The 'University of Michigan, Ann Arbor' ('U of M', 'UM' or simply 'Michigan') is a
coeducational
public research university in the state of
Michigan, and one of the foremost universities in the United States. The university was founded in 1817 in
Detroit, about 20 years before the territory of Michigan officially became a state, and moved to
Ann Arbor in 1837. Today, it is the state's oldest university and the flagship campus of the University of Michigan system, which now has two satellite campuses, the
University of Michigan, Flint and the
University of Michigan, Dearborn.
In its 2006 Top 100 Global Universities ranking, Newsweek ranked the University of Michigan 11th in the World. In its 2007 edition, ''
U.S. News & World Report'' ranked the university's undergraduate program second in the United States among public universities and 24th among all universities. In its last published survey in 1995 the
National Research Council ranked UM third in the United States in a study that spanned 41 graduate disciplines as to aggregate quality of graduate programs. The university has one of the largest research expenditures of any American university and one of the largest number of living alumni at 420,000.
[ About the Association ] The university owns one of the most well-regarded academic medical centers in the United States, the
University of Michigan Health System.
[2] UM is recognized for its history of
student activism and its athletic teams, notably in
football,
men's basketball, and
ice hockey as well.
Despite being a public institution, the University of Michigan is known for its high student fees; tuition for out-of-state students is currently the most expensive in the country.
[3] The university has also been at the center of a national controversy involving the use of
affirmative action in admissions. Though the university successfully affirmed before the
U.S. Supreme Court that consideration of
race as a factor in admissions to universities was
constitutional in 2003,
[4] Michigan voters
approved restrictions on affirmative action in public universities and governmental hiring in November 2006. This meant that Michigan had to cease using race and gender as criteria for admissions.
[5]
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History
Main articles: History of the University of Michigan
The University of Michigan was established in Detroit in 1817 as the Catholepistemiad, or University of Michigania, by the governor and judges of
Michigan Territory. Ann Arbor had set aside 40 acres (16 ha) that it hoped would become the site for a new state capitol, but it offered this land to the university when
Lansing was chosen as the state capital. The university moved to Ann Arbor in 1837. The original 40 acres became part of the current Central Campus. The first classes in Ann Arbor were held in 1841, with six freshmen and a sophomore, taught by two professors. Eleven students graduated in the first commencement in 1845. By 1866, enrollment increased to 1,205 students, many of whom were
Civil War veterans. Women were first admitted in 1870, making UM the first major university to do so (and the third college overall, after
Oberlin College in 1833 and
Lawrence University in 1847). James B. Angell, who served as the university's president from 1871 to 1909, aggressively expanded UM's curriculum to include professional studies in
dentistry,
architecture,
engineering,
government, and
medicine. UM also became the first American university to use the
seminar method of study.
[6]

The Central Campus Diag, viewed from the Graduate Library, looking North.
From 1900 to 1920 many new facilities were constructed on campus, including facilities for the dental and pharmacy programs, a chemistry building, a building for the natural sciences,
Hill Auditorium, large hospital and library complexes, and two residential halls. The university fortified its reputation for research in 1920 by reorganizing the College of Engineering and forming an advisory committee of 100 industrialists to guide academic research initiatives. During
World War II, UM's research grew to include
U.S. Navy projects such as
proximity fuzes,
PT boats, and
radar jamming. By 1950, enrollment had reached 21,000, of whom 7,700 were veterans supported by the
G.I. Bill. As the
Cold War and the
Space Race took hold, UM became a major recipient of government grants for strategic research and helped to develop peacetime uses for
nuclear energy. At present, much of that work, as well as research into alternative energy sources, is pursued via the Memorial Phoenix Project.
[7]
On
October 14,
1960,
Presidential candidate
John F. Kennedy proposed the concept of what became the
Peace Corps on the steps of Michigan Union.
[8] Lyndon B. Johnson's speech outlining his
Great Society program also occurred at UM.
8 Also during the 1960s, UM saw many protests by student groups. On
March 24,
1965, a group of UM faculty members and 3,000 students held the nation's first ever faculty-led "teach-in" to protest against American policy in Southeast Asia.
[9][10] In response to a series of
sit-ins in 1966 by ''Voice''–the campus political party of Students for a Democratic Society–UM's administration banned sit-ins. This stimulated 1,500 students to conduct a further one-hour sit-in in the administration building.

Law Quadrangle
During the 1970s, severe budget constraints challenged the university's physical development; however, the 1980s saw a surge in funds devoted to research in the social and physical sciences. Meanwhile, the university's involvement in the anti-missile
Strategic Defense Initiative and investments in
South Africa caused controversy on campus. During the 1980s and 1990s, the university devoted substantial resources to renovating its massive hospital complex and improving the academic facilities on the North Campus. The university also emphasized the development of computer and information technology throughout the campus.
In the early 2000s, UM also faced declining state funding due to state budget shortfalls. At the same time, the university attempted to maintain its high academic standing while keeping
tuition costs affordable. There were also disputes between UM's administration and labor unions, notably with the Lecturers' Employees Organization (LEO) and the Graduate Employees Organization (GEO), the union representing graduate student employees. These conflicts led to a series of one-day walkouts by the unions and their supporters.
[11]

The Lawyer's Club
In 2003, two lawsuits involving UM's
affirmative action admissions policy reached the
U.S. Supreme Court (''
Grutter v. Bollinger'' and ''
Gratz v. Bollinger''). President
George W. Bush took the unusual step of publicly opposing the policy before the court issued a ruling. The court found that race may be considered as a factor in university admissions in all public universities and private universities that accept federal funding. However, a point system was ruled as being unconstitutional. In the first case, the court upheld the
Law School admissions policy, while in the second it ruled against the university's undergraduate admissions policy. The debate still continues, however, because in November of 2006 Michigan voters passed
proposal 2, banning most affirmative action in university admissions. Under that law race, gender, and national origin can no longer be considered in admissions.
[12] UM and other organizations were granted a stay from implementation of the passed proposal soon after that election, and this has allowed time for proponents of affirmative action to decide legal and constitutional options in response to the election results. The university has stated it plans to continue to challenge the ruling; in the meantime, the admissions office states that it will attempt to achieve a diverse student body by looking at other factors such as whether the student attended a disadvantaged school, and the level of education of the student's parents.
[12]
The
August 1,
2006, publication of ''
The Advocate College Guide for LGBT Students'' highlighted the University of Michigan as one of the 20 best campuses for
LGBT students.
[14] The guide acknowledged colleges and universities across the United States for making strides toward the advancement and integration of the LGBT community via a wide variety of student support groups, resources, events, policies, and other efforts to create an overall exceptional educational climate for these individuals.
Academic profile

Central Campus: Angell Hall, one of the major buildings of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts.
The university has 25,555
undergraduate and 14,470
graduate students in 600 academic programs, and each year about 5,400 new students are enrolled. Students come from all 50
U.S. states and more than 100 countries.
[15] 98% of the university's incoming class of 2006 earned a high school GPA of 3.0 and higher, while the middle 50% of the incoming class earned a high school GPA of 3.60 to 3.90.
[16][17] The middle 50% of applicants reported an
SAT score of about 1900–2160 and an
ACT score of 27–31, with
AP credit granted to over 3000 freshmen students.
[18] About 22% of newly-enrolled undergraduates and 25% of all undergraduates are members of ethnic
minority groups.
[17]
About 65% of undergraduate students are enrolled in the
College of Literature, Science, and the Arts (LS&A), while the
College of Engineering has about 20%. Fewer than 3% of undergraduate students are enrolled in the
Ross School of Business. The rest of the undergraduate students are enrolled in the smaller schools, including the
School of Nursing, the School of Natural Resources and Environment, and the
School of Art and Design.
[20] Most graduate students are enrolled in the
Rackham Graduate School, the College of Engineering, the Law School, the
Ross School of Business, and the
Medical School. The Medical School is partnered with the
University of Michigan Health System, which comprises the University's three hospitals, dozens of outpatient clinics, and many centers for medical care, research, and education. Other academic units include the
Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy,
Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning and the Schools of
Dentistry,
Education,
Information,
Music, Theatre & Dance, Natural Resources and Environment,
Public Health, and
Social Work, of which Social Work has been ranked first by the ''U.S. News and World Report'' every year since 1994.
[21]
There are over 6,200 faculty members, 73 of whom are members of the
National Academy, and 400 of whom hold an endowed chair in their discipline.
[22] The university consistently leads the nation in the number of
Fulbright Scholars and has matriculated 25
Rhodes Scholars.
In one recent rankings summary, more than 70% of UM's 200 major programs, departments, and schools were ranked in the top 10 nationally, and more than 90% of programs and departments were ranked in the top 20 nationally.
[23] The 2008 ''
U.S. News and World Report'' ranks UM 25th among all American universities and 3rd (tied with
UCLA) among
public universities.
[24] In its 2007 annual college rankings, ''
The Washington Monthly'' ranks UM sixth nationally with criteria based on research, community service, and social mobility.
[25] ''
Newsweek International'' rates UM 11th globally based on "openness and diversity" as well as "distinction in research".
[26] The 2006 THES and SJTU academically rank the university as 29th and 21st in the world, respectively. Similarly, the 2007 edition of the ''Fiske Rankings'' rates UM with "5 Stars"—reserved for only those universities of the highest academic quality. Furthermore, UM's academic reputation has led to its inclusion on Richard Moll's list of
Public Ivies.
[27]
A concern about academics at UM is the high level of educational expenses for a public institution, especially for out-of-state undergraduate students, who pay about
US $30,000 annually for tuition alone. Currently, out-of-state tuition at UM is the most expensive in the United States for a public college or university.
[28] Conversely, in-state undergraduate students pay about US $10,000 annually.
[29] Notwithstanding the quoted tuition levels, the university is attempting to lower the cost of attendance. To that end, the university is building a US $400 million endowment in order to replace loans with out-right grants to students.
[30][31]
Research and endowment

Biomedical Science Research Building at the UM Medical School.
The university is one of the founding members (1900) of the
Association of American Universities, the nation's most significant consortium of research universities.
The university has one of the largest annual research expenditures of any university in the United States, totaling about US $775 million per annum from 2004 to 2005, and US $797 million in 2006.
[ Annual Report on Research, Scholarship and Creative Activity at the University of Michigan FY2006 ] The Medical School spent the most at over US $333 million, while the College of Engineering was second at more than $131 million.
UM also has a
technology transfer office, which is the university conduit between laboratory research and corporate commercialization interests.
UM helped develop one of the first university computer networks (the Merit Network) and has made major contributions to the mathematics of
information theory. Other major contributions included the precursor to the
National Science Foundation computer networking backbone,
[32] the virtual memory model, and computer
databases. The university is also a major contributor to the medical field with the
EKG,
gastroscope, the announcement of
Jonas Salk's polio vaccine, and the extracorporeal membrane oxygenation system or
ECMO. The university's 13,000-acre (53 km²)
biological station in the
Northern Lower Peninsula of Michigan is one of only 47
Biosphere Reserves in the United States.
[33]
UM is home to the
National Election Studies and the
University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index. Political scientists and policy analysts use UM's
Correlates of War project as a gauge of nations' relative
global power and a barometer for the outbreak of war. The university is also home to major research centers in
optics, reconfigurable manufacturing systems,
wireless integrated microsystems, and social sciences. The University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute is located at the university, and support was recently given to the
life sciences with the establishment of the Life Sciences Institute and the construction of associated facilities. Undergraduate students are able to participate in various research projects through the
Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program (UROP) as well as the UROP/Creative-Programs.
[34]
UM's
financial endowment (the "University Endowment Fund") was valued at $5.65 billion in NACUBO's 2006 ranking.
1 It is the
ninth largest endowment in the U.S. and the third-largest among U.S. public universities.
[35] The endowment is primarily used according to the donors' wishes, which include the support of teaching and research. In mid-2000, UM embarked on a massive fund-raising campaign called "The Michigan Difference," which aimed to raise $2.5 billion, with $800 million dollars designated for the permanent endowment.
[36] Slated to run through December 2008, the university announced that the campaign had reached its target 19 months early in May 2007.
[37]
Libraries and museums

Law School Library reading room
The
UM library system comprises 19 individual libraries with 24 separate collections—roughly 8.13 million volumes, growing at the rate of 177,000 volumes a year.
[38] In the most recent academic year for which such figures are released (2005), the
Association of Research Libraries (ARL) — using a variety of metrics — ranked UM's library system as one of the top academic library systems in the U.S.
[39]
UM was the original home of the
JSTOR database, which contains about 750,000 digitized pages from the entire pre-1990 backfile of ten journals of
history and
economics. The University recently initiated a book digitization program in collaboration with
Google. As of
August 31,
2006, UM has rolled out the first phase of the Google archive retrieval.
[40]
Two prominent libraries, the
Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library and the Shapiro Undergraduate Library (also called the UGLi, which is officially an acronym but was used by students as a reference to the building's uninspired appearance prior to its recent renovation), are on Central Campus and are connected by a
skywalk. The Duderstadt Center on North Campus houses books on
art,
architecture, and
engineering. The Duderstadt Center also contains multiple
computer labs,
video editing studios, and a
3D virtual reality room. North Campus is also home to the
Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library and the
Bentley Historical Library.

The UM Museum of Art on Central Campus.
The University of Michigan is home to a number of museums, whose focuses include
archeology,
anthropology,
paleontology,
zoology,
dentistry, and art. The natural history public collections are housed at the University of Michigan Exhibit Museum of Natural History, which displays items from the collections of the paleontology, zoology, and anthropology museums. The Exhibit Museum also holds the largest display of dinosaur specimens in Michigan, as well a specimen of the
state fossil, the
mastodon (the only such display in the world containing adult male and female specimens: the Buesching and Owosso mastodons).
[41] Another major university museum is the University of Michigan Museum of Art, with a permanent collection of European, American, Middle Eastern, Asian, and African items, and temporary exhibits on a wide variety of subjects.
Campus

Locations of the three main U-M campuses in Ann Arbor
The Ann Arbor campus is divided into four main areas: the North, Central, Medical, and South Campuses. The physical infrastructure includes more than 500 major buildings, with a combined area of more than 29 million square feet (664 acres or 2.69 km²).
[42] The campus also consists of leased space in buildings scattered throughout the city, many occupied by organizations affiliated with the University of Michigan Health System. An East Medical Campus has recently been developed on Plymouth Road, with several university-owned buildings for outpatient care, diagnostics, and outpatient surgery.
In addition to the UM Golf Course on South Campus, the university operates a second golf course called "Radrick Farms Golf Course" on Geddes Road. The golf course is only open to faculty, staff, and alumni.
[43] Another off-campus facility is the Inglis House, which the university has owned since the 1950s. The Inglis House is a 10,000 square foot (930 m²) mansion used to hold various social events, including meetings of the board of regents, and to host visiting dignitaries.
[44] The university also operates a large office building called Wolverine Tower in southern Ann Arbor near Briarwood Mall. Another major facility is the
Matthaei Botanical Gardens, which is located on the eastern outskirts of Ann Arbor.
All four campus areas are connected by
bus services, the majority of which connect the North and Central Campuses. There is a shuttle service connecting the University Hospital, which lies between North and Central Campuses, with other medical facilities throughout northeastern Ann Arbor.
[45] The Central and South Campus areas are contiguous, while the North Campus area is separated from them, primarily by the
Huron River.
Central Campus

Hill Auditorium, Burton Tower, and the Rackham Building
Central Campus was the original location of UM when it moved to Ann Arbor in 1837. It originally had a school and dormitory building (where Mason Hall now stands) and several houses for professors on land bounded by North University Avenue, South University Avenue, East University Avenue, and State Street.
[46] Because Ann Arbor and Central Campus developed simultaneously, there is no distinct boundary between the city and university, and some areas contain a mixture of private and university buildings. Central Campus is the location of the
College of Literature, Science and the Arts, and is immediately adjacent to the medical campus. Most of the graduate and professional schools, including the
Ross School of Business and the
Law School, are on Central Campus. Ten of the buildings on Central Campus were designed by Detroit-based architect
Albert Kahn between 1904 and 1936. The most notable of the Kahn-designed buildings are the
Burton Memorial Tower and nearby
Hill Auditorium.
[47]
North Campus

Much of North Campus has a modern architectural style.
North Campus is the most contiguous campus, built independently from the city on a large plot of land — approximately 800 acres (3.25 km²) — that the university bought in 1952.
[48] It is newer than Central Campus, and thus has more
modern architecture, whereas most Central Campus buildings are classical or gothic in style. The architect
Eero Saarinen, based in
Birmingham, Michigan, created one of the early master plans for North Campus and designed several of its buildings in the 1950s, including the Earl V. Moore School of Music Building.
[49] North and Central Campuses each have unique bell towers that reflect the predominant architectural styles of their surroundings. Each of the bell towers houses a grand
carillon. North Campus houses the
College of Engineering, the Schools of
Music, Theater & Dance, and Art and Design, the
Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, and an annex of the School of Information.
South Campus
South Campus is the site for the athletic programs, including major sports facilities, such as
Michigan Stadium,
Crisler Arena, and
Yost Ice Arena. South Campus is also the site of the Buhr library storage facility (the collections of which are undergoing digitization by Google), the Institute for Continuing Legal Education, and the Student Theatre Arts Complex, which provides shop and rehearsal space for student theatre groups. The university's departments of public safety and transportation services offices are located on South Campus.
UM's golf course is located south of Michigan Stadium and Crisler Arena. It was designed in the late 1920s by
Alister MacKenzie, the designer of
Augusta National Golf Club in
Augusta, Georgia (home of
The Masters Tournament).
[50] The course opened to the public in the spring of 1931. The University of Michigan Golf Course was included in a listing of top holes designed by what ''
Sports Illustrated'' calls “golf’s greatest course architect.” The UM Golf Course’s signature No. 6 hole — a 310-yard par 4, which plays from an elevated tee to a two-tiered, kidney-shaped green protected by four bunkers — is the second hole on the Alister MacKenzie Dream 18 as selected by a five-person panel that includes three-time Masters champion
Nick Faldo and golf course architect
Tom Doak. The listing of “the best holes ever designed by Augusta National architect Alister MacKenzie” is featured in SI’s Golf Plus special edition previewing the Masters in
April 4,
2006.
Athletics
Main articles: Michigan Wolverines
The University of Michigan's sports teams are called the
Wolverines. They participate in the
NCAA's
Division I-A and in the
Big Ten Conference in all sports except men's
ice hockey, which competes in the
Central Collegiate Hockey Association. In seven of the past ten years, UM has finished in the top five of the
NACDA Director's Cup, a ranking compiled by the
National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics to tabulate the success of universities in competitive sports. UM has finished in the top eleven of the Directors' Cup standings in each of the award's twelve seasons and has placed in the top six in each of the last eight seasons.
[51]
The
UM football program ranks first in NCAA history in both total wins (860) and winning percentage (.745).
[52] The team won the first
Rose Bowl game in 1902, and has the longest current streak of consecutive
bowl game appearances. The last year in which UM did not appear in a bowl was 1974, which was also the last season in which Big Ten teams other than the champion were not eligible for bowls; UM's last losing season was in 1967. The Wolverines have won a record 42 Big Ten championships, including five in the past decade. The program has eleven
national championships, most recently in 1997,
[53] and has produced three
Heisman Trophy winners:
Tom Harmon,
Desmond Howard and
Charles Woodson.
[54]
Michigan Stadium is the largest college football-only stadium in the world, with an official capacity of more than 107,501 (the extra seat is said to be "reserved" for
Fritz Crisler[55]) though attendance—frequently over 111,000 spectators—regularly exceeds the official capacity.
[56] The NCAA's record-breaking attendance has become commonplace at Michigan Stadium, especially since the arrival of head coach
Bo Schembechler. UM has fierce rivalries with many teams, including
Michigan State,
Notre Dame, and
Ohio State, the latter of which has been referred to by
ESPN as the greatest
rivalry in American sports.
[57] UM has all-time winning records against Ohio State University (57-40-6), University of Notre Dame (19-14-1), and Michigan State University (66-28-5).
The men's
ice hockey team, which plays at
Yost Ice Arena, has won nine
national championships, while the
men's basketball team, which plays at
Crisler Arena, has appeared in four
Final Fours and won a
national championship in 1989. However, the program became involved in a scandal involving payments from a booster during the 1990s. This led to the program being placed on probation for a four-year period. The program also voluntarily vacated victories from its 1992–1993 and 1995–1999 seasons in which the payments took place, as well as its 1992 and 1993 Final Four appearances.
Through the
2004 Summer Olympic Games, 178 UM students and coaches had participated in the Olympics, winning medals in every
Summer Olympics except 1896, and winning gold medals in all but four Olympiads. UM students have won a total of
116 Olympic medals: 54 gold, 27 silver, and 35 bronze.
[58]
Student life
Residential life

Mosher-Jordan Residence Hall
The University of Michigan has the sixth-largest campus housing system in the U.S. and the third-largest family housing operation, accommodating up to 12,562 people.
[59] The residence halls are organized into three distinct groups: Central Campus, Hill Area (between Central Campus and the University of Michigan Medical Center) and North Campus. Family housing is located on North Campus and mainly serves graduate students. The largest residence hall has a capacity of 1,277 students, while the smallest accommodates 31 residents.
59 A majority of upper-class and graduate students live in off-campus apartments, houses, and
cooperatives, with the largest concentrations in the Central and South Campus areas. The higher cost of living in Ann Arbor has prompted some students to live in nearby communities such as
Ypsilanti or
Plymouth.
The residential system has a number of "living-learning communities" where academic activities and residential life are combined. These communities focus on areas such as research through the
Michigan Research Community, medical sciences,
community service and the
German language.
[60] The
Michigan Research Community, usually housed in Mosher-Jordan Hall, is currently located in East Quadrangle (East Quad) due to renovations in its former building. The
Residential College (RC), a living-learning community that is a division of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, also has its principal instructional space in East Quad. In 2006, the university approved plans for a new residence complex for 550 students on the northern corner of Central Campus. When completed, this residence complex will comprise a second living-learning community.
[61]
Groups and activities

Michigan Union on Central Campus
There are more than 1150 student clubs and organizations at the university.
[62] With a history of student activism, some of the most visible groups include those dedicated to causes such as
civil rights and
labor rights. Two of the most notable of these groups were
Students for a Democratic Society, which recently reformed with a new chapter on campus as of February of 2007, and the
Weather Underground. Though the student body generally leans toward
left-wing politics, there are also conservative groups, such as
YAF and religious groups like "JAAM" (Jewish Awareness America).
Fraternities and sororities, many of which are located east of Central Campus, play a role in the university's social life.
Intramural sports are popular, and there are recreation facilities for each of the three campuses.
[63] There are also several engineering projects teams, including the
University of Michigan Solar Car Team, which placed first in the
American Solar Challenge four times and third in the
World Solar Challenge three times.
[64] Michigan Interactive Investments, an investing and finance organization, is also affiliated with the university. The university also showcases many community service organizations and charitable projects, including SERVE, Circle K,
The Detroit Project,
Habitat for Humanity[65], and
Ann Arbor Reaching Out.
The
Michigan Union and Michigan League are student activity centers located on Central Campus; Pierpont Commons is on North Campus. The Michigan Union houses a majority of student groups, including the student government. The William Monroe Trotter House, located east of Central Campus, is a multicultural student center operated by the university's Office of Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs.
[66] The University Activities Center (UAC) is a student-run programming organization and is composed of 15 committees.
[67] Each group involves students in the planning and execution of a variety of events both on and off campus.
The
Michigan Marching Band, composed of over 350 students from almost all of UM's schools,
[68] is the university's
marching band. Being over 100 years old,
[69] the band perform at every home game and travel to at least one away game a year. The student-run and led
University of Michigan Pops Orchestra is another musical ensemble that attracts students from all academic backgrounds. It performs regularly in the
Michigan Theater. The
University of Michigan Men's Glee Club, founded in 1859, is a men's chorus comprised of over 100 members. Its eight member subset
a cappella group, the
University of Michigan Friars, which was founded in 1955, is the oldest currently running a cappella group on campus.
[70]
''The
Michigan Daily'' is the student-run daily newspaper. Founded in 1890, ''The Daily'' is published five days a week during the normal academic year, and weekly during the spring and summer terms. Other student publications at the university include the conservative ''
The Michigan Review'', the progressive ''Michigan Independent'', the ''
Michigan Journal of Political Science'', and the humor publications ''The Michigan Every Three Weekly'' and the ''
Gargoyle''.
WCBN (88.3 FM) is a freeform radio station;
WOLV-TV is a student-run television station that is primarily shown on the university's cable television system.
Student government

Anti-Coke banner at the University of Michigan, February 2005. Coca-cola products were briefly banned on campus due to student groups pressure in 2006.
Housed in the Michigan Union, the
Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) is the central student government of the University. With representatives from each of the University's colleges and schools, the MSA represents students and manages student funds on the campus. The Michigan Student Assembly is a member of the statewide
Association of Michigan Universities. In recent years MSA has organized airBus, a transportation service between campus and the
Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, and has led the university's efforts to register its student population to vote, with its Voice Your Vote Commission (VYV) registering 10,000 students in 2004. VYV also works to improve access to non-partisan voting-related information and increase student voter turnout.
[71]
There are student governance bodies in each college and school. The two largest colleges at the University of Michigan are the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts (LS&A) and the College of Engineering. Students in the LS&A are represented by the LS&A Student Government (LSA SG). The University of Michigan Engineering Council (UMEC) manages student government affairs for the College of Engineering. In addition, the students that live in the residence halls are represented by the
University of Michigan Residence Halls Association
A longstanding goal of some members of the student government is to create a student designated seat on the Board of Regents, the university's governing body. Such a designation would achieve parity with other Big Ten schools that have student regents. In 2000, students Nick Waun and Scott Trudeau ran for the board on the state-wide ballot as third-party nominees. Waun ran for a second time in 2002, along with Matt Petering and Susan Fawcett.
[72] Although none of these campaigns has so far been successful, a recent poll shows that most students consider student activity fees to be taxation without representation on the board. Another poll conducted by the State of Michigan in 1998 concluded that a majority of Michigan voters would approve of such a position if the measure were put before them. A change to the board's makeup would require amending the
Michigan Constitution.
[73]
Fight song
The University of Michigan's
fight song, ''
The Victors'', was written by student
Louis Elbel in 1898 following the last-minute football victory over the
University of Chicago that clinched a league championship. The song was declared by
John Philip Sousa as "the greatest college fight song ever written."
[74] The song refers to the university as being the "Champions of the West". At the time, UM was part of the "Western Conference", which would later become the
Big Ten Conference. Although mainly used at sporting events, the fight song can be heard at other events that UM competes in. President
Gerald Ford had it played as his entrance anthem in preference over the more traditional ''Hail to the Chief'' during his term from 1974 to 1977.
[75] The fight song is also sung during graduation commencement ceremonies. The university's
alma mater song is ''The Yellow and Blue''. A common rally cry is "Let's Go Blue!", written by former students Joseph Carl, a tuba player, and Albert Ahronheim, a
drum major.
Notable people and alumni
Main articles: List of University of Michigan alumni
UM has more than 420,000 living graduates.
[ About the Association ] Several astronauts are alumni, including the all-UM crews of
Gemini 4 and
Apollo 15. UM's contribution to aeronautics also include aircraft designer
Clarence "Kelly" Johnson of
Skunk Works fame. In addition to the late
U.S. president Gerald Ford, the university has produced twenty-five
Rhodes scholars and 116
Olympic medalists, seven
Nobel Prize winners, and
Fields medal winner
Stephen Smale. UM alumni have also founded or co-founded many companies and organizations (''see also:
List of Entities Founded by University of Michigan alumni'').
Notable writers who attended UM include playwright
Arthur Miller, novelist
Betty Smith, screenwriter
Judith Guest, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet
Theodore Roethke, authors
Charles Major and
Sandra Steingraber, Japanese literature translator
Juliet Winters Carpenter and composer/author/puppeteer
Forman Brown. In
Hollywood, famous alumni include actor
James Earl Jones; actresses
Lucy Liu,
Selma Blair, and
Ruth Hussey; and filmmaker
Lawrence Kasdan.
Other UM graduates include TV journalist
Mike Wallace,
Dana Jacobson and
Steve Phillips of
ESPN,
Rich Eisen of the
NFL Network, entrepreneur Eric Sadek, singer
Joe Dassin, former House Minority Leader
Dick Gephardt, Super Bowl MVPs
Tom Brady and
Desmond Howard, 1997
Heisman Trophy winner
Charles Woodson, Google co-founder
Larry Page, conservative pundit
Ann Coulter, assisted suicide advocate
Jack Kevorkian,
USC Trojan Marching Band director
Dr. Arthur C. Bartner,
Weather Underground radical activist
Bill Ayers,
[76] activist
Tom Hayden, Unabomber
Theodore Kaczynski, architect
Charles Moore, famous avant-garde painter
Aethelred Eldridge,
Mannheim Steamroller founder
Chip Davis, the Swedish Holocaust hero
Raoul Wallenberg, and
Benjamin D. Pritchard, the Civil War general who captured
Jefferson Davis.
[77] Pop singer
Madonna, professional baseball player
Derek Jeter, and rock legend
Iggy Pop attended but did not graduate.
Clarence Darrow, one of the leading attorneys in the U.S., attended the Law School at a time when many lawyers did not receive any formal education.
Sanjay Gupta, a neurosurgeon and CNN medical correspondent, attended the UM School of Medicine.
The university claims the only alumni association with a chapter on the
moon, established in 1971 when the all-UM crew of Apollo 15 placed a charter plaque for a new UM Alumni Association on the lunar surface.
[78] According to the Apollo 15 astronauts, several small UM flags were brought on the mission. However, no flag made it to the surface or was left there. The presence of a UM flag on the moon is a long-held campus myth.
[79]
See also
★
University of Michigan-Dearborn
★
University of Michigan-Flint
★ Various other universities commonly called "
U of M"
Notes
1. University endowment grows to US .7 billion, , , , The Michigan Daily,
2. America's Best Hospitals 2006: Honor Roll
3. The 10 most expensive colleges Sahadi, Jeanne
4. University of Michigan Affirmative Action Lawsuit
5. University of Michigan Drops Affirmative Action for Now Associated Press
6. Higher Education in Transition, Brubacher, John Seiler, , , Transaction Publishers, July 1, 1997, ISBN 1-56000-917-9
7. MMPEI
8. University of Michigan Timelines - General University Timeline
9. Vietnam teach-in 30 years ago Newman, Matthew
10. A Decade of Dissent:Teach-Ins
11. GSIs walk out Saini, kjyot
12. Associated Press
13. Associated Press
14. College Made Easy Bruce C. Steele and Neal Broverman
15. Undergraduate Admissions - Prospective Students
16. University of Michigan - Ann Arbor: Freshman Class Profile
17. University of Michigan - Common Data Set 2004–2005 (Page 11)
18. Undergraduate Admissions - Fast Facts
19. University of Michigan - Common Data Set 2004–2005 (Page 11)
20. Enrollment by Degree Type and School/College
21. America's Best Graduate Schools 2007 - Health: Social Work (Master's)
22. The Top American Research Universities (December 2004). ''The Center''. Accessed October 2, 2005.
23. University of Michigan - Ann Arbor: Recent Rankings for Graduate & Professional Academic
24. America's Best Colleges 2008
25. National Universities
26. The Complete List: The Top 100 Global Universities
27. The Public Ivys: America's Flagship Undergraduate Colleges, Moll, Richard., , , Vikiing Adult, 1985, ISBN 0-670-58205-0
28. Sahadi, Jeanne (October 28, 2005). The 10 most expensive colleges. ''CNN/Money''. Accessed February 21, 2005.
29. Academic Year Tuition and Fees for Full-Time Students for the last 10 years. ''University of Michigan Office of Budget & Planning''. Accessed October 7, 2006.
30. Campaign Goals of UM School, Colleges, and Units
31. M-PACT expansion replaces some loans with grants Serwach, Joe
32. Merit Network: History
33. United States of America - Focal point for biosphere reserves
34. UROP is First, Gregerman, Sandra, , , LSA Magazine, 2005
35. Yale Posts Highest Endowment Returns, Topping Stanford, Harvard Keenan, Matthew
36. Campaign Goals - The Michigan Difference
37. U-M's Michigan Difference campaign hits goal Gershman, Dave
38. University of Michigan Libraries (1-11-2005). ''U of M News Service''. Accessed September 19, 2005.
39. ARL Statistics 2004–05 A Compilation of Statistics from the One Hundred and Twenty-three Members of the Association of Research Libraries, Martha Kyrillidou and Mark Young, , , Association of Research Libraries, 2006
40. Frequently Asked Questions about MBooks at the University of Michigan
41. Scientists use manufacturing methods to reconstruct mastodon
42. Environmental Stewardship at the University of Michigan
43. Welcome to Radrick Farms Golf Course
44. The Inglis House Estate at the University of Michigan Duderstadt, Anne
45. Bus Routes & Medical Center Parking Express Shuttles
46. The Central Forty and The Diag (1837)
47. A Chronology of University of Michigan Buildings, 1840-1999
48. North Campus Tour
49. Eero Saarinen-Operational Thoroughness A Way of Working, Carter, Brian, , , Dimensions Volume Fourteen, 2000
50. UM Golf Course
51. Sports Academy Directors' Cup
52. Official 2006 NCAA Divisions I-A and I-AA Football Records Book
53. University of Michigan Football - National Championships
54. Michigan in the Heisman Trophy Voting
55. Michigan Stadium
56. ''The Michigan Stadium Story'' - Once Again the Biggest House, 1998
57. The 10 greatest rivalries
58. Michigan in the Olympics
59. Housing Fact Sheet
60. Michigan Learning Communities
61. North Quad to feature study of media, information technology
62. University of Michigan Student Organizations - Maize Pages
63. About Our Facilities
64. UMSolar - About Us
65. UM Habitat for Humanity
66. William Monroe Trotter Multicultural Center
67. About UAC
68. Sections
69. History
70. Our History
71. About Voice Your Vote
72. Regent candidates discuss tuition, health care issues at forum
73. Board of regents says no to MSA student regent campaign fee Holmes, Erin
74. University of Michigan College Prowler Off the Record, Michael Hondorp, Fabrikant Alexis, , , College Prowler, Inc, January 1, 2005, ISBN 1-59658-163-8
75. The Press and the Ford Presidency, Rozell, Mark J., , , University of Michigan Press, October 15, 1992, ISBN 0-472-10350-4 .
76. Bill Ayers, Fugitive Days: A Memoir, (New York: Penguin Books, 2003)
77. James J. Green, ''The Life and Times of General B. D. Pritchard'' (Allegan: Allegan County Historical Society, 1979), p. 2.
78. About the Association - Famous U-M Alumni
79. Debunking the Moon Myth Leah Graboski
References
★
Fiske Guide to Colleges 2005 (Twenty-first Edition), Fiske, Edward B., , , Sourcebooks, Inc, 2004, ISBN 1-4022-0229-6
★
Tempests into Rainbows: Managing Turbulence, Fleming, Robben W., , , The University of Michigan Press, 1996, ISBN 0-472-10674-0
★
Special to the Daily: The 1st 100 Years of Editorial Freedom at the Michigan Daily, Holtzer (editor), Susan., , , Caddo Gap Press, 1990, ISBN 0-9625945-2-0
★
The Making of The University of Michigan 1817–1992, Peckham, Howard H., , , The University of Michigan Press, 1994, ISBN 0-472-06594-7
★
Facts & Figures (2005). ''University of Michigan Office of Budget & Planning'' at sitemaker.umich.edu/obpinfo/facts___figures.
External links
★
University of Michigan - Official website
★
Español (Spanish) University of Michigan portal
★
Official athletics website
★