Filling a gap: U-M students help combat Michigan’s shortage of rural dentists

Northern Michigan resident Becky Klein was surprised to learn that the dentists at the Thunder Bay Community Health Service clinic were students from the U-M School of Dentistry. They turned out to be just as competent and professional as seasoned practitioners, she said, and excellent communicators.
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U-M lecturer, staffer win Grammy with reed quintet
In February, U-M’s Kari Landry and Andrew Koeppe won the Grammy for Best Instrumental Composition for ‘Strands,” a piece they’d recorded with their reed quintet Akropolis. Some 16 years before they stood on stage with a statuette at LA’s Peacock Theater, the five members of Akropolis were undergrads majoring in music at U-M.
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War of the Worlds fan mail reveals early version of ‘fake news’
The U-M Library recently opened access to a digitized archive of some 1,300 fan letters sent in response to the 1938 broadcast of Orson Welles’ “War of the Worlds.” These letters dispel the myth — long perpetuated by the media — that Welles’ broadcast incited panic and hysteria.
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U-M astronomers peer deeper into mysterious Flame Nebula
Using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, a team of researchers, including astronomers from the University of Michigan, are closing in on the answer to a looming cosmic question. In probing the Flame Nebula, they’re finding out what’s the smallest celestial body that can form on its own from clouds of gas and dust in space.
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U-M astronomy will lead its first satellite mission
The project assembles a team of experts from across the country for a mission called STARI — STarlight Acquisition and Reflection toward Interferometry. The goal is to showcase the viability of a new technique for studying exoplanets, or planets outside of our solar system.
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U-M microCT lab celebrates milestone with scan of a wolverine skull
For seven years, a CT scanner has been whirring away scanning specimens: snakes, lizards, frogs, bats, rodents, wasps, fish, a whole red fox, an armadillo. Recently the U-M MicroCT Scanning Laboratory completed its 10,000th scan: a 3D image of a wolverine skull, collected in British Columbia in 1948.
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Enduring Spirit: When family history is national history
Many histories have been written about the Cherokee nation. But “Cherokee History and the Spirit Family” by environmental lawyer James Barnes, J.D. ’70, delivers the nation’s history by way of his own expansive family network. ‘It’s personal in that sense,’ he says. And it’s powerful.
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President's Message
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Are you an ‘ager’ or a ‘youther’?
Why do some people appear younger or older than people born in the same year?
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In the news
Creativity and connection across prison walls
One of the world’s largest and longest-running exhibitions of incarcerated artists is back with new programming designed to foster connection and deepen public understanding of incarceration in Michigan. The 29th annual Exhibition of Artists in Michigan Prisons, curated by U-M’s Prison Creative Arts Project, showcases 772 artworks by 538 artists incarcerated in 26 state prisons. The Duderstadt Center Gallery on U-M’s North Campus is presenting the artwork through April 1.