Search Results

Search Constraints

Search Results

January 09, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 81) • Page Image 3

…The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 9, 1983-Page 3 Writing Workshop earns good grades TUESDAY LUNCH DISCUSSION 12 NOON--JANUARY 11 (Everyone Welcome) "NEWS REPORING IN THE MIDDLE EAST" Speaker: ROBIN WRIGHT, World News Correspondent in the Middle East I y PAMELA CHEN It's three weeks until due date, and your paper extolling the virtues of small curd cottage cheese just doesn't seem like A-plus material. What do you do? You could blow it of...…

January 11, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 82) • Page Image 3

…Peace plan in Mideast urgent, The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, January 11, 1983-Page 3 Reagan eyes tax hikes to cure budget crisis says 'U' By LAURIE DELATER "The United States must not be lulled into short-term optimism" because most of the fighting in. Lebanon has ceased, the Middle East correspondent for the Sunday Times of London said at the University Sunday., Robin Wright, a 1971 Michigan graduate, expressed the urgency of im- plementing Pr...…

January 12, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 83) • Page Image 3

…The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, January 12, 1983-Page 3 Sing Sing seige ends; officials to make changes OSSINGING, N.Y. (AP) - Guards buttoned up the old Sing Sing prison yesterday, while 17 freed hostages got medical checkups and the state's prison boss began correcting some of the con- ditions that led to the 53-hour siege of Cell Block B. After a morning inspection tour, State Correction Commissioner Thomas Coughlin said rebellious prisoners...…

January 13, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 84) • Page Image 3

…Nobel Laureate warns against arms build up -Thursday, January 13, 1983-Page 3 Six MSU students disciplined By THOMAS MILLER At no time in history has the threat of world destruction been greater, and people must act now to avert catastrophe, Nobel Prize laureate George Wald told a Rackham gathering last night. "The most important problem today is how to keep the human race from wiping itself out," Wald said in the year's first University Act...…

January 14, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 85) • Page Image 3

…The Michigan Daily-Friday, January 14, 1983-Page 3 i I Local, performers to aid anti-nuke movement, By HALLE CZECHOWSKI University students will be giving the arms race the old song and dance this month at a benefit to aid the local nuclear disarmament movement. Local singers, dancers, speakers and performers will gather at the Union Jan. 29 in an effort to raise money for several nuclear disarmament groups, such as the Interfaith Council fo...…

January 15, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 86) • Page Image 3

…Colleges respond to the call of technology I The Michigan Daily-Saturday, January 15, 1983-Page 3 Inte fex trial end s; jug' NEW YORK (AP) - Peter Karle, a senior at Chaminade High School in Mineola, N.Y., faced a tough choice this winter as he tried to decide what sort of college was right for him. His dilemma is shared by many high school seniors around the country; he thinks of himself as a liberal arts student. But he also has a passion...…

January 16, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 87) • Page Image 3

…-H APPENINGS- Sunday Highlight The University of Michigan Canoe/Kayak Club is holding an open house for all of you who have ever wanted to sit in a kayak but were afraid to try. Today, from 10 a.m. to noon, at the North Campus Recreation Center, poten- tial kayakers and canoers can try their hand at the two water sports on a nice, placid, indoor pool, which is a lot better than trying it on the Huron River. Films Cinema Guild - The Kid, 7 p.m....…

January 18, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 88) • Page Image 3

…University reaff irs 'S.African ivestment policy By FANNIE WEINSTEN Rather than 4comply with legislation requiring state colleges to divest from companies operating in racially- segregated South Africa, the University yesterday reaffirmed its plans to con- tinue to simply ask these companies to abandon discriminatory practices. 'Our first objective is to get change,'' University Chief °Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff told the faculty Senat...…

January 19, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 89) • Page Image 3

…The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, January 19, 1983-Page 3 Supreme Court to decide on home video taping law WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court, soon to decide whether millions of Americans are illegally taping television shows, was told yesterday that makers of home video recorders "have infected this country with the knowledge that causes copyright in- fringement." Stephen Kroft, a lawyer for two copyright-owning movie companies locked in a bi...…

January 20, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 90) • Page Image 3

…The Michigan Daily-Thursday, January 20, 1983-Page 3 HAPENIGS-Grad. dean criticizes' u., n A kXl£fW) A XYM LIA M t iT.n*iv r tit rda d rtments. Sussman said. And s ra the study does no~t do Highlight The University Regents will hold their January meeting at 10 a.m. in the Regents Room of the Administration Building. Films AAFC - Taxi Zum Klo, 7 & 9 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Cinema Guild - Z, 6 & 9:50 p.m., Basic Training, 8:15 p.m., Lorch Hall. ...…

January 21, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 91) • Page Image 3

…Ann Arbor Inn ,goes Vegas for The Michigan Daily-Friday, January 21, 1983-Page 3 Dem hopefuls spar politely in mayoral debate Mich. T By REBECCA BERNARD The Ann Arbor Inn may be a long way from Las Vegas, but gambling fans can go there to get a taste of the casino life tonight and tomorrow at the second an- nual Millionaires' Party benefit for the Michigan Theatre. For a $5 cover . charge, partygoers can pick up a free drink and the chance ...…

January 22, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 92) • Page Image 3

…'U' prof says Riley case may hurt court image The Michigan Daily-Saturday, January 22, 1983-Page 3 U.S. open to Soviet ideas for arms reduction LANSING (UPI) - An attorney representing former Gov. William Milliken suggested in a brief filed yesterday that the reputation of the Michigan Supreme Court could be af- fected on how it handles the case of Justice Dorothy Riley. James White, a reknowned Univer- sity of Michigan law professor, made t...…

January 23, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 93) • Page Image 3

…The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 23, 1983-Page 3, Ren Cen defaults, faces unsure financial future DETROIT (UPI) - The glittering silver-glass towers of the Renaissance Center, designed to reflect the city's rebirth from turmoil of the late 1960s, are now tarnished by mortgage default and an uncertain financial future. Sitting on Detroit's riverfront, the massive office-hotel complex was sup- posed to mark a new life for the city's sagging ...…

January 25, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 94) • Page Image 3

…No progress made in ,Lebanon-Israeli talks The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, January 25, 1983-Page 3 - From AP and UPI KHALDE, Lebanon - Israel and Lebanon disagreed over early warning stations and normalizing relations at yesterday's session of U.S.-sponsored negotiations on withdrawal of foreign troops from Lebanon. The private Lebanese Central News gency said the Israeli delegation in- sisted on: " Total withdrawal of PLO guerrillas from northe...…

January 26, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 95) • Page Image 3

…The'Michigan Daily-Wednesday, January 26, 1983-Page 3 Conference exhibits jobs for minorities, disabled By TRACEY MILLER Highlighted by a slide show for em- ployers who might be interested in hiring handicapped workers, the ninth annual Career Conference for minority and disabled students got off to a strong start yesterday at the Michigan League. "Equal to the Task," presented by theDupont Co., stressed the capability of disabled employ...…

January 27, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 96) • Page Image 3

…-H APPENINGS- Highlight Electrical Engineering Prof. Tom Senior and campus minister Don Coleman will be the featured speakers at tonight's "Issues on Campus" forum. Senior, a member of the University's Research Policies Committee, and Coleman, a representative of Guild House, will discuss "Military Research and the University of Michigan" at the Campus Chapel, 1236 Washtenaw Court, beginning at 7:30 p.m. Films Cinema Guild - The Birth of a Nat...…

January 28, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 97) • Page Image 3

…d k The Michigan Daily-Friday, January 28, 1983-Page 4 Mubarak presses From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak told President Reagan yesterday that time is running out for peace in the Middle East and the United States has a special responsibility to make sure the "golden opportunity" is not missed. The White House meeting between the two presidents produced agreement that the im- passe in negotiations on the withdraw...…

January 29, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 98) • Page Image 3

…Forum explores ,horrors of war in the, ..Me Mideast $y LAURIE DELATER War is the most unimaginative way of Solving problems and inevitably leads to uman suffering, peace advocate Richard Cleaver said yesterday at a forum on the human dimension of the year in Lebanon. The forum, which also featured Paul Hopkins, Mideast representative of the United Presbyterian Church, was part of a two-day conference. titled, "In Search of a Near East Settleme...…

January 30, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 99) • Page Image 3

…Officials celebrate opening of A2 A 2train station By SCOTT KASHKIN Amid the pops of champagne corks and the snipping of a ribbon, Ann Ar- bor's premier train station staged its grand opening yesterday on Depot Street. The modern $725,000 facility, located next to the restaurant which was once its predecessor, provides increased space for baggage services, a larger passenger waiting area, and access for the physically handicapped,. ONE OF THE ...…

January 05, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 77) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, January 5, 1983 The Michiga an Daily Greel The Rev. Andrew Greeley isn't exactly what the Vatican would call an ideal priest. Besides writing a syndicated column that consistently ignites controversy within the Catholic church, Greeley churns out best-selling novels about the sex lives of priests. Although some Catholics find his two books, Car- dinal Sins and Thy Brother's Wife, cheap exploitation, Greeley c...…

January 06, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 78) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Thursday, January 6, 1983 The Michigan Daily Democrats in'84: Open for auditions 4 By Jon Weiss Ever since Ted Kennedy decided to. withdraw from the upcoming presiden- tial race, the media has been buzzing about all the different candidates who have a chance for the Democratic nomination in 1984. I'm no political know-it-all, but I can tell something's wrong with the stiffs who now are being pushed on us. Take the Democra...…

January 07, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 79) • Page Image 4

…OPINION Page 4 Friday, January 7, 1983 The Michigan Daily Jesse Helms: How the mighty fall By Michael Caro witz His name carried a lot of weight in Washington's halls of power a year and a half ago. His endorsement or op- position to a congressional bill was a force to be reckoned with. But while the beginning of the 97th Session of Congress brought Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina to the zenith of his influence, the end of that session...…

January 08, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 80) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Saturday, January 8, 1983 The Michigan Daily ., , Looking for ways to eliminate poverty 4 By Da n Aronoff Indignation and alarm over poverty and suf- fering is one thing; constructive criticism of current policies and intelligent proposals for change are quite another. Unfortunately, in these troubled times we hear much of the fMr- mer, but almost nothing of the latter. Everybody is upset and concerned about pover...…

January 09, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 81) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Sunday, January 9, 1983 The Michigan Daily Decisions on a forest and a fire A FTER MONTHS of demonstrations, investigations, and rumors, the verdict finally came: The University's top budget committee had recommended massive changes-and massive budget cuts-at the School of Natural Resources. The proposals of the Budget Priorities Com- mittee, made public Thursday, would cut the school's budget by 30 percent, greatly reduce ...…

January 11, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 82) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Tuesday, January 11, 1983 The Michigan Daily Is Helms a statesman or a Scrooge? By Dan Aronoff recovery in the near future. Disagree with his traditional Keynesian practice. In some objec- 1 1HOU tIf W A Asupply-side theories as you wish, but you can't tive sense, Jesse Helms and the other suppor- Anyone who read a newspaper or watched hdeny that the issue Sen. Helms addessed is one ters of his filibuster may be the only tel...…

January 12, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 83) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, January 12, 1983 The Michigan Daily -4 Arroyo: Insecurity, alienation, hope On Christmas Eve, 1981, the Economics Building burned to the ground. On January 7, 1983, Arthur Arroyo, former University em- ployee, was sentenced to five to ten years for starting the blaze. ' Although friends claimed that Arroyo set the fire because of a grudge against the University, he says his crime was part of his com- plicated...…

January 13, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 84) • Page Image 4

…I OPINION Page4 Thursday, January 13, 1983 The Michigan Daily Question for 1984: Will Ronnie run? By Michael Caro witz Although the thought of electing a,-president in 1984 may be the farthest thing from most American minds, it is a leading topic of conver- sation in Washington. The hopes and prospects of many potential candidates hinge on a single question: Will President Reagan run seek re- election? President Reagan's personal popula...…

January 14, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 85) • Page Image 4

…OPINION Page 4 Friday, January 14, 1983 The Michigan Daily Making up (an exam) is hard to do By Chuck Jaffe On December 14, LSA junior Rick Erwin's right lung collapsed. So did his hopes for a solid academic term. The physical and academic collapse that oc- curred on the first day of final exams last term was the result of circumstances beyond Er- win's control. His lung lost pressure when a blister popped on its surface. The grades col...…

January 15, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 86) • Page Image 4

…OPINION 6 4 - Page 4 Saturday, January 15, 1983 Reagan, Andro ov: Ready, set, sui q By Helen Thomas WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan is beginning the new year with at new, more aggressive search for a nuclear arms reduction agreement w.ith the Soviets. There are also strong signs in the hwindthat a summit meeting may be ;: shaping up in the coming months bet- ween Reagan and Soviet President Yuri Andropov, if only to take each othe...…

January 16, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 87) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Sunday, January 16, 1983 The Michigan Daily Blanchard: New face, same old cuts then to the Regents. All the above are expectec g TOOKTHEMatwhewcuseyk tbacked chair s ad changes its mind. A group of citizens are to approve the report with only minor changes. chauffered limosines, but once they were pressing for a ballot proposal which would through with all the inaugural wining and declare Ann Arbor a "nuclear free zone." dini...…

January 18, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 88) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page4Tuesday, January 18, 1983 The Michigan Daily 4 Running the 'U' like the Germans do By Robert Hon igman "Iprotest to you, gentlemen, that if I had to choose between a so-called university, which dispensed with residence and tutorial superintendence, and gave its degree to any person who passed an examination in a wide range of subjects, and a university which had no professors or examinations at all, but merely brought a nu...…

January 19, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 89) • Page Image 4

…I OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, January 19, 1983 The Michigan Daily Israeli peace drive: hanging ideas 4 How strong is the Israeli peace movement? Strong enough to -change ideas, perhaps, if not gover- nments, according to Dan Amit, one of the founders of the Commit- tee Against the War in Lebanon. Amit, who spoke on campus last week for the New Jewish Agenda, told Daily staff writers Julie Hinds .and David Spak about the peace movement's resp...…

January 20, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 90) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Thursday, January 20, 1983 The Michigan Daily Will Hollings be the man of the hour? By Michael Caro witz With most attention being focused on the ,early frontrunners, the Democratic Party may nd up overlooking one of its strongest possible x ontenders for the White House. For all of his experience as a U.S. Senator and a former pgovernor, Ernest Hollings of South Carolina still finds himself relatively unknown to the ~gen...…

January 21, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 91) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Pge Friday, January 21, 1983 The Michigan Daily Who'll speak for the trees? a / / /1' >> 1 >> ( ,:: 1 . ti 4 By Lani Wiegand LANSING (UPI) - Who will speak for environmental causes? Michigan groups that have pushed for stricter pollution laws and more statutes governing hazardous waste handling and disposal have to be won- dering that right now. WHEN 1982 became 1983, the four people they had counted on to champion such issues ...…

January 22, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 92) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Saturday, January 22, 1983 The Michigan Daily Roe v. Wade: Ten years later By Richard Carelli WASHINGTON - It began with an un- married woman, known only as "Jane Roe," who was too poor to leave Texas to end her un- wanted pregnancy. So she stayed home and gave birth. Then she challenged the state law that outlawed the abortion she would have b preferred. a Jane Roe didn't know it when she went to court, but she was ...…

January 23, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 93) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Sunday, January 23, 1983 The Michigan Daily Pot law, registration: A call to arms I THE ANN ARBOR City Council drew the battle lines Monday night for the upcoming city elections: It'll be Conservatism vs. Apathy to see which of America's two greatest powers will take credit for obliterating the city's last remnant of war-era progressivism., On the one side is Field Marshal Louis von Belcher and the forces of evil fight...…

January 25, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 94) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Tuesday, January 25, 1983 The Michigan Daily 4 Reagan: (Red) scaring the freeze By Katherine Gee and Howard Simon The nuclear freeze movement has become the target of a Reagan ad- ministration "red-scare" campaign. In a throwback to the tactics of Mc- Carthyism, the President is attempting to discredit the freeze movement by branding it as a Soviet front. REAGAN had initially taken a rather conciliatory position on t...…

January 26, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 95) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, January 26, 1983 The Michigan Daily 4.. 4' Sinclair A Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCIII, No. 95 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 I' Editorial' represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Coercing the refusniks N CsNG t 6 k'y ; tJ f J.c ' r o'er s r i I a HE REGULATIONS are simple enough: If you don't register for fhe draft, you don't receive fi...…

January 27, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 96) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Thursday, January 27, 1982 The Michigan Daily A better argument for Roe v. Wade i Ten years ago last week the Supreme Court, speaking through Justice Harry Blackmun, legalized abortion in the highly controversial case of Roe v. Wade. The abortion debate was a hot topic of discussion before Roe, and has been even hot- ter since. Daily staff writer David Spak interviewed University Law Prof. Donald Regan this week about th...…

January 28, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 97) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Friday, January 28, 1983 The Michigan Daily Reagan joins real world, drops rhetoric By Helen Thomas WASHINGTON - President Reagan, seeking to-show that he is in touch with suf- ering America, is planning to hit the road more often to sell his new belt-tightening policy. Reagan laid out a program in his State of the Union address that spreads the sacrifice and nakes no big promises of a quick economic recovery. STILL, HIS Rep...…

January 29, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 98) • Page Image 4

…OPINION Page 4 Saturday, January 29, 1983 The Michigan Daily The facade of democracy in Costa Rica 4 C 1 By Matthew P. Levine SSpecial to the Daily ., SAN JOSE, Costa Rica-Democracy is a mighty system, but it basically consists of only two things: The right of the majority to choose its leaders, and the right of the minority to fun- -. ction legally in the attempt to become the majority. * There are two structural reenforcements to ,,,,,...…

January 30, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 99) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Sunday, January 30, 1983 The Michigan Daily NR students: Revolutionary tactics T HE ACTS of desperate men are sometimesothe Regents in November 1981. Although some crazed. Certainly those School of Natural But you should have seen them last week. Regents have expressed dissatisfaction with Resources students feeling the cold steel of the Pacing and fretting. That's when they thought the proposal, Regent Deane Baker admitted ...…

January 05, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 77) • Page Image 5

… Thieves active over Christmas The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, January 5, 1983-Page 5 Band marches away with a rosy award By JERRY ALIOTTA The Christmas holidays, normally a time of giving, were a time of taking, too, according to Ann Arbor police. Thousands of dollars worth of Kmer- thandise was nabbed during the several break-ins that occurred over Vacation. "Easy to peddle items with good resale value, such as stereo equipment, cameras and ...…

January 06, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 78) • Page Image 5

…ARTS Thursday, January 6, 1983 The Michigan Doily To otsie's n o drag By Joshua Bilmes F YOU ARE looking for an excuse not to see Tootsie, here's the only one I-could think of: Much of the film Will probably be shown as clips on this year's Academy Awards show. Besides etting a number of the acting ominations, Tootsie itself is sure to be nominated as Best Picture. This Oscar'candidate opens with a montage of scenes that show Dustin Hoff...…

January 07, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 79) • Page Image 5

…The Michigan Daily-Friday, January 7, 1983-Page 5 Record number of auto workers face layoffs DETROIT (UPI) - Domestic automakers yesterday started off the new year by announcing record in- } definite layoffs for next week of 269,400,, the seventh consecutive week in which a record will be set for the current slump. The new layoff figure is up by 40 ,people from the 269,360 workers who were on indefinite layoff at the end of 11982, which had ...…

January 08, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 80) • Page Image 5

…Quakes hit Calif. The Michigan Daily-Saturday, January 8, 1983-Page 5 ; I. ovo canic activity suspected MAMMOTH LAKES, Calif. (AP) - Hundreds of earthquakes rumbled for a second day yesterday through this Sierra Nevada ski resort, which since May has been under official notice of "potential volcanic hazard." Geologists stressed they haven't determined whether the earthquakes were associated with underground volcanic activity. MORE THAN 1,0...…

January 09, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 81) • Page Image 5

…ARTS The Michigan Daily -Sunday, January 9, 1983 Page 5 Four strings strong 3 Guitarist David Bromberg brings his mix of country, blues, and folk music to the Sixth Ann Arbor Folk Festival next Saturday at the Michigan Theatre. Folk festivalfeatures fine fiddling oot-stom in fun By Katie Brewer N INETEEN YEARS ago at a music festival in Vermont a classical tradition was established; the Guarneri String Quartet, what is now the oldest st...…

January 11, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 82) • Page Image 5

…ARTS 'he Michigan Daily Tuesday, January 11, 1983 I Guarneri: Page 5 Magic "0s101 mu0 cal moments Pianist performs at Union Arts Program NORTH CAMPUS may seem like a vast wasteland to some of you, but to a myriad of music students, it's a haven where one can hone and refine raw talent. That's hopefully what oc- curs when a student finally graduates from the music school. Toni-Marie Montgomery will demon- strate all she has learned w...…

January 12, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 83) • Page Image 5

…ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, January 12, 1983 Page 5 Best friends are not enough By Joshua Bilmes BEST Friends should have been one of the best comedies the world has ever seen. A glance through the credits shows that all the elements for that to happen are present. Norman Jewison is an undoubtedly talented director. Burt Reynolds and Goldie Hawn look as if they should be one of Hollywood's greatest teams ever. The supporting cas...…

January 13, 1983 (vol. 93, iss. 84) • Page Image 5

…ARTS The Michigan Daily Thursday, January 13, 1983 Page 5 Dancers have fun at work By Coleen Egan T HERE ARE NO bright-yellow hardhats visible. Only sweat- drenched heads of hair can be seen. The ear-drum breaking sound of the jack- hammer is missing too. In their place one hears only deep breathing and the sliding and squeaking of bare feet on a wood floor. The flourescent-orange cones and the huge diamond-shaped highway signs are absent...…

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan