The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
Weekend Roundup
Thursday, March 12, 2015 — 5A
Classifieds
Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com
ACROSS
1 Atkins no-no
5 “__ bad idea”
9 Brothers Grimm
creature
14 Old apple spray
15 Pinnacle
16 Painful turning
point?
17 Elizabeth of
“Lone Star”
18 Nothing
19 Experimental
blast
20 Russian
composer and
piano virtuoso
23 Related
compounds
24 Gap
28 Italian roads
29 Café breakfast
order
31 Birdbrain
33 Arrived just in
time for
34 Reservoir
creator
37 TV fantasy about
three magical
sisters
40 Delivery person?
41 Some Persians
43 Absolute ruler
45 Den piece
48 Arrival
announcement
52 Deduce
53 Manned the
helm
54 Annual sports
event that begins
with Selection
Sunday on 3/15
... or, cryptically,
a hint to the
scrambled word
found at the starts
of 20-, 29-, 37-
and 45-Across
57 Provide a spread
for
60 Script “Q” feature
61 In the past
62 Scenic route,
perhaps
63 Curvature
64 Stax Records
genre
65 Sleep soundly?
66 Milk sources for
some Tibetan
cheese
67 Milk sources for
some Greek
cheese
DOWN
1 Crop pants
2 Orioles’ div.
3 Venom
4 Hindu priest
5 Childhood home
of Jesus
6 Makes the first
move
7 Actress Hatcher
8 Nerve cell
transmitter
9 Story you might
find on
MuggleNet.com,
briefly
10 Myrmecologist’s
subject
11 ’50s political
nickname
12 Jekyll creator’s
monogram
13 However
21 Doc
22 Resistance unit
25 Lions, Tigers or
Bears
26 Fancy coif
27 Come off as
29 Personnel
employee
30 Dough
dispensers, for
short
32 Dry riverbed
34 Pull with effort
35 Special
something
36 Co. runners
38 Dorothy Parker’s
“Excuse my dust”
and others
39 Like the Taj Mahal
42 Bagel topping
44 Precisely, after
“on”
46 Town crier’s cry
47 JFK info
49 Prior to today,
poetically
50 Save
51 Fords that never
got going
53 Usually stained
work garb
55 French Open
surface
56 Bat mitzvah
dance
57 “The Big Bang
Theory”
network
58 Author Rand
59 Seesaw need
By Alex Miller
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
03/12/15
03/12/15
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
RELEASE DATE– Thursday, March 12, 2015
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
xwordeditor@aol.com
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FOR RENT
HELP WANTED
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
CAMPUS
EVENTS
Thursday, 3/12
Friday, 3/13
Saturday, 3/14
Symphony band
8 p.m.
Hill Auditorium
Austin Andres’
“Mendosa Trilogy”
11 p.m.
Walgreen Drama Center
Speaking Across
Conflict
3 p.m. - 7 p.m.
Trotter Multicultural
Center
HIVE: An exhibition of
work by Mike Bianco
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Stamps School of Art &
Design (Slusser Gallery)
Bill Frisel
3:30 p.m.
Mendelssohn Theatre
Sunday, 3/15
Dance Marathon
2 p.m. - Sunday at 2 p.m.
Indoor Track and Field
Building
By CARLY NOAH
Daily Weekend Contributor
Around Campus
CSG proposes committee
for fossil fuel disinvestment
Monday, a proposal to
support the creation of a
committee to research the
University’s investments in
oil and coal was brought to
Central
Student
Govern-
ment by CSG representative
Swathi Shanmugasundaram,
an LSA sophomore, and the
Divest and Invest campaign,
a coalition of students, fac-
ulty, staff and community
members. The proposal was
questioned by CSG Presi-
dent Bobby Dishell, a Public
Policy senior, who want-
ed the group to perform
research
without
need-
ing to form a committee.
University President
addresses Greek life
controversies
University
President
Mark Schissel held a fire-
side chat Monday after-
noon where he addressed
the implications of recent
Greek life ski trips. The
University
has
recently
severed ties with Sigma
Alpha Mu, one of the fra-
ternities reported to have
vandalized a resort dur-
ing their ski trip. Schissel
asked the 30 students in the
audience how to create a
culture where it’s possible
to have an enjoyable time
without creating mayhem.
Around the world
University of Oklahoma
racist fraternity
video goes viral
An anonymous video
released to media Satur-
day showed several Uni-
versity of Oklahoma Sigma
Alpha Epsilon fraternity
members chanting a racist
song on a bus en route to
a Greek life event. As a re-
sult, the fraternity has been
removed from the Uni-
versity of Oklahoma and
their house is in the pro-
cess of being dismantled.
Homeopathy deemed
useless, according to
Australian researchers
Australia’s top medical
research body, The Nation-
al Health and Medical Re-
search Council, issued a re-
port stating there is a lack
of reliable evidence proving
homeopathy to be an effec-
tive treatment option for
any health condition. The
body hopes the report will
discourage Australian in-
surance groups from cover-
ing homeopathic treatments.
THIS WEEK IN
REVIEW
S TA F F P I C K S
S P R I N G B R E A K . . .
C H E C K I N ’ O U T
LUKE BRYAN
“ K I N G S M A N :
T H E S E C R E T
S E R V I C E ”
IN
THEATERS
FRIDAY 3/13
“ X ”
“ C I N D E R E L L A”
NOW IN
THEATERS
ED SHEERAN
EVENT SPOTLIGHT:
Arts &
Culture By Allana Akhtar, Weekend Roundup Editor | Photos courtesy of African Students Association
Sister Africa Culture Show
3 THINGS to do this
weekend
By EMILIE PLESSET
Daily Weekend Editor
The temperature is finally
above 40 degrees and the Diag is
underwater. Spring has sprung
in Ann Arbor and it’s time to
do something fun. If you’re
ready to break out of your win-
ter hibernation, here are some
things you can do this weekend
to embrace the new season.
FRIDAY, MARCH 13
If you find yourself with some
post-midterms free time, start
reading the popular “Diver-
gent” trilogy before the film
adaption of the sequel, “Insur-
gent,” hits theaters next Friday,
March 20. The series follows
16-year-old
Beatrice
“Tris”
Prior as she endures a society in
a future dystopian Chicago that
categorizes people into five fac-
tions and eliminates those who
exercise independence from the
system. While you’re at it, if you
can’t get enough of the Diver-
gent universe, you might also
want to re-watch the film ver-
sion of the first book, “Diver-
gent.”
SATURDAY, MARCH 14
Looking for a culture fix? The
Detroit Institute of Arts will
open its exhibition on the year
20th-century Mexican artists
Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo
spent in Detroit. The exhibi-
tion will open Saturday evening
and guests are encouraged to
wear rebozos, bright colors
and flowers. The opening will
include appetizers and enter-
tainment by Mariachi Gallos
de Oro and Ballet Folklorico
Mayocoyani Izel. Tickets can
be purchased online for $25.
SUNDAY, MARCH 15
After spending the school
year fundraising, the efforts of
the University’s Dance Mara-
thon will finally culminate in
its 18th annual fundraising
rave this weekend. Through-
out the year, the organization
has been raising money to sup-
port therapy programs at the
University’s C.S. Mott Chil-
dren’s Hospital and William
Beaumont Children’s Hospital
in Royal Oak. Beginning Satur-
day at 2 p.m., hundreds of stu-
dents will stand for 24 hours as
they dance and play with chil-
dren who are benefiting from
the raised money. If you’re not
already participating, make
sure you stop by to support
your friends at DMUM.
VIRGINIA LOZANO/Daily
University students at the Dance Marathon in 2014 standing for 30 hours to
raise money to improve the quality of life for children with disabilities.
Wolverine Forensic
Tournament
7:30 a.m.
Mason Hall
Michigan vs. Michigan
State hockey game
5:05 p.m.
Yost Ice Arena
T
The African Students
Association will host
its 17th annual Sister
Africa Culture Show on Friday
at the Michigan Theater.
“The purpose of our show
this year is to showcase how
African
culture
impacted
other cultures from around the
world,” said LSA senior Olubisi
Ajetunmobi, president of ASA.
Emceed by prominent Afri-
can comedian Foxy P, the event
will showcase a variety of per-
formances highlighting Afri-
can culture and its influence
around the world. In addition
to a fashion show and perfor-
mances by University dance
groups, the event will feature
a performance by the Kenyan
Zuzu Acrobats, an acrobatic
team that previously competed
on “America’s Got Talent.”
According to Ajetunmobi,
the culture show started two
years after the ASA was found-
ed on campus in 1996 and has
been an annual installment
since. The culture show was
originally a smaller event in the
Michigan Union, but has since
expanded considerably and has
been hosted in the Power Cen-
ter for the past two years.
This year, ASA is moving the
production to the Michigan
Theater in hopes that the new
location will allow for further
expansion.
The culture show will also
include Amala, Oga Boys and
Brazilian Capoeira dance per-
formances. Additionally, many
prominent fashion designers,
singers, musicians and poets
from all over the nation will
showcase their work.
“We just hope that students
who come to the show see that
there’s more to Africa than
what they see on the news or
on TV,” Ajetunmobi said. “We
also want to show how impact-
ful Africa is to so many cul-
tures around the world.”
ASA is co-sponsoring the
evASA is co-sponsoring the
event with the Office of Multi-
Ethnic Student Affairs, Central
and LSA student governments
and the Multicultural Coun-
cils in most residence halls.
Tickets are $5 for students
and $8 for non-students. How-
ever, students can attend the
show for free if they pick up
a Passport to the Arts ticket
in any residence hall or at the
New Student Programs center
in the LSA Building.
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