Michigan
From NASA pioneer to media moguls: 4 people University of Michigan wants to honor with degrees
ANN ARBOR, MI — What do a Pulitzer Prize-winning news editor, a C-SPAN co-founder, an Emmy-winning historian and a trailblazing female NASA software engineer have in common?
They’re all being considered for honorary doctorates from the University of Michigan during winter commencement on Dec. 15 at Crisler Center.
The university’s Board of Regents is expected to vote on the approval of the degrees for Rebecca Blumenstein, John D. Evans, Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Margaret H. Hamilton on Thursday, Dec. 5.
Blumenstein became president of editorial at NBC News in 2023. She has been recommended for an honorary Doctor of Laws degree.
At NBC News, she oversees programs like “Meet the Press” and Dateline NBC.”
Blumenstein‘s journalism career launched after she served as editor in chief at The Michigan Daily. She earned a bachelor’s degree from the UM Residential College.
While leading The Wall Street Journal‘s China bureau abroad, her team won a Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting in 2007 for its “Naked Capitalism” series.
She had previously worked for the Journal’s Detroit bureau and New York Technology Group, after early-career jobs with the Tampa Tribune, Gannett Newspapers and Newsday. She later served as a deputy editor and chief for The Journal and then moved to The New York Times to serve as a deputy managing editor.
Evans had leadership roles for C-SPAN, which he helped co-found, for 44 years. In 2016, Evans was inducted into the national Cable Hall of Fame. He has been recommended for a Doctor of Laws degree.
He earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Michigan in 1966 and served as the station manager of WCBN, a campus radio station. He was also a Washtenaw County deputy sheriff who went on to serve in the U.S. Navy.
Evans is credited with building the first cable system in the Washington, D.C. metro area. He has also championed AIDS research and the LGBTQ+ community through research and philanthropy.
He currently chairs the American Medical Association Foundation’s LGBTQ+ Health Commission and has also supporting LGBTQ+ initiatives and scholarships through the UM. He also created the John D. Evans Fund for Media and Technology.
Gates is an Emmy-winning documentarian and literary scholar who has built a career at top universities. Gates currently directs Harvard University’s Hutchins Center for African and African American Research. He has been recommended for a Doctor of Humane Letters.
Among his many books and documentaries, “The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross,” a six-part PBS documentary, won an Emmy, a Peabody Award and an NAACP Image Award in 2013. He also hosts PBS show “Finding Your Roots,” a series that dives into celebrities’ ancestries.
Before joining the faculties at the universities of Yale, Cornell, Duke and Harvard, he graduated from Yale summa cum laude in 1973 and was the first Black student to receive an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Award. He received his doctorate in English literature from the University of Cambridge.
Among other accomplishments, he was the first Black scholar to receive a National Humanities Medal, and the NAACP awarded him “for his work to preserve and celebrate African American history and culture,” this summer.
Hamilton is credited with coining the title of software engineer. She is a woman pioneer in the field who worked on NASA’s Apollo missions and the Skylab space station. She has been recommended for a Doctor of Engineering degree.
A Presidential Medal of Freedom awardee, she is also credited with being the first woman programmer hired by NASA. She also co-founded Higher Order Software in 1976 and Hamilton Technologies in 1986.
While with NASA, she advocated for coding to override human error, after her daughter crashed a simulator in the lab.
In her early days, she spent a semester studying math at the University of Michigan before transferring to Earlham College. She went on to work at MIT, including for the school’s Lincoln Lab, writing software to detect enemy aircraft during the Cold War.
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Michigan
Michigan-based Stryker hit with cyberattack
Michigan
Michigan hockey vs Notre Dame time, channel in Big Ten Tournament
Detroit Red Wings celebrate their Olympians, Michigan hockey Olympians
Detroit Red Wings celebrate their Olympians, Michigan hockey Olympians on March 4, 2026 in Detroit.
Michigan hockey may be the No. 1 team in the nation in the USCHO and NPI rankings, but they fell short of a regular-season title and don’t have the clearest path to a Big Ten Tournament win.
But three wins can help the Wolverines solidify their status as the best in the nation, even if they’re No. 2 in the Big Ten as of now.
The Wolverines (26-7-1) face Notre Dame in the quarterfinals of the 2026 Big Ten Hockey Tournament on Wednesday, March 11, at Yost Ice Arena in Ann Arbor. The game is set to start at 7 p.m. ET and will not be televised on a traditional channel, but streamed exclusively on BIG+.
Michigan finished with the most overall wins (26) and most conference wins (17) in the Big Ten, but finished second to Michigan State in points, relegating them to the No. 2 seed. As a result, the two-time defending-champion Spartans got a bye and head right into the semifinals, while the Wolverines play last-place Notre Dame to kick off the tournament.
Since the tournament reseeds winners for the semifinal round, it is not clear who Michigan will play if it wins. However, with the Spartans holding the No. 1 seed, a rematch between the top two teams in the conference can only happen in the final game, which will take place on Saturday, March 21.
Here’s what you need to know as Michigan hockey begins its quest for a Big Ten tournament title.
Michigan hockey vs Notre Dame, Big Ten tournament time
- Date: Wednesday, March 11.
- Time: 7 p.m. ET.
- Location: Yost Ice Arena, Ann Arbor.
Michigan hockey vs Notre Dame, Big Ten tournament channel
- Time: 7 p.m. ET.
- Channel: N/A.
- Streaming: BIG+.
Wednesday’s game against Notre Dame will not be on a traditional television channel, but can be streamed on the BIG+ app.
Big Ten hockey conference tournament bracket
The Big Ten hockey conference tournament uses a three-round, single-elimination bracket that involves all seven conference teams, with the top seed earning a first-round bye. The remaining six teams then play a knockout round with the winners advancing to the semifinals.
Big Ten hockey 2026 standings
- Michigan State (51 points).
- Michigan (49 points).
- Penn State (41 points).
- Wisconsin (39 points).
- Ohio State (29 points).
- Minnesota (27 points).
- Notre Dame (16 points).
Big Ten Tournament hockey 2026 quarterfinals schedule: March 11
- No. 7 Notre Dame at No. 2 Michigan, 7 p.m. ET (BIG+).
- No. 6 Minnesota at No. 3 Penn State, 7 p.m. ET (BIG+).
- No. 5 Ohio State at No. 4 Wisconsin, 8 p.m. ET (BIG+).
Big Ten Tournament hockey 2026 semifinals schedule: March 14
- Lowest remaining seed at No. 1 Michigan State, time TBD (Big Ten Network).
- Second-lowest remaining seed at second-highest remaining seed, time TBD (Big Ten Network).
Big Ten Tournament hockey 2026 semifinals schedule: March 21
- Lowest remaining seed at highest remaining seed, time TBD (Big Ten Network).
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You can reach Christian at cromo@freepress.com.
Michigan
Does Kyle Whittingham face ‘win now’ pressure at Michigan?
For some programs, spring football has started in earnest, but for Michigan football, it will have to wait another week. But with practices on the horizon, college football pundits are starting to ask questions about what the upcoming season may look like, and among the questions is what Kyle Whittingham’s Wolverines will be in his first year.
On3’s popular show ‘Ari & Andy’ attempted to ask and answer that question on their latest episode.
As the duo of Ari Wasserman and Andy Staples mulled over various storylines in the coaching realm, once they got to the ‘newcomers’ — coaches who have taken over new programs — they started with Whittingham. For Wasserman, the big question is how quickly Whittingham can win in Ann Arbor?
“How much pressure is Kyle Whittingham to make sure that Michigan doesn’t lose whatever momentum that it had from winning the national championship and falling back into another 25 year period of being pretty good, but not great?” Wasserman said. “Because on one hand, this is a very critical moment in their program arc. But on the other hand, don’t you also have to give him the benefit of the doubt that, hey, what happened at the end of or during last year was highly dysfunctional in a way that we don’t really see very often in sports in general, let alone college sports? And you got hired during a weird time on the calendar. You probably weren’t anticipating coaching this year.
“Like, do you get a year to try to get your bearings of a new place that expects to win a championship? Like, I don’t know how Michigan fans are viewing this season. Now you’ll tell me what you always tell me. They demand excellence, and they expect excellence. There’s no honeymoon. I think that’s true. But from a rational analysis of this, I don’t know how to view what the (expectations are), like what is a successful season for Kyle Whittingham in year one, make the playoff?”
Staples is a little less about the questions and more about the answers. Because in his mind, regardless of how he got there, Whittingham to Michigan might be the best hire of the entire cycle.
“This really isn’t about Michigan’s expectations. It’s more about Kyle Whittingham’s expectations,” Staples said. “And the fact that Kyle Whittingham did this and the fact that Michigan did this, this was Michigan going out and getting the best coach they could get. But it’s very interesting because let’s say Michigan had fired Sherrone Moore in a more conventional way. And it had been just for losing and had been at the end of the season. And Kyle Whittingham had been one of the coaches that was available, but one of many that was available that the whole cycle hadn’t already been done. I still would have called hiring Kyle Whittingham, maybe the best hire of the cycle. I don’t think a 66-year-old guy goes to this place to build, to rebuild it. He’s going to win now. That’s the whole point of this. He’s not doing this except it is to win now.”
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