worked with them eight years ago to commemorate the 90th anniversary of their magazine, and they wanted to do something with us again. "They will be traveling a paneled display version of the exhibit, and there's a very extensive Web site that will be coming up on our museum Web site, www.hfmgv.org ." Endelman explains that the technolo- gy exhibit is different from other exhibits on which she has worked because plan- ners did not start with materials already owned by the museum. After concepts had been decided, planners looked for any resource to obtain the necessary arti- facts to illustrate the ideas. "We actually got things off an on- line auction Web site," she says. "I've seen references to other museums doing the same thing, and I've talked to colleagues who are getting artifacts off the site. They're things that are hard to find at an antique shop. "We wanted to talk about medical developments and the commercializa- tion of penicillin, which was available to the public after World War II, for example, and we got a penicillin bot- tle from 1945 off the Web site." Jewish visitors will see a reference to ethnic music when they take note of the segment that features the Victrola. There's Yiddish sheet music from the Yiddish Book Center in Massachusetts. "The Victrola and availability of records did two things for people," Endelman says. "They introduced pop- ular culture and helped create a national culture, but they also helped people stay in touch with their homeland and their own culture. Italian Americans bought records of Caruso, and blacks bought recordings of the blues. Jews listened to various kinds of Jewish music." The exhibit is aimed at family audiences. "We want to encourage intergen- erational dialogue, sharing experi- ences and maybe understanding why parents or kids are the way they are," Endelman says. "We hope people will gather personal insight and see all the various factors that shape us as individuals." ❑ "Your Place in Time: 20th Century America" can be seen 9 a.m.-5 p.m. daily at Henry Ford Museum, where admission is $12.50 for adults, $11.50 for seniors 62 and over, $7.50 for children 5-12 and free to chil- dren under 5. (313) 271-1620. um Maven Judy Endelman oversees collections, curatorial staff and conservation at Henry Ford Museum 6' Greenfield Village. T he Baby Boomers segment of "Your Place in Time: 20th Century America" has the most per- sonal meaning for Judith Endelman, exhibit director and director of his- tatiCal resources at Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village. "There's a lot in the exhibit that reminds me of my past," says Endelman, 52, who has been with the museum for 13 years. "We have a section where people can listen to music as it sounded on an AM radio station, a long-playing stereo set and an eight-track tape player. Listening to the Aivl. radio going from station to station and listening to "Sgt. Pepper" on the stereo certainly reminds Inc of being a teenager. "We also have a pretty long sec- don of representations of television programs from the '50s, '60s and '70s, and that reflects most all of my life, from Howdy Doody, which I vaguely remember watching, to All in the Family, so that's all very powerful. "A classroom is set up for people to understand the kinds of drills that were done during the fear of the atom bobbin the mid-'50s, and I certainly have memories of that as well." Endelman, who grew up in north- ern California, lived in Berkeley and the Bay Area during the turbulent ::„,, of student activism and appre- 0):#0 how the exhibit recalls the .Tent of technology during 'fniies. She participated in the anti -war marches that ed that era and were broadcast e world to see. went to two different campuses University of California and degree in anthropology from " Endelrnan recalls. 'That in the '60s, when people went to college because they wanted to become enlightened. I really didn't think of career possibilities. "My husband, Todd, who teaches modern Jewish history at the University of Michigan, also is from California, and after we graduated from college and got married, we lived in Israel for a year. While we were in Israel, Todd said he wanted started by the Jewish Federation of Indianapolis and was published by the Indiana University Press. I also did a guide to studying religion in Indiana and learned a lot about Protestant denominations and Catholicism_ "When Todd was approached by the University of Michigan, we moved to Ann Arbor because we thought there would be more opportunities for me, and we've been here ever since." During her first year in Michigan, Endelman had a fellow- ship at the Bentley Historical Library at the university. At the suggestion of a friend, she applied at the Henry Ford Museum and worked her way up from positions of responsibility for text and print to oversight of collections, curatori- al staff and conservation. Other Henry Ford Museum exhibits developed under her direc- tion include "Americans on Vacation" and the Heinz House. Her area of expertise in 20th-centu- ry American history is immigrant and ethnic communities, the focus of her master's thesis and projects in Indiana. "I didn't set out to work in muse- ums, but when I think about what I like to do and what I've always enjoyed, it feels like it was my path — even though it wasn't a deliberate path," says Endelman. She is a mem- Judy Endelman ber of the American Association of Museums, Society of American Archivists and the Midwest Archives After earning a degree in Conference. American studies, Endelman moved The Endelmans, active with Beth to New York with her husband, who Israel Congregation in Ann Arbor, are got a job at Yeshiva University. She empty nesters. Son Michael, 23, is a became an archivist at the Jewish freelance writer in Boston. Daughter Theological Seminary and also ran a Flora is a freshman at Emory freelance research business, which University in Atlanta. Both children included Jewish genealogical studies. spent a year in Israel with Young "Being Californians, we found it Judaea. a little hard to adapt to life without "My kids went to the Hebrew a car, and we moved to Indiana, Day School [of Ann Arbor], and where my husband was offered a when they were students there, I was job," Endelman recalls. "I ended active there," Endelman says. "I'm a up writing a history of the Jewish big supporter of Jewish community community of Indianapolis, which activities." 1-1 was commissioned by the Indiana — Suzanne Chessler Historical Society. The project was to get a doctorate in history, and I decided to go to library school. "We moved to Boston, and I went to Simmons College while he was at Harvard. 'After I graduated, I started look- ing around for jobs and stumbled upon the American Jewish Historical Society. That job was very important because it helped me understand that I really wasn't interested in conven- tional library work but was very inter- ested in research and developing col- lections that were subject focused." .0.1:xW FM A5MA5:".g. ';ir,:if ,M3,1,0:: :W a.K r,> .fi?W:0" "1. 4"O P V"..aiSA VVz 1999 71