Too much screen time? U-M pioneers digital wellness program for youths
Addiction, cyberbullying, eating disorders, anxiety, and other mental health issues caused by problematic digital practices and an increase in screen time are some of the themes of a new and unique U-M interprofessional Peer-to-Peer Digital Wellness class.
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From Sudan to Sin City
Odds are good that Dante Vasquez is the sole honorary Ghanaian chief living in Las Vegas.
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Supermileage Team Aims to Mow Down the Competition
Video: Can a car really get 3,300 miles to the gallon? The University of Michigan’s Supermileage Team is on its way to proving it can—with a lawnmower engine. “Fuel efficiency is one of those issues prevalent in society today,” says chief engineer and team co-founder Brett Merkel. “[This technology] can have far-reaching effects and be implemented in just a few years.”
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Ross School brings Executive MBA to sunny SoCal
Business professor-cum-shark diver George Siedel will teach the LA cohort of the Executive MBA Program this fall.
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In Praise of Imperfection
Baseball’s Jim Abbott ponders his “improbable life” in a compelling new memoir.
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Gupta to Graduates: "Do One Thing Every Day that Scares You"
Video: “Since I left Michigan, you’ve had three presidents, the first lady, and the head of the United Nations as your commencement speakers,” said CNN medical correspondent and neurosurgeon Sanjay Gupta, ’90, MD ’93, to the Class of 2012 at spring commencement. “That’s not bad. But I have something none of them did. I am a true-blue Wolverine. I am one of you. And I am at home today in front of you. In your house. Your very, very Big House.”
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Let the Spawning Commence
Video: Michigan Sea Grant researchers are constructing rock reefs to boost populations of lake sturgeon and other rare native fish. First stop: the St. Clair River delta northeast of Detroit. The goal is to promote “really robust, self-sustaining populations of lake sturgeon, whitefish, and walleye,” says project leader Jennifer Read.
Columns
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President's Message
From this day forward: ‘Vision 2034’
As U-M plans for the next decade, we prioritize the safety of our present-day campus community. -
Editor's Blog
Something old, something new
Who's ready for an excellent adventure? Just keep an eye peeled for the (virtual) hot lava. -
Climate Blue
Order from disorder
Ricky Rood explains the organizing principles behind weather, which is how we feel climate. -
Health Yourself
Getting a leg up on sciatica and piriformis syndrome
Victor Katch compares and contrasts sciatica and piriformis syndrome and explains how to ease that pain in your butt.
The Art Show
Founded in 1990 with a single theatre workshop, the Prison Creative Arts Project (PCAP) is a program of U-M’s Residential College. Courses serve as gateways for undergraduate participation in prison arts workshops and provide academic training in issues surrounding incarceration and practical skills in the arts. The program’s Annual Exhibition of Artists in Michigan Prisons (“the art show”) is one of the largest exhibits of artwork by incarcerated artists in the world. The annual exhibition, free to the public, is presented with support from the Michigan Arts and Culture Council. It runs through April 2 at the Duderstadt Gallery. (Click on the images to enlarge. Images are courtesy of PCAP.) Learn more about PCAP.