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Marcin Szczepanski

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Marcin Szczepanski

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34 images Created 2 Mar 2022

Michigan Engineering

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  • Flying Eagles, a team of former members of the now-disbanded Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity hosted their 82nd annual Mud Bowl game on Saturday morning just before the homecoming game between the University of Michigan and Northwestern University. University of Michigan has unsuccessfully tried to cancel the event this year and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon national fraternity suspended the Ann Arbor members for “health-and-safety violations and the failure of members to uphold … policies and procedures.”. Determined to uphold tradition, the local members organized the Mud Bowl independently.  They faced an unassociated team made up of a variety of University of Michigan students.  Flying Eagles won 24 to 10. The Mud Bowl has raised around $110,000 for Mott Children’s Hospital in the last six years alone. The Mud Bowl has been played in conjunction with Homecoming since 1933 in a round depression filed with water and mud in front of the now former house of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity in Ann Arbor, MI.  Saturday, October., 10th, 2015. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0034.jpg
  • Flying Eagles, a team of former members of the now-disbanded Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity hosted their 82nd annual Mud Bowl game on Saturday morning just before the homecoming game between the University of Michigan and Northwestern University. University of Michigan has unsuccessfully tried to cancel the event this year and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon national fraternity suspended the Ann Arbor members for “health-and-safety violations and the failure of members to uphold … policies and procedures.”. Determined to uphold tradition, the local members organized the Mud Bowl independently.  They faced an unassociated team made up of a variety of University of Michigan students.  Flying Eagles won 24 to 10. The Mud Bowl has raised around $110,000 for Mott Children’s Hospital in the last six years alone. The Mud Bowl has been played in conjunction with Homecoming since 1933 in a round depression filed with water and mud in front of the now former house of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity in Ann Arbor, MI.  Saturday, October., 10th, 2015. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0033.jpg
  • Flying Eagles, a team of former members of the now-disbanded Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity hosted their 82nd annual Mud Bowl game on Saturday morning just before the homecoming game between the University of Michigan and Northwestern University. University of Michigan has unsuccessfully tried to cancel the event this year and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon national fraternity suspended the Ann Arbor members for “health-and-safety violations and the failure of members to uphold … policies and procedures.”. Determined to uphold tradition, the local members organized the Mud Bowl independently.  They faced an unassociated team made up of a variety of University of Michigan students.  Flying Eagles won 24 to 10. The Mud Bowl has raised around $110,000 for Mott Children’s Hospital in the last six years alone. The Mud Bowl has been played in conjunction with Homecoming since 1933 in a round depression filed with water and mud in front of the now former house of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity in Ann Arbor, MI.  Saturday, Nov., 20th, 2015. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0031.jpg
  • Flying Eagles, a team of former members of the now-disbanded Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity hosted their 82nd annual Mud Bowl game on Saturday morning just before the homecoming game between the University of Michigan and Northwestern University. University of Michigan has unsuccessfully tried to cancel the event this year and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon national fraternity suspended the Ann Arbor members for “health-and-safety violations and the failure of members to uphold … policies and procedures.”. Determined to uphold tradition, the local members organized the Mud Bowl independently.  They faced an unassociated team made up of a variety of University of Michigan students.  Flying Eagles won 24 to 10. The Mud Bowl has raised around $110,000 for Mott Children’s Hospital in the last six years alone. The Mud Bowl has been played in conjunction with Homecoming since 1933 in a round depression filed with water and mud in front of the now former house of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity in Ann Arbor, MI.  Saturday, October., 10th, 2015. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0032.jpg
  • A truck navigates Atigun Pass in the Arctic Circle on the ice road from Fairbanks to northern part of Alaska. <br />
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Brie Van Dam makes a similar trip 357 miles north from Fairbanks to Toolik Field Station several times during the Alaskan winters.  She monitors the pulse of earth's changing climate though a series of research projects at the Toolik Field Station.    03/23/2016<br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0029.jpg
  • Flying Eagles, a team of former members of the now-disbanded Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity hosted their 82nd annual Mud Bowl game on Saturday morning just before the homecoming game between the University of Michigan and Northwestern University. University of Michigan has unsuccessfully tried to cancel the event this year and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon national fraternity suspended the Ann Arbor members for “health-and-safety violations and the failure of members to uphold … policies and procedures.”. Determined to uphold tradition, the local members organized the Mud Bowl independently.  They faced an unassociated team made up of a variety of University of Michigan students.  Flying Eagles won 24 to 10. The Mud Bowl has raised around $110,000 for Mott Children’s Hospital in the last six years alone. The Mud Bowl has been played in conjunction with Homecoming since 1933 in a round depression filed with water and mud in front of the now former house of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity in Ann Arbor, MI.  Saturday, October., 10th, 2015. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0030.jpg
  • Michigan Engineering alumna Brie Van Dam  takes density, depth and weight measurements of snow in the research plot 1,5 mile from the Toolik Research Station in Alaska. The station is located 357 miles north from Fairbanks, in the Arctic Circle. Van Dam manages a data center at the research station. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0027.jpg
  • Michigan Engineering alumna Brie Van Dam  takes density, depth and weight measurements of snow in the research plot 1,5 mile from the Toolik Research Station in Alaska. The station is located 357 miles north from Fairbanks, in the Arctic Circle. Van Dam manages a data center at the research station.   3/24/2016<br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0028.jpg
  • Abe Noe-Hays and Kim Nace laugh during an impromptu photo shoot in front of Kim's house.  Abe and Kim are co-founders of the Rich Earth Institute. They promote collecting and using human urine as a plant fertilizer.     Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0026.jpg
  • University of Michigan engineering students (from left) Adam Schroder and David Hershey *both dress in Blues Brother outfits scheer on their team in the season opener game against the Appalachian State University on Saturday, August 30, 2014. David and Adam wear the costumes every single game and lead the UM student fans in singing a Blues Brothers song during  the break between second and third quarters.  Michigan won the game 52-14. Last time Michigan played Appalachian State was in 2007 and App. State won 34-32 in what may have been the biggest college football upset ever and one of the lowest moments in the history of the Michigan football program. Big House, University of Michigan stadium in Ann Arbor.
    Michigan Engineering_0024.jpg
  • University of Michigan students react with frustration to University of Michigan football team making another mistake after they gathered at the apartment of David Hershey to watch the Michigan football game against Notre Dame.  The game was the last game before an indefenite hiatus in the long standing football rivalry between the two schools.  At the end, the Irish demolished the Wolverines on Saturday night 31-0 as Michigan fans at home and at the Notre Dame stadium looked in in despair and disbelieve.  From right towards the back are: Mary Brahos, Sarah Hill, David Hershey, Adam Shroeder, Colin Harman,  Lauren McGee, Travis Wooley and Andrew Kanei.   Saturday, September 6,  2014.
    Michigan Engineering_0025.jpg
  • Over 100,000 fans at the University of Michigan's Big House greet the team as the University of Michigan players run out of the tunnel and into a football field a day after the UM Athletic Director Dave Brandon resigned. They will play against University of Indiana. November 1st., 2014.  UM won the game. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan
    Michigan Engineering_0023.jpg
  • Always smiling and a vulcan of energy, U-M's solar car biggest supporter and cheerleader Charles S. Hutchins spots a University of Michigan beret at the official finish line at Victoria Square where #3 University of Michigan's Quantum solar cars arrived on Friday, October 21, 2011 during the World Solar Challenge race across Australia.<br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M
    Michigan Engineering_0021.jpg
  • Seen from the railway bridge above, a group of students floats down Argo Pond near the man-made cascades in downtown Ann Arbor on a sunny July afternoon.  Thursday, July 24th, 2014.   Photo by Marcin Szczepansk/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0020.jpg
  • Story Title<br />
True Believers,  Anguish and Elation in the Student Section<br />
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Story Description:<br />
"Football is a Religion," a longtime University of Michigan football announcer Bob Ufer used to say. "And Saturday is the Holy Day of Obligation.  The story aims to capture that quasi-religious character of college football, its meaning, emotions and a sometimes-ugly-underbelly.  <br />
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Caption:<br />
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Terrace Still displays the face painted in Wolverine colors before the start of the University of Michigan football game against the Miami (Ohio) University.  UM won 34-10.   September 13th., 2014.  Ann Arbor.
    Michigan Engineering_0022.jpg
  • Gerald Chang (left) and Cole Witte work on fixing the problem after University of Michigan's Quantum pulled over on the side of the road to deal with a missing faring (wheel cover) that was blown away by the strong wind. Today was supposed to be the day of a big push on the side of the U-M's team that planned on overtaking Nuna 6 and maybe even getting close to the #1 Tokai University's Challenger. Challenger was 30 minutes ahead of both Nuna 6 and Quantum at the end of the previous day.  At the end of the day and after a series of techinical issues, Quantum fell 1.5 hour behind Challenger and an hour behind Nuna6.  It's day four at at the World Solar Challenge competition in Australia on Wednesday, October 19th, 2011 The cars crossed over to South Australia from Northern Territory this morning. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M<br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M
    Michigan Engineering_0018.jpg
  • Neon's Nuna 6 drives away, gaining quickly on the University of Michigan's Quantum that had to pull over on the side of the road to deal with a missing faring (wheel cover) that was blown away by the strong wind. Today was supposed to be the day of a big push on the side of the U-M's team that planned on overtaking Nuna 6 and maybe even getting close to the #1 Tokai University's Challenger that was 30 minutes ahead of both Nuna 6 and Quantum at the end of the previous day.  It's day four at at the World Solar Challenge competition in Australia on Wednesday, October 19th, 2011 The cars crossed over to South Australia from Northern Territory this morning. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M<br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M
    Michigan Engineering_0019.jpg
  • U-M's Quantum (left) and Nuon's Nuna 6 charge batteries early morning on day three at a gas station restaurant called Wauchope.  A day earlier the cars were forced to stop there and spend the night after the area down the road was closed due to bush fire.  World Solar Challenge competition on Tuesday, October 18th, 2011<br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M U-M's Quantum (left) and Nuon's Nuna 6 charge batteries early morning on day three at a gas station restaurant called Wauchope.  A day earlier the cars were forced to stop there and spend the night after the area down the road was closed due to bush fire.  World Solar Challenge competition on Tuesday, October 18th, 2011<br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M<br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M U-M's Quantum was pulled over for a couple minutes by local authorities because the smoke from the bush fire got too strong.   Day three at at the World Solar Challenge competition on Tuesday, October 18th, 2011<br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M<br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-Mday three of the World Solar Challenge.  Tuesday, October 18, 2011. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M<br />
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Local authorities stop the Michigan solar car for a couple minutes because visibility on the road was reduced to almost zero as heavy smoke from burning bush engulfed the area on day three of the World Solar Challenge competition on Tuesday, October 18th, 2011. This morning, Quantum stayed a bit behind the Challenger and Nuna 6, partly because of that stop, with Challenger increasing the distance to 25 minutes.    Tuesday, October 18, 2011. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M
    Michigan Engineering_0017.jpg
  • Zach Helfand and Sharon Faktor share a celebratory kiss after graduating from the University of Michigan moments earlier. They are outside of the Big House (UM football stadium), where UM Commencement Ceremony took place on Saturday, May 3rd, 2014 in Ann Arbor, MI.  Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0016.jpg
  • Michigan Engineering alum Ed Shearer helps Michigan Engineering BLUElab member Samantha Rahmani measure the dimensions of an overflow tank on the water supply line to the village of Chaquitón in Guatemala. Villagers at Chaquitón have complained that the pollution in the spring tap water makes their kids sick. UM students are here to develop affordable and efficient system to purify water. They partnered up with a Lutheran group Gloria Dei where Michigan Engineering Alum Ed Shearer is a member. Chaquitón, Guatemala. August 28th, 2015. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0012.jpg
  • Indian American students toss their caps into the air to celebrate graduation from the UM College of Engineering. University of Michigan College of Engineering Commencement Ceremony ended 20 minutes earlier at the Crisler Arena  on Saturday, May 3rd, 2014 in Ann Arbor, MI.  Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0015.jpg
  • Michigan Engineering Dean Dave Munson chest bumps a graduating engineering student  during the University of Michigan College of Engineering Commencement Ceremony at the Crisler Arena  on Saturday, May 3rd, 2014 in Ann Arbor, MI.  Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0014.jpg
  • Sally Stumbo works on her computer at the startup company Nutshell in Ann Arbor, MI. May 25, 2014.    Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan
    Michigan Engineering_0010.jpg
  • Michigan Engineering BLUElab members Samantha Rahmani and Alex Mattia anxiously examine peach dishes with water from the village of Chaquitón for signs of growing bacteria. Villagers at Chaquitón have complained that the pollution in the spring tap water makes their kids sick. UM students are here to develop affordable and efficient system to purify water. They partnered up with a Lutheran group Gloria Dei where Michigan Engineering Alum Ed Shearer is a member. Chaquitón, Guatemala. August 28th, 2015. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0011.jpg
  • Tim Bruns, Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Michigan Engineering  and his students observe the buccal mass of an aplysia Californica (sea slug) moving.  From left are Ahmed Jiman, Aileen Ouyang, Tim Bruns and Zachariah Sperry.  <br />
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Sea slugs are sea-dwelling invertebrates that are a common animal model in neuroscience and neural engineering studies due to their relatively large nerves and ganglia. First Zach anesthetized the animal with an injection, and then he dissected out the buccal mass (mouth parts) and its attached nerve ganglia. <br />
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Bruns' lab performs in vivo studies to develop interfaces with the peripheral nervous system. In these studies they seek to understand how the nervous system works and to obtain functional control over an end organ. In general they focus on autonomic organs, including a primary lab goal of restoring bladder function through stimulation and recording from specific nerves. <br />
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May 9th, 2017.  Ann Arbor, MI. <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Multimedia Director and Senior Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0009.jpg
  • Op Akinbola wears an UM cap at the Crossing the Boundaries class taught by U-M lecturer Paul Kaminski in the summer as part of the Michigan Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (M-STEM) Academy for the incoming freshmen.    University of Michigan's Central Campus.  Wednesday, July 11th, 2012 <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, University of Michigan, CoE, Multimedia Producer
    Michigan Engineering_0008.jpg
  • Grace Simon is all smiles  as her parents, Jennifer and Eric Simon kiss her simultaneously  after they visited the class where Michigan Engineering students pitched their software development ideas on how to improve the ways Grace communicates with the people around her. <br />
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To signal “yes,” Grace Simon raises her right fist. For “no,” she shakes her head. And that, for the most part, is how the 13-year-old communicates with the world. <br />
Diagnosed with cerebral palsy at six months old, Grace doesn’t have the muscle control to speak, sign or walk. But her capable mind understands spoken language.(She’s actually kind of nosy, says her mother.) She reads chapter books. Her favorite subject is math.<br />
“She’s really bright on the inside, but she just can’t get it out,” said David Chesney, a University of Michigan lecturer in computer science and engineering who has built a syllabus around Grace. <br />
This semester, the 80 students in his software engineering course are working to help her. <br />
Chesney has challenged them to design and build systems that could make it easier for Grace to communicate, play, or be more independent at school or home.    Monday, Septyember 16, 2013<br />
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 Photo by Marcin Szczepanski
    Michigan Engineering_0007.jpg
  • UM engineering graduate Harish Roopkumar was one of the very last students leaving the Crisler Arena when he lifted Shreya Atluri, a daughter of very good friends, high up in the area in the celebration of his graduation. Jarish and Shreya are members of a vibrant Indian community at the University of Michigan. Saturday, May 3rd, 2014 in Ann Arbor, MI.  Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
    Michigan Engineering_0013.jpg
  • Ann Arbor based start-up company Sky Specs test a drone on the University of Michigan football stadium. The drone will deliver the ball at the start of the University of Michigan vs. University of Utah football game. Sky Specs who was founded by Michigan Engineering alumni developed the drone and hopes to mass produce such drones.  August 15th., 2014. Ann Arbor, MI.    <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan
    Michigan Engineering_0005.jpg
  • Meaghan Richmond, Michigan Introduction to Technology & Engineering (MITE) student works in a chemical engineering as part of the Engineering Concepts class during the MITE camp on the University of Michigan's North Campus.  The MITE program is designed to excite, engage, educate and empower students currently in the 9th and 10th grade with an integrated curriculum that centers on an engineering based project. The program takes place in July and August and has approximately forty student participants.    Wednesday, July 11th, 2012 <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, University of Michigan, CoE, Multimedia Producer
    Michigan Engineering_0004.jpg
  • Bowen Xu, Catherine Fisher, Raven Zeer, and Chris McMeeking, Computer Science BSE Students, discuss an application for Grace Simon in EECS 481 in the EECS Building on October 21, 2013<br />
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Grace, 13-years old, was diagnosed with cerebal palsy at six months old and does not have the muscle control to speak, sign, or walk. Her mind is very capable, however, understanding the spoken language and reading the written word.<br />
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Students in EECS 481 are challenged this semester in designing and building systems that can make it easier for Grace to communicate, play, or be more independent at school or home.<br />
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Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing<br />
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www.engin.umich.edu
    Michigan Engineering_0006.jpg
  • 4/17/12 Jasprit Singh, professor of Applied Physics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, does a chariot posture in his office on University of Michigan's North Campus during a Day In the Life of the University of Michigan on April 17, 2012.
    Michigan Engineering_0003.jpg
  • Bill Roth from Hitachi gets his protective suit fixed while leading a workshop for Electrical Engineering & Computer Science Department scientists at the Lurie Nanofabrication Facility on University of Michigan's North Campus.   <br />
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Photo by Marcin Szczepanski, Multimedia Content Producer/College of Engineering, U-M
    Michigan Engineering_0001.jpg
  • University of Michigan Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering professor Margaret Wooldridge, 45, (first left) discusses the nuances of a single cylinder optically accessible gasoline direct injection (GDI) engine with Michigan Engineering graduate students. The engine is on loan from Ford Motor Company and the optical access allows the students to image fuel injection and combustion and understand how the fuel injection and ignition events can be used to improve engine efficiency and emissions. The graduate students are (from right) Scott Wagnon, 25, (Mechanical Engineering), Steven Morris, 25, (Aerospace Engineering), Dimitris Assanis, 22, (Mechanical Engineering), Mohammad Fatouraie, 26, (Mechanical Engineering, pointing) and Andrew Mansfield, 26, (Mechanical Engineering, in the back).  G. G. Brown Laboratories   Friday, March 23th, 2012. <br />
Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/University of Michigan, College of Engineering Multimedia Producer
    Michigan Engineering_0002.jpg