On more serious topics, student reporters met with divisive figures like Hubbard, attended discussions with two Watergate defendants who came to campus in the early 1980s and covered protest efforts around a Michigan House of Representatives bill to separate the Dearborn campus from the University of Michigan in 1970.
The digitization project has been in the works since mid-2024 and is scheduled to be available to the public by December, Zmuda says. The project will be featured at the , which will take place on April 4 at 蹤獲扦-Dearborn. It is a free event and the public is welcome. Interested? .
Zmuda, whose three-year 蹤獲扦-Dearborn archiving appointment was made possible by a separate grant from the IHP, says shes organizing the universitys archive which is on the first floor of the Mardigian Library and found several iterations of the campus paper, which started publication in 1963. It was called The Dearborn Wolverine in the early 1960s and then Ad Hoc from 1965 until it was renamed as the Michigan Journal in 1971. The is still in publication.
Zmuda also found student papers in the archive that offered points of view or events that were not covered in the universitys flagship paper, such as The Black Emblem. Published in 1975, it provided more extensive coverage of marginalized groups like disabled veterans and people of color and more highlighted faculty work that promoted equity.
Zmuda says university newspapers give insight into the student voice that other materials, such as annual reports or Board of Regents meeting notes, cannot. Those are important too, but newspapers were published so regularly and they were intended to be ephemeral and fleeting that you end up getting a lot more of a holistic look at a place and time, she says. Looking at the Michigan Journal, its the most complete and granular documentation of campus life that we have. I look at the Michigan Journal as being one of the few times that we have student voices in the archives in a really consistent, strong and expansive way.
The IHP grant is also supporting digitization of , the student creative arts journal that launched in 1971 and is still published today.
Senior Associate Librarian Holly Sorscher says the library is thrilled to be working on this project. More than a decade ago, before Sorscher worked at 蹤獲扦-Dearborn, the Journal was digitized through the HathiTrust Digital Library, a large-scale digital repository that is co-owned and co-managed by research libraries around the world and administered by U-M. But after the Michigan Journal digitization was complete, library staff learned that access to the papers would be limited. HathiTrusts materials, which were scanned in by Google through an agreement during the digital librarys early years, fell under copyright restrictions set by Google.
It has become apparent after many, many iterations of trying to figure this out, that all of those items that are digitized in HathiTrust were not available to the public and, if you did get access, its not searchable by phrase or context, says Sorscher, who notes that the 蹤獲扦-Dearborn team has worked extensively with the University of Michigan Library Copyright Office on the current project. We realized that the only way we're going to get campus history from the Michigan Journal out there is if we re-digitize the entire thing and put it somewhere where it's accessible. We needed money to be able to do that. Through this Inclusive History Project grant, we were able to get money to hire Hannah for a three-year term. And then, through IHP, we were able to get money to digitize again.