In the News
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October 4, 2022
“(I) didn’t expect to see all of this light music with titles like ‘The Most Beautiful Time of Life.’ It was a tremendous surprise reading titles like that in a concentration camp. I certainly did not expect these pieces to sound as beautiful and expressive as they do based on the extremely unusual instrumentation that they had,” said Patricia Hall, professor of music theory, who discovered archived manuscripts of songs performed by prisoner orchestras at Auschwitz-Birkenau.
The Detroit Jewish News -
October 4, 2022
“This is an existential threat to dealers — they realize they’re going to be cut out. Consumers want to deal with the company that made the vehicle, and they want to be able to make a decision without someone breathing down their neck,” said Daniel Crane, professor of law, on the ability of electric carmakers in some states to sell their vehicles directly to customers online.
TIME -
October 3, 2022
“I think many Russians actually believe this is a war against Nazism,” said Jeffrey Veidlinger, professor of history and Judaic studies. “The war against Nazism is really the defining moment of the 20th century for Russia. What they’re doing now is in a way a continuation of this great moment of national unity from World War II.
UNILAD -
October 3, 2022
Hunger affects 4 in 10 people with heart disease — more than double what it was two decades earlier — according to research by Eric Brandt, clinical lecturer in cardiovascular medicine, and Tammy Chang, associate professor of family medicine. Getting heart disease increases a person’s risk of “developing socioeconomic problems that could reduce access to adequate and quality food,” Brandt said.
UPI -
October 3, 2022
“If what you’re seeing in a child is a behavior manifesting from underlying trauma being triggered, then disciplining them in the usual way — suspension and expulsion — is not going to change the behavior and will only remove the child’s ability to participate in school,” said Jennifer Erb-Downward, senior research associate at Poverty Solutions, who found that homeless students in Michigan are disciplined at higher rates.
The New York Times Magazine -
September 30, 2022
Ken Kollman, professor of political science and director of the Center for Political Studies, says it’s not surprising that Democrats are reshaping their campaigns around the momentum of the improving economy: “They will adapt to the moment, and especially if they are getting some traction by touting their recent policies on student loan forgiveness or the recent reduction in gas prices that are happening nationwide.”
Michigan Advance -
September 30, 2022
“Of the many costs that the War on Drugs inflicts on the Black community, the practice of deliberately charging innocent defendants with fabricated crimes may be the most shameful,” said Samuel Gross, professor emeritus of law, whose research shows that innocent Black people are much more likely to face wrongful convictions than innocent white people and seven times more likely to be victims of police misconduct.
National Public Radio -
September 30, 2022
Unlike online tutoring and cryptocurrency trading — areas that China’s regulators have unambiguously quashed — dating and other services centered on social encounters have remained relatively unscathed. “Rather than simply cracking down, dating apps are seen as technologies that can be effectively co-opted by the state,” said Yun Zhou, assistant professor of sociology and Chinese studies.
The New York Times -
September 29, 2022
Neurologists Stephen Goutman and Eva Feldman found that workers exposed to hazardous chemicals in manufacturing, welding and chemical operations face a higher risk of developing amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. “Some of these workers … may have been exposed to mixtures of metals and other chemicals without their knowledge,” said Goutman, director of the Pranger ALS Clinic. Feldman, director of the ALS Center of Excellence, says their research is “critical in identifying modifiable disease factors and populations at risk, so that we can prevent ALS from occurring in the first place.”
U.S. News & World Report -
September 29, 2022
In the past few decades, developers have largely projected their vision of Detroit and its land use onto people who have been living in the city throughout hard times, says Jason Hawes, doctoral student in environment and sustainability: “That is an ongoing story in Detroit, that sort of contestation of land use in the city and especially in historically Black communities.”
Bridge Detroit