archive

  1. December 6, 1993

    Museum will return Native American remains, cultural items

    By Sally Pobojewski News and Information Services At its November meeting, the Board of Regents authorized the University to negotiate with relevant Native American groups in compliance with a federal law that requires universities and museums to return to Native American groups, upon request, human remains and certain cultural objects shown to be affiliated with…
  2. December 6, 1993

    Native American groups contacted by the University

    Acoma (New Mexico); Apache: 8 groups in Arizona, New Mexico and Oklahoma; Arikara, North Dakota; Brule Sioux (South Dakota); Cherokee (North Carolina); Crow (Montana); Hopi (Arizona); Iowa (Oklahoma); Isleta (New Mexico); Jemez (New Mexico); LacVieux (Michigan); Laguna (New Mexico); Navajo (Arizona); Grand Traverse (Michigan); Pawnee (Oklahoma); Gila River Pima (Arizona); Potawatomi (Michigan); Quapaw (Oklahoma); Saginaw…
  3. December 6, 1993

    Researcher studies potential uses of silk-like protein polymer

    By Sally Pobojewski News and Information Services If spiders and silkworms could talk, U-M scientist David Martin has a few questions he’d like to ask. For instance, how and why does a spider change the consistency and chemical structure of its web? How do substances like salt and water cross the membrane barrier into a…
  4. December 6, 1993

    Gov. John Engler to give commencement address

    Gov. John M. Engler will be the main speaker at the University’s winter commencement on Sunday (Dec. 12). Engler and three others—Carl A. Gerstacker, Elie Wiesel and Roger W. Wilkins—will receive honorary degrees. Gerstacker, Wiesel and Wilkins will make brief remarks. Some 2,000 students on the Ann Arbor campus expect their degrees this winter. The…
  5. December 6, 1993

    U-M Press establishes special group for early texts

    The U-M Press has established the Society for Early English and Norse Electronic Texts (SEENET). The society will acquire, produce and disseminate scholarly electronic editions of Old Norse, Old English and Middle English texts. According to U-M Press editor Ellen Bauerle, “SEENET will combine the full capacities of computer technology with the highest standards of…
  6. December 6, 1993

    Information on MLK Day events is due Dec. 15

    This year’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day commemoration (Jan. 17) will incorporate activities under the theme of “American Culture or America the Multicultural?” Units planning events must submit information to Michael Jones-Coleman, MLK Day coordinator, by Dec. 15 to ensure inclusion in the Record’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day calendar, which will be published Jan.…
  7. December 6, 1993

    Group revising smoking policy

    A subcommittee of the University’s Alcohol and Other Drugs Policy Council is working on changes to the University smoking policy that will make the U-M a smoke-free campus. The group’s study of the issue is prompted by new concerns about the health hazards of environmental tobacco smoke. The council reports to George D. Zuidema, vice…
  8. December 6, 1993

    OBITUARIES

    Marshall H. Becker Marshall H. Becker, professor of health behavior and health education at the School of Public Health, died of cancer here on Nov. 26. He was 53. Becker, who also was professor of health behavior at the Medical School, was internationally renowned for his research on patient compliance and psychosocial factors in health…
  9. December 6, 1993

    Statistics poised to increase collaborative activities

    By Jane R. Elgass The addition of three new senior faculty members to the Department of Statistics this fall will further strengthen its teaching and research in applied statistics, and create new opportunities for interdisciplinary work with other U-M units. The new faculty members are Roderick J.A. Little, professor of statistics, and Vijayan N. Nair…
  10. December 6, 1993

    Funding, research for AIDS has increased, Gebbie tells listeners

    By Deborah Gilbert News and Information Services Kristine Gebbie, the Clinton administration’s national AIDS policy coordinator, encountered courteous but passionate desperation among listeners who attended her talk on federal AIDS policy last Thursday night. Gebbie was on campus for events related to World AIDS Day. Her talk was sponsored by the Public Health Student Association.…