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Sudoku Syndication
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4/6/09 10:16 AM

IRON MAN.
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2 — Friday, September 29, 2017
News
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

SAM MOUSIGIAN/Daily

Two Door Cinema Club performs in Grand Rapids Wednesday.

Tweets
Follow @michigandaily

Joe Árvai
@DecisionLab
 
People are freaking out over @
Twitter’s move to 280 characters. 
People in #PuertoRico still need 
drinking water and electricity.

akastrikey
@akatookey

#TakeTheKnee #TakeAKnee It’s 
wild that we have to do anything 
like this to get heard by #umich 
admin. @DrMarkSchilissel wya?

#resistcapitalism
@shakewait

Main Street smells like vomit this 
morning #annarbor

Hakeem J. Jefferson
@hakeemjefferson

Just saw the video of a young 
white man urinating on 
#BlackLivesMatter chalking on @
UMich diag. This behavior cannot 
be tolerated.

 

CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES

Yoga in the Big House

WHAT: Enjoy yoga instruction 
at the Michigan Stadium to 
celebrate the University’s 
bicentennial! Sessions start 
every 30 minutes. Attendants 
are encouraged to bring a mat, 
towel and water bottle.

WHO: MHealthy

WHEN: 3 p.m. to 6 p.m.

WHERE: Michigan Stadium

Redshirt Mass Meeting

WHAT: Learn how to become a 
‘Red Shirt,’ or untrained volunteer 
for SAPAC, before you complete 
training in winter semester and 
find a volunteer group that fits you 
best.

WHO:Sexual Assault and 
Prevention Center

WHEN: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

WHERE: Mason Hall, Room 3463

Friday Flicks: Pirates of 
the Carribbean V

WHAT: Enjoy a free screening of 
the latest installment in Captain 
Jack Sparow’s adventure on the 
high seas.

WHO: Center for Campus 
Involvement

WHEN: 9 p.m. to 11:59 p.m.

WHERE: Michigan Union, 
Kunzel Room

Building Community in 
Detroit&Regional Japan

WHAT: A workshop that 
applies the community design 
lessons learned in earthquake 
and tsunami-struck Ishinomaki, 
Japan, to Detroit communities.

WHO: Center for Japanese 
Studies

WHEN: 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

WHERE: Michigan 
Architecture Prep Studio, Room 
3909

How To Watch Them 
Watching You
WHAT: Five experts will 
speak on the emerging field of 
‘algorithim auditing,’ which 
aims to prevent unwanted 
consequences of algorithmic 
systems used in social media and 
other computing platforms.
WHO: Institute for Social 
Research
WHEN: 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
WHERE: Institute for Social 
Resarch, Room 6050

E-Hour: Rishi Narayan

WHAT: Rishi Narayan, 
founder of Underground 
Printing, will engage and 
network with students while 
speaking about crucial topics in 
entrepreneurship.

WHO: Center for 
Entrepreneurship

WHEN: 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

WHERE: Walgreen Drama 
Center, Stamps Auditorium

Carbon Leaf

WHAT: Live a day ‘less ordinary’ 
with indie rock band Carbon 
Leaf, who is visiting Ann Arbor 
as part of their 2017 U.S. Tour. 
General admission is $25, while 
reserved seating is $32.

WHO: Michigan Union Ticket 
Office

WHEN: 8 p.m.

WHERE: The Ark, 316 S. Main St.

Law Day

WHAT: This fair provides 
undergrads the opportunity 
to network with law school 
representatives all over the 
country and gather information 
about applications, financial aid, 
reference letters and more.

WHO: Newnan LSA Academic 
Advising Center

WHEN: 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

WHERE: Michigan Union, 2nd 
Floor

2 DOOR S

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Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327

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The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the 
University OF Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily’s office 
for $2. Subscriptions for September-April are $250 and year long subscriptions are $275. University affiliates are subject to a 
reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. 

REBECCA LERNER 
Managing Editor rebler@michigandaily.com

ALEXA ST.JOHN 
Managing News Editor alexastj@michigandaily.com

Senior News Editors: Riyah Basha, Tim Cohn, Lydia Murray, 
Nisa Khan, Sophie Sherry
Assistant News Editors: Jordyn Baker, Colin Beresford, Rhea 
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Senior Photo Editors: Zoey Holmstrom, Evan Aaron, Alexis Rankin, 
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Baker, Sam Mousigian, Kevin Zheng

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Senior Social Media Editors: Kayla Waterman and Anna Haritos

Student health may suffer from 

the return of beer and attendant 

intemperate drinking, according to 

a statement issued yesterday by Dr. 

Warren E. Forsythe, director of the 

University Health Service. 

Automobile accidents and bodily 

and mental deterioration are predicted 

for intemperate students by the 

statement which follows:

“One hesitates to say that any 

alcoholic drink is compatible with 

health. Certainly such drinking has 

no health values but injury depends 

upon many variable circumstances. 

In common sense observations it is 

difficult to demonstrate harm from 

temperate use of beverages of low 

alcoholic content but the pathologist 

sees harmful tissue changes 

attributable to prolonged and probably

immoderate drinking of beer. 

Any increase of drinking raises many 

questions of student welfare. Whatever 

may be said in favor of temperate 

drinking, no one can well deny that 

intemperance is harmful to the drinker 

and society generally. Because of 

the physiological effects of alcohol 

and the circumstances under which 

students used to drink, the line between 

temperance and intemperance is a 

difficult one to determine or maintain. 

The return of legal and cheaper beer 

will be a challenge to the good sense 

and self-control of our students. From 

past observations and a knowledge 

of the physiological action of alcohol 

one cannot help but fear that student 

health is going to be injured in several 

ways if drinking increases. An increase 

of physical injuries from automobile 

accidents and an increase of venereal 

infections are particular hazards 

resulting from over drinking.

“It is a nice question as to whether 

or not medical service which is supplied 

upon a co-operative social basis for any 

group should be available for illness and 

injuries resulting from alcoholism.

FRIDAY’S BICENTENNIAL FEATURE: INTEMPERATE BEER-DRINKING 
IS DECLARED HARMFUL TO HEALTH

Civil rights workers discuss history 
of discrimination in Ann Arbor

Community members discussed past and present segregation in Detroit and A2

Thursday 
night, 
about 
70 

students and members of the Ann 
Arbor community gathered in the 
Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library 
to listen to 1960s civil rights 
workers discuss past and present 
segregation in Detroit and Ann 
Arbor. The event focused on how 
the 1967 Detroit riots in Ann Arbor 
and the impact they had on the 
segregation present in Ann Arbor 
at the time. The event was held in 
tandem with the Reverberations 
of Rebellion exhibit currently on 
display in the library to better 
explain this connection.

The discussion was organized by 

Taubman student Joel Batterman 
to help commemorate the 50th 
anniversary of the Detroit riots of 
1967. Batterman, a Ph.D. candidate, 
designed the discussion to explain 
the history of segregation in Ann 

Arbor — something he believes 
a large number of people do not 
understand.

“Because a lot of people don’t 

know about that,” Batterman said. 
“They don’t know the history of 
segregation and inequality in Ann 
Arbor or of the efforts to fight it.”

To help explain this history, 

Batterman worked to gather the 
leaders of the civil rights movement 
in Ann Arbor together to explain 
the important work they had led 
in the fight for equality. The panel 
included Shirley Beckley, Walter 
“Trey” Greene, Anna Holden and 
Alma Wheeler Smith, who all 
worked on desegregation efforts in 
the 1960s and ’70s.

Moderated by History professor 

Matt Lassiter, the panel opened 
with statements by each panelist on 
their personal histories in the civil 
rights movement and moved to 
discussions of segregation in Ann 
Arbor.

Shirley Beckley, a former staff 

member on the Ann Arbor Human 
Relations Commission, spoke about 
growing up in segregated Ann 
Arbor and what being Black meant 
at that time.

“The other thing was that we 

had certain places we could go 
and certain places on Main Street 
that we weren’t allowed to go in 
to different restaurants here,” 
Beckley said.

She 
also 
described 
the 

experience of being forced to sit 
in the balcony of the Michigan 
Theater and the State Theater, as 
Black patrons were not permitted 
to sit close to the front.

After Beckley concluded her 

remarks, former state Rep. Alma 
Wheeler Smith spoke on housing 
segregation in Ann Arbor.

“Ann Arbor, in many respects, 

was as bad as the South,” Wheeler 
Smith said. “It was just not done by 
law, it was done by agreements and 
codes and boundaries.”

Wheeler Smith, the daughter of 

Albert Wheeler, the first Black 
mayor of Ann Arbor and the first 
tenured Black professor at the 
University of Michigan, went on 
to discuss the segregation that 
existed within the University at 
the time.

“The University itself was 

a very segregated place,” she 
said. “We had a population in 
the late ’50s, early ’60s, when 
I was coming into a college of 
about 3 percent Black, and we 
had one Black faculty member 
at the medical school.”

The final two panelists, Anna 

Holden and Trey Greene, spoke 
on civil rights-oriented student 
organizations on campus in the 
1960s. Holden helped lead and 
found the Ann Arbor Congress 
of 
Racial 
Equality. 
Along 

with the NAACP and other 
organizations, she led protests 
against segregated housing to 
the Ann Arbor City Council and 
was eventually arrested for her 
activism.

Read more in The Michigan 
Daily archives online

MORGEN SHOWEN

For the Daily

Read more at 
MichiganDaily.com

