Today's Headlines
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Teaching Innovation Prizes honor five faculty projects
Five faculty projects that involve innovative approaches to improving student learning will be honored May 6 with Provost’s Teaching Innovation Prizes.
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Chatas: U-M will be a ‘living lab’ for environmental stewardship
In the final Michigan Minds podcast highlighting key impact areas of Vision 2034, Geoff Chatas, executive vice president and chief financial officer, discusses climate action, sustainability and environmental justice.
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CRIME ALERT: Sexual Assault, 04-28-24
Between 6:20-7 p.m., Glen Street Parking Structure (Lot M-61), 333 Glen Ave.
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Enriching Scholarship virtual conference set for May 6‑9
U-M’s 26th annual Enriching Scholarship conference, scheduled for May 6-9 around the theme “Surveying the Now,” aims to highlight the ways technology has changed current classrooms.
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UM‑Dearborn, UM‑Flint host commencement ceremonies
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Lecturers, U-M reach tentative agreement on four-year pact
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University addresses potential commencement protests
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OVPR awards 15 staff members for research service, leadership
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Commencement-related celebrations and parking changes
Coming Events
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Apr 30
Celebrating the Stearns Collection of Musical Instruments
An International and Intertemporal Musicscape; 7:30-9 p.m.; Earl V. Moore Building, Hankinson Rehearsal Hall
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May 1
2024 Research and Analytics Showcase
Explore cutting-edge, educational research at U-M; 4-6 p.m., Center for Academic Innovation
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May 2
“Homecoming”
Bill Jackson Photography Exhibition; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; North Campus Research Complex Building 18, Rotunda Gallery; runs through Aug. 2
Roman’s battle
Roman DiLeo was born in June 2022 with what U-M Health C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital pediatric cardiologist David Peng described as “the most extreme and severe case of newborn dilated cardiomyopathy” he’d ever seen. Roman has had his share of life-saving medical procedures, from heart pumps to a heart transplant. But what his parents didn’t expect was what came after he received his new healthy heart. Like his namesake, professional wrestler Roman Reigns, Roman is not only a fighter but a cancer survivor. This video chronicles young Roman’s battles.
Read more about Roman DiLeoSpotlight
Among those preparing to graduate are Mahalina Dimacali from LSA/School for the Environment and Sustainability; Evan Eidt from the College of Engineering; Ikalanni Jahi from the Penny W. Stamps School of Art & Design; Olivia Jeong from the School of Public Health; Neil Nakkash from the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy; and Hannah Slawson from the School of Nursing
— Each year, the Record highlights the range of experiences and people who attend U-M by profiling selected graduates about their time at the university and their plans for life afterward.
Read more about the seniorsIt Happened at Michigan
Family trees and the ‘striking incidence’ of cancer
For years, U-M pathologist Aldred Scott Warthin studied the lives — and deaths from cancer — of an extended Ann Arbor family. In 1913, he wrote a landmark paper sharing that cancer could be passed on from generation to generation. Warthin’s research became the foundation of what is known as Lynch Syndrome.
Read the full featureMichigan in the news
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“If you are diagnosed with A-fib at any age, but in particular at a younger age, you have been given a great opportunity to now say, ‘OK, what things can I do to help better manage my health and reduce the chance of having a problem later in life?’ I almost think of it like a wake-up call,” said Geoff Barnes, associate professor of cardiovascular medicine, on the rise of atrial fibrillation in people under 65.
The New York Times -
“Climate change is making pollen increase. It’s both increasing the magnitude of pollen, as well as the length and duration of the pollen season,” said Allison Steiner, professor of climate and space sciences and engineering, who notes that severe thunderstorms can break up the pollen into “tinier particles (that) can get into your lungs and can trigger more respiratory distress.”
NBC News -
With tensions over the war in Gaza spilling into workplaces across America, companies are increasingly steering clear of divisive issues — and they expect their employees to do the same. “This is certainly a U-turn from a few years ago when activist employees seemed to be gaining the upper hand,” said Jerry Davis, professor of management and organizations and of sociology.
USA Today