ACROSS
1 The Olympic
Australis and
others
6 Sound 
detectors
10 Move lightly
14 Full range
15 Produce on a
farm
16 Biked it
17 Video game
brother
18 Hold ’em fee
19 “That makes
sense”
20 2002 British
Open champion
21 Patient care
group
24 Pay
26 “Frasier” role
27 “Arabian Nights”
name
28 Duties
32 Political
convention
announcement
37 Novelist Tolstoy
38 Rep on the
street
39 Place for a small
pet
40 Jag, e.g.
41 Had-at link
42 Casing filler
46 Picking up, in a
way
48 Quaint
preposition
49 Dennings of “2
Broke Girls”
50 The “it” in “I don’t
want to talk about
it”
55 Like much rock ...
and like the last
words of 21-, 32-
and 42-Across?
59 Wild way to go
60 “Little Things
Mean __”: 1954
#1 hit
61 Quaint “not”
62 It’s usually not
more than a 
foot
64 Lead
65 Slush Puppie
maker
66 Part of a meet
67 Enjoys a hero
68 Agreeing words
69 Takes chances

DOWN
1 Looked like a
wolf?
2 Eighth-century
pope
3 Not quite right
4 Haul
5 Reaction causes
6 “Holy moly!”
7 Golf nickname
8 Coll. drilling group
9 Curse
10 Aunt in “Nancy”
11 Come in too late?
12 Start of a solution
13 Abound (with)
22 “Happy Days”
actress Moran
23 It’s retold often
25 Ratt or Poison
28 Taberna snack
29 Drawing passage
30 Crumbly salad
topper
31 29-Down buildup
32 Some HDTVs
33 Push for
34 Reason for
glowing letters
35 Water cooler
sound
36 Humanities degs.
40 City north of Des
Moines
42 Rama VII’s
kingdom

43 “Mary Queen of
Scots”
biographer
Fraser
44 One of the Spice
Girls
45 Built
47 Winter 
Olympics
equipment
50 Self-gratifying
outing
51 “But of course!”

52 Supermarket
option
53 Speak one’s mind
54 Staked shelters
55 Nutmeg spice
56 Scat legend,
familiarly
57 Talk up
58 Suggestive
63 Co-star of
Richard in “The
Night of the
Iguana”

By Bruce Venzke and Gail Grabowski
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
06/25/15

06/25/15

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, June 25, 2015

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

Classifieds

Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com

PAINTING/CLEANING HELP
Email tclark_tca@sbcglobal.net

EFF, 1 & 2 Bedrooms Avail Fall 

2015‑16
$800 ‑ $1420. Most include Heat and 

Water. Parking where avail: $50‑80/mo. 

Coin Laundry access on site/nearby. 
www.cappomanagement.com 
Call 734‑996‑1991 

ARBOR PROPERTIES 

Award‑Winning Rentals in Kerrytown, 

Central Campus, Old West Side, 
Burns Park. Now Renting for 2015. 
734‑649‑8637. www.arborprops.com

2 & 3 BDRM APTS IN A HOUSE 

South Campus Fall 2015‑16 

1015 Packard ‑ $1370‑$1930 + Utilities 
Call 734‑996‑1991 to sched a viewing

NEW UNIVERSITY TOWERS
Apartments‑Starting at $899/room 

www.u‑towers.com Only 3 minutes from 

Central Campus

! NORTH CAMPUS 1‑2 Bdrm. !
! Riverfront/Heat/Water/Parking. !
! www.HRPAA.com !

CENTRAL CAMPUS, FURNISHED 
rooms for students, shared kitch., ldry., 
bath., internet, summer from $425, fall 

from $600. Call 734‑276‑0886.

2015/16 “PRIME” PARKING
721 S. Forest, 1320 S. University,

520 Packard, 508 Division & 511 E. 

Hoover 734‑761‑8000 primesh.com

!!LG. RMS., Hill St. off State. Prkg. For 

Male. $525/mo. 845‑399‑9904

THESIS EDITING. LANGUAGE,
organization, format. All Disciplines.
734/996‑0566 or writeon@iserv.net 

PARKING

FOR RENT

HELP WANTED

SERVICES

WE HOPE YOU’RE
HAVING A GREAT
SUMMER!

8

Thursday, June 25, 2015
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
NEWS

does not meet 100 percent 

financial aid.

Students who benefit from 

financial aid, however, still have 
a lower graduation rate than 
students who do not receive any 
financial aid.

Sixteen 
percent 
of 
under-

graduates received Pell Grants, 
the federal grant for mainly low-
income students for the 2012-
2013 school year according to the 
Fifth Edition of the Michigan 
Almanac. Similar to other selec-
tive academic institutions, the 
financial makeup of undergradu-
ates is comprised of a majority 
of students from higher-income 
backgrounds.

According to Deborah Greene 

from the Office of Public Affairs, 
the University does not have 
socioeconomic data for all Uni-
versity students on graduation 
rates. In an e-mail to the Daily, 
she said the Office of Budget 
and Planning’s information on 
Pell Grant recipients is the best 
estimate of graduation rate data 
based on Socioeconomic status.

Students receiving Pell Grants, 

who are an economic minority on 
campus and are more likely to be 
lower-income students, graduate 
at lower rates than the Univer-
sity’s average.

In 2008, 85% of students 

receiving Pell grants graduated 
from the University compare to 
the 90% class average. Though 
this is the highest the University 
has seen in recent years, gradua-
tion rates are still low compared 
to class averages.a lot of people to 
come to North Campus, Maddix 
said. “Sometimes, in the library 
world, things are more isolated 
and people don’t get a chance to 
get to North Campus. Also, North 
Campus has amazing facilities 
that we can use.”

One such the facility is the 

UM3D Lab, which had a live 
demonstration of 3D printing. 
The UM3D Lab, part of the Digi-
tal Media Commons at the Dude, 
provides 3D printing access, 
learning and services to the Uni-
versity.

Nathan Diroff, who works in 

the lab, this lab provides services 
such as printing files for people 
who send them, as well as train-
ing people to use 3D printers.

“3D as a medium and as a 

method for production is amaz-
ing,” Diroff said. “Some of these 
things are different human anat-
omy that have never been printed 
in this way before, you can print 
things that have never actually 
existed in the physical realm 
before.”

The art gallery and exhibit will 

remain open in the Duderstadt 
through June 5. the program.”

Drawn in by the diversity of 

course options available to Lib-
eral Studies students, Emma 
Davis, who is also a lecturer and 
dance instructor at UM-Flint, 
enrolled in the program. She said 
the flexibility of the curriculum 
helps her tailor an education that 
fits her needs and that increased 
online offerings will help her 
meet those needs.

“With Liberal Studies, I was 

able to bring my interest in dance, 
community work and writing all 
together to form my own gradu-
ate focus. I shaped my own pro-
gram as opposed to entering a 
program where a strict agenda 
is in place,” she said. “A lot of 
people of are working, including 
myself, while in the program, so 
sometimes it can be hard to come 
straight from work and sit in 
class for three hours in the mid-
dle of the night. The cool thing 
about an online format is now 
work can be done at your own 
time and that really goes along 
with the independent nature of 
Liberal Studies.”

er living ,” she said. “We have 

water bottle refill stations, we 
use LED light bulbs, and there 
are things that are on campus 
like classes and campus farms 
and different programs. And 
these are things that other peo-
ple can do — like turning off the 
water while brushing your teeth. 
Just small things like that.”

Barbara 
Hagan,a 
Univer-

sity sustainability representa-

tive, said similar sustainability 
programs will continue in the 
future.

“We have a direct buying rela-

tionship with the Zilke Farms to 
put into the (residential) halls,” 
said Hagan. “We don’t want to 
add on a bunch of famers and 
then have nobody get business 
from us that’s profitable, so 
we’re going maybe a farmer at 
a time and making sure we can 
absorb all of their crops and 
make it profitable for them.”

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