8

Thursday, June 1, 2017
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
NEWS

ACROSS
1 Wines that can
be white or red
7 Greetings
10 Lighthouse view
13 Widely
recognized
14 Sleep on it
16 Immediate
caregiver, briefly
17 Highlighted
publication part
19 “All Things
Considered” airer
20 Mongrel
21 Brest bestie
22 Howe of hockey
24 Singer DiFranco
25 Halves of some
master-servant
relationships
27 Little pitchers
have big ones,
per an old maxim
28 Pioneering
computer
30 Stick-in-the-mud
33 Cabbage
35 Insect stage
36 Quarterback
Roethlisberger
37 Nice and easy
40 Degree for Dr. Oz
43 Southwestern
lizards
44 Traveling from
gig to gig
46 Score keeper?
51 Takes care of
52 Boss of fashion
53 Procedures
involving suction,
familiarly
55 FDR agency
56 “How nice!”
59 Bridge, e.g.
60 Dandy
61 Sought office
62 What narcs may
do ... or what can
literally be found
in three pairs of
puzzle answers
66 “Microsoft sound”
composer
67 Meanies
68 Result of a big hit
69 Circle div.
70 Vicious of the
Sex Pistols
71 Levels of society

DOWN
1 Short movie?
2 Quebec Winter
Carnival race
vehicle

3 Like some
workers in an
open shop
4 Seeking
exoneration, in a
way
5 Deadlock
6 Skinny sort
7 “I found the
place!”
8 Wrath
9 Deer fellow
10 “Where the Wild
Things Are”
author
11 Rome, once
12 Not moving
14 Chiropractor’s
concern
15 Bother
18 Fish-eating duck
23 Truckee
Meadows city
26 Pioneering PCs
28 Diplomatic HQ
29 “Oh, be quiet!”
31 Composer
Schifrin
32 Secret Service
title
34 Fighter Holly who
ended Ronda
Rousey’s
undefeated
streak

38 Schlep
39 Given as
homework
40 African capital
named for an
American
president
41 Capital on the
Danube
42 Horace’s “__
Poetica”
43 Natural sci.
45 “Copy that”

46 British counties
47 Compassionate
48 Creamy quaff
49 Popular tablets
50 Show up
54 Some Croatians
57 In the past
58 Ballpark fare
63 The Rams of the
Atlantic 10 Conf.
64 Old PC
component
65 Blues-rocker Chris

By Agnes Davidson and C.C. Burnikel
©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
06/01/17

06/01/17

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, June 1, 2017

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

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U-M Dearborn reveals new small business major

By ANDREW HIYAMA

Summer Daily News Editor

Rather than finding an area 

of specialization, students at 

the 
University 
of 
Michigan-

Dearborn College of Business 
will have the opportunity to 
learn how to build their own 
business from the ground up 
with the new small business 

management major that will be 
introduced this upcoming fall.

The program will span a broad 

array of topics in business — 
focusing on all information a 
CEO would need to know — from 

human resource management to 
accounting.

In a press release, Karen 

Strandholm, 
the 
Strategy 

and 
Management 
Studies 

Department Chair at the COB, 
noted 
typical 
curricula 
for 

bachelor’s degrees in business 
don’t 
necessarily 
prepare 

students to establish their own 
startup.

“This 
curriculum 
is 

specifically designed for the 
small 
business 
environment, 

where workers must be flexible,” 
she said. “In a large corporation 
you can be specialized in your 
education, but that’s not really an 
option when starting or running 
a small business. We’ve also 
seen that larger employers are 
interested in graduates with this 
education because they’ll have a 
solid foundation in how business 
works, 
from 
entrepreneurial 

thinking to financial reporting.”

According to the press release, 

the college is implementing the 
major in response to popular 
demand.

Contracted by the COB, the 

Educational 
Advisory 
Board, 

which 
provides 
consulting 

services in the field of education, 
found 
regional 
employers’ 

demand 
for 
employees 
with 

small-business expertise at an 
undergraduate level increased 57 
percent just from 2014 to 2015.

In a message, Colin Meldrum, 

who recently graduated from 
the UM-Dearborn College of 
Business, said he thought in 
addition to being able to start 
your own business, expertise in 
that area could increase appeal 
to employers.

“I think it offers students the 

opportunity to gain a competitive 

advantage by having a unique 
major that lets them stand 
out from the average business 
school graduate,” he wrote. “For 
future entrepreneurs it could 
be quite beneficial to major in 
something like that. Learning 
from experienced entrepreneurs 
could help encourage graduates 
to start their own business.”

Becca Solberg, Business junior 

at the University of Michigan-
Ann Arbor, agreed, saying she 
thought Ross School of Business 
could do more to facilitate small 
business ownership.

“Ross does focus a lot on finance 

in general,” she said. “They bring 
in these huge companies for 
recruiting and stuff, and I feel 
like in my one year at Ross there 
wasn’t 
much 
encouragement 

about starting your own business, 
so maybe some workshops or 
something around that would be 

useful. I mean we are learning the 
skills that could be transferred 
over to starting your own business, 
but I would say in general there’s 
not much encouragement to make 
those strides.”

Strandholm added that even 

if one doesn’t end up starting 
their own business, the purpose 
of the major would give them 
flexibility down the road and a 
skillset that will be useful in any 
venture.

“There is something appealing 

about determining what is right 
for you and having the freedom 
to make that decision,” she said. 
“It’s also an education that you can 
use at any point in your career — 
starting out, deciding mid-career 
that you want to go out on your 
own, or after retirement. Knowing 
how to run a business is a valuable 
skillset to have.”

There is something appealing about 

determining what is right for you 
and having the freedom to make 
that decision. It’s also an education 
that you can use at any point in your 
career — starting out, deciding mid-

career that you want to go out on 

your own, or after retirement.

