Playing it forward
In the extra-musical world of RC alum Julia Wolfe, members of the orchestra snap their fingers. Stomp their feet. And play their instruments, of course. During a weeklong residency hosted by UMS, the Pulitzer-winning composer joined student musicians from Germany’s Karajan-Akademie of the Berliner Philharmoniker and U-M’s School of Music, Theatre & Dance as they became a cohesive — and active — international ensemble.
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It Happened at Michigan: U-M alum was first American to walk in space
In 1965, Edward H. White II, a 1959 graduate in aeronautical engineering and the pilot of NASA’s Gemini IV, became the first American to walk in space. White was traveling with one other astronaut, James A. McDivitt, a fellow Wolverine from the Class of 1959. They had attached American flags to their space suits, kicking off a longstanding tradition of astronauts donning the Stars and Stripes.
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Arsenal Bridge Ventures invests up to $7.8 million in U-M startup to advance weight regulation drugs
Courage Therapeutics aims to address obesity and restrictive eating disorders, such as anorexia nervosa and cachexia, by targeting neural circuits in the brain known as the central melanocortin system. Roger Cone, a professor of molecular and integrative physiology, has been at the forefront of melanocortin research for decades. Courage Therapeutics is a U-M spinout company.
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Sleuthing the story behind a photo
When Edward Mears discovered a photo, dated 1933, of his grandmother and her friends at U-M’s Alpha Lambda Chinese fraternity, his imagination lit up. One of his grandmother’s friends, an Asian man, had inscribed the photo ‘To Veronica, with love, Ben.’ The inscription inspired a deep dive at the Bentley and took the Michigan Law grad across continents. The story is still unfolding.
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‘Will the girl who took my shirt and left her poetry…’
Before social media, before dating apps, there were personal ads, a department of newspapers’ classified advertising sections that spiced up the paper’s lifeless gray columns. A dive into The Michigan Daily’s digital archive reveals an especially creative era on campus when Michigan students used the Daily’s back pages to express their emotions and connect.
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On the verge: Breakthrough treatment for osteoporosis
Because of partnerships with federal agencies like the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Defense, Karl Jepsen has worked for decades to build up the field of bone research. “We are just now seeing the outcomes of funded projects from 20, 30, 40 years ago,” he says.
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Swept away by Beckett and dining with Miller
For 50 years, Enoch Brater shared his passion for literature and the theatre with thousands of like-minded students at U-M. The University’s Kenneth T. Rowe Collegiate Professor Emeritus of Dramatic Literature retired in spring 2025. As a renowned expert on Samuel Beckett and Arthur Miller, he viewed plays as ‘literature meant to be performed.’
Columns
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President's Message
An unparalleled education
Michigan alumni are not passive observers. They are innovators, humanists, and leaders, known worldwide for their ideas and impact. -
Editor's Blog
Walking through history
A visit to the Museum on Main reminds us that Michigan Medicine's past is creating the future of medicine worldwide. -
Health Yourself
Monitor your health at home
Victor Katch provides a rundown of self-monitoring devices designed to help you track your health. -
Climate Blue
A flood of warnings about warming
It was a frigid winter, you say. So, how can it be warming? Ricky Rood has a flood of information…
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MGo Blue podcasts
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Michigan Ross Podcasts
Check out the series "Business and Society," "Business Beyond Usual," "Working for the Weekend," and "Down to Business." -
Michigan Medicine Podcasts
Hear audio series, news, and stories about the future of health care.
Spring fling 2026
Spring has sprung—sort of—on the University of Michigan campus. Enjoy these scenes from a busy season that saw a parade of national champions, conferral of the 1 millionth U-M degree, and anticipation for the next big bloom of peonies at Nichols Arboretum.













