In the News

  1. February 13, 2025
    • Mary Sue Coleman

    “By cutting indirect costs, the federal government will force universities to scale back research that may help develop the next vaccine or cure, or the next technological innovation that will create new businesses or help secure our country,” wrote Mary Sue Coleman, president emerita, about the Trump administration’s 15% reimbursement cap — currently on hold pending federal court action — for facility and administrative expenses universities incur while conducting work funded by federal research agencies.

    Inside Higher Ed
  2. February 12, 2025
    • Jennifer Garner

    “There is a groundswell of bipartisan support to combat our country’s chronic disease crisis. And there’s a clear and actionable strategy on the table: translate the FDA’s updated definition of ‘healthy’ food into a simple symbol that we can all use to guide our supermarket choices,” wrote Jennifer Garner, assistant professor of nutritional sciences.

    MedPage Today
  3. February 12, 2025
    • Stuart Batterman

    Detroit soil and street dust contain high levels of PCNs and PCBs — toxic and persistent contaminants that could pose a threat to human health, says Stuart Batterman, professor of environmental health sciences: “The problem happens to be near waste sites or waste piles that aren’t really controlled. … So removing these waste piles, characterizing the soils, covering them with clean fill is a way to control the problem.”

    Michigan Public
  4. February 12, 2025
    • Elizabeth Popp Berman

    “(The Trump) administration appears to be not just setting priorities, but enforcing ideological conformity in a way that if your (research) grant is studying something that’s not aligned with a particular view of the world, it’s just not going to be funded. I think taking that away has the potential to undermine the whole scientific enterprise,” said Elizabeth Popp Berman, professor of organizational studies.

    National Public Radio
  5. February 11, 2025
    • Sari Reisner

    “It feels like we are under attack. … It’s an ethical imperative to address public health, and by not doing that, whether it’s through not studying gender or specifically erasing transgender people from public health, we have a real problem on our hands,” said Sari Reisner, associate professor of epidemiology, whose research with Kristi Gamarel, associate professor of health behavior and health equity, on federal defunding of HIV prevention among transgender minority youth.

    The Washington Post
  6. February 11, 2025
    • Photo of Adam Pritchard

    “The law on the books is not all that different from state to state. But there’s a herding effect. Because there are so many companies incorporated in Delaware, there are a lot of Delaware decisions on issues that might not come up all that often — but it probably has come up at some point in Delaware,” said Adam Pritchard, professor of law, on why the Diamond State has become the center of the business law world.

    Slate
  7. February 11, 2025
    • Kamissa Camara

    “They do not believe that France’s presence offers them anything but actual French interference in their domestic affairs … but this does not mean that countries of the region are cutting diplomatic ties with France,” said Kamissa Camara, professor of practice in international diplomacy, about the withdrawal of the French military from Africa’s Sahel region after 65 years.

    Australian Broadcasting Corporation
  8. February 10, 2025
    • Jamon Jordan

    “Black people have been taught in America, for the most part, that their history begins when someone else does something to them. Black people are actors. They’re subjects, they do things, and those things are important — not just the things that happen to them,” said Jamon Jordan, lecturer in the Residential College.

    CBS News Detroit
  9. February 10, 2025
    • Aubree Gordon

    Higher immunity rates and effective vaccines have kept COVID relatively mild this winter, but the current virus also avoided the kind of mutations that may have allowed for faster transmission or greater sickness, says Aubree Gordon, professor of epidemiology: “You have two or three years of it being really bad. Usually the first year is the worst — as far as incidence rates and severity goes — and then it settles out.”

    The New York Times
  10. February 10, 2025
    • Jessi Grieser

    Thanks to social media, “there’s more power for (slang) words that are part of very small communities to break out” and a shorter lifespan of words and phrases that catch on, says Jessi Grieser, associate professor of linguistics. “That does seem to be related to the cycle of social media and just how quickly a given term can pop up on TikTok, be used, be changed and then just be gone.” 

    The Wall Street Journal