October 21, 2020

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Coming Events

  • Oct 19

    Attend at Home — Week of Oct. 19

    Each week, U-M’s Arts & Culture website highlights selected virtual events or exhibitions around the university.

    This week includes: Clements Library presents “Race, Gender and Rights”; UMS and Ford School present “A Conversation with Trevor Noah”; Reimagining Detroit’s Museum and Cultural District; ISR Insights: Perspectives on the 2020 Presidential Election; John Lewis: The Legacy of a Life Lived in Good Trouble.

  • Oct 21

    “Me, the ‘Other'” panel discussion

    A look at the documentary film about otherness and oneness featuring twelve diverse students living in Washtenaw County, 7-8:30 p.m.

  • Oct 22

    Perspectives on the 2020 Presidential Election

    Panel discussion with Jenna Bednar, Vincent Hutchings, and Angela Ocampo, 4-5:30 p.m.

  • Oct 22

    Reimagining Detroit’s Museum and Cultural District

    Panelists will share their insights on the Detroit Square design proposal, 4-5:30 p.m.

More Events at Happening@Michigan

Faculty/Staff Spotlight

Colleen Stone
“Really being intentional about exercising is so important right now, for my mental health and my physical well-being.”

Colleen Stone, content and digital strategist for the Department of Surgery at Michigan Medicine and avid runner

Read more about Colleen Stone

This Week in U-M History

Business Dean B. Joseph White was named interim president on Oct. 19, 2001, after Lee C. Bollinger resigned.

Interim president

Business Dean B. Joseph White was named interim president on Oct. 19, 2001, after Lee C. Bollinger resigned. Read about some of the other things that happened in U-M history during the week of Oct. 12-18.

Read more about U-M in History

Michigan in the news

    • Headshot of Karyn Lacy

    “I think if this were 1950, his message would be perfect. The problem is it’s not 1950,” said Karyn Lacy, professor of sociology and Afroamerican and African studies, on President Trump’s pitch to try to reclaim suburban female voters by relying on an airbrushed version of America’s past.

    The Associated Press
    • Headshot of Stephanie Preston

    “I think people are trying to protect their own interests, which in some ways is rational. Even if it can cause what they call a ‘commons problem,’ where then there’s not enough for everybody,” said Stephanie Preston, professor of psychology, commenting on a number of countries that are stockpiling for an uncertain pandemic season amid concerns over whether the global supply chain for food can remain intact as COVID-19 cases rise worldwide.

    Marketplace
    • Photo of Arnold Monto

    “If you are not very sick and believe you have not had contact with somebody who might have COVID, then I would not necessarily go get a test or anything like that if you have mild respiratory symptoms. (But) if you are having an illness with cough and respiratory difficulty, you better get tested,” said Arnold Monto, professor of epidemiology, who believes that testing for COVID-19, the flu or a cold should be done on a case-by-case basis.

    The Washington Post