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Spotlight

Shanelle Boluyt
“When I’m writing, my inner critic is gone, which is nice. I love seeing the story come to life, and sometimes it surprises even me.”

– Shanelle Boluyt, a DevOps business systems analyst for the Institute for Social Research’s Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research who has a passion for writing and has published a novel

Read more about Shanelle Boluyt

It Happened at Michigan

A hockey game at Yost Ice Arena

A century of Yost

When Yost Field House opened its doors on South State Street in 1923, it was the largest indoor collegiate athletic complex in the U.S. In 1973, the university converted the field house into an ice arena and is well known to be an intimidating environment for visiting teams.

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Michigan in the news

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    • Photo of Paolo Pasquariello

    Market watchers see “many echoes of Brexit in the rhetoric and policymaking coming out of the White House these days,” said Paolo Pasquariello, professor of finance. “Brexit has cost the U.K. tens of billions of pounds and much more in missed growth in the last few years alone.”

    Detroit Free Press
    • Raven Garvey

    During a period of unusual activity in Earth’s magnetic field, early humans may have protected themselves from harmful solar radiation using ochre, a natural mineral known for its rich yellow, red and brown hues, said Raven Garvey, associate professor of anthropology: “While archaeologists cannot directly observe the behaviors of peoples who lived over 40,000 years ago, we can hypothesize that the increased use of ochre may have been, in part, for its sun-protective properties.”

    BBC Science Focus
    • Ian Hiskens
    • Michael Craig

    “Batteries are nasty chemical devices that wear out after about 10 years, create enormous environmental damage in mining the materials to produce (them) … and when they’re dumped into landfills,” said Ian Hiskens, professor emeritus of electrical and computer engineering. Michael Craig, assistant professor of energy systems and industrial and operations engineering, is helping to develop battery technologies that can store more power and last longer, eventually getting “to something that’s even longer like hydrogen, which can do hundreds or thousands of hours cheaper and cheaper.” 

    Michigan Public