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Featured Articles

  • A close-up of one of the papers in the exhibition at William L. Clements Library. Image credit: Jeremy Marble, Michigan News

    The order that launched the Revolutionary War, 250 years later

    The start of the Revolutionary War 250 years ago can be traced to one manuscript containing the orders for the Concord Expedition on April 18, 1775.

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  • Concept illustration of a group. of silent politicians. Image credit: Nicole Smith, made with Midjourney

    Many political leaders silent during surge in policies

    Political leaders from both the Republican and Democratic parties have largely opted for a strategy of silence as President Donald Trump approaches the milestone of his first 100 days in office on April 30. The Trump administration has rolled out an array of policy shifts—from immigration to tariffs—but, notably, there hasn't been a substantial wave of resistance from many politicians, especially Democrats, says University of Michigan expert Jonathan Hanson of the Ford School of Public Policy.

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  • Concept illustration of declining health and wealth in America. Image credit: Nicole Smith, made with ChatGPT

    50 years of US economic change linked to poorer health, shorter lives for less-educated Americans

    Fifty years of economic change have taken a heavy toll on some Americans, especially those with less education who not only have been left behind but are sicker and living shorter lives, according to new research.

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  • Sunscreen, clothes and caves may have helped Homo sapiens survive 41,000 years ago

    Ancient Homo sapiens may have benefitted from sunscreen, tailored clothes and the use of caves during the shifting of the magnetic North Pole over Europe about 41,000 years ago, new University of Michigan research shows.

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  • Four men stand in a line, diagonal toward the camera, pointing at a human-height silver and gold machine with many valves and tubes branching from it.

    Advanced microelectronics: Why a next-gen semiconductor doesn’t fall to pieces

    A new class of semiconductors that can store information in electric fields could enable computers that run on less power, sensors with quantum precision, and the conversion of signals between electrical, optical and acoustic forms—but how they maintained two opposite electric polarizations in the same material was a mystery.

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  • A woodrat. Image courtesy: Denise Dearing, University of Utah

    Variations in temperature and diet can affect this rodent’s ability to survive venomous snake bites

    The power of a snake's venom to incapacitate its prey may depend on more than just its potency or the prey's tolerance for the toxin—it also depends a bit on the weather, says a University of Michigan researcher.

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  • Concept photo of photo of an elderly man driving in his car, looking out the window with wrinkles on his face and glasses. Image credit: Nicole Smith, made with Midjourney

    Off the road: 1 in 4 seniors quit driving due to sight issues

    Older drivers with vision impairment are dramatically more likely to stop driving or avoid challenging road conditions—with severe cases four times more likely to give up driving altogether, a national University of Michigan study finds.

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  • Brose and Murray

    Two U-M professors chosen for Guggenheim Fellowships

    U-M professors Benjamin Brose and Martin Murray were among 198 individuals from the United States and Canada working across 53 disciplines appointed for the 100th class of fellows, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation has announced.

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  • In time of crisis, sport teams invested in community support

    Professional sports teams focused on outreach to their local communities during the COVID-19 pandemic instead of focusing solely on protecting their business models, according to a University of Michigan study.

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  • A man wearing a blue lab coat holds a thin, transparent disc toward the ceiling with forceps.

    Making desalination more eco-friendly: New membranes could help eliminate brine waste

    Desalination plants, a major and growing source of freshwater in dry regions, could produce less harmful waste using electricity and new membranes made at the University of Michigan.

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  • The Michigan Micro Mote (M3) computer next to a grain of rice for scale. Image credit: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering

    Enabling stroke victims to ‘speak’: $19M toward brain implants to be built at U-M

    A new collaboration between the University of Michigan and Stanford University aims to give stroke patients the ability to "speak" by detecting and interpreting brain signals, using the world's smallest computers linked up to the world's most biocompatible sensors.

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  • Polio vaccine milestone: Live podcast marks 70th anniversary of historic announcement at U-M

    In today's challenging era for vaccines, the University of Michigan School of Public Health will host a live podcast taping April 11 in recognition of the announcement made 70 years ago at U-M, when the polio vaccine was declared safe and effective to a worldwide audience.

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  • The National Institute of Occupational Health and Safety's Robert C. Byrd Laboratory in Morgantown, West Virginia in 2017. Image credit: Antony-22, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

    Federal budget cuts and worker safety

    One of the federal institutes focused on keeping workers safe from injury and illness on the job has lost about two-thirds of its staff due to federal budget cuts.

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In the news

  • Detroit News How a University of Michigan library exhibit sheds light on Paul Revere's famous ride
  • Detroit Free Press Government cuts could cost Michigan universities more than $200M in research spending
  • Bloomberg Powell caught in 'difficult position' between markets, Trump: Stevenson
More In The News
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