Innovation
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The protest psychosis
In the 1960s, psychiatry saw an astonishing but largely hidden phenomenon. Schizophrenia, once seen as a disease of anxious, well-off white women, became a go-to diagnosis of angry, urban black men. How did madness, blackness and civil rights become linked, and what were the consequences for patients and society? U-M psychiatry professor Jonathan Metzl looks for answers.
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Going global
Why would U-M embark on a formal research collaboration with a university in Shanghai?
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Sustainable mobility
Automakers at the 2010 North American International Auto Show have big hopes for their new vehicles—hipper, more fuel-efficient, environmentally sound cars.
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The man who gave me Japan
An alum’s story of how U-M prof Edward Seidensticker changed his life through poetry.
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Students help to bring the Internet to rural Africa
Residents of rural Kenya now have e-mail accounts and Internet access thanks in part to the work of U-M engineering students.
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Harder than brain surgery
Chair of the University of Michigan’s Department of Neurosurgery, Dr. Karin Muraszko shines as both a brain surgeon and a person. In this moving video, originally produced by Michigan Television for the Big Ten Network, Dr. Muraszko describes the challenges of brain surgery, overcoming disability and sexism, and helping families face the possible loss of a child.