All Headlines

  1. December 14, 2015

    Student administration assistant mentors U-M, Detroit students

    On a recent afternoon, Angela Jeon was stopped by friends no less than four times as she walked out of the Duderstadt Center. She warmly asked them questions, effortlessly recalling personal details. Her friends joke, “She knows half the campus.”

  2. December 14, 2015

    Winter fun

    Student soldiers wrestle in the snow during World War II.

  3. December 14, 2015

    Higher ed briefs

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

  4. December 11, 2015

    Buy, buy privacy

    A story in LSA Today explores how each click of an online purchase helps advertisers acquire and use your personal data to predict what you’ll buy — and even what you’ll pay.

  5. December 11, 2015

    Unhealthy choices cost company health care plans billions of dollars

    One out of every four dollars that employers pay for health care is tied to unhealthy lifestyle choices or conditions like smoking, stress and obesity, a U-M study finds.

  6. December 11, 2015

    Campus briefs

    News from around the university.

  7. December 11, 2015

    Study highlights economic value for PH.D.s in the private sector

    Students who graduate with doctorate degrees disproportionately find employment in large, high-wage entities of the private sector, a new study indicates.

  8. December 10, 2015

    U-M has 75 student-athletes on fall Academic All-Big Ten team

    Seventy-five U-M student-athletes have earned recognition for their work in the classroom by being named to the fall 2015 Academic All-Big Ten team.

  9. December 10, 2015

    One-quarter of new doctors may be depressed, new study shows

    More than one in four doctors in the early stages of their careers has signs of depression, according to a new study led by a Medical School psychiatrist.

  10. December 10, 2015

    New lie-detecting software from U-M uses real court case data

    By studying videos from high-stakes court cases, U-M researchers are building unique lie-detecting software based on real-world data.