The Michigan Times
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The Michigan Times is the student newspaper at the University of Michigan-Flint. Having been founded in 1956 as the University News, The Michigan Times has seen notables such as Michael Moore [citation needed] on its staff.
In 2003, the university's literary magazine entitled "Qua" was incorporated in The Michigan Times. It has since been reduced from its original magazine form into a two-page spread.
The Michigan Times has a print run of 4,000 papers per 16 Editions each academic year (volume).
In November 2005, national syndicated radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh read a Michigan Times article on his show as part of his "Feminist Update." The article, "MSU professors link hunting with sexual violence" was written by Page W.H. Brousseau IV taken from the November 7, 2005 issue, and focused on a study by Michigan State University professors linking sexual violence with bow hunting.
Contents |
[edit] Editors-in-Chief of The Michigan Times
Term | Editor's Name |
---|---|
2003-Current | Amanda Durish |
2002-2003 | Ray Smith/Jordan Climie |
2000-2002 | Vanessa Ferguson |
[edit] Editors of the Qua
[edit] Pre-acquisition
[edit] Post-acquisition
Term | Editor's Name |
---|---|
2005-2006 | Haley Ely |
2003-2005 & Current | Sarah Durish |
2002-2003 | Nich McInerny |
2002 | Amanda Brousseau |
[edit] 2006 Contributing Writers
Kevin Allen, Danielle Campbell, Ashley Combs, Candace Hough, Dick Sadler, Allison D. Shoup, Jeff Shuel, Liz Sollinger, Mike Stechschulte
[edit] External links
- The Michigan Times Online Edition
- The Michigan Times Business Website
- "MSU professors link hunting with sexual violence" by Page W.H. Brousseau IV. The Michigan Times, November 7, 2005.
- Discussion of "MSU professors link hunting with sexual violence" on FreeRepublic.com.