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March 25, 2013
If you were to look at Mark Wilson’s Web browser history, you would see lots of visits to travel sites and Google searches for “plane tickets to Ghana.” Wilson, who has a joint appointment as a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology in LSA and professor of epidemiology in the School of Public Health, travels…
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March 18, 2013
Living in close proximity to large stone castles in the middle of green hills was a portal into another world for Matthew Stewart-Fulton. “When I was 5 my family moved to England for a year, so I was surrounded by medieval aspects that left an impression on me as a child,” says Stewart-Fulton, a security…
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March 11, 2013
Photo by Scott C. Soderberg, Michigan Photography. Dr. David Aronoff sat in an exam room, listening to his patient hurry through a long list of symptoms and a medical history as if she was being timed. When she finished, the patient asked why Aronoff didn’t interrupt her. He was listening. “There are two talents that…
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February 18, 2013
Michael Gordon has a goal: to “research and teach about solving societal problems through enterprise and to create sustainable, impactful changes in society.” It may sound ambitious, but Gordon is dedicated. As a social entrepreneur and Arthur F. Thurnau Professor and professor of business administration at the Stephen M. Ross School of Business, he works…
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February 11, 2013
Placed on top of Jeri Hollister’s kitchen table is a small sculpture, the clay manipulated to create the strong curves of the well-defined muscles on a brown horse. “We had a bottomless sandbox in the backyard when I was a kid, and I used to dig down to the bottom where the soil was more…
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February 4, 2013
What moment in the classroom stands out as the most memorable? I was teaching a class on time-based art forms (installation, sound art, performance) and several students from Japan who spoke no English ended up making and presenting amazing art for their final project. It was an incredible testament to the power of visual images…
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January 28, 2013
Several years ago, Mary Kay Pauley started sewing teddy bears. At first it was just to keep up her lifelong passion for sewing. But when approached to make a bear out of a newborn baby’s crib sheet, the bears took on an entirely new and greater purpose. Through word of mouth, “Kay’s Bears” has kept…
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January 21, 2013
Photo by Scott C. Soderberg, Michigan Photography. Dr. Matthew Boulton doesn’t speak Chinese, but that didn’t stop him from founding the School of Public Health’s China Scholar Exchange Program. At dinner with a former health department colleague in Beijing several years ago, Boulton drew up the outlines for the program on a dinner napkin, and…
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January 14, 2013
A few weeks ago, Natalie Condon watched as a bat went from specimen to object of display for the Museum of Zoology, filming the whole time. She watched as a museum research assistant disassembled the bat skeleton, cleaned it out and reassembled it; she turned the footage into a time-lapse film. As a videographer for…
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December 10, 2012
After moving to the United States more than 18 years ago, Rita Barvinok uses her interest in theater to keep closely connected to her Russian roots. “Some of my friends with little children and I wanted to keep the Russian language alive, and do something educational with our children,” says Barvinok, a system administrator in LSA Biology…