University Wire

News

Faculty says it wants strong ties to Bollinger

Members of the University faculty are extending an olive branch to President Lee Bollinger, calling for a closer relationship between the faculty and the new president.

Interracial marriages up: Students say study results reflect changing attitudes

More and more Americans are choosing to marry outside of their race, according to the results of a new study headed by University sociology Prof. Reynolds Farley.

Rash of fires plague county

Police and fire investigators suspect a possible link between a recent rash of fires in Ann Arbor.

'U' surgeons go prime-time

If you think Michigan sports is the only part of the University getting TV-time, try flipping on The Learning Channel.

'U' urologist suspected of financial fraud

The chief urologist at the School of Medicine was suspended because of alleged financial improprieties, according to a published report yesterday.

Off-campus living gives some students headaches

Sewage leaks up from the laundry room, the first-floor ceiling caves in and the heat never comes back on. No, this isn't the set of a bad horror movie.

Gore visits China

BEIJING - Launching the highest-level official U.S. visit to China since the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown of 1989, Vice President Al Gore arrived here yesterday and a grateful China prepared to thank the United States by signing two major deals with American companies.

Around the Nation

Around the World

Students' Party captures LSA-SG election ballots

By a margin of just 27 votes, the Students' Party took over the leadership of LSA Student Government.

Brater proposes three bills to improve environmental quality

While some legislators see state Rep. Liz Brater's proposed changes to the state's environmental policies as a step to a better future, others see the plan as more bureaucracy and paperwork. "We need enforcement of our environmental policies," Brater (D-Ann Arbor) said. "It's an effort to give public input."

Campus remembers Holocaust victims

Standing outside in the cold at four in the morning is not something most students prefer to do on a regular basis. But that is just what many students will be doing early Thursday morning on the Diag when they read off the names of Holocaust victims as part of the 24-hour Memorial of Names, sponsored by Hillel.

Crime Notes

The Calendar: What's happening in Ann Arbor today

03-25-97

HOME| NEWS| EDITORIAL| ARTS| SPORTS| CLASSIFIED| ARCHIVES|


©1997 The Michigan Daily
Letters to the editor
should be sent to:
daily.letters@umich.edu
Comments about this site
should be sent to:
online.daily@umich.edu