All Headlines
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April 1, 2026
Obituary — Alfred Lee Nuttall
Alfred Lee Nuttall (Fred), age 82, died peacefully at home, surrounded by loving family, in Portland, Oregon, on Jan. 2, 2026.
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March 31, 2026
Graduate student research assistants to join GEO
Graduate student research assistants at the University of Michigan have voted to join the Graduate Employees’ Organization union.
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March 31, 2026
Look to Leadership: Leading with care in a changing public safety landscape
U-M’s security enhancements are intended to reduce harm by shortening incident response times and supporting thorough, appropriate investigations.
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March 31, 2026
Kent Syverud to begin as University of Michigan president on May 11
Kent Syverud will begin his tenure as U-M’s 16th president on May 11, returning home to U-M’s Ann Arbor campus and marking the start of a new chapter in the university’s leadership.
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March 30, 2026
U-M contributes over $32M to Ann Arbor, local communities
U-M provided more than $32 million in financial support to the city of Ann Arbor in fiscal year 2025, averaging $22.8 million annually over the past five years.
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March 30, 2026
It Happened at Michigan: Mollie Graham was first Black woman to be admitted to U-M
In the spring of 1880, 22-year-old Graham was in her final semester at U-M. Her academic focus was Latin and science, she understood German and French, and she hoped for a career as a journalist.
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March 30, 2026
David Ginsburg to deliver 101st Henry Russel Lecture
Ginsburg, one of the nation’s leading scholars in the molecular genetics of bleeding and clotting disorders, will reveal new insights into the pathogenesis of heart and blood diseases.
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March 30, 2026
Pharmacy associate professor works to make oncology care accessible to all
Bernard Marini, who works as a clinical pharmacy specialist in hematology at Michigan Medicine, knows his patients receive world-class care. But others, outside of U-M don’t. He’s working to change that.
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March 30, 2026
UM-Dearborn study asks: Does polluted air dampen your mood?
After a recent article suggested bird singing patterns were negatively affected by poor air quality and smoke exposure, UM-Dearborn researchers posed the logical question: How does poor air quality impact humans?
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March 30, 2026
Campus briefs
Short news items from around the University of Michigan.
