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Fall 2019

Author David Maraniss revisits his family’s brush with HUAC when his father was called to testify in 1952. Papers and research restore philosopher and reformer Alice Chipman Dewey to her own legacy. And Lulu Middleton’s archived WWII letters delivered warmth, advice, and connection to service members.

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Selected Stories

A selection of stories of this issue. Please download PDF to read all content.

A Good American Family

by Katie Vloet

Author David Maraniss was just three years old, too young to understand what was happening when his father was
called before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1952.
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Voices from the Philippines

by Robert Havey

A history professor and her undergraduate research fellows bring fresh eyes to the fraught history of American imperialism in the Philippines.
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Out of the Shadows

by Sarah J. Robbins

Alice Chipman Dewey was a philosopher, social reformer, educator, pioneer, and among the earliest women to graduate from U-M. Her incredible legacy has been historically overshadowed by that of her husband, John Dewey, though research and papers at the Bentley are now helping define Alice in her own right.
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Writing Aunt Lulu

by Cinda Nofziger

During World War II, Lulu Middleton wrote letters to service men and women, sending along advice, cookies, candy and ultimately a connection to home in Michigan.
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Cropsey Up Close

by Lara Zielin

The earliest paintings of U-M's campus have been scanned into the 21st century.
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The Case of the Missing Mastodon

by Lara Zielin

A mastodon was discovered in 1934, and its bones came to the University of Michigan. But what happened to them after that remains a mystery.
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Three Generations of Michigan Connections

by Lara Zielin

Betty Bishop has trusted the materials of her family’s Michigan legacy, stretching back to the 1800s, to the Bentley Historical Library.
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A Revolutionary Change

by Terrence J. McDonald, Director

On January 5, 1870, the University Board of Regents passed a resolution that paved the way for coeducation at Michigan. In 2020, we celebrate the 150th anniversary of this remarkable change.
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