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Spotlight

Mica Harrison Loosemore
“I unwind by doing my art, and some days that’s coloring and some days that’s new creations.”

— Mica Harrison Loosemore, assistant dean of admissions, financial aid and enrollment at the School of Music, Theatre & Dance who loves to create fabric art or textile art

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It Happened at Michigan

A photo of U-M forestry students gathered in trucks in the 1920s.

A forest of knowledge

Following a period in which Michigan’s logging industry cleared acres upon acres of densely packed forests, U-M became the first in the nation to offer courses in forestry in 1881. The School of Forestry and Conservation, now the School for Environment and Sustainability, opened in 1927 with Samuel T. Dana as dean.

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Michigan in the news

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    • Sonja Schuetz

    “A lot of times people feel like, ‘It doesn’t matter how long I sleep. I wake up and feel like a truck ran over me,’” said Sonja Schuetz, clinical associate professor of neurology, about people who experience unrefreshing sleep without a clear underlying medical cause — a phenomenon that seems linked to inadequate deep, restorative rest.

    TIME
    • J. Alex Halderman

    “It’s important to point out that the existence of (ballot) vulnerabilities is not in and of itself evidence that any past election result was compromised. But it’s certainly a concern looking ahead. … Of course, as a voter, the existence of vulnerabilities isn’t a reason not to vote,” said J. Alex Halderman, professor of electrical engineering and computer science.

    National Public Radio
    • Photo of Nicholas Bagley

    “On the one hand, we want (judges) to be nonpartisan, unbiased people who are lawyers, who apply the law without fear or favor. On the other hand, we know that judging is an activity — especially at the (state) Supreme Court level — that entails a lot of political judgment,” said Nicholas Bagley, professor of law. “That ambivalence … has really scrambled our elections, and put us into this, I think, unfortunate spot.”

    Michigan Public