University of Michigan: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 42°16′37″N 83°44′17″W / 42.27694°N 83.73806°W / 42.27694; -83.73806
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{{Short description|Public research university in Ann Arbor, Michigan, US}}
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{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2024}}
<font style="font: inherit; font-size: 100%; font-weight: bold; text-align: center; border: none; margin: 0; padding: 0; color: #6a6c76;">University of Michigan, Ann Arbor</font>
{{Infobox university
<p style="margin: 1em 0;">
[[Image:Umichigan color seal.gif|140px|University of Michigan Seal]]<br>
| name = University of Michigan
| image_name = Seal of the University of Michigan.svg
<table style="background: transparent; text-align: left; table-layout: auto; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 0; font-size: 100%;" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
| image_upright = .7
<tr><th style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;">Motto</th><td style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top">''Artes, Scientia, Veritas''
| latin_name = Universitas Michigania
<br>(Latin, "Arts, science, truth")</td></tr>
| motto = {{lang-la|Artes, Scientia, Veritas}}
<tr><th style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;">Established</th>
| mottoeng = "Arts, Knowledge, Truth"
<td style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top">1817</td></tr>
| former_names = Catholepistemiad (1817–1821)
<tr><th style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;">School type</th>
| budget = $13.1 billion (2024)<ref>{{Cite web |title = University Budget Book – FY 2024 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/budget/ubudgetbook_fy24.pdf |access-date = April 12, 2024 |publisher = Office of Budget and Planning }}</ref>
<td style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top">[[Public school|Public]] [[University]]</td></tr>
| endowment = $17.9 billion (2023)<ref>{{Cite news |date = October 19, 2023 |title = Endowment generated 5.2% return in FY '23 |url = https://record.umich.edu/articles/endowment-generated-5-2-return-in-fy-23/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20231020011523/https://record.umich.edu/articles/endowment-generated-5-2-return-in-fy-23/ |archive-date = October 20, 2023 |access-date = October 23, 2023 |publisher = University of Michigan }}</ref>
<tr><th style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;">President</th>
| president = [[Santa Ono]]
<td style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top">[[Mary Sue Coleman]]</td></tr>
| provost = [[Laurie McCauley]]
<tr><th style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;">Location</th>
| established = {{start date and age|1817|8|26}}<ref name="Founding">{{Cite web |title = U-M's Foundings in Detroit and Ann Arbor: Key Dates |url = http://bicentennial.umich.edu/resources/u-ms-foundings-in-detroit-and-ann-arbor-key-dates/ |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20131101064603/http://bicentennial.umich.edu/resources/u-ms-foundings-in-detroit-and-ann-arbor-key-dates/ |archive-date = November 1, 2013 |access-date = January 28, 2016 |publisher = University of Michigan }}</ref>
<td style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top">[[Ann Arbor, Michigan|Ann Arbor]], [[Michigan|MI]], [[United States|USA]]</td></tr>
| type = [[Public university|Public]] [[research university]]
<tr><th style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;">Enrollment</th>
| academic_affiliations = {{hlist
<td style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top">25,000 undergraduate,<br>14,000 graduate</td></tr><tr>
|[[Association of American Universities|AAU]]|[[Oak Ridge Associated Universities|ORAU]]
<th style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;">Faculty</th>
|[[Universities Research Association|URA]]
<td style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top">4,196</td></tr><tr>
|[[University Research Corridor|URC]]
<th style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;">Endowment</th>
|[[National Sea Grant College Program|Sea-grant]]
<td style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top">US$4.2 billion</td></tr><tr>
|[[National Space Grant College and Fellowship Program|Space-grant]]
<th style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;">Campus</th>
}}
<td style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top">[[Ann Arbor]], 3,177 acres (13 km&sup2;); (12.86&nbsp;km&sup2;)
| students = 52,065 (2023)<ref name="Snapshot 2023">{{Cite web |title = Ann Arbor Campus Snapshot – Fall 2023 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/factsfigures/Fall2023_CampusInfographic.pdf |access-date = April 12, 2024 |publisher = Office of Budget and Planning }}</ref>
[[Total]], 20,965 acres (84.84&nbsp;km&sup2;) (inclusive of arboretums)
| undergrad = 33,730 (2023)<ref name="Snapshot 2023" />
</td></tr><tr>
| postgrad = 18,335 (2023)<ref name="Snapshot 2023" />
<th style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;">Sports teams</th>
| administrative_staff = 23,798 (2023)<ref name="Snapshot 2023" />
<td style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top"> Teams are called the Wolverines. 12 men's varsity teams, 14 women's; 2 each men's and women's club varsity teams. [http://www.mgoblue.com/ UM Athletics]</td></tr><tr>
| faculty = 8,189 (2023)<ref name="Snapshot 2023"/>
<th style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;">Website</th>
| city = [[Ann Arbor, Michigan|Ann Arbor]]
<td style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top">[http://www.umich.edu/ www.umich.edu]</td></tr>
| state = [[Michigan]]
</table>
| country = United States
</p>
| coor = {{coord|42|16|37|N|83|44|17|W|display=inline,title}}
</div>
| campus = Midsize city<ref>{{Cite web |title = College Navigator – University of Michigan-Ann Arbor |url = https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=Michigan&s=all&pg=2&id=170976 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211107114346/https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=Michigan&s=all&pg=2&id=170976 |archive-date = November 7, 2021 |access-date = November 7, 2021 |website = nces.ed.gov }}</ref>
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| campus_size = {{cvt|3177|acre|km2}}<br />Total: {{cvt|20965|acre|km2}}, including arboretum<ref>{{Cite web |year = 2006 |title = Environmental Stewardship at the University of Michigan |url = http://www.oseh.umich.edu/OSEH%20Presentations/OSEH%20Lecture%20Series%206.pdf |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070615012332/http://www.oseh.umich.edu/OSEH%20Presentations/OSEH%20Lecture%20Series%206.pdf |archive-date = June 15, 2007 |access-date = April 29, 2007 |publisher = University of Michigan Occupational Safety and Environmental Health }}</ref>
| colors = Maize and blue<ref>{{Cite web |date = July 7, 2015 |title = Style Guide: Colors |url = http://vpcomm.umich.edu/brand/style-guide/design-principles/colors |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150714010133/http://vpcomm.umich.edu/brand/style-guide/design-principles/colors |archive-date = July 14, 2015 |access-date = July 7, 2015 |publisher = Office of Global Communications, University of Michigan }}</ref><br />{{college color boxes|Michigan Wolverines}}
| nickname = [[Michigan Wolverines|Wolverines]]
| sporting_affiliations = {{hlist|[[NCAA Division I FBS]] – [[Big Ten Conference|Big Ten]]|[[Collegiate Water Polo Association|CWPA]]}}
| website = {{URL|https://umich.edu}}
| logo = University of Michigan logo.svg
| logo_upright = 1.0
| accreditation = [[Higher Learning Commission|HLC]]
| free_label = Newspaper
| free = ''[[The Michigan Daily]]''
| free_label2 = Yearbook
| free2 = ''[[Michiganensian]]''
}}
The '''University of Michigan''' ('''U-M''', '''UMich''', or simply '''Michigan''') is a [[public university|public]] [[research university]] in [[Ann Arbor, Michigan]]. Founded in 1817, it is the oldest institution of higher education in the state. The University of Michigan is one of the earliest American [[research universities]] and is a founding member of the [[Association of American Universities]]. In the fall of 2023, the university enrolled over 52,000 students.<ref name="Snapshot 2023" /><ref name="Enroll 2023">{{Cite book |url = https://www.masu.org/sites/default/files/documents/2023-11/MASU%202023%20Enrollment%20Report.pdf |title = ENROLLMENT REPORT FALL 2023 |publisher = Michigan Association of State Universities |year = 2023 |pages = 3 |language = en }}</ref>


The university is [[Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education|classified]] among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very High Research Activity". It consists of nineteen [[college]]s and offers 250 degree programs at the [[undergraduate]] and [[Graduate school|graduate]] level across various [[Liberal arts education|liberal arts]] and [[Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics|STEM]] disciplines.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Academics |url = http://umich.edu/academics |access-date = December 13, 2023 |website = University of Michigan |language = en }}</ref> The university is [[Higher education accreditation in the United States|accredited]] by the [[Higher Learning Commission]]. In 2021, it ranked third among American universities in [[List of countries by research and development spending|research expenditures]] according to the [[National Science Foundation]].
The '''University of Michigan, Ann Arbor''' is a public coeducational university located in [[Ann Arbor]], [[Michigan]]. The oldest and primary campus of the University of Michigan, U of M Ann Arbor, is one of the world's leading research institutions, and is consistently ranked as one of the top public academic institutions worldwide.


The University of Michigan's athletic teams are collectively known as the [[Michigan Wolverines|Wolverines]]. They compete in [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]] [[NCAA Division I|Division I]] [[NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision|FBS]] as members of the [[Big Ten Conference]]. The university currently fields varsity teams across 29 NCAA-sanctioned sports. As of 2022, athletes from the university have won 188 medals at the [[List of American universities with Olympic medals|Olympic Games]].
The University's professional graduate schools (law school, medical school, business school, school of engineering, and school of education) are perennially ranked by [[US News & World Report]] as some of the best in the country. Considered to be a [[Public Ivy]], it is also highly respected for its departments of philosophy, economics, political science, history, and mathematics.

Notable alumni from the university include 8 domestic and foreign [[head of state|heads of state]] or [[head of government|heads of government]], 47 [[U.S. senators]], 218 members of the [[U.S. House of Representatives]], 42 [[Cabinet of the United States|U.S. Cabinet secretaries]], and 41 [[U.S. governors]].


==History==
==History==
''Main article: [[History of the University of Michigan]]''
{{Main|History of the University of Michigan}}


=== 1817–1837 ===
The University of [[Michigan]] was established in [[1817]] by the [[Michigan Territory|Michigan Territorial]] legislature as one of the United States' first public [[university|universities]] on 1,920 acres (8 km&sup2;) of land ceded by the [[Chippewa]], [[Ottawa]], and [[Potawatomi]] people. The school moved from Detroit to [[Ann Arbor]] in [[1837]]. Hoping to be tapped as the site for the new state capitol, Ann Arbor had set aside 40 acres of land, which was subsequently offered to the University. The ceded acreage in Detroit was sold and the proceeds remain in the University's permanent endowment.
The University of Michigan was established on August 26, 1817,<ref name="Founding" /> as [[History of the University of Michigan#The Catholepistemiad (1817–1821)|''Catholepistemiad'']], or ''University of Michigania'', under an act of the [[Michigan Territory]]. The corporate existence of the university had its rise in the Act of 1817, and has been continuous throughout all subsequent changes of its [[organic law]].<ref name="Hinsdale 1906">{{harvnb|Hinsdale|1906}}</ref>{{rp|11}}''Catholepistemiad,'' a neologism, translates roughly as "School of Universal Knowledge".<ref>{{Cite web |title = SNAPSHOTS OF U-M HISTORY: Rising from the Ashes |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/features/rising-from-the-ashes/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210630032947/https://bentley.umich.edu/features/rising-from-the-ashes/ |archive-date = June 30, 2021 |access-date = May 8, 2022 |website = www.bentley.umich.edu }}</ref>


''Catholepistemiad'' was not a university in the contemporary sense but rather a centralized system of schools, libraries, and other cultural and scientific institutions borrowing its model from the [[University of France|Imperial University of France]] founded by [[Napoleon I]] a decade earlier.<ref name="um2017.org">{{Cite web |title = The University of Michigan's Heritage – Two Centuries of Leadership |url = http://um2017.org/U_of_M_History_files/Brief%20Michigan%20History.pdf |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211010020717/http://um2017.org/U_of_M_History_files/Brief%20Michigan%20History.pdf |archive-date = October 10, 2021 |access-date = October 9, 2021 |publisher = um2017.org }}</ref><ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|10}} Besides carrying on the central institution, the president and didactorium of ''Catholepistemiad'' were also authorized to establish private colleges, academies, and libraries in the Michigan Territory.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|10}} It was only after the State of Michigan entered the Union in 1837 that a new plan was adopted to focus the corporation on higher education.<ref name="um2017.org" />
The first classes were held in [[1841]]; six freshmen and a sophomore were taught by two professors. Eleven men graduated in the first commencement ceremony, in [[1845]]. By [[1865]]-[[1866|66]], the university's enrollment increased to 1,205 students, with many of the new enrollees veterans of the Civil War.


[[File:First Annual Report University of Michigania.JPG|thumb|left|First Annual Report of the university, authored by [[John Monteith (minister)|John Monteith]], November 16, 1818]]
The first two decades of the twentieth century saw a construction boom on campus that included facilities to house the dental and pharmacy programs, a chemistry building, a building for the study of natural sciences, two residence halls, [[Hill Auditorium]], and large hospital and library complexes. The school's position as a prominent research university gained momentum in [[1920]] with a formal reorganization of the College of Engineering and the formation of an advisory committee of 100 industrialists to guide academic research initiatives. During [[World War II]], the university grew into a true research powerhouse, undertaking major initiatives on behalf of the [[United States Navy|U.S. Navy]] and contributing to weapons development with breakthroughs including the V.T. Fuse, depth bombs, the PT boat, and radar jammers. By [[1950]], university enrollment had reached 21,000, of whom 7,700 were veterans supported by the [[G.I. Bill]].


Shortly after the passage of the Act of 1817, [[John Monteith (minister)|John Monteith]] became the first president of ''Catholepistemiad'', and [[Gabriel Richard]], a Catholic priest, was vice president. Monteith and Richard enacted that [[Education in the United States#Public and private schools|private schools]] should be established in Detroit, Monroe and Mackinaw, and before the end of September 1817, the three private schools were in operation.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|11}} The cornerstone of the first school house, near the corner of Bates Street and Congress Street in Detroit, was laid on September 24, 1817. Subscriptions amounting to $5,000 payable in instalments running over several years were obtained to carry on the work.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|12}} Of the total amount subscribed to start the work, two-thirds came from [[Grand Lodge of Michigan|Zion Masonic Lodge]] and its members.<ref>{{Cite press release |title = Mysterious Freemason Celebrates 250th Anniversary in Michigan |publisher = prnewswire |url = https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/mysterious-freemason-celebrates-250th-anniversary-in-michigan-254266941.html |last1 = Berry |first1 = Wesley |access-date = December 24, 2021 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211009121054/https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/mysterious-freemason-celebrates-250th-anniversary-in-michigan-254266941.html |archive-date = October 9, 2021 }}</ref> In August 1818, a private [[Lancasterian school]] taught by [[Lemuel Shattuck]] was opened in the building.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|12}}
[[Image:Jfkatmichiganunion.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[John F. Kennedy]] outlines his vision for the [[Peace Corps]] on the steps of the Michigan Union.]]


=== 1837–1900 ===
As the [[Cold War]] and the [[Space Race]] took shape, Michigan became a principal recipient of government research grants, and its researchers were on the vanguard of exploring peacetime uses for atomic power. In a [[1966]] report by the [[American Council on Education]], the university was rated first or second in the nation in graduate teaching of all twenty-eight disciplines surveyed.


{{multiple image
On [[March 24]], [[1964]], a group of faculty held the nation's first "[[teach-in]]" to protest American policy in Southeast Asia. 2,500 students attended the event. A series of [[1966]] sit-ins by Voice, the campus political party of [[Students for a Democratic Society]], prompted the administration to ban [[sit-in]]s, a move that, in turn, led 1,500 students to conduct a one-hour sit-in in the administration building.
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| image1 = JasperCropseyUniversityOfMichigan.jpg
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| caption1 = ''University of Michigan'' (1855) [[Jasper Francis Cropsey]]|alt=Painting of a rolling green landscape with trees with a row of white buildings in the background
| image2 = Colored elevation of Mason Hall.jpg
| alt2 =
| caption2 = Colored elevation of Mason Hall (built in 1841; demolished in 1950), the first building devoted to instruction on the Ann Arbor campus. The design was used as a reference by [[John F. Rague]] to build the [[North Hall (University of Wisconsin)|North Hall]] (built in 1851) in [[Madison, Wisconsin]], which is a [[National Historic Landmark]].<ref name="nrhp">{{cite web|first=Jeffrey M. |last= Dean |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Bascom Hill Historic District |date=June 1974 |url={{NRHP url |id=74000065}} |access-date=February 17, 2024 |publisher=[[National Park Service]]}} With {{NRHP url|id=74000065|photos=y|title=13 photos}}.</ref>
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After the state of Michigan entered the Union in 1837, its constitution granted the university an unusual degree of autonomy as a "coordinate branch of state government". It delegated full powers over all university matters granted to its governing Board of Regents.<ref name="um2017.org" /> On June 3–5, the Board of Regents held its first meeting in [[Ann Arbor]] and formally accepted the proposal by the town to locate the university there.<ref name=Founding/> The town of Ann Arbor had existed for only 13 years and had a population of about 2,000.<ref>{{Cite web |title = 002 1817-1871 PH.indd |url = http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/history/publications/photo_saga/media/PDFs/2%201817-1871.pdf |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211031220923/http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/history/publications/photo_saga/media/PDFs/2%201817-1871.pdf |archive-date = October 31, 2021 |access-date = October 14, 2021 |website = www.umhistory.dc.umich.edu }}</ref> A grant of {{convert|40|acre|ha}}, obtained through the [[Treaty of Fort Meigs]],<ref>{{Cite web |title = AIUM: About |url = http://www.umich.edu/~aium/about.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180817172231/http://www.umich.edu/~aium/about.html |archive-date = August 17, 2018 |access-date = March 7, 2018 |website = www.umich.edu }}</ref> formed the basis of the present Central Campus.<ref name="Central Campus History">{{Cite web |title = The Central Forty and The Diag (1837) |url = http://www.umich.edu/pres/history/markers/diag.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130901090004/http://president.umich.edu/history/markers/diag.html |archive-date = September 1, 2013 |access-date = April 29, 2007 |publisher = University of Michigan History and Traditions Committee }}</ref>
During the [[1970s]], severe budget constraints hindered to some extent the university's physical development and academic standing but eventually saw a surge in funds devoted to research in the social and physical sciences, although campus controversy arose over involvement in the anti-missile [[Strategic Defense Initiative]] and investments in [[South Africa]]. During the [[1980s]] and [[1990s]], the university devoted substantial resources to renovating its massive hospital complex and improving the academic facilities on the school's North Campus. In the late 1980s and early 1990s the university emphasized uses for computer and information technology throughout the campus.


Since the founding period, the private sector has remained the primary provider of university financing to supplement tuition collected from students. Early benefactors of the university included businessman [[Dexter M. Ferry]] (donor of [[Ferry Field]]), Arthur Hill (regent, donor of [[Hill Auditorium]]), the Nichols family (regents, donors of the [[Nichols Arboretum]]), [[William E. Upjohn]] (donor of the Peony
In [[2003]], two lawsuits involving the school'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, though the eventual ruling was mixed. In the first case, the court upheld the [[University_of_Michigan_Law_School|Law School]] admissions policy while in the second, it ruled against the university's undergraduate admissions policy.
Garden), [[William P. Trowbridge]], [[John Stoughton Newberry|John S. Newberry]], who funded the construction of Helen H. Newberry Residence, and [[Henry N. Walker]], a politician who rallied Detroit businessmen to fund the [[Detroit Observatory]]. [[Clara Harrison Stranahan]], a close friend of Scottish-American industrialist [[Andrew Carnegie]], donated $25,000 to the university in 1895. The [[Waterman Gymnasium]] was financed by donations from citizens and matched Joshua W. Waterman's pledge of $20,000.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|67}}


[[File:Library and Chapel, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (front elevation) MET DT369502.jpg|thumb|left|[[Alexander J. Davis]]'s original University of Michigan designs featured the [[Gothic Revival style]]. Davis himself is generally credited with coining the term "Collegiate Gothic".]]
==Academics==
The university has over 24,800 [[undergraduate]] students and over 14,900 [[graduate students]] with over 600 academic programs. Students come from all 50 [[states]] and over 100 [[countries]], though the university admits less than 50% of applicants. 98% of applicants had a graduation [[high school]] [[GPA]] over 3.0. Each class year at Michigan numbers over 6,250 students. The upper quartile of each Michigan class is thus 2 to 3 times the size of the inter-quartile class of the Ivy League schools, yet with a minimum board score hovering around 1400, that quartile is academically competitive with the Ivy League average of 1420. As a result, Michigan numbers within its enrollment somewhat weaker students as well as a cohort competitive with, and as large as, the Ivy League schools. [[Diversity]] is valued at the university, as 15% newly enrolled undergraduates are [[minorities]].


In 1838, the Regents contracted with [[Alexander Jackson Davis]], who according to Superintendent [[John Davis Pierce]] provided truly "magnificent designs" in the Gothic Revival style; but unfortunately the completion of them at that day would, as Pierce said, involve an expenditure of half a million dollars.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|31}} Although approving the designs, the tight budget of the fledgling university forced the Regents to ultimately abandon them and instead adopted a much less expensive plan.<ref>{{Cite book |last = Truettner |first = Julia M. |url = https://www.press.umich.edu/17028/aspirations_for_excellence |title = Aspirations for Excellence |date = 2003 |publisher = University of Michigan Press |isbn = 9780472112777 |access-date = December 24, 2021 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211224202852/https://www.press.umich.edu/17028/aspirations_for_excellence |archive-date = December 24, 2021 |url-status = live }}</ref> The superintendent of construction on the first structure to be built for the university was Isaac Thompson, an associate of Davis.<ref>{{Cite web |last1 = Donnelly |first1 = Walter A. |last2 = Shaw |first2 = Wilfred B. |last3 = Gjelsness |first3 = Ruth W. |date = 1958 |title = President's House |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/legacy-support/campus_tour/preshouse.php |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211224202852/https://bentley.umich.edu/legacy-support/campus_tour/preshouse.php |archive-date = December 24, 2021 |access-date = December 24, 2021 |website = bentley.umich.edu/ |publisher = University of Michigan Press }}</ref>
About 65% of undergraduate students are enrolled in the [[University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts|College of Literature, Science, and the Arts]] (LS&A). The university has a top ranking [[University of Michigan College of Engineering|engineering school]] which enrolls approximately 25% of undergraduate students. Less than 3% of undergraduate students are enrolled in the highly selective [[Ross School of Business]] which students apply to after being enrolled at the university for two years. The rest of the undergraduate students are scattered throughout the smaller colleges on campus including the [[The University of Michigan School of Music|School of Music]], the [[University of Michigan School of Nursing|School of Nursing]], and the [[University of Michigan School of Art and Design|School of Art and Design]].


Mason Hall was the first building at the University of Michigan dedicated to instruction, serving as both a dormitory and a classroom facility. The building was known as the University Main Building upon its completion in 1841 before changing its name to honor the state's first governor, [[Stevens T. Mason]], in 1843. In 1849, a twin building called South College was constructed south of Mason Hall. University Hall, built between 1871 and 1873, connected the two buildings, which were then referred to as the South Wing and the North Wing.
Most graduate students are enrolled in LS&A, the College of Engineering, the [[University of Michigan Law School|Law School]], and the [[University of Michigan Medical School|Medical School]]. The Medical School is partnered with one of the largest health care complexes in the world, the [[University of Michigan Health System]] (UMHS).


[[Asa Gray]] was the first professor appointed to Michigan on July 17, 1837.<ref>{{Cite web |title = New General Library |url = http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/mort/original/1900/13%20University%20Library%201883/index.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200123141029/http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/mort/original/1900/13%20University%20Library%201883/index.html |archive-date = January 23, 2020 |access-date = October 14, 2021 |publisher = UMHistory }}</ref> His position was also the first one devoted solely to [[botany]] at any educational institution in America.{{sfn|University of Michigan|2015}}{{sfn|Pitcher|1856|p=79}}{{sfn|Dupree|1988|pp=67–68}}<ref name="B0017XZGIK">{{cite book |last = Duderstadt |first = Anne. |author-link = |date = January 1, 2006 |title = The University of Michigan: A Photographic Saga (Millenium Project) |url = |location = |publisher = University of Michigan Press |page = |asin = B0017XZGIK }}</ref>[[Douglass Houghton]] was named the university's first professor of geology, mineralogy, and chemistry in 1839.<ref name="B0017XZGIK" /> Other notable faculty members appointed at the university during this period included [[Andrew Ten Brook]], [[Samuel Denton]], [[Alexander Winchell]], [[Franz Brünnow]], [[Henry Simmons Frieze]], [[Thomas McIntyre Cooley]], and [[De Volson Wood]].<ref name="B0017XZGIK" /> [[Andrew Dickson White]], founder and first president of Cornell University, filled the first permanent chair of history in the country at the university from 1857 to 1864.<ref name="B0017XZGIK" /> White was one the earliest benefactors of the University of Michigan; he joined the Michigan faculty in 1858.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Professor White's trees |url = http://michigantoday.umich.edu/2008/04/trees.php |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100606173105/http://michigantoday.umich.edu/2008/04/trees.php |archive-date = June 6, 2010 |access-date = July 31, 2010 |website = Michigan Today }}</ref>
The University routinely leads the nation in the number of [[Fulbright Scholars]] and has several [[Rhodes Scholars]]. The university's combination of academics and athletics places it high in college ratings. In one recent rankings summary, more than 70% of Michigan's more than 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 [http://www.umich.edu/%7Eoapainfo/TABLES/PDF/UMAA_Rankings.pdf].


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.<ref>{{Cite web |date = July 5, 2007 |title = University of Michigan Timelines: General University Timeline |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/exhibits/umtimeline/general.php |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090421020242/http://bentley.umich.edu/exhibits/umtimeline/general.php |archive-date = April 21, 2009 |access-date = December 26, 2008 |publisher = Bentley Historical Library }}</ref>
===Libraries and Museums===
The University Library system is the sixth largest library system in the country. It is comprised of 19 individual libraries with 24 separate collections, roughly 7.96 million volumes, 67,554 current serials, 343,915 maps, 39,604 linear feet of mansucripts and archives, and over 85,000 film, video, and audio materials. The collection grows at the rate of 150,000 volumes, or roughly 2.5 miles (4 km), per year. The University was the original home of the [[JSTOR]] database with about 750,000 pages digitized from the entire pre-[[1990]] backfile of ten journals of [[history]] and [[economics]]. The University recently entered into a path-breaking book digitization program with [[Google]].


In the following years, the regents established branches of the university in various parts of the state.<ref name="Kalamazoo Branch">{{Cite web |date = May 2023 |title = University of Michigan Branch 1838–1843 |url = https://www.kpl.gov/local-history/kalamazoo-history/education/university-of-michigan-branch/ |access-date = January 7, 2024 |publisher = Kalamazoo Public Library }}</ref> These decentralized branches were designed to serve as preparatory schools for the primary university.<ref name="Kalamazoo Branch" /> The first branch was located in [[Pontiac, Michigan|Pontiac]], and others followed in [[Kalamazoo, Michigan|Kalamazoo]], [[Detroit]], [[Niles, Michigan|Niles]], [[Tecumseh, Michigan|Tecumseh]], [[White Pigeon, Michigan|White Pigeon]], and [[Romeo, Michigan|Romeo]].<ref name="Kalamazoo Branch" /> Despite its optimism, the branches floundered, finding it difficult to enroll students. Some of the branches would later merge with local colleges. [[Kalamazoo College]], the oldest private college in the state, once operated as the Kalamazoo Branch of the University of Michigan from 1840 to 1850.<ref name="Kalamazoo Branch" />
Two prominent libraries, the [[Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library]] and the [[Shapiro Undergraduate Library]], are located on Central Campus and connected by a [[skywalk]]. The [[Duderstadt Center]] on North Campus contains books for [[art]], [[architecture]], and [[engineering]]. The Duderstadt Center also contains multiple [[computer lab]]s, [[video editing]] studios, and a [[3D]] [[virtual reality]] room.


The years 1837–1850 revealed weakness in the organization and working of the university. Regents of the university discovered that the organic act from which they derived their powers made them too dependent upon the legislature. The subject was brought to the attention of the legislature more than once but without securing the desired action in order to achieve increased independence. By the late 1840s, the Regents achieved a strong position relative to [[collective bargaining]] with the legislature as the opinion was becoming common among [[capitalists]], [[clergymen]] and [[intellectual|intellectual elites]], since by then the state derived significant [[tax revenue]] through them. Such a situation ultimately led to a change in the organic act of the university. Remodeled, the act, which was approved April 8, 1851, emancipated the university from legislative control that would have been injudicious and harmful. The office of Regent was changed from an appointed one to an elected one, and the office of President was created, with the Regents directed to select one. As Hinsdale argued, "the independent position of the university has had much to do with its growth and prosperity. In fact, its larger growth may be dated from the time when the new sections began to take effect."<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|40}}
The University of Michigan is also home to a number of [[museum]]s which cover topics such as [[archeology]], [[anthropology]], [[paleontology]], [[zoology]], [[dentistry]], and [[art]]. The natural history public collections can be found 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 as the official state [[fossil]], the [[mastodon]]. The [[University of Michigan Museum of Zoology|Museum of Zoology]] collection includes over 15 million specimens representing all orders of [[bird]]s, [[amphibian]]s and [[reptile]]s, [[mite]]s, and [[insect]]s, and over 80% of orders of [[fish]] and [[mollusk]]s. One of the more famous museums is the [[University of Michigan Museum of Art]] which has approximately 14,000 art pieces, including European, American, Middle Eastern, Asian, and African, as well as changing exhibits.


[[File:Statue of Benjamin Franklin Standing on lawn in front of University Hall First Congregational Church and Union School West Hall visible across State Street.jpg|thumb|Statue of [[Benjamin Franklin]], stood on west side of South State Street in front of University Hall]]
===Research===
The University has the largest yearly research expenditure of any public university in the United States, totaling roughly [[United States dollar|$]]750 million in [[2004]].


The University of Michigan conferred the degree of [[Bachelor of Science]] in 1855, four years after the [[Lawrence Scientific School]] at [[Cambridge, Massachusetts|Cambridge]] conferred the degree in 1851, for the first time in the United States, making Michigan the second institution in the country to confer the degree.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|48}} The degree of [[Bachelor of Philosophy]] was conferred for the first time in the university's history upon six students in 1870.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|79}} The degrees of [[Master of Philosophy]] and [[Doctor of Philosophy]] was first offered in 1875.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|88}}
The University was at the center of the development of one of the first university networks and has made major contributions to the mathematics of [[information theory]], notably through [[Claude E. Shannon|Claude Shannon]]. Other major contributions include the construction of the precursor to the [[National Science Foundation]] (NSF) [[computer network|computer networking]] backbone, the virtual memory model, and computer [[database]]s. The [[National Election Studies]] and one of the nation's most watched [[Index (economics)|economic index]], the University of Michigan's Consumer Confidence Index, are based at the University.
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Michigan established its [[Michigan Medicine|medical school]] in 1850, engineering courses in 1854, and a [[Michigan Law|law school]] in 1859.<ref name="um2017.org" /> In 1875, the University of Michigan established the [[University of Michigan School of Dentistry|College of Dental Surgery]], becoming the second university in the United States to offer dental education after [[Harvard School of Dental Medicine|Harvard Dental College]], which was founded in 1867. The university was also the first to provide graduate-level dentistry education. In 1876, [[Albert B. Prescott]] established the university's [[University of Michigan College of Pharmacy|College of Pharmacy]], which was the nation's first school of pharmacy at a state university.
The University is also a major contributor to the medical field, with the [[EKG]], [[gastroscope]], [[Jonas Salk]]'s polio vaccine, and the ECMO (extracorporal membrane oxygenation) system being invented at the University. Currently, the University is breaking new ground in femtosecond [[Photorefractive keratectomy|keratectomy]] using chirped-pulse [[laser]]s. Huge support was recently given to the [[life science]]s with the establishment of the Life Sciences Institute (LSI) and the construction of associated facilities.


The university was among the first to introduce instruction in fields as diverse as zoology and botany, [[modern languages]], [[modern history]], [[American literature]], [[speech]], [[journalism]], [[teacher education]], [[forestry]], [[bacteriology]], [[naval architecture]], [[aeronautical engineering]], [[computer engineering]], and [[nuclear engineering]].<ref name="um2017.org" /> In 1856, Michigan built the nation's first [[chemical laboratory]].<ref name="Chem Lab">{{Cite web |title = Chemical Laboratory |url = http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/mort/original/1875/chemical_laboratory/index.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211021222339/http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/mort/original/1875/chemical_laboratory/index.html |archive-date = October 21, 2021 |access-date = October 21, 2021 |publisher = UMHistory }}</ref> That laboratory was the first structure on the North American continent that was designed and equipped solely for instruction in chemistry.<ref name="Chem Lab" /> In 1869, the University of Michigan opened the first hospital in the country owned and operated by a university.
Undergraduate students are able to participate in various research projects through the Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program (UROP) as well as the UROP/Creative-Programs. These programs received a #1 national ranking [http://www.lsa.umich.edu/lsa/detail/0,2034,5377%255Farticle%255F7354,00.html].

Methods of instruction had also undergone important changes. The ''[[seminar]]'' method of study was first introduced into the university by [[Charles Kendall Adams]] in 1871–1872, making the university the first American institution to naturalize this product of the German soil.<ref>{{Cite book |last = Brubacher |first = John Seiler |title = Higher Education in Transition |date = July 1, 1997 |publisher = Transaction Publishers |isbn = 1-56000-917-9 |page = 187 }}</ref><ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|71}}

[[File:Literary Class of 1880.jpg|thumb|Literary Class of 1880 (includes [[Mary Henrietta Graham]], the first African American woman graduate of the University of Michigan)]]

By 1866, enrollment had increased to 1,205 students. Women were first admitted in 1870,<ref>{{Cite web |date = September 26, 2008 |title = Suggested Research Topics – Gender and Social Space on the University Campus, 1870–1970 |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/research/topics/gendersp.php |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090313030542/http://bentley.umich.edu/research/topics/gendersp.php |archive-date = March 13, 2009 |access-date = December 25, 2008 |publisher = Bentley Historical Library }}</ref> although [[Alice Robinson Boise Wood]] was the first woman to attend classes (without matriculating) in 1866–67.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Brennan |first = T. Corey |date = n.d. |title = WOOD, Alice Robinson Boise |url = https://dbcs.rutgers.edu/all-scholars/9307-wood-alice-robinson-boise |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190123010141/https://dbcs.rutgers.edu/all-scholars/9307-wood-alice-robinson-boise |archive-date = January 23, 2019 |access-date = March 13, 2020 |website = Database of Classical Scholars |publisher = Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey |quote = When the question first came up in 1854 of admitting women to the University of Michigan, [[James Robinson Boise]] is the only professor on record to vote in its favor. A dozen years later, when his daughter Alice had graduated Ann Arbor High School, he is said to have been enraged that she could not continue at Michigan, and in September 1866 informally invited his daughter to join his Greek recitations at the university. Some of his colleagues followed suit. }}</ref> In 1870, Gabriel Franklin Hargo graduated from Michigan Law as the second African American to graduate from a law school in the United States. In 1871, [[Sarah Killgore]] became the first woman to graduate from law school and be admitted to the bar of any state in the United States.<ref>{{cite web |url = http://www.law.umich.edu/historyandtraditions/students/Documents/Sarah_Killgore_Bio.pdf |title = Michigan's First Woman Lawyer |publisher = University of Michigan Law School |access-date = September 14, 2013 }}</ref> Among the early students in the School of Medicine was [[Jose Celso Barbosa]], who graduated as valedictorian in 1880, becoming the first [[Puerto Ricans|Puerto Rican]] to earn a university degree in the United States.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Guzmán |first = W. |date = May 22, 2020 |title = José Barbosa (1857–1921) |url = https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/jose-barbosa-1857-1921/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210923010739/https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/jose-barbosa-1857-1921/ |archive-date = September 23, 2021 |access-date = August 27, 2021 |website = BlackPast.org }}</ref> [[Ida Gray]] graduated from the [[University of Michigan School of Dentistry|School of Dentistry]] in June 1890, becoming the first African-American woman dentist in the United States.{{sfn|Dykes|1996|p=496}}

By the 1870s, the university had built an international reputation. During this period, over 80 subjects of the [[Emperor of Japan]] were sent to Ann Arbor to study law as part of the opening of that empire to external influence.<ref>{{cite web |url = https://michigan.law.umich.edu/about-michigan-law/michigan-law-history |title = Michigan Law History |publisher = University of Michigan Law School |access-date = February 17, 2024 }}</ref> The University of Michigan was also involved with the building of the [[Philippine]] education, legal, and public health systems during the era of the American colonization of the Philippines through the efforts of Michigan alumni that included [[Dean Conant Worcester]] and [[George A. Malcolm]].<ref>{{Cite book |last = Calata |first = Alexander A. |title = Mixed Blessing: The Impact of the American Colonial Experience on Politics and Society in the Philippines |date = 2002 |publisher = Greenwood Press |isbn = 9780313307911 |editor-last = McFerson |editor-first = Hazel M. |location = Westport, CT |pages = 90–91 |chapter = The Role of Education in Americanizing Filipinos |oclc = 756515246 }}</ref>

Descendants of [[History of Massachusetts|Massachusetts founding families]] made up a large portion of the university population in the 19th century; among them was Regent Charles Hebard, a lineal descendant of [[William Bradford (governor)|William Bradford]], a founding father of [[Plymouth Colony]].<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|204}} In the early 20th century, the university became a favored choice for high-achieving Jewish students seeking a quality education free of religious discrimination when the private colleges with Protestant affiliation often imposed quotas on Jewish admissions. Since then, the university has served as a haven for the community of Jewish-American scholars.<ref>{{Cite press release |date = December 28, 2023 |title = University to launch institute to address antisemitism |url = https://record.umich.edu/articles/university-to-launch-institute-to-address-antisemitism/ |access-date = January 7, 2024 |publisher = U-M Office of the Vice President for Communications }}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |date = November 29, 2023 |title = Buss: Once a haven, Jews now fearful on UM campus |url = https://www.detroitnews.com/story/opinion/columnists/kaitlyn-buss/2023/11/27/buss-once-a-haven-jews-now-fearful-on-um-campus/71717662007/ |access-date = January 7, 2024 |newspaper = The Detroit News }}</ref>

[[File:Commencement 1912 President Hutchins and dignitaries walking across Diag toward Engineering Arch.jpg|thumb|left|Commencement, 1912: University President [[Harry Burns Hutchins|H.B. Hutchins]] and dignitaries walking across The Diag toward the Engineering Arch]]

Throughout its history, Michigan has been one of the nation's largest universities, vying with the largest private universities such as [[Harvard University]] and [[Columbia University]] (then known as Columbia College) during the 19th and early 20th centuries, and then holding this position of national leadership until the emergence of the statewide public university systems in the post-WWII years.<ref name="um2017.org" /> By the turn of the 19th century, the university was the second largest in the United States after Harvard University.<ref>{{Cite web |title = The First 150 Years |url = https://www.northwestern.edu/magazine/northwestern/spring2001/first150_long_feature.htm |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211010020717/https://www.northwestern.edu/magazine/northwestern/spring2001/first150_long_feature.htm |archive-date = October 10, 2021 |access-date = October 9, 2021 |website = northwestern.edu }}</ref>

=== 20th century ===
[[File:Photo of courtyard Law Quadrangle.jpg|thumb|Law Quadrangle, ca. 1930s]]

From 1900 to 1920, the growth of [[higher education]] led the university to build numerous new facilities. The [[Martha Cook Building]] was constructed as an all-female residence in 1915 as the result of a gift from [[William W. Cook|William Wilson Cook]] in honor of his mother, Martha Walford Cook.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Martha Cook Residence Hall |url = http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/mort/central/south%20of%20south%20U/Martha%20Cook/index.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211019033108/http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/mort/central/south%20of%20south%20U/Martha%20Cook/index.html |archive-date = October 19, 2021 |access-date = October 18, 2021 }}</ref>
Cook planned to endow a professorship of law of corporations, but eventually made possible the development of the Law Quadrangle.<ref name="Law Quadrangle">{{Cite web |title = The Law Quadrangle |url = http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/mort/central/south%20of%20south%20U/Law%20Quadrangle/index.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200218134450/http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/mort/central/south%20of%20south%20U/Law%20Quadrangle/index.html |archive-date = February 18, 2020 |access-date = October 18, 2021 }}</ref> The five buildings comprising the Law Quadrangle were constructed during the decade of 1923–33 on two city blocks purchased by the university: Lawyers Club, Dormitory Wing, John P. Cook Dormitory, William W Cook Legal Research Library, and Hutchins Hall.<ref name="Law Quadrangle" /> The buildings, in the [[Tudor architecture|Tudor Gothic style]], recalled the quadrangles of the two [[Oxbridge|English ancient universities]] Oxford and Cambridge.<ref name="Law Quadrangle" />

[[File:UhlenbeckKramersGoudsmit.jpg|thumb|left|Physicists [[George Uhlenbeck|G.E. Uhlenbeck]], [[Hendrik Kramers|H.A. Kramers]], and [[Samuel Goudsmit|S.A. Goudsmit]] circa 1928 at Michigan]]

From 1915 to 1941, the physics department was led by [[Harrison M. Randall|H.M. Randall]], who established the importance of theoretical colleagues. [[Oskar Klein|O.B. Klein]], [[Samuel Goudsmit|S.A. Goudsmit]], [[George Uhlenbeck|G.E. Uhlenbeck]], [[Otto Laporte|O. Laporte]] and [[David M. Dennison|D.M. Dennison]] joined the physics faculty during this time. Theoretical physicist [[Wolfgang Pauli|W. Pauli]], who became known as one of the pioneers of [[quantum physics]], held a visiting professorship at the university in 1931.<ref name="Burton">{{Cite web |last = Burton |first = Marion Le Roy |title = Department of Physics (University of Michigan) records, 1873–[ongoing]. |url = https://search.lib.umich.edu/catalog/record/990027429270106381?filter.author=Oppenheimer%2C+J.+Robert%2C+1904-1967.&library=Bentley+Historical+Library |access-date = November 1, 2023 |website = search.lib.umich.edu |publisher = UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LIBRARY }}</ref> Other physicists with ties to the university include the inventor of the [[Synchrotron|Race Track Synchrotron]] [[H. Richard Crane|H.R. Crane]], [[Gordon Sutherland|G.B.B.M. Sutherland]] and [[Hendrik Kramers|H.A. Kramers]]. [[Stephen Timoshenko|S. Timoshenko]], who is considered to be the father of modern [[engineering mechanics]], created the first U.S. bachelor's and doctoral programs in engineering mechanics when he was a faculty professor at the university.

[[File:People attending UM physics symposium pose for group photo Summer 1931.jpg|thumb|[[Hans Kramers|H.A. Kramers]], second row, sixth left with [[J. Robert Oppenheimer]], second row, fourth left, in a photograph of the Summer Symposium on Theoretical Physics in 1931 at the University of Michigan]]

The University of Michigan Summer Symposium in Theoretical Physics was held annually from 1928 to 1941.<ref>{{cite web |last = Levine |first = Alaina G. |title = Historic Sites Initiative – University of Michigan |url = https://www.aps.org/programs/honors/history/historicsites/summer.cfm |access-date = February 4, 2024 |website = American Physical Society }}</ref> During this period, virtually every world-renowned physicist lectured at the symposium, including [[Niels Bohr|N. Bohr]], [[Paul Dirac|P.A.M. Dirac]], [[Enrico Fermi|E. Fermi]], [[Werner Heisenberg|W. Heisenberg]], [[Paul Ehrenfest|P. Ehrenfest]], [[Erwin Schrödinger|E. Schrödinger]], and others.<ref name="Burton" /> No fewer than fifteen of the visiting physicists were either Nobel laureates or would later receive the [[Nobel Prize in physics]]. [[J. Robert Oppenheimer]], who was a professor at the [[California Institute of Technology]] and would later be known as the "father of the atomic bomb", visited in 1931 and 1934.<ref name="Burton" />
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The University of Michigan has been the birthplace of some important academic movements, establishing the Michigan schools of thought and developing the Michigan Models in various fields. [[John Dewey]], [[Charles Horton Cooley]], [[George Herbert Mead]], and [[Robert Ezra Park]] first met at Michigan. There, they would influence each other greatly.<ref>{{Cite book |last = Miller |first = David |title = George Herbert Mead: Self, Language, and the World |publisher = University of Texas Press |year = 2009 |isbn = 978-0-292-72700-7 |pages = xii-xix }}</ref> In political science, [[Angus Campbell (psychologist)|Angus Campbell]], [[Philip Converse]], [[Warren Miller (political scientist)|Warren Miller]] and [[Donald E. Stokes|Donald Stokes]], proposed the [[Michigan Model|Michigan model of voting]].<ref>{{Cite news |last = Pace |first = Eric |date = February 3, 1999 |title = Warren E. Miller, 74, Expert On American Voting Patterns |url = https://www.nytimes.com/1999/02/03/us/warren-e-miller-74-expert-on-american-voting-patterns.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180912022153/https://www.nytimes.com/1999/02/03/us/warren-e-miller-74-expert-on-american-voting-patterns.html |archive-date = September 12, 2018 |access-date = September 11, 2018 |work = [[The New York Times]] }}</ref>

Shortly after the war, in 1947, the Regents appointed a War Memorial Committee to consider establishing a war memorial in honor of students and alumni who fell in [[World War II]], and in 1948, approved a resolution to "create a war memorial center to explore the ways and means by which the potentialities of atomic energy may become a beneficent influence in the life of man, to be known as the Phoenix Project of the University of Michigan," leading to the world's first academic program in nuclear science and engineering.<ref>{{Cite web |title = MMPEI–History |url = http://www.energy.umich.edu/about/#history |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081229015555/http://www.energy.umich.edu/about |archive-date = December 29, 2008 |access-date = August 28, 2010 |publisher = Michigan Memorial Phoenix Energy Institute }}</ref><ref name="um2017.org" /> The Memorial Phoenix Project was funded by over 25,000 private contributors by individuals and corporations, such as the [[Ford Motor Company]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last = Martin |first = Joseph D. |date = February 2016 |title = The Peaceful Atom Comes to Campus |journal = Physics Today |volume = 69 |issue = 2 |pages = 40–46 |bibcode = 2016PhT....69b..40M |doi = 10.1063/pt.3.3081 |doi-access = free }}</ref>

During the 1960s, the university campus was the site of numerous protests against the Vietnam War and university administration. On March 24, 1965, a group of U-M faculty members and 3,000 students held the nation's first-ever faculty-led "[[teach-in]]" to protest against American policy in Southeast Asia.<ref>{{Cite journal |last = Newman |first = Matthew |date = October 1995 |title = U-M faculty's historic teach-in of 30 years ago: 'A Vital Service To Their Country' |url = http://www.ns.umich.edu/MT/95/Oct95/mt11o95.html |url-status = dead |journal = Michigan Today |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100602090041/http://www.ns.umich.edu/MT/95/Oct95/mt11o95.html |archive-date = June 2, 2010 |access-date = August 28, 2010 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date = December 22, 2008 |title = A Decade of Dissent: Teach-Ins |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/exhibits/dissent/teachins.php |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100727123100/http://bentley.umich.edu/exhibits/dissent/teachins.php |archive-date = July 27, 2010 |access-date = August 28, 2010 |publisher = Bentley Historical Library }}</ref> The university's [[Spectrum Center (community center)|Spectrum Center]] is the oldest collegiate [[LGBT student center]] in the U.S., pre-dating [[University of Pennsylvania|Penn]]'s.<ref>{{Cite web |date = November 11, 2011 |title = AADL Talks To Jim Toy and Jackie Simpson |url = https://aadl.org/node/164719 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210116141342/https://aadl.org/node/164719 |archive-date = January 16, 2021 |access-date = August 27, 2021 |publisher = Ann Arbor District Library }}</ref>

Due to concerns over the university's financial situation there have been suggestions for the complete separation of the university and state through [[privatization]].<ref>{{Cite magazine |last = Sullivan |first = Amy |date = April 23, 2009 |title = Cash-Strapped State Schools Being Forced to Privatize |url = http://content.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1893286,00.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211010051453/http://content.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1893286,00.html |archive-date = October 10, 2021 |access-date = October 10, 2021 |magazine = [[Time (magazine)|Time]] }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last1 = Weislak |first1 = Lance J. |last2 = LaFaive |first2 = Michael D. |date = March 1, 2004 |title = Privatize the University of Michigan (Viewpoint on Public Issues) |url = https://www.mackinac.org/V2004-08 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211114231442/https://www.mackinac.org/V2004-08 |archive-date = November 14, 2021 |access-date = November 14, 2021 |publisher = Mackinac Center for Public Policy }}</ref> Even though the university is a public institution ''de jure'', it has embraced [[Funding|funding models]] of a [[private university]] that emphasize [[tuition|tuition funding]] and raising funds from [[donation|private donors]].<ref>{{Cite web |last = Fain |first = P. |date = November 1, 2009 |title = At public universities: Less for more. |url = https://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/01/education/edlife/01public-t.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220509002710/https://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/01/education/edlife/01public-t.html |archive-date = May 9, 2022 |access-date = May 8, 2022 |website = The New York Times }}</ref> Considering that "the University of Michigan already has only minimal fiscal ties to the state," the legislature convened a panel in 2008 that recommended converting the University of Michigan from a public to a private institution.<ref>{{Cite journal |last = Kelderman |first = E. |date = May 1, 2009 |title = Public Colleges Consider Privatization as a Cure for the Common Recession |url = https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ841423 |url-status = live |journal = Chronicle of Higher Education |volume = 55 |issue = 34 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220509002710/https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ841423 |archive-date = May 9, 2022 |access-date = May 8, 2022 }}</ref>

Since the fall of 2021, the university has had the largest number of students in the state, surpassing [[Michigan State University]]'s former enrollment leadership.<ref>{{cite web |last1 = Ramirez |first1 = Charles E. |last2 = Kozlowski |first2 = Kim |date = October 3, 2023 |title = UM Ann Arbor remains largest university in state as competition to get in intensifies |url = https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/michigan/2023/10/02/um-ann-arbor-enrollment-52000-sets-another-record/71029768007 |access-date = February 2, 2024 |website = The Detroit News }}</ref> Given the state's shrinking pool of college-age students, there is public concern that the university's expansion could harm smaller schools by drawing away good students.<ref name='bridgemi-112'>{{cite web |last1 = Lohman |first1 = Isabel |last2 = Wilkinson |first2 = Mike |date = April 4, 2022 |title = U-M, MSU thrive while Michigan regional universities scramble for students |url = https://www.bridgemi.com/talent-education/u-m-msu-thrive-while-michigan-regional-universities-scramble-students |access-date = February 2, 2024 |website = bridgemi.com }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last = Atwood |first = Sarah |date = January 22, 2024 |title = University enrollment is up in Michigan, but big schools far outpacing smaller colleges |url = https://www.lansingstatejournal.com/story/news/local/campus/2024/01/22/michigan-state-university-um-enrollment-gains-public-universities/72310711007/ |access-date = February 2, 2024 |website = Lansing State Journal }}</ref> Some of the state's regional public universities and smaller private colleges have already seen significant declines in enrollment, while others face difficulties in maintaining enrollment figures without lowering admission standards.<ref name='bridgemi-112'/>

===Historical links===

[[File:HarryHutchins JamesAngell AndrewWhite.png|thumb|University presidents [[Harry Burns Hutchins]], left, and [[James Burrill Angell]], center, with [[Cornell University]] founder [[Andrew Dickson White]], right, in a 1900s photograph]]

The University of Michigan was the first attempt in the [[New World]] to build a [[History of European universities#Modern universities|modern university]] in the European sense. The institution was the clearest and strongest presentation that had yet been made of what, in this country, at once came to be called the "[[Prussian education system#United States|Prussian ideas]]". It was a radically different approach to higher education; a complete civil system of education, in contradistinction to the ecclesiastical system made out of the [[colonial colleges]]. Michigan alumni and faculty members carried this newer concept of the university with them as they founded other institutions including [[Andrew Dixon White]], a cofounder of [[Cornell University]].<ref name="um2017.org" /> Cornell alumni [[David Starr Jordan]] and [[John Casper Branner]] passed the concept to [[Stanford University]] in the late 19th century.<ref>{{cite book |last = Peckham |first = Howard Henry |author-link = |date = September 26, 1994 |title = The Making of The University of Michigan 1817–1992 |url = |location = |publisher = UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN BENTLEY LIBRARY |page = |isbn = 9780472065943 }}</ref> [[Clark Kerr]], the first chancellor of the [[University of California, Berkeley]], called Michigan the "mother of state universities" and credited the university for the first creation of the [[research university]] in America.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Kerr |first = Clark |date = December 16, 1973 |title = Clark Kerr 1973 Winter Commencement: THE AMERICAN UNIVERSITY – END OF ITS GOLDEN AGE? |url = http://websites.umich.edu/~bhlumrec/c/commence/1973-Kerr.pdf |access-date = December 1, 2023 |publisher = University of Michigan }}</ref>
* [[University of California]]: had its early planning based upon the University of Michigan.<ref>{{Cite book |last = Stadtman |first = Verne A. |url = https://archive.org/details/universityofcali00stad |title = The University of California, 1868–1968 |date = 1970 |publisher = McGraw-Hill |location = New York |pages = [https://archive.org/details/universityofcali00stad/page/7 7–34] |url-access = registration }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last = Marsden |first = George M. |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=E9QOfEZrrLYC&pg=PA134 |title = The Soul of the American University: From Protestant Establishment to Established Nonbelief |date = 1994 |publisher = Oxford University Press |isbn = 9780195106503 |location = New York |pages = 134–140 |access-date = November 9, 2021 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211109071657/https://books.google.com/books?id=E9QOfEZrrLYC&pg=PA134 |archive-date = November 9, 2021 |url-status = live }} Page 138 of this source incorrectly states that the date of the final negotiations in which Governor Low participated was October 8, 1869, but it is clear from the context and the endnotes to that page (which cite documents from 1867) that the reference to 1869 is a typo.</ref>
* [[University of Chicago]]: Michigan alumnus Robert Ezra Park played a leading role in the development of the [[Chicago school (sociology)|Chicago School of sociology]]. The University of Chicago Laboratory School was founded in 1896 by John Dewey and [[Calvin Brainerd Cady]], who were members of the Michigan faculty.
* Cornell University: [[Andrew Dixon White]] and [[Charles Kendall Adams]], the first and second presidents of Cornell, respectively, were members of the Michigan faculty. Cornell also had its [[Cornell Law School|Law School]] founded by Michigan alumni Charles Kendall Adams and [[Harry Burns Hutchins]].
* Harvard University: Michigan alumnus [[Edwin Francis Gay]] was the founding dean of the [[Harvard Business School]] from 1908 to 1919,<ref>{{Cite web |title = Our History |url = http://www.hbs.edu/about/history.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130218170344/http://www.hbs.edu/about/history.html |archive-date = February 18, 2013 |access-date = January 7, 2009 |publisher = hbs.edu }}</ref> instrumental in the school's planning.
* [[Johns Hopkins University]]: had its [[Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine|pharmacology department]] established by [[John Jacob Abel]], an alumnus of Michigan.
* Massachusetts Institute of Technology: had its [[MIT Media Lab|Media Lab]] co-founded by Michigan alumnus [[Jerome Wiesner]]. [[Nicholas Negroponte]], the co-founder and Chairman Emeritus of the Media Lab, has held a visiting professorship at the University of Michigan.
* [[Northwestern University]]: Michigan alumnus [[Henry Wade Rogers]] was instrumental in transforming Northwestern from a small cluster of colleges into a major, nationally recognized university. His wife, Emma Winner Rogers, founded the Northwestern University Settlement Association.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Henry and Emma Rogers Society |url = https://giftplanning.northwestern.edu/henry-and-emma-rogers-society |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220515232621/https://giftplanning.northwestern.edu/henry-and-emma-rogers-society |archive-date = May 15, 2022 |access-date = January 8, 2022 |publisher = Northwestern University }}</ref>
* [[Syracuse University]]: [[Alexander Winchell]] and [[Erastus O. Haven]], the first and second chancellors of Syracuse University, respectively, were members of the Michigan faculty.
* [[Wellesley College]]: Michigan alumna [[Alice Freeman Palmer]], the President of Wellesley College from 1881 to 1887, "transformed the fledgling school from one devoted to Christian domesticity into one of the nation's premier colleges for women."{{Sfn|Massachusetts Moments}}
* [[Yale University]]: had its [[Residential colleges of Yale University|residential college system]] co-organized by [[James Rowland Angell]], a graduate of Michigan.{{sfn|Bergin|1983}} Michigan alumnus [[Henry Wade Rogers]] introduced the "case system" and the college degree requirement into the [[Yale Law School]].


==Campus==
==Campus==
[[image:umichnorthcampus.jpg|thumb|right|220px|The Bell Tower reflects the architectural style of North Campus.]]
The three thousand plus acres of the Ann Arbor campus of the University of Michigan are divided into three main areas: North Campus, Central Campus, and South Campus. The physical plant is comprised of more than 300 major buildings with a combined area of more than 29 million square feet (3 km&sup2;).


[[File:University of Michigan Law Library.JPG|thumb|left|William W. Cook Legal Research Library]]
North Campus houses the College of Engineering, the Schools of Music and Art and Design, and the Taubman College of [[Architecture]] and [[Urban Planning]]. The College of Literature, Science and the Arts and most of the graduate and professional schools occupy Central Campus, with the Medical Center between North and Central Campuses. South Campus houses the athletic programs, the Buhr library storage facility, Institute for Continuing Legal Education, and the Student Theatre Arts Complex, which provides shop and rehearsal space for student theatre groups. Central and North Campuses differ notably in architecture; while the buildings in the former appear rather classical or gothic, the latter has a much more [[Modern Architecture|modern architectural]] look. North and Central Campuses each have unique bell towers which reflect the predominant architectural style of their surroundings.


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,<ref>{{Cite web |title = Environmental Protection Management Practices: Flood Control |url = http://www.oseh.umich.edu/environment/floodcontrol.shtml |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130514111416/http://www.oseh.umich.edu/environment/floodcontrol.shtml |archive-date = May 14, 2013 |access-date = March 8, 2013 |publisher = University of Michigan Occupational Safety and Environmental Health }}</ref> with a combined area of more than {{convert|37.48|e6sqft|acre km2}}.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Office of Campus Sustainability |title = University of Michigan-FY2018 Annual Environmental Metrics Report |url = https://ocs.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/FY-2018-env-metrics-final.pdf |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200523105438/https://ocs.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/FY-2018-env-metrics-final.pdf |archive-date = May 23, 2020 |access-date = March 13, 2020 |page = 3 }}</ref> The Central and South Campus areas are contiguous, while the North Campus area is separated from them, primarily by the [[Huron River (Michigan)|Huron River]].<ref>{{Cite map |title = Ann Arbor Map |url = http://campusinfo.umich.edu/maps/ann-arbor |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130413071623/http://campusinfo.umich.edu/maps/ann-arbor |archive-date = April 13, 2013 |access-date = March 8, 2013 |publisher = University of Michigan, MM&D }}</ref> There is also leased space in buildings scattered throughout the city, many occupied by organizations affiliated with the University of Michigan Health System. An East Medical Campus was developed on Plymouth Road, with several university-owned buildings for outpatient care, diagnostics, and outpatient surgery.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Street Map to Rachel Upjohn Building |url = http://www.uofmhealth.org/maps-directions |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120818112646/http://www.uofmhealth.org/maps-directions/ |archive-date = August 18, 2012 |access-date = October 25, 2008 |publisher = University of Michigan Health System }}—The linked map shows the entire East Medical Campus.</ref>
Ten of the buildings on Central Campus were designed by [[Detroit]]-based architect [[Albert Kahn]] between [[1904]] and [[1936]], while [[Birmingham, Michigan]]-based [[Eero Saarinen]] created one of the early master plans for North Campus and designed several of its buildings in the [[1950s]] [http://www.tcaup.umich.edu/publications/dimensions/dimfourteen.html]. The most notable of the Kahn-designed buildings are the prominent Burton Memorial Tower and nearby Hill Auditorium; Saarinen designed the [http://www.music.umich.edu/resources/facilities/moore.html Earl V Moore School of Music Building].


In addition to the University of Michigan Golf Course on South Campus, the university operates a second golf course on Geddes Road called Radrick Farms Golf Course. The golf course is only open to faculty, staff and alumni.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Welcome to Radrick Farms Golf Course |url = http://radrick.umich.edu/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130330090502/http://radrick.umich.edu/ |archive-date = March 30, 2013 |access-date = April 8, 2013 |publisher = University of Michigan }}</ref> Another off-campus facility is the Inglis House, which the university has owned since the 1950s. The Inglis House is a {{convert|10,000|sqft|m2|adj=on}} mansion used to hold various social events, including meetings of the Board of Regents, and to host visiting dignitaries.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Duderstadt |first = Anne |title = The Inglis House Estate at the University of Michigan |url = http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/history/publications/inglis/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071013222511/http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/history/publications/inglis/ |archive-date = October 13, 2007 |access-date = April 28, 2007 |publisher = University of Michigan }}</ref> 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.<ref>{{Cite book |date = April 22, 1998 |title = Campus Planning – Overview Report 1998 (Introduction and Summary) |url = http://www.aec.bf.umich.edu/campus.plans/Phase1/Phase1%20Overview%20-%204-22-98%20Introduction%20and%20Summary.pdf |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140423130901/http://www.aec.bf.umich.edu/campus.plans/Phase1/Phase1%20Overview%20-%204-22-98%20Introduction%20and%20Summary.pdf |archive-date = April 23, 2014 |access-date = March 8, 2013 |publisher = University of Michigan – Architecture, Engineering and Construction |page = 3 }}</ref>
== Athletics ==
''Main article: [[Athletics at the University of Michigan]]''
[[Image:Michigan_BlockM.jpg|120px|left|University of Michigan "Block M"]]Michigan's sports teams are called the [[wolverine|Wolverines]], after the state's nickname. They participate in the [[NCAA]]'s [[Division I-A]] and in the [[Big Ten Conference]] in all sports except [[ice hockey|hockey]], which competes in the [[Central Collegiate Hockey Association]].


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.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Buses |url = https://campusinfo.umich.edu/article/buses-0 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211005141411/https://campusinfo.umich.edu/article/buses-0 |archive-date = October 5, 2021 |access-date = October 5, 2021 |publisher = University of Michigan }}</ref>
[[Image:michiganstadiumgame.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Football Saturday at Michigan's "The Big House".]]


===Central Campus===
The Michigan [[American football|football]] team won the first [[Rose Bowl (game)|Rose Bowl]] game in [[1902]], and has won an NCAA-record 842 games through the [[2004]] season. The football team is the NCAA's all-time winningest program - in both total wins and winning percentage. The program is a model of consistency as it is one of only two teams to have been ranked in the final Top 25 poll every year since 1989 [http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2003/football/ncaa/specials/preview/2003/powerful.teams/]. Since that time, the Wolverines have won outright or shared seven Big Ten titles and won a national championship. Michigan has won nine national championships overall. The years for those titles are 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1918, 1932, 1933, 1948, and 1997 [http://www.angelfire.com/mi/troycolt/deccentury.html].
{{further|University of Michigan Central Campus Historic District}}


[[File:Front_of_Angell_Hall.jpg|thumb|[[James Burrill Angell Hall]]]]
Michigan has produced three Heisman trophy winners for college football's outstanding player of the year. Those players are Tom Harmon (1940), Desmond Howard (1991), and Charles Woodson (1997) [http://www.mgoblue.com/document_display.cfm?document_id=13326].


Central Campus was the original location of University of Michigan 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 {{convert|40|acre|ha}} of land bounded by North University Avenue, South University Avenue, East University Avenue, and State Street. The President's House, located on South University Avenue, is the oldest building on campus as well as the only surviving building from the original {{convert|40|acre|ha|adj=on}} campus.<ref name="Central Campus History" /> 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.<ref>{{Cite web |year = 2008 |title = 2008 Annual Environmental Report |url = http://www.oseh.umich.edu/pdf/08_report.pdf |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130515004102/http://www.oseh.umich.edu/pdf/08_report.pdf |archive-date = May 15, 2013 |access-date = March 8, 2013 |publisher = The Regents of the University of Michigan |page = 9 }}</ref> The Central Campus residence halls are split up into two groups: the Hill Neighborhood and Central Campus.<ref name="Campus Housing">{{Cite web |title = Undergraduate Housing Overviews |url = http://www.housing.umich.edu/undergrad |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130318213559/http://www.housing.umich.edu/undergrad |archive-date = March 18, 2013 |access-date = March 8, 2013 |publisher = University of Michigan Division of Student Affairs }}</ref>
The team is popular throughout the country. A survey conducted by ESPN showed the Michigan football uniform to be the most popular uniform amongst fans in all of sports [http://espn.go.com/page2/s/hruby/031021.html].


Central Campus is the location of the [[University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts|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]], the [[Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy]], the [[University of Michigan Law School|Law School]] and the [[University of Michigan School of Dentistry|School of Dentistry]], are on Central Campus. Two prominent libraries, the [[Hatcher Graduate Library|Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library]] and the [[Shapiro Undergraduate Library]] (which are connected by a [[skyway|skywalk]]), are also on Central Campus.<ref>{{Cite web |title = The University of Michigan Campus |url = http://www.si.umich.edu/aboutsi/campus |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130515005725/http://www.si.umich.edu/aboutsi/campus |archive-date = May 15, 2013 |access-date = April 8, 2013 |publisher = University of Michigan School of Information }}</ref> as well as [[Museums at the University of Michigan|museums]] housing collections in archaeology, anthropology, paleontology, zoology, dentistry and art. Ten of the buildings on Central Campus were designed by Detroit-based architect [[Albert Kahn (architect)|Albert Kahn]] between 1904 and 1936 including [[Burton Memorial Tower]] and [[Hill Auditorium]].<ref>{{Cite web |date = July 5, 2007 |title = A Chronology of University of Michigan Buildings, 1840–1999 |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/exhibits/campus_tour/chronology.php |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100819203735/http://bentley.umich.edu/exhibits/campus_tour/chronology.php |archive-date = August 19, 2010 |access-date = August 28, 2010 |publisher = Bentley Historical Library }}</ref>
Michigan's famous football coaches include [[Fielding Yost]], [[Fritz Crisler]] and [[Bo Schembechler]]. [[Michigan Stadium]] is the largest football-only stadium in the world, with an official capacity of 107,501 and with attendance commonly exceeding 110,000. NCAA record-breaking attendance has become commonplace at Michigan Stadium, especially since the arrival of Schembechler in [[1969]]. The University of Michigan has fierce rivalries with many teams, including Michigan State and Notre Dame; however their football rivalry with The Ohio State University is widely considered to be the greatest in all of college athletics, and was called the greatest sports rivalry of all time by [[ESPN]] [http://espn.go.com/endofcentury/s/other/bestrivalries.html].


===North Campus===
The Michigan [[college basketball|men's basketball]] team, which plays at [[Crisler Arena]], and the [[ice hockey]] team, which plays at [[Yost Ice Arena]], are also highly-popular teams on campus.
[[File:University of Michigan August 2013 056 (Earl V. Moore Building).jpg|thumb|left|Earl V. Moore Building on North Campus]]


North Campus is the most contiguous campus, built independently from the city on a large plot of farmland—approximately {{convert|800|acre|km2}}—that the university bought in 1952.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Migliore |first = Greg |date = January 31, 2008 |title = Contest seeks U-M North Campus hub designs |url = http://blog.mlive.com/ann_arbor_business_review/2008/01/contest_seeks_um_north_campus.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120621034553/http://blog.mlive.com/ann_arbor_business_review/2008/01/contest_seeks_um_north_campus.html |archive-date = June 21, 2012 |access-date = August 28, 2010 |work = Ann Arbor Business Review }}</ref> It is newer than Central Campus, and thus has more [[modernist architecture]], whereas most Central Campus buildings are classical or [[Collegiate 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 [[University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance#Facilities|Earl V. Moore School of Music Building]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last = Carter |first = Brian |year = 2000 |title = Eero Saarinen-Operational Thoroughness A Way of Working |journal = Dimensions Volume Fourteen |pages = 32–39 }}</ref> 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]], 2 of only 57 globally. The North Campus tower is called [[Lurie Tower]].<ref>{{Cite book |last = Duderstadt |first = Anne |url = http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/history/publications/Downloads/AMD%20Engineering%20Book.pdf |title = The University of Michigan College of Engineering |publisher = Millennium Project, University of Michigan |year = 2003 |page = 83 |access-date = March 8, 2013 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130515012604/http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/history/publications/Downloads/AMD%20Engineering%20Book.pdf |archive-date = May 15, 2013 |url-status = live }}</ref> The University of Michigan's largest residence hall, [[Bursley Hall]], is part of North Campus.<ref name="Campus Housing" />
Michigan's women's [[softball]] team won the 2005 Division 1 [[NCAA Softball Championship]], defeating two-time defending champion and perennial softball power [[UCLA]]. Michigan is the first school east of the Mississippi River to win this title.


North Campus houses the College of Engineering, the [[University of Michigan School of Music|School of Music, Theatre & Dance]], the [[Penny W. Stamps School of Art & Design|Stamps School of Art & Design]], the [[Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning]], and an annex of the [[University of Michigan School of Information|School of Information]].<ref>{{Cite map |date = August 16, 2012 |title = North Campus Map |url = http://campusinfo.umich.edu/maps/north-campus |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130413075505/http://campusinfo.umich.edu/maps/north-campus |archive-date = April 13, 2013 |access-date = April 8, 2013 |publisher = University of Michigan Division of Student Affairs }}</ref> The campus is served by the [[University of Michigan College of Engineering#Laboratories and facilities|Duderstadt Center]], which houses the Art, Architecture and Engineering Library. The Duderstadt Center also contains multiple [[computer lab]]s, [[non-linear editing system|video editing]] studios, electronic music studios, an audio studio, a video studio, multimedia workspaces, and a [[3D computer graphics|3D]] [[virtual reality]] room.<ref>{{Cite web |date = February 1, 2006 |title = Welcome to the James and Anne Duderstadt Center |url = http://www.dc.umich.edu/Welcome.htm |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130330084003/http://www.dc.umich.edu/Welcome.htm |archive-date = March 30, 2013 |access-date = March 8, 2013 |publisher = The Regents of the University of Michigan }}</ref> Other libraries located on North Campus include the [[Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library]] and the [[Bentley Historical Library]].
In seven of the past 10 years, Michigan has finished in the top five of the [[NACDA Director's Cup]], a list compiled by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics that charts institutions' overall success in college sports.


===Michigan "fight song"===
===South Campus===
The school "fight song" is ''The Victors'', written by student Louis Elbel in [[1898]] following a last-minute 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." Largely believed to be an original creation, the melody of the fight song is actually the same as the breakup strain from George Rosey's ''The Spirit of Liberty March'', copyrighted earlier in 1898. The alma mater song is ''The Yellow and Blue''. A common rally cry at Michigan football games is "Let's Go Blue!"


[[File:University of Michigan August 2013 258 (Golf Course).jpg|thumb|The University of Michigan Golf Course was designed by Scottish golf course architect [[Alister MacKenzie]] and opened in 1931]]
'''See also'''

*[http://www.umich.edu/~info/victors.html ''The Victors'' lyrics]
South Campus is the site for the athletic programs, including major sports facilities such as [[Michigan Stadium]], [[Crisler Center]], and [[Yost Ice Arena]]. South Campus is also the site of the Buhr library storage facility, Revelli Hall, home of the [[Michigan Marching Band]], the Institute for Continuing Legal Education,<ref name="South Campus">{{Cite map |title = South Campus Map |url = http://campusinfo.umich.edu/maps/south-campus |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130413083624/http://campusinfo.umich.edu/maps/south-campus |archive-date = April 13, 2013 |access-date = April 8, 2013 |publisher = University of Michigan Division of Student Affairs }}</ref> and the Student Theatre Arts Complex, which provides shop and rehearsal space for student theatre groups.<ref>{{Cite web |date = August 16, 2012 |title = Student Theatre Arts Complex |url = http://campusinvolvement.umich.edu/article/94 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130515005648/http://campusinvolvement.umich.edu/article/94 |archive-date = May 15, 2013 |access-date = April 8, 2013 |publisher = University of Michigan Division of Student Affairs }}</ref> The university's departments of public safety and transportation services offices are located on South Campus.<ref name="South Campus" />
*[http://www.umich.edu/~info/maize.html ''The Yellow and Blue'' lyrics]

The University of Michigan Golf Course is located south of Michigan Stadium. 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]].<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan Golf Course |url = http://www.mgoblue.com/facilities/golf-course.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100901045032/http://www.mgoblue.com/facilities/golf-course.html |archive-date = September 1, 2010 |access-date = August 28, 2010 |website = MGoBlue |publisher = University of Michigan Athletic Department }}</ref> The course opened to the public in 1931 and has one of "the best holes ever designed by Augusta National architect Alister MacKenzie" according to the magazine ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'' in 2006.<ref>{{Cite news |date = April 5, 2006 |title = U-M Golf Course Hole Listed Among MacKenzie's Best |url = http://www.mgoblue.com/sports/m-golf/spec-rel/040506aaa.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100902035604/http://www.mgoblue.com/sports/m-golf/spec-rel/040506aaa.html |archive-date = September 2, 2010 |access-date = August 28, 2010 |work = MGoBlue |publisher = University of Michigan Athletic Department }}</ref>

== Organization and administration ==

=== Governance ===
{{See also|Board of Regents of the University of Michigan|President of the University of Michigan}}
[[File:Michigan University Regents 75th Anniversary Celebration June 27 1912.jpg|thumb|Photograph of Michigan University Regents 75th Anniversary Celebration on June 27, 1912.
<br>''Standing'' L-R: Frank B. Leland, John H. Grant, Shirley W. Smith, Harry O. Bulkey, [[William L. Clements]], [[Lucius Lee Hubbard]], Benjamin Hanchett, Junius E. Beal
<br>''Seated'' L-R: Luther L. Wright, [[James B. Angell]], [[Harry B. Hutchins]], Walter M. Sawyer]]

The University of Michigan is governed by the [[Board of Regents of the University of Michigan|Board of Regents]], established by the Organic Act of March 18, 1837. It consists of eight members, elected at large in biennial state elections<ref>{{harvnb|Hebel|2004}}</ref> for overlapping eight-year terms.<ref>{{Cite web |title = About the Board of Regents |url = http://regents.umich.edu/about/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081221204929/http://www.regents.umich.edu/about/ |archive-date = December 21, 2008 |access-date = December 25, 2008 |publisher = University of Michigan Board of Regents }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date = October 3, 2007 |title = Regents of the University of Michigan: Historical Background |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/exhibits/regents/history.php |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080908002643/http://www.bentley.umich.edu/exhibits/regents/history.php |archive-date = September 8, 2008 |access-date = December 26, 2008 |publisher = Bentley Historical Library }}</ref> Before the Office of President was established in 1850, the University of Michigan was directly managed by the appointed Board of Regents, with a rotating group of professors to carry out the day-to-day administration duties.<ref name="hinsdale">{{harvnb|Hinsdale|1906|p=37}}</ref> The second [[Constitution of Michigan|Michigan Constitution of 1850]], a significant revision to the original 1835 Constitution, established the Office of President. It further made the Board of Regents of the University of Michigan an elected body instead of an appointed one and gave the Regents the authority to name a president to preside over meetings without a vote.<ref>State of Michigan, 1850, Article 13, section 8</ref>

The [[President of the University of Michigan]] is the principal executive officer responsible for managing the day-to-day operations of the university, that is, the main campus in Ann Arbor. The President is not directly involved in the management of the regional campuses; instead, two additional Chancellors are appointed by the President to administer the two regional campuses located in [[University of Michigan–Dearborn|Dearborn]] and [[University of Michigan–Flint|Flint]]. The university's current president is [[Santa Ono]], formerly the president of the [[University of British Columbia]] in Canada. On October 14, 2022, he became the 15th President of the University of Michigan, succeeding the outgoing president, [[Mark Schlissel]].<ref>{{Cite new |title = University of Michigan President Mark Schlissel fired by board after investigation |url = https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/education/2022/01/16/university-michigan-president-mark-schlissel-fired/6549755001/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220116214410/https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/education/2022/01/16/university-michigan-president-mark-schlissel-fired/6549755001/ |archive-date = January 16, 2022 |access-date = January 16, 2022 |newspaper = [[USA Today]] }}</ref>

The [[President's House, University of Michigan|President's House]], located at 815 South University Avenue on the Ann Arbor campus, is home to the Office of the President. Constructed in 1840, the three-story [[Italianate]] President's House is the oldest surviving building on the Ann Arbor campus and a [[University of Michigan Central Campus Historic District]] contributing property.<ref>{{Cite web |date = October 3, 2007 |title = President's House |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/exhibits/campus_tour/preshouse.php |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080820232655/http://bentley.umich.edu/exhibits/campus_tour/preshouse.php |archive-date = August 20, 2008 |access-date = December 26, 2008 |publisher = Bentley Historical Library }}</ref>

====Student government====

Housed in the [[Michigan Union]], the [[Student governments in the United States#University of Michigan|Central Student Government]] (CSG) is the central student government of the university. With representatives from each of the university's colleges and schools, including graduate students, CSG represents students and manages student funds on the campus. CSG is a 501(c)(3) organization, independent from the University of Michigan.<ref>{{Cite web |title = IRS Form 990, FY 2012 |url = https://csg.umich.edu/files/files/FY%202012.pdf |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141018114552/https://csg.umich.edu/files/files/FY%202012.pdf |archive-date = October 18, 2014 }}</ref> In recent years CSG 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.<ref>{{Cite web |year = 2006 |title = About Voice Your Vote |url = http://www.msa.umich.edu/mgovote2006/about.html |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071003010504/http://www.msa.umich.edu/mgovote2006/about.html |archive-date = October 3, 2007 |access-date = March 21, 2007 |publisher = University of Michigan CSG }}</ref> CSG was successful at reviving [[Homecoming]] activities, including a carnival and parade, for students after a roughly eleven-year absence in October 2007,<ref>{{Cite news |last = Shubert |first = Cathe |date = September 19, 2007 |title = Homecoming parade, carnival to return |url = http://media.www.michigandaily.com/media/storage/paper851/news/2007/09/19/StudentGovernment/Homecoming.Parade.Carnival.To.Return-2977420.shtml |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080426130223/http://media.www.michigandaily.com/media/storage/paper851/news/2007/09/19/StudentGovernment/Homecoming.Parade.Carnival.To.Return-2977420.shtml |archive-date = April 26, 2008 |access-date = April 6, 2008 |work = The Michigan Daily }}</ref> and during the 2013–14 school year, was instrumental in persuading the university to rescind an unpopular change in student football seating policy at Michigan Stadium.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Woodhouse |first = Kellie |date = March 12, 2014 |title = How a Persistent Student Government Got Michigan to Scrap General Admission Football Seating |url = http://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor/index.ssf/2014/03/how_a_persistent_student_presi.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141017150125/http://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor/index.ssf/2014/03/how_a_persistent_student_presi.html |archive-date = October 17, 2014 |access-date = October 13, 2014 |publisher = MLive }}</ref> In 2017, CSG successfully petitioned the Ann Arbor City Council to create a Student Advisory Council to give student input into Ann Arbor city affairs.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Ann Arbor City Council Unanimously Approves Student Advisory Council |url = https://csg.umich.edu/2017/01/19/ann-arbor-city-council-unanimously-approves-student-advisory-council/ |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170403194746/https://csg.umich.edu/2017/01/19/ann-arbor-city-council-unanimously-approves-student-advisory-council/ |archive-date = April 3, 2017 |access-date = April 2, 2017 }}</ref>

[[File:Dana front.jpg|thumb|left|Samuel Trask Dana Building (West Medical Building) houses the School for Environment and Sustainability]]

There are student governance bodies in each college and school, independent of Central Student Government. Undergraduate students in the LS&A are represented by the LS&A Student Government (LSA SG).<ref>{{Cite web |title = Who We Are |url = https://csg.umich.edu/about/who-we-are |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130515010245/https://csg.umich.edu/about/who-we-are |archive-date = May 15, 2013 |access-date = February 11, 2013 }}</ref> Engineering Student Government (ESG) manages undergraduate student government affairs for the College of Engineering. Graduate students enrolled in the Rackham Graduate School are represented by the Rackham Student Government (RSG), and law students are represented by the Law School Student Senate (LSSS) as is each other college with its own respective government. In addition, the students who live in the residence halls are represented by the University of Michigan [[Residence hall association|Residence Halls Association]] (RHA), which contains the third most constituents after CSG and LSA SG.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Residence Hall Government |url = http://www.housing.umich.edu/reshalls/rha |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130204230644/http://www.housing.umich.edu/reshalls/rha |archive-date = February 4, 2013 |access-date = February 11, 2013 |publisher = University of Michigan }}</ref>

A longstanding goal of the student government is to create a student-designated seat on the Board of Regents, the university's governing body.<ref name="Student Regent">{{Cite news |date = June 29, 1998 |title = Denied again: University should have a student regent |url = http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1998/jun/06-29-98/edit/edit1.html |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081013100636/http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1998/jun/06-29-98/edit/edit1.html |archive-date = October 13, 2008 |access-date = September 15, 2008 |work = The Michigan Daily }}</ref> 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 statewide ballot as third-party nominees. Waun ran for a second time in 2002, along with Matt Petering and Susan Fawcett.<ref>{{Cite news |date = October 21, 2002 |title = Regent candidates discuss tuition, health care issues at forum |url = http://www.umich.edu/~urecord/0203/Oct21_02/14.shtml |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070821051104/http://www.umich.edu/~urecord/0203/Oct21_02/14.shtml |archive-date = August 21, 2007 |access-date = April 28, 2007 |work = The University Record Online }}</ref> Although none of these campaigns has been successful, a 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.<ref name="Student Regent" /> A change to the board's makeup would require amending the Michigan Constitution.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Holmes |first = Erin |date = September 8, 1998 |title = Board of regents says no to MSA student regent campaign fee |url = http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1998/sep/09-08-98/news/news20.html |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071013222504/http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1998/sep/09-08-98/news/news20.html |archive-date = October 13, 2007 |access-date = April 28, 2007 |work = The Michigan Daily }}</ref>

===Finances===

{{multiple image
| align = right
| direction = vertical
| width = 230
| header =
| image1 = Umichlawquadrangle.jpg
| alt1 =
| caption1 =
| image2 = MichiganLawQuad.jpg
| alt2 =
| caption2 =
| footer = The William W. Cook Legal Research Library and other buildings comprising the Law Quadrangle were built during 1923–33 and then donated to the university by [[William W. Cook|William Wilson Cook]]. It was the university's most significant private gift at the time.
}}

In the fiscal year 2022–23, the [[State of Michigan]] spent $333 million on the university, which represents 3.03% of its total operating revenues of $11 billion.<ref name="FY2022-23 budget">{{Cite web |title = Fiscal Year 2022–2023 U-M Budget |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/budget/ubudgetbooksummary_fy23.pdf |access-date = February 2, 2024 |website = obp.umich.edu |publisher = Office of Budget and Planning }}</ref> The Office of Budget and Planning reports that [[Michigan Medicine]]'s auxiliary activities are the largest funding source, contributing $6.05 billion to the Auxiliary Funds, which accounts for 55.1% of the total operating budget. [[college tuition in the United States|Student tuition and fees]] contributed $1.95 billion to the General Fund, accounting for 11% of the total budget.<ref name="FY2022-23 budget" /> Research grants and contracts from the [[U.S. federal government]] contributed $1.15 billion to the Expendable Restricted Funds, accounting for 10.4% of the total budget.<ref name="FY2022-23 budget" />

The university's current (FY 2022–23) operating budget has four major sources of funding:<ref name="FY2022-23 budget" />

* General Fund money, which accounts for 25.4% of the operating budget, is derived from various sources: [[tuition|student tuition and fees]] ($1.95 billion or 75.2%), state support ($333 million or 12.8%), [[Industry funding of academic research|sponsored research]] ($301 million or 11.6%), and other revenue ($8 million or 0.3%). It covers the costs of teaching, student services, facilities, and administrative support. The state's annual contribution to the school's operating budget was 3.03% in 2023 and does not cover intercollegiate athletics, housing, or Michigan Medicine.<ref name="FY2022-23 budget" />

* Auxiliary Funds, which account for 58.2% of the operating budget, are sourced from self-supporting units and do not receive taxpayer or tuition support. These include [[Michigan Medicine]] ($6.16 billion), [[Michigan Wolverines|intercollegiate athletics]] ($186 million), [[University of Michigan student housing|student housing]] ($160 million), and student publications.<ref name="FY2022-23 budget" />

* Expendable Restricted Funds, which account for 14.2% of the operating budget, are from providers who designate how their money is spent. Funding comes from research grants and contracts, [[financial endowment|endowment]] payout ($305 million), and private gifts ($157 million). It pays for [[scholarships]] and [[fellow]]ships; salaries, benefits and research support for some faculty; and research, programs and academic centers.<ref name="FY2022-23 budget" />

* Designated Funds, which account for 2.2% of the operating budget, come from fees charged for and spent on experiential learning, programs, conferences, performance venues, and executive and continuing education.<ref name="FY2022-23 budget" />

==== Endowment ====

The university's [[financial endowment]], known as the "University Endowment Fund", comprises over 12,400 individual funds.<ref name=budget-tutorial>{{cite web |title = GENERAL FUND BUDGET SNAPSHOT |website = publicaffairs.vpcomm.umich.edu |url = https://publicaffairs.vpcomm.umich.edu/key-issues/tuition/general-fund-budget-tutorial/ |access-date = February 2, 2024 }}</ref> Each fund must be spent according to the donor's specifications.<ref name=budget-tutorial/> Approximately 28% of the total endowment is allocated to support academic programs, while 22% is designated for student scholarships and fellowships.<ref name=budget-tutorial/> Approximately 19% of the endowment was allocated to Michigan Medicine and can only be used to support research, patient care, or other purposes specified by donors.<ref name=budget-tutorial/>

{{as of|2023}}, the university's endowment, valued at $17.9 billion, ranks as the tenth largest among all universities in the country.<ref name=2022-NTSE-Endowment>{{Cite web |title = U.S. and Canadian 2022 NTSE Participating Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2022 Endowment Market Value, Change in Market Value from FY21 to FY22, and FY22 Endowment Market Values Per Full-time Equivalent Student |publisher = National Association of College and University Business Officers (NACUBO) |url = https://www.nacubo.org/-/media/Nacubo/Documents/research/2022-NTSE-Endowment-Market-Values-FINAL.ashx |date = April 21, 2023 |access-date = February 2, 2024 |format = XLS }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last = Don Jordan |date = October 19, 2023 |title = Endowment generated 5.2% return in FY '23 |url = https://record.umich.edu/articles/endowment-generated-5-2-return-in-fy-23/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20231129085243/https://record.umich.edu/articles/endowment-generated-5-2-return-in-fy-23/ |archive-date = November 29, 2023 |access-date = December 4, 2023 |website = The University Record }}</ref> The university ranks 86th in endowment per student.<ref name=2022-NTSE-Endowment/> The [[Michigan Law|law school]]'s endowment, totaling over $500 million, has a significantly higher per-student value compared to that of its parent university.<ref name="law_endowment">{{cite web |url = https://leiterlawschool.typepad.com/leiter/2022/05/per-student-value-of-law-school-endowments-2021.html |title = Per student value of law school endowments21.html |last = Leiter |first = Brain |date = May 3, 2022 |access-date = February 17, 2024 }}</ref> It ranks as the eighth wealthiest law school in the nation in 2022.<ref name="law_endowment"/>

=== Schools and colleges ===

There are thirteen undergraduate schools and colleges.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Undergraduate Studies |url = http://www.umich.edu/undergrad.php |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081217040925/http://www.umich.edu/undergrad.php |archive-date = December 17, 2008 |access-date = December 26, 2008 |publisher = University of Michigan }}</ref> By enrollment, the three largest undergraduate units are the [[College of Literature, Science, and the Arts]], the [[University of Michigan College of Engineering|College of Engineering]], and the [[Ross School of Business]].<ref name="size">{{Cite web |date = October 2014 |title = Enrollment by Degree Type & School/College |url = http://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/factsfigures/enrollment_umaa_fall14.pdf |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150317210814/http://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/factsfigures/enrollment_umaa_fall14.pdf |archive-date = March 17, 2015 |access-date = March 8, 2015 |publisher = UM News Service }}</ref> At the graduate level, the [[Rackham School of Graduate Studies]] serves as the central administrative unit of graduate education at the university.<ref>{{Cite web |title = What is Rackham? |url = http://www.rackham.umich.edu/about_us/what_is_rackham/ |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081207153452/http://www.rackham.umich.edu/about_us/what_is_rackham/ |archive-date = December 7, 2008 |access-date = December 25, 2008 |publisher = University of Michigan Rackham Graduate School }}</ref> There are 18 graduate schools and colleges. [[First professional degree|Professional degrees]] are conferred by the [[Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning]], the [[University of Michigan School of Nursing|School of Nursing]], the [[University of Michigan School of Dentistry|School of Dentistry]], the [[University of Michigan Law School|Law School]], the [[Michigan Medicine|Medical School]], and the [[University of Michigan College of Pharmacy|College of Pharmacy]].<ref name=size/> [[Michigan Medicine]], the university's health system, comprises the university's three hospitals, dozens of outpatient clinics, and many centers for medical care, research, and education.

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size: 85%;"
|+
! College/school
! Year<br>founded<ref>{{Cite web |date = November 4, 2008 |title = University of Michigan Timelines: Departmental History |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/exhibits/umtimeline/departmental.php |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080724171549/http://alumni.umich.edu/info/um/famous_alumni_abc.php |archive-date = July 24, 2008 |access-date = December 26, 2008 |publisher = Bentley Historical Library }}</ref>
! Enrollment<br>(FA 2023)
! General Fund Budget<br>($, 2022-23)<ref name="FY2022-23 budget"/>
! Budget<br>per student<br>($, 2022-23)<ref name="FY2022-23 budget"/>
|-
| [[Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning|A. Alfred Taubman College of<br>Architecture & Urban Planning]]
| 1906 || 737 || 25,707,200 || 34,881
|-
| [[University of Michigan School of Dentistry|School of Dentistry]]
| 1875 || 670 || 41,055,284 || 61,277
|-
| [[University of Michigan College of Engineering|College of Engineering]]
| 1854 || 11,113 || 276,845,246 || 24,912
|-
| [[University of Michigan School for Environment and Sustainability|School for Environment and Sustainability]]
| 1927 || 516 || 28,034,976 || 54,331
|-
| [[University of Michigan School of Information|School of Information]]
| 1969 || 1,760 || 50,147,537 || 28,493
|-
| [[University of Michigan School of Kinesiology|School of Kinesiology]]
| 1984 || 1,312 || 22,088,845 || 16,836
|-
| [[University of Michigan Law School|Law School]]
| 1859 || 1,017 || 57,495,856 || 56,535
|-
| [[College of Literature, Science, and the Arts]]
| 1841 || 21,973 || 522,704,411 || 23,788
|-
| [[University of Michigan School of Education|Marsal Family School of Education]]
| 1921 || 371 || 19,058,427 || 51,370
|-
| [[Michigan Medicine|Medical School]]
| 1921 || 1,677 || 124,714,812 || 74,368
|-
| [[University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance|School of Music, Theatre & Dance]]
| 1880 || 1,134 || 43,101,134 || 38,008
|-
| [[University of Michigan School of Nursing|School of Nursing]]
| 1893 || 1,183 || 31,644,687 || 26,750
|-
| [[University of Michigan College of Pharmacy|College of Pharmacy]]
| 1876 || 561 || 22,056,888 || 39,317
|-
| [[University of Michigan School of Public Health|School of Public Health]]
| 1941 || 1,162 || 49,478,265 || 42,580
|-
| [[Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy]]
| 1914 || 362 || 17,191,821 || 47,491
|-
| [[Ross School of Business|Stephen M. Ross School of Business]]
| 1924 || 4,433 || 137,479,144 || 31,013
|-
| [[University of Michigan School of Social Work|School of Social Work]]
| 1951 || 940 || 31,557,111 || 33,571
|-
| [[Stamps School of Art & Design|Penny W. Stamps School of Art & Design]]
| 1974 || 740 || 18,111,495 || 24,475
|- style="background-color:#eaecf0"
| University of Michigan, Ann Arbor*
| {{dash}} || 52,065 || 2,590,485,130 || 49,755
|+
| colspan="6" | *included other standalone units
|}

==Academics==

===Admissions===

{| class="wikitable" style="float:right; font-size:85%; margin:10px"
! colspan="10" style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Michigan Wolverines|color=white}}" |First-time fall freshman statistics
|-
!&nbsp;
!2023<ref name="CDS2023-24">{{Cite web |date = n.d. |title = University of Michigan Common Data Set 2023–2024 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/cds/cds_2023-2024_umaa.pdf |access-date = April 2, 2024 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget and Planning |quote = For common datasets from 1998–present, see obp.umich.edu/campus-statistics/common-data-set/ }}</ref>
!2022<ref name="CDS2022-23">{{Cite web |date = n.d. |title = University of Michigan Common Data Set 2022–2023 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/cds/cds_2022-2023_umaa.pdf |access-date = December 17, 2023 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget and Planning |quote = For common datasets from 1998–present, see obp.umich.edu/campus-statistics/common-data-set/ }}</ref>
!2021<ref name="CDS2021-22">{{Cite web |date = n.d. |title = University of Michigan Common Data Set 2021–2022 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/cds/cds_2021-2022_umaa.pdf |access-date = December 17, 2023 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget and Planning |quote = For common datasets from 1998–present, see obp.umich.edu/campus-statistics/common-data-set/ }}</ref>
!2020<ref name="CDS2020-21">{{Cite web |date = n.d. |title = University of Michigan Common Data Set 2020–2021 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/cds/cds_2020-2021_umaa.pdf |access-date = December 17, 2023 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget and Planning |quote = For common datasets from 1998–present, see obp.umich.edu/campus-statistics/common-data-set/ }}</ref>
!2019<ref name="CDS2019-20">{{Cite web |date = n.d. |title = University of Michigan Common Data Set 2019–2020 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/cds/cds_2019-2020_umaa.pdf |access-date = December 17, 2023 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget and Planning |quote = For common datasets from 1998–present, see obp.umich.edu/campus-statistics/common-data-set/ }}</ref>
|- style="text-align:center;"
!Applicants
|87,605
|84,289
|79,743
|65,021
|64,972
|- style="text-align:center;"
!Admits
|15,714
|14,914
|16,071
|16,974
|14,883
|- style="text-align:center;"
!Admit rate
|17.94%
|17.69%
|20.15%
|26.11%
|22.91%
|- style="text-align:center;"
!Enrolled
|7,462
|7,050
|7,290
|6,879
|6,830
|- style="text-align:center;"
![[Yield (college admissions)|Yield]]
|47.49%
|47.27%
|45.36%
|40.53%
|45.89%
|- style="text-align:center;"
!SAT range
|1350–1530
|1350–1530
|1360–1530
|1340–1520
|1340–1530
|- style="text-align:center;"
!ACT range
|31–34
|31–34
|31–35
|31–34
|31–34
|}

''U.S. News & World Report'' rates Michigan "Most Selective"<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan—Ann Arbor |url = https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/university-of-michigan-ann-arbor-9092 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211013104427/https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/university-of-michigan-ann-arbor-9092 |archive-date = October 13, 2021 |access-date = October 14, 2021 |website = U.S. News & World Report }}</ref> and The Princeton Review rates its admissions selectivity of 96 out of 99.<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan—Ann Arbor |url = https://www.princetonreview.com/college/university-michigan--ann-arbor-1023092 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211029173734/https://www.princetonreview.com/college/university-michigan--ann-arbor-1023092 |archive-date = October 29, 2021 |access-date = October 14, 2021 |publisher = The Princeton Review }}</ref> Admissions are characterized as "more selective, lower transfer-in" according to the Carnegie Classification.<ref name="Carnegie" /><ref name="Students profile 2020">{{Cite web |title = Student Profile |url = https://admissions.umich.edu/apply/first-year-applicants/student-profile |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20201125080309/https://admissions.umich.edu/apply/first-year-applicants/student-profile |archive-date = November 25, 2020 |access-date = November 25, 2020 |website = Office of Undergraduate Admissions |publisher = University of Michigan }}</ref> Michigan received over 83,000 applications for a place in the 2021–22 freshman class, making it one of the most applied-to universities in the United States.<ref name="Students profile 2020" /><ref>{{Cite web |title = Colleges With the Most Applications |url = https://www.theclassroom.com/colleges-with-the-most-applications-data-study.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211029174758/https://www.theclassroom.com/colleges-with-the-most-applications-data-study.html |archive-date = October 29, 2021 |access-date = October 12, 2021 |website = theclassroom.com |language = en }}</ref> Of those students accepted to Michigan's Class of 2027, 7,050 chose to attend.

Admission is based on academic prowess, extracurricular activities, and personal qualities. The university's admission process is [[need-blind]] for domestic applicants.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Williams |first = Kaitlin |date = September 29, 2011 |title = University admissions still need-blind despite funding cuts |url = https://www.michigandaily.com/uncategorized/u-doesnt-consider-household-income-admissions-process/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230504072113/https://www.michigandaily.com/uncategorized/u-doesnt-consider-household-income-admissions-process/ |archive-date = May 4, 2023 |access-date = May 4, 2023 |work = [[The Michigan Daily]] }}</ref> Admissions officials consider a student's standardized test scores, application essay and letters of recommendation to be important academic factors, with emphasis on an applicant's academic record and GPA, while ranking an applicant's high school class rank as 'not considered'.<ref name="CDS2022-23"/><ref name="CDS2021-22"/> In terms of non-academic materials as of 2022, Michigan ranks character/personal qualities and whether the applicant is a first-generation university applicant as 'important' in making first-time, first-year admission decisions, while ranking extracurricular activities, talent/ability, geographical residence, state residency, volunteer work, work experience and level of applicant's interest as 'considered'.<ref name="CDS2022-23"/> Some applicants to Music, Theatre and Dance and some applicants to the [[University of Michigan College of Engineering|College of Engineering]] may be interviewed.<ref name="CDS2022-23"/> A portfolio is required and considered for admission for Art, Architecture and the [[Ross School of Business]].<ref name="CDS2022-23"/> Submission of standardized test scores is recommended but not compulsory. Of the 52% of enrolled freshmen in 2023 who submitted SAT scores; the middle 50 percent Composite scores were 1350-1530. Of the 18% of the incoming freshman class who submitted ACT scores; the middle 50 percent Composite score was between 31 and 34.

{| class="wikitable" style="float:right; font-size:85%; margin:10px; text-align:center;"
|+ Enrollment in University of Michigan-Ann Arbor (2013–2024)
! Academic Year
! Undergraduates
! Graduate
! Total Enrollment
|-
! 2013–2014<ref name="CDS2013-14">{{Cite web |date = n.d. |title = University of Michigan Common Data Set 2013–2014 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/cds/cds_2013-2014_umaa.pdf |access-date = February 1, 2024 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget and Planning |quote = For common datasets from 1998–present, see obp.umich.edu/campus-statistics/common-data-set/ }}</ref>
| 28,283 || 15,427 || 43,710
|-
! 2014–2015<ref name="CDS2014-15">{{Cite web |date = n.d. |title = University of Michigan Common Data Set 2014–2015 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/cds/cds_2014-2015_umaa.pdf |access-date = February 1, 2024 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget and Planning |quote = For common datasets from 1998–present, see obp.umich.edu/campus-statistics/common-data-set/ }}</ref>
| 28,395 || 15,230 || 43,625
|-
! 2015–2016<ref name="CDS2015-16">{{Cite web |date = n.d. |title = University of Michigan Common Data Set 2015–2016 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/cds/cds_2015-2016_umaa.pdf |access-date = February 1, 2024 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget and Planning |quote = For common datasets from 1998–present, see obp.umich.edu/campus-statistics/common-data-set/ }}</ref>
| 28,312 || 15,339 || 43,651
|-
! 2016–2017<ref name="CDS2016-17">{{Cite web |date = n.d. |title = University of Michigan Common Data Set 2016–2017 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/cds/cds_2016-2017_umaa.pdf |access-date = February 1, 2024 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget and Planning |quote = For common datasets from 1998–present, see obp.umich.edu/campus-statistics/common-data-set/ }}</ref>
| 28,964 || 15,754 || 44,718
|-
! 2017–2018<ref name="CDS2017-18">{{Cite web |date = n.d. |title = University of Michigan Common Data Set 2017–2018 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/cds/cds_2017-2018_umaa.pdf |access-date = February 1, 2024 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget and Planning |quote = For common datasets from 1998–present, see obp.umich.edu/campus-statistics/common-data-set/ }}</ref>
| 29,821 || 16,181 || 46,002
|-
! 2018–2019<ref name="CDS2018-19">{{Cite web |date = n.d. |title = University of Michigan Common Data Set 2018–2019 |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/cds/cds_2018-2019_umaa.pdf |access-date = December 17, 2023 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget and Planning |quote = For common datasets from 1998–present, see obp.umich.edu/campus-statistics/common-data-set/ }}</ref>
| 30,318 || 16,398 || 46,716
|-
! 2019–2020<ref name="CDS2019-20" />
| 31,266 || 16,824 || 48,090
|-
! 2020–2021<ref name="CDS2020-21" />
| 31,329 || 16,578 || 47,907
|-
! 2021–2022<ref name="CDS2021-22" />
| 32,282 || 17,996 || 50,278
|-
! 2022–2023<ref name="CDS2022-23" />
| 32,695 || 18,530 || 51,225
|-
! 2023–2024<ref name="CDS2023-24" />
| 33,730 || 18,335 || 52,065
|}

====Requirements====

The requirements for admission to the freshman class were first published in August 1841, with fluency in [[ancient languages]], such as [[Latin]] and [[Greek language|Greek]], being among the many requirements.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|33}} Candidates for admission to the freshman class were examined in [[English grammar]], [[geography]], [[arithmetic]], [[algebra]], Virgil, Cicero's Select Orations, Jacob's or Felton's Greek Reader, Andrews and Stoddard's Latin Grammar, and Sophocles's Greek Grammar. In 1851, the university dropped the requirement for students who did not wish to pursue the usual collegiate course embracing the ancient languages, permitting their admission without examination in such languages.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|44}} This provision may be considered a prelude to [[scientific education]].

[[File:ArchwayLawQuadrangle.jpg|thumb|left|The archway to the Law Quadrangle]]

Requirements for admission varied from department to department in the early days, and admissions were mostly given by referral. Candidates were required to do no more than satisfying professors on such inquiry as professors saw fit to make of their ability to do the work to obtain admission to the university. Such a practice was deemed flawed, eventually leading to [[corruption]]. In 1863, a rigid generalized entrance examination was imposed, creating one standard of qualifications for admission to all the departments, academical and professional.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|79}} The early administration praised the then-new practice for its role in strengthening admission to the university.<ref name="Hinsdale 1906" />{{rp|44}} The [[entrance examination]] imposed in 1863 had played a significant role in the admission process during the 19th century until the emergence of the nationwide [[standardized tests]], which were not offered until 1900.

====Affirmative action====
{{main|Affirmative action at the University of Michigan}}

In 2003, two lawsuits involving U-M's [[affirmative action in the United States|affirmative action]] admissions policy reached the [[Supreme Court of the United States|U.S. Supreme Court]] (''[[Grutter v. Bollinger]]'' and ''[[Gratz v. Bollinger]]''). President [[George W. Bush]] publicly opposed the policy before the court issued a ruling.<ref>{{Cite news |date = January 15, 2003 |title = President Bush Discusses Michigan Affirmative Action Case |url = https://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2003/01/20030115-7.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110305233331/http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2003/01/20030115-7.html |archive-date = March 5, 2011 |access-date = December 27, 2008 |publisher = Office of the Press Secretary, White House }}</ref> 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, but it ruled that a point system was 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.{{citation needed|date=November 2020}} The debate continued because in November 2006, Michigan voters passed [[Michigan Civil Rights Initiative|Proposal 2]], banning most affirmative action in university admissions. Under that law, race, gender, and national origin can no longer be considered in admissions.<ref name="Goodman 2007">{{Cite news |last = Goodman |first = David N. |date = January 11, 2007 |title = University of Michigan Drops Affirmative Action for Now |url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/10/AR2007011002095.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20121110151213/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/10/AR2007011002095.html |archive-date = November 10, 2012 |access-date = January 12, 2007 |newspaper = The Washington Post |agency = Associated Press }}</ref> U-M and other organizations were granted a stay from implementation of the law soon after that referendum. This allowed time for proponents of affirmative action to decide legal and constitutional options in response to the initiative results. In April 2014, the Supreme Court ruled in ''[[Schuette v. Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action]]'' that Proposal 2 did not violate the U.S. Constitution. 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.<ref name="Goodman 2007" />

{{clear}}

===Majors and programs===

The university offers 133 undergraduate majors & degrees across the College of Engineering (18), College of Literature, Science, and the Arts (77), College of Pharmacy (1), Ford School of Public Policy (1), LSA Residential College (3), Marsal Family School of Education (3), Ross School of Business (1), School of Dentistry (1), School of Information (2), School of Kinesiology (3), School of Music, Theatre & Dance (16), School of Nursing (1), School of Public Health (2), Stamps School of Art & Design (2), and Taubman College of Architecture & Urban Planning (2). The most popular undergraduate majors, by 2021 graduates, were computer and information sciences (874), business administration and management (610), economics (542), behavioral neuroscience (319), mechanical engineering (316), experimental psychology (312).<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan-Ann Arbor |url = https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=University+of+Michigan&s=all&id=170976#programs |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230127152810/https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=University+of+Michigan&s=all&id=170976#programs |archive-date = January 27, 2023 |access-date = January 27, 2023 |website = nces.ed.gov |publisher = U.S. Dept of Education }}</ref>

The [[Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies]] offers more than 180 graduate degree programs in collaboration with fourteen other schools and colleges. Nineteen graduate and professional degree programs, including the [[juris doctor]], [[master of business administration]], [[doctor of dental surgery]], [[master of engineering]], [[doctor of engineering]], [[doctor of medicine]], and [[doctor of pharmacy]], are offered exclusively by the schools and colleges; Rackham does not oversee their administration. The university conferred 4,951 graduate degrees, and 709 first professional degrees in 2011–2012.<ref>{{Cite web |date = October 16, 2012 |title = Degrees Conferred by Degree Level & School/College |url = http://sitemaker.umich.edu/obpinfo/files/umaa_degreesummary_12.pdf |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130204162106/http://sitemaker.umich.edu/obpinfo/files/umaa_degreesummary_12.pdf |archive-date = February 4, 2013 |access-date = August 31, 2010 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget & Planning |pages = 1–2 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |year = 2009 |title = The University of Michigan – Degrees and Areas of Study |url = http://provost.umich.edu/college_portrait/2009/page2.html |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100608011640/http://www.provost.umich.edu/college_portrait/2009/page2.html |archive-date = June 8, 2010 |access-date = August 31, 2010 |publisher = U-M Provost's Office }}</ref>

===Reputation and rankings===

{{Infobox US university ranking
<!-- U.S. rankings -->| Forbes = 23
| THE_WSJ = 28
| USNWR_NU = 21
| Wamo_NU = 23
| ARWU_W = 26
| ARWU_NU = 18
| THES_W = 23
| QS_W = 33
| USNWR_W = 19
}}

The University of Michigan is a large, four-year, residential research university accredited by the [[Higher Learning Commission]].<ref name="Carnegie">{{Cite web |title = Carnegie Classifications – University of Michigan |url = http://carnegieclassifications.iu.edu/lookup/view_institution.php?unit_id=170976 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180913074027/http://carnegieclassifications.iu.edu/lookup/view_institution.php?unit_id=170976 |archive-date = September 13, 2018 |access-date = July 22, 2010 |publisher = Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title = U-M Accreditation 2010 |url = http://www.accreditation.umich.edu/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100723184740/http://www.accreditation.umich.edu/ |archive-date = July 23, 2010 |access-date = July 22, 2010 |publisher = University of Michigan }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title = Directory of HLC Institutions – University of Michigan |url = http://ncahlc.org/component/option,com_directory/Action,ShowBasic/Itemid,184/instid,1368/lang,en/ |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110101105139/http://ncahlc.org/component/option%2Ccom_directory/Action%2CShowBasic/Itemid%2C184/instid%2C1368/lang%2Cen/ |archive-date = January 1, 2011 |access-date = May 5, 2013 |publisher = The Higher Learning Commission, North Central Association of Colleges and Schools }}</ref> The four-year, full-time undergraduate program comprises the majority of enrollments and emphasizes instruction in the arts, sciences, and professions with a high level of coexistence between graduate and undergraduate programs. The university has "very high" research activity and the comprehensive graduate program offers doctoral degrees in the humanities, social sciences, and [[STEM fields]] as well as professional degrees in medicine, law, and dentistry.<ref name="Carnegie" /> U-M has been included on [[Richard Moll (author)|Richard Moll]]'s list of [[Public Ivies]].<ref>{{Cite book |last = Moll |first = Richard |title = The Public Ivys: America's Flagship Undergraduate Colleges |publisher = Viking Adult |year = 1985 |isbn = 0-670-58205-0 |location = New York |page = 61 }}</ref>

The 2021 ''U.S. News & World Report'' Best Colleges report ranked Michigan 3rd among public universities in the United States.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Top Public Universities |url = https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/national-universities/top-public |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20171102072710/https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/national-universities/top-public |archive-date = November 2, 2017 |access-date = January 18, 2021 |website = U.S. News & World Report }}</ref> Michigan was ranked 6th in the 2021 ''U.S. News & World Report'' Best Undergraduate Engineering Programs Rankings.<ref>{{Cite web |title = 2021 Best Undergraduate Engineering Programs Rankings |url = https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/engineering-doctorate |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211201005433/https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/engineering-doctorate |archive-date = December 1, 2021 |website = U.S. News & World Report }}</ref> Michigan was ranked 3rd in the 2021 ''U.S. News & World Report'' Best Undergraduate Business Programs Rankings.<ref>{{Cite web |title = 2021 Best Undergraduate Business Programs Rankings |url = https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/business-overall |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170223063315/https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/business-overall |archive-date = February 23, 2017 |access-date = January 18, 2021 |website = U.S. News & World Report }}</ref> The 2020 ''Princeton Review'' College Hopes & Worries Survey ranked Michigan as the No. 9 "Dream College" among students and the No. 7 "Dream College" among parents.<ref>{{Cite web |title=2020 College Hopes & Worries Press Release {{!}} The Princeton Review |url=https://www.princetonreview.com/press/college-hopes-worries-press-release |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191007224857/https://www.princetonreview.com/press/college-hopes-worries-press-release |archive-date=October 7, 2019 |access-date=January 18, 2021 |website=www.princetonreview.com}}</ref> The 2022–23 edition of the CWUR rankings ranked Michigan 12th nationally and 15th globally.<ref>{{Cite web |title=World University Rankings 2022–23 {{!}} Global 2000 List {{!}} CWUR |url=https://cwur.org/2022-23.php |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211012034200/https://cwur.org/2020-21.php |archive-date=October 12, 2021 |access-date=July 17, 2022 |website=cwur.org |language=en}}</ref>

====National rankings====

{| class="wikitable collapsible" style="font-size: 90%; width: 650px;"
|-
! colspan="6" style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Michigan Wolverines|color=white}}"| National Institution Rankings
|-
! Institution
!
! Rank
! Year
! Change<br>(YoY)
! Source<ref>{{Cite magazine |title = University of Michigan – Ann Arbor – U.S. News Best Grad School Rankings |url = https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/university-of-michigan-ann-arbor-170976/overall-rankings |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200503024500/https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/university-of-michigan-ann-arbor-170976/overall-rankings |archive-date = May 3, 2020 |access-date = September 28, 2020 |magazine = U.S. News & World Report }}</ref><ref>{{Cite magazine |title = University of Michigan—Ann Arbor Rankings |url = https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/university-of-michigan-ann-arbor-9092/overall-rankings |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210429171325/https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/university-of-michigan-ann-arbor-9092/overall-rankings |archive-date = April 29, 2021 |access-date = May 1, 2021 |magazine = U.S. News & World Report }}</ref>
|-
! colspan="6"| Undergraduate
|-
| rowspan="4"| University of Michigan—Ann Arbor
| '''Best National Universities'''
| '''21'''
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| ''Dream'' College Among Students
| 5
| 2024
| {{increase}} 4
| [[Princeton Review|Princeton <br>Review]]
|-
| ''Dream'' College Among Parents
| 6
| 2024
| {{increase}} 2
| [[Princeton Review|Princeton <br>Review]]
|-
| Undergraduate Research/<br>Creative Projects
| 5
| {{dash}}
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| rowspan="1"| [[University of Michigan College of Engineering|College of Engineering]]
| Undergraduate Engineering
| 5
| {{dash}}
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| rowspan="1"| School of Nursing
| Bachelor of Science in Nursing
| 7
| {{dash}}
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| rowspan="1"| [[College of Literature, Science, and the Arts|College of Literature, Science, and<br>the Arts]]
| Undergraduate Psychology
| 3
| {{dash}}
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
! colspan="6"| Graduate
|-
| rowspan="11"| [[University of Michigan College of Engineering|College of Engineering]]
| '''Best Engineering Schools'''
| '''7'''
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Aerospace Engineering
| 7
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Biomedical Engineering
| 9
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Civil Engineering
| 5
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Computer Engineering
| 7
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Electrical Engineering
| 4
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Environmental Engineering
| 2
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Industrial Engineering
| 2
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Materials Engineering
| 7
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Mechanical Engineering
| 5
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Nuclear Engineering
| 1
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| rowspan="2"| [[Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy|Gerald R. Ford School of<br>Public Policy]]
| '''Best Public Affairs Programs'''
| 4
| 2024
| {{nochange}}
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Political Science
| 4
| 2021
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| [[University of Michigan School of Information|School of Information]]
| '''Best Library and<br>Information Studies Programs'''
| '''6'''
| 2021
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| [[University of Michigan School of Education|Marsal Family School of<br>Education]]
| '''Best Education Schools'''
| '''3'''
| 2024
| {{decrease}} 2
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| rowspan="3"| [[University of Michigan School of Public Health|School of Public Health]]
| '''Best Public Health Schools'''
| '''5'''
| 2024
| {{nochange}}
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Biostatistics
| 4
| 2022
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Health Care Management
| 3
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| rowspan="12"| [[College of Literature, Science, and the Arts|College of Literature, Science, and<br>the Arts]]
| Biological Sciences
| 23
| 2022
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Chemistry
| 14
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Clinical Psychology (Doctorate)
| 10
| 2020
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Earth Sciences
| 9
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Economics
| 12
| 2022
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| English
| 8
| 2021
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| History
| 2
| 2021
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Mathematics
| 11
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Physics
| 13
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Psychology
| 3
| 2022
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Sociology
| 2
| 2021
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Statistics
| 7
| 2022
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| [[University of Michigan School of Social Work|School of Social Work]]
| '''Best Schools for Social Work'''
| '''1'''
| 2024
| {{nochange}}
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| [[Stamps School of Art & Design]]
| '''Best Art Schools'''
| '''8'''
| 2020
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| rowspan="3"| [[Stephen M. Ross School of Business|Stephen M. Ross School of<br>Business]]
| '''Best B-Schools'''
| '''9'''
| 2023–24
|
| [[Bloomberg Businessweek|Bloomberg <br>Businessweek]]
|-
| '''Best Business Schools'''
| '''12'''
| 2024
| {{decrease}} 4
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Part-time MBA
| 6
| 2024
| {{increase}} 1
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
! colspan="6"| Professional
|-
| [[University of Michigan Law School|Law School]]
| '''Best Law Schools'''
| '''9'''
| 2024
| {{increase}} 1
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| rowspan="2"| [[University of Michigan Medical School|Medical School]]
| '''Best Medical Schools: Research'''
| '''13'''
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| '''Best Medical Schools: Primary Care'''
| '''26'''
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| rowspan="3"| School of Nursing
| '''Best Nursing Schools: Master's'''
| '''7'''
| 2024
| {{increase}} 1
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| '''Best Nursing Schools: Doctor of<br>Nursing Practice'''
| '''8'''
| 2024
| {{decrease}} 2
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Midwifery
| 6
| 2024
| {{decrease}} 4
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| [[University of Michigan College of Pharmacy|College of Pharmacy]]
| '''Best Pharmacy Schools'''
| 2
| 2024
| {{increase}} 1
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
! colspan="6"| Other
|-
| rowspan="5"| University of Michigan—Ann Arbor
| Top Public Schools
| 3
| 2023
|
| [[U.S. News & World Report|U.S. News]]
|-
| Public Universities
| 1
| 2022
|
| [[Times Higher Education World University Rankings|THE]]
|-
| Top 25 Public Colleges
| 4
| 2023
|
| [[Forbes]]
|-
| Top Public Universities In America
| 2
| 2024
|
| [[Niche (company)|Niche]]
|}

====World rankings====

{|class="wikitable collapsible" style="font-size: 90%; width: 650px;"
|-
! colspan="6" style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Michigan Wolverines|color=white}}" |
World University Rankings
|-
! Institution
!
! Rank
! Year
! Change<br>(YoY)
! Source<ref>{{Cite magazine |title = University of Michigan—Ann Arbor – U.S. News Best Global University Rankings |url = https://www.usnews.com/education/best-global-universities/university-of-michigan-ann-arbor-170976 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210429174953/https://www.usnews.com/education/best-global-universities/university-of-michigan-ann-arbor-170976 |archive-date = April 29, 2021 |access-date = May 3, 2021 |magazine = U.S. News & World Report }}</ref>
|-
| rowspan="6"| University of Michigan—Ann Arbor
| '''Academic Ranking of<br>World Universities'''
| '''26'''
| 2023
| {{increase}} 2
| [[ARWU|ShanghaiRanking]]
|-
| '''Best Global Universities'''
| '''19'''
| 2022-23
|
| U.S. News
|-
| '''Top Global Universities'''
| '''33'''
| 2024
| {{decrease}} 8
| QS
|-
| '''World University Rankings'''
| '''23'''
| 2023
| {{increase}} 1
| THE
|-
| World Reputation Rankings
| 18
| 2023
| {{nochange}}
| THE
|-
| '''World University Rankings'''
| '''16'''
| 2023
| {{decrease}} 1
| [[CWUR]]
|}
{|class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="font-size: 90%; width: 650px;"
|-
! colspan="6" style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Michigan Wolverines|color=white}}" |
World Rankings by Subject
|-
! Institution
!
! Rank
! Year
! Change<br>(YoY)
! Source
|-
| School of Dentistry
| Dentistry & Oral Sciences
| 1
| 2023
|
| [[Academic Ranking of World Universities|ShanghaiRanking]]
|-
| rowspan="32"| College of Engineering
|-
| Aerospace Engineering
| 6
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Automation & Control
| 12
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Biomedical Engineering
| 36
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Biotechnology
| 51-75
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2"| Chemical Engineering
| 94
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 101-150
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2"| Civil Engineering
| 46
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 51-75
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2"| Computer Science
| 18
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 41
| {{dash}}
|
| THE
|-
| Computer Science & Engineering
| 51-75
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2"| Electrical and<br>Electronic Engineering
| 105
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 51-75
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Energy and Fuels
| 76
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Energy Science & Engineering
| 76-100
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2"| Engineering
| 21
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 19
| {{dash}}
|
| THE
|-
| Environmental Science & Engineering
| 51-75
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Instruments Science & Technology
| 201-300
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Materials Science
| 44
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Materials Science & Engineering
| 46
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2"| Mechanical Engineering
| 36
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 76-100
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Metallurgical Engineering
| 34
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2"| Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
| 87
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 101-150
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Optics
| 57
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Remote Sensing
| 51-75
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Space Science
| 25
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Telecommunication Engineering
| 201-300
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Transportation Science & Technology
| 14
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| School for Environment and<br>Sustainability
| Environment/Ecology
| 35
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| rowspan="2"| Gerald R. Ford School of<br>Public Policy
| Political Sciences
| 9
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Public Administration
| 101-150
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| School of Information
| Library & Information Science
| 42
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2" | Law School
| rowspan="2"| Law
| 9
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| 26
| {{dash}}
|
| THE
|-
| rowspan="33"| College of Literature, Science, and<br>the Arts
|-
| Agricultural Sciences
| 201-300
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2"| Arts & Humanities
| 10
|
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 18
| {{dash}}
|
| THE
|-
| Atmospheric Science
| 51-75
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Biological Sciences
| 44
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Biology & Biochemistry
| 17
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Biotechnology and<br>Applied Microbiology
| 56
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| rowspan="2"| Chemistry
| 46
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 76-100
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Communication
| 6
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Condensed Matter Physics
| 85
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Earth Sciences
| 51-75
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Ecology
| 51-75
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Economics
| 23
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Geography
| 151-200
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Geosciences
| 67
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Human Biological Sciences
| 44
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Life sciences
| 29
| {{dash}}
|
| THE
|-
| rowspan="2"| Mathematics
| 21
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 30
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Oceanography
| 101-150
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Physical Chemistry
| 84
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Physical sciences
| 23
| {{dash}}
|
| THE
|-
| rowspan="2"| Physics
| 25
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 24
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Plant and Animal Science
| 93
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| rowspan="1"| Psychiatry/Psychology
| 13
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| rowspan="2"| Psychology
| 11
| {{dash}}
|
| THE
|-
| 11
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Social sciences
| 9
| {{dash}}
|
| THE
|-
| Sociology
| 4
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Statistics
| 16
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2"| Marsal Family School of Education
| rowspan="2"| Education
| 8
| {{dash}}
|
| THE
|-
| 1
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="17"| Medical School
|-
| Cardiac & Cardiovascular Systems
| 18
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Cell Biology
| 26
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| rowspan="2"| Clinical Medicine
| 12
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 36
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Clinical and Health
| 21
| {{dash}}
|
| THE
|-
| Endocrinology and Metabolism
| 23
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Gastroenterology and Hepatology
| 22
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Immunology
| 31
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Infectious Diseases
| 12
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Medical Technology
| 31
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Microbiology
| 43
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Molecular Biology & Genetics
| 15
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Neuroscience & Behavior
| 40
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Oncology
| 15
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and<br>Medical Imaging
| 37
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Surgery
| 11
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| School of Nursing
| Nursing
| 32
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2"| College of Pharmacy
| Pharmacology & Toxicology
| 27
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences
| 42
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="4"| School of Public Health
|-
| Public, Environmental and<br>Occupational Health
| 22
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| Public Health
| 12
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Social Sciences & Public Health
| 6
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| rowspan="7"| Stephen M. Ross School of<br>Business
|-
| Business Administration
| 50
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| rowspan="2"| Economics & Business
| 13
| {{dash}}
|
| U.S. News
|-
| 20
| {{dash}}
|
| THE
|-
| Global MBA
| 26
| 2023
| {{decrease}} 2
| [[Financial Times]]
|-
| Finance
| 34
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|-
| Management
| 7
| 2023
|
| ShanghaiRanking
|}

===Research===

{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:85%; text-align:center; float:right; clear:right; margin-left:1em;"
|+ ''Science research output, by year''<ref>{{Cite web |last = <!--Not stated--> |title = 2018 tables: Institutions – academic |url = https://www.natureindex.com/annual-tables/2018/institution/academic/all/global |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220101003819/https://www.natureindex.com/annual-tables/2018/institution/academic/all/global |archive-date = January 1, 2022 |access-date = December 31, 2021 |website = natureindex.com |publisher = Nature Index }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last = <!--Not stated--> |title = 2019 tables: Institutions – academic |url = https://www.natureindex.com/annual-tables/2019/institution/academic/all/global |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220101003816/https://www.natureindex.com/annual-tables/2019/institution/academic/all/global |archive-date = January 1, 2022 |access-date = December 31, 2021 |website = natureindex.com |publisher = Nature Index }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last = <!--Not stated--> |title = 2020 tables: Institutions – academic |url = https://www.natureindex.com/annual-tables/2020/institution/academic/all/global |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220101003817/https://www.natureindex.com/annual-tables/2020/institution/academic/all/global |archive-date = January 1, 2022 |access-date = December 31, 2021 |website = natureindex.com |publisher = Nature Index }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last = <!--Not stated--> |title = 2021 tables: Institutions – academic |url = https://www.natureindex.com/annual-tables/2021/institution/academic/all/global |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220101003817/https://www.natureindex.com/annual-tables/2021/institution/academic/all/global |archive-date = January 1, 2022 |access-date = December 31, 2021 |website = natureindex.com |publisher = Nature Index }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last = <!--Not stated--> |title = 2022 tables: Institutions – academic |url = https://www.nature.com/nature-index/annual-tables/2022/institution/academic/all/countries-United%20States%20of%20America%20(USA) |access-date = December 16, 2023 |website = natureindex.com |publisher = Nature Index }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last = <!--Not stated--> |title = 2023 tables: Institutions – academic |url = https://www.nature.com/nature-index/annual-tables/2023/institution/academic/all/countries-United%20States%20of%20America%20(USA) |access-date = December 16, 2023 |website = natureindex.com |publisher = Nature Index }}</ref>
! !! Share !! National Rank !! Global Rank
|-
! 2022
| 365.97 {{increase}}
| 6
| 18
|-
! 2021
| 337.95 {{decrease}}
| 6
| 19
|-
! 2020
| 398.64 {{increase}}
| 4
| 11
|-
! 2019
| 343.84 {{decrease}}
| 5
| 14
|-
! 2018
| 344.48 {{increase}}
| 6
| 14
|-
! 2017
| 336.06 {{increase}}
| 5
| 11
|}

Michigan is one of the founding members (in the year 1900) of the [[Association of American Universities]]. The university manages one of the largest annual collegiate research budgets of any university in the United States. According to the [[National Science Foundation]], Michigan spent $1.639 billion on research and development in 2021, ranking it 3rd in the nation.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Table 21. Higher education R&D expenditures, ranked by FY 2021 R&D expenditures: FYs 2010–21 |url = https://ncses.nsf.gov/pubs/nsf23304/assets/data-tables/tables/nsf23304-tab021.pdf |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230608153629/https://www.ncses.nsf.gov/pubs/nsf23304/assets/data-tables/tables/nsf23304-tab021.pdf |archive-date = June 8, 2023 |access-date = June 26, 2023 |website = ncsesdata.nsf.gov |publisher = [[National Science Foundation]] }}</ref> This figure totaled over $1 billion in 2009.<ref name="Forrest 2010">{{Cite book |last = Forrest |first = Stephen R. |url = https://research.umich.edu/content/2010/01/fy09-financial-report.pdf |title = Annual Report on Research and Scholarship FY2009 Financial Summary |date = January 21, 2010 |publisher = Office of the Vice President for Research |location = Ann Arbor |quote = University of Michigan expenditures in support of research, scholarship and creative activity reached a special milestone in Fiscal Year 2009—total expenditures for the year surpassed $1 billion, reaching $1,016,565,913.... The total is an increase of 9.4% over FY2008. Overall, the University's research portfolio remains one of the largest in the country.... |access-date = March 12, 2020 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100606135859/https://research.umich.edu/content/2010/01/fy09-financial-report.pdf |archive-date = June 6, 2010 |url-status = dead }}</ref> The Medical School spent the most at over $445 million, while the College of Engineering was second at more than $160 million.<ref name="Forrest 2010" />

[[File:University of Michigan August 2013 102 (Simpson Memorial Institute).jpg|thumb|left|The Thomas Henry Simpson Memorial Institute for Medical Research was constructed in 1924 as the result of a donation from the widow of iron magnate Thomas H. Simpson, in memory of her late husband, who succumbed to pernicious anemia]]

In 2009, U-M signed an agreement to purchase a facility formerly owned by [[Pfizer]]. The acquisition includes over {{convert|170|acre|km2}} of property, and 30 major buildings comprising roughly {{convert|1600000|sqft|m2}} of wet laboratory space, and {{convert|400000|sqft|m2}} of administrative space. At the time of the agreement, the university's intentions for the space were not fully articulated, but the expectation was that the new space would allow the university to ramp up its research and ultimately employ in excess of 2,000 people.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Lessnau |first = Laura |date = December 20, 2008 |title = U-M to buy Pfizer's former Ann Arbor property |url = https://news.umich.edu/u-m-to-buy-pfizer-s-former-ann-arbor-property/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200103005426/https://news.umich.edu/u-m-to-buy-pfizer-s-former-ann-arbor-property/ |archive-date = January 3, 2020 |access-date = March 12, 2020 |work = Michigan News |publisher = Office of the Vice President for Communications }}</ref>

The university is also a major contributor to the medical field with the [[Electrocardiogram|EKG]]<ref>{{Cite web |year = 2010 |title = History |url = http://www.med.umich.edu/1busi/history.htm |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100819203131/http://www.med.umich.edu/1busi/history.htm |archive-date = August 19, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = University of Michigan Health System }}</ref> and the [[gastroscope]].<ref>{{Cite book |title = Inventors and Inventions |publisher = Marshall Cavendish Corporation |year = 2008 |isbn = 9780761477617 |location = New York |page = 928 }}</ref> The university's {{convert|13000|acre|km2|adj=on}} [[University of Michigan Biological Station|biological station]] in the [[Northern Michigan|Northern Lower Peninsula of Michigan]] is one of only 47 [[Biosphere reserve|Biosphere Reserves]] in the United States.<ref>{{Cite web |date = November 1, 2000 |title = United States of America – Focal point for biosphere reserves |url = http://www.unesco.org/mabdb/br/brdir/directory/contact.asp?code=USA |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110514060053/http://www.unesco.org/mabdb/br/brdir/directory/contact.asp?code=USA |archive-date = May 14, 2011 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = [[UNESCO]] }}</ref>

In the mid-1960s U-M researchers worked with [[IBM]] to develop a new [[virtual memory]] architectural model<ref>{{Cite journal |last1 = Arden |first1 = B. W. |author-link = Bruce Arden |last2 = Galler |first2 = B. A. |author-link2 = Bernard A. Galler |last3 = O'Brien |first3 = T. C. |last4 = Westervelt |first4 = F. H. |author-link4 = Franklin H. Westervelt |date = January 1966 |title = Program and Addressing Structure in a Time-Sharing Environment |journal = [[Journal of the ACM]] |location = New York |publisher = [[Association for Computing Machinery]] |volume = 13 |issue = 1 |pages = 1–16 |doi = 10.1145/321312.321313 |issn = 0004-5411 |eissn = 1557-735X |s2cid = 9302487 |doi-access = free }}</ref> that model became part of [[IBM System/360 Model 67|IBM's Model 360/67]] [[mainframe computer]] (the 360/67 was initially dubbed the 360/65M where the "M" stood for Michigan).<ref>{{Cite journal |last = Topol |first = Susan |date = May 13, 1996 |title = A History of MTS — 30 Years of Computing Service |journal = University of Michigan Information Technology Digest }}</ref> The [[Michigan Terminal System]] (MTS), an early [[time-sharing]] computer [[operating system]] developed at U-M, was the first system outside of IBM to use the 360/67's virtual memory features.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Mills |first = David |author-link = David L. Mills |date = January 23, 2005 |title = Michigan Terminal System |url = https://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/gallery/gallery8.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100614033109/http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills//gallery/gallery8.html |archive-date = June 14, 2010 |access-date = August 31, 2010 }}</ref>

{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:85%; text-align:center; float:right; clear:right; margin-left:1em;"
|+ ''R&D statistics, by year''<ref>{{Cite journal |last1 = Lombardi |first1 = John V. |author-link = John V. Lombardi |last2 = Abbey |first2 = Craig W. |last3 = Craig |first3 = Diane D. |date = 2020 |title = The Top American Research Universities |url = https://data-apps.ir.aa.ufl.edu/mup/CMUP%20Annual%20Reports/MUP-2020-Top-American-Research-Universities-Annual-Report.pdf |journal = The Lombardi Program on Measuring University Performance |location = Amherst and Gainesville |publisher = The Center for Measuring University Performance, UMass Amherst and University of Florida |access-date = December 16, 2023 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1 = Lombardi |first1 = John V. |author-link = John V. Lombardi |last2 = Abbey |first2 = Craig W. |last3 = Craig |first3 = Diane D. |date = 2019 |title = The Top American Research Universities |url = https://mup.umass.edu/sites/default/files/mup-2019-top-american-research-universities-annual-report.pdf |url-status = live |journal = The Lombardi Program on Measuring University Performance |location = Amherst and Gainesville |publisher = The Center for Measuring University Performance, UMass Amherst and University of Florida |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210903164811/https://mup.umass.edu/sites/default/files/mup-2019-top-american-research-universities-annual-report.pdf |archive-date = September 3, 2021 |access-date = October 23, 2021 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1 = Lombardi |first1 = John V. |author-link = John V. Lombardi |last2 = Abbey |first2 = Craig W. |last3 = Craig |first3 = Diane D. |date = 2018 |title = The Top American Research Universities |url = https://mup.umass.edu/sites/default/files/mup-2018-top-american-research-universities-annual-report.pdf |url-status = live |journal = The Lombardi Program on Measuring University Performance |location = Amherst and Gainesville |publisher = The Center for Measuring University Performance, UMass Amherst and University of Florida |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210805190103/https://mup.umass.edu/sites/default/files/mup-2018-top-american-research-universities-annual-report.pdf |archive-date = August 5, 2021 |access-date = October 23, 2021 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1 = Lombardi |first1 = John V. |author-link = John V. Lombardi |last2 = Abbey |first2 = Craig W. |last3 = Craig |first3 = Diane D. |date = 2017 |title = The Top American Research Universities |url = https://mup.umass.edu/sites/default/files/mup-2017-top-american-research-universities-annual-report.pdf |url-status = live |journal = The Lombardi Program on Measuring University Performance |location = Amherst and Gainesville |publisher = The Center for Measuring University Performance, UMass Amherst and University of Florida |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211023203818/https://mup.umass.edu/sites/default/files/mup-2017-top-american-research-universities-annual-report.pdf |archive-date = October 23, 2021 |access-date = October 23, 2021 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1 = Lombardi |first1 = John V. |author-link = John V. Lombardi |last2 = Abbey |first2 = Craig W. |last3 = Craig |first3 = Diane D. |date = 2016 |title = The Top American Research Universities |url = https://mup.umass.edu/sites/default/files/mup-2016-top-american-research-universities-annual-report.pdf |url-status = live |journal = The Lombardi Program on Measuring University Performance |location = Amherst and Gainesville |publisher = The Center for Measuring University Performance, UMass Amherst and University of Florida |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211023203832/https://mup.umass.edu/sites/default/files/mup-2016-top-american-research-universities-annual-report.pdf |archive-date = October 23, 2021 |access-date = October 23, 2021 }}</ref>
! !! Total<br>Research<br>x $1000 !! National<br>Rank !! Federal<br>Research<br>x $1000 !! National<br>Rank !! National<br>Academy<br>Members !! National<br>Rank
|-
! 2019
| {{dash}}
| {{dash}}
| {{dash}}
| {{dash}}
| 120
| 10
|-
! 2018
| 1,493,353
| 3
| 841,158
| 3
| 118
| 9
|-
! 2017
| 1,434,535
| 2
| 822,436
| 3
| 113
| 12
|-
! 2016
| 1,357,228
| 2
| 780,080
| 3
| 108
| 13
|-
! 2015
| 1,300,340
| 2
| 728,712
| 3
| 106
| 13
|-
! 2014
| 1,279,603
| 2
| 733,779
| 3
| {{dash}}
| {{dash}}
|}

U-M is home to the [[National Election Studies]] and the [[University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index]]. The [[Correlates of War]] project, also located at U-M, is an accumulation of scientific knowledge about 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 and the Life Sciences Institute are located at the university. The Institute for Social Research (ISR), the nation's longest-standing laboratory for interdisciplinary research in the social sciences,<ref>{{Cite web |last = Frantilla |first = Anne |date = September 1998 |title = Social Science in the Public Interest: A Fiftieth-Year History of the Institute for Social Research |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/research/publications/ISR.pdf |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090205080145/http://bentley.umich.edu/research/publications/ISR.pdf |archive-date = February 5, 2009 |access-date = December 25, 2008 |publisher = Bentley Historical Library }}</ref> is home to the Survey Research Center, Research Center for Group Dynamics, Center for Political Studies, Population Studies Center, and Inter-Consortium for Political and Social Research. Undergraduate students are able to participate in various research projects through the [[Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program]] (UROP) as well as the UROP/Creative-Programs.<ref>{{Cite web |title = About UROP |url = http://www.lsa.umich.edu/urop/about |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080923081017/http://www.lsa.umich.edu/urop/about/ |archive-date = September 23, 2008 |access-date = August 28, 2010 |publisher = University of Michigan Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program }}</ref>

The [[University of Michigan Library|U-M library system]] comprises nineteen individual libraries with twenty-four separate collections—roughly 13.3 million volumes as of 2012.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Statistical Highlights 2011–2012 |url = http://www.lib.umich.edu/statistical-highlights |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130113013200/http://www.lib.umich.edu/statistical-highlights |archive-date = January 13, 2013 |access-date = March 5, 2013 |publisher = Regents of the University of Michigan }}</ref> U-M 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, and has initiated a book digitization program in collaboration with [[Google]].<ref>{{Cite web |title = Michigan Digitization Project |url = http://www.lib.umich.edu/michigan-digitization-project |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100929020751/http://www.lib.umich.edu/michigan-digitization-project |archive-date = September 29, 2010 |access-date = October 2, 2010 |publisher = University of Michigan Library }}</ref> The [[University of Michigan Press]] is also a part of the U-M library system.

In the late 1960s U-M, together with [[Michigan State University]] and [[Wayne State University]], founded the [[Merit Network]], one of the first university computer networks.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Merit's History |url = http://www.merit.edu/about/history/article.php |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090207130720/http://merit.edu/about/history/article.php |archive-date = February 7, 2009 |access-date = September 15, 2008 |publisher = Merit Network }}—A university press release called a demonstration of the network (with a connection between U-M and Wayne State University) on December 14, 1971, as "a milestone in higher education" and an "historic event."</ref> The Merit Network was then and remains today administratively hosted by U-M. Another major contribution took place in 1987 when a proposal submitted by the Merit Network together with its partners [[IBM]], [[MCI Communications|MCI]], and the [[State of Michigan]] won a national competition to upgrade and expand the [[National Science Foundation Network]] (NSFNET) backbone from 56,000 to 1.5 million, and later to 45 million bits per second.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Merit Network: History |url = http://www.merit.edu/about/history/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070715115444/http://www.merit.edu/about/history/ |archive-date = July 15, 2007 |access-date = March 21, 2007 |publisher = Merit Network }}</ref> In 2006, U-M joined with Michigan State University and Wayne State University to create the [[University Research Corridor]]. This effort was undertaken to highlight the capabilities of the state's three leading research institutions and drive the transformation of Michigan's economy.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Serwach |first = Joe |date = September 22, 2008 |title = URC fuels new industries |url = http://www.ur.umich.edu/0809/Sep22_08/00.php |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100610175743/http://www.ur.umich.edu/0809/Sep22_08/00.php |archive-date = June 10, 2010 |access-date = December 25, 2008 |work = University of Michigan News Service }}</ref> The three universities are electronically interconnected via the Michigan LambdaRail (MiLR, pronounced 'MY-lar'), a high-speed data network providing 10&nbsp;Gbit/s connections between the three university campuses and other national and international network connection points in Chicago.<ref>{{Cite web |title = What is Michigan LambdaRail (MiLR)? |url = http://milr.org/ |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20020628030018/http://milr.org/ |archive-date = June 28, 2002 |access-date = August 31, 2010 |publisher = MiLR, Michigan LambdaRail }}</ref>

In May 2021, the university announced plans to cut carbon emissions from its campuses. The plan covers all of its operations and goals include removing emissions from direct, on-campus sources by 2040.<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan pledges steep carbon emission cuts at all three campuses |url = https://www.abc12.com/2021/05/20/university-of-michigan-pledges-steep-carbon-emission-cuts-at-all-three-campuses/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210521100143/https://www.abc12.com/2021/05/20/university-of-michigan-pledges-steep-carbon-emission-cuts-at-all-three-campuses/ |archive-date = May 21, 2021 |access-date = May 21, 2021 |website = www.abc12.com |language = en }}</ref>


==Student life==
==Student life==
===Student government===
Housed within the Michigan Union, the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) is the central student government of the University of Michigan's Ann Arbor campus. With representatives from each of the University's colleges and schools, the MSA represents the voice of students, and manages student funds on the campus. The Michigan Student Assembly is a member of the state-wide [[Association of Michigan Universities]].


===Student body===
Within each college and school, there are also student governance bodies. These bodies represent the needs of their respective college or school.


{| class="wikitable floatright sortable collapsible"; text-align:right; font-size:80%;"
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. The University of Michigan Engineering Council (UMEC) manages student government affairs for the College of Engineering.
|+ style="font-size:90%" |Undergraduate student body composition as of October 10, 2023
|-
! Race and ethnicity<ref name="U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard" />
! colspan="2" data-sort-type=number |Total
|-
| [[Non-Hispanic whites|White]]
|align=right| {{bartable|53|%|2||background:gray}}
|-
| [[Asian Americans|Asian]]
|align=right| {{bartable|17|%|2||background:purple}}
|-
| [[Hispanic and Latino Americans|Hispanic]]
|align=right| {{bartable|7|%|2||background:green}}
|-
| [[African Americans|Black]]
|align=right| {{bartable|4|%|2||background:mediumblue}}
|-
| Other{{efn|Other consists of [[Multiracial Americans]] & those who prefer to not say.}}
|align=right| {{bartable|10|%|2||background:brown}}
|-
| [[Foreign national]]
|align=right| {{bartable|8|%|2||background:orange}}
|-
! colspan="4" data-sort-type=number |[[Economic diversity]]{{Citation needed|date=December 2023}}
|-
| [[American lower class|Low-income]]{{efn|The percentage of students who received an income-based federal [[Pell grant]] intended for low-income students.}}
|align=right| {{bartable|18|%|2||background:red}}
|-
| [[Affluence in the United States|Affluent]]{{efn|The percentage of students who are a part of the [[American middle class]] at the bare minimum.}}
|align=right| {{bartable|82|%|2||background:black}}
|}


As of October 2023, the university had an enrollment of 52,065 students: 33,730 [[Undergraduate education|undergraduate students]] and 18,335 [[graduate student]]s<ref>{{Cite book |url = https://www.masu.org/sites/default/files/documents/2023-11/MASU%202023%20Enrollment%20Report.pdf |title = ENROLLMENT REPORT FALL 2023 |publisher = Michigan Association of State Universities |year = 2023 |pages = 3 |language = en }}</ref> in a total of 600 academic programs.{{Citation needed|date=December 2023}} This makes it the largest university in the state of Michigan.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Lauren Love |date = October 2, 2023 |title = U-M's fall enrollment makes it state's largest university |url = https://record.umich.edu/articles/u-ms-fall-enrollment-makes-it-states-largest-university/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20231115200744/https://record.umich.edu/articles/u-ms-fall-enrollment-makes-it-states-largest-university/ |archive-date = November 15, 2023 |access-date = December 4, 2023 |website = The University Record }}</ref> The largest college at the university was the [[College of Literature, Science, and the Arts]] with 21,973 students (42.2% of the total student body), followed by the [[University of Michigan College of Engineering|College of Engineering]] (11,113; 21.3%) and [[Ross School of Business]] (4,433; 8.1%). All other colleges each hosted less than 5% of the total student population.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Enrollment Reports {{!}} Office of the Registrar |url=https://ro.umich.edu/reports/enrollment |access-date=December 15, 2023 |website=University of Michigan Office of the Registrar}}</ref>
==Famous alumni and faculty==
''Main article: [[List of University of Michigan people]]''


Students come from all 50 [[U.S. state]]s and nearly 100 countries.<ref name="Students profile 2020" /> As of 2022, 52% of undergraduate students were Michigan residents, while 43% came from other states. The remainder of the undergraduate student body was composed of international students.<ref name="University of Michigan Office of Budget & Planning 2022">{{Cite book |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/factsfigures/cy_UMAA_Infographic.pdf |title = ANN ARBOR CAMPUS SNAPSHOT – FALL 2022 |publisher = University of Michigan Office of Budget & Planning |year = 2022 |pages = 1 |language = en }}</ref> Of the total student body, 43,253 (83.1%) were U.S. citizens or permanent residents and 8,812 (16.9%) were international students as of November 2023.<ref>{{Cite book |last = Morkin |first = Tyler |url = https://internationalcenter.umich.edu/sites/default/files/Annual_Report.pdf |title = 2023 Statistical Report: International Students, Scholars, Faculty, Staff, and Education Abroad |date = November 13, 2023 |publisher = University of Michigan International Center |pages = 4 |language = en }}</ref>
There are over 425,000 living alumni and 4,196 faculty of the University of Michigan. The number is often quoted as the largest number of living alumni of any American university. Campus tour guides and orientation meeting also commonly report the university as being the only one with an alumni association on the moon, due to the University's flag being one of only two on the moon, next to the U.S. flag.


In terms of [[Race (human categorization)|race]], as of October 2023 the undergraduate student body was approximately 53% [[White people|White]], 17% [[Asian Americans|Asian]], 7% [[Hispanic and Latino Americans|Hispanic]], 4% [[African Americans|Black]], 5% from two or more races, and 5% from an unknown racial composition. The remaining 8% of undergraduates were international students.<ref name="U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard">{{Cite web |title=University of Michigan-Ann Arbor {{!}} College Scorecard |url=https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/school/?170976-University-of-Michigan-Ann-Arbor |access-date=December 15, 2023 |website=U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard |language=en}}</ref>
Famous alumni include the first American to perform a [[space walk]], a [[President of the United States|US President]], the "father" of the [[iPod]], founders of [[Sun Microsystems]] and [[Google]], [[Arthur Miller]], the writer of the play [[Death of a Salesman]], the father of information theory, and the voice of [[Darth Vader]].


According to a 2017 report by the New York Times, the median family income of a student at Michigan was $154,000. 66% of students came from families within the top 20% in terms of income.<ref>{{Cite news |last1 = AISCH |first1 = GREGOR |last2 = BUCHANAN |first2 = LARRY |last3 = COX |first3 = AMANDA |last4 = QUEALY |first4 = KEVIN |date = January 18, 2017 |title = Economic diversity and student outcomes at Michigan |url = https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/projects/college-mobility/university-of-michigan-ann-arbor |access-date = December 15, 2023 |work = The New York Times |language = en-US |issn = 0362-4331 }}</ref> As of 2022, approximately 23% of in-state undergraduate students and 14% of out-of-state students received a [[Pell Grant]].<ref name="University of Michigan Office of Budget & Planning 2022" />
==See also==
*[[University of Michigan-Dearborn]]
*[[University of Michigan-Flint]]


===Residential life===
==References==
{{Main|University of Michigan Housing}}
*{{Book reference | Author=Fleming, Robben W. | Title=Tempests into Rainbows: Managing Turbulence | Publisher=Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press | Year=1996 | ID=ISBN 0472106740}}
*{{Book reference | Author=Holtzer (editor), Susan. | Title=Special to the Daily: The 1st 100 Years of Editorial Freedom at the Michigan Daily | Publisher=Caddo Gap Press | Year=1990 | ID=ISBN 0962594520}}
*{{Book reference | Author=Peckham, Howard H. | Title=The Making of The University of Michigan 1817-1992 | Publisher=Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press | Year=1994 | ID=ISBN 0472065947}}
*[http://www.research.umich.edu/research_guide/annual_reports/FY04/04regentsreport.html Ulaby, Fawwaz T. ''Annual Report on Research, Scholarship and Creative Activity at the University of Michigan FY2004'']. (February 17, 2005). UM Research.


[[File:A picture of the University of Michigan campus in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.jpg|thumb|Law Quadrangle, constructed during the decade of 1923–33, was designed by [[York and Sawyer]] in the [[Tudor architecture|Tudor style]]. Its design recalled the [[Quadrangle (architecture)|quadrangles]] of [[Oxbridge|two ancient English universities]], Oxford and Cambridge|alt=Law Quadrangle]]
==External links==
*[http://www.umich.edu/ Unversity of Michigan Home Page]
*[http://alumni.umich.edu/ UM Alumni Association]
*[http://www.mgoblue.com/ University of Michigan Athletics Site]
*[http://www.umich.edu/lib_resources.html#museums University of Michigan Museum Resource]
*[http://www.photos.ns.umich.edu/Public/Standard/RecordView.jsp Various images of the campus]
*[http://www.johnwcooper.com/annarbor-michigan.htm College Students' Guide to University of Michigan's Campus]
*[http://www.umich.edu/~info/maps.html Campus maps]


The University of Michigan's campus housing system can accommodate approximately 10,000 students, or nearly 25 percent of the total student population at the university.<ref>{{Cite web |title = About University Housing |url = http://www.housing.umich.edu/about |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100817192131/http://www.housing.umich.edu/about |archive-date = August 17, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = University of Michigan Housing }}</ref> The residence halls are located in three distinct geographic areas on campus: 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 1,270 students,<ref>{{Cite web |title = Residence Hall Overviews Bursley Hall |url = http://www.housing.umich.edu/reshalls/overviews#/bursley-hall |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100820202444/http://www.housing.umich.edu/reshalls/overviews/#/bursley-hall |archive-date = August 20, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = University of Michigan Housing }}</ref> while the smallest accommodates 25 residents.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Residence Hall Overviews Henderson House |url = http://www.housing.umich.edu/reshalls/overviews#/henderson-house |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100820202444/http://www.housing.umich.edu/reshalls/overviews/#/henderson-house |archive-date = August 20, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = University of Michigan Housing }}</ref> A majority of upper-division and graduate students live in off-campus apartments, houses, and [[Housing cooperative|cooperatives]], with the largest concentrations in the Central and South Campus areas.[[File:UniversityOfMichiganInsideLawQuad.jpg|thumb|Lawyers Club Dining Hall]]
===University media===

*[http://www.michigandaily.com/ The Michigan Daily, independent student newspaper]
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 and Discovery Scholars, medical sciences, [[community service]] and the [[German language]].<ref>{{Cite web |title = Michigan Learning Communities |url = http://www.housing.umich.edu/reshalls/learning-communities |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100823144116/http://www.housing.umich.edu/reshalls/learning-communities |archive-date = August 23, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = UM Undergraduate Housing }}</ref> The Michigan Research and Discovery Scholars and the Women in Science and Engineering Residence Program are housed in Mosher-Jordan Hall. 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. The Michigan Community Scholars Program, dedicated to civic engagement, community service learning and intercultural understanding and dialogue, is located in West Quad.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Michigan Community Scholars Program |url = http://www.lsa.umich.edu/mcsp |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130126124138/http://www.lsa.umich.edu/mcsp |archive-date = January 26, 2013 |access-date = February 7, 2013 }}</ref> The Lloyd Hall Scholars Program (LHSP) is located in Alice Lloyd Hall. The Health Sciences Scholars Program (HSSP) is located in Couzens Hall. The North Quad complex houses two additional living-learning communities: the Global Scholars Program<ref>{{Cite news |date = January 26, 2005 |title = North Quad to feature study of media, information technology |url = http://www.umich.edu/news/index.html?Releases/2005/Jan05/r012605c |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070524233505/http://www.umich.edu/news/index.html?Releases%2F2005%2FJan05%2Fr012605c |archive-date = May 24, 2007 |access-date = April 28, 2007 |work = University of Michigan News Service }}</ref> and the [[Max Kade|Max Kade German Program]].<ref>{{Cite web |title = Max Kade Residence |url = http://www.lsa.umich.edu/german/german/kade |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100806213624/http://www.lsa.umich.edu/german/german/kade/ |archive-date = August 6, 2010 |access-date = September 19, 2010 |publisher = Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures }}</ref> It is "technology-rich", and houses communication-related programs, including the School of Information, the Department of Communication Studies, and the Department of Screen Arts and Cultures.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Huston |first = Caitlin |date = July 25, 2010 |title = North Quad to showcase state-of-the-art technology, international programs |url = http://www.michigandaily.com/content/north-quad-preparing-fall-departments-moving |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100729061834/http://www.michigandaily.com/content/north-quad-preparing-fall-departments-moving |archive-date = July 29, 2010 |access-date = September 30, 2010 |work = The Michigan Daily }}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last = Maughan |first = Linsey |date = September 3, 2009 |title = New North Quad residence hall complex on track for opening in fall 2010 |url = http://www.annarbor.com/news/education/post-6/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100610081023/http://www.annarbor.com/news/education/post-6/ |archive-date = June 10, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |work = AnnArbor.com }}</ref> North Quad is also home to services such as the Language Resource Center and the Sweetland Center for Writing.<ref>{{Cite web |title = North Quadrangle |url = http://www.housing.umich.edu/reshalls/overviews/north-quadrangle |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110613105110/http://www.housing.umich.edu/reshalls/overviews/north-quadrangle |archive-date = June 13, 2011 |access-date = January 16, 2011 |publisher = University of Michigan Housing }}</ref>
*[http://www.michiganreview.com/ The Michigan Review, an independent conservative student newspaper]

*[http://www.michiganindependent.com/ The Michigan Independent, a progressive student run newspaper]
The residential system also has a number of "theme communities" where students have the opportunity to be surrounded by students in a residential hall who share similar interests. These communities focus on global leadership, the college transition experience, and internationalism.<ref>[http://www.housing.umich.edu/reshalls/theme-communities Theme Communities] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120108164752/http://housing.umich.edu/reshalls/theme-communities |date=January 8, 2012 }}. UM Undergraduate Housing. 2009. Retrieved February 8, 2012.</ref> The Adelia Cheever Program is housed in the Helen Newberry House.<ref>[http://www.housing.umich.edu/adelia-cheever-program Adelia Cheever Program] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111225194646/http://www.housing.umich.edu/adelia-cheever-program |date=December 25, 2011 }}. UM Undergraduate Housing. 2009. Retrieved February 8, 2012.</ref> The [[First Year Experience]] is housed in the Baits II Houses and Markley Hall along with portions of all other buildings with the exception of North Quad, Northwood, and Stockwell Hall.<ref>[http://www.housing.umich.edu/FYE First Year Experience] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120210064721/http://housing.umich.edu/FYE |date=February 10, 2012 }}. UM Undergraduate Housing. 2009. Retrieved February 8, 2012.</ref> The Sophomore Experience is housed in Stockwell Hall and the Transfer Year Experience is housed in Northwood III.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Second Year Experience – University Housing |url = http://www.housing.umich.edu/SYE |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20111104204016/http://www.housing.umich.edu/SYE |archive-date = November 4, 2011 |access-date = February 8, 2012 }}</ref><ref>[http://www.housing.umich.edu/TYE Transfer Experience] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120204191929/http://housing.umich.edu/TYE |date=February 4, 2012 }}. UM Undergraduate Housing. 2009. Retrieved February 8, 2012.</ref> The newly organized International Impact program is housed in North Quad.<ref>[http://www.housing.umich.edu/International-Impact International Impact] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120313214541/http://www.housing.umich.edu/international-impact |date=March 13, 2012 }}. UM Undergraduate Housing. 2009. Retrieved February 8, 2012.</ref>
*[http://www.wolv.org/ WOLV-TV, the University of Michigan's student-run television station]

[[File:Stockwell residence hall university of michigan.JPG|thumb|left|[[Stockwell Hall|Stockwell Residence Hall]]]]

===Groups and activities===

[[File:Arthur J Lacy with U of M Democratic Club 1898.jpg|thumb|Photograph of the University of Michigan Democratic Club in 1898.
<br>''Back Row'' (L–R): [[Arthur Lacy]], C. Thomas, J.M. Baily<br>''Front Row'' (L–R): F.K. Bowers, C.F. Kelley, C.D. Landis, JS. McElligott]]

The university lists 1,438 student organizations, including Omega Omega Omega (OOO), the nation's first mental health fraternity.<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan Directory of Student Organizations Profile of Omega Omega Omega – Maize Pages |url = https://maizepages.umich.edu/organization/ooo |access-date = August 7, 2023 |publisher = University of Michigan Student Assembly }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan Directory of Student Organizations – Maize Pages |url = http://uuis.umich.edu/maizepgs/ |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101124035157/http://uuis.umich.edu/maizepgs/ |archive-date = November 24, 2010 |access-date = May 22, 2012 |publisher = University of Michigan Student Assembly }}</ref> The student body is politically engaged, though, with 96% stating they intended to vote in the 2020 election. It is largely progressive, with 43% identifying as very liberal, 33% as somewhat liberal, and 13% moderate. 11% identified as conservative or very conservative.<ref>{{Cite web |title = How are U-M students voting this election? A survey of issues most important to students |url = https://www.michigandaily.com/government/how-are-umich-students-voting-election-survey-issues-most-important-students/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230401160207/https://www.michigandaily.com/government/how-are-umich-students-voting-election-survey-issues-most-important-students/ |archive-date = April 1, 2023 |access-date = April 1, 2023 }}</ref> With a history of student activism, some of the most visible groups include those dedicated to causes such as [[civil rights]] and [[labor rights]], such as local chapters of [[Students for a Democratic Society (2006 organization)|Students for a Democratic Society]] and United Students Against Sweatshops. Conservative groups also organize, such as the [[Young Americans for Freedom]].<ref>{{Cite web |title = Young Americans for Freedom at the University of Michigan |url = https://www.yafumich.com/ |access-date = September 10, 2023 |website = Young Americans for Freedom at the University of Michigan }}</ref>

There are also several engineering projects teams, including the [[University of Michigan Solar Car Team]], which has placed first in the [[North American Solar Challenge]] six times and third in the [[World Solar Challenge]] four times.<ref>{{Cite web |title = About Us – Past Teams |url = http://solarcar.engin.umich.edu/about/pastteams |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100705142947/http://www.solarcar.engin.umich.edu/about/pastteams |archive-date = July 5, 2010 |access-date = August 31, 2010 |publisher = UM Solar Car Teams }}</ref> Michigan Interactive Investments,<ref>{{Cite web |title = Michigan Interactive Investments |url = https://www.miiclub.org/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211022051009/https://www.miiclub.org/ |archive-date = October 22, 2021 |access-date = October 22, 2021 |website = Michigan Interactive Investments }}</ref> the TAMID Israel Investment Group, and the Michigan Economics Society<ref>{{Cite web |title = About Us |url = http://www.mesclub.org/pages/aboutUs |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101129133838/http://www.mesclub.org/pages/aboutUs |archive-date = November 29, 2010 |access-date = March 5, 2013 |publisher = Michigan Economic Society }}</ref> are also affiliated with the university.

The university also showcases many community service organizations and charitable projects, including [[Foundation for International Medical Relief of Children]], Dance Marathon at the University of Michigan,<ref>{{Cite web |title = Meet DMUM |url = http://www.dmum.org/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100908154826/http://www.dmum.org/ |archive-date = September 8, 2010 |access-date = August 31, 2010 |publisher = Dance Marathon, Inc. }}</ref> [[The Detroit Partnership]], [[Relay for Life|Relay For Life]], U-M Stars for the Make-A-Wish Foundation, InnoWorks at the University of Michigan, SERVE, Letters to Success, PROVIDES, [[Circle K International|Circle K]], [[Habitat for Humanity]],<ref>{{Cite web |title = UM Habitat for Humanity |url = http://www.habitatum.org/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140829101244/http://www.habitatum.org/ |archive-date = August 29, 2014 |access-date = July 14, 2007 |publisher = UM Habitat for Humanity }}</ref> and Ann Arbor Reaching Out. [[Intramural sports]] are popular, and there are recreation facilities for each of the three campuses.<ref>{{Cite web |date = January 22, 2007 |title = About Our Facilities |url = http://www.recsports.umich.edu/facilities/descriptions.html |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080209120744/http://www.recsports.umich.edu/facilities/descriptions.html |archive-date = February 9, 2008 |access-date = April 28, 2007 |publisher = UM Department of Recreational Sports }}</ref>

[[File:Michigan Union 2009.JPG|thumb|left|[[Michigan Union]], an [[Art Deco building]] constructed on land wholly owned by the student society in 1917, was designed by Michigan alumni [[Irving Kane Pond]] and [[Allen Bartlit Pond]].|alt=]]

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.<ref>{{Cite web |title = About the Trotter Multicultural Center |url = http://mesa.umich.edu/trotter/ |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100823141107/http://www.mesa.umich.edu/trotter/ |archive-date = August 23, 2010 |access-date = August 31, 2010 |publisher = University of Michigan Division of Student Affairs }}</ref> The University Activities Center (UAC) is a student-run programming organization and is composed of 14 committees.<ref>{{Cite web |title = About UAC |url = http://www.umuac.org/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100110214530/http://www.umuac.org/ |archive-date = January 10, 2010 |access-date = February 16, 2010 |publisher = University Activities Center }}</ref> Each group involves students in the planning and execution of a variety of events both on and off campus.

[[File:Marching band on the field at UM versus Harvard football game 12 October 1940.jpg|thumb|[[Michigan Marching Band]] on the field at Michigan versus [[Harvard Crimson|Harvard]] football game in 1940]]

The [[Michigan Marching Band]], composed of more than 350 students from almost all of U-M's schools,<ref>{{Cite web |title = Sections |url = http://mmb.music.umich.edu/sections/ |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100923133257/http://mmb.music.umich.edu/sections/ |archive-date = September 23, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = The Michigan Marching Band }}</ref> is the university's [[marching band]]. Over 125 years old (with a first performance in 1897),<ref>{{Cite web |title = History |url = http://mmb.music.umich.edu/history/ |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100612012451/https://mmb.music.umich.edu/history/ |archive-date = June 12, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = The Michigan Marching Band }}</ref> the band performs at every home football game and travels 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 (Ann Arbor)|Michigan Theater]]. The [[University of Michigan Men's Glee Club]], founded in 1859 and the [[Glee club#Oldest United States collegiate glee clubs|second oldest]] such group in the country, is a men's chorus with over 100 members.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Shattuck |first = Kathryn |date = April 7, 2011 |title = Yale Glee Club at 150, at Carnegie Hall |url = https://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/08/arts/music/yale-glee-club-at-150-at-carnegie-hall.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160723014415/http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/08/arts/music/yale-glee-club-at-150-at-carnegie-hall.html |archive-date = July 23, 2016 |access-date = February 25, 2017 |work = The New York Times }}</ref> 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.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Our History |url = http://www.ummgc.org/friars/history.html |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100831110950/http://www.ummgc.org/friars/history.html |archive-date = August 31, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = The University of Michigan Friars }}</ref> The University of Michigan is also home to over twenty other a cappella groups, including Amazin' Blue, The Michigan G-Men, and [[Compulsive Lyres]], all of which have competed at the International Championship of Collegiate A Cappella (ICCA) finals in New York City. Compulsive Lyres are the first and only group from Michigan to claim an ICCA title, having won in 2002.<ref>{{Cite web |date = May 5, 2002 |title = A cappella group wins international championship |url = https://www.michigandaily.com/content/cappella-group-wins-international-championship |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20201010001343/https://www.michigandaily.com/content/cappella-group-wins-international-championship |archive-date = October 10, 2020 |access-date = October 6, 2020 |website = The Michigan Daily |language = en }}</ref> The Michigan G-Men are one of only six groups in the country to compete at ICCA finals four times, one of only two TTBB ensembles to do so, and placed third at the competition in 2015.<ref>{{Cite web |date = August 12, 2015 |title = Results |url = https://varsityvocals.com/results-page/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20201008203958/https://varsityvocals.com/results-page/ |archive-date = October 8, 2020 |access-date = October 6, 2020 |website = Varsity Vocals |language = en-US }}</ref> Amazin' Blue placed fourth at ICCA finals in 2017. In 2020, The A Cappella Archive ranked The Michigan G-Men and Amazin' Blue at #7 and #13, respectively, out of all groups that have ever competed in ICCA.<ref>{{Cite web |title = The A Cappella Archive – Rankings & Records |url = https://sites.google.com/view/the-a-cappella-archive/varsity-vocals/rankings-records |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210713080701/https://sites.google.com/view/the-a-cappella-archive/varsity-vocals/rankings-records |archive-date = July 13, 2021 |access-date = October 6, 2020 |website = sites.google.com |language = en-US }}</ref>

The University of Michigan has over 380 cultural and ethnic student organizations on campus.<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan Maize Pages – Organizations |url = https://maizepages.umich.edu/organizations |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141209040401/https://maizepages.umich.edu/organizations |archive-date = December 9, 2014 }}</ref> There are organizations for almost every culture from the Arab Student Association to Persian Student Association<ref>{{Cite web |title = Arab Student Association – Home |url = https://maizepages.umich.edu/organization/ArabStudentAssociation |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141209040456/https://maizepages.umich.edu/organization/ArabStudentAssociation |archive-date = December 9, 2014 }}</ref> to African Students Association<ref>{{Cite web |title = African Students Association – Home |url = https://maizepages.umich.edu/organization/michiganafricans |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141209040719/https://maizepages.umich.edu/organization/michiganafricans |archive-date = December 9, 2014 }}</ref> to even the Egyptian Student Association.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Egyptian Student Association – Home |url = https://maizepages.umich.edu/organization/egyptians |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141209040716/https://maizepages.umich.edu/organization/egyptians |archive-date = December 9, 2014 }}</ref> These organizations hope to promote various aspects of their culture along with raising political and social awareness around campus by hosting an assortment of events throughout the school year. These clubs also help students make this large University into a smaller community to help find people with similar interests and backgrounds.

==== Fraternities and sororities ====

[[File:Founders of Acacia Fraternity (1904).jpg|thumb|Photograph of the 14 founding members of [[Acacia (fraternity)|Acacia]], the only general fraternity to be founded in Michigan.]]

[[Fraternities and sororities]] play a role in the university's social life; approximately seven percent of undergraduate men and 16% of undergraduate women are active in the Greek system.<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan—Ann Arbor Student Life |url = https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/university-of-michigan-ann-arbor-9092/student-life |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230123030527/https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/university-of-michigan-ann-arbor-9092/student-life |archive-date = January 23, 2023 |access-date = February 9, 2023 |website = U.S. News & World Report }}</ref> Four different Greek councils—the Interfraternity Council, Multicultural Greek Council, [[National Pan-Hellenic Council]], and Panhellenic Association—represent most Greek organizations. Each council has a different recruitment process.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Welcome to Greek Life |url = https://greeklife.umich.edu/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110328190256/http://greeklife.umich.edu/ |archive-date = March 28, 2011 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = Division of Student Affairs – Greek Life at the University of Michigan }}</ref>

[[File:Delta Sigma Delta Fraternity, 1502 Hill Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan - panoramio.jpg|thumb|left|[[Delta Sigma Delta]], the first dental fraternity in the world]]

National honor societies such as [[Phi Beta Kappa]], [[Phi Kappa Phi]], and [[Tau Beta Pi]] have chapters at U-M.<ref name="University of Michigan College of LS&A">{{Cite web |title = Honors And Awards For Superior Academic Achievement |url = http://www.lsa.umich.edu/umich/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=c36d086dbf3e9110VgnVCM1000005001010aRCRD&linkTypeBegin=channellinkTypeEnd&assetNameBegin=Honors%20and%20Awards%20for%20Superior%20Academic%20AchievementassetNameEnd |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100614165029/http://www.lsa.umich.edu/umich/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=c36d086dbf3e9110VgnVCM1000005001010aRCRD&linkTypeBegin=channellinkTypeEnd&assetNameBegin=Honors%20and%20Awards%20for%20Superior%20Academic%20AchievementassetNameEnd |archive-date = June 14, 2010 |access-date = September 30, 2010 |publisher = University of Michigan College of LS&A }}</ref> Degrees "with Highest Distinction" are recommended to students who rank in the top 3% of their class, "with High Distinction" to the next 7%, and "with Distinction" to the next 15%. Students earning a minimum overall GPA of 3.4 who have demonstrated high academic achievement and capacity for independent work may be recommended for a degree "with Highest Honors", "with High Honors", or "with Honors".<ref name="University of Michigan College of LS&A" /> Those students who earn all A's for two or more consecutive terms in a calendar year are recognized as James B. Angell Scholars and are invited to attend the annual Honors Convocation, an event which recognizes undergraduate students with distinguished academic achievements.<ref name="University of Michigan College of LS&A" />

[[File:Phi Delta Phi Fraternity House, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.JPG|thumb|[[Phi Delta Phi]], the oldest legal organization in continuous existence in the United States]]

==== Collegiate secret societies ====

The University of Michigan hosts three secret societies: Michigauma, Adara, and the Vulcans. Michigauma and Adara were once under the umbrella group "The Tower Society", the name referring to their historical locations in the Michigan Union tower. Michigauma was all-male while Adara was all-female, although both later became co-ed.
* [[Order of Angell|Michigauma]], more recently known as the Order of Angell, was formed in 1902 by a group of seniors in coordination with University president James Burrill Angell. The group disbanded itself in 2021 due to public concerns about elitism and the society's history. The group was granted a lease for the top floor of the Michigan Union tower in 1932, which they referred to as the "tomb", but the society vacated the space in 2000. Until more recent reforms, the group's rituals were inspired by the culture of [[Native Americans of the United States|Native Americans]].<ref>{{Cite web |title = Michigamua Image Gallery |url = http://www.goodspeedupdate.com/michigamua-images.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210504121125/http://goodspeedupdate.com/michigamua-images.html |archive-date = May 4, 2021 |access-date = May 9, 2008 }}</ref> Some factions on campus identified Michigauma as a [[secret society]], but many disputed that characterization, as its member list has been published some years in ''[[The Michigan Daily]]'' and the ''[[Michiganensian]]'', and online since 2006 reforms.
* Adara, known as Phoenix, was formed in the late 1970s by women leaders on campus and disbanded itself in 2021 amid campus criticisms of secret societies.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Horne |first = Brooke Van |date = January 1, 1970 |title = Phoenix, a secret society at U-M, votes to disband permanently |url = https://www.michigandaily.com/campus-life/phoenix-female-only-secret-society-u-m-votes-disband/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210624202922/https://www.michigandaily.com/campus-life/phoenix-female-only-secret-society-u-m-votes-disband/ |archive-date = June 24, 2021 |access-date = June 21, 2021 |website = The Michigan Daily |language = en-US }}</ref> In the early 1980s they joined the tower society and occupied the sixth floor of the tower just below Michigamua.
* Vulcans, occupied the fifth floor of the Union tower though were not formally a part of the tower society. They draw their heritage from the Roman god [[Vulcan (mythology)|Vulcan]]. The group which used to do its tapping publicly is known for its long black robes and for its financial contributions of the College of Engineering.

===Media and publications===

[[File:University of Michigan Student Publications Building.jpg|thumb|Stanford Lipsey Student Publications Building]]

Several [[academic journal]]s are published at the university:
* The Law School publishes ''[[Michigan Law Review]]'' and six other [[law journal]]s: The ''[[Michigan Journal of Environmental and Administrative Law]]'', ''[[University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform]]'', ''[[Michigan Journal of Race & Law]]'', ''[[Michigan Telecommunications and Technology Law Review]]'', ''Michigan Journal of International Law'', and ''[[Michigan Journal of Gender and Law]]''.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Journals and Student Organizations |url = http://www.law.umich.edu/journalsandorgs/Pages/orgs.aspx |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130513090957/http://www.law.umich.edu/journalsandorgs/Pages/orgs.aspx |archive-date = May 13, 2013 |access-date = April 8, 2013 |publisher = The University of Michigan Law School }}</ref>
* The Ross School of Business publishes the ''[[Michigan Journal of Business]]''.
* Several undergraduate journals are also published at the university, including the ''Michigan Journal of Political Science'', ''Michigan Journal of History'', ''University of Michigan Undergraduate Research Journal'', the ''Michigan Journal of International Affairs'', and the ''Michigan Journal of Asian Studies''.

The [[student newspaper]] is ''[[The Michigan Daily]]'', founded in 1890 and editorially and financially independent of the university. ''The Daily'' is published five days a week during academic year, and weekly from May to August. The [[yearbook]] is the ''[[Michiganensian]]'', founded in 1896. Other student publications at the university include the conservative ''[[The Michigan Review]]'' and the progressive ''Michigan Independent''. The humor publication ''[[Gargoyle Humor Magazine]]'' is also published by Michigan students.

[[WCBN-FM]] (88.3 FM) is the student-run [[college radio]] station which plays in [[Freeform (radio format)|freeform format]]. WOLV-TV is the student-run television station that is primarily shown on the university's cable television system. WJJX was previously the school's student-run radio station. A [[carrier current]] station, it was launched in 1953.<ref>{{Cite book |last1 = Smith |first1 = Patti F. |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=7cSYDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA89 |title = Vanishing Ann Arbor |last2 = Woodman |first2 = Britain |year = 2019 |isbn = 9781439666975 |location = Chicago [[Arcadia Publishing]] |page = 89 |access-date = March 9, 2020 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200523105441/https://books.google.com/books?id=7cSYDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA89 |archive-date = May 23, 2020 |url-status = live |via = Google Books }}</ref>

===Safety===

Violent crime is rare on the campus though a few of the cases have been notorious including [[Theodore Kaczynski]]'s attempted murder of professor [[James V. McConnell]] and research assistant Nicklaus Suino in 1985. Kaczynski, also known as the [[Unabomber]], graduated from Michigan with his PhD in 1967.

A radical left-wing militant organization [[Weather Underground]] was founded at the university in 1969.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Wakin |first = Daniel J. |date = August 24, 2003 |title = Quieter Lives for 60's Militants, but Intensity of Beliefs Hasn't Faded |url = https://www.nytimes.com/2003/08/24/nyregion/quieter-lives-for-60-s-militants-but-intensity-of-beliefs-hasn-t-faded.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190403082338/https://www.nytimes.com/2003/08/24/nyregion/quieter-lives-for-60-s-militants-but-intensity-of-beliefs-hasn-t-faded.html |archive-date = April 3, 2019 |access-date = December 12, 2021 |website = The New York Times }}</ref> It was later designated a domestic terrorist group by the [[FBI]].<ref>{{Cite web |title = Weather Underground Bombings |url = https://www.fbi.gov/history/famous-cases/weather-underground-bombings |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190510182419/https://www.fbi.gov/history/famous-cases/weather-underground-bombings |archive-date = May 10, 2019 |access-date = December 12, 2021 |publisher = Federal Bureau of Investigation }}</ref>

In 2014, the University of Michigan was named one of 55 higher education institutions under investigation by the Office of Civil Rights "for possible violations of federal law over the handling of sexual violence and harassment complaints." President [[Barack Obama]]'s [[White House Task Force to Protect Students from Sexual Assault]] was organized for such investigations.<ref>{{Cite news |date = May 1, 2014 |title = U.S. Department of Education Releases List of Higher Education Institutions with Open Title IX Sexual Violence Investigations |url = http://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/us-department-education-releases-list-higher-education-institutions-open-title-i |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140714000905/http://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/us-department-education-releases-list-higher-education-institutions-open-title-i |archive-date = July 14, 2014 |access-date = July 14, 2014 |work = U.S. Department of Education }}</ref> Seven years later, in 2021, the university attracted national attention when a report commissioned by the university was released that detailed an investigation into sexual assault allegations against doctor [[Robert Anderson (sex offender)|Robert Anderson]] who reportedly abused at least 950 university students, many of whom were athletes, from 1966 to 2003.<ref>{{Cite magazine |last = Breiler |first = Christopher |title = Horrific Details Of Sexual Abuse at Michigan Largely Ignored Amid Debates Over Legacies |url = https://www.si.com/college/michigan/football/university-of-michigan-football-doctor-robert-anderson-bo-schembechler |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211212060217/https://www.si.com/college/michigan/football/university-of-michigan-football-doctor-robert-anderson-bo-schembechler |archive-date = December 12, 2021 |access-date = December 12, 2021 |department = Michigan Wolverines News, Analysis and More |magazine = Sports Illustrated }}</ref> Several football players from that time say football coach [[Bo Schembechler]] ignored and enabled the abuse and told players to "toughen up" after being molested.<ref>{{Cite web |date = June 10, 2021 |title = Bo Schembechler's son, others say iconic coach knew about Michigan doctor's sexual abuse |url = https://sports.yahoo.com/bo-schembechlers-son-others-detail-how-much-iconic-coach-knew-about-sexual-abuse-190114255.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211212060218/https://sports.yahoo.com/bo-schembechlers-son-others-detail-how-much-iconic-coach-knew-about-sexual-abuse-190114255.html |archive-date = December 12, 2021 |access-date = December 12, 2021 |website = Yahoo! Sports }}</ref> Schembechler reportedly punched his then 10-year-old son Matthew after he reported abuse by Anderson.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Blinder |first = Alan |date = June 10, 2021 |title = Son of Bo Schembechler Says He Was Abused by Team Doctor at Michigan |url = https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/10/sports/ncaafootball/michigan-abuse-bo-schembechler.html |url-access = limited |archive-url = https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20211228/https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/10/sports/ncaafootball/michigan-abuse-bo-schembechler.html |archive-date = December 28, 2021 |website = The New York Times }}{{cbignore}}</ref> Following the exposure of a similar history of abuse at [[Ohio State University]], male survivors of both Anderson at Michigan and Strauss at Ohio State spoke out to combat sexual abuse.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Heinrichs |first = Audra |date = November 30, 2021 |title = Male survivors unite to expose sexual abuse at college football's biggest rivals |url = https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2021/nov/30/ohio-state-michigan-doctors-sexual-abuse-college-football |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211220114201/https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2021/nov/30/ohio-state-michigan-doctors-sexual-abuse-college-football |archive-date = December 20, 2021 |access-date = December 22, 2021 |website = The Guardian }}</ref> The University of Michigan settled with the survivors for $490 million.<ref>{{Cite web |last = Jesse |first = David |title = University of Michigan reaches $490M settlement with Dr. Anderson sexual assault survivors |url = https://www.freep.com/story/news/education/2022/01/19/university-michigan-robert-anderson-settlement-sexual-assault/6553333001/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220120030702/https://www.freep.com/story/news/education/2022/01/19/university-michigan-robert-anderson-settlement-sexual-assault/6553333001/ |archive-date = January 20, 2022 |access-date = January 20, 2022 |website = Detroit Free Press |language = en-US }}</ref>

==Athletics==
{{Main|Michigan Wolverines}}

[[File:Burgee of University of Michigan.SVG|thumb|Burgee of University of Michigan]]

The University of Michigan's sports teams are called the [[Michigan Wolverines|Wolverines]]. They participate in the [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]] [[NCAA Division I|Division I]] [[NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision|Football Bowl Subdivision]] and in the [[Big Ten Conference]] in all sports except women's water polo, which is a member of the [[Collegiate Water Polo Association]]. U-M boasts 27 varsity sports, including 13 men's teams and 14 women's teams.<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan Athletics Varsity Sports |url = http://www.mgoblue.com/school-bio/mich-varsity-sports.html |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130301041006/http://www.mgoblue.com/school-bio/mich-varsity-sports.html |archive-date = March 1, 2013 |access-date = February 9, 2013 |website = MGoBlue |publisher = University of Michigan Athletic Department }}</ref> In 10 of the past 14 years concluding in 2009, U-M 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. U-M has finished in the top 10 of the Directors' Cup standings in 21 of the award's 29 seasons between [[Michigan Wolverines#NCAA Division I Directors' Cup|1993–2021]] and has placed in the top six in nine of the last 10 seasons.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Learfield Sports Directors' Cup Previous Scoring |url = http://www.nacda.com/directorscup/nacda-directorscup-previous-scoring.html |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110102202358/http://www.nacda.com/directorscup/nacda-directorscup-previous-scoring.html |archive-date = January 2, 2011 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics }}</ref>

More than 250 Michigan athletes or coaches have participated in [[Olympic Games|Olympic]] events,<ref>{{Cite web |last = Kinney |first = Greg |date = February 4, 2020 |title = Michigan in the Olympics – Michigan Olympians by Sport |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/athdept/olymp2/olsports.htm |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20191024185005/https://bentley.umich.edu/athdept/olymp2/olsports.htm |archive-date = October 24, 2019 |access-date = March 13, 2020 |website = University of Michigan Athletics History |publisher = [[Bentley Historical Library]] }}</ref> and as of 2021 its students and alumni have won [[List of American universities with Olympic medals|155 Olympic medals]].<ref>{{Cite web |last = Kinney |first = Greg |date = August 21, 2016 |title = Michigan in the Olympics – University of Michigan Medalists |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/athdept/olymp2/ummedals.htm |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180615200930/http://bentley.umich.edu/athdept/olymp2/ummedals.htm |archive-date = June 15, 2018 |access-date = March 13, 2020 |website = University of Michigan Athletics History |publisher = [[Bentley Historical Library]] }}</ref>

[[Michigan Stadium]] is the largest college football stadium in the nation and one of the largest football-only stadiums in the world, with an official capacity of 107,601<ref>{{Cite web |date = August 7, 2015 |title = U-M Announces New Seating Capacity for Michigan Stadium |url = http://www.mgoblue.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/080715aaa.html |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170625150652/http://www.mgoblue.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/080715aaa.html |archive-date = June 25, 2017 |access-date = August 7, 2015 |publisher = University of Michigan Department of Athletics }}</ref> (the extra seat is said to be "reserved" for [[Fritz Crisler]]<ref>{{Cite web |title = Michigan Stadium |url = http://www.mgoblue.com/facilities/michigan-stadium.html |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140419162602/http://www.mgoblue.com/facilities/michigan-stadium.html |archive-date = April 19, 2014 |access-date = April 8, 2013 |website = MGoBlue |publisher = University of Michigan Athletic Department }}</ref>) though attendance—frequently over 111,000 spectators—regularly exceeds the official capacity.<ref>{{Cite web |title = ''The Michigan Stadium Story'' – Once Again the Biggest House, 1998 |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/stadium/stadtext/stad1998.htm |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070313183556/http://bentley.umich.edu/stadium/stadtext/stad1998.htm |archive-date = March 13, 2007 |access-date = March 23, 2007 |publisher = Bentley Historical Library }}</ref> The NCAA's record-breaking attendance has become commonplace at Michigan Stadium.

U-M is also home to 29 men's and women's club sports teams, such as rugby, hockey, volleyball, boxing, soccer, and tennis.

=== National championships ===

The [[Michigan Wolverines football|Michigan football]] program ranks first in NCAA history in total wins (1,004 through the end of the 2023 season) and tied for 1st among FBS schools in winning percentage (.734).<ref>{{Cite web |last = Crawford |first = Brad |date = December 26, 2021 |title = College football's all-time winningest programs, ranked |url = https://247sports.com/LongFormArticle/College-footballs-all-time-winningest-programs-ranked-179115056/#179115056_7 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211226203735/https://247sports.com/LongFormArticle/College-footballs-all-time-winningest-programs-ranked-179115056/#179115056_7 |archive-date = December 26, 2021 |access-date = January 16, 2022 |website = 247Sports }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title = Football Bowl Subdivision Records: All-Time Won-Loss Records |url = http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2015/FBS.pdf |url-status = live |archive-url = http://arquivo.pt/wayback/20160521052546/http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2015/fbs.pdf |archive-date = May 21, 2016 |access-date = March 3, 2016 |publisher = National Collegiate Athletics Association |page = 98 }}</ref> The team won the first [[Rose Bowl Game|Rose Bowl game]] in [[1902 Rose Bowl|1902]]. U-M had 40 consecutive winning seasons from 1968 to 2007, including consecutive [[bowl game]] appearances from 1975 to 2007.<ref>{{Cite web |date = May 31, 2008 |title = University of Michigan Athletics History: All-Time University of Michigan Football Record 1879–2007 |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/athdept/football/misc/fbrecord.htm |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081231230137/http://bentley.umich.edu/athdept/football/misc/fbrecord.htm |archive-date = December 31, 2008 |access-date = December 25, 2008 |publisher = Bentley Historical Library }}</ref> The Wolverines have won a record 44 Big Ten championships. The program claims 12 [[College football national championships in NCAA Division I FBS|national championships]],<ref name="MichiganScoreboardSign2001">{{Cite sign |title = Michigan Stadium scoreboard National Champions 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1918, 1923, 1932, 1933, 1947, 1948, 1997 |date = November 24, 2001 |type = Stadium Sign |publisher = [[University of Michigan]] |location = [[Michigan Stadium]] |url = https://www.flickr.com/photos/nguzzo/2163229263/ |access-date = January 11, 2023 }}</ref><ref name="MichiganTunnelSign">{{Cite sign |title = Michigan Football National Champions 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1918, 1923, 1932, 1933, 1947, 1948, 1997, 2023 |date = April 11, 2024 |type = Tunnel Sign |publisher = [[University of Michigan]] |location = [[Michigan Stadium]] |url = https://twitter.com/ByAZuniga/status/1778561493333656043 |access-date = May 9, 2024 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20240510205350/https://imgur.com/a/xE1S3L0 |archive-date = May 10, 2024 |url-status = live }}</ref> most recently the 2023 National Championship,<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan Football – National Championships |url = https://mgoblue.com/feature/2023-football-national-champions }}</ref> and has produced three [[Heisman Trophy]] winners: [[Tom Harmon]], [[Desmond Howard]] and [[Charles Woodson]].<ref name="Heisman">{{Cite web |year = 2010 |title = Heisman Winners |url = http://www.heisman.com/index.php/heismanWinners |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140801004040/http://www.heisman.com/index.php/heismanWinners |archive-date = August 1, 2014 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = Heisman Trophy at Heisman.com }}</ref>

The [[Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey|men's ice hockey team]], which plays at Yost Ice Arena, has won nine [[NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championship|national championships.]]<ref>{{Cite web |title = Men's Ice Hockey (Division I): Championship History |url = https://www.ncaa.com/history/icehockey-men/d1 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130309014858/http://www.ncaa.com/history/icehockey-men/d1 |archive-date = March 9, 2013 |access-date = March 5, 2013 |publisher = NCAA }}</ref>

The [[Michigan Wolverines men's basketball|men's basketball]] team, which plays at the Crisler Center, has appeared in five [[NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|Final Fours]] and won the [[1989 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament|national championship]] in 1989. The program also voluntarily vacated victories from its 1992–1993 and 1995–1999 seasons in which [[University of Michigan basketball scandal|illicit payments to players]] took place, as well as its 1992 and 1993 Final Four appearances.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Cnockaert |first = Jim |date = March 22, 2002 |title = Accident's effects still felt six years later: Roberson: It changed the athletic department |work = Ann Arbor News }}</ref> The men's basketball team has most recently won back-to-back Big Ten Tournament Championships.

===In the Olympics===

Through the [[2012 Summer Olympics]], 275 U-M students and coaches had participated in the Olympics, winning medals in each [[Summer Olympic Games]] except 1896, and winning gold medals in all but four Olympiads. U-M students/student-coaches (e.g., notably, Michael Phelps) have won a total of [[Michigan Wolverines#Olympians|185 Olympic medals]]: 85 golds, 48 silvers, and 52 bronzes.<ref>{{Cite web |date = February 5, 2016 |title = Michigan in the Olympics |url = https://bentley.umich.edu/athdept/olymp2/oltitle.htm |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100901031205/http://bentley.umich.edu/athdept/olymp2/oltitle.htm |archive-date = September 1, 2010 |access-date = August 28, 2010 |publisher = Bentley Historical Library }}</ref>
<!--Needs citation: U-M is the only school in the U.S. to have won Division I National Championships in football, baseball, basketball, and hockey.-->

===Fight songs and chants===

[[File:Singing_The_Yellow_and_the_Blue_between_halves_of_the_Penn_Game,_1916.png|thumb|Singing ''[[The Yellow and Blue|The Yellow and the Blue]]'' between halves of the [[University of Pennsylvania|Penn]] Game, November 1916]]

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 won a league championship. The song was declared by [[John Philip Sousa]] to be "the greatest college fight song ever written."<ref>{{Cite book |last = Michael Hondorp, Fabrikant Alexis |title = University of Michigan College Prowler Off the Record |date = January 1, 2005 |publisher = College Prowler, Inc |isbn = 1-59658-163-8 |page = 118 }}</ref> The song refers to the university as being "the Champions of the West". At the time, U-M was part of the Western Conference, which would later become the Big Ten Conference. Michigan was considered to be on the Western Frontier when it was founded in the old [[Northwest Territory]].

Although mainly used at sporting events, the Michigan fight song is often heard at other events as well. President [[Gerald Ford]] had it played by the [[United States Marine Band]] as his entrance anthem during his term as president from 1974 to 1977, in preference over the more traditional "[[Hail to the Chief]]",<ref>{{Cite book |last = Rozell |first = Mark J. |title = The Press and the Ford Presidency |date = October 15, 1992 |publisher = University of Michigan Press |isbn = 0-472-10350-4 |page = 38 }}</ref> and the Michigan Marching Band performed a slow-tempo variation of the fight song at [[Death and state funeral of Gerald Ford|his funeral]].<ref>{{Cite news |last = Singer |first = Michelle |date = January 3, 2007 |title = Gerald Ford Returns Home For The Last Time |url = https://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/01/02/politics/main2320308.shtml |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090221044716/http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/01/02/politics/main2320308.shtml |archive-date = February 21, 2009 |access-date = February 18, 2010 |work = CBS News }}</ref> 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]]!" which has a complementary short musical arrangement written by former students Joseph Carl, a sousaphonist, and Albert Ahronheim, a [[Drum major (marching band)|drum major]].<ref>{{Cite magazine |last = Stieg |first = Bill |date = May 21, 1984 |title = A Catchy Intro To A Cheer Became Music To The Ears Of Myriad Fans |url = http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1122081/index.htm |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081202160254/http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1122081/index.htm |archive-date = December 2, 2008 |access-date = December 25, 2008 |magazine = Sports Illustrated }}</ref>

Before "The Victors" was officially the university's fight song, the song "[[There'll Be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight]]" was considered to be the school song.<ref>{{Cite web |year = 1999 |title = The Michiganesian Yearbook |url = http://www.e-yearbook.com/yearbooks/University_Michigan_Michiganensian_Yearbook/1999/Page_186.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120217110348/http://www.e-yearbook.com/yearbooks/University_Michigan_Michiganensian_Yearbook/1999/Page_186.html |archive-date = February 17, 2012 |access-date = April 9, 2012 |page = 186 }}</ref> After Michigan temporarily withdrew from the Western Conference in 1907, a new Michigan fight song "[[Varsity (fight song)|Varsity]]" was written in 1911 because the line "champions of the West" was no longer appropriate.<ref>{{Cite web |title = The Eugene Fischer Years: 1906–1914 |url = http://mmb.music.umich.edu/node/43351 |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120331162125/http://mmb.music.umich.edu/node/43351 |archive-date = March 31, 2012 |access-date = April 9, 2012 |website = Michigan Marching Band website |publisher = Regents of the University of Michigan }}</ref>

==Museums==
{{main list|List of museums and collections at the University of Michigan}}

[[File:University of Michigan August 2013 192 (Kelsey Museum of Archaeology).jpg|thumb|upright|Newberry Hall ([[Kelsey Museum of Archeology]])]]

The university is also home to several public and research museums including but not limited to the [[University of Michigan Museum of Art|University Museum of Art]], [[University of Michigan Museum of Natural History]], [[Detroit Observatory]], [[Sindecuse Museum of Dentistry]], and the LSA Museum of Anthropological Archaeology.

[[Kelsey Museum of Archeology]] has a collection of Roman, Greek, Egyptian, and Middle Eastern artifacts.<ref>{{Cite web |date = 2008 |title = About Us |url = http://www.lsa.umich.edu/kelsey/aboutus |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090107222617/http://www.lsa.umich.edu/kelsey/aboutus |archive-date = January 7, 2009 |access-date = December 26, 2008 |publisher = The Kelsey Museum of Archeology at the University of Michigan }}</ref> Between 1972 and 1974, the museum was involved in the excavation of the [[archaeological site]] of [[Dibsi Faraj]] in northern [[Syria]].<ref>{{Citation |last1 = Harper |first1 = Richard P. |title = Excavations at Dibsi Faraj, Northern Syria, 1972–1974: A Preliminary Note on the Site and Its Monuments with an Appendix |date = 1975 |journal = Dumbarton Oaks Papers |volume = 29 |pages = 319–338 |doi = 10.2307/1291379 |jstor = 1291379 |last2 = Wilkinson |first2 = Tony J. }}</ref> The Kelsey Museum re-opened November 1, 2009, after a renovation and expansion.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Imran Syed |date = November 1, 2009 |title = Hoarding history |url = http://www.michigandaily.com/content/imran-syed-hoarding-history |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131017051756/http://michigandaily.com/content/imran-syed-hoarding-history |archive-date = October 17, 2013 |access-date = November 4, 2021 |publisher = The Michigan Daily }}</ref>

The collection of the University of Michigan Museum of Art include nearly 19,000 objects that span cultures, eras, and media and include European, American, Middle Eastern, Asian, and African art, as well as changing exhibits. The Museum of Art re-opened in 2009 after a three-year renovation and expansion.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Mallory |first = Jones |date = March 18, 2009 |title = Economy yields higher museum attendance |url = http://www.michigandaily.com/content/2009-03-19/economy-yields-higher-museum-attendance |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150412133935/http://www.michigandaily.com/content/2009-03-19/economy-yields-higher-museum-attendance |archive-date = April 12, 2015 |access-date = July 19, 2013 |work = Michigan Daily }}</ref> UMMA presents special exhibitions and diverse educational programs featuring the visual, performing, film and literary arts that contextualize the gallery experience.<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan |url = http://www.umma.umich.edu |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080210075431/http://www.umma.umich.edu/ |archive-date = February 10, 2008 |access-date = July 19, 2013 |publisher = Museum of Art (UMMA) }}</ref>

The University of Michigan Museum of Natural History began in the mid-19th century and expanded greatly with the donation of 60,000 specimens by [[Joseph Beal Steere]] in the 1870s. The building also houses three research museums: the Museum of Anthropology, Museum of Paleontology. Today, the collections are primarily housed and displayed in the Ruthven Museums Building which was completed in 1928.<ref>{{Cite web |date = 2008 |title = History |url = http://www.lsa.umich.edu/exhibitmuseum/about/history |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080210121729/http://www.lsa.umich.edu/exhibitmuseum/about/history |archive-date = February 10, 2008 |access-date = December 26, 2008 |publisher = University of Michigan Exhibit Museum of Natural History }}</ref>

== Notable people ==

=== Benefactors ===

[[File:Henry Ford at 1923 UM vs Marines football game dedication of Yost Field House.jpg|thumb|[[Henry Ford]] (second from the left) at the dedication of [[Yost Field House]] in 1923]]

The [[Grand Lodge of Michigan|Zion Masonic Lodge]] funded the university's first academic building in the 1810s.<ref name="prnewswire">{{Cite press release |title = Mysterious Freemason Celebrates 250th Anniversary in Michigan |publisher = prnewswire |url = https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/mysterious-freemason-celebrates-250th-anniversary-in-michigan-254266941.html |last1 = Berry |first1 = Wesley |access-date = February 10, 2024 }}</ref> Two-thirds of the total funding to establish the university was contributed by the [[Masonic lodge]] and its members.<ref name="prnewswire"/> Since then, private donors have become an important source of funding for the university. Among the individuals who have made significant donations commemorated at the university are [[William Wilson Cook]], [[Dexter M. Ferry|Dexter Mason Ferry]], the [[Ford family]], the [[Nichols Arboretum|Nichols family]], the [[University of Michigan School of Education|Marsal Family]], the [[Preston Robert Tisch|Tisch Family]], [[William E. Upjohn|William Erastus Upjohn]], [[John Stoughton Newberry]], [[Clara Harrison Stranahan]], [[William K. Brehm]], [[William Morse Davidson]], [[A. Alfred Taubman]], [[Penny W. Stamps School of Art and Design|Penny W. Stamps]], and [[Ronald Weiser]]. The [[Samuel Zell|Zell Family Foundation]], led by Sam and Helen Zell, has donated a total of $152 million to the university over the years.<ref>{{cite web |title = University of Michigan receives $50 million from Zell Family Foundation, led by alumna Helen Zell, for Creative Writing Program |url = https://news.umich.edu/university-of-michigan-receives-50-million-from-zell-family-foundation-led-by-alumna-helen-zell-for-creative-writing-program/ |access-date = February 10, 2024 |website = news.umich.edu |date = March 7, 2013 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title = University of Michigan receives $60 million gift from the Zell Family Foundation |url = https://news.umich.edu/university-of-michigan-receives-60-million-gift-from-the-zell-family-foundation/ |access-date = February 10, 2024 |website = news.umich.edu |date = July 13, 2015 }}</ref> [[Stephen M. Ross]] made a $200 million donation to the business school and athletic campus in 2013.<ref>{{cite web |title = U-Michigan to receive $200 million from prominent real estate developer Stephen M. Ross |url = https://news.umich.edu/u-michigan-to-receive-200-million-from-prominent-real-estate-developer-stephen-m-ross/ |access-date = February 10, 2024 |website = news.umich.edu |date = September 4, 2013 }}</ref> Ross made a separate $100 million contribution to the university in 2004.<ref>{{cite web |title = Alumni – Stephen M. Ross |url = https://michiganross.umich.edu/alumni/stephen-m-ross |access-date = February 10, 2024 |website = michiganross.umich.edu }}</ref> [[Charles Munger]] pledged $110 million in 2013 for a graduate residence and fellowships.<ref>{{cite web |title = Charles Munger pledges $110 million for U-Michigan graduate residence and fellowships to create community of scholars; largest gift in university's history |url = https://news.umich.edu/charles-munger-pledges-110-million-for-u-michigan-graduate-residence-and-fellowships-to-create-community-of-scholars-largest-gift-in-university-s-history/ |access-date = February 10, 2024 |website = michiganross.umich.edu |date = April 18, 2013 }}</ref>

=== Faculty and staff ===
{{Main list|List of University of Michigan faculty and staff}}

{| class="wikitable floatright" style="font-size: 90%;"
|-
! colspan="4" style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Michigan Wolverines|color=white}}"| Faculty memberships (2023)
|-
! colspan=2| National Academies
|-
| [[List of members of the National Academy of Engineering|National Academy of Engineering]]<ref>{{Cite web |title = National Academy of Engineering Member Directory |url = http://www.nae.edu/default.aspx?id=20412 |access-date = December 22, 2023 |website = nae.edu }}</ref>
| 30
|-
| [[List of members of the National Academy of Medicine|National Academy of Medicine]]<ref>{{Cite web |title = National Academy of Medicine General Directory |url = https://nam.edu/directory/?lastName=&firstName=&parentInstitution=&yearStart=1970&yearEnd=2023&presence=0 |access-date = December 22, 2023 |website = nam.edu }}</ref>
| 62
|-
| [[List of members of the National Academy of Sciences|National Academy of Sciences]]<ref>{{Cite web |title = National Academy of Sciences Member directory |url = http://www.nasonline.org/site/Dir?sid=1011&view=basic&pg=srch |access-date = December 22, 2023 |website = nasonline.org }}</ref>
| 37
|-
! colspan=2| '''Other'''
|-
| [[American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]<ref>{{Cite web |title = American Academy of Arts and Sciences Member Directory |url = https://www.amacad.org/directory |access-date = December 22, 2023 |website = amacad.org }}</ref>
| 99
|-
| [[American Philosophical Society]]<ref>{{Cite web |title = American Philosophical Society Member Directory |url = https://search.amphilsoc.org/memhist/search |access-date = December 22, 2023 |website = amphilsoc.org }}</ref>
| 17
|}

As of fall 2022, Michigan had 7,954 faculty members and the full-time-equivalent (FTE) total was 6,752. Tenured and tenure-track faculty comprise 2,787 FTEs, lecturers comprise 830 FTEs and another 3,135 FTEs are individuals with clinical, research and other titles who are primarily involved in health care, research, and related scholarly activities.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Chapter 6 Faculty & Staff |url = https://obp.umich.edu/wp-content/uploads/pubdata/almanac/Almanac_Ch6.pdf |access-date = December 22, 2023 |website = obp.umich.edu }}</ref>

Michigan's current faculty includes 30 members of [[National Academy of Engineering]]; 62 members of [[National Academy of Medicine]]; 37 members of the [[National Academy of Sciences]]; 99 members of the [[American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]; 17 members of [[American Philosophical Society]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last1 = Lombardi |first1 = John V. |author-link = John V. Lombardi |last2 = Capaldi |first2 = Elizabeth D. |author-link2 = Elizabeth D. Phillips |last3 = Reeves |first3 = Kristy R. |last4 = Gater |first4 = Denise S. |date = December 2004 |title = The Top American Research Universities |url = https://mup.umass.edu/sites/default/files/mup-pdf/MUP-2004-Top-American-Research-Universities-Annual-Report.pdf |url-status = live |journal = The Lombardi Program on Measuring University Performance |location = Amherst and Gainesville |publisher = The Center for Measuring University Performance, UMass Amherst and University of Florida |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190411214604/https://mup.umass.edu/sites/default/files/mup-pdf/MUP-2004-Top-American-Research-Universities-Annual-Report.pdf |archive-date = April 11, 2019 |access-date = March 12, 2020 }}</ref>

The university's current and former faculty includes thirteen [[List of University of Michigan faculty and staff#Notable faculty: Nobel Laureates|Nobel laureates]], eight [[List of University of Michigan faculty and staff#Pulitzer Prize-winning faculty|Pulitzer Prize winners]], 41 [[List of University of Michigan faculty and staff#MacArthur Foundation award winners|MacArthur Fellows]], as well as eighteen [[List of University of Michigan faculty and staff#American Association for the Advancement of Science|AAAS fellows]].

=== Alumni ===
{{Main list|List of University of Michigan alumni}}

As of 2013, nine Michigan alumni have won the [[List of University of Michigan alumni#Nobel laureates|Nobel Prize]].<ref>{{Cite web |title = Alumni |url = http://alumni.umich.edu/about-the-alumni-association |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101111165617/http://alumni.umich.edu/about-the-alumni-association |archive-date = November 11, 2010 |access-date = September 7, 2013 |publisher = University of Michigan }}</ref> As of 2022, 35 of Michigan's matriculants have been awarded a [[List of University of Michigan alumni#Pulitzer Prize winners|Pulitzer Prize winners]]. By alumni count, Michigan ranks fifth {{as of|2018|lc=y|post=,}} among all schools whose alumni have won Pulitzers. The university is, {{as of|2020|lc=y|post=,}} associated one [[Mitchell Scholarship|Mitchell Scholar]].<ref>{{Cite web |date = November 25, 2020 |title = MSI student will study in Ireland as U-M's first George J. Mitchell Scholarship recipient |url = https://www.si.umich.edu/about-umsi/news/msi-student-will-study-ireland-u-ms-first-george-j-mitchell-scholarship-recipient |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20201126154512/https://www.si.umich.edu/about-umsi/news/msi-student-will-study-ireland-u-ms-first-george-j-mitchell-scholarship-recipient |archive-date = November 26, 2020 |access-date = November 26, 2020 |website = The University of Michigan }}</ref> As of 2021, 30 Michigan students or alumni have been named [[List of University of Michigan alumni#Rhodes Scholars|Rhodes Scholars]].<ref>{{Cite web |last = Office of the American Secretary |title = Number of Winners by Institution: U.S. Rhodes Scholars 1904–2020 |url = http://www.rhodesscholar.org/assets/uploads/2020%20RS_Number%20of%20Winners%20by%20Institution(1).pdf |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200126200442/http://www.rhodesscholar.org/assets/uploads/2020%20RS_Number%20of%20Winners%20by%20Institution(1).pdf |archive-date = January 26, 2020 |access-date = March 13, 2020 |website = U.S. Rhodes Scholarships |publisher = The Rhodes Trust |page = 7 }}</ref>

==== Government and law ====
{{Main list|List of University of Michigan law and government alumni}}

[[File:Gerald Ford at University of Michigan 1976.png|thumb|Presidential candidate [[Gerald Ford]] wears a "Michigan #1" sweater, Kick-off of Ford's [[1976 United States presidential election|1976 presidential campaign]] at the University of Michigan campus in [[Ann Arbor]]]]

Michigan graduates have held a range of high-level U.S. government positions, including [[United States President]] ([[Gerald Ford]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Gerald R. Ford |url = http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=F000260 |work= Biographical Directory of the United States Congress |accessdate = October 17, 2012 }}</ref>); [[United States Secretary of State]] ([[William Rufus Day]]<ref name="fjc1379896">{{FJC Bio|588|nid=1379896|name=William Rufus Day<!--(1849–1923)-->}}</ref>); [[Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States|United States Supreme Court justice]] (William Rufus Day<ref name="fjc1379896"/>, [[Frank Murphy]]<ref>{{cite web |url = http://www.law.umich.edu/newsandinfo/lqn/pasteditions/winter2005/Documents/murphy.pdf |title = University of Michigan Law Quadrangle Notes on Frank Murphy. |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090327184102/http://www.law.umich.edu/newsandinfo/lqn/pasteditions/winter2005/Documents/murphy.pdf |archive-date = March 27, 2009 |url-status = dead |df = mdy }}</ref>, [[George Sutherland]]<ref>{{cite book |last = Paschal |first = Joel Francis |title = Mr. Justice Sutherland: A Man Against the State |location = Princeton, New Jersey |publisher = Princeton University Press |year = 1951 |page = 5-20 }}</ref>); [[United States Secretary of the Treasury]] ([[George M. Humphrey]]<ref>{{cite news |title = Corporation Builder; George Magoffin Humphrey |url = https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1962/08/17/310077412.pdf |access-date = April 26, 2019 |work = [[The New York Times]] |date = August 17, 1962 }}</ref>); [[United States Attorney General]] ([[Harry Micajah Daugherty]]<ref>{{cite book |last = Giglio |title = H.M. Daugherty and the Politics of Expediency |page = 3 }}{{full|date=May 2024}}</ref>); [[United States Secretary of the Interior]] ([[Kenneth Lee Salazar]]<ref>{{cite web |title=SALAZAR, Kenneth Lee |url=https://bioguide.congress.gov/search/bio/S001163 |work=Biographical Directory of the United States Congress |accessdate=May 16, 2024 }}</ref>); [[United States Secretary of Agriculture]] ([[Clinton Anderson]]<ref>{{cite web |title=ANDERSON, Clinton Presba |url=https://bioguide.congress.gov/search/bio/A000186 |work=Biographical Directory of the United States Congress |accessdate=May 16, 2024 }}</ref>, [[Julius Sterling Morton]]<ref>{{cite book |last = Olson |first = James C. |year = 1942 |title = J. Sterling Morton |location = Lincoln |publisher = Nebraska State Historical Society Foundation |pages = 20–24 }}</ref>, [[Arthur M. Hyde]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Arthur Mastick Hyde |url = http://www.nga.org/cms/home/governors/past-governors-bios/page_missouri/col2-content/main-content-list/title_hyde_arthur.html |publisher = National Governors Association |accessdate = October 17, 2012 }}</ref>, and [[Dan Glickman]]<ref>[http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=G000240 "GLICKMAN, Daniel Robert (1944–)"], Biographical Information, ''Bioguide,'' U.S. Congress official website, retrieved April 3, 2017.</ref>); [[United States Secretary of Commerce]] ([[Roy D. Chapin]]<ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.automotivehalloffame.org/honoree/roy-d-chapin-sr/ |work=Hall of Fame Inductees |title=Roy D. Chapin, Inducted 1972 |publisher=Automotive Hall of Fame |access-date=January 22, 2020}}</ref> and [[Robert P. Lamont]]<ref>{{cite web |url=https://nydailynews.newspapers.com/article/daily-news-obituary-for-robert-patterson/60017023/ |title=Daily News, February 20, 1948, Page 575. via Newspapers.com, clip page for Obituary for Robert Patterson LAMONT (Aged 80) by user bill1427 |website=nydailynews.newspapers.com |date=February 20, 1948 |access-date=May 16, 2024 |publisher=Daily News }}</ref>); [[United States Secretary of Health and Human Services]] ([[Tom Price (American politician)|Tom Price]]<ref>{{Cite news |url = http://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/michigan/2016/11/29/tom-price/94602446/ |title = Trump's pick for health chief is a Lansing native |work = The Detroit News |access-date = March 6, 2017 }}</ref>); [[United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development]] ([[Ben Carson]]<ref>{{cite web |publisher=University of Michigan Alumni Association |title=Ben Carson, MD’77 |url=https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/ben-carson/ |access-date = March 6, 2017 |archive-url= |archive-date= }}</ref>); Director of the [[United States Office of Management and Budget]] ([[Rob Portman]]<ref name="bioguidep000449">{{cite web |url = http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=p000449 |title = PORTMAN, Robert Jones (Rob) - Biographical Information |website = [[Biographical Directory of the United States Congress]] |publisher = [[United States Congress]] }}</ref>); [[United States Trade Representative]] (Rob Portman<ref name="bioguidep000449"/>).

More than 250 Michigan graduates have served as [[List of University of Michigan legislator alumni|legislators]] as either a [[United States Senator]] (47 graduates) or as a [[United States Representatives|Congressional representative]] (over 215 graduates), including former [[House Majority Leader]] [[Dick Gephardt]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> U.S. Representative [[Justin Amash]].<ref>{{Cite web |title = About Justin Amash |url = http://amashforcongress.com/about |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101125020202/http://amashforcongress.com/about |archive-date = November 25, 2010 |access-date = March 6, 2011 }}</ref> As of 2021, Michigan has matriculated 63 [[U.S. governors]] or lieutenant governors, including former [[Governor of Michigan]] [[Rick Snyder]],<ref>{{cite web |url = http://votesmart.org/candidate/biography/124011/rick-snyder |title = Governor Rick Snyder's biography |work = Votesmart.org |access-date = July 19, 2013 }}</ref> former [[Governor of New York]] [[Thomas E. Dewey]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.lib.rochester.edu/index.cfm?page=1160|publisher=lib.rochester.edu|title=Dewey, Thomas E. {{pipe}} RBSCP|accessdate=February 23, 2017}}</ref> and former [[Governor of California]] [[Culbert Olson]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Culbert L. Olson|url=http://www.nga.org/cms/home/governors/past-governors-bios/page_california/col2-content/main-content-list/title_olson_culbert.html|publisher=National Governors Association|accessdate=October 23, 2012}}</ref> Former [[Los Angeles Mayor]] [[Henry Thomas Hazard]],<ref>[http://dbase1.lapl.org/webpics/calindex/documents/05/1507.pdf Clare Wallace, Los Angeles Public Library reference file, 1938, with references as cited there]</ref> former [[Chicago Mayor]] [[Lori Lightfoot]],<ref>{{cite web |last1 = Kozlowski |first1 = Kim |last2 = Rahal |first2 = Sarah |title = UM alum Lightfoot to be Chicago's 1st black female mayor |url = https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/michigan/2019/04/02/um-alum-lightfoot-chicago-1st-black-female-mayor/3342865002/ |website = The Detroit News |access-date = April 4, 2019 |language = en |date = April 2, 2019 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190404001316/https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/michigan/2019/04/02/um-alum-lightfoot-chicago-1st-black-female-mayor/3342865002/ |archive-date = April 4, 2019 |url-status = live }}</ref> and [[Detroit Mayor]] [[Mike Duggan]]<ref>{{cite web |title = About Mike Duggan |url = https://dugganfordetroit.com/about |website = dugganfordetroit.com |access-date = May 14, 2024 |language = en |date = |archive-url = |archive-date = |url-status = }}</ref>are also Michigan graduates. As of 2019, Michigan has placed onto various State Supreme Courts over 125 graduates, 40 of whom served as Chief Justice. As of 2022, Michigan has matriculated 64 Ambassadors who served as Ambassador in more than 72 countries.

Foreign alumni include the [[Prime Minister of Singapore]] ([[Lawrence Wong]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Lawrence Wong |url = http://www.pmo.gov.sg/cabinet/mr-lawrence-wong |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150820131421/http://www.pmo.gov.sg/cabinet/mr-lawrence-wong |archive-date = August 20, 2015 |access-date = August 18, 2015 |website = Prime Minister's Office Singapore }}</ref>); the current ruler of the [[Emirate of Ras Al Khaimah]] ([[Saud bin Saqr Al Qasimi]]<ref>{{cite web |title = H.H. Sheikh Saud Bin Saqr Al Qassimi - Biography |url = https://marcopolis.net/h-h-sheikh-saud-bin-saqr-al-qassimi-biography.htm |access-date = November 30, 2021 |website = marcopolis.net |language = en-gb }}</ref>); the 51st [[Prime Minister of Italy]] ([[Lamberto Dini]]); the [[Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda]] 1994–2004 ([[Lester Bird]]); the 47th [[President of Costa Rica]] ([[Luis Guillermo Solís]]); the [[Prime Minister of Peru]] 1993–1994 ([[Alfonso Bustamante]]); the [[Prime Minister of Jordan]] 2012–2016 ([[Abdullah Ensour]]<ref>{{cite news |title = Jordan PM CV |url = http://www.pm.gov.jo/english/index.php?page_type=pages&part=1&page_id=428 }}</ref>); the 13th [[President of Pakistan]] ([[Arif Alvi]]<ref>{{cite news |title = The cleric, the lawyer and the partyman |url = https://tribune.com.pk/story/1794826/1-presidential-election-cleric-lawyer-partyman/ |access-date = September 4, 2018 |work = The Express Tribune |date = September 4, 2018 |archive-date = December 25, 2018 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20181225211324/https://tribune.com.pk/story/1794826/1-presidential-election-cleric-lawyer-partyman/ |url-status = live }}</ref>); [[Chief Secretary of Hong Kong]] 2007–2011 ([[Henry Tang Ying-yen]]<ref>{{cite web |publisher = University of Michigan Alumni Association |title = Alumni Spotlight |url = http://alumni.umich.edu/node/807 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100609130605/http://alumni.umich.edu/node/807 |archive-date = June 9, 2010 }}</ref>); [[Deputy Prime Minister of South Korea]] 2017–2018 ([[Kim Dong-yeon]]); Deputy Prime Minister of [[Bulgaria]] in the government of Boyko Borisov ([[Simeon Djankov]]); the [[List of chief ministers of Punjab, India|Chief Minister of Punjab]] 1952–1964 ([[Pratap Singh Kairon]]).

==== Science ====

[[List of University of Michigan alumni#Computers, engineering, and technology|Numerous U-M graduates contributed]] to the field of computer science, including [[Claude Shannon]] (who made major contributions to the mathematics of [[information theory]]),<ref>{{Cite web |date = November 9, 2001 |title = Shannon Statue Dedicated at the University of Michigan |url = http://www.eecs.umich.edu/shannonstatue/ |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100731230211/http://www.eecs.umich.edu/shannonstatue/ |archive-date = July 31, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = University of Michigan EECS }}</ref> and [[Turing Award]] winners [[Edgar Codd]], [[Stephen Cook]], [[Frances E. Allen]], and [[Michael Stonebraker]].

U-M's contributions to aeronautics include aircraft designer [[Clarence "Kelly" Johnson]] of [[Lockheed Corporation|Lockheed]] [[Skunk Works]] fame.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Biographical Memoirs-Clarence Leonard (kelly) Johnson |url = http://www.nap.edu/readingroom.php?book=biomems&page=cjohnson.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110218171958/http://www.nap.edu/readingroom.php?book=biomems&page=cjohnson.html |archive-date = February 18, 2011 |access-date = August 31, 2010 |publisher = The National Academies Press }}</ref>

==== Business ====
{{Main list|List of University of Michigan business alumni}}

Michigan alumni have founded or cofounded companies such as [[Alphabet Inc.]] ([[Larry Page]]<ref>{{Cite web |title = Corporate Information – Google Management: Larry Page |url = https://www.google.com/intl/en/corporate/execs.html#larry |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100820212225/http://www.google.com/intl/en/corporate/execs.html#larry |archive-date = August 20, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = Google, Inc. }}</ref>), [[The Boeing Company]] ([[Edgar Gott]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Edgar N. Gott, 1909 |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/edgar-n-gott/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>), [[Stryker Corporation]] ([[Homer Stryker]]<ref>{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan Alumni Innovator Hall of Fame |url = https://medicine.umich.edu/dept/surgery/about-us/history |archive-url = |archive-date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |publisher = UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MEDICAL SCHOOL DEPARTMENT OF SURGERY }}</ref>), [[Loews Corporation]] ([[Preston Robert Tisch]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Tisch family members continue tradition of support |url = https://record.umich.edu/articles/tisch-family-members-continue-tradition-support/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = record.umich.edu |publisher = Office of the Vice President for Communications }}</ref>), [[Merrill Lynch]] ([[Charles Edward Merrill]]<ref>{{cite web |title = As Markets Falter, Merrill Lynch Sold: Recalling Charles Merrill's Amherst Ties |url = https://amherststudent-archive.amherst.edu/current/news/view.php%3Fyear=2008-2009&issue=03&section=news&article=02.html |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = amherststudent-archive.amherst.edu |publisher = The Amherst Student }}</ref>), [[JetBlue]] ([[Dave Barger]]<ref>{{cite web |title = David Barger, '17 |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/david-barger/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>), [[Science Applications International Corporation]] ([[John Robert Beyster|J. Robert Beyster]]<ref>{{Cite book |last1 = Beyster |first1 = J. Robert |title = The SAIC solution: How we built an $8 billion employee-owned technology company |last2 = Economy |first2 = Peter |date = 2007 |publisher = John Wiley & Sons |isbn = 978-0-470-09752-6 |location = Hoboken |pages = 190–191 |oclc = 76820653 |author-link = J. Robert Beyster |author-link2 = Peter Economy }}</ref>), [[Rocket Mortgage]] ([[Gary Gilbert]]<ref>{{cite web |title = This kid is all right |url = https://michigantoday.umich.edu/2012/04/19/a8206/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = michigantoday.umich.edu |publisher = Office of the VP for Communications }}</ref>), [[Domino's Pizza, Inc.]] ([[Tom Monaghan]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Tom Monaghan, x'60 |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/tom-monaghan/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>), [[H&R Block]] ([[Henry W. Bloch]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Henry W. Bloch, '44, HLLD'05 |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/henry-w-bloch/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>), [[Related Group]] ([[Stephen M. Ross]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Stephen M. Ross - Leader, Visionary, Philanthropist, Wolverine. |url = https://michiganross.umich.edu/alumni/stephen-m-ross |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = michiganross.umich.edu |publisher = Stephen M. Ross School of Business }}</ref>), [[Admiral Group]] ([[Henry Engelhardt]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Henry Engelhardt - Chief Executive Officer, Admiral Group |url = https://www.forbes.com/profile/henry-engelhardt/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = [[Forbes]] }}</ref>), [[Five Guys|Five Guys Enterprises]] (Jerry Murrell<ref>{{cite web |title = Five Guys Burgers: America's Fastest Growing Restaurant Chain |url = https://www.forbes.com/forbes/2012/0806/restaurant-chefs-12-five-guys-jerry-murrell-all-in-the-family.html |date = July 18, 2012 |access-date = May 11, 2024 |website = [[Forbes]] }}</ref>
), [[Leo Burnett Company]] ([[Leo Burnett]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Leo Burnett, 1914 |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/leo-burnett/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>), [[Dart Container Corporation]] (William A. Dart<ref>{{cite web |title = Dart Container family, Detroit Free Press, June 29, 1992 p. 11F |url = https://www.newspapers.com/article/detroit-free-press-dart-container-family/17379017/ |date = June 29, 1992 |access-date = May 14, 2024 |website = newspapers.com |url-status = |archiveurl = |archivedate = |publisher = Detroit Free Press }}</ref>), [[Groupon]] ([[Eric Lefkofsky]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Eric Lefkofsky, '91, JD'93 |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/eric-lefkofsky/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>and [[Brad Keywell]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Bradley A. Keywell |url = https://zli.umich.edu/people/bradley-a-keywell/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = zli.umich.edu |publisher = Samuel Zell and Robert H. Lurie Institute for Entrepreneurial Studies }}</ref>), [[EQ Office]] ([[Samuel Zell]]<ref>{{cite web |title = About Zell Lurie |url = https://zli.umich.edu/about/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = zli.umich.edu |publisher = SAMUEL ZELL & ROBERT H. LURIE INSTITUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURIAL STUDIES }}</ref>), [[Saba Capital]] ([[Boaz Weinstein]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Boaz Weinstein, Founder & Chief Investment Officer |url = https://www.sabacapital.com/our-team/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = sabacapital.com |publisher = SABA CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, L.P. }}</ref>), [[Barracuda Networks]] ([[Dean Drako]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Dean Drako |url = https://lab.engin.umich.edu/members/eac_bios_dean-drako/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = lab.engin.umich.edu |publisher = MICHIGAN ENGINEERING }}</ref>), [[Munger, Tolles & Olson]] (Charlie Munger<ref name="munger2011">{{cite web |title = Munger's $20M Gift |url = https://www.law.umich.edu/quadrangle/spring2011/specialfeatures/Pages/Mungers20MGift.aspx |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = law.umich.edu |publisher = The University of Michigan Law School }}</ref>and [[Ronald L. Olson]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Ronald Olson Elected to Caltech Board |url = https://www.caltech.edu/about/news/ronald-olson-elected-caltech-board-242 |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = caltech.edu |publisher = California Institute of Technology }}</ref>), [[Club Quarters]] ([[Ralph Bahna]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Ralph Bahna, travel and leisure executive, 1942-2014 |url = https://www.ft.com/content/11d18136-a49a-11e3-b915-00144feab7de |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = ft.com |publisher = The Financial Times Ltd. }}</ref>), [[Taubman Company]] ([[A. Alfred Taubman]]<ref>{{cite web |title = A. ALFRED TAUBMAN |url = https://taubmancollege.umich.edu/about/history/a-alfred-taubman/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = taubmancollege.umich.edu |publisher = A. Alfred Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning }}</ref>), and [[Skype Technologies|Skype]] ([[Niklas Zennström]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Niklas Zennstrom, '91 |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/niklas-zennstrom/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>).

Alumni have also led several companies, including [[Berkshire Hathaway]] ([[Charlie Munger]]<ref name="munger2011"/>), [[Ford Motor Company|Ford]] ([[James Hackett (businessman)|James Hackett]]<ref>{{cite web |title=Jim Hackett, longtime Ford School Committee member, appointed interim athletic director |url=https://fordschool.umich.edu/news/2014/jim-hackett-longtime-ford-school-committee-member-appointed-interim-athletic-director |website=fordschool.umich.edu |date=November 3, 2014 |access-date = May 16, 2024 |publisher=Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy }}</ref>), [[Walgreens Boots Alliance|Walgreens]] ([[Charles Rudolph Walgreen Jr.]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Great American Business Leaders of the 20th Century - Charles R. Walgreen, Jr. - WALGREEN COMPANY |url = https://www.hbs.edu/leadership/20th-century-leaders/details?profile=charles_r_walgreen_jr |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = hbs.edu |publisher = Harvard Business School }}</ref>), [[State Farm Insurance]] (Jon Farney<ref>{{cite web |title = State Farm® announces new leadership |url = https://newsroom.statefarm.com/state-farm-new-ceo/ |date = March 14, 2024 |access-date = May 11, 2024 |website = newsroom.statefarm.com |publisher = State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company }}</ref>), [[Citigroup]] ([[John C. Dugan]]<ref>{{cite web |title=John Cunningham Dugan -- Department of the Treasury |url=https://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/results/leadership/bio_1025.html |access-date=May 16, 2024 |website=georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov}}</ref>), [[Tencent]] (Martin Lau<ref>{{cite web |title = Martin Lau, '94 |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/martin-lau/ |date = |access-date = May 11, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>), [[Wells Fargo]] ([[Timothy J. Sloan]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.wellsfargo.com/about/corporate/governance/sloan/|title=Timothy J. Sloan Biography : President, and CEO : Wells Fargo|website=Wellsfargo.com|accessdate=2016-10-17}}</ref>), [[Albertsons]] (Vivek Sankaran<ref name="ross-fortune1000-2024"/>), [[Allstate|Allstate Corp.]] ([[Thomas J. Wilson]]<ref name="ross-fortune1000-2024">{{Cite web |title = University of Michigan Produces More CEOs at Fortune 1000 Companies Than Any Other Public University |url = https://michiganross.umich.edu/news/university-michigan-produces-more-ceos-fortune-1000-companies-any-other-public-university |archive-url = |archive-date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |publisher = Stephen M. Ross School of Business }}</ref>), [[American Airlines Group|American Airlines]] ([[Robert Isom]]<ref name="ross-fortune1000-2024"/>), [[PNC Financial Services]] ([[William S. Demchak]]), [[Turkish Airlines]] ([[Temel Kotil]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Hawk and dove - President & CEO, Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI) |url = https://thebusinessyear.com/interview/hawk-and-dove/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = thebusinessyear.com |publisher = thebusinessyear }}</ref>), [[Meijer]] ([[Doug Meijer]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Douglas F. Meijer, '76 |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/douglas-f-meijer/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>and [[Hank Meijer]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Hendrik G. "Hank" Meijer, '73, HLLD'19 |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/hendrik-g-hank-meijer/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>), [[Chrysler Group LLC]] ([[C. Robert Kidder]]<ref>{{cite web |first1 = Kenneth N. |last1 = Gilpin |first2 = Eric |last2 = Schmitt |title = BUSINESS PEOPLE; Kidder, Peabody Officer Named to Merrill Post |url = https://www.nytimes.com/1986/01/17/business/business-people-kidder-peabody-officer-named-to-merrill-post.html |date = January 17, 1986 |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = [[The New York Times]] }}</ref>), [[BorgWarner Inc.]] ([[Timothy M. Manganello]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Significant endowment from Manganello/BorgWarner |url = https://me.engin.umich.edu/news-events/news/significant-endowment-manganelloborgwarner/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = me.engin.umich.edu |publisher = MECHANICAL ENGINEERING }}</ref>), [[Activision Blizzard]] ([[Bobby Kotick]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Bobby Kotick, x'82 |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/bobby-kotick/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>), [[Restaurant Brands International]] ([[J. Patrick Doyle]]<ref>{{cite web |title = J. Patrick Doyle |url = https://www.rbi.com/English/about-us/board-of-directors/person-details/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = rbi.com |publisher = Restaurant Brands International Inc. }}</ref>), [[Guardian Industries]] ([[Bill Davidson (businessman)|William Morse Davidson]]<ref>{{Cite web |title = William Davidson: A Portrait of Action |url = https://wdi.umich.edu/news/william-davidson-a-portrait-of-action/ |archive-url = |archive-date = |access-date = May 13, 2024 |publisher = William Davidson Institute }}</ref>), [[Bloomin' Brands]] (David Deno<ref name="ross-fortune1000-2024"/>), [[Coinstar]] ([[Gregg Kaplan]]<ref>{{cite web |url = https://www.kioskmarketplace.com/articles/profile-gregg-kaplan-coinstar-president-coo-makes-hall-of-fame-2/ |title = Profile: Gregg Kaplan, Coinstar president, COO makes Hall of Fame |date = August 3, 2009 |publisher = }}</ref>), [[Craigslist]] ([[Jim Buckmaster]]<ref>{{cite web |title = Jim Buckmaster |url = https://www.craigslist.org/about/jim_buckmaster |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = craigslist.org |publisher = Craigslist }}</ref>), [[Twitter]] ([[Dick Costolo]]<ref>{{cite web |title = More than 140 Characters: Dick Costolo Talks With Alumni |url = https://alumni.umich.edu/michigan-alum/more-than-140-characters-dick-costolo-talks-with-alumni/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = alumni.umich.edu |publisher = Alumni Association of the University of Michigan }}</ref>), and [[Bain Capital]] ([[Edward Conard]]<ref>{{cite web |title = The Upside of Inequality: How Good Intentions Undermine the Middle Class |url = https://michigantoday.umich.edu/alumni/books/the-upside-of-inequality-how-good-intentions-undermine-the-middle-class/ |date = |access-date = May 12, 2024 |website = michigantoday.umich.edu |publisher = Office of the VP for Communications }}</ref>).

==== Authors and journalists ====

Notable writers who attended U-M include playwright [[Arthur Miller]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni">{{Cite web |title = Famous U-M Alumni |url = http://alumni.umich.edu/info/um/famous_alumni_abc.php |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100712122532/http://alumni.umich.edu/info/um/famous_alumni_abc.php |archive-date = July 12, 2010 |access-date = August 29, 2010 |publisher = Alumni Association University of Michigan }}</ref> essayists [[Susan Orlean]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> [[Jia Tolentino]],<ref>{{Cite magazine |title = Jia Tolentino |url = https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/jia-tolentino |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180205193408/https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/jia-tolentino |archive-date = February 5, 2018 |access-date = November 21, 2020 |magazine = The New Yorker |language = en }}</ref> [[Sven Birkerts]], journalists and editors [[Mike Wallace]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> [[Jonathan Chait]] of ''[[The New Republic]]'', Indian author and columnist [[Anees Jung]], [[Daniel Okrent]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> and [[Sandra Steingraber]], food critics [[Ruth Reichl]] and [[Gael Greene]], novelists [[Brett Ellen Block]], [[Elizabeth Kostova]], [[Marge Piercy]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> [[Brad Meltzer]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> [[Betty Smith]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> and [[Charles Major (writer)|Charles Major]], screenwriter [[Judith Guest]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> Pulitzer Prize-winning poet [[Theodore Roethke]], National Book Award winners [[Keith Waldrop]] and [[Jesmyn Ward]], composer/author/puppeteer [[Forman Brown]], [[Alireza Jafarzadeh]] (a Middle East analyst, author, and TV commentator), and memoirist and self-help book author [[Jerry and Mary Newport|Jerry Newport]].
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==== Music and entertainment ====

Musical graduates include operatic soprano [[Jessye Norman]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> singer [[Joe Dassin]], multiple members of the bands [[Tally Hall]] and [[Vulfpeck]], jazz guitarist [[Randy Napoleon]], and [[Mannheim Steamroller]] founder [[Chip Davis]].<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> Well-known composers who are alumni include [[Frank Ticheli]], [[Andrew Lippa]], and the Oscar and Tony Award-winning duo [[Pasek and Paul|Benj Pasek and Justin Paul]]. Pop superstar [[Madonna (entertainer)|Madonna]]<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> and rock legend [[Iggy Pop]]<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> attended but did not graduate.

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==== Film and television ====

In [[Cinema of the United States|Hollywood]], famous alumni include actors [[Michael Dunn (actor)|Michael Dunn]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> [[Darren Criss]], [[James Earl Jones]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> and [[David Alan Grier]];<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> actresses [[Lucy Liu]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> [[Gilda Radner]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> and [[Selma Blair]]<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> as well as television director [[Mark Cendrowski]] and filmmaker [[Lawrence Kasdan]].<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> Many Broadway and musical theatre actors, including [[Gavin Creel]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> [[Andrew Keenan-Bolger]], his sister [[Celia Keenan-Bolger]], and [[Taylor Louderman]] attended U-M for musical theatre. Emmy Award winner [[Sanjay Gupta]] attended both college and medical school at the university.<ref>{{Cite news |title = Sanjay Gupta |url = http://www.cnn.com/CNN/anchors_reporters/gupta.sanjay.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101019021301/http://www.cnn.com/CNN/anchors_reporters/gupta.sanjay.html |archive-date = October 19, 2010 |access-date = August 31, 2010 |agency = CNN }}</ref> Conservative pundit [[Ann Coulter]] is another U-M law school graduate (J.D. 1988).<ref name="Famous UM alumni" />
{{clear}}

==== Sports ====

U-M athletes have starred in [[Major League Baseball]], the [[National Football League]] and [[National Basketball Association]] as well as in other professional sports. Notable among recent players is [[Tom Brady]] of the [[New England Patriots]] and the [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]].<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> Three players have won college football's [[Heisman Trophy]], awarded to the player considered the best in the nation: [[Tom Harmon]] (1940), [[Desmond Howard]] (1991), and [[Charles Woodson]] (1997).<ref name="Heisman" /> Professional golfer [[John Schroeder (golfer)|John Schroeder]] and Olympic swimmer [[Michael Phelps]] also attended the University of Michigan; the latter studied Sports Marketing and Management. Phelps also swam competitively for [[Michigan Wolverines swimming and diving#Club Wolverine|Club Wolverine]], a swimming club associated with the university.<ref>{{Cite news |last = Michaelis |first = Vicki |date = February 13, 2007 |title = Phelps' dominant pool dream still alive |url = https://www.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/2007-02-12-phelps-focus_x.htm |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081012101644/http://www.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/2007-02-12-phelps-focus_x.htm |archive-date = October 12, 2008 |access-date = October 25, 2008 |work = USA Today }}</ref> The [[Canada women's national soccer team|Canada national team]]'s [[Shelina Zadorsky]] played soccer at the University of Michigan.<ref>{{Cite web |title = Shelina Zadorsky – Women's Soccer |url = https://mgoblue.com/sports/womens-soccer/roster/shelina-zadorsky/10544 |access-date = December 9, 2023 |website = University of Michigan Athletics |language = en }}</ref>

[[National Hockey League]] players [[Marty Turco]], [[Luke Hughes (ice hockey)|Luke Hughes]], [[Chris Summers (ice hockey)|Chris Summers]], [[Max Pacioretty]], [[Carl Hagelin]], [[Dylan Larkin]], [[Zach Hyman]], [[Brendan Morrison]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> [[Jack Johnson (ice hockey)|Jack Johnson]], and [[Michael Cammalleri]]<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> all played for U-M's ice hockey team. MLB Hall of Famers [[George Sisler]] and [[Barry Larkin]] also played baseball at the university.<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> Several team owners have been alumni, including multiple-team owner [[Bill Davidson (businessman)|Bill Davidson]] (NBA [[Detroit Pistons]], NHL [[Tampa Bay Lightning]], WNBA [[Detroit Shock]], among others) and NFL owners [[Stephen M. Ross]] ([[Miami Dolphins]]), [[Preston Robert Tisch]] ([[New York Giants]]), and [[Ralph Wilson]] ([[Buffalo Bills]]).
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==== Activists and humanitarians ====

Activists associated with the university include [[Weather Underground]] radical activist [[Bill Ayers]],<ref>{{Cite book |last = Ayers |first = Bill |title = Fugitive Days: A Memoir |publisher = New York: Penguin Books |year = 2003 |isbn = 0-8070-7124-2 }}</ref> activist [[Tom Hayden]],<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /> architect [[Charles Willard Moore|Charles Moore]],<ref>{{Cite web |title = Who |url = http://www.charlesmoore.org/who.html |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081026014641/http://www.charlesmoore.org/who.html |archive-date = October 26, 2008 |access-date = October 26, 2008 |publisher = Charles Moore Foundation }}</ref> [[Swedes|Swedish]] hero of the Holocaust [[Raoul Wallenberg]],<ref>{{Cite web |last = Schreiber |first = Penny |title = The Wallenberg Story |url = http://wallenberg.umich.edu/raoul-wallenberg/the-story-of-raoul-wallenberg/college-life/ |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140713122043/http://wallenberg.umich.edu/raoul-wallenberg/the-story-of-raoul-wallenberg/college-life/ |archive-date = July 13, 2014 |access-date = February 14, 2007 |publisher = The Wallenberg Foundation (University of Michigan) }}</ref> Civil War General [[Benjamin D. Pritchard]],<ref>{{Cite book |last = Greenm James J. |title = The Life and Times of General B. D. Pritchard |publisher = Allegan: Allegan County Historical Society |year = 1979 |page = 2 }}</ref> and assisted-suicide advocate [[Jack Kevorkian]].

==== Exploration ====

Several astronauts attended Michigan including the all-U-M crews of both [[Gemini 4]]<ref>{{Cite book |last = Shayler |first = David |title = Gemini |publisher = Springer |year = 2001 |isbn = 1-85233-405-3 |page = 103 }}</ref> and [[Apollo 15]].<ref name="Graboski 2006" /> The university claims the only alumni association with a chapter on the Moon, established in 1971 when the crew of [[Apollo 15]] placed a charter plaque for a new U-M Alumni Association on the lunar surface.<ref name="Famous UM alumni" /><ref name="Graboski 2006">{{Cite news |last = Graboski |first = Leah |date = March 29, 2006 |title = Debunking the moon myth |url = https://www.michigandaily.com/content/debunking-moon-myth |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200103005913/https://www.michigandaily.com/content/debunking-moon-myth |archive-date = January 3, 2020 |access-date = March 13, 2020 |work = [[The Michigan Daily]] |language = en }}</ref>

==Notes==
{{Notelist}}

==References==
{{Reflist}}


===Libraries===
===Sources===
* {{Cite web |title=Asa Gray |url=http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/history/Faculty_History/G/Gray,_Asa_.html |access-date=January 3, 2015 |publisher=University of Michigan |ref={{sfnRef|University of Michigan|2015}} |archive-date=June 18, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210618142037/http://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/history/Faculty_History/G/Gray,_Asa_.html |url-status=dead}}
*[http://lib.umich.edu/ University Library]
* {{Cite book |last = Bergin |first = Thomas G. |title = Yale's Residential Colleges: The First Fifty Years |publisher = Yale University |year = 1983 |location = New Haven }}
**[http://www.lib.umich.edu/libinfo/alphalist.html Alphabetical listing]
* {{Cite book |last = Dupree |first = A. Hunter |title = Asa Gray, American Botanist, Friend of Darwin |publisher = Johns Hopkins University Press |year = 1988 |isbn = 978-0-8018-3741-8 |location = Baltimore, MD |author-link = A. Hunter Dupree }}
**[http://www.lib.umich.edu/libinfo/liblist.html Subject listing]
* {{Cite journal |last = Hebel |first = Sara |date = October 15, 2004 |title = State Regents: Should They Be Elected or Appointed? |url = http://chronicle.com/weekly/v51/i08/08a00101.htm |journal = The Chronicle of Higher Education |volume = 51 |issue = 8 |pages = A1 }}
* {{Cite book |last = Hinsdale |first = Burke A. |url = https://archive.org/details/historyuniversi01hinsgoog |title = History of the University of Michigan |publisher = University of Michigan |year = 1906 |editor-last = Demmon |editor-first = Isaac |access-date = August 16, 2007 }}
* {{Cite web |last = Massachusetts Moments |date = November 25, 2006 |title = Alice Freeman and George Herbert Palmer Marry December 23, 1887 |url = http://www.massmoments.org/moment.cfm?mid=367 |access-date = February 10, 2017 |publisher = Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities }}
* {{Cite book |last = Pitcher |first = Zina |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=i5o-AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA1 |title = Laws and Regulations of the American Medical Association, With a Sketch of Detroit, and a Brief History of the University of Michigan, and of the Development of the Resources of the State |publisher = R. F. Johnstone & Company |year = 1856 |location = Detroit }}


== External links ==
===Employee organizations===
{{Commons|University of Michigan}}
*[http://www.upower.org Union of Professional Office Workers (UPOWER)] - AFT, AFL-CIO
{{Wikiquote|University of Michigan}}
*[http://www.leounion.org Lecturers Employee Organization (LEO) - Local 6244], AFT, AFL-CIO
* {{Official website}}
*[http://www.umgeo.org Graduate Employees Organization (GEO) - Local 3550], AFT, AFL-CIO
*[http://www.umpnc.org the University of Michigan Professional Nurse Council (UMPNC)] - MNA / UAN, AFL-CIO
* [http://www.mgoblue.com/ University of Michigan Athletics website]
* {{Curlie|Reference/Education/Colleges_and_Universities/North_America/United_States/Michigan/University_of_Michigan/}}
*[http://www.uofmskilledtrades.org The University of Michigan Skilled Trades Union, Inc] - AFL-CIO
* Notable Alumni at https://alumni.umich.edu/notable-alumni/?jsf=jet-engine&tax=notable-alumni-category:955<nowiki/>{{Wikisource-inline|list=
*[http://www.iuoelocal547.com International Union of Operating Engineers - Local 547], IUOE, AFL-CIO
** {{cite EB1922 |last=Shaw|first=W. B.|wstitle=Michigan, University of|short=x|noicon=x}}
*[http://www.med.umich.edu/medschool/hoa/index.htm University of Michigan House Officers Association]
** {{cite Collier's|wstitle=Michigan, University of|short=x|noicon=x}}
*[http://www.afscme1583.com American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees - Local 1583], AFSCME, AFL-CIO
** {{cite EB1911|wstitle=Michigan, University of|short=x|noicon=x}}
*International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees - Local 395, [http://www.iatse-intl.org IATSE], AFL-CIO
** {{cite NIE |wstitle=Michigan, University of |short=x |noicon=x}}
*University of Michigan Law Enforcement Association - [http://www.poam.net/ POAM]
** {{cite AmCyc |wstitle=Michigan, University of |short=x |noicon=x}}
}}


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Latest revision as of 16:16, 16 May 2024

University of Michigan
Latin: Universitas Michigania
Former names
Catholepistemiad (1817–1821)
MottoLatin: Artes, Scientia, Veritas
Motto in English
"Arts, Knowledge, Truth"
TypePublic research university
EstablishedAugust 26, 1817; 206 years ago (1817-08-26)[1]
AccreditationHLC
Academic affiliations
Endowment$17.9 billion (2023)[2]
Budget$13.1 billion (2024)[3]
PresidentSanta Ono
ProvostLaurie McCauley
Academic staff
8,189 (2023)[4]
Administrative staff
23,798 (2023)[4]
Students52,065 (2023)[4]
Undergraduates33,730 (2023)[4]
Postgraduates18,335 (2023)[4]
Location, ,
United States

42°16′37″N 83°44′17″W / 42.27694°N 83.73806°W / 42.27694; -83.73806
CampusMidsize city[6], 3,177 acres (12.86 km2)
Total: 20,965 acres (84.84 km2), including arboretum[5]
NewspaperThe Michigan Daily
YearbookMichiganensian
ColorsMaize and blue[7]
   
NicknameWolverines
Sporting affiliations
Websiteumich.edu

The University of Michigan (U-M, UMich, or simply Michigan) is a public research university in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Founded in 1817, it is the oldest institution of higher education in the state. The University of Michigan is one of the earliest American research universities and is a founding member of the Association of American Universities. In the fall of 2023, the university enrolled over 52,000 students.[4][8]

The university is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very High Research Activity". It consists of nineteen colleges and offers 250 degree programs at the undergraduate and graduate level across various liberal arts and STEM disciplines.[9] The university is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission. In 2021, it ranked third among American universities in research expenditures according to the National Science Foundation.

The University of Michigan's athletic teams are collectively known as the Wolverines. They compete in NCAA Division I FBS as members of the Big Ten Conference. The university currently fields varsity teams across 29 NCAA-sanctioned sports. As of 2022, athletes from the university have won 188 medals at the Olympic Games.

Notable alumni from the university include 8 domestic and foreign heads of state or heads of government, 47 U.S. senators, 218 members of the U.S. House of Representatives, 42 U.S. Cabinet secretaries, and 41 U.S. governors.

History[edit]

1817–1837[edit]

The University of Michigan was established on August 26, 1817,[1] as Catholepistemiad, or University of Michigania, under an act of the Michigan Territory. The corporate existence of the university had its rise in the Act of 1817, and has been continuous throughout all subsequent changes of its organic law.[10]: 11 Catholepistemiad, a neologism, translates roughly as "School of Universal Knowledge".[11]

Catholepistemiad was not a university in the contemporary sense but rather a centralized system of schools, libraries, and other cultural and scientific institutions borrowing its model from the Imperial University of France founded by Napoleon I a decade earlier.[12][10]: 10  Besides carrying on the central institution, the president and didactorium of Catholepistemiad were also authorized to establish private colleges, academies, and libraries in the Michigan Territory.[10]: 10  It was only after the State of Michigan entered the Union in 1837 that a new plan was adopted to focus the corporation on higher education.[12]

First Annual Report of the university, authored by John Monteith, November 16, 1818

Shortly after the passage of the Act of 1817, John Monteith became the first president of Catholepistemiad, and Gabriel Richard, a Catholic priest, was vice president. Monteith and Richard enacted that private schools should be established in Detroit, Monroe and Mackinaw, and before the end of September 1817, the three private schools were in operation.[10]: 11  The cornerstone of the first school house, near the corner of Bates Street and Congress Street in Detroit, was laid on September 24, 1817. Subscriptions amounting to $5,000 payable in instalments running over several years were obtained to carry on the work.[10]: 12  Of the total amount subscribed to start the work, two-thirds came from Zion Masonic Lodge and its members.[13] In August 1818, a private Lancasterian school taught by Lemuel Shattuck was opened in the building.[10]: 12 

1837–1900[edit]

University of Michigan (1855) Jasper Francis Cropsey
Colored elevation of Mason Hall (built in 1841; demolished in 1950), the first building devoted to instruction on the Ann Arbor campus. The design was used as a reference by John F. Rague to build the North Hall (built in 1851) in Madison, Wisconsin, which is a National Historic Landmark.[14]

After the state of Michigan entered the Union in 1837, its constitution granted the university an unusual degree of autonomy as a "coordinate branch of state government". It delegated full powers over all university matters granted to its governing Board of Regents.[12] On June 3–5, the Board of Regents held its first meeting in Ann Arbor and formally accepted the proposal by the town to locate the university there.[1] The town of Ann Arbor had existed for only 13 years and had a population of about 2,000.[15] A grant of 40 acres (16 ha), obtained through the Treaty of Fort Meigs,[16] formed the basis of the present Central Campus.[17]

Since the founding period, the private sector has remained the primary provider of university financing to supplement tuition collected from students. Early benefactors of the university included businessman Dexter M. Ferry (donor of Ferry Field), Arthur Hill (regent, donor of Hill Auditorium), the Nichols family (regents, donors of the Nichols Arboretum), William E. Upjohn (donor of the Peony Garden), William P. Trowbridge, John S. Newberry, who funded the construction of Helen H. Newberry Residence, and Henry N. Walker, a politician who rallied Detroit businessmen to fund the Detroit Observatory. Clara Harrison Stranahan, a close friend of Scottish-American industrialist Andrew Carnegie, donated $25,000 to the university in 1895. The Waterman Gymnasium was financed by donations from citizens and matched Joshua W. Waterman's pledge of $20,000.[10]: 67 

Alexander J. Davis's original University of Michigan designs featured the Gothic Revival style. Davis himself is generally credited with coining the term "Collegiate Gothic".

In 1838, the Regents contracted with Alexander Jackson Davis, who according to Superintendent John Davis Pierce provided truly "magnificent designs" in the Gothic Revival style; but unfortunately the completion of them at that day would, as Pierce said, involve an expenditure of half a million dollars.[10]: 31  Although approving the designs, the tight budget of the fledgling university forced the Regents to ultimately abandon them and instead adopted a much less expensive plan.[18] The superintendent of construction on the first structure to be built for the university was Isaac Thompson, an associate of Davis.[19]

Mason Hall was the first building at the University of Michigan dedicated to instruction, serving as both a dormitory and a classroom facility. The building was known as the University Main Building upon its completion in 1841 before changing its name to honor the state's first governor, Stevens T. Mason, in 1843. In 1849, a twin building called South College was constructed south of Mason Hall. University Hall, built between 1871 and 1873, connected the two buildings, which were then referred to as the South Wing and the North Wing.

Asa Gray was the first professor appointed to Michigan on July 17, 1837.[20] His position was also the first one devoted solely to botany at any educational institution in America.[21][22][23][24]Douglass Houghton was named the university's first professor of geology, mineralogy, and chemistry in 1839.[24] Other notable faculty members appointed at the university during this period included Andrew Ten Brook, Samuel Denton, Alexander Winchell, Franz Brünnow, Henry Simmons Frieze, Thomas McIntyre Cooley, and De Volson Wood.[24] Andrew Dickson White, founder and first president of Cornell University, filled the first permanent chair of history in the country at the university from 1857 to 1864.[24] White was one the earliest benefactors of the University of Michigan; he joined the Michigan faculty in 1858.[25]

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.[26]

In the following years, the regents established branches of the university in various parts of the state.[27] These decentralized branches were designed to serve as preparatory schools for the primary university.[27] The first branch was located in Pontiac, and others followed in Kalamazoo, Detroit, Niles, Tecumseh, White Pigeon, and Romeo.[27] Despite its optimism, the branches floundered, finding it difficult to enroll students. Some of the branches would later merge with local colleges. Kalamazoo College, the oldest private college in the state, once operated as the Kalamazoo Branch of the University of Michigan from 1840 to 1850.[27]

The years 1837–1850 revealed weakness in the organization and working of the university. Regents of the university discovered that the organic act from which they derived their powers made them too dependent upon the legislature. The subject was brought to the attention of the legislature more than once but without securing the desired action in order to achieve increased independence. By the late 1840s, the Regents achieved a strong position relative to collective bargaining with the legislature as the opinion was becoming common among capitalists, clergymen and intellectual elites, since by then the state derived significant tax revenue through them. Such a situation ultimately led to a change in the organic act of the university. Remodeled, the act, which was approved April 8, 1851, emancipated the university from legislative control that would have been injudicious and harmful. The office of Regent was changed from an appointed one to an elected one, and the office of President was created, with the Regents directed to select one. As Hinsdale argued, "the independent position of the university has had much to do with its growth and prosperity. In fact, its larger growth may be dated from the time when the new sections began to take effect."[10]: 40 

Statue of Benjamin Franklin, stood on west side of South State Street in front of University Hall

The University of Michigan conferred the degree of Bachelor of Science in 1855, four years after the Lawrence Scientific School at Cambridge conferred the degree in 1851, for the first time in the United States, making Michigan the second institution in the country to confer the degree.[10]: 48  The degree of Bachelor of Philosophy was conferred for the first time in the university's history upon six students in 1870.[10]: 79  The degrees of Master of Philosophy and Doctor of Philosophy was first offered in 1875.[10]: 88 

The Diag in the 19th century

Michigan established its medical school in 1850, engineering courses in 1854, and a law school in 1859.[12] In 1875, the University of Michigan established the College of Dental Surgery, becoming the second university in the United States to offer dental education after Harvard Dental College, which was founded in 1867. The university was also the first to provide graduate-level dentistry education. In 1876, Albert B. Prescott established the university's College of Pharmacy, which was the nation's first school of pharmacy at a state university.

The university was among the first to introduce instruction in fields as diverse as zoology and botany, modern languages, modern history, American literature, speech, journalism, teacher education, forestry, bacteriology, naval architecture, aeronautical engineering, computer engineering, and nuclear engineering.[12] In 1856, Michigan built the nation's first chemical laboratory.[28] That laboratory was the first structure on the North American continent that was designed and equipped solely for instruction in chemistry.[28] In 1869, the University of Michigan opened the first hospital in the country owned and operated by a university.

Methods of instruction had also undergone important changes. The seminar method of study was first introduced into the university by Charles Kendall Adams in 1871–1872, making the university the first American institution to naturalize this product of the German soil.[29][10]: 71 

Literary Class of 1880 (includes Mary Henrietta Graham, the first African American woman graduate of the University of Michigan)

By 1866, enrollment had increased to 1,205 students. Women were first admitted in 1870,[30] although Alice Robinson Boise Wood was the first woman to attend classes (without matriculating) in 1866–67.[31] In 1870, Gabriel Franklin Hargo graduated from Michigan Law as the second African American to graduate from a law school in the United States. In 1871, Sarah Killgore became the first woman to graduate from law school and be admitted to the bar of any state in the United States.[32] Among the early students in the School of Medicine was Jose Celso Barbosa, who graduated as valedictorian in 1880, becoming the first Puerto Rican to earn a university degree in the United States.[33] Ida Gray graduated from the School of Dentistry in June 1890, becoming the first African-American woman dentist in the United States.[34]

By the 1870s, the university had built an international reputation. During this period, over 80 subjects of the Emperor of Japan were sent to Ann Arbor to study law as part of the opening of that empire to external influence.[35] The University of Michigan was also involved with the building of the Philippine education, legal, and public health systems during the era of the American colonization of the Philippines through the efforts of Michigan alumni that included Dean Conant Worcester and George A. Malcolm.[36]

Descendants of Massachusetts founding families made up a large portion of the university population in the 19th century; among them was Regent Charles Hebard, a lineal descendant of William Bradford, a founding father of Plymouth Colony.[10]: 204  In the early 20th century, the university became a favored choice for high-achieving Jewish students seeking a quality education free of religious discrimination when the private colleges with Protestant affiliation often imposed quotas on Jewish admissions. Since then, the university has served as a haven for the community of Jewish-American scholars.[37][38]

Commencement, 1912: University President H.B. Hutchins and dignitaries walking across The Diag toward the Engineering Arch

Throughout its history, Michigan has been one of the nation's largest universities, vying with the largest private universities such as Harvard University and Columbia University (then known as Columbia College) during the 19th and early 20th centuries, and then holding this position of national leadership until the emergence of the statewide public university systems in the post-WWII years.[12] By the turn of the 19th century, the university was the second largest in the United States after Harvard University.[39]

20th century[edit]

Law Quadrangle, ca. 1930s

From 1900 to 1920, the growth of higher education led the university to build numerous new facilities. The Martha Cook Building was constructed as an all-female residence in 1915 as the result of a gift from William Wilson Cook in honor of his mother, Martha Walford Cook.[40] Cook planned to endow a professorship of law of corporations, but eventually made possible the development of the Law Quadrangle.[41] The five buildings comprising the Law Quadrangle were constructed during the decade of 1923–33 on two city blocks purchased by the university: Lawyers Club, Dormitory Wing, John P. Cook Dormitory, William W Cook Legal Research Library, and Hutchins Hall.[41] The buildings, in the Tudor Gothic style, recalled the quadrangles of the two English ancient universities Oxford and Cambridge.[41]

Physicists G.E. Uhlenbeck, H.A. Kramers, and S.A. Goudsmit circa 1928 at Michigan

From 1915 to 1941, the physics department was led by H.M. Randall, who established the importance of theoretical colleagues. O.B. Klein, S.A. Goudsmit, G.E. Uhlenbeck, O. Laporte and D.M. Dennison joined the physics faculty during this time. Theoretical physicist W. Pauli, who became known as one of the pioneers of quantum physics, held a visiting professorship at the university in 1931.[42] Other physicists with ties to the university include the inventor of the Race Track Synchrotron H.R. Crane, G.B.B.M. Sutherland and H.A. Kramers. S. Timoshenko, who is considered to be the father of modern engineering mechanics, created the first U.S. bachelor's and doctoral programs in engineering mechanics when he was a faculty professor at the university.

H.A. Kramers, second row, sixth left with J. Robert Oppenheimer, second row, fourth left, in a photograph of the Summer Symposium on Theoretical Physics in 1931 at the University of Michigan

The University of Michigan Summer Symposium in Theoretical Physics was held annually from 1928 to 1941.[43] During this period, virtually every world-renowned physicist lectured at the symposium, including N. Bohr, P.A.M. Dirac, E. Fermi, W. Heisenberg, P. Ehrenfest, E. Schrödinger, and others.[42] No fewer than fifteen of the visiting physicists were either Nobel laureates or would later receive the Nobel Prize in physics. J. Robert Oppenheimer, who was a professor at the California Institute of Technology and would later be known as the "father of the atomic bomb", visited in 1931 and 1934.[42]

West Engineering Building, 1905

The University of Michigan has been the birthplace of some important academic movements, establishing the Michigan schools of thought and developing the Michigan Models in various fields. John Dewey, Charles Horton Cooley, George Herbert Mead, and Robert Ezra Park first met at Michigan. There, they would influence each other greatly.[44] In political science, Angus Campbell, Philip Converse, Warren Miller and Donald Stokes, proposed the Michigan model of voting.[45]

Shortly after the war, in 1947, the Regents appointed a War Memorial Committee to consider establishing a war memorial in honor of students and alumni who fell in World War II, and in 1948, approved a resolution to "create a war memorial center to explore the ways and means by which the potentialities of atomic energy may become a beneficent influence in the life of man, to be known as the Phoenix Project of the University of Michigan," leading to the world's first academic program in nuclear science and engineering.[46][12] The Memorial Phoenix Project was funded by over 25,000 private contributors by individuals and corporations, such as the Ford Motor Company.[47]

During the 1960s, the university campus was the site of numerous protests against the Vietnam War and university administration. On March 24, 1965, a group of U-M faculty members and 3,000 students held the nation's first-ever faculty-led "teach-in" to protest against American policy in Southeast Asia.[48][49] The university's Spectrum Center is the oldest collegiate LGBT student center in the U.S., pre-dating Penn's.[50]

Due to concerns over the university's financial situation there have been suggestions for the complete separation of the university and state through privatization.[51][52] Even though the university is a public institution de jure, it has embraced funding models of a private university that emphasize tuition funding and raising funds from private donors.[53] Considering that "the University of Michigan already has only minimal fiscal ties to the state," the legislature convened a panel in 2008 that recommended converting the University of Michigan from a public to a private institution.[54]

Since the fall of 2021, the university has had the largest number of students in the state, surpassing Michigan State University's former enrollment leadership.[55] Given the state's shrinking pool of college-age students, there is public concern that the university's expansion could harm smaller schools by drawing away good students.[56][57] Some of the state's regional public universities and smaller private colleges have already seen significant declines in enrollment, while others face difficulties in maintaining enrollment figures without lowering admission standards.[56]

Historical links[edit]

University presidents Harry Burns Hutchins, left, and James Burrill Angell, center, with Cornell University founder Andrew Dickson White, right, in a 1900s photograph

The University of Michigan was the first attempt in the New World to build a modern university in the European sense. The institution was the clearest and strongest presentation that had yet been made of what, in this country, at once came to be called the "Prussian ideas". It was a radically different approach to higher education; a complete civil system of education, in contradistinction to the ecclesiastical system made out of the colonial colleges. Michigan alumni and faculty members carried this newer concept of the university with them as they founded other institutions including Andrew Dixon White, a cofounder of Cornell University.[12] Cornell alumni David Starr Jordan and John Casper Branner passed the concept to Stanford University in the late 19th century.[58] Clark Kerr, the first chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley, called Michigan the "mother of state universities" and credited the university for the first creation of the research university in America.[59]

Campus[edit]

William W. Cook Legal Research Library

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,[66] with a combined area of more than 37.48 million square feet (860 acres; 3.482 km2).[67] The Central and South Campus areas are contiguous, while the North Campus area is separated from them, primarily by the Huron River.[68] There is also leased space in buildings scattered throughout the city, many occupied by organizations affiliated with the University of Michigan Health System. An East Medical Campus was developed on Plymouth Road, with several university-owned buildings for outpatient care, diagnostics, and outpatient surgery.[69]

In addition to the University of Michigan Golf Course on South Campus, the university operates a second golf course on Geddes Road called Radrick Farms Golf Course. The golf course is only open to faculty, staff and alumni.[70] 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.[71] 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.[72]

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.[73]

Central Campus[edit]

James Burrill Angell Hall

Central Campus was the original location of University of Michigan 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 40 acres (16 ha) of land bounded by North University Avenue, South University Avenue, East University Avenue, and State Street. The President's House, located on South University Avenue, is the oldest building on campus as well as the only surviving building from the original 40-acre (16 ha) campus.[17] 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.[74] The Central Campus residence halls are split up into two groups: the Hill Neighborhood and Central Campus.[75]

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, the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, the Law School and the School of Dentistry, are on Central Campus. Two prominent libraries, the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library and the Shapiro Undergraduate Library (which are connected by a skywalk), are also on Central Campus.[76] as well as museums housing collections in archaeology, anthropology, paleontology, zoology, dentistry and art. Ten of the buildings on Central Campus were designed by Detroit-based architect Albert Kahn between 1904 and 1936 including Burton Memorial Tower and Hill Auditorium.[77]

North Campus[edit]

Earl V. Moore Building on North Campus

North Campus is the most contiguous campus, built independently from the city on a large plot of farmland—approximately 800 acres (3.2 km2)—that the university bought in 1952.[78] It is newer than Central Campus, and thus has more modernist architecture, whereas most Central Campus buildings are classical or Collegiate 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.[79] 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, 2 of only 57 globally. The North Campus tower is called Lurie Tower.[80] The University of Michigan's largest residence hall, Bursley Hall, is part of North Campus.[75]

North Campus houses the College of Engineering, the School of Music, Theatre & Dance, the Stamps School of Art & Design, the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, and an annex of the School of Information.[81] The campus is served by the Duderstadt Center, which houses the Art, Architecture and Engineering Library. The Duderstadt Center also contains multiple computer labs, video editing studios, electronic music studios, an audio studio, a video studio, multimedia workspaces, and a 3D virtual reality room.[82] Other libraries located on North Campus include the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library and the Bentley Historical Library.

South Campus[edit]

The University of Michigan Golf Course was designed by Scottish golf course architect Alister MacKenzie and opened in 1931

South Campus is the site for the athletic programs, including major sports facilities such as Michigan Stadium, Crisler Center, and Yost Ice Arena. South Campus is also the site of the Buhr library storage facility, Revelli Hall, home of the Michigan Marching Band, the Institute for Continuing Legal Education,[83] and the Student Theatre Arts Complex, which provides shop and rehearsal space for student theatre groups.[84] The university's departments of public safety and transportation services offices are located on South Campus.[83]

The University of Michigan Golf Course is located south of Michigan Stadium. 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.[85] The course opened to the public in 1931 and has one of "the best holes ever designed by Augusta National architect Alister MacKenzie" according to the magazine Sports Illustrated in 2006.[86]

Organization and administration[edit]

Governance[edit]

Photograph of Michigan University Regents 75th Anniversary Celebration on June 27, 1912.
Standing L-R: Frank B. Leland, John H. Grant, Shirley W. Smith, Harry O. Bulkey, William L. Clements, Lucius Lee Hubbard, Benjamin Hanchett, Junius E. Beal
Seated L-R: Luther L. Wright, James B. Angell, Harry B. Hutchins, Walter M. Sawyer

The University of Michigan is governed by the Board of Regents, established by the Organic Act of March 18, 1837. It consists of eight members, elected at large in biennial state elections[87] for overlapping eight-year terms.[88][89] Before the Office of President was established in 1850, the University of Michigan was directly managed by the appointed Board of Regents, with a rotating group of professors to carry out the day-to-day administration duties.[90] The second Michigan Constitution of 1850, a significant revision to the original 1835 Constitution, established the Office of President. It further made the Board of Regents of the University of Michigan an elected body instead of an appointed one and gave the Regents the authority to name a president to preside over meetings without a vote.[91]

The President of the University of Michigan is the principal executive officer responsible for managing the day-to-day operations of the university, that is, the main campus in Ann Arbor. The President is not directly involved in the management of the regional campuses; instead, two additional Chancellors are appointed by the President to administer the two regional campuses located in Dearborn and Flint. The university's current president is Santa Ono, formerly the president of the University of British Columbia in Canada. On October 14, 2022, he became the 15th President of the University of Michigan, succeeding the outgoing president, Mark Schlissel.[92]

The President's House, located at 815 South University Avenue on the Ann Arbor campus, is home to the Office of the President. Constructed in 1840, the three-story Italianate President's House is the oldest surviving building on the Ann Arbor campus and a University of Michigan Central Campus Historic District contributing property.[93]

Student government[edit]

Housed in the Michigan Union, the Central Student Government (CSG) is the central student government of the university. With representatives from each of the university's colleges and schools, including graduate students, CSG represents students and manages student funds on the campus. CSG is a 501(c)(3) organization, independent from the University of Michigan.[94] In recent years CSG 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.[95] CSG was successful at reviving Homecoming activities, including a carnival and parade, for students after a roughly eleven-year absence in October 2007,[96] and during the 2013–14 school year, was instrumental in persuading the university to rescind an unpopular change in student football seating policy at Michigan Stadium.[97] In 2017, CSG successfully petitioned the Ann Arbor City Council to create a Student Advisory Council to give student input into Ann Arbor city affairs.[98]

Samuel Trask Dana Building (West Medical Building) houses the School for Environment and Sustainability

There are student governance bodies in each college and school, independent of Central Student Government. Undergraduate students in the LS&A are represented by the LS&A Student Government (LSA SG).[99] Engineering Student Government (ESG) manages undergraduate student government affairs for the College of Engineering. Graduate students enrolled in the Rackham Graduate School are represented by the Rackham Student Government (RSG), and law students are represented by the Law School Student Senate (LSSS) as is each other college with its own respective government. In addition, the students who live in the residence halls are represented by the University of Michigan Residence Halls Association (RHA), which contains the third most constituents after CSG and LSA SG.[100]

A longstanding goal of the student government is to create a student-designated seat on the Board of Regents, the university's governing body.[101] 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 statewide ballot as third-party nominees. Waun ran for a second time in 2002, along with Matt Petering and Susan Fawcett.[102] Although none of these campaigns has been successful, a 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.[101] A change to the board's makeup would require amending the Michigan Constitution.[103]

Finances[edit]

The William W. Cook Legal Research Library and other buildings comprising the Law Quadrangle were built during 1923–33 and then donated to the university by William Wilson Cook. It was the university's most significant private gift at the time.

In the fiscal year 2022–23, the State of Michigan spent $333 million on the university, which represents 3.03% of its total operating revenues of $11 billion.[104] The Office of Budget and Planning reports that Michigan Medicine's auxiliary activities are the largest funding source, contributing $6.05 billion to the Auxiliary Funds, which accounts for 55.1% of the total operating budget. Student tuition and fees contributed $1.95 billion to the General Fund, accounting for 11% of the total budget.[104] Research grants and contracts from the U.S. federal government contributed $1.15 billion to the Expendable Restricted Funds, accounting for 10.4% of the total budget.[104]

The university's current (FY 2022–23) operating budget has four major sources of funding:[104]

  • General Fund money, which accounts for 25.4% of the operating budget, is derived from various sources: student tuition and fees ($1.95 billion or 75.2%), state support ($333 million or 12.8%), sponsored research ($301 million or 11.6%), and other revenue ($8 million or 0.3%). It covers the costs of teaching, student services, facilities, and administrative support. The state's annual contribution to the school's operating budget was 3.03% in 2023 and does not cover intercollegiate athletics, housing, or Michigan Medicine.[104]
  • Expendable Restricted Funds, which account for 14.2% of the operating budget, are from providers who designate how their money is spent. Funding comes from research grants and contracts, endowment payout ($305 million), and private gifts ($157 million). It pays for scholarships and fellowships; salaries, benefits and research support for some faculty; and research, programs and academic centers.[104]
  • Designated Funds, which account for 2.2% of the operating budget, come from fees charged for and spent on experiential learning, programs, conferences, performance venues, and executive and continuing education.[104]

Endowment[edit]

The university's financial endowment, known as the "University Endowment Fund", comprises over 12,400 individual funds.[105] Each fund must be spent according to the donor's specifications.[105] Approximately 28% of the total endowment is allocated to support academic programs, while 22% is designated for student scholarships and fellowships.[105] Approximately 19% of the endowment was allocated to Michigan Medicine and can only be used to support research, patient care, or other purposes specified by donors.[105]

As of 2023, the university's endowment, valued at $17.9 billion, ranks as the tenth largest among all universities in the country.[106][107] The university ranks 86th in endowment per student.[106] The law school's endowment, totaling over $500 million, has a significantly higher per-student value compared to that of its parent university.[108] It ranks as the eighth wealthiest law school in the nation in 2022.[108]

Schools and colleges[edit]

There are thirteen undergraduate schools and colleges.[109] By enrollment, the three largest undergraduate units are the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, the College of Engineering, and the Ross School of Business.[110] At the graduate level, the Rackham School of Graduate Studies serves as the central administrative unit of graduate education at the university.[111] There are 18 graduate schools and colleges. Professional degrees are conferred by the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, the School of Nursing, the School of Dentistry, the Law School, the Medical School, and the College of Pharmacy.[110] Michigan Medicine, the university's health system, comprises the university's three hospitals, dozens of outpatient clinics, and many centers for medical care, research, and education.

College/school Year
founded[112]
Enrollment
(FA 2023)
General Fund Budget
($, 2022-23)[104]
Budget
per student
($, 2022-23)[104]
A. Alfred Taubman College of
Architecture & Urban Planning
1906 737 25,707,200 34,881
School of Dentistry 1875 670 41,055,284 61,277
College of Engineering 1854 11,113 276,845,246 24,912
School for Environment and Sustainability 1927 516 28,034,976 54,331
School of Information 1969 1,760 50,147,537 28,493
School of Kinesiology 1984 1,312 22,088,845 16,836
Law School 1859 1,017 57,495,856 56,535
College of Literature, Science, and the Arts 1841 21,973 522,704,411 23,788
Marsal Family School of Education 1921 371 19,058,427 51,370
Medical School 1921 1,677 124,714,812 74,368
School of Music, Theatre & Dance 1880 1,134 43,101,134 38,008
School of Nursing 1893 1,183 31,644,687 26,750
College of Pharmacy 1876 561 22,056,888 39,317
School of Public Health 1941 1,162 49,478,265 42,580
Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy 1914 362 17,191,821 47,491
Stephen M. Ross School of Business 1924 4,433 137,479,144 31,013
School of Social Work 1951 940 31,557,111 33,571
Penny W. Stamps School of Art & Design 1974 740 18,111,495 24,475
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor*  – 52,065 2,590,485,130 49,755
*included other standalone units

Academics[edit]

Admissions[edit]

First-time fall freshman statistics
  2023[113] 2022[114] 2021[115] 2020[116] 2019[117]
Applicants 87,605 84,289 79,743 65,021 64,972
Admits 15,714 14,914 16,071 16,974 14,883
Admit rate 17.94% 17.69% 20.15% 26.11% 22.91%
Enrolled 7,462 7,050 7,290 6,879 6,830
Yield 47.49% 47.27% 45.36% 40.53% 45.89%
SAT range 1350–1530 1350–1530 1360–1530 1340–1520 1340–1530
ACT range 31–34 31–34 31–35 31–34 31–34

U.S. News & World Report rates Michigan "Most Selective"[118] and The Princeton Review rates its admissions selectivity of 96 out of 99.[119] Admissions are characterized as "more selective, lower transfer-in" according to the Carnegie Classification.[120][121] Michigan received over 83,000 applications for a place in the 2021–22 freshman class, making it one of the most applied-to universities in the United States.[121][122] Of those students accepted to Michigan's Class of 2027, 7,050 chose to attend.

Admission is based on academic prowess, extracurricular activities, and personal qualities. The university's admission process is need-blind for domestic applicants.[123] Admissions officials consider a student's standardized test scores, application essay and letters of recommendation to be important academic factors, with emphasis on an applicant's academic record and GPA, while ranking an applicant's high school class rank as 'not considered'.[114][115] In terms of non-academic materials as of 2022, Michigan ranks character/personal qualities and whether the applicant is a first-generation university applicant as 'important' in making first-time, first-year admission decisions, while ranking extracurricular activities, talent/ability, geographical residence, state residency, volunteer work, work experience and level of applicant's interest as 'considered'.[114] Some applicants to Music, Theatre and Dance and some applicants to the College of Engineering may be interviewed.[114] A portfolio is required and considered for admission for Art, Architecture and the Ross School of Business.[114] Submission of standardized test scores is recommended but not compulsory. Of the 52% of enrolled freshmen in 2023 who submitted SAT scores; the middle 50 percent Composite scores were 1350-1530. Of the 18% of the incoming freshman class who submitted ACT scores; the middle 50 percent Composite score was between 31 and 34.

Enrollment in University of Michigan-Ann Arbor (2013–2024)
Academic Year Undergraduates Graduate Total Enrollment
2013–2014[124] 28,283 15,427 43,710
2014–2015[125] 28,395 15,230 43,625
2015–2016[126] 28,312 15,339 43,651
2016–2017[127] 28,964 15,754 44,718
2017–2018[128] 29,821 16,181 46,002
2018–2019[129] 30,318 16,398 46,716
2019–2020[117] 31,266 16,824 48,090
2020–2021[116] 31,329 16,578 47,907
2021–2022[115] 32,282 17,996 50,278
2022–2023[114] 32,695 18,530 51,225
2023–2024[113] 33,730 18,335 52,065

Requirements[edit]

The requirements for admission to the freshman class were first published in August 1841, with fluency in ancient languages, such as Latin and Greek, being among the many requirements.[10]: 33  Candidates for admission to the freshman class were examined in English grammar, geography, arithmetic, algebra, Virgil, Cicero's Select Orations, Jacob's or Felton's Greek Reader, Andrews and Stoddard's Latin Grammar, and Sophocles's Greek Grammar. In 1851, the university dropped the requirement for students who did not wish to pursue the usual collegiate course embracing the ancient languages, permitting their admission without examination in such languages.[10]: 44  This provision may be considered a prelude to scientific education.

The archway to the Law Quadrangle

Requirements for admission varied from department to department in the early days, and admissions were mostly given by referral. Candidates were required to do no more than satisfying professors on such inquiry as professors saw fit to make of their ability to do the work to obtain admission to the university. Such a practice was deemed flawed, eventually leading to corruption. In 1863, a rigid generalized entrance examination was imposed, creating one standard of qualifications for admission to all the departments, academical and professional.[10]: 79  The early administration praised the then-new practice for its role in strengthening admission to the university.[10]: 44  The entrance examination imposed in 1863 had played a significant role in the admission process during the 19th century until the emergence of the nationwide standardized tests, which were not offered until 1900.

Affirmative action[edit]

In 2003, two lawsuits involving U-M's affirmative action admissions policy reached the U.S. Supreme Court (Grutter v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bollinger). President George W. Bush publicly opposed the policy before the court issued a ruling.[130] 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, but it ruled that a point system was 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.[citation needed] The debate continued because in November 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.[131] U-M and other organizations were granted a stay from implementation of the law soon after that referendum. This allowed time for proponents of affirmative action to decide legal and constitutional options in response to the initiative results. In April 2014, the Supreme Court ruled in Schuette v. Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action that Proposal 2 did not violate the U.S. Constitution. 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.[131]

Majors and programs[edit]

The university offers 133 undergraduate majors & degrees across the College of Engineering (18), College of Literature, Science, and the Arts (77), College of Pharmacy (1), Ford School of Public Policy (1), LSA Residential College (3), Marsal Family School of Education (3), Ross School of Business (1), School of Dentistry (1), School of Information (2), School of Kinesiology (3), School of Music, Theatre & Dance (16), School of Nursing (1), School of Public Health (2), Stamps School of Art & Design (2), and Taubman College of Architecture & Urban Planning (2). The most popular undergraduate majors, by 2021 graduates, were computer and information sciences (874), business administration and management (610), economics (542), behavioral neuroscience (319), mechanical engineering (316), experimental psychology (312).[132]

The Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies offers more than 180 graduate degree programs in collaboration with fourteen other schools and colleges. Nineteen graduate and professional degree programs, including the juris doctor, master of business administration, doctor of dental surgery, master of engineering, doctor of engineering, doctor of medicine, and doctor of pharmacy, are offered exclusively by the schools and colleges; Rackham does not oversee their administration. The university conferred 4,951 graduate degrees, and 709 first professional degrees in 2011–2012.[133][134]

Reputation and rankings[edit]

Academic rankings
National
ARWU[135]18
Forbes[136]23
U.S. News & World Report[137]21
Washington Monthly[138]23
WSJ/College Pulse[139]28
Global
ARWU[140]26
QS[141]33
THE[142]23
U.S. News & World Report[143]19

The University of Michigan is a large, four-year, residential research university accredited by the Higher Learning Commission.[120][144][145] The four-year, full-time undergraduate program comprises the majority of enrollments and emphasizes instruction in the arts, sciences, and professions with a high level of coexistence between graduate and undergraduate programs. The university has "very high" research activity and the comprehensive graduate program offers doctoral degrees in the humanities, social sciences, and STEM fields as well as professional degrees in medicine, law, and dentistry.[120] U-M has been included on Richard Moll's list of Public Ivies.[146]

The 2021 U.S. News & World Report Best Colleges report ranked Michigan 3rd among public universities in the United States.[147] Michigan was ranked 6th in the 2021 U.S. News & World Report Best Undergraduate Engineering Programs Rankings.[148] Michigan was ranked 3rd in the 2021 U.S. News & World Report Best Undergraduate Business Programs Rankings.[149] The 2020 Princeton Review College Hopes & Worries Survey ranked Michigan as the No. 9 "Dream College" among students and the No. 7 "Dream College" among parents.[150] The 2022–23 edition of the CWUR rankings ranked Michigan 12th nationally and 15th globally.[151]

National rankings[edit]

National Institution Rankings
Institution Rank Year Change
(YoY)
Source[152][153]
Undergraduate
University of Michigan—Ann Arbor Best National Universities 21 2023 U.S. News
Dream College Among Students 5 2024 Increase 4 Princeton
Review
Dream College Among Parents 6 2024 Increase 2 Princeton
Review
Undergraduate Research/
Creative Projects
5  – U.S. News
College of Engineering Undergraduate Engineering 5  – U.S. News
School of Nursing Bachelor of Science in Nursing 7  – U.S. News
College of Literature, Science, and
the Arts
Undergraduate Psychology 3  – U.S. News
Graduate
College of Engineering Best Engineering Schools 7 2023 U.S. News
Aerospace Engineering 7 2023 U.S. News
Biomedical Engineering 9 2023 U.S. News
Civil Engineering 5 2023 U.S. News
Computer Engineering 7 2023 U.S. News
Electrical Engineering 4 2023 U.S. News
Environmental Engineering 2 2023 U.S. News
Industrial Engineering 2 2023 U.S. News
Materials Engineering 7 2023 U.S. News
Mechanical Engineering 5 2023 U.S. News
Nuclear Engineering 1 2023 U.S. News
Gerald R. Ford School of
Public Policy
Best Public Affairs Programs 4 2024 Steady U.S. News
Political Science 4 2021 U.S. News
School of Information Best Library and
Information Studies Programs
6 2021 U.S. News
Marsal Family School of
Education
Best Education Schools 3 2024 Decrease 2 U.S. News
School of Public Health Best Public Health Schools 5 2024 Steady U.S. News
Biostatistics 4 2022 U.S. News
Health Care Management 3 2023 U.S. News
College of Literature, Science, and
the Arts
Biological Sciences 23 2022 U.S. News
Chemistry 14 2023 U.S. News
Clinical Psychology (Doctorate) 10 2020 U.S. News
Earth Sciences 9 2023 U.S. News
Economics 12 2022 U.S. News
English 8 2021 U.S. News
History 2 2021 U.S. News
Mathematics 11 2023 U.S. News
Physics 13 2023 U.S. News
Psychology 3 2022 U.S. News
Sociology 2 2021 U.S. News
Statistics 7 2022 U.S. News
School of Social Work Best Schools for Social Work 1 2024 Steady U.S. News
Stamps School of Art & Design Best Art Schools 8 2020 U.S. News
Stephen M. Ross School of
Business
Best B-Schools 9 2023–24 Bloomberg
Businessweek
Best Business Schools 12 2024 Decrease 4 U.S. News
Part-time MBA 6 2024 Increase 1 U.S. News
Professional
Law School Best Law Schools 9 2024 Increase 1 U.S. News
Medical School Best Medical Schools: Research 13 2023 U.S. News
Best Medical Schools: Primary Care 26 2023 U.S. News
School of Nursing Best Nursing Schools: Master's 7 2024 Increase 1 U.S. News
Best Nursing Schools: Doctor of
Nursing Practice
8 2024 Decrease 2 U.S. News
Midwifery 6 2024 Decrease 4 U.S. News
College of Pharmacy Best Pharmacy Schools 2 2024 Increase 1 U.S. News
Other
University of Michigan—Ann Arbor Top Public Schools 3 2023 U.S. News
Public Universities 1 2022 THE
Top 25 Public Colleges 4 2023 Forbes
Top Public Universities In America 2 2024 Niche

World rankings[edit]

World University Rankings

Institution Rank Year Change
(YoY)
Source[154]
University of Michigan—Ann Arbor Academic Ranking of
World Universities
26 2023 Increase 2 ShanghaiRanking
Best Global Universities 19 2022-23 U.S. News
Top Global Universities 33 2024 Decrease 8 QS
World University Rankings 23 2023 Increase 1 THE
World Reputation Rankings 18 2023 Steady THE
World University Rankings 16 2023 Decrease 1 CWUR

Research[edit]

Science research output, by year[155][156][157][158][159][160]
Share National Rank Global Rank
2022 365.97 Increase 6 18
2021 337.95 Decrease 6 19
2020 398.64 Increase 4 11
2019 343.84 Decrease 5 14
2018 344.48 Increase 6 14
2017 336.06 Increase 5 11

Michigan is one of the founding members (in the year 1900) of the Association of American Universities. The university manages one of the largest annual collegiate research budgets of any university in the United States. According to the National Science Foundation, Michigan spent $1.639 billion on research and development in 2021, ranking it 3rd in the nation.[161] This figure totaled over $1 billion in 2009.[162] The Medical School spent the most at over $445 million, while the College of Engineering was second at more than $160 million.[162]

The Thomas Henry Simpson Memorial Institute for Medical Research was constructed in 1924 as the result of a donation from the widow of iron magnate Thomas H. Simpson, in memory of her late husband, who succumbed to pernicious anemia

In 2009, U-M signed an agreement to purchase a facility formerly owned by Pfizer. The acquisition includes over 170 acres (0.69 km2) of property, and 30 major buildings comprising roughly 1,600,000 square feet (150,000 m2) of wet laboratory space, and 400,000 square feet (37,000 m2) of administrative space. At the time of the agreement, the university's intentions for the space were not fully articulated, but the expectation was that the new space would allow the university to ramp up its research and ultimately employ in excess of 2,000 people.[163]

The university is also a major contributor to the medical field with the EKG[164] and the gastroscope.[165] 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.[166]

In the mid-1960s U-M researchers worked with IBM to develop a new virtual memory architectural model[167] that model became part of IBM's Model 360/67 mainframe computer (the 360/67 was initially dubbed the 360/65M where the "M" stood for Michigan).[168] The Michigan Terminal System (MTS), an early time-sharing computer operating system developed at U-M, was the first system outside of IBM to use the 360/67's virtual memory features.[169]

R&D statistics, by year[170][171][172][173][174]
Total
Research
x $1000
National
Rank
Federal
Research
x $1000
National
Rank
National
Academy
Members
National
Rank
2019  –  –  –  – 120 10
2018 1,493,353 3 841,158 3 118 9
2017 1,434,535 2 822,436 3 113 12
2016 1,357,228 2 780,080 3 108 13
2015 1,300,340 2 728,712 3 106 13
2014 1,279,603 2 733,779 3  –  –

U-M is home to the National Election Studies and the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index. The Correlates of War project, also located at U-M, is an accumulation of scientific knowledge about 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 and the Life Sciences Institute are located at the university. The Institute for Social Research (ISR), the nation's longest-standing laboratory for interdisciplinary research in the social sciences,[175] is home to the Survey Research Center, Research Center for Group Dynamics, Center for Political Studies, Population Studies Center, and Inter-Consortium for Political and Social Research. Undergraduate students are able to participate in various research projects through the Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program (UROP) as well as the UROP/Creative-Programs.[176]

The U-M library system comprises nineteen individual libraries with twenty-four separate collections—roughly 13.3 million volumes as of 2012.[177] U-M 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, and has initiated a book digitization program in collaboration with Google.[178] The University of Michigan Press is also a part of the U-M library system.

In the late 1960s U-M, together with Michigan State University and Wayne State University, founded the Merit Network, one of the first university computer networks.[179] The Merit Network was then and remains today administratively hosted by U-M. Another major contribution took place in 1987 when a proposal submitted by the Merit Network together with its partners IBM, MCI, and the State of Michigan won a national competition to upgrade and expand the National Science Foundation Network (NSFNET) backbone from 56,000 to 1.5 million, and later to 45 million bits per second.[180] In 2006, U-M joined with Michigan State University and Wayne State University to create the University Research Corridor. This effort was undertaken to highlight the capabilities of the state's three leading research institutions and drive the transformation of Michigan's economy.[181] The three universities are electronically interconnected via the Michigan LambdaRail (MiLR, pronounced 'MY-lar'), a high-speed data network providing 10 Gbit/s connections between the three university campuses and other national and international network connection points in Chicago.[182]

In May 2021, the university announced plans to cut carbon emissions from its campuses. The plan covers all of its operations and goals include removing emissions from direct, on-campus sources by 2040.[183]

Student life[edit]

Student body[edit]

Undergraduate student body composition as of October 10, 2023
Race and ethnicity[184] Total
White 53% 53
 
Asian 17% 17
 
Hispanic 7% 7
 
Black 4% 4
 
Other[a] 10% 10
 
Foreign national 8% 8
 
Economic diversity[citation needed]
Low-income[b] 18% 18
 
Affluent[c] 82% 82
 

As of October 2023, the university had an enrollment of 52,065 students: 33,730 undergraduate students and 18,335 graduate students[185] in a total of 600 academic programs.[citation needed] This makes it the largest university in the state of Michigan.[186] The largest college at the university was the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts with 21,973 students (42.2% of the total student body), followed by the College of Engineering (11,113; 21.3%) and Ross School of Business (4,433; 8.1%). All other colleges each hosted less than 5% of the total student population.[187]

Students come from all 50 U.S. states and nearly 100 countries.[121] As of 2022, 52% of undergraduate students were Michigan residents, while 43% came from other states. The remainder of the undergraduate student body was composed of international students.[188] Of the total student body, 43,253 (83.1%) were U.S. citizens or permanent residents and 8,812 (16.9%) were international students as of November 2023.[189]

In terms of race, as of October 2023 the undergraduate student body was approximately 53% White, 17% Asian, 7% Hispanic, 4% Black, 5% from two or more races, and 5% from an unknown racial composition. The remaining 8% of undergraduates were international students.[184]

According to a 2017 report by the New York Times, the median family income of a student at Michigan was $154,000. 66% of students came from families within the top 20% in terms of income.[190] As of 2022, approximately 23% of in-state undergraduate students and 14% of out-of-state students received a Pell Grant.[188]

Residential life[edit]

Law Quadrangle
Law Quadrangle, constructed during the decade of 1923–33, was designed by York and Sawyer in the Tudor style. Its design recalled the quadrangles of two ancient English universities, Oxford and Cambridge

The University of Michigan's campus housing system can accommodate approximately 10,000 students, or nearly 25 percent of the total student population at the university.[191] The residence halls are located in three distinct geographic areas on campus: 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 1,270 students,[192] while the smallest accommodates 25 residents.[193] A majority of upper-division and graduate students live in off-campus apartments, houses, and cooperatives, with the largest concentrations in the Central and South Campus areas.

Lawyers Club Dining Hall

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 and Discovery Scholars, medical sciences, community service and the German language.[194] The Michigan Research and Discovery Scholars and the Women in Science and Engineering Residence Program are housed in Mosher-Jordan Hall. 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. The Michigan Community Scholars Program, dedicated to civic engagement, community service learning and intercultural understanding and dialogue, is located in West Quad.[195] The Lloyd Hall Scholars Program (LHSP) is located in Alice Lloyd Hall. The Health Sciences Scholars Program (HSSP) is located in Couzens Hall. The North Quad complex houses two additional living-learning communities: the Global Scholars Program[196] and the Max Kade German Program.[197] It is "technology-rich", and houses communication-related programs, including the School of Information, the Department of Communication Studies, and the Department of Screen Arts and Cultures.[198][199] North Quad is also home to services such as the Language Resource Center and the Sweetland Center for Writing.[200]

The residential system also has a number of "theme communities" where students have the opportunity to be surrounded by students in a residential hall who share similar interests. These communities focus on global leadership, the college transition experience, and internationalism.[201] The Adelia Cheever Program is housed in the Helen Newberry House.[202] The First Year Experience is housed in the Baits II Houses and Markley Hall along with portions of all other buildings with the exception of North Quad, Northwood, and Stockwell Hall.[203] The Sophomore Experience is housed in Stockwell Hall and the Transfer Year Experience is housed in Northwood III.[204][205] The newly organized International Impact program is housed in North Quad.[206]

Stockwell Residence Hall

Groups and activities[edit]

Photograph of the University of Michigan Democratic Club in 1898.
Back Row (L–R): Arthur Lacy, C. Thomas, J.M. Baily
Front Row (L–R): F.K. Bowers, C.F. Kelley, C.D. Landis, JS. McElligott

The university lists 1,438 student organizations, including Omega Omega Omega (OOO), the nation's first mental health fraternity.[207][208] The student body is politically engaged, though, with 96% stating they intended to vote in the 2020 election. It is largely progressive, with 43% identifying as very liberal, 33% as somewhat liberal, and 13% moderate. 11% identified as conservative or very conservative.[209] With a history of student activism, some of the most visible groups include those dedicated to causes such as civil rights and labor rights, such as local chapters of Students for a Democratic Society and United Students Against Sweatshops. Conservative groups also organize, such as the Young Americans for Freedom.[210]

There are also several engineering projects teams, including the University of Michigan Solar Car Team, which has placed first in the North American Solar Challenge six times and third in the World Solar Challenge four times.[211] Michigan Interactive Investments,[212] the TAMID Israel Investment Group, and the Michigan Economics Society[213] are also affiliated with the university.

The university also showcases many community service organizations and charitable projects, including Foundation for International Medical Relief of Children, Dance Marathon at the University of Michigan,[214] The Detroit Partnership, Relay For Life, U-M Stars for the Make-A-Wish Foundation, InnoWorks at the University of Michigan, SERVE, Letters to Success, PROVIDES, Circle K, Habitat for Humanity,[215] and Ann Arbor Reaching Out. Intramural sports are popular, and there are recreation facilities for each of the three campuses.[216]

Michigan Union, an Art Deco building constructed on land wholly owned by the student society in 1917, was designed by Michigan alumni Irving Kane Pond and Allen Bartlit Pond.

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.[217] The University Activities Center (UAC) is a student-run programming organization and is composed of 14 committees.[218] Each group involves students in the planning and execution of a variety of events both on and off campus.

Michigan Marching Band on the field at Michigan versus Harvard football game in 1940

The Michigan Marching Band, composed of more than 350 students from almost all of U-M's schools,[219] is the university's marching band. Over 125 years old (with a first performance in 1897),[220] the band performs at every home football game and travels 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 and the second oldest such group in the country, is a men's chorus with over 100 members.[221] 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.[222] The University of Michigan is also home to over twenty other a cappella groups, including Amazin' Blue, The Michigan G-Men, and Compulsive Lyres, all of which have competed at the International Championship of Collegiate A Cappella (ICCA) finals in New York City. Compulsive Lyres are the first and only group from Michigan to claim an ICCA title, having won in 2002.[223] The Michigan G-Men are one of only six groups in the country to compete at ICCA finals four times, one of only two TTBB ensembles to do so, and placed third at the competition in 2015.[224] Amazin' Blue placed fourth at ICCA finals in 2017. In 2020, The A Cappella Archive ranked The Michigan G-Men and Amazin' Blue at #7 and #13, respectively, out of all groups that have ever competed in ICCA.[225]

The University of Michigan has over 380 cultural and ethnic student organizations on campus.[226] There are organizations for almost every culture from the Arab Student Association to Persian Student Association[227] to African Students Association[228] to even the Egyptian Student Association.[229] These organizations hope to promote various aspects of their culture along with raising political and social awareness around campus by hosting an assortment of events throughout the school year. These clubs also help students make this large University into a smaller community to help find people with similar interests and backgrounds.

Fraternities and sororities[edit]

Photograph of the 14 founding members of Acacia, the only general fraternity to be founded in Michigan.

Fraternities and sororities play a role in the university's social life; approximately seven percent of undergraduate men and 16% of undergraduate women are active in the Greek system.[230] Four different Greek councils—the Interfraternity Council, Multicultural Greek Council, National Pan-Hellenic Council, and Panhellenic Association—represent most Greek organizations. Each council has a different recruitment process.[231]

Delta Sigma Delta, the first dental fraternity in the world

National honor societies such as Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, and Tau Beta Pi have chapters at U-M.[232] Degrees "with Highest Distinction" are recommended to students who rank in the top 3% of their class, "with High Distinction" to the next 7%, and "with Distinction" to the next 15%. Students earning a minimum overall GPA of 3.4 who have demonstrated high academic achievement and capacity for independent work may be recommended for a degree "with Highest Honors", "with High Honors", or "with Honors".[232] Those students who earn all A's for two or more consecutive terms in a calendar year are recognized as James B. Angell Scholars and are invited to attend the annual Honors Convocation, an event which recognizes undergraduate students with distinguished academic achievements.[232]

Phi Delta Phi, the oldest legal organization in continuous existence in the United States

Collegiate secret societies[edit]

The University of Michigan hosts three secret societies: Michigauma, Adara, and the Vulcans. Michigauma and Adara were once under the umbrella group "The Tower Society", the name referring to their historical locations in the Michigan Union tower. Michigauma was all-male while Adara was all-female, although both later became co-ed.

  • Michigauma, more recently known as the Order of Angell, was formed in 1902 by a group of seniors in coordination with University president James Burrill Angell. The group disbanded itself in 2021 due to public concerns about elitism and the society's history. The group was granted a lease for the top floor of the Michigan Union tower in 1932, which they referred to as the "tomb", but the society vacated the space in 2000. Until more recent reforms, the group's rituals were inspired by the culture of Native Americans.[233] Some factions on campus identified Michigauma as a secret society, but many disputed that characterization, as its member list has been published some years in The Michigan Daily and the Michiganensian, and online since 2006 reforms.
  • Adara, known as Phoenix, was formed in the late 1970s by women leaders on campus and disbanded itself in 2021 amid campus criticisms of secret societies.[234] In the early 1980s they joined the tower society and occupied the sixth floor of the tower just below Michigamua.
  • Vulcans, occupied the fifth floor of the Union tower though were not formally a part of the tower society. They draw their heritage from the Roman god Vulcan. The group which used to do its tapping publicly is known for its long black robes and for its financial contributions of the College of Engineering.

Media and publications[edit]

Stanford Lipsey Student Publications Building

Several academic journals are published at the university:

The student newspaper is The Michigan Daily, founded in 1890 and editorially and financially independent of the university. The Daily is published five days a week during academic year, and weekly from May to August. The yearbook is the Michiganensian, founded in 1896. Other student publications at the university include the conservative The Michigan Review and the progressive Michigan Independent. The humor publication Gargoyle Humor Magazine is also published by Michigan students.

WCBN-FM (88.3 FM) is the student-run college radio station which plays in freeform format. WOLV-TV is the student-run television station that is primarily shown on the university's cable television system. WJJX was previously the school's student-run radio station. A carrier current station, it was launched in 1953.[236]

Safety[edit]

Violent crime is rare on the campus though a few of the cases have been notorious including Theodore Kaczynski's attempted murder of professor James V. McConnell and research assistant Nicklaus Suino in 1985. Kaczynski, also known as the Unabomber, graduated from Michigan with his PhD in 1967.

A radical left-wing militant organization Weather Underground was founded at the university in 1969.[237] It was later designated a domestic terrorist group by the FBI.[238]

In 2014, the University of Michigan was named one of 55 higher education institutions under investigation by the Office of Civil Rights "for possible violations of federal law over the handling of sexual violence and harassment complaints." President Barack Obama's White House Task Force to Protect Students from Sexual Assault was organized for such investigations.[239] Seven years later, in 2021, the university attracted national attention when a report commissioned by the university was released that detailed an investigation into sexual assault allegations against doctor Robert Anderson who reportedly abused at least 950 university students, many of whom were athletes, from 1966 to 2003.[240] Several football players from that time say football coach Bo Schembechler ignored and enabled the abuse and told players to "toughen up" after being molested.[241] Schembechler reportedly punched his then 10-year-old son Matthew after he reported abuse by Anderson.[242] Following the exposure of a similar history of abuse at Ohio State University, male survivors of both Anderson at Michigan and Strauss at Ohio State spoke out to combat sexual abuse.[243] The University of Michigan settled with the survivors for $490 million.[244]

Athletics[edit]

Burgee of University of Michigan

The University of Michigan's sports teams are called the Wolverines. They participate in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision and in the Big Ten Conference in all sports except women's water polo, which is a member of the Collegiate Water Polo Association. U-M boasts 27 varsity sports, including 13 men's teams and 14 women's teams.[245] In 10 of the past 14 years concluding in 2009, U-M 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. U-M has finished in the top 10 of the Directors' Cup standings in 21 of the award's 29 seasons between 1993–2021 and has placed in the top six in nine of the last 10 seasons.[246]

More than 250 Michigan athletes or coaches have participated in Olympic events,[247] and as of 2021 its students and alumni have won 155 Olympic medals.[248]

Michigan Stadium is the largest college football stadium in the nation and one of the largest football-only stadiums in the world, with an official capacity of 107,601[249] (the extra seat is said to be "reserved" for Fritz Crisler[250]) though attendance—frequently over 111,000 spectators—regularly exceeds the official capacity.[251] The NCAA's record-breaking attendance has become commonplace at Michigan Stadium.

U-M is also home to 29 men's and women's club sports teams, such as rugby, hockey, volleyball, boxing, soccer, and tennis.

National championships[edit]

The Michigan football program ranks first in NCAA history in total wins (1,004 through the end of the 2023 season) and tied for 1st among FBS schools in winning percentage (.734).[252][253] The team won the first Rose Bowl game in 1902. U-M had 40 consecutive winning seasons from 1968 to 2007, including consecutive bowl game appearances from 1975 to 2007.[254] The Wolverines have won a record 44 Big Ten championships. The program claims 12 national championships,[255][256] most recently the 2023 National Championship,[257] and has produced three Heisman Trophy winners: Tom Harmon, Desmond Howard and Charles Woodson.[258]

The men's ice hockey team, which plays at Yost Ice Arena, has won nine national championships.[259]

The men's basketball team, which plays at the Crisler Center, has appeared in five Final Fours and won the national championship in 1989. The program also voluntarily vacated victories from its 1992–1993 and 1995–1999 seasons in which illicit payments to players took place, as well as its 1992 and 1993 Final Four appearances.[260] The men's basketball team has most recently won back-to-back Big Ten Tournament Championships.

In the Olympics[edit]

Through the 2012 Summer Olympics, 275 U-M students and coaches had participated in the Olympics, winning medals in each Summer Olympic Games except 1896, and winning gold medals in all but four Olympiads. U-M students/student-coaches (e.g., notably, Michael Phelps) have won a total of 185 Olympic medals: 85 golds, 48 silvers, and 52 bronzes.[261]

Fight songs and chants[edit]

Singing The Yellow and the Blue between halves of the Penn Game, November 1916

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 won a league championship. The song was declared by John Philip Sousa to be "the greatest college fight song ever written."[262] The song refers to the university as being "the Champions of the West". At the time, U-M was part of the Western Conference, which would later become the Big Ten Conference. Michigan was considered to be on the Western Frontier when it was founded in the old Northwest Territory.

Although mainly used at sporting events, the Michigan fight song is often heard at other events as well. President Gerald Ford had it played by the United States Marine Band as his entrance anthem during his term as president from 1974 to 1977, in preference over the more traditional "Hail to the Chief",[263] and the Michigan Marching Band performed a slow-tempo variation of the fight song at his funeral.[264] 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!" which has a complementary short musical arrangement written by former students Joseph Carl, a sousaphonist, and Albert Ahronheim, a drum major.[265]

Before "The Victors" was officially the university's fight song, the song "There'll Be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight" was considered to be the school song.[266] After Michigan temporarily withdrew from the Western Conference in 1907, a new Michigan fight song "Varsity" was written in 1911 because the line "champions of the West" was no longer appropriate.[267]

Museums[edit]

Newberry Hall (Kelsey Museum of Archeology)

The university is also home to several public and research museums including but not limited to the University Museum of Art, University of Michigan Museum of Natural History, Detroit Observatory, Sindecuse Museum of Dentistry, and the LSA Museum of Anthropological Archaeology.

Kelsey Museum of Archeology has a collection of Roman, Greek, Egyptian, and Middle Eastern artifacts.[268] Between 1972 and 1974, the museum was involved in the excavation of the archaeological site of Dibsi Faraj in northern Syria.[269] The Kelsey Museum re-opened November 1, 2009, after a renovation and expansion.[270]

The collection of the University of Michigan Museum of Art include nearly 19,000 objects that span cultures, eras, and media and include European, American, Middle Eastern, Asian, and African art, as well as changing exhibits. The Museum of Art re-opened in 2009 after a three-year renovation and expansion.[271] UMMA presents special exhibitions and diverse educational programs featuring the visual, performing, film and literary arts that contextualize the gallery experience.[272]

The University of Michigan Museum of Natural History began in the mid-19th century and expanded greatly with the donation of 60,000 specimens by Joseph Beal Steere in the 1870s. The building also houses three research museums: the Museum of Anthropology, Museum of Paleontology. Today, the collections are primarily housed and displayed in the Ruthven Museums Building which was completed in 1928.[273]

Notable people[edit]

Benefactors[edit]

Henry Ford (second from the left) at the dedication of Yost Field House in 1923

The Zion Masonic Lodge funded the university's first academic building in the 1810s.[274] Two-thirds of the total funding to establish the university was contributed by the Masonic lodge and its members.[274] Since then, private donors have become an important source of funding for the university. Among the individuals who have made significant donations commemorated at the university are William Wilson Cook, Dexter Mason Ferry, the Ford family, the Nichols family, the Marsal Family, the Tisch Family, William Erastus Upjohn, John Stoughton Newberry, Clara Harrison Stranahan, William K. Brehm, William Morse Davidson, A. Alfred Taubman, Penny W. Stamps, and Ronald Weiser. The Zell Family Foundation, led by Sam and Helen Zell, has donated a total of $152 million to the university over the years.[275][276] Stephen M. Ross made a $200 million donation to the business school and athletic campus in 2013.[277] Ross made a separate $100 million contribution to the university in 2004.[278] Charles Munger pledged $110 million in 2013 for a graduate residence and fellowships.[279]

Faculty and staff[edit]

Faculty memberships (2023)
National Academies
National Academy of Engineering[280] 30
National Academy of Medicine[281] 62
National Academy of Sciences[282] 37
Other
American Academy of Arts and Sciences[283] 99
American Philosophical Society[284] 17

As of fall 2022, Michigan had 7,954 faculty members and the full-time-equivalent (FTE) total was 6,752. Tenured and tenure-track faculty comprise 2,787 FTEs, lecturers comprise 830 FTEs and another 3,135 FTEs are individuals with clinical, research and other titles who are primarily involved in health care, research, and related scholarly activities.[285]

Michigan's current faculty includes 30 members of National Academy of Engineering; 62 members of National Academy of Medicine; 37 members of the National Academy of Sciences; 99 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; 17 members of American Philosophical Society.[286]

The university's current and former faculty includes thirteen Nobel laureates, eight Pulitzer Prize winners, 41 MacArthur Fellows, as well as eighteen AAAS fellows.

Alumni[edit]

As of 2013, nine Michigan alumni have won the Nobel Prize.[287] As of 2022, 35 of Michigan's matriculants have been awarded a Pulitzer Prize winners. By alumni count, Michigan ranks fifth as of 2018, among all schools whose alumni have won Pulitzers. The university is, as of 2020, associated one Mitchell Scholar.[288] As of 2021, 30 Michigan students or alumni have been named Rhodes Scholars.[289]

Government and law[edit]

Presidential candidate Gerald Ford wears a "Michigan #1" sweater, Kick-off of Ford's 1976 presidential campaign at the University of Michigan campus in Ann Arbor

Michigan graduates have held a range of high-level U.S. government positions, including United States President (Gerald Ford[290]); United States Secretary of State (William Rufus Day[291]); United States Supreme Court justice (William Rufus Day[291], Frank Murphy[292], George Sutherland[293]); United States Secretary of the Treasury (George M. Humphrey[294]); United States Attorney General (Harry Micajah Daugherty[295]); United States Secretary of the Interior (Kenneth Lee Salazar[296]); United States Secretary of Agriculture (Clinton Anderson[297], Julius Sterling Morton[298], Arthur M. Hyde[299], and Dan Glickman[300]); United States Secretary of Commerce (Roy D. Chapin[301] and Robert P. Lamont[302]); United States Secretary of Health and Human Services (Tom Price[303]); United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (Ben Carson[304]); Director of the United States Office of Management and Budget (Rob Portman[305]); United States Trade Representative (Rob Portman[305]).

More than 250 Michigan graduates have served as legislators as either a United States Senator (47 graduates) or as a Congressional representative (over 215 graduates), including former House Majority Leader Dick Gephardt,[306] U.S. Representative Justin Amash.[307] As of 2021, Michigan has matriculated 63 U.S. governors or lieutenant governors, including former Governor of Michigan Rick Snyder,[308] former Governor of New York Thomas E. Dewey,[309] and former Governor of California Culbert Olson.[310] Former Los Angeles Mayor Henry Thomas Hazard,[311] former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot,[312] and Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan[313]are also Michigan graduates. As of 2019, Michigan has placed onto various State Supreme Courts over 125 graduates, 40 of whom served as Chief Justice. As of 2022, Michigan has matriculated 64 Ambassadors who served as Ambassador in more than 72 countries.

Foreign alumni include the Prime Minister of Singapore (Lawrence Wong[314]); the current ruler of the Emirate of Ras Al Khaimah (Saud bin Saqr Al Qasimi[315]); the 51st Prime Minister of Italy (Lamberto Dini); the Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda 1994–2004 (Lester Bird); the 47th President of Costa Rica (Luis Guillermo Solís); the Prime Minister of Peru 1993–1994 (Alfonso Bustamante); the Prime Minister of Jordan 2012–2016 (Abdullah Ensour[316]); the 13th President of Pakistan (Arif Alvi[317]); Chief Secretary of Hong Kong 2007–2011 (Henry Tang Ying-yen[318]); Deputy Prime Minister of South Korea 2017–2018 (Kim Dong-yeon); Deputy Prime Minister of Bulgaria in the government of Boyko Borisov (Simeon Djankov); the Chief Minister of Punjab 1952–1964 (Pratap Singh Kairon).

Science[edit]

Numerous U-M graduates contributed to the field of computer science, including Claude Shannon (who made major contributions to the mathematics of information theory),[319] and Turing Award winners Edgar Codd, Stephen Cook, Frances E. Allen, and Michael Stonebraker.

U-M's contributions to aeronautics include aircraft designer Clarence "Kelly" Johnson of Lockheed Skunk Works fame.[320]

Business[edit]

Michigan alumni have founded or cofounded companies such as Alphabet Inc. (Larry Page[321]), The Boeing Company (Edgar Gott[322]), Stryker Corporation (Homer Stryker[323]), Loews Corporation (Preston Robert Tisch[324]), Merrill Lynch (Charles Edward Merrill[325]), JetBlue (Dave Barger[326]), Science Applications International Corporation (J. Robert Beyster[327]), Rocket Mortgage (Gary Gilbert[328]), Domino's Pizza, Inc. (Tom Monaghan[329]), H&R Block (Henry W. Bloch[330]), Related Group (Stephen M. Ross[331]), Admiral Group (Henry Engelhardt[332]), Five Guys Enterprises (Jerry Murrell[333] ), Leo Burnett Company (Leo Burnett[334]), Dart Container Corporation (William A. Dart[335]), Groupon (Eric Lefkofsky[336]and Brad Keywell[337]), EQ Office (Samuel Zell[338]), Saba Capital (Boaz Weinstein[339]), Barracuda Networks (Dean Drako[340]), Munger, Tolles & Olson (Charlie Munger[341]and Ronald L. Olson[342]), Club Quarters (Ralph Bahna[343]), Taubman Company (A. Alfred Taubman[344]), and Skype (Niklas Zennström[345]).

Alumni have also led several companies, including Berkshire Hathaway (Charlie Munger[341]), Ford (James Hackett[346]), Walgreens (Charles Rudolph Walgreen Jr.[347]), State Farm Insurance (Jon Farney[348]), Citigroup (John C. Dugan[349]), Tencent (Martin Lau[350]), Wells Fargo (Timothy J. Sloan[351]), Albertsons (Vivek Sankaran[352]), Allstate Corp. (Thomas J. Wilson[352]), American Airlines (Robert Isom[352]), PNC Financial Services (William S. Demchak), Turkish Airlines (Temel Kotil[353]), Meijer (Doug Meijer[354]and Hank Meijer[355]), Chrysler Group LLC (C. Robert Kidder[356]), BorgWarner Inc. (Timothy M. Manganello[357]), Activision Blizzard (Bobby Kotick[358]), Restaurant Brands International (J. Patrick Doyle[359]), Guardian Industries (William Morse Davidson[360]), Bloomin' Brands (David Deno[352]), Coinstar (Gregg Kaplan[361]), Craigslist (Jim Buckmaster[362]), Twitter (Dick Costolo[363]), and Bain Capital (Edward Conard[364]).

Authors and journalists[edit]

Notable writers who attended U-M include playwright Arthur Miller,[306] essayists Susan Orlean,[306] Jia Tolentino,[365] Sven Birkerts, journalists and editors Mike Wallace,[306] Jonathan Chait of The New Republic, Indian author and columnist Anees Jung, Daniel Okrent,[306] and Sandra Steingraber, food critics Ruth Reichl and Gael Greene, novelists Brett Ellen Block, Elizabeth Kostova, Marge Piercy,[306] Brad Meltzer,[306] Betty Smith,[306] and Charles Major, screenwriter Judith Guest,[306] Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Theodore Roethke, National Book Award winners Keith Waldrop and Jesmyn Ward, composer/author/puppeteer Forman Brown, Alireza Jafarzadeh (a Middle East analyst, author, and TV commentator), and memoirist and self-help book author Jerry Newport.

Music and entertainment[edit]

Musical graduates include operatic soprano Jessye Norman,[306] singer Joe Dassin, multiple members of the bands Tally Hall and Vulfpeck, jazz guitarist Randy Napoleon, and Mannheim Steamroller founder Chip Davis.[306] Well-known composers who are alumni include Frank Ticheli, Andrew Lippa, and the Oscar and Tony Award-winning duo Benj Pasek and Justin Paul. Pop superstar Madonna[306] and rock legend Iggy Pop[306] attended but did not graduate.

Film and television[edit]

In Hollywood, famous alumni include actors Michael Dunn,[306] Darren Criss, James Earl Jones,[306] and David Alan Grier;[306] actresses Lucy Liu,[306] Gilda Radner,[306] and Selma Blair[306] as well as television director Mark Cendrowski and filmmaker Lawrence Kasdan.[306] Many Broadway and musical theatre actors, including Gavin Creel,[306] Andrew Keenan-Bolger, his sister Celia Keenan-Bolger, and Taylor Louderman attended U-M for musical theatre. Emmy Award winner Sanjay Gupta attended both college and medical school at the university.[366] Conservative pundit Ann Coulter is another U-M law school graduate (J.D. 1988).[306]

Sports[edit]

U-M athletes have starred in Major League Baseball, the National Football League and National Basketball Association as well as in other professional sports. Notable among recent players is Tom Brady of the New England Patriots and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.[306] Three players have won college football's Heisman Trophy, awarded to the player considered the best in the nation: Tom Harmon (1940), Desmond Howard (1991), and Charles Woodson (1997).[258] Professional golfer John Schroeder and Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps also attended the University of Michigan; the latter studied Sports Marketing and Management. Phelps also swam competitively for Club Wolverine, a swimming club associated with the university.[367] The Canada national team's Shelina Zadorsky played soccer at the University of Michigan.[368]

National Hockey League players Marty Turco, Luke Hughes, Chris Summers, Max Pacioretty, Carl Hagelin, Dylan Larkin, Zach Hyman, Brendan Morrison,[306] Jack Johnson, and Michael Cammalleri[306] all played for U-M's ice hockey team. MLB Hall of Famers George Sisler and Barry Larkin also played baseball at the university.[306] Several team owners have been alumni, including multiple-team owner Bill Davidson (NBA Detroit Pistons, NHL Tampa Bay Lightning, WNBA Detroit Shock, among others) and NFL owners Stephen M. Ross (Miami Dolphins), Preston Robert Tisch (New York Giants), and Ralph Wilson (Buffalo Bills).

Activists and humanitarians[edit]

Activists associated with the university include Weather Underground radical activist Bill Ayers,[369] activist Tom Hayden,[306] architect Charles Moore,[370] Swedish hero of the Holocaust Raoul Wallenberg,[371] Civil War General Benjamin D. Pritchard,[372] and assisted-suicide advocate Jack Kevorkian.

Exploration[edit]

Several astronauts attended Michigan including the all-U-M crews of both Gemini 4[373] and Apollo 15.[374] The university claims the only alumni association with a chapter on the Moon, established in 1971 when the crew of Apollo 15 placed a charter plaque for a new U-M Alumni Association on the lunar surface.[306][374]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans & those who prefer to not say.
  2. ^ The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students.
  3. ^ The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum.

References[edit]

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