Stephen M. Ross School of Business
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March 11, 2024
Program coordinator travels world as handball referee
Rafael Marques, a program coordinator in the Stephen M. Ross School of Business’ Sanger Leadership Institute, grew up playing handball in Brazil and now is a referee.
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February 15, 2024
Regents appoint five to be 2024 Arthur F. Thurnau Professors
Deirdre Leong de la Cruz, Anouck R. Girard, Nicholas C. Henriksen, LaKisha M. Simmons and Sara B. Soderstrom have been named Arthur F. Thurnau Professors.
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February 12, 2024
Ross School of Business celebrating 100 years of firsts
What started as U-M’s School of Business Administration in 1924 — and which was renamed for Stephen M. Ross in 2004 — has seen a lot of business-education firsts over the past 100 years.
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February 12, 2024
Business professor scuba dives around the world
Dana Muir, an Arthur F. Thurnau Professor, Robert L. Dixon Collegiate Professor of Business and professor of business law in the Stephen M. Ross School of Business, is an avid scuba diver.
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January 15, 2024
Ross School to boost neighborhood entrepreneurs in Detroit
U-M’s Detroit Neighborhood Entrepreneurs Project, which has helped nearly 700 small businesses since its introduction in 2016, has moved to the Stephen M. Ross School of Business.
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November 13, 2023
Campus briefs
Short news items from around the University of Michigan.
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October 16, 2023
Managing director plays bass with local band
Gene Mage, managing director of custom programs in the Stephen M. Ross School of Business, took up bass guitar in the late 1980s and dove back into music in 2020.
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October 16, 2023
Campus briefs
Short news items from around the University of Michigan.
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September 6, 2023
U-M students bridge cultures, empower communities around world
From China to Mongolia, and from France to South Africa, U-M students embarked on expeditions that defied borders and redefined cultural connections this summer.
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September 1, 2023
Negative feedback could moderate social media extremes
“Downvotes” and “dislikes” from peers could moderate extreme rhetoric and mitigate echo chambers among social media users, according to new research from U-M.