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'You're in!' U-M President Mary Sue Coleman Calls Prospective Students to Offer Congratulations

 

colemancallsstudents.jpg

University of Michigan President Mary Sue Coleman calls accepted students congratulating them.

Photo courtesy of U-M

“Call our house please,” one Facebooker wrote; “I hope she calls my granddaughter soon,” another entreated; “Ooh, still waiting,” posted yet another.

 

Roughly 42,000 people submitted undergraduate applications to U-M this year, an all-time record. In spite of the record-breaking applications, U-M is trying to shrink the size of the freshman class and plans to enroll fewer than 6,000 students.

Most students will find out whether or not they made the cut by early April.

Coleman called about 20 prospective students herself, “encouraging them to attend Michigan,” according to U-M spokesperson Rick Fitzgerald. Coleman calls a select number of accepted applicants each year, he said.

The U-M Medical School employed a similar tactic last December when top school officials hand-delivered select acceptance letters.

“This year we actually went on the road. We went to the cities of some students who are going to be admitted and hand-delivered them their letters of admittance, which the students thought was the greatest thing ever,” said medical school admissions director Robert Ruiz. ‘It’s about having a little bit of fun with an otherwise stressful process.”

Applicants in Dallas, Boston, Washington, D.C., Ann Arbor and East Lansing received in-person acceptances.

Kellie Woodhouse covers higher education for AnnArbor.com. Reach her at kelliewoodhouse@annarbor.com or 734-623-4602 and follow her on twitter.

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On This Day: March 29

Updated March 28, 2012, 2:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On March 29, 1973, the last United States troops left South Vietnam, ending America’s direct military involvement in the Vietnam War.

Go to article »

On March 29, 1867, Cy Young, American professional baseball player, was born. Following his death on Nov. 4, 1955, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1790 John Tyler, the 10th president of the United States, was born in Charles City County, Va.
1867 Baseball Hall of Famer Cy Young was born in Gilmore, Ohio.
1882 The Knights of Columbus was chartered in Connecticut.
1951 Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage for passing nuclear secrets to the Soviet Union.
1962 Jack Paar hosted NBC’s “Tonight Show” for the final time.
1971 Army Lt. William L. Calley Jr. was convicted of murdering at least 22 Vietnamese civilians in the My Lai massacre. (He spent three years under house arrest.)
1971 A jury in Los Angeles recommended the death penalty for Charles Manson and three female followers for the 1969 Tate-La Bianca murders. (The sentences were later commuted.)
1992 Democratic presidential front-runner Bill Clinton acknowledged experimenting with marijuana “a time or two” while attending Oxford University, adding, “I didn’t inhale and I didn’t try it again.”
1999 Wayne Gretzky of the New York Rangers scored the last of his National Hockey League record 894 goals in a home game against the New York Islanders.
1999 The Dow Jones industrial average closed above 10,000 for the first time.
2002 Israel declared Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat an enemy and sent tanks and armored personnel carriers to fully isolate him in his headquarters in the West Bank town of Ramallah.
2006 Hamas formally took over the Palestinian government.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Michel Hazanavicius, Director (“The Artist”)

Director Michel Hazanavicius (“The Artist”) turns 45 years old today.

AP Photo/Vince Bucci

Perry Farrell, Rock singer (Jane’s Addiction)

Rock singer Perry Farrell (Jane’s Addiction) turns 53 years old today.

AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

1927 John McLaughlin, TV host (“The McLaughlin Group”), turns 85
1936 Judith Guest, Author, turns 76
1943 Eric Idle, Comedian (“Monty Python”), turns 69
1943 John Major, Former British prime minister, turns 69
1943 Vangelis, Composer (“Chariots of Fire”), turns 69
1945 Walt Frazier, Basketball Hall of Famer, turns 67
1955 Earl Campbell, Football Hall of Famer, turns 57
1961 Amy Sedaris, Comedian, actress (“Strangers With Candy”), turns 51
1963 Elle Macpherson, Model, turns 49
1967 John Popper, Rock musician (Blues Traveler), turns 45
1968 Lucy Lawless, Actress (“Xena: Warrior Princess”), turns 44
1971 Robert Gibbs, Former White House press secretary, turns 41
1976 Jennifer Capriati, Tennis player, turns 36

 

Historic Birthdays

Cy Young 3/29/1867 – 11/4/1955 American professional baseball player. Go to obituary »
74 Santorio Santorio 3/29/1561 – 2/22/1636
Italian physician; introduced use of precision instruments in medicine
71 John Tyler 3/29/1790 – 1/18/1862
10th president of the United States
80 Isaac Mayer Wise 3/29/1819 – 3/26/1900
Bohemian-born American rabbi; organized Reform Jewish institutions in U.S.
83 Elihu Thomson 3/29/1853 – 3/13/1937
American engineer and inventor; founder of U.S. electrical industry
78 Howard Lindsay 3/29/1889 – 2/11/1968
American playwright, producer and partner of Russel Crouse
83 Jozsef Mindszenty 3/29/1892 – 5/6/1975
Hungarian Roman Catholic priest; opposed totalitarianism
54 Lavrenty Beria 3/29/1899 – 12/23/1953
Russian director of the Soviet secret police
80 Sir William Walton 3/29/1902 – 3/8/1983
English composer
70 E. Power Biggs 3/29/1906 – 3/10/1977
English-born American organist
72 Pearl Bailey 3/29/1918 – 8/17/1990
American singer and entertainer
74 Samuel Moore Walton 3/29/1918 – 4/5/1992
American retail magnate; founded Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

 

 

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March 29

MORNING

“He was numbered with the transgressors.”
Isaiah 53:12

Why did Jesus suffer himself to be enrolled amongst sinners? This wonderful condescension was justified by many powerful reasons. In such a character he could the better become their advocate. In some trials there is an identification of the counsellor with the client, nor can they be looked upon in the eye of the law as apart from one another. Now, when the sinner is brought to the bar, Jesus appears there himself. He stands to answer the accusation. He points to his side, his hands, his feet, and challenges Justice to bring anything against the sinners whom he represents; he pleads his blood, and pleads so triumphantly, being numbered with them and having a part with them, that the Judge proclaims, “Let them go their way; deliver them from going down into the pit, for he hath found a ransom.” Our Lord Jesus was numbered with the transgressors in order that they might feel their hearts drawn towards him. Who can be afraid of one who is written in the same list with us? Surely we may come boldly to him, and confess our guilt. He who is numbered with us cannot condemn us. Was he not put down in the transgressor’s list that we might be written in the red roll of the saints? He was holy, and written among the holy; we were guilty, and numbered among the guilty; he transfers his name from yonder list to this black indictment, and our names are taken from the indictment and written in the roll of acceptance, for there is a complete transfer made between Jesus and his people. All our estate of misery and sin Jesus has taken; and all that Jesus has comes to us. His righteousness, his blood, and everything that he hath he gives us as our dowry. Rejoice, believer, in your union to him who was numbered among the transgressors; and prove that you are truly saved by being manifestly numbered with those who are new creatures in him.

EVENING

“Let us search and try our ways, and turn again to the Lord.”
Lamentations 3:40

The spouse who fondly loves her absent husband longs for his return; a long protracted separation from her lord is a semi-death to her spirit: and so with souls who love the Saviour much, they must see his face, they cannot bear that he should be away upon the mountains of Bether, and no more hold communion with them. A reproaching glance, an uplifted finger will be grievous to loving children, who fear to offend their tender father, and are only happy in his smile. Beloved, it was so once with you. A text of Scripture, a threatening, a touch of the rod of affliction, and you went to your Father’s feet, crying, “Show me wherefore thou contendest with me?” Is it so now? Are you content to follow Jesus afar off? Can you contemplate suspended communion with Christ without alarm? Can you bear to have your Beloved walking contrary to you, because you walk contrary to him? Have your sins separated between you and your God, and is your heart at rest? O let me affectionately warn you, for it is a grievous thing when we can live contentedly without the present enjoyment of the Saviour’s face. Let us labour to feel what an evil thing this is–little love to our own dying Saviour, little joy in our precious Jesus, little fellowship with the Beloved! Hold a true Lent in your souls, while you sorrow over your hardness of heart. Do not stop at sorrow! Remember where you first received salvation. Go at once to the cross. There, and there only, can you get your spirit quickened. No matter how hard, how insensible, how dead we may have become, let us go again in all the rags and poverty, and defilement of our natural condition. Let us clasp that cross, let us look into those languid eyes, let us bathe in that fountain filled with blood–this will bring back to us our first love; this will restore the simplicity of our faith, and the tenderness of our heart.