All Headlines

  1. May 24, 1993

    Committee appointed to study flexible benefits options

    A Universitywide advisory committee has begun working with University groups and external consultants to study, plan, design and recommend a flexible benefits program. The Flexible Benefits Advisory Committee (FBAC) is co-chaired by David J. Anderson, professor of electrical and computer engineering and chair of the Advisory Committee on University Budgets (ACUB), and Chandler W. Matthews,…
  2. May 24, 1993

    Antonia Novello wins Athena Award

    Antonia C. Novello, the 14th surgeon general of the U.S. Public Health Service, will receive the Alumnae Council’s 1993 Athena Award. Novello is the first woman and first Hispanic surgeon general. The Athena Award, established in 1973, is presented each year to an alumna for professional excellence and public service. The award will be presented…
  3. May 24, 1993

    Provost Whitaker: we need to turn our special skills of critical analysis inward

    By Mary Jo Frank Faculty, staff and administrators must come to grips with the multiple issues confronting the modern university, an institution whose mission has changed dramatically since its founding in the Middle Ages to train male clergy. Acknowledging an “undercurrent of unease” that permeates today’s campus amid the quiet pursuit of the everyday tasks…
  4. May 24, 1993

    Checkoway, Hartford testify in D.C. about national service proposal

    By Bernie DeGroat News and Information Services If Congress approves President Bill Clinton’s national service plan, the University is prepared to help make it a success, U-M officials told a congressional panel last week. “We and our partners in eastern Michigan have expressed an interest in serving as one of the pilot sites for the…
  5. May 24, 1993

    21st Century program integrates students’ academic, social lives

    By Bernie DeGroat News and Information Services Many minority college students fare poorly academically not because they are ill-prepared or lack proper skills, but because they feel “disconnected” socially from their school. Educators can help those students by focusing less on skill remediation and more on making them feel a part of the academic and…
  6. May 24, 1993

    Summer Festival, June 19–July 11, celebrates 10 years

    By Adam Glaser Ann Arbor Summer Festival This year’s Ann Arbor Summer Arts Festival, set for June 19–July 11, will celebrate the event’s 10th anniversary. The festival will feature a number of performers returning by popular demand from previous seasons, as well as a variety of talent new to the festival stage. As in past…
  7. May 24, 1993

    SERVICE AWARD RECIPIENTS

    The following staff members will behonored for their service to the University at a June 2 banquet. 40 years Jeanne M. Collins, Materiel Services, UMH; Audrey M. Lucas, Medical Campus Human Resources Department, UMH; Dale E. Norris, Electric Shop, Plant Operation; Carl H. Watts Jr., Construction Labor, Plant Operations. 30 years George H. Anderson, Epidemiology,…
  8. May 24, 1993

    Regents grant emeritus status to nine faculty members

    Nine faculty members were given the emeritus title by the Regents at their May meeting. They are: Alan G. Billings, professor of theatre Prof. Billings joined the faculty in 1966 after teaching at the University of Illinois, University of Delaware and the University of Louisville. In 1990 he served as interim chair of the U-M…
  9. May 24, 1993

    Many U policies go beyond requirements of new Family and Medical Leave Act

    The new federal Family and Medical Leave Act “will be a great opportunity to highlight the University’s role as the employer of choice,” says Leslie de Pietro, coordinator of the Family Care Resources Program and chair of the University’s Family and Medical Leave Act Task Force. “It will give us a chance to highlight how…
  10. May 24, 1993

    4 Distinguished Dissertation Award winners share ‘war stories’

    By Kate Kellogg News and Information Services The crisp, linear path of research, writing and defense that should be the doctoral student’s existence, says Gregory S. Carleton, really is “more like mushy cereal with soggy flakes dipping into various extremes of doubt and confidence.” Carleton recently earned his Ph.D. in Slavic languages and literature. Carleton…