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Despite decades of reassessment of his deeds and significance, Christopher Columbus remains popular among 85% of Americans, according to a U-M study. |
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If it weren't for some quirky, largely Midwestern physicians, US emergency rooms
still might be stuck in the 1950s model, according to a U-M physician who has
researched more than 60 years of ER medicine. |
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U-M sociologist George Steinmetz writes of the 1904-07 German genocide of two ethnic groups in Southwest Africa, now Namibia.
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The number of fatal traffic crashes in Michigan dropped 10 percent in 2004, thanks to increased safety belt use and greater awareness of the dangers of drinking and driving, a U-M researcher says.
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After earning BAs in jazz, classical music and economics at Michigan in 2000, Sachal Vasandani went into investment banking on Wall Street. But he took a detour and launched a career as a jazz singer.
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Anyone interested in learning the latest about tobacco-related research—worldwide, pro or con—will find this School of Public Health site a major resource.
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School of Art alumna Edwina Jacques has donated a lifesize eponymous sculpture, with face and hands of 24-karat gold, to stand in the foyer of Martha Cook Residence Hall.
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Triple-alumnus Roy Alan Jacobstein ’69, ’73 MD, ’86 MPH, is a poet and public health physician who lives in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. |
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