Classifieds
Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com
ACROSS
1 __ of Cleves
5 Ink, so to speak
9 Skin problem
13 Genuine
14 “How much wood
__ a woodchuck
chuck ...”
16 “__ Wood sawed
wood”: tongue
twister opening
17 Washington
landmark
20 Hidden supply
21 Major
installation?
22 Pianist Dame
Myra __
25 Site of South
America’s
westernmost
mainland point
26 Fairy tale
patriarch
30 Latin dances
34 Saccharide suffix
35 Legal write-up
37 Elizabethan
strings
38 Escher’s
“Relativity” is an
example of it
42 Provided with an
email dupe
43 Poke around
44 Many corp. logos
45 Apollo home
48 “The Wolf of Wall
Street” director
50 Prominent
theater sign
52 Suture securer
53 Impeded
57 Bandleader
Shaw
61 9-Across
treatments
64 NASCAR route
65 Incline
66 __ school
67 Use a blowtorch
on
68 James of jazz
69 James portrayer
DOWN
1 Hammer-throw
trajectories
2 With 59-Down,
“Very clever!”
3 Popular wine
source
4 Prophet in 2
Kings
5 “Tea for __”
6 Former Time
Warner division
7 Big wind
8 Drink noisily
9 Popular energy
drinks
10 China setting
11 Comic __:
typeface
12 Whopping
15 Places to see
FDR
18 “Doctor Who”
broadcaster
19 Constellation
named for an
instrument
23 Shot contents
24 Some voyages
26 Shelter resident
27 Shelter org.
28 Hero in a
Prokofiev work
29 Rider’s handful
31 Hotel choice
32 Elemental bits
33 “Common” asset
36 Congregation
39 New York airport
name until 1963
40 “On Golden
Pond” bird
41 Big fuss
46 Suit
47 Mythical gold
maker
49 Barbershop
sharpeners
51 Bridal shop
netting
53 Put in the
overhead bin
54 “All you need,” in
a Beatles song
55 Australian export
56 Hurdle for a jr.
58 Flag
59 See 2-Down
60 “World Series of
Poker” channel
62 Explosive initials
63 Greek vowel
By Gareth Bain
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
05/07/15
05/07/15
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
RELEASE DATE– Thursday, May 7, 2015
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
xwordeditor@aol.com
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Enjoy the Sudoku
on page 2
8
Thursday, May 7, 2015
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
NEWS
six diseases, you’re not trying to
spend up everything. You’re happy
to pass it on and there’s nobody
talking about death panels.”
Carson has also called for devel-
oping oil and energy in the United
States, arguing that petroleum
independence would deplete fund-
ing for terrorists groups in the
Middle East. He has also endorsed
a flat income tax rate, an idea he
compared to 10 percent tithing
that appears in the Bible.
Despite gaining much support
from conservatives for his public
critiques of the president, Carson
has had several public blunders.
In 2014, Carson withdrew from
speaking at the Johns Hopkins
commencement ceremony after
students protested comments he
made comparing gay men and
women to pedophiles.
A March interview with CNN
garnered much negative feedback
after Carson said being gay is an
absolute choice because many
inmates who go to prison straight
are gay when they are released.
Carson has also compared the
Affordable Care Act to slavery,
saying it “robs you of your own
ability to control your own life.”
This statement and others he made
comparing the U.S. government to
Nazi Germany have made him the
subject of additional criticisms.
During remarks at the Detroit
Music Hall on Monday morning,
Carson addressed criticisms alleg-
ing he wants to scale down on wel-
fare programs
“There are many people who
are critical of me because they say
Carson wants to get rid of all the
safety nets and welfare programs
even though he must’ve benefited
from them. This is a blatant lie. I
have no desire to rid of safety nets
for people who need them. I have
a strong desire to get rid of pro-
grams who create dependency in
able-bodied people.”
Carson will be the first African
American to represent the Repub-
lican Party in the presidential race
if he wins the party’s nomination.
CANDIDACY
From Page 3
own learning.”
He also said experimenting with
new teaching techniques is benefi-
cial to the teaching community.
“These kinds of experiments
and these kinds of projects expand
the imagination for me as a teacher
also to sort of understand the dif-
ferent dynamics that students face
and start to see things from a stu-
dent’s perspective,” Clauge said.
After an hour of mingling with
presenters, the crowds moved into
the Blau Auditorium, where the
five TIP winners were officially
recognized before a panel of Uni-
versity educators took the stage
to discuss how the University can
drive innovation through experi-
mentation with new digital land-
scapes.
Specifically, the panel focused
on Unizin, a consortium of 10 uni-
versities including the University
of Michigan. The consortium aims
to develop and share new, benefi-
cial digital technologies for teach-
ers and students, support content
systems that empower faculty and
provide analytic services.
One such technology is Canvas,
a learning management system
that the University plans to imple-
ment over the next couple of years
to replace CTools.
Tim McKay, Arthur F. Thurnau
professor of physics and director
of the LSA Honors Program, spoke
about the importance of Unizin’s
efforts to create a community of
educators intent on developing
higher levels of learning and the
tools needed to do so.
“Everybody who is using these
new tools should be thinking about
how to, in a scholarly way, figure
out what’s happening and, in the
same scholarly way, share that
information with the rest of the
community so that when we make
these decisions they won’t just be
rolling over us, we’ll actually be
making them in an informed way,”
McKay said.
Stacy Morrone, associate vice
president of learning technologies
at Indiana University, said Unizin
is working to make sense of and
join together emerging tools and
data.
“Unizin seems to be the conver-
gence of so many things that we
should be thinking about around
content, the learning manage-
ment system and what all this data
means for the success of our stu-
dents,” Morrone said.
Angelo Pitillo, director of the
University’s
English
Language
Institute, also attended the panel
and said the event was a great
opportunity to learn about the lat-
est research being pursued in high-
er education.
“We’re at a really important
time with the development of
technology for teaching and learn-
ing,” Pitillo said. “I think it’s really
important to know where we’re at
and where we’re going.”
EDUCATION
From Page 2
ter to President Obama asking
him to endorse this conflict resolu-
tion solution. He later visited cam-
pus to speak about the issue.
Terrence
McDonald,
direc-
tor of Bentley Historical Library,
said the library contains the larg-
est historical archive in the state
of Michigan and has a long tradi-
tion of attempting to attract the
archives of important political
figures.
McDonald said Dingell is one of
the major political figures in the
20th century and his collection is
a valuable addition to the library’s
archive.
“Historians
and
students
are going to get such great ben-
efit from an access to his papers,”
McDonald said.
McDonald added that Dingell’s
donation is one of the largest dona-
tions to the library’s historical
archive. The donation is approxi-
DOCUMENTS
From Page 2
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