Ann Arbor

U-M’s MFA hits topnotch status

Michigan's Masters in Fine Arts program has produced luminaries like Patrick O’Keefe and Uwem Akpan, and has the distinction of being considered second only to Iowa.Excerpt:In the basement of the newly remodeled University of Michigan Museum of Art, a sizable crowd has gathered in a sleek, sterile-looking auditorium. It's a Friday night in Ann Arbor, and you can almost hear the sound of cheap beers cracking open throughout the city. But for those sitting in UMMA’s Helmut Stern Auditorium, the only sound that echoes is the voice of Kyle Booten, who is center-stage, reciting his ambitious, abstract brand of poetry.Booten — along with a large percentage of his audience — is a student in the University’s MFA program. The atmosphere is warm and congenial, and the sense of community among those assembled is akin to that of a congenial family reunion. As the night wears on, it becomes clear that the University's MFA students are unlike most other graduate students.Short for Master of Fine Arts, an MFA program is an often overlooked and misunderstood two-year graduate program in which students prepare for careers writing poetry, fiction or both. The MFA program was first introduced at the University of Iowa 70 years ago. Now MFA degrees are offered at more than 150 universities across the nation. Despite the success of the MFA movement, it's been surrounded by a fair degree of controversy.Most of the flak arises from the very nature of an MFA program. In essence, it attempts to teach something historically considered unteachable: creative writing.Read the rest of the story here.

Ann Arbor Nanosystems blooms thanks to green products

Ann Arbor-based, green-chem start-up Nanosystems doesn't look to stay small for much longer.Excerpt:In just four years, John Nanos has gone from teaching organic chemistry at the University of Michigan to building a multimillion-dollar company that's helping the environment.In 2005, the former adjunct professor launched a start-up company in Ann Arbor called Nanosystems Inc. after coming up with a greener way to make the polyurethane foam used in everything from the cores of surfboards to ear plugs and wound dressings.Nanos, who grew up in Dearborn as the son of a Ford Motor Co. engineer, developed chemicals for foam that are derived from soybeans, corn and other vegetables instead of oil. Today, Nanosystems produces these liquid building blocks for foam in Ann Arbor and Los Angeles, shipping them to dozens of customers around the country."You are essentially having a softer carbon footprint," said Nanos, who works out of a laboratory at the Michigan Research Institute in Ann Arbor.Read the rest of the story here.

A123 Systems goes public with IPO

One of Ann Arbor's biggest employers for engineering and R&D talent is going public. A123 Systems issued an initial public offering last week of 28,180,501 shares of its common stock at $13.50 per share.An IPO is a sign of not only that a company has arrived but expects significant growth in the near term. The Massachusetts-based firm bought Ann Arbor's T/J Technologies in 2006 and is maintaining its presence in the city. That equals out to 300 of its 1,000 employees in Ann Arbor, and both numbers are expected to grow. A123 Systems specializes in hybrid and high power lithium technology that goes in the next generation of cars, like the Chevrolet Volt. It plans to build a lithium-ion battery factory in Novi after receiving a $69 million investment fro General Electric. A123 Systems is one of the main beneficiaries of the billions of dollars of federal money being invested into electric- and hybrid-car development. The federal government is making these huge investments with the idea of putting 5 million hybrid or plug-in electric vehicles on the road by 2013.Source: A123 SystemsWriter: Jon Zemke

U-M Study: Bad Economy May Be Good for Your Health

Looks like tough economies are good for more than one kind of belt tightening, according to a new University of Michigan study.Excerpt:Are you finally ready for some good news about the recession? As it turns out, a shaky economy might actually be good for your health.Although it seems hard to believe, a new analysis of the Great Depression—the mother of all economic bad times—suggests that mortality dropped and life expectancy increased during that period.Researchers estimate that around that time, a year with a 5% drop in the gross domestic product (GDP) was associated with a 1.9-year gain in life expectancy, while a 5% rise in the GDP lowered life expectancy by about one to two months.And it’s not just the Great Depression, says José A. Tapia Granados, MD, of the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Read the rest of the story here.

Video Small Company Innovation

U-M produces two very important things: Talent and research. The university's Small Company Innovation program connects the commercial to the academic by placing and subsidizing graduate research students in local firms.

Systems in Motion exec discusses what his company will bring to Ann Arbor

The leader behind one of Silicon Valley's most promising start-ups shoots from the hip on why his company needed to invest in Ann Arbor early.Excerpt:The new jobs at Systems in Motion's IT services delivery center near Ann Arbor will offer salaries between $30,000 and $80,000 along with benefits, and the company plans to offer a certain amount of on-the-job training to employees.Debashish Sinha, the firm's top marketing executive, said a recent media report listing the above salary range for new hires "by and large" was accurate. The firm told the state its average weekly wage would be $557 and that it would pay a portion of health care benefits."We are building a business that needs ... people motivated to do work for us and for our customers by a broad range of things, not just because it pays them the most money, because we will never be the company that pays them the most money," he said. "So we'll build an environment that fosters innovation, that fosters a sense of community, where our employees come and can feel like they can belong to a community other than working in a job."Read the rest of the story here and here.

Michigan tailgate aims for zero waste

Tailgating on football Saturdays isn't exactly sustainability in action, but some University of Michigan fans are trying to change that.Excerpt:In Ann Arbor on Saturday, the visiting Hoosiers came up three points shy in a homecoming game against the University of Michigan football team. Final score: 36-33.And at a pre-game tailgate hosted by the UM Alumni Association, a team of  Student Sustainability Initiative (SSI) volunteers came up at least three coffee creamer containers shy of their goal: a “zero waste” tailgate.Those three coffee creamer containers came from Edward J. Vander Velde – from the 50th reunion class of 1959 – who kidded the volunteers who were staffing one of the waste stations inside Oosterbaan Fieldhouse, saying, “We’re still short of perfect!”Read the rest of the story here.

Skype president reflects on business, following his heart and time in Ann Arbor

A big shot in the start-up world (president of Skype) reflects on the lessons he learned growing up in Ann Arbor.Excerpt:MY life has been punctuated by points where I followed my heart rather than my head. I grew up in Ann Arbor, Mich., and went to the alternative high school there. It was called Community High — Commie High for short — and it had an unstructured format. I spent much of my junior and senior years traveling the country in a six-member jazz ensemble.Read the rest of the story here.

Home sweet swap: Seattle/Ann Arbor house exchange leads to cultural immersion

Selling a home in America these days isn't easy, but movers and sellers in Seattle and Ann Arbor are making trades to solve that problem.Excerpt:As I pulled my overloaded Subaru up to a house in Ann Arbor, Mich., last September, I paused a moment with an unsettling realization.Inside the home — a lovely two-story brick colonial on a quintessentially leafy street — was a couple I'd met just once before, for an hour. Based on that meeting, a few e-mails and a one-page agreement, we'd arranged to swap houses for the next nine months while I studied at the University of Michigan and they took an extended vacation in Seattle.The what-ifs, I realized, were daunting. The Ann Arbor couple — Hans and Chris — seemed ideal house-swappers. But what if they weren't? What if Hans and Chris hated our house and wanted to come home? Or, more plausibly, what if my young children wreak the kind of havoc that I know they can?Read the rest of the story here.

A Strange Brew Of Beer And Community

Michigan has the fifth highest number of microbreweries in the nation, and the Ann Arbor area is doing more than its fair share to keep those numbers up. From Ypsi to Dexter to Milan, locally brewed ales, lagers and stouts are not only becoming the beverage of choice, but also bringing community together in unexpected ways.

Our Partners

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Eastern Michigan University
Ann Arbor Art Center
UMS
U of M Arts Initiative
Engage EMU
Ann Arbor Housing Commission

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