1. January 17, 2022

    Three faculty members to receive Goddard Power awards

    Oveta Fuller and Reshma Jagsi, both of the Medical School, and Bhramar Mukherjee of the School of Public Health will receive 2022 Sarah Goddard Power Awards.

  2. January 17, 2022

    2021 FSA spending deadline extended through Dec. 31

    The university has extended the deadline to Dec. 31 for faculty and staff to use pre-tax funds set aside through their 2021 flexible spending accounts.

  3. January 17, 2022

    Filmmaker got their start early with VHS camcorder

    Charli Brissey, assistant professor of dance in the School of Music, Theatre & Dance, has worked at U-M since 2018 teaching film, composition and technique classes in the dance department.

  4. January 17, 2022

    Heritage Project — Just nuts

    Through the years, the darting, chattering, pandering squirrels have been a happy diversion for U-M students, staff and faculty.

  5. January 17, 2022

    Police Beat — December 2021

    Police Beat for December 2021. 

  6. January 17, 2022

    Campus briefs

    Short news items from around the University of Michigan.

  7. January 14, 2022

    Sustainability goals advance alongside carbon neutrality efforts

    U-M has made progress toward its 2025 sustainability goals for the Ann Arbor campus in many areas, while the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on campus operations continues.

  8. January 13, 2022

    News beats social, alternative media for accurate health information

    Accuracy and truth, according to a new study involving three countries, including the United States, has been found by individuals who rely more on mainstream news.

  9. January 13, 2022

    James Hilton leaving library role to focus on academic innovation

    James Hilton, U-M’s vice provost for academic innovation and university librarian-dean of libraries, will step down from his library role June 30 to more sharply focus on U-M’s academic innovation effort in the vice provost role.

  10. January 12, 2022

    Expert: Views on politics, science drive public response to pandemic

    Political persuasion and trust in science have weighed heavily on mask use and compliance with shelter-in-place policies in the U.S. during the pandemic, according to studies co-authored by a U-M doctoral student in economics.