August 31, 1967 (vol. 0, iss. 1) • Page Image 112
… Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVFRSITY OF MICHiGAN . ~ UNDFt AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Opinions Are Free' 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR. MICH…
… week. . The usual sarcastic comments mut- tered among students about the length of lines and the number of adminis- trative mistakes. were bitter and un- forgiving. Faculty members, particular- ly…
… counselors, were equally outraged as students related horror tales of five hour ordeals in Waterman Gym, often coming after extensive waits in coun- selling lines and the turtle-paced pro- cessional into the…
… the transition will not soon be forgotten. Students, who had not pre-registered were required to pick up their new ID cards in the Administration Building, but the problem was there. With lines winding…
… was the fact that these signs were downstairs and not immediately visible to students. enter- ing the Administration Building. Long waits were unrewarded in Room 102 while 514 held the yellow tickets of…
… all students previously registered during the Winter or Spring semesters. N0 EXCUSE is adequate for ,this fiasco. The University has been planning the changeover for months and knew well in advance the…
… vast numbers of students who would be forced to seek their cards in- the Ad- ministration Building. A multiversity which has not yet realized that small rooms in the basement of a building cannot handle…
…' thousands of students is in sad shape. Administrators too in- considerate to plan ahead deserve every headache resulting from irate stu- dents and registration mistakes. However, recounting the trials and…
… tribulations of a registration nearly over (although one official estimates that "several thousand" will register late) is fruitless. Rumors that 5000 new ID cards were printed up using the students' college…
… receive greater recogni- tion, both financially and with in- creased respect for the importance of uae role. "The primary function' of a university is to serve the students," said Kazarinoff. Insufficient…



