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Coming Events

  • Jun 11

    Health Lab Live Show

    A white circle with the number 10 in the middle against a black background

    To celebrate its 10-year anniversary, Health Lab will host the first “Health Lab Live Show,” which will bring two Health Lab articles to life by interviewing experts on stage in front of a live audience while talking trending and interesting health and wellness topics; 11 a.m.-12:15 p.m.; Ford Auditorium

  • Jun 14

    Ann Arbor Japan Week

    Join from June 14 to 20 for free Japan-themed events and activities for all ages; times and locations vary

  • Jun 17

    2026 Campus Juneteenth Events

    Juneteenth Prayer Breakfast (8:30-10 a.m. June 17, Michigan League); Juneteenth Luncheon and Program (noon-1:30 p.m. June 18, Haven Hall, Lemuel Johnson Center); Juneteenth Keynote Lecture (4 p.m. June 18, Chemistry Building); Juneteenth Leadership Panel and Luncheon (noon-1:30 p.m. June 19, Ruthven Administration Building, University Hall)

More Events at Happening@Michigan

Spotlight

Emily Bilek high fives a co-worker
“What’s unique about our training is that we are actually having clinicians face some of their own fears.”

— Emily Bilek, clinical associate professor of psychiatry in the Medical School

Read more about Emily Bilek

It Happened at Michigan

Ralph Nader speaking at Hill Auditorium

A humble class gift that’s witnessed history being made

For more than 100 years, Hill Auditorium has been U-M’s most prestigious venue for rhetoric and debate. And for that same period, dozens of speakers have leaned upon an oak lectern given to the university by students.

Read the full feature

U-M & Los Alamos Research Computing Center

Get ongoing facility updates and learn how U-M is already leveraging these advanced tools to solve global challenges.

Learn more

Michigan in the news

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

    • Ashley Gearhardt

    “People should not require a Ph.D. in nutrition science to identify ultraprocessed foods. We shouldn’t have to be in such a massively rigged system, where we’re all having to work so insanely hard to nourish our bodies — it shouldn’t be this hard,” said Ashley Gearhardt, professor of psychology, whose research shows that nearly three quarters of Americans favor warning labels on ads and packages of ultraprocessed foods.

    CNN
    • Jason Corso

    “We don’t let experimental medical treatments skip clinical trials because patients are desperate for a cure, and we shouldn’t let AI rush to market just because we are dazzled by its potential. As AI transforms our world, it’s time we prioritize real guarantees and transparency over hype and marketing gimmicks,” said Jason Corso, professor of robotics and of electrical engineering and computer science.

    The Detroit News
    • Leah Litman

    “It is so absurd as to be ridiculous. It was always going to be hard to find a worse, more ridiculous DNI than Tulsi Gabbard, and Trump just might have done that. Bill Pulte has zero national security experience. He spent the last 18 or so months just digging up dirt on Donald Trump’s political enemies,” said Leah Litman, professor of law, on President Trump’s choice for director of national intelligence.

    The New Republic
    • Rick Neitzel

    The world generates millions of tons of e-waste from old laptops, cellphones, fitness trackers and other electronic devices each year, and less than a quarter of it is properly recycled. “The way that we’re creating and using and disposing of these devices has generated this completely unsustainable waste stream. And there are no signs of that abating at all. In fact, the trend continues to accelerate,” said Rick Neitzel, professor of environmental health sciences.

    The Independent
    • Savithry Namboodiripad

    Place names with non-English origins often get pronounced differently than their original language would dictate. “We sort of learn (words) in a particular context, and we’re not always connecting it to this other meaning or this other way to analyze that word. This is really common with place names, particularly because we don’t often think about what a place name means,” said Savithry Namboodiripad, associate professor of linguistics, who believes that respecting how longtime residents pronounce their home’s name makes sense in most cases.

    MLive