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The Changing Environment of Northern Michigan

The Changing Environment of Northern Michigan
A Century of Science and Nature at the University of Michigan Biological Station


Knute J. Nadelhoffer, Alan J. Hogg, Jr., and Brian A. Hazlett, Editors
One hundred years of scientific study of wildlife and environmental change at the University of Michigan Biological Station. Read more . . .

Resources

Editors Photos

Knute J. Nadelhoffer

Knute J. Nadelhoffer
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Alan J. Hogg, Jr.

Alan J. Hogg, Jr.
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Brian A. Hazlett

Brian A. Hazlett
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Photos

Photo 1

The first ornithology class in 1909. Courtesy University of Michigan Biological Station.
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Photo 2

Old-growth stand of red pine in the Pellston Plain. Understory trees of eastern white pine will eventually replace the overstory red pines if wildfire is absent or rare over the next 100-150 years. Courtesy Burton V. Barnes.
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Photo 3

Seedlings of northern red oak are common in the ground-cover layer of the high-elevation, dry, outwash-lake plain forests. They rarely are recruited into the understory layer because of severe deer browsing, exacerbated by slow growth due to soil-water stress. Courtesy Burton V. Barnes.
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Photo 4

Douglas Lake watersheds. Courtesy U.S. Geological Survey.
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Photo 5

A swamp. Courtesy Robert Pillsbury.
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Photo 6

A temporary pool. Courtesy Robert Pillsbury.
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Photo 7

Canada or velvet-leaf blueberry (Vaccinium myrtilloides). Courtesy Edward G. Voss.
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Photo 8

Dwarf lake iris (Iris lacustris). Courtesy Edward G. Voss.
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Photo 9

Sulfur shelf or chicken of the woods (Laetiporus sulphureus). Courtesy Marilynn Smith.
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Photo 10

Nymphaea odorata subsp. tuberosa. Courtesy Mary H. Sexton.
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Photo 11

Cladonia cristatella, commonly known as British soldiers because of the red apothecia, which resemble the red hats of British troops during the American Revolutionary War. This fruticose species is a few inches tall, and is found throughout the state but is abundant in the Lower Peninsula. Courtesy Patricia L. Hinds.
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Photo 12

Porcupine. Courtesy Philip Myers.
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Photo 13

Five-Lined skink, Eumeces fasciata. Courtesy Scott Smith.
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Photo 14

A cluster of the zebra mussel, Dreissena polymorpha. Courtesy Kimberly S. Cerrudo.
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Photo 15

Purple loosestrife, Lythrum salicaria. Courtesy Kimberly S. Cerrudo.
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Culture Wars and Enduring American Dilemmas

Culture Wars and Enduring American Dilemmas

by Irene Taviss Thomson
Research showing America's politics may be more based on personal choice than party or cultural divisions. Read more . . .

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Photos

Irene Taviss Thomson

Irene Taviss Thomson
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Author photo courtesy of Michael Thomson

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Guide to Great Lakes Fishes

Guide to Great Lakes Fishes

by Gerald R. Smith
A comprehensive guide to more than fifty common fishes of the Great Lakes. Read more . . .

Resources

Photos

Gerald R. Smith

Gerald R. Smith. Author photo courtesy of John Megahan.
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photo 1

Lake Sturgeon illustration by Emily S. Damstra
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photo 2

Lake Sturgeon photo courtesy of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources
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photo 3

Lake Sturgeon line illustration by Karen Klitz
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photo 4

Lake Sturgeon photo by Dave Brenner
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A Martian Muse

A Martian Muse
Further Essays on Identity, Politics, and the Freedom of Poetry

by Reginald Shepherd
National Book Critics Circle Award finalist's posthumous volume of critical essays. Read more . . .

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Photos

Reginald Shepherd

Reginald Shepherd
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The Music of Django Reinhardt

The Music of Django Reinhardt


by Benjamin Givan
An in-depth analysis of the music and life of a gypsy music legend. Read more . . .

Resources

Sample Music

IllSeeYouInMyDreams

I'll See You In My Dreams

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "I'll See You In My Dreams," recorded on June 30, 1939. One of Reinhardt's most famous recordings, this three-minute version of Isham Jones's 1924 theme spotlights the guitarist throughout in an effortlessly inventive performance.

Paramount Stomp

Paramount Stomp

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Paramount Stomp," recorded on December 7, 1937. On a disc that also featured violinists Stéphane Grappelli and Michel Warlop, Reinhardt plays a solo notable for its long-range melodic descents.

Festival Swing

Festival Swing

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Festival Swing," recorded on December 26, 1940. Recorded the day after France celebrated its first Christmas under wartime Nazi occupation, "Fesitval Swing" is performed by an all-star big-band featuring the best French jazz musicians of the day, with spoken introductions by the critic Charles Delaunay.

Djangos Tiger

Django's Tiger

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Django's Tiger," recorded on January 31, 1946. An exuberant postwar improvisation based on the harmonies of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band's "Tiger Rag".

Embraceable You

Embraceable You

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Embraceable You," recorded on January 31, 1946. A spirited uptempo rendition of George Gershwin's classic song.

Coquette

Coquette

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Coquette," recorded on January 31, 1946. A sparkling midtempo solo from the postwar record session that reunited Reinhardt with his former musical colleague Stéphane Grappelli for the first time since 1939.

I Can't Give You Anything But Love

I Can't Give You Anything But Love

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "I Can't Give You Anything But Love," recorded on May 4, 1936. A leisurely version of the classic 1928 Jimmy McHugh song.

Charleston

Charleston

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Charleston," recorded on April 21, 1937. A rousing performance of James P. Johnson's most famous composition.

Solitude

Solitude

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Solitude," recorded on April 21, 1937. A stately rendering of a ballad by Duke Ellington.

A Little Love, A Little Kiss

A Little Love, A Little Kiss

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "A Little Love, A Little Kiss," recorded on April 6, 1937. An unaccompanied presentation of the song's verse, likely inspired by Eddie Lang's 1927 solo recording of the same theme.

The Sheik of Araby

The Sheik of Araby

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "The Sheik of Araby," recorded on April 27, 1937. A driving improvisation illustrating Reinhardt's technical facility in the guitar's lower register.

Saint Louis Blues

Saint Louis Blues

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Saint Louis Blues," recorded on September 9, 1937. During the habanera section of this familiar 1914 composition, Reinhardt characteristically interpolates ornamental melodic passages between each phrase of W.C. Handy's theme.

Honeysuckle Rose

Honeysuckle Rose

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Honeysuckle Rose," recorded on January 31, 1938. A romping performance of Fats Waller's famous song, recorded during an interwar tour of Britain.

Love's Melody

Love's Melody

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Love's Melody," recorded on February 1, 1946. A graceful rhapsodic improvisation on an original theme.

HCQ Strut

H.C.Q. Strut

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "H.C.Q. Strut," recorded on August 25, 1939. Recorded at the peak of Reinhardt's career, only days before the outbreak of World War II.

Miss Columbia

Miss Columbia

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Miss Columbia," recorded in September or October 1928. One of Reinhardt's earliest recordings finds him playing the banjo-guitar in a musette ensemble only weeks before he was severely injured in a caravan fire.

Solid Old Man

Solid Old Man

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Solid Old Man," recorded on April 5, 1939. Recorded with members of the Duke Ellington Orchestra, this slow blues was the subject of one of the earliest published analyses of Reinhardt's playing, by the French composer and critic André Hodeir.

Blues for Ike

Blues for Ike

Django Reinhardt's guitar solo on "Blues for Ike," recorded on March 10, 1953. Only two months before his death at the age of forty-three, this medium-tempo blues finds Reinhardt playing the electric guitar in the company of several other leading French postwar jazz musicians.

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Fall 2009

An Angle of Vision
Women Writers on Their Poor and Working-Class Roots

by Lorraine M. López
Uncommon perspectives by prominent women writers on class, money, family, and home. Read more . . .

Resources

Photos

Lorraine Lopez=

Lorraine López
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Barack Obama's America
How New Conceptions of Race, Family, and Religion Ended the Reagan Era

by John Kenneth White
Research and reflections on the American demographic shift that led to the election of President Barack Obama. Read more . . .

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Photos

John White=

John Kenneth White
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A Critic's Journey

by Ilan Stavans
One of the leading voices in Latino literature writes about his life and work. Read more . . .

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Photos

Ilan Stavans=

Ilan Stavans
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First Loves and Other Adventures

by Grace Schulman
Award-winning poet explores the exhilaration of reading. Read more . . .

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Photos

Grace Schulman=

Grace Schulman
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Good for the Jews

by Debra Spark
A funny, sexy novel about Jewish families in the Midwest. Read more . . .

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Photos

Debra Spark=

Debra Spark
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Isadore's Secret
Sin, Murder, and Confession in a Northern Michigan Town

by Mardi Link
A gripping account of the mysterious disappearance of a young nun in a northern Michigan town and the national controversy that followed when she turned up dead and buried in the basement of her own convent. Read more . . .

Resources

Photos

photo 1=

Holy Rosary Church, 1883. (Courtesy Traverse Area Historical Society.)
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photo 2=

Sexton Jacob Flees, Father Andrew (second from left), and two unidentified local men show off the spoils of a winter hunt. Circa 1910. (Collection of Jack Sweeney.)
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photo 3=

The only known photograph of Sister Mary Jamina. (Courtesy University of Notre Dame Archives.)
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photo 4=

Aerial view of Isadore, circa 1975. (Courtesy Traverse Area Historical Society.)
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photo 5=

Postcard featuring Stella Lipczynska, inside the Leelanau County Jail, Leland, MI, circa 1919. (Collection of Dave Tinder.)
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photo 6=

Grand Rapids Press coverage. (Courtesy Traverse Area Historical Society.)
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Mardi Link=

Mardi Link, Photo credit Pete Morton
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Mardi Link=

Mardi Link, Photo credit Grand Traverse Insider
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Look at Me!
The Fame Motive from Childhood to Death

by Orville Gilbert Brim
A unique study of the desire for fame, its origins, and its consequences from one of the leading scholars in the field of human and child development. Read more . . .

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Photos

Orville Gilbert Brim=

Orville Gilbert Brim
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Poetics of Dislocation

by Meena Alexander
A prominent poet brings the experience of the world to her struggles to find her place in America, and explores what the many cultures in this country mean for poets practicing their craft. Read more . . .

Resources
Photos

Meena Alexander=

Meena Alexander, Photo credit Marion Ettlinger
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Fall 2009

The Accidental Teacher
Life Lessons from my Silent Son

by Annie Lubliner Lehmann
A mother's honest, unvarnished, and touching memoir about the life lessons she learned from a son with autism. Read more . . .

Resources
Photos

Annie Lehmann=

Annie Lubliner Lehmann with Jonah
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Annie Lehmann=

Annie Lubliner Lehmann
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The Echoes of L'Arbre Croche

by Donald A. Johnston
Mystery, intrigue, romance, and history in a novel set on the Great Lakes. Read more . . .

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Grand River and Joy

by Susan Messer
A novel that puts the reader right in the heart of the 1967 Detroit race riots. Read more . . .

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Photos

Susan Messer=

Susan Messer, Photo credit Cindy Trim
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Incidents in an Educational Life
A Memoir (of Sorts)

by John M. Swales
Incidents in an Educational Life offers a rare glimpse into the professional journey of a prominent scholar and educator. Read more . . .

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Photos

John Swales=

John Swales, Photo credit University of Michigan, 1986
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M Is for Michigan Football
Celebrating the Tradition of Michigan Football

by Greg Nelson
M Is for Michigan Football explores 26 of the many traditions and highlights of the University of Michigan football program, the winningest in all of college football. Read more . . .

Resources

Photos

Bo 1st Rose Bowl win 1981=

Bo Schembechler, Photo credit Joseph Arcure (B is for Bo)
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Desmond Heisman pose

Desmond Howard's Heisman pose, Photo courtesy of Bentley Historical Library (H is for Heisman)
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Fist and Helmet

Fist and Helmet, Photo credit Joseph Arcure (W is for Winged helmet)
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The Big House=

Michigan Stadium, Photo courtesy of Bentley Historical Library (A is for Ann Arbor)
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Desmond Heisman pose

UM-MSU lined up over the ball, Photo courtesy of Bentley Historical Library (P is for the Paul Bunyan Trophy)
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Spring 2009

Bath Massacre
America's First School Bombing

by Arnie Bernstein
A gripping account of America's first—and largest—school mass murder. Read more . . .

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Photos

Author photo 1=

Arnie Bernstein, photo credit Elizabeth Sattelberger
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Bernstein Fig 1

Couzens Memorial Park, photo by author
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Bernstein Fig 2

Andrew and Nellie Kehoe, photo courtesy Bath School Museum
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Bernstein Fig 3

Bath Consolidated School, photo courtesy Bath School Museum
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Bernstein Fig 5

Hazel Weatherby, photo courtesy Bath School Museum
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Bernstein Fig 6

Ruins of the north wing, photo courtesy Bath School Museum
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Bernstein Fig 8

The remains of Kehoe's truck, photo courtesy Bath School Museum
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Bernstein Fig 10

Loading an ambulance in the shadow of destruction, photo courtesy Bath School Museum
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Bernstein Fig 12

Michigan State Police officers holding some of the dynamite planted by Kehoe, photo courtesy Bath School Museum
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Bernstein Fig 16

Pauline Johns, age eleven, photo courtesy Bath School Museum
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Bernstein Fig 18

Women and children removing nails from salvaged beams of the damaged building
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Bernstein Fig 19

Remnants of the Kehoe farm stood for several generations, photo courtesy Bath School Museum
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Deckhand
Life on Freighters of the Great Lakes

by Nelson "Mickey" Haydamacker with Alan D. Millar
The colorful tale of a deckhand's life on Great Lakes ore-boats. Read more . . .

Resources

Photos

photo 1=

The SS J. L. Mauthe and SS Charles M. Schwab during fit out, Ashtabula, spring 1963
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photo 2

Second Mate Dan Colman on a jury-rigged scaffold painting the stack of the SS Colonel James Pickands, 1963
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photo 3

Mickey covered with coal dust after a hard night on SS Samuel Mather, Thanksgiving Eve 1962
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photo 4

Taking a wave over the starboard side of the SS Samuel Mather in rough seas on Lake Superior
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photo 5

Watchman Henry Speiler and deckwatch Wesley Perkins hosing ice off the deck with steaming water on the SS Samuel Mather, Thanksgiving Day, 1962
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photo 6

Susent over the stern of the SS Elton Hoyt 2nd, 1962
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Ellington Uptown
Duke Ellington, James P. Johnson, and the Birth of Concert Jazz

by John Howland
Explores a little-discussed yet truly hybrid American musical tradition lost between the canons of authentic jazz and classical music. Read more . . .

Resources

Sample Music

Author John Howland has selected a series of musical compositions especially for this site, that he feels help to identify some important trends in Duke Ellington and James P. Johnson's music. Read the descriptions below and click the links to hear a clip of each song, including one exclusive never-released clip from the Johnson estate.

Black, Brown and Beige

Black

Duke Ellington, "Black" from Black, Brown & Beige, performed live at Carnegie Hall, January 23, 1943
NOTE: Duke Ellington's 45-minute, three-movement concert work, Black, Brown and Beige, which is subtitled A Tone Parallel to the History of the Negro in America, was premiered at his orchestra's Carnegie Hall debut and represents Ellington's most ambitious effort at combining his interest in symphonic-length composition and subtle social commentary on both American race relations and the art of African American popular music.

New World a Comin'

New World a Comin'

Duke Ellington, "New World a Comin'," performed live at Carnegie Hall, December 11, 1943
NOTE: As the central extended composition at Ellington's second annual Carnegie Hall concert, the 1943 quasi-piano concerto New World a Comin' both promoted his lifelong social hopes for racial equality and represented his most self-consciously rhapsodic piano composition.

A Tone Parallel to Harlem

A Tone Parallel to Harlem

Duke Ellington, A Tone Parallel to Harlem (Harlem Suite), from the 1951 album Ellington Uptown
NOTE: While Duke Ellington's 1951 big band composition A Tone Parallel to Harlem was designed as a musical travelogue of the composer's beloved Harlem community, the subsequent big-band-plus-symphony orchestration (by Luther Henderson) of this masterful 14-minute composition also became Ellington's most widely performed "symphonic" work.

Yamekraw: A Negro Rhapsody

Yamekraw: A Negro Rhapsody

James P. Johnson, Yamekraw: A Negro Rhapsody, performed by Marcus Roberts (piano) with orchestra
NOTE: As the first major black concert jazz composition, and as a work that was notably composed by the father of Harlem stride piano, James P. Johnson's 1927 Yamekraw: A Negro Rhapsody opens a valuable window on the vibrant legacy of the 1920s symphonic jazz idiom as it existed beyond the George Gershwin and Paul Whiteman circle.

Jazzamine Concerto

Jazzamine Concerto

James P. Johnson, Jazzamine Concerto, recorded by James P. Johnson as a piano solo in 1945
NOTE: James P. Johnson's 1945 solo piano recording of his 1934 piano-and-orchestra Jazzamine Concerto (a.k.a. Concerto Jazz a Mine) ideally illustrates his personal vision for translating the Harlem stride piano idiom to the compositional ideals of the concert hall.

In a Baptist Mission

In a Baptist Mission

Movement IV, "In a Baptist Mission," from James P. Johnson's Harlem Symphony, premiere performance by the Brooklyn Civic Orchestra, Dr. Paul Kosok, conductor, March 11, 1939, broadcast over WYNC, New York. Property of the James P. Johnson Estate and the James P. Johnson Foundation, Riverside, CA.
NOTE: This rare transcription recording captures the vibrant premiere performance of the Harlem Symphony, James P. Johnson's rich musical travelogue of the Harlem community and his most-performed concert work.

Photos

Howland Photo=

James P. Johnson outside his Harlem home in the late 1920s. Courtesy of the Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University Libraries.
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Howland Photo=2

A 1940s publicity photo of James P. Johnson. Courtesy of the Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University Libraries.
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Howland Photo=3

A 1933 publicity photo of Ellington made before his orchestra's tour of England. This is one of the best-known images of Ellington, and it reflects the Cotton Club famous tag line, "The Aristocrat of Harlem." Courtesy of the Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University Libraries.
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howland Photo=4

A composerly publicity photo of Duke Ellington from the 1930s. Courtesy of the Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University Libraries.
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Howland Photo=6

Duke Ellington and His Orchestra, 1930. Courtesy of the Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University Libraries.
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Howland Photo=9

A 1935 Brunswick Records advertisement for the release of Duke Ellington's Reminiscing in Tempo. Courtesy of the Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University Libraries.
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Howland Photo=8a

From the concert program to the "First Concert of Symphonic Works by James P. Johnson," Heckscher Theatre, New York City, March 8, 1942. Courtesy of the James P. Johnson Foundation.
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Howland Photo=8b

From the concert program to the "First Concert of Symphonic Works by James P. Johnson," Heckscher Theatre, New York City, March 8, 1942. Courtesy of the James P. Johnson Foundation.
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A Good Quarrel
America's Top Legal Reporters Share Stories from Inside the Supreme Court

edited by Timothy R. Johnson and Jerry Goldman
The country's top legal reporters comment on and analyze some of the most important oral arguments in recent court history. Read more . . .

Resources

While reading what top legal reporters say about some of the most important U.S. Supreme Court oral arguments in recent history, go to www.goodquarrel.com to listen to audio and hear for yourself the very style and delivery of the oral arguments that have shaped the history of our nation's highest law.
Here are some suggestions from the authors:

Photos

Author photo 1=

Timothy R. Johnson, Photo credit Dan Marshall
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Author photo 2

Jerry Goldman, Photo credit Andrew Gruen
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Author photo 3

Jerry Goldman, Photo credit Jason Wagner
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Guns, Democracy, and the Insurrectionist Idea

by Joshua Horwitz and Casey Anderson
Does the gun lobby threaten the democratic institutions safeguarding individual liberty in America? Read more . . .

Resources

Photos

Casey Anderson=

Casey Anderson
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Joshua Horwitz=

Joshua Horwitz
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Highbrow/Lowdown
Theater, Jazz, and the Making of the New Middle Class

by David Savran
The culture clash that permanently changed American theater. Read more . . .

Resources

Sample Music

Author David Savran has selected a series of musical compositions especially for this site, that he feels help to identify some important trends discussed in the book. Read the descriptions below and click the links to hear a clip of each song.

Fascinating Rhythm

Fascinating Rhythm

Fred Astaire, "Fascinating Rhythm" from At the Movies
NOTE: The big hit from Lady, Be Good!, the Gershwins' first Broadway smash, "Fascinating Rhythm."

Crazy Rhythm'

Crazy Rhythm

Caroll Gibbons & The New Mayfair Dance Orchestra, "Crazy Rhythm" from The Charleston
NOTE: "Crazy Rhythm," the 1928 song by Roger Wolfe Kahn and Irving Caesar that explains what happens when a highbrow meets a lowbrow.

Sweet And Low-down

Sweet And Low-down

Various Artists - AVID Entertainment, "Sweet And Low-down", from George Gershwin - A Celebration: Fascinating Rhythm
NOTE: The big hit from Tip-Toes, the Gershwins' 1925 hit, "Sweet And Low-down."

When Do We Dance

When Do We Dance?

Various Artists - AVID Entertainment, "When Do We Dance?", from George Gershwin - A Celebration: Fascinating Rhythm
NOTE: "When Do We Dance?" from Tip-Toes.

These Charming People

These Charming People

Various Artists - AVID Entertainment, "These Charming People", from George Gershwin - A Celebration: Fascinating Rhythm
NOTE: "These Charming People" from Tip-Toes.

Concerto in F

Concerto in F

Michael Tilson Thomas; Garrick Ohlsson, "Concerto in F for Piano and Orchestra/Allegro," from Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue; Concerto in F; An American in Paris: Classic Library Series
NOTE: George Gershwin's Concerto in F, the work that proved that he could write serious concert music.

Ballet

Ballet Pour instruments Mecanique et Percussion, Roll One

The New Palais Royale Orchestra & Percussion Ensemble, Maurice Peress, "Ballet Pour Instruments Mecanique et Percussion, Roll One," from The Original Ballet Mechanique - George Antheil's Carnegie Hall Concert of 1927
NOTE: George Antheil's Ballet mecanique, the most scandalous and revolutionary piece of music of the 1920s.

Im Just Wild About Harry

I'm Just Wild About Harry

Vaughn De Leath, "I'm Just Wild About Harry," from Ukulele Lady
NOTE: "I'm Just Wild About Harry," by Eubie Blake and Noble Sissle, the big hit of Shuffle Along.

Rhapsody in Blue

Rhapsody in Blue

Michael Tilson Thomas, "Rhapsody in Blue," from Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue; Concerto in F; An American in Paris: Classic Library Series
NOTE: George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue (1924), the piece that changed American music forever.

Photos

author photo 1=

David Savran, photo credit The Graduate Center at CUNY
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author photo 2

David Savran, photo credit The Graduate Center at CUNY
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Historic photos may be available for use upon request. E-mail Heather Newman for details at: newmanh@umich.edu

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No Boundaries
Transnational Latino Gangs and American Law Enforcement

by Tom Diaz
An alarming report on Latino crime gangs and the efforts of U.S. law enforcement to contain them. Read more . . .

Resources

Photos

Tom Diaz=

Tom Diaz
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To Shake Their Guns in the Tyrant's Face
Libertarian Political Violence and the Origins of the Militia Movement

by Robert H. Churchill
Did a long-standing and libertarian understanding of the American Revolution create the perfect climate for the militia movement in the United States? Read more . . .

Resources

Photos

Robert Churchill=

Robert Churchill, Photo credit University of Hartford
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Robert Churchill=

Robert Churchill, Photo credit University of Hartford
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William G. Milliken
Michigan's Passionate Moderate

by Dave Dempsey
The story of one of the Great Lake State's most fascinating political figures, the "gentleman governor" of Michigan. Read more . . .

Resources

Photos

Author photo 1=

Author 1, Photo credit Tracey Easthope
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Author photo 2

Author 2, Photo credit Tracey Easthope
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World War II Front Line Nurse

by Mildred A. MacGregor
The riveting personal account of a Michigan nurse's experiences in France, Germany, and Africa during the Second World War. Read more . . .

Resources

Photos

The author in her silver dress

The author in her silver lamé dress
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Formal portrait of the author

Formal portrait of the author
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The author with her dog Pepe

The author with her dog, Pépé
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Mildred MacGregor

Mildred MacGregor at the Yankee Air Museum, Photo credit Jim Tocco
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*Requires QuickTime Player. If you do not have QuickTime Player, you can download a free version at www.apple.com/downloads/.

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Fall 2008

Domino's Farms

by Bertie Bonnell
The fascinating story of the tenacity and talent that transformed a Michigan farmstead into America's most innovative office park. Read more . . .

Resources

Photos

Aerial Photo=

Aerial Photo of Domino's Farms, Photo credit Marc Akemann
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Buffalo

Buffalo at Domino's Farms, Photo credit Marc Akemann
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Kids

Construction at Domino's Farms, Photo credit John Forshee
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Kids

Kids at Domino's Farms, Photo credit Marc Akemann
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Kids

Photo credit Balthazaar Korab
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Kids

View of Domino's Farms, Photo credit Marc Akemann
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Kids

View of Domino's Farms, Photo credit Marc Akemann
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Kids

View of Domino's Farms, Photo credit Marc Akemann
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