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A third generation Auburn graduate, Lee Anne Brantley found her calling in social work and today leads a system change project for the District of Columbia.
Harold Franklin, Auburn's first African-American student, said it was made clear that he would not be allowed to earn his master's degree because of the color of his skin.
Leah Rawls Atkins, the first person to earn a history doctorate from Auburn University and the founding director of the Center for the Arts & Humanities, leaves a legacy in academics, service and athletics.
Assistant Professor of History Heidi Hausse explores how Western attitudes toward surgical and artisanal interventions in the body started transforming around 500 years ago.