The appellant Nsubuga Tabula appealed to the High Court from the Judicial advisor court for bail and a case of defamation alleged that he permitted the publication in his newspaper in matters insulting the King of Buganda. The High Court granted him bail since it found no law for refusing bail.
Dissertation by Dr. Marina Axeen on a comparative study between teaching a Library Science course to undergraduate students with the PLATO system and a traditional lecture method. Coordinated Science Laboratory was formerly known as Control Systems Laboratory
Joint Services Electronics Program / DA 28 043 AMC 00073(E)
Advanced Research Projects Agency through the Office of Naval Research / Nonr 3985-(08)
United States Office of Education / OEC-3-7-700050-3131
This photograph depicts an all-Black baseball team at the Jones School in 1939. The Jones School, now Community High School, is described as an "anchor" of what was known as the North Central area of Ann Arbor, a historically Black neighborhood in present-day Kerrytown (Jones School, n.d.). While it was open, the school served as a site for food drives, donation efforts, and recreational programs for Black students living in the area (Jones School, n.d.). In 1963, the Ann Arbor Board of Education formed a 12-member Citizens’ Committee to study and provide statistics about the dynamics of race, specifically in regards to the racial composition of student populations, in Ann Arbor public schools (Jones School, n.d.). Through the report that the Committee created and released the following year, the Jones School was determined a de facto' segregated school by the Ann Arbor Board of Education and subsequently closed due to community pressure (Jones School, n.d.). More broadly, the work of the Committee spurred action to address segregation across the city’s school system (Jones School, n.d.).
2-300 teens march on Hitsville USA to demand release of Tommy Good record. Organized by the Tommy Good Fan Club. Protest held up rush hour traffic and caused two minor accidents. Tommy made a command appearance outside and got mobbed.
While most women's clubs who petitioned Congress argued against the damming of the Hetch Hetchy Valley, San Francisco residents stood largely in support of the dam. In their telegram to Congress, the Executive Board of the San Francisco District of the California Women's Clubs urged the Senate to vote for the Raker Bill, a bill to grant San Francisco the right to dam the Valley. Women activists in the Progressive Era often appealed to the special concerns of their gender. In this example, the Federation argued that women faced the water crises daily.
In lieu of real exotic animals, students crafted replicas for actors to wear during the parade. A giraffe, named "Tessie" according to the image's description, was a highlight of the event. One image shows the costumed students being driven downtown in a caged wagon, while the other shows the students stationed somewhere, possibly Ferry Field, with another student.