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The facility is named for Rachel Mary (Upjohn) Meader, who with her husband Edwin gave $10 million toward the building's construction. The facility also is home to: Sleep Research Center; MRI Simulator; Brain Imaging Center; Stress and Neuroendocrine Program [54] The Ice Cube houses the Sports Medicine Program in a facility southwest of Ann Arbor.
Examples of new buildings include the Cardiovascular Center, the Biomedical Science Research Building, the Rachel Upjohn Building and the replacement for C.S. Mott Children's Hospital and Women's Hospital, scheduled to open in 2011. The Ann Arbor campus is divided into four main areas: the North, Central, Medical, and South Campuses.
The Bronson Upjohn Building, previously known as the Upjohn Company Office Building or Building 24, is an office building located at 301 John Street in Kalamazoo, Michigan. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2022.
Rachael Mary Upjohn Light Meader (April 15, 1916 – March 16, 2008) was an American aerial photographer and explorer. Heir to the Upjohn Company fortune, she is best known in aerial circles for her 35,000-mile (56,000 km) flight in 1937–1938, during which she photographed unprecedented images of South America and Africa.
In 2011, Parfet donated the 330,000 square-foot building that has been home to the WMed Upjohn Campus medical school since its inaugural class in 2014. [ 6 ] Parfet plays an ongoing and active role in a wide range of philanthropic focused on the sustainable development of Western Michigan and also sits as President of the Board of Trustees of ...
Dr. Upjohn married Rachel Phoebe Babcock on December 24, 1878. They had five children: Rachel Winifred Upjohn Smith Light (1880-1929), William Harold Upjohn (1884-1928), Mary Upjohn (1889-1889, infant death), Dorothy Upjohn DeLano Dalton (1890-1981), and Genevieve Upjohn Gilmore (1894-1990). [2] Rachel Phoebe Babcock Upjohn died on July 4, 1905 ...
Upjohn Tower, Kalamazoo, Michigan (designed for the Upjohn Company; demolished after Pfizer buyout, 2005) Studebaker Factory, Building 84, 1923, South Bend, Indiana Cold Spring Granite Company Main Plant, 1929, Cold Spring, Minnesota (demolished 2008)
Aaron Sojourner is an American economist and senior researcher at the Upjohn Institute for Employment Research. [1] He was formerly an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Minnesota's Carlson School of Management [2] and senior economist for the Council of Economic Advisers. [3]