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Coming Events

  • Apr 3

    Why we explore

    The Leinweber Center for Theoretical Physics Public Lecture, with Rob Meyers of the Perimeter Institute; 4-5 p.m.; Rackham Amphitheatre

  • Apr 4

    Inclusive History Project Summit

    Universitywide summit to explore histories of inclusion and exclusion; 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; Fairlane Center North, UM-Dearborn, 19000 Hubbard Drive

  • Apr 4

    Dear Colleagues

    Join a discussion with legal and policy experts to unpack the legal context of recent executive orders and Department of Education correspondences; noon-1 p.m.; virtual

More Events at Happening@Michigan

Spotlight

Eddie Verdonk
“The moment my pen touched the paper, it was symbolic to me. I was embarking on an arduous, lengthy journey of sobriety and I had an arduous, lengthy artistic endeavor to go along with it.”

— Eddie Verdonk, a patient services associate at Mary Rackham Institute who has explored a variety of artistic mediums throughout his life

Read more about Eddie Verdonk

It Happened at Michigan

A photo of U-M football players and a Block M flag

How maize and blue became U-M’s colors

Blue had been an unofficial color of U-M since the school’s founding, and maize was chosen by students because it provided a nice contrast to the blue. With no standards initially implemented, the hues of the colors varied until a committee commissioned in 1912 by the Board of Regents settled on the current colors.

Read the full feature

Michigan in the news

Some publications may require registration or a paid subscription for full access.

    • Brendan Kochunas

    A new wave of smaller, cheaper nuclear reactors may have a short window to succeed, given the regulatory scrutiny and advances in energy storage technologies to make wind and solar power more reliable and economical, says Brendan Kochunas, assistant professor of nuclear engineering and radiological sciences.

    The Associated Press
    • Joanne Hsu

    Consumer sentiment is at its lowest level in more than two years, after plummeting 12% in March. “Consumers perceive a tremendous amount of uncertainty in the economy — policy uncertainty, market uncertainty, general economic uncertainty,” said Joanne Hsu, director of the Surveys of Consumers. “The fact that expectations worsened across the board suggests that consumers perceive more downside than upside risk for the foreseeable future.”

    The Detroit News
    • Headshot of Brian Stewart

    “Its fragile Afro-alpine ecosystems are crucial to biologists studying biodiversity. Its freshwater resources are southern Africa’s most important. Archaeologically, it is significant,” co-wrote Brian Stewart, associate professor of anthropology and curator of African archaeology at the Museum of Anthropological Archaeology, after Donald Trump described Lesotho as a country that “nobody has ever heard of.”

    Nature