archive

  1. April 26, 1993

    DATELINE: WASHINGTON

    ‘Budget consistent with earlier blueprints’ By Laurie Fenlason Office of Federal Relations While he’s unwilling to declare any book weighing five pounds and containing 1,400+ pages “free of surprises,” Tom Butts describes President Bill Clinton’s proposed 1994 budget as “consistent with earlier administration blueprints.” (And that’s the good news.) “Trying to effect deficit reduction, while…
  2. April 19, 1993

    Regents name four engineering faculty to endowed professorships

    Four College of Engineering faculty members have been named to endowed professorships: Yoram Koren, professor of mechanical engineering and applied mechanics, also will hold the Paul G. Goebel Professorship of Engineering. Fawwaz T. Ulaby, professor of electrical engineering and computer science, also will be the R. Jamison and Betty Williams Professor of Engineering. Kensall D.…
  3. April 19, 1993

    LS&A faculty members face tough homework assignment

    By Mary Jo Frank As homework assignments go, it’s a tough one: create courses in the natural sciences, social sciences and humanities to meet a proposed new quantitative reasoning requirement for all LS&A students. The courses must be intellectually rigorous yet attractive enough to entice the 25 percent of LS&A students who systematically avoid math.…
  4. April 19, 1993

    Students get first crack at tickets

    Student tickets for the University of Michigan spring commencement May 1 at Michigan Stadium will be distributed beginning April 26. Commencement ceremonies featuring first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton as speaker will start at 11 a.m. All persons attending must have tickets to enter the stadium. The all-University program will be open to graduating students from…
  5. April 19, 1993

    GREEN gets $1.35 million NSF grant to expand program

    By Kate Kellogg News and Information Services The University has received a $1.35 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to expand and enhance a watershed studies program that links secondary school students and teachers throughout the world. The three-year grant will enable the Global Rivers Environmental Education Network (GREEN) to develop the Teacher…
  6. April 19, 1993

    Multiculturalism requires open, honest discussions

    By Jane R. Elgass While many people believe there has been a great deal of progress in enhancing the status of underrepresented minorities since the civil rights struggles of the 1960s, this is not the case, according to Harold R. Johnson, special counsel to the president. In fact, Johnson says, he has a “passionate concern…
  7. April 19, 1993

    Weick to give Katz Newcomb Lecture April 23

    Karl E. Weick, the Rensis Likert Collegiate Professor of Organizational Behavior and Psychology in the School of Business Administration, will give the 21st annual Katz Newcomb Lecture in Social Psychology at 4 p.m. Friday (April 23) in Rackham Amphitheater. In his lecture “ ‘Young Men and Fire’—Rethinking Organizational Theory,” Weick will discuss how assumptions often…
  8. April 19, 1993

    Humanities Institute marks 5 years with conference on collaboration

    By Bernie DeGroat News and Information Services The Institute for the Humanities will celebrate its fifth anniversary with a free, public conference Friday–Sunday (April 23–25) at Assembly Hall, Rackham Building. The Institute’s “Conference on Collaboration” will explore why humanities professors continue to pursue specialized, rather than broad-based, research. “The rewards that individual scholars seek—money, tenure,…
  9. April 19, 1993

    U-M Press strives to publish high-quality academic selections

    Editor’s Note: The Record each month carries a listing of books published by the U-M Press. We hope our readers enjoy this look into what’s behind the book titles. This month’s listing appears on page 8. By Rebecca A. Doyle What has stacks and stacks of books but is not a library? Where at the…
  10. April 19, 1993

    Hillary Clinton to give commencement address

    A crowd of more than 50,000—graduating students and their families and friends—will stream into Michigan Stadium May 1 for spring commencement, where Hillary Rodham Clinton will become the first first lady to give a U-M commencement address. When she and candidate Bill Clinton were on campus in October, more than 13,000 students and community residents…