All Headlines

  1. May 2, 2016

    Accolades

    Awards and honors for U-M faculty and staff.

  2. May 2, 2016

    Campus briefs

    News from around the university.

  3. May 2, 2016

    Higher ed briefs

    News from other Michigan public universities and U-M peer institutions across the nation.

  4. April 30, 2016

    Study examines surgical skill and weight loss surgery success

    Poor surgical skills during bariatric surgery have a quick impact on patients, landing some in emergency departments for bleeding and infection once the operation is over.

  5. April 30, 2016

    Sugar shock: Insulin costs tripled in 10 years, study finds

    People with diabetes who rely on insulin have seen the cost of that drug triple in just a decade — even as doctors have prescribed higher doses to drive down their blood sugar levels.

  6. April 30, 2016

    Commencement speaker Bloomberg calls out intolerance, demagoguery

    Business leader and former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg urged U-M graduates to guard against intolerance and demagoguery during his Spring Commencement address Saturday.

  7. April 29, 2016

    Obituary: Maxwell Reade

    After 100 years and two days, Professor Emeritus Maxwell O. Reade died April 13.

  8. April 29, 2016

    One oil field a key culprit in global ethane gas increase

    A single U.S. shale oil field is responsible for much of the past decade’s increase in global atmospheric levels of ethane, a gas that can damage air quality and impact climate, according to new study led by the University of Michigan.

  9. April 29, 2016

    Landslide risk remains high a year after magnitude-7.8 Nepal earthquake

    With the monsoon season fast approaching, the landslide risk in Nepal remains high a year after a magnitude-7.8 earthquake that killed more than 8,000 people, according to a University of Michigan-led research team.

  10. April 29, 2016

    Simulation offers glimpse of how e-cigarettes could impact smoking

    As the popularity of electronic cigarettes and calls to regulate them continue to grow, a University of Michigan study may help answer those who wonder what changes might be seen in smoking prevalence if e-cigarette use encourages smokers to quit, or if it becomes a first step toward smoking.