on the border of Israel, fed by the United Nations and costing American taxpayers about…

… were killed, Johnson reported to the White House, just during his brief stay in the Near East. *' ** * -JORDAN GUARDED- JOHNSTON reported that at first he was met with hostility from both sides. The Arab

… authorities, it calls for the cooperation of Israel with three Arab states-Lebanon, Syria and Jordan. The waters of the Jordan are to be impounded largely in Lebanon, with another dam at Lake Tiberias. From…

February 29, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 103) • Page Image 4

… urged by the UN to give whatever they earn on this extra day to the needs of the children. Nor are students being overlooked in the quest for funds. At 8 p.m. tonight Leland Stowe will speak at Hill…

… Auditorium in a fund-raising lec- ure. The United World Federalists and the student Famine Committee, sponsors of the Editorials published in The Michigan Daily acre written by members of The Daily staff and…

… represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: HAROLD JACKSON lecture, have set up a cry that all students support the appeal for funds by buying tickets. Yet the response to this worthy cause has…

… children with one supplementary meal a day. A similar plan was employed successfully last year on a much smaller scale. In addition to swelling the fund for fam- ine relief, the student will be profiting…

February 20, 2020 (vol. 129, iss. 74) • Page Image 3

… complicit in the oppression of Palestinians through my past actions.” The statement from Arab Student Association and SAFE also called on CSG to recognize a resolution passed in 2017 supporting…

… work that I need to do.” CSG Communications Director Alex Johnson released a statement Wednesday night, acknowledging the harm done to the Palestinian, Muslim and Arab students on campus by…

… support Palestinian, Muslim and Arab students on campus,” Johnson wrote. “In the next several days, President Gerstein hopes to listen to the concerns and needs of impacted students and work…

…, associate vice provost for academic affairs and senior director of Academic Human Resources, said the University values graduate students and is working towards a fair agreement. “We recognize the…

… importance of graduate student instructors and graduate student staff assistants to the academic mission of the university and to the academic success of our students,” said Sascha Matish, associate…

… decades, the University has grown exponentially, adding thousands of students and faculty. GEO member Joseph Valle said the University had not adjusted to this growth. “Over the past several…

… decades, the University has continued to grow,” Valle said. “Tens of thousands of more students and employees … yet the University has built a total of a thousand new beds on campus in the past…

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…

March 07, 2018 (vol. 127, iss. 86) • Page Image 4

… moment of silence, and then proceeded to silence all debate on gun reform. Finally, after last month’s shooting at Stoneman Douglas High School where 17 high school students were murdered in one of…

… actors who are not part of the gun industry, including themselves. Republican leaders blamed the police, the FBI, the school’s administration and even the students in Parkland, Fla. To a certain…

… Authority’s Bureau of Statistics. According to numerous scholars, including Yoram Ettinger and Caroline Glick, the population of Arabs living in the Palestinian territories has been greatly…

… inflated. In particular, Ettinger identifies almost 400,000 Palestinians living abroad, 300,000 Jerusalem Arabs with dual ID cards who have been double counted by Israelis and…

… Palestinians, and an overexaggerated Arab birth rate. This, among other disparities, contributes to a total of almost 1.15 million “invisible” Arabs who aren’t counted in the census. The importance of…

… this apparent miscalculation cannot be overstated. This existence or absence of 1.15 million Arabs can very well determine which group (Jews or Arabs) will be the majority demographic in the…

… Editor 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. ALEXA ST. JOHN Editor in Chief ANU ROY…

January 25, 1999 (vol. 109, iss. 65) • Page Image 2

… HELP 975-4357 Any time, any day, 24 hours. Fully confidential. Serving Students since 1970. lenge for us." LSA first-year student Jasmine Bhatia attended three of the workshops Saturday. Two of them…

… out what you put in," she said. "The students who didn't partici- pate would have gotten a lot out of it." -Daily Staf ReporterAsma Rafeeq contributed to this report. Color Calls! Call attention to the…

… statement. s AROUND THE WORLD Iraq fails to gamer Arab League support CAIRO, Egypt - After failing to achieve a blanket denunciation of U.S.- British airstrikes, Iraq's chief diplomat stormed out of a…

… meeting of Arab League foreign ministers here yester- day and angrily accused fellow Arab states of bowing to the dictates of the United States. Iraqi Foreign Minister Mohammed Said Sahaf expressed…

… bitterness that the long-sought meeting, called to forge an Arab consensus on U.N. sanc- tions and U.S. military actions against Iraq, had fallen short of the Baghdad regime's hopes in almost every partic…

…- ular. Instead of a statement condemning U.S. policies and calling on Arab states to unilaterally abrogate the U.N. Security Council sanctions imposed after Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990, the Arab

…-Consuming? Betsy Taylor Revolutionary Advocate for a New American Dream On "Sustainable Consumption" Ine Micnigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 IS publisned Monday tnrougn rioay during tne tall and winter terms Dy students

January 17, 1984 (vol. 94, iss. 88) • Page Image 2

… broken off.. . and soon the whole area is cleaned out." This month, Jaeger says he found three fresh fire sites, after one night of traying. Jaeger says he supports students right to have fun, but not at…

…? Read the Michigan Daily 764-0558 ------ Daily Photo by DAN HABIB A sign at the Arboretum's Geddes Rd. entrance warns visitors against traying, but students say they haven't seen the message or that they…

… formation of the deposits, known as plaques. Hussein calls return of Egypt to Arab world a must for unity AMMAN, Jordan-King Hussein told Parliament yesterday that the Palestine issue was "the first and…

… foremost preoccupation" of his new government and that a return of Egypt to the Arab fold was indispensable to Arab unity. - Hussein asked the Palestine Liberation Organization to help enable Jor- dan to do…

… its duty to "Palestine and its people." In his speech, the king mentioned no political leaders by name, but he has invited Arafat to join him in talks on solving the Palestinian problem. "Arab Egypt…

… cannot be left out of the ranks of the Arab Nation, which is indispensable to Egypt, while Egypt is indispensable to the Arab'Nation," Hussein said. Druse gunners shell east Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon…

… Levy. Tim Makinen. Adorn Martin, Mike McGraw, . News Editor......................GEORGE ADAMS Scott McKinley, Barb McQuade Lisa Nofen, Phil Student Affairs Editor ... ...............BETH ALLEN Nussell…

March 14, 1994 (vol. 104, iss. 94) • Page Image 4

… Qur'an. Perhaps the Arabs have a different version of the Qur'an than the other Muslims.") You see, anti-anyone sentiment serves only harmful intentions. First-year students who pick up the paper…

…IE HALLADAY Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editor in Chief Edited and managed JuUE BECKER by students at the JASON LIcHrsTEIN University of Michigan Acting Editorial Page Editors Unles.s otherwise noted, unsigned…

… n Monday, March 7, in a speech fo the LSA faculty, Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen A. Hartford outlined several new proposals for residence hall life begin- ning in 1996. Later this week…

… every incoming student participate in a "Living, Learning Environ- ment" during his or her first year at the Uni- versity. New programs, similar to the Resi- dential College and Pilot programs, would be…

…, requiring par- ticipation in these programs for all students would be a mistake. One of the ways the University hopes to improve residence hall life is to group stu- dents according to "broad interests." The…

…, and the residence halls are one of the most fundamental components of this experience. In this case, diversity not only refers to racial and ethnic groups, but also to students with different…

… backgrounds and in- terests. Furthermore, students do not need the administration's "groupings" to prod them into developing their social and educational networks.'This already occurs, simply through the nature…

… them more useful and accessible to students. And while it is unlikely that any new configuration will al- low the libraries to compete with research libraries such as the Grad, plans to enlarge the…

…. New stations will be doled out to LSA and the Office of Student Affairs, and other programs will address music, arts and athletic interests. This is an idea that deserves further consideration. It is…

… not the administration's role to control students' living environments. If anything, it should work to enhance them. Proposals such as those regarding the libraries and cable channels are such examples…

March 22, 1988 (vol. 98, iss. 115) • Page Image 4

… that events sponsored by either the Arab or Jewish handicapped education. Only a handful of U of M students are wheel-chair users. Why? Because prospec- tive students handicapped stu- dents learn quickly…

… and managed by situdents at The University of Michigan LETTERS: Group supports Arab- American Week 4 Vol. XCVIII, No. 115 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a…

… Is- rael currently occupies: the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. One of the largest obstacles to solving the conflict in the CU, unfair to To the Daily: As a "physically challenged" student, I found…

student association. MCC rep- resents the 200,000 students from Michigan's 15 state uni- versities on the state and federal level. MCC has done signifi- cant work, but also has big plans. State student

… lobby organi- zations from around the nation have had tremendous success. For instance, United Council, Wisconsin's student associa- tion, saved its 200,000 con- Middle East peacefully lies in the…

… misconception each side has about the other: Jews think of Arabs as terrorists; Arabs think of Jews as occupiers. Both within Israel and around the world, these views must be changed. Governor Blanchard has de…

…- clared the week of March 21-25 to be Arab-American Aware- ness Week. Look for posters around campus and in the List for more information regarding this week's events. This week's events afford the Uni…

…- versity of Michigan commu- nity the opportunity to increase our knowledge of the Arab- American community as well as to increase understanding between the Arab and Jewish communities. In the future, we hope…

… terminology to discuss the issue. Maybe the Daily staff could use some sensitivity training of their own. -Blame Waterman March 7 Question 5 Berkeley, saving students al- most $ 50,000. MCC's most successful ef…

… to higher education. Every one percent saved from a proposed tuition increase, saves the students of the University of Michigan about 2 million dollars. The way to ensure a strong, pro-student voice in…

June 03, 2002 (vol. 112, iss. 125) • Page Image 4

… appropriate way to achieve orchestrated the green armband campaign political goals, their ultimate vision of vio- to show solidarity with Arab-American lence and their present intimidation of students, but the…

… group failed to consult opponents is unacceptable. with or seek the support of any Arab- If BAMN were willing to thoroughly American student groups. These irrespon- reevaluate its methods and use its vast…

STUDENTS AT THE Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other pieces do not SINCE 1890 necessarily reflect…

… committees president of the University had the sole Legislature's education budget cuts. uine student-athletes. Consistent inequality University must address chronic gender pay gap T he unsurprising findings…

… of the students from working with the most tal- Report on Faculty Salary and ented faculty and receiving the best pos- Composition released by the sible education. Committee on the Economic Status of…

… prevents University pay gap from continuing unabated. An opiate for the few Trotskyite group has yet to change its tactics 4 T he Coalition to Defend Affirmative actual University students. BAMN's go…

…-it- Action and Integration and Fight for alone attitude has prevented collaboration Equality By Any Means Necessary with student groups and drawn away popu- has not changed. The group, which has a lar support…

… from their causes. long history on campus of alienating would- The group's unwillingness to accept be allies, working against student groups contrary positions has been one of the pri- and usurping…

… issues, held its most recent mary causes for the stagnant debate on affir- event this weekend in Ann Arbor, the mative action at the University. Students on Student/Youth Conference of the New Civil both…

…, organized the confer- accept contrary University are extremely rare, ence which brought a large num- positions has been instead attempts at discussion bers of high school students from one of the primary…

March 19, 1991 (vol. 101, iss. 114) • Page Image 8

…Page 8-The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, March 19,1991 'U' course offers students summer in the Rockies , Court to rule on school 0 by Jami Blaauw Daily Staff Reporter Instead of suffering through…

… Biblogy 152 for those much' needed natural science credits, some University students will be spending their summer in the Rocky Mountains studying the unique geblogy. , For the past 15 years, stu- dents…

… always working on some- thing' - Tracy Robinson LSA first- year student About 45 to 50 students - 30 percent of whom are incoming first-year students - participate in the prggram each summer at Camp Dadis…

students visit geo- logic locations. Students camp in these locations for a few days, taking time to explore minerals, * rocks, and fossils in natural set- tings. The course is taught by three professors and…

… two or three TAs. During the first week of the course, students spend most of their time in the classroom learning the fundamentals of ge- ologic study. The remainder of the course is spent in the field…

…, both at Camp Davis and surrounding ar- eas like Yellowstone National ~ - -t l University students can opt to spend the summer in the Rockies to study geology hands-on. They earn natural science credit…

… Davis begins with breakfast at 6:30, with class work beginning at 8 a.m. Students spend only a couple of hours during the morn- ing in the classroom and the re- mainder of the day is spent in the field…

…. The students return to camp just before dinner and have the evening to study, hike, and socialize around the camp- fire. On weekends, students may go to the nearest town or hike around the area. During…

… first-year LSA student who took the course last summer before her first term. "I had never been out West. It was a nice experience and I learned a lot." Buses leave from Ann Arbor July 5 and return August…

… 20. All interested students are encour- aged to contact Dr. Joyce M. Budai at the Department of Geo- logical Sciences for further in- formation and an application. prayer r WASHINGTON (AP) - The…

November 29, 1988 (vol. 99, iss. 57) • Page Image 1

… UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Arab nations said yesterday the General Assembly session will move to Geneva so PLO chief Yasser Arafat can address it, unless the United States reverses itself within 48 hours and…

… committee took no action. Arab diplomats called the U.S. visa denial a "slap in the face." The Soviet Union and China, and U.S. allies Britain and France, said Arafat should be allowed to speak. Most nations…

…-trial hearing was scheduled for Dec. 7. MSA resurrects student court BY KRISTIN HOFFMAN The Central Student Judiciary, the judicial branch of the Michigan Student Assembly, is a little-known campus entity…

… out, until virtually no one knew of its existence. Sotiroff said the administration was ignor- ing students' complaints, and that a strong CSJ was needed to give legitimacy to student decisions. "If the…

…. Current MSA Parliamentarian Jeff Gau- thier, a Rackham graduate student, took charge of resurrecting CSJ last spring. He and Lauren Isenberg, a former CSJ member, in- terviewed students for the 10 open…

… positions. Sotiroff, who was appointed last spring, was the only student still interested in serving this fall. Nine new members were interviewed and approved by MSA. The court is composed of five women and…

… five men. The student court, which encompasses two other judicial panels, does not normally re- view decisions made by University officials, but will hear a case if students claim their right to due…

…-aca- demic student disputes, conflicts between student groups, as well as student complaints with MSA. This body is currently defunct, but CSJ members are conducting a search for the five open seats. The most…

… little the DAVID LUBLINER/Dolly Opening d ay CRISP worker Larry McBride hands out a computer printout to a newly-registered student. Registration for winter term classes began yesterday. SACUA debates…

November 01, 1988 (vol. 99, iss. 39) • Page Image 1

student governments have passed a proposal to reconvene the panel that writes student conduct rules. The faculty's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs voted unanimously yesterday to reconvene…

… the University Council, a nine-member committee of students, faculty, and administrators. The Michigan Student Assembly, during its meeting last week, passed the proposal which will now head to the…

… have called the council ineffective because students would not compromise their position against a code of non-academic conduct. But student activists criticized the administration for not listening to…

… the student body, which has consistently voted against the code in MSA-conducted polls. In the past, council members have left meetings in frustration because neither side was willing to compromise. But…

… against the Arab uprising in the occupied lands. "There's no question it will help Likud," said Daniel Elazar, a political analyst of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. "For most voters this will only…

Arab-oriented parties whose strong support of the Palestine Liberation Organ- ization make them unacceptable in either major party's coalitions. The recent killings have prompted calls for revenge by…

… piece of legislation the University and its graduate student teaching assistants had waited ten months to see. But there was one problem. Nobody at the University was quite sure what it meant. This…

… morning, after almost a week of deliberations, University lawyers and top ad- ministrators plan to answer publicly the ques- tion that some say last week's federal tax bill didn't: do graduate student

July 23, 1981 (vol. 91, iss. 46) • Page Image 1

….S.-made Israeli warplanes struck plies. twice across the border yesterday, ISRAEL SAID its jets returned safely bombing Lebanon's main oil pipeline from hitting trails the guerrillas cut and hitting Arab guerrilla…

…. For stories on students in the Art Fair, and a local potter, see Page 3. CEis1PULTER come into classroom BY JOHN ADAM Daily staff writer Everyone knows engineers use com- puters, but imagine a history…

… uses will be an "ordinary" resource in the future. Aid scholars in Latin, history, even English "We should be anticipating a time when nearly all college students and faculty members do computing and…

… handle information in a familiar and personal way." But the replacement of a teacher with a computer is "not a likely outcome," said Zinn. STUDENTS ARE motivated to learn using media other than the…

student. "Students will need a teacher, but less as a source of factual and organized knowledge than as a mentor in the processing of information and the forming of value judgements," said Stanford…

… Ericksen, founder of CRLT, in his memo to Faculty. STUDENTS OF all disciplines will be able to work with computers. There is already a University English course en- titled "Literary Uses of the Computer…

…: * Teachers must guide students in scanning and selecting from multiple sources of information which will be in the computer's memory. They must advise the students "which buttons to push." r The value…

…-solving will continue to be a difficult topic of teacher instruction. Students must comprehend the logic behind specific procedures and to learn See COMPUTERS, Page 9 …

March 22, 1988 (vol. 98, iss. 115) • Page Image 2

… on many issues, but disagree on the priority of the issues. Common Sense party members say the as- sembly must listen to "ordinary" student interests before focusing on controversial and national is…

… parties are opposed to Interim President Robben Fleming's code for discriminatory acts. But Nemeroff said he would inform students about the positive and negative parts of Flem- ing's policy before he…

… decides to make a state- ment about it. Phillips said Students First will plan on organizing student opposition to the code when elections are over. STUDENTS FIRST party members want to steer the assembly…

March 08, 1952 (vol. 62, iss. 108) • Page Image 4

…) itatives on its{ xally the house elected officer. has two repre- quad council, president and Though the Michigan House lan emphasizes the individual Campus calendar Events Today ARAB STUDENTS-A planning…

… ommittee for a June confernce o Arab students in the United States will meet today ad tomor- row in the Union under the spon- sorship of the American Friends of the Middle East. The committee consists of…

… issue of Generation will be accept- ed until Friday in the Generation office of the Student Publications Bldg. * 9 * CONFERENCE - Representa- tives of Michigant junior colleges will meet with University…

… officials and faculty 'members Friday to discuss student transfers. U.S. Proposal Averts Planned Oil, Gas Strike DENVER-(I)-An oil and gas industry strike set for midnight tomorrow was called off yesterday…

…-dorm, independent." ISA To Hold, Ball may 16 The Inteinational Ball will be held May 16 in the Union Ball- r9om, coming'as the grand finale to the annual International Week, the International Students Asso- ciation…

… state, the ity and the management of the ice show. License Numbers Requested by OSA All students who have driving permits must turn in their 1951 and 1952 license numbers im- mediately to the Office of…

February 21, 1951 (vol. 61, iss. 93) • Page Image 5

…I I I I . . - . T"M" WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIV Ni ghtclub Opens on Campus; No 'ID' Needed for Entrance 'Little Club' To Provide New Entertainment For Students on…

… engagement of Peggy Law- will to John S. Ballman has been announced by Miss Lawwill's par- ents, Dr. and Mrs. Stewart Law- will of Lookout Mt., Tenn. Students may go nightclubbing, without the aid of ID, from…

… Events in the life of a typical Michigan law student will be de- scribed pictorially at "Chancel- lor's Court", a semi-formal which will be sponsored by the Student Bar Association Saturday in the League…

… of the Student Bar Association. General chairman in charge of the dance is Dale Strain. Other committee members include Lin- coln Knor, tickets and Alan Campbell, decorations. the campus, particularly…

… this time, admission will be $1. 'Ctenter' Party Will Welcome New Students The counselor to foreign stu- dents and the staff of the Inter- national Center will hold an open house at 8 p.m. Saturday, Feb…

…. 24 at the Center. The open house will provide an opportunity for faculty, towns- people, American students, and foreign students, to meet students from other lands who have en- rolled for the first…

… time this semes- ter. Invitations have already been sent. Among the more than 700 for- eign students in the University, 50 are new this semester. The open house is in honor of these students

…. Refreshments will be served, and foreign women students, dressed in their national costumes, will serve sa hostesses. The hostesses will be: Norika Osawa from Japan; Dr. Nan Koh, Korea; Edith Corillo…

October 19, 2005 (vol. 116, iss. 13) • Page Image 2

… could determine the out- come are apparently among the regions that need investigation. The audit comes as Sunni Arab lead- ers who oppose the charter claimed that voting was fixed in the two key provinc…

…- es - Ninevah and Diyala - and else- where to swing them to a "yes." Both provinces are believed to have slight Sunni Arab majorities that likely voted "no" in large numbers Saturday, along with…

… 20 percent rejected. The questions about the count further raised tensions over a referendum that has polarized Iraqis. Sunni Arabs large- ly reject the draft constitution, saying it will split Iraq…

… attack in Baghdad and elsewhere, including an adviser to the indus- try minister, one of the country's top Sunni Arab officials, police said. The handcuffed and mutilated bodies of six Shiites were found…

… Dulaimi told The Associated Press he would ask during today's opening session for more time to prepare Saddam's defense and arrange for Arab and West- ern lawyers to join him in the defense team. - Compiled…

… percent of the vote in the Michigan Student Assembly presidential elections last winter. It should have said he won with 75 percent of the vote. Please report any errors in the Daily to corrections…

March 14, 1996 (vol. 106, iss. 91) • Page Image 5

… NATION/WORLD The Michiga 'THE SUMMIT OF THE PEACEMAKERS' n Daily - Thursday, March 14, 1996 - 5A Arabs, Israelis join to support peace SHARM EL-SHEIK, Egypt (AP) - Shoulder-to-shoulderin a…

… historic show of solidarity, Arabs joined Israelis at a summit of world leaders yesterday to vow unequivocal support forthe bomb- gped Middle East peace process and n unrelenting war against terrorists…

… moved by the outcome. He spoke of watching "with an unbelieving eye" as former Arab enemies pledged to end the scourge of terrorism. "They are the most impressive lead- ers of our time," Peres said. "It…

…, the restive Palestin- ian population News and the wider Arab world. But his appear- ance and remarks here were also Analysis King Hussein of Jordan, Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres, U…

…- ians to the wider group of Arab nations represented at Sharm el Sheik, Clinton said, "Many of the nations here today have experienced the nightmare of ter- ror. Death does not discriminate among the…

…) And with the Student Advantage Card you'll get an additional 15% off Amtrak fares. For more information I I I mall 1 _JQ~AAMTRAK I …

July 24, 1980 (vol. 90, iss. 45) • Page Image 9

… controversial bill making Jerusalem, including the annexed Arab sector, Israel's capital. Prime Minister Menachem Begin left his sickbed to appear for the vote and lead a 65-12 majority. The bill now goes to a…

… committee for final preparation for enactment. THE BILL HAS drawn strong criticism from Arab countries and other nations that maintain Israel has no right to claim sovereignty over predominantly Arab East…

… form of autonomy for Palestinians living in Israeli-occupied Arab territory. EGYPT REGARDS East Jerusalem as part of the West Bank of the Jordan River, and wants the city's 100,000 Arabs to vote in…

…. ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE members cited what they alleged to be Marwil's frequently intemperate behavior, as well as questionable scholarly production and worsening student evaluations, as reasons for the denial of…

August 04, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 58) • Page Image 13

… it said was a photostatic copy Students, with 145 nations represented, esterday of a visa application filled now under way here. (Continued from Page 1) At one point, a man appeared bran- dishing a…

…, his face was streaming with blood. The suspect had been overpowered by security men of the Arab League, which shares its offices in the building with the PLO. Later an anonymous caller to the French…

… news agency Agence France- Prpsse claimed the attack was carried out by a previously unknown "Rejec- tion Front of Stateless Arab Palestinians." THE CALLER also claimed the group was responsible for a…

… op- posite sides of the intra-Arab conflict. The militantly anti-Israel gover- nment of Iraq believes only war can resolve the Arab-Israeli dispute, insists on total dismantling of the Jewish state and…

… criticized Israel for past retaliatory strikes across Arab borders. The Tel Aviv bomb was hidden in a black briefcase planted under a stall selling T-shirts and children's clothes in the Carmel market, a maze…

May 19, 1977 (vol. 87, iss. 12) • Page Image 2

… Labor party yesterday in an effort to present a unified na- tion to the Arab world. There was no immediate word on whether Labor would accept the offer to form a coalition government, which came as Arabs

… angrily denounced the Likud election victory Tuesday as a threat to Middle East peace. ARAB state-controlled radios branded Begin a "notorious ter- rorist" with whom negotiations would be impossible. They…

Arab armament pro- grams. THE CONSERVATIVE victory also left deep political divisions in Israel. Yosef Sarid, a top Labor official, said he doubted there could be any coalition with the Likud. "Such a…

… withdrawal - on the other fronts for less than a full peace treaty. In the West Bank, Arabs re- ceived the news of Begin's tri- umph glumly. "Begin is a man of war, not of peace," said Kerim Khalaf, mayor of…

… MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 12-5 Thursday, May 19, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann ArbarM lehigan 48109…

June 03, 1976 (vol. 86, iss. 21) • Page Image 3

… Switzerland to sell pounds and convert to Swiss francs. Sellers were not named but Arab oil producers are among the clients who deal through Swiss banks. They said a second selling wave in the afternoon came…

… northern Akkar region. Syrian-led guerrillas of the Saiqa or- ganiiation were reinforced around the port of Sidon and a nearby American- run oil refinery vital to Syria. Arab dinlonatic sources said the Sy…

… employee walkout last Thursday that will leave the oft-visited student restaurant inoperative for at least two weeks. The mass walkout came after Thomp- son refused to comply with the mana- gers' and workers…

July 21, 1967 (vol. 77, iss. 51) • Page Image 3

… necessary." But the sponsors bumped into opposition from the Arab dele- gates, who spoke out against what they described as attempts to gloss over failure of the assem- bly to demand unconditional withdrawal…

… of Israeli forces from Arab territory won in the war. Under the resolution, the coun- cil would be asked to consider "the tense situation in the Middle East as a matter of urgency." Diplomatic sources…

… said the Arabs objected to that as too mild a description of a situation; the Arabs said it amounted to a threat to world peace. Ambassador Max Jakobson of Finland told the assembly it might be useful to…

… on a Latin- American resolution that spoke of a troop withdrawal and an end to the state of war between Israel and the Arabs. I k I 1 presents CHARLIE CHAPLIN'S Burlesque on Carmen First Ann Arbor…

…!Y UNION-LEAGUE UNION-LEAGUE SINGLE'S TENNIS TOURNAMENT for MEN and WOMEN-Students and Professors TROPHIES and PRIZES! Sign up and information: UAC Offices, 2nd floor, Union DEADLINE: JULY 23 L r ---" 2…

September 19, 1958 (vol. 69, iss. 4) • Page Image 12

… another. And perhaps the most important to date was the union of Egypt and Syria in, and federation of Yemen with, the United Arab Re- public. Writes Philbsophy in Bookf In the manner of Adolph Hit-+ ler…

… study reflecting . . . asking myself: What is our positive role in this troubled world, and where1 is the place in which we should fulfill that role? It seemed to him, Nasser wrote,t that the Arab circle…

… fu-i ture (and, however he tries toc change his disguise, the same ene-f my)--so long as this is true, why do we scatter our efforts? Arabs Have Three Strengths The Arab circle, Nasser said, has three…

…. The book is sched- uled for publication during Janu- ary, 1959. GAMAL ABDEL NASSER--Egypt's chief has three dreams: The unification of the Arab Republic into a strong force; a voice in the future of…

… CHUCK WAGON Extends a hearty welcome to the University students His restdurant is open to YOU from 9 A.M. to 11 P.M. Fine Salads & Sandwiches - PIZZA' CLOSED TUESDAYS I COTTAGE INN PIZZERIA, FREE…

April 11, 2003 (vol. 113, iss. 130) • Page Image 3

… India." Princeton prof talks on the prevention of terrorism Students examine move-out options at term end By Michael Kan Daily Staff Reporter With the school year ending, most students are faced with…

… the dilemma of where they can store their belongings over the summer. Currently, the University recommends a variety of methods to help students either ship or store their possessions. John's Pack…

… unwanted student possessions on the Internet auction website eBay, York said. Stu- dents can leave their belongings for auction and the company will make preparations to sell it online. "We take the…

April 16, 1998 (vol. 108, iss. 115) • Page Image 9

… young men then, ry because they thought Israel was missing the chance to e peace with an Arab enemy. So they decided to write a letter. The letter sparked a movement. The movement brought tens of…

…, and the peace they sought with all the Arabs is still elusive. Their movement was dubbed Peace Now, to their conster- nation - they thought it was too insistent, too "American." After two decades the…

… letter, such as Tzali Reshef, the current impasse in Israeli-Arab relations is dis- couraging. "I don't think we have all the time in the world," Reshef said. "In the Middle East, if you have a deadlock…

… *h Arab neighbors, return of land to the Palestinians. But leaving a huge celebratory rally in Tel Aviv in November 1995, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated. Peace Now watched in dismay as…

… Molenar, who also participated in the program last summer, said many of the students' worst teaching fears never materialized. "We had been afraid that our lessons wouldn't be good enough," Molenar said…

… all the summer activities. Organizers said they hope to receive increased funding to expand the course so students from across the country could take part in the volunteer program. To find out more…

… information or to register for the course, students can e- mail hcashman@umich.edu. ITD Continued from Page 1A tures in line with its budget. It would never be our policy to reduce services. ITD is working with…

… MSA representa- tives, the Rackham Student Government LTD's Student Advisory Committee and other groups to further revise the basic t computing program for next year. "We're looking to meet…

… approximately 95 percent of all students' needs," Griffiths said. lTD's main goal for future policy changes is to make sure computing ser- t vices for students are not reduced. "We want to provide as much service…

… 1 as we can with our funding" McCord said. Student S -. paper aims or diversity CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) -- The editors of the Harvard Crimson recently looked around the newsroom and came to a sudden…

January 15, 1998 (vol. 108, iss. 58) • Page Image 3

… Carly Southworth iDaily Staff Reporters Not only is this year's crop of first- year students the largest entering class in the history of the University, they also may be the least politically inter…

…- ested. An annual study conducted by the University of California at Los Angeles reported that the more than one and a half million of the country's first-year university and college students exhibit the…

… reached the University, and students have mixed opinions on the issue. LSA first-year student John Siddall is part of the remaining 73 percent who said he does not care about politics. "(Politics) isn…

…'t very exciting to me," Siddall said. "There's not much I can really change. I'm one voice lost in a million." Some University students said lack of time is also a main constraint on their political…

… activity. Engineering first-year student Jason Riback said he does not have enough time to keep up with politics. "Because I'm studying and involved in a fraternity, there's no time (for poli- tics…

… and naking the decisions," Riback said. Political science Prof. Hanes Walton, Jr. said he believes many students will find politics to be more important as they prepare to graduate. "Practical realities…

… is. Some first-year students already have discovered the significance of polities. "I am very interested (in politics). In taet, I just begged my way into an Intro to American polities class," said LSA…

January 26, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 96) • Page Image 1

… all non-aligned nations should support Sadat to prevent Israel from exploiting Arab See ISRAELI, Page 6 'U'student grabs loot on Wheel of Fortune' By ELIZABETH SLOWIK LSA senior Larry Caplan is a…

… populated section of the Negev Desert. Prime Minister Mena- chem Begin has publicly rejected the idea of changing the accepted Israeli- Egyptian boundary. King Hassan of Morocco called on Arab countries to…

… rally behind Sadat, saying such support would put pres- sure on Western leaders to persuade Israel to withdraw from occupied Arab territory.; In an interview published today in the Cairo daily Al…

… agreement. Humphrey linked his appeal for Israeli flexibility on the Sinai settle- ments to his view that there also is a need for Arab compromising on the Palestine issue. MRS. HUMPHREY'S appointment was…

… BECAUSE1 elimination of Plan B - which requires be "more dem students to take courses in the analytic, & Committeec empirical, moral, and aesthetic modes he believes it of learning - and raises the number…

… Housin Executive Committee reports to the requests by Q governing faculty of LSA which makes has attracted the final decision. morning riser from East Qua requirements students have approach- it if it…

… meant discussing educationa bution requirement with goals with students. f "what's the minimum I LSA-SG appointee Carolyn Rosen and so have usually satis- berg said she is "very excited" abou without much…

… effort, ac- the proposal. She agrees that it wil huck Judge, director of "encourage students to go to the othe c Counseling. plans," adding that the independent ap THE revised plan C will proach will…

… probably appeal most ti nanding," Associate Dean very highly motivated students. chairman John Knott said THE PROPOSAL has been in formu will "induce students to lation since early last term when a sub tions…

… more seriously." He committee of the curriculum commi es that they will be en- tee began seeking input from student think about the aims of a and faculty about the distributiv ion." plans. By mid…

January 11, 1977 (vol. 87, iss. 82) • Page Image 1

…, 1977 Ten Cents E i ~,.E ight Pages r iF Y~OU SEE N&S HM A O-AU ILJY Stranded students Five Michigan students stranded in Latin Amer- ica due to the financial collapse of an Ann Arbor- based exchange…

… program will be coming home Jan. 18, state officials said yesterday. The five were among 22 U. S. students originally stranded because the International Cultural Exchange lacked the funds to bring them home…

… for women, at 7 p.m. in the Central Campus Recreation Bldg. - bring your student ID. e Phyllis philosophizes The latest words of wisdom from Phyllis Schla- fly, Republican activist and prominent…

… to pursue the swift completion of its appoin ed rounds. As students in 300 school districts throughout the state enjoyed a day off, as did students at Eastern Michigan University and Washtenaw…

… Community College, University students trudged their normal routes to class. It took them considerably longer than usual, of course, ON NORTH CAMPUS many students were forced to walk to central campus as most…

… buses were suck in the drifts. Sev- eral buses bypassed Bursley Hall altogether until roads were cleared late in the morning. Some undaunted stu'dents depended on their new cross-country skis to…

…. Kissinger MUNICH OLYMPICS SUSPECT: Arrest spurs touts American strength Arab PARIS (AP) - An interna- tional storm blew up yesterday around the arrest in France of an alleged Palestinian terrorist on…

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan