Current Issue - UNC Chapel Hill Libraries

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Volume 22, number 3 • Fall 2015
U N I V E R S I T Y
L I B R A R Y
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
ON THE COVER:
Kenan Science CALA
Colin Nickles and
Head of Kenan Science
Information Services
Danianne Mizzy
create a 3D model
of the Old Well.
Dear Friends:
Dear Friends,
Libraries have long provided instruction and guidance to students
who are learning how to do research. But when we crafted a new
strategic plan two years ago, we knew we had more to offer.
Alongside our historic commitment to research and service,
we set out to develop transformative teaching and learning
experiences and to engage in all aspects of the educational
curriculum. In this issue of Windows, you will learn about some
of the ways that this vision takes shape.
Our cover story examines an exemplary collaboration that actually predates our plan by
more than a decade. This is the Carolina Academic Library Associates (CALA) program
that the Library runs in partnership with the School of Information and Library Science
(SILS). For 15 years, it has been developing the next generation of academic librarians.
Windows is published by
the Friends of the Library
under the auspices of
the University Library,
UNC-Chapel Hill. Send
questions and comments
to P.O. Box 8890, Davis
Library CB# 3900, Chapel
Hill, NC 27515-8890 or
call (919) 843-5660.
While pursuing their master’s degrees, CALAs work half-time in the Library under the
guidance of experienced mentors. They receive a generous financial package and have
access to coaching and professional development opportunities. Many CALAs have gone
on to outstanding careers—some, right here at Carolina.
This issue also highlights the Library’s Research Hub, which is enabling transformative
teaching and learning experiences, as well as generous gifts including the late Hal Kemp’s
instruments and concert recordings from McCabe’s Guitar Shop.
Editor
Catherine House
Editorial Board
John Blythe
Rachel Canada
Peggy Myers
Judith Panitch
Photographs
Aleah Howell
When we encounter the bright, ambitious, motivated students who come to our libraries,
it inspires us to do our very best for them. Thank you to each of you for being part of
our success and theirs.
Sincerely,
Design
Alison Duncan
Thanks to
Tanya Fortner
Liza Terll
Margaretta Yarborough
Sarah C. Michalak
University Librarian and Associate Provost for University Libraries
2
Fresh
faces
bring new perspectives to the
Southern Historical Collection
Bryan Giemza
Before his role as director of the
Southern Historical Collection (SHC),
Bryan Giemza was a tenured associate
professor of American Literature at
Randolph-Macon College doing what
professors do: writing and editing books,
teaching and influencing his students’ lives.
At the SHC, he’s still making a difference in students’ lives, only from a different angle. While he continues to write and
teach, Giemza said, “My sense of what a
classroom might be has changed. There’s a
much broader range
of constituents to
serve as we try to
reach beyond the
podium.” For example, Giemza explains
that a classroom can
take many forms such
as a community-driven exhibit or an
outreach event. “Having this new canvas
is why I love my new role,” he said.
Though Giemza is fairly new to his
position in the SHC, the SHC is certainly
not new to him. Throughout his studies as
a literary scholar, the collection has been a
central part of his work. “I’ve benefited
immensely from its resources as a
researcher, and my career has been shaped
by its centrality in the understanding of
American and regional culture,” he said.
“I’ve been inspired by, and benefited
from, the organizations, publications and
partners that have grown out of the collection.” He lists the Southern Oral History
Project, the journal Southern Cultures and
the Center for the Study of the American
South among them.
Giemza is delighted to be at the hub
where all these things come together, and,
as head of the SHC, he enjoys work that
is tremendously varied. A typical day for
Giemza might include traveling backroads
to rummage through an attic collection,
meeting with donors and colleagues
about preservation needs and preparing
a presentation on archiving.
Besides managing day-to-day tasks,
Giemza and the rest of the SHC staff have
been working on a long-term strategic
plan for building and preserving the
collection. “Planning allows us to do more
than react,” Giemza said. “It offers us a
chance to set the agenda and dream
toward our highest aspirations.”
For Giemza one of the best things
to come out of the planning process was
learning the individual abilities of the team
so each could plug into work according to
his/her strengths. With a strategic plan,
they are able to pre-think projects, assign
tasks and gauge progress and success.
In recent years, the SHC has been
working to build its collection of African
American materials to help tell the story of
the African American southern experience.
The SHC plans to focus on the South’s
Latino communities as well. “As we look
at southern history through a migration
framework, we’d like to hire a dedicated
archivist to grow the Latino Collections,”
Giemza said.
Growing, preserving and neverending sums up what library work is
all about. And that’s okay with Giemza.
“It seems to me that the best stories
don’t end, that the best work always
yields results beyond a lifetime,” he said.
“Working in an archive honors the long
view in every sense.”
Chaitra Powell
It’s been about a year since Chaitra
Powell joined the Southern Historical
Collection (SHC) as the African American
Collections and Outreach Archivist. While
33
her main role is to
cultivate relationships
with donors and collect African American
materials for the
SHC, she also works
in the archives—
appraising, writing
descriptions, processing, digitizing and
preserving materials, and curating exhibits.
On Wednesdays, she can be found at the
SHC’s reference desk fielding research
questions from graduate students.
Having a dedicated position to take
on this integral part of the South’s history
shows the SHC’s
commitment to
telling the story of
the African
American southern experience. “When
someone has a project idea or a research
question about African American materials,
it doesn't go into a pile of competing
responsibilities,” Powell said. “It can come
to my desk and potentially become part
of a bigger collecting agenda or research
network.”
Powell, who has a master’s degree in
library science, comes to the SHC from
the Los Angeles area where she worked
as an archival consultant for the Mayme
A. Clayton Library and Museum. There
she gained experience in processing
manuscript materials, curating exhibits
and coordinating public programs.
Those opportunities combined with
her interest in African American history
make Powell’s position in the SHC a great
fit— for her and the SHC. “One of my
first mentors in the archives told me the
best archivists are passionate about the
subjects of their collections,” Powell said.
“I love that my position has a focus on
African American history and culture.”
Powell leads the African American
Family Documentation Initiative, which
aims to collect the homegrown records
of the everyday lives of African Americans
in the South. As Powell works to collect
materials from African American families
to include in the SHC’s growing collection,
she’s also helping family historians maintain
the records they have in their care.
“My experience has shown me that
family archives are sacred in many African
American families,” Powell said. “And
we have a professional obligation to keep
communities informed of their options.
We hope to develop a family historian
toolkit within the next year that we can
add to the scope of the initiative.”
Other outreach projects Powell heads
up include the Historic Black Towns and
Settlements Alliance and partnerships
with North Carolina’s Historically Black
Colleges and Universities.
As a collection of all things southern,
the SHC is thankful to have Powell on
board to help collect these vital pieces
of the South’s history. “The position of
African Americans in the American South
has been complex since its inception and
continues to be discussed today in so many
contexts,” Powell said. “I am thrilled to
identify and secure the types of collections
that will provide the evidence to enhance
this dialogue for future generations.”
—compiled by Catherine House
Teague appointed associate director of library development
Dwain Teague began his appointment
as associate director for library
development on January 2. Reporting
to Peggy Myers, director of library
development, Teague is responsible for
developing and implementing strategies
to secure major
gifts to support the
mission and priorities
of the UNC-Chapel
Hill library system.
Teague has
served as a major
gift fundraiser for
the past 17 years
and previously oversaw the development
efforts for UNC’s School of Information
and Library Science. Prior to his time
at UNC, Teague worked as a fundraiser
for university libraries at the University
of Central Florida, North Carolina State
University and East Carolina University.
Before launching his career in development work, he held several library
positions at East Carolina University.
Besides reaching out to potential
donors, Teague enjoys teaching librarians
and library leaders the basics of library
fundraising and donor engagement.
He recently co-hosted a Fundraising for
Libraries Bootcamp at Rutgers University;
authored a book chapter entitled
“Discovery Calls: Expanding Your Donor
Base and Donor Pipeline for Future
Library Support” (Successful Library
Fundraising Best Practices, M. Sandra
Wood, editor); and co-authored an
article for Technical Services Quarterly
entitled “Reconnect with Your Alumni
and Connect to Donors.”
Other professional contributions have
included membership on the Conference
4
Planning Committee for the Academic
Library Advancement Development
Network (ALADN); service as a
Conference Session Host for the
Council for Advancement and Support
of Education (CASE) District III; and
serving as a fundraising mentor for
ALADN, CASE and the Triangle Chapter
of the Association of Fundraising
Professionals (AFP). He is currently
chair-elect for the American Library
Association’s Library Leadership and
Management Association (LLAMA)
committee for Fund Raising and
Financial Development.
Teague earned his master’s in
English (technical and professional
communication) and a bachelor’s in
communication from East Carolina
University.
On-the-job training program
gives library science
graduates an
by Catherine House
It’s no secret that UNC’s School of Information and Library Science (SILS) is
among the top library and information schools in the country. Stellar faculty, cutting-edge
research and an ideal location all contribute to SILS’s success. But SILS also has something
that sets it apart from other library science schools — the Carolina Academic
Library Associates program, also known as CALA.
This coveted program, which attracts
applicants from across the nation, provides
full tuition, health insurance, professional
development opportunities, mentoring and
work assignments within the University
Library. Since its beginning in fall
2000, the University Library
has funded the program,
which accepts
approximately
eight students
each fall.
Wilson Technical
Services CALA
Amelia Holmes (left)
and Head of Archival
Processing Jackie
Dean review a group
of photographs.
5
SILS Dean Gary Marchionini
compares the program to medical school.
“Associates get internships and on-thejob training throughout their entire
educational experience,” Marchionini
said. “As a professional school, SILS
is always looking for ways to engage
students in practical experiences.”
Associates work 20 hours per week
for the University Library system in
departmental libraries, technical services,
special collections or the library systems
department. The librarians in each
area serve as mentors and treat CALA
associates, who do real work in a library
setting, as colleagues. As SILS’s degree
program is two years (most are one or
1½ years), associates enter the job force
with two solid years of work experience.
Abigail Flanigan, a second-year
CALA student who works in the Library’s
Preservation Department, for example,
has gained experience in all three of
feel like a part of my department and
the department’s areas: conservation,
of the University Library,” Flanigan
preservation services and digital producsaid. “Because I attend staff meetings,
tion. In the latter, she’s digitized materials
departmental meetings and have served
ranging from Nobel Prize Winner Oliver
on University Library committees, I now
Smithies’s laboratory notebooks to a letter
have a network of librarians to reach out
from Langston
Hughes. Flanigan has
also helped research
supplies and equipment for preservation
Recently, Barbara Moran, former dean of SILS and
needs and investigatco-creator of the CALA program, asked CALA alumni
ed procedures for
to
share their thoughts on and experiences with the
opening up access to
CALA
program. Here’s what they had to say:
out-of-print and brittle books in UNC’s
digital libraries.
“I can say unequivocally that the reason I have been
“Spending two
able to move up in librarianship, be a mentor and make
years in the same
the connections I have is because of the training that
CALA provided me.” — Sojourna J. Cunningham (MLS ’10)
academic library
department has
“Going to UNC and participating in the CALA program
allowed me to truly
was the best decision I could have made.”
Because of CALA…
— Amanda McDonald (MLIS ’04)
“There is a reason SILS maintains very high ratings in
U.S. News & World Report. CALA is a huge part of that.”
— Sarah Falls (MSLS ’05)
“By providing a meaningful part-time job, internships
and professional development, I had a two year head
start over my peers at graduation.” — Billy Cook (MSLS ’12)
Music Library CALA
David Tenenholtz
and Music Librarian
Diane Steinhouse
compare an LP with
a musical score.
6
to if I have questions about something
outside of my domain. I’ve also gotten
a better understanding of what it takes
for an academic library to function on
a daily basis.”
In addition to their work hours,
CALAs participate in monthly career
strategy workshops, attend professional
development seminars and meet regularly
with their supervisors to discuss progress
on projects, explain library operations and
contextualize managerial decisions. “This
support at both the programmatic and
individual level has helped me to feel
prepared to enter the workforce as an
academic librarian,” Flanigan said.
Flanigan, who can’t praise the CALA
program enough, said she almost didn’t
come to UNC. She had originally
planned to stay in the Midwest, but when
she found out she got in the program, she
said the decision was easy. “The program
offered everything I was looking
for —work experience, professional
development and financial support —
and it would bring me to North
Carolina,” she said.
Other CALA associates echo
Flanigan’s sentiments. Sarah Bankston, a
2012 CALA graduate and now a librarian
at Texas A&M, said, “The work portion
of the CALA program gave me tangible
skills that I could speak about in my
interviews and helped me develop habits
that I took into my professional life
after school.”
Likewise, Anna Sandelli, a 2014
CALA graduate and currently an assistant
professor and librarian at the University
of Tennessee, Knoxville, said that one of
the best parts of the CALA program was
that she got “a taste of what it was like to
be a library professional and feel like part
of a library team while still a student.”
Digital Research Services
CALA Natalia Lopez (left) and
Numeric Data Services and
Data Management Librarian
Michele Hayslett at the
Research Hub service desk.
7
And, of course, the students
aren’t the only ones to benefit from
the program. For SILS, it’s a major
recruitment tool that brings the best
and brightest students to UNC. “The
CALA program is key in recruiting some
of the very best talent,” Marchionini
said. “It’s a real incentive for students
to apply from all over the nation.”
Being able to lure the most talented
students is also good news for the
University Library, as the CALA program
provides a ready-made cohort of motivated employees. “Innovation and thoughtful ideas for enhancing and enriching our
programs is what we receive from the
CALAs,” said University Librarian Sarah
Michalak.
Post graduation, CALA associates
have gone on to fill positions in academic
libraries, including Keio University in
Tokyo, Duke, Johns Hopkins, Vanderbilt,
University of Virginia and the UNC
system, as well as in the information
industry at companies such as Elsevier
and Novelist. Even after they’ve left
SILS, associates continue to maintain ties
with the CALA program by providing
networking opportunities for current
associates and coming back to SILS each
year for an alumni panel in which they
answer questions about their experiences
in the library science field.
Flanigan definitely plans to keep
in touch after she graduates in May.
“Because the Library and SILS have
made an investment in my education and
professional development, I feel motived
to give back to the field of academic
librarianship through active involvement
at the school, library and national level,”
she said.
Supporting the CALA program
For 15 years, the CALA program has operated without the support
of an endowment. Some years that has meant fewer CALA
awards. To continue to support this valuable program, the Library
seeks to establish an endowment, which would guarantee and
even increase the amount of stipends, making the CALA program
a truly premier award. The Library welcomes contributions of any
amount and is offering the following named opportunities:
Named Carolina Academic Library Associate Program: $5 million
Individual Named Positions: $500,000
Career Development: $100,000
Program Support Fund: $50,000
Preservation Librarian
Andy Hart and Preservation
CALA Abigail Flanigan in
the preservation workroom.
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Innovation
Interaction
AND
AT THE
Research
Hubs
connect
scholars
across
campus,
around
the world
by Rachel Canada
Have you ever wanted to take a virtual trip to the Galapagos Islands?
Make a 3D prototype? Create an interactive map that can be shared?
Carolina students can do these projects and more, thanks to the recent
installation of the UNC Library Research Hub, which connects UNC scholars
with expertise, tools and training to propel research in new directions.
9
What is a Makerspace?
Makerspaces are places where people can gather
to create, invent and learn. Makerspaces provide
manufacturing equipment, such as 3D printers,
along with education and support in using the
equipment. Community members are able to
design, prototype and create manufactured works
that would not be possible to create with the
resources available to individuals working alone.
Makerspaces represent the democratization of
design, engineering, fabrication and education.
Bear prototype created with 3D printer.
•••••••••••••••••••
3D Printing
The Center for
Literacy & Disability
Studies (CLDS) focuses
largely on K-12 students
with multiple disabilities. A recently funded
project involves building communication
systems for blind students with significant
and multiple disabilities. Researchers
built a system of tactile symbols to convey
different elements such as color, texture,
braille and written word. Previously, CLDS
had built these symbols using cardboard,
fabric and hot glue (see examples above).
Karen Erickson, director of the CLDS,
contacted the Kenan Science Library for
support to create open source CAD files
that can be sent to 3D printers. Moving to
3D printing opens some great opportunities for two primary reasons: there is much
more consistency in the product and it
becomes an educational resource as the
files are available for anyone working with
this population.
3D symbols
for Turn, Up,
It, Open, and
Make.
THE HUBS
There are three primary points of engagement: Davis Library,
Kenan Science Library and the Health Sciences Library. The
Research Hubs partner with complementary campus agencies
such as NC TRACS and the Odum Institute. The Library plays
a vital role in connecting services and programs across campus.
Each Hub center features skilled librarians, technology specialists
and expert staff to support research; spaces for working and
engagement; cutting edge technologies; and the training and
support to use them. There is also space for events that showcase
the research activities of faculty and students. A diverse calendar
of events and programming attracts users and will establish and
sustain a creative and engaging culture.
The Davis Library Research Hub—on the newly renovated
second floor— specializes in geographic information systems
and data (GIS), statistics, visualization and digital humanities.
GPS units are available for checkout, and the GIS/Stats Open
Lab provides hardware and software to support these areas of
study. The Liquid Galaxy (see sidebar) allows users to explore
sites of interest and book collaborative work and presentation
spaces. The Davis Library Hub aims to provide low-barrier access
to a wide range of technologies with the potential to transform
teaching and learning, while advancing new forms of scholarship.
The Kenan Science Library Hub is housed on the ground floor
of Venable Hall and serves as a Makerspace (see “What is a
Makerspace?”). It also serves as part of a larger campus-level
effort to support innovation. Available technology includes four
Makerbot 3D printers, one Stratasys uPrint Se Plus, NextEngine
3D scanner, an electronics soldering station, and Arduino and
Raspberry Pi microcontrollers that are available for checkout. A
creativity center provides drawing and modeling materials, such
as clay, Legos and K’nex, to get makers in the creative mind-set.
The Health Sciences Library Hub is located on the second
floor and provides collaborative work spaces for instruction and
presentation, as well as space for distance education and pointto-point videoconferencing. In the Health Sciences Library,
teleconferencing facilities connect health care professionals
around the state and around the world. Proposed links from
these facilities to newly developed spaces in other campus
libraries can facilitate communication and collaboration in
interdisciplinary endeavors on campus and beyond.
Funding for the Research Hubs was made possible through contributions to the Library’s unrestricted
endowments, including William Johnston Armfield IV and Jane Hall Armfield Library Endowment,
George Watts Carr Library Fund, Virginia Phelps Clancy Library Fund, Educational Foundation Library
Endowment, Joe A. Hewitt Librarian's Opportunity Fund, Lineberger Library Fund, Thomas Jack Lynch
Academic Affairs Library Endowment, James E. Maloney Library Fund, The David and Rebecca Pardue
Library Fund, Clifton E. Pleasants Family Library Fund and the University Library Endowment.
10
than 5,000 municipalities. The data is also available at the
province level (of which there are 27).
The Liquid Galaxy
Users of Davis Library’s new Liquid Galaxy display system can
travel the globe without leaving Chapel Hill. Just enter any
Google Earth destination to see the location from various
angles. A surround-screen immersive environment makes users
feel as if they are really there.
Made up of seven screens joined in a semi-circle, the Liquid
Galaxy invites exploration with a high-resolution display and
intuitive navigation. The installation has become a bright spot
on tours of the library. Students and visitors enjoy using the
Google-map technology to search for their home address or a
favorite vacation spot.
Students worked in groups, choosing eight to 10 variables to
examine closely. The process of working with a large statistical
dataset served multiple learning objectives related to understanding data, specifically in understanding aggregated data, using a
codebook and interpreting data at different geographic scales.
Students were taught how to make interactive Web maps to
investigate the data, and Research Hub service desk staff were
available to provide Web mapping assistance as needed.
More than fun and games, the Galaxy has also become a part
of class curriculums. In Amanda Henley’s Geography 121 class,
students spent the semester learning about human geography
topics such as development, globalization and urban structure.
They also learned how geographers study these concepts using
quantitative and qualitative methods. For their final project, students explored the concepts they learned in class by conducting
a case study on Brazil.
With help from graduate student assistant Amanda Tickner,
Henley located and prepared a dataset for the students to use for
their case studies. The Atlas of Human Development in Brazil
includes more than 200 human development indicators for more
Based on what students found in their data and maps, they
chose destinations for virtual field trips, which they made using
the Liquid Galaxy.
An intro-level human geography class explores a city street in Brazil.
SILS Student Alison Blaine (left) and GIS Librarian Amanda Henley consult the Liquid Galaxy.
11
Concerted
Southern Folklife Collection to digitize
By Judy Panitch and Steve Weiss
If your favorite concert took place at the iconic McCabe’s Guitar Shop in Santa Monica,
California, then you are in luck! Venue owner Bob Riskin has donated thousands of
hours of recordings from McCabe’s world famous concert series to the Southern Folklife
Collection (SFC) which will preserve the recordings by creating and archiving digital copies.
“It was important
that these taped
recordings, which
are old and fragile
and have significant
scholarly value, go
to a place where
they would be carefully conditioned
and conserved.”
— Bob Riskin
McCabe’s Guitar Shop, first open for business in 1958, started out selling folk and acoustic
instruments, teaching music lessons and making repairs. Soon after, they began their
in-store concerts and, over the decades, estimate that more than 1,600 musical acts have
played at McCabe’s in the intimate, bare-bones back room. A list of acts on the store’s
website comes with a warning: “We lost track of a few, but we’re working on diggin’ em up.”
Since 1969, most of the store’s concerts have been recorded. Thousands of hours of
recordings on audio cassettes, open reel and digital audio include performances by the
likes of Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, John Fahey, John Hammond, Bill Monroe, Odetta, Jean
Ritchie, Dave Van Ronk, Mike Seeger, Ralph Stanley, Merle Travis, Kate Wolf, Townes
Van Zandt, and North Carolina’s own Elizabeth Cotten as well as Doc and Merle Watson.
“It was important that these taped recordings, which are old and fragile and have significant
scholarly value, go to a place where they would be carefully conditioned and conserved,”
Riskin said. “We did an inventory and cataloged more than 2,000 tapes. When I began to
think of who should receive the gift, several knowledgeable people I respect, including my
sound engineers, all said the best choice would be the University of North Carolina.”
12
Conservation
world famous concert series recordings
The UNC Connection
UNC alumnus Robert Burns Clark ’61, J.D.
’65 connected the SFC’s curator, Steve
Weiss, to Riskin and McCabe’s music
teacher Kit Alderson. Clark, a North Carolina
native, is a born storyteller. After attending
UNC as an undergraduate and law student,
he made a movie called Moonrunners and,
shortly after, moved his family to California
to continue his writing pursuits.
A few years later, Moonrunners was
adapted into the Dukes of Hazzard
television series. Clark has written, rewritten or edited more than 40 television
episodes for prime time television as well
as written and produced several movies
of the week. Clark’s first novel Pittsburg
Landing was published in 2011.
Clark studied guitar with Kit Alderson at
McCabe’s where he became aware of the
store’s concert archive. Alderson, a noted
musician and teacher, was a member of
the folk-rock trio The Stone Poneys and
trained actors Reese Witherspoon and
Joaquin Phoenix how to play guitar and
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autoharp for their roles as June Carter and
Johnny Cash in the film Walk the Line.
Clark and Anderson have been advocates
for McCabe's history and worked to see
the collection preserved.
“McCabe’s is a premier venue for
roots music,” Weiss said. “And
this collection is a national
treasure that documents nearly
five decades of top performers in
an intimate setting.”
Weiss envisions many audiences
will be interested in the recordings
including students, scholars, fans
and those doing research for documentaries, film and television. The collection will be available for listening
beginning in September 2016.
McCabe’s, which will continue
to present legendary musicians and vocal artists at its
iconic venue every week,
will add new digitized
recordings to the SFC
collection over time.
BOOKS AS
Holsenbeck Fund brings first-edition
Sol LeWitt book to Sloane Art Library
by Heather Gendron
Even with 7 million books, there
are times UNC students may need to
get their hands on a particular book
not housed in the University Library.
So what’s a student to do? If you’re a
graduate student like Alyssa
Miserendino, a first-year
MFA student, you can
request support from the
Holsenbeck Fund, a library
fund established by Howard
Holsenbeck ’63 to support
the current research of
UNC graduate students in
all disciplines.
Miserendino, who was
researching her family’s
photo archives, submitted
a request for a first-edition
copy of Autobiography
(1980) by renowned
conceptual artist Sol
LeWitt. The book features
1,086 square photographs
of everything found in
LeWitt’s studio at the time,
laid-out in a grid format
over 127 pages. These
photographs, which include
kitchen accoutrements; clippings and
photos of people, places and things of
influence; and other odds-and-ends
around LeWitt’s studio, come together to
form a visual autobiography of the artist.
The book piqued Miserendino’s
interest when she discovered a family
image in her father’s archive that had
been taken at the Milwaukee Art
Museum during an exhibition—
Constructivism and the Geometric
Traditions: selections from the
McCrory collection—that ran during
the summer of 1981.
“The symmetry and compulsive
nature of the book is what I was interested in looking at,” Miserrendino said. “My
father’s archive of imagery is compulsive,
but in a very different manner. I was
interested in looking back on this histori-
14
cal mark in art, of the compulsive use of
the camera to document personal items to
create a systematic body of vernacular
imagery.”
Miserendino’s book request was
granted, and Autobiography now resides
in the Sloane Art Library
along with a growing special collection of key texts
that represent the
history and evolution
of artists’ books and
photobooks — books
created by artists and
photographers as works
of art, rather than books
of reproductions of works
of art. Autobiography
pairs nicely with other
photographic books by
LeWitt in the Art Library
that use squares and grids
as design elements, such
as Photogrids (1977-78),
Cock Fight Dance (1980)
and Sunrise and Sunset at
Praiano (1980). LeWitt
frequently played with
geometric forms and grids
in his books, as well as in
his wall drawings and sculptures. LeWitt’s
books fall into a category of art works
called “artists’ multiples” which were
meant to be produced cheaply and in
large multiples, making art accessible to a
wider public. “It is the desire of artists
that their ideas be understood by
as many people as possible. Books
make it easier to accomplish this,”
said Sol LeWitt (1928-2007).
Since LeWitt’s Autobiography
and other books are now considered
collector’s items, prices for quality
first editions can be prohibitive.
Thanks to the Holsenbeck Fund and
Miserendino’s request, the Sloane
Art Library’s collection of LeWitt
publications is more complete.
Gendron is the former head of the
Sloane Art Library.
15
Instruments with swing
Leading New York orchestra leaders,
Vincent Lopez (left) and B.A. Rolfe (right)
present Hal Kemp (seated) with a baton
in recognition of his rise as a nationally
known Broadway orchestra leader.
16
by Emily Jack and Linda Jacobson
When he was 16 years old, Howard Dunaway
’44 received a job offer he couldn’t refuse. For most
teenagers, working with your uncle isn’t a dream job,
except Dunaway’s uncle was Hal Kemp ’26, leader of
one of the era’s most popular big bands.
It was the spring of 1938, and the Hal Kemp
Orchestra was gearing up for an East Coast tour.
The band needed help with driving and setting up
before performances, and Kemp thought the young
Dunaway would make an enthusiastic and willing
candidate. When Kemp drove his new Ford convertible to his nephew’s Charlotte home, he made an
offer that Dunaway readily accepted.
They hit the college circuit, beginning with a
trio of spring dances in Virginia—Washington &
Lee University, University of Richmond, University
of Virginia— and then continued up the East Coast.
A gig at the famous Hershey Park pavilion,
which hosted all the top dance bands of the era, was
followed by Steel Pier in Atlantic City, where the
Hal Kemp Orchestra and Benny Goodman’s band
played at opposite ends of the pier. The tour was
capped by a month in New York City playing at the
Starlight Roof in the Waldorf Astoria.
For Kemp’s nephew, the experience of traveling
with his famous uncle was life-changing. Kemp
introduced him to the likes of Errol Flynn, Alice Faye
and Judy Garland. The sustained exposure to worldclass musicians fostered in Dunaway a passion for
music and instruments of all kinds. He went on
to play the drums in a dance band, violin in the
Charlotte Symphony and piano and xylophone for
his own enjoyment.
Dunaway counts those few months touring with
Hal Kemp as among the most memorable of his life.
He shared these reminiscences with the staff of the
North Carolina Collection Gallery upon donating
Hal Kemp’s clarinet and saxophone to the Collection.
Howard Dunaway’s brother, Kemp Dunaway ’46,
played the saxophone and clarinet and as a result,
inherited his uncle’s instruments. When Kemp
Dunaway passed, Howard handed over the care of
the instruments to the North Carolina Collection.
The instruments join a number of Hal Kemp-related
materials in the Wilson Special Collections Library,
including the Hal Kemp Papers in the Southern
Historical Collection, and a number of audio
recordings in the North Carolina Collection and
the Southern Folklife Collection.
James Hal Kemp was born in Marion,
Ala., in 1904 and began playing clarinet
at age six. When he was a teenager, his
family moved to Charlotte, N.C., where
he attended Charlotte Central High and
organized his first dance band—the fivepiece Merrymakers. After entering UNC
in 1922, he started the
Carolina Club Orchestra,
which recorded for
Okeh records and
performed in Europe
during summer
breaks.
During his senior
year, Kemp formed
a seven-piece combo
that became the foundation for his professional band — the Hal
Kemp Orchestra. While active, Kemp’s
band recorded some of the era’s major
hits and consistently appeared in the top
10 of the Billboard’s College Poll. The
band was also the first to be featured in a
motion picture —1938’s Radio City Revels.
Tragically, two years later in 1940, Kemp
died in an auto accident at age 36.
17
Access
Granted
Southern Folklife Collection secures
$986,000 preservation grant
by Judy Panitch and Steve Weiss
With its millions of feet of motion
picture film and a quarter-million sound
and video recordings, the Southern
Folklife Collection (SFC) has drawn
many scholars, filmmakers and musicians
over the years. To name a couple,
Academy Award–winning director Martin
Scorsese and Grammy Award–winning
musicians The Carolina Chocolate Drops
have all found inspiration in the SFC.
As one of the nation’s foremost
archival resources for the study of vernacular music, art and culture relating to the
American South, the SFC works to ensure
that patrons near and far have access to
this invaluable resource. Since the late
1980s, the SFC has been active in media
preservation and has received numerous
grants to digitize its collection of unique
audio, video and motion picture films.
This year, the University Library
received a grant of $986,000 from
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
for “Extending the Reach of Southern
Audiovisual Sources,” in which activities
will begin in August.
“We’ve become very proficient
at digitizing smaller portions of the
collection for preservation and access,
but these methods do not scale up,” said
SFC curator Steve Weiss. “Thanks to the
Mellon Foundation, we will be able to
solve problems of preservation for tens of
thousands of valuable items. We will also
create a robust infrastructure for online
streaming of the collection, providing
broad access to these cultural treasures
for the first time.”
The Library will use grant funds
to optimize processes in order to manage
the collection and digitize recordings on a
large scale; produce preservation-quality
master files; and deliver research-quality
access copies via online streaming.
Among the materials that the SFC
will digitize for preservation and access
are thousands of hours of recordings from
the collections of Broadside magazine,
the Highlander Research and Education
Center, Guy and Candie Carawan,
William Ferris, Alice Gerrard, Archie
Green, and Mike Seeger, among many
others.
The grant includes funding that will
allow the SFC to conduct research and
share knowledge about the best methods
for large-scale digitization of multimedia
John Loy, an audio preservation engineer
in the SFC, makes a preservation transfer
from a 1/4" open reel tape.
collections. A Southern Folklife Audiovisual Research Fellowship will create
short-term residences for visiting scholars,
allowing them to fully engage with curatorial staff and materials in the collection.
The grant builds upon a prior planning grant from the Mellon Foundation
that developed recommendations for
preserving the SFC’s fragile multimedia
components before they begin to deteriorate. Past preservation grants have come
from the Grammy Foundation and the
National Endowment for the Humanities.
“We will create a robust infrastructure for online streaming of the collection,
providing broad access to these cultural treasures for the first time.”
—STEVE WEISS, SFC curator
18
Every effort has been made to
ensure the accuracy of this report.
Please accept our apologies if we
are in error. Contact the University
Library Development Office at
(919) 843-5660 so that we may
adjust our records.
H ONOR
RO
LL
of G I NG
IV
Images are from the current
Rare Book collection exhibition
Chronicles of Empire: Spain in
the Americas (see page 27 for
exhibit information).
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015
Benefactors
$10,000 or more
Benjamin Whiteley Baker
Nancy G. Baker
Blythe Family Fund
Martha Brown
Rodney C. Brown
Josephine Ragland Darden
Thomas Francis Darden II
Christopher Dark
Florence Fearrington
Howard Holsenbeck
Thomas S. Kenan III
T.S. Kenan, III Living Trust
Nolan Delano Lovins
Ellice & Rosa McDonald Foundation, Inc.
James Edward Maloney
John Mills
Virginia Holshouser Mills
National Christian Foundation
North Caroliniana Society
C. Edward Pleasants
Nancy Thompson Pleasants
John Ashton Powell
Randleigh Foundation Trust
The Rosebud Agency
Edward C. Smith Jr. Restated 2006
Revocable Trust
Edward Calvin Smith Jr.
Jo Allison Clary Smith
The Jo C. Smith Restated 2006
Revocable Trust
Murray J. Smith
Martha Jent Tilley
Weatherspoon Foundation
Patrons
$1,000 – $9,999
Charles Marc Abbey
Kristen E. Abbey
American Endowment Foundation
Estate of Josef Anderle
Elemer Bako
Daniel Wilson Barefoot
Kay Townsend Barefoot
William Ronald Barnes Jr.
Habib F. Bassil
Kathleen A. Bassil
Greg Bell
Elizabeth Ann Bezera
and David Roy Lent
James Cyril Blaine
Jean Burdette Blaine
John Alexander Blythe
Mellicent O’Brien Blythe
J. Melvin Bowen
Frederick Baker Bridgers
Charles Wilson Broadwell
Mary Earle Brown
Neilson Brown
The Burch-Safford Foundation, Inc.
John Woodfin Burress III
Mary Louise Bizzell Burress
Clifford R. Butler Jr.
Linda Lynch Butler
Thomas Roberts Cannon
Betsy Steele Carr
George Watts Carr III
Marilyn Carter and Mehdi Emamian
Kathryn Virginia Clancy
Catherine Hudson Clark
and W. Lloyd Clark
Evangeline Hinson Clark*
Robert Burns Clark Jr.
Norm Cohen
Community Foundation for Greater
Atlanta
Community Foundation of Western
North Carolina
Sally Boyette Cone
Robert Clarence Cone
Carolyn P. Coolidge-Riggs
and Timothy Riggs
Betty Bruton Cooney
James P. Cooney
Stephen Mark Cumbie
and Druscilla French
Thomas Hampton Cuthbertson
Robert Joseph Dabal
Mohammed Mujtaba Dar
Lyell Dawes, Jr. Trust
Archie H. Davis
Emilie Patton de Luca
Fred Hyams Deaton Jr.
J. Taylor Doggett
19
Michael Nathan Driscoll
Linda Harris Edmisten
Rufus Lige Edmisten
John Parkhill Evans
Pat Evans
Susan Evans
Susan K. Fellner
Marcie Cohen Ferris
William R. Ferris Jr.
Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund
Frank John Fischer III
Fitzpatrick Communications, Inc.
Joyce Lee Fitzpatrick
and James Eugene Stewart, Jr.
Foundation for the Carolinas
Bryan Albin Giemza
Kristi Barrett Giemza
David Robinson Godschalk
Lallie Moore Godschalk
Anne Howell Gray
Bernard Gray
Paul Green Foundation
Dixie Nann Griffith
Gail Harrison Grossman
Steven Howard Grossman
Lenore Beth Guidoni
and Michael Allen Massey
Donald Christian Hamilton
Holley Michelle Morris Hamilton
Ann Hanes
F. Borden Hanes Jr.
Charles Clement Hargrave
Elizabeth George Hargrave
Thelma O. Harms
Anna Ragland Hayes
G. Jason Hedrick
Robert G. Heyneman
Hill Family Fund
Susan Winstead Holderness
and Kenneth Floyd Ledford
Shaida Jarrahi Horner
Vance L. Horner II
Joyce Rockwood Hudson
Betty Debnam Hunt
Eric J. Hyman and Sara Oswald
Annette Morrell Ingle
John Robert Ingle
Ali Jarrahi
Jewish Foundation of Greensboro
Houston G. Jones
Clarence Higgins Keller
Joyce Dickman Keller
John Thomas Kelly III
Kay P. Kelly
Betty Kenan
A. Larkin Kirkman
Rosa Dickinson Kirkman
Audrey Koudelka
Toni M. Koudelka
Amanda Kay Kyser
Kimberly Kyser
Kyser Foundation
Dana Borden Lacy
Graham G. Lacy Jr.
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015
Annie Gray Calhoun Lane
Charles Thomas Lane
Jonathan Gregory Lauterer
Linda Susan Lee
James W. Lester Jr.
Judy Lester
Allan Roy Life
Page West Life
Peggy Liu
Linda Close Lupton
Richard Byron Lupton
Ashly Maitland
Scott Maitland
Hannah Lacob Malkin
Sara Mount Malone
David G. Martin Jr.
Harriet Wall Martin
Dana Kathleen Hurt McMahan
Esteban McMahan
Tift Merritt
Sarah C. Michalak
Mid Atlantic Foundation
Richard Dale Miller
W. Thomas Minor III
Minor Foundation
Sara Giles Moore Foundation
Cheryl A. Moosavi
M. A. Moosavi
William A. Morgan
Eleanor Saunders Morris
Margaret Cleary Myers
Robert F. Myers
Alice Albert Nelson
Lewis M. Nelson Jr.
Charles Stephens Norwood Jr.
Nancy Bridgers Norwood
Dwight Stephen Oldham
Regina Whittington Oliver
S. Theodore Oliver Jr.
Michele Pas and Barry Poss
Ronnie Howard Patterson
Josephine Ward Patton
Evelyn M. Poole-Kober
Farrel Franklin Potts
Welsh Davidson Potts
Cynthia Gridley Pruden
J. Norfleet Pruden III
Alfred L. Purrington III
Suzanne Townsend Purrington
O.H. Rankin Foundation
W. Trent Ragland Jr. Foundation
Samuel Boyce Rankin Sr.
Heather Louise Richwine
Martha Borden Roberson
Wilborn Murray Roberson
E.T. Rollins Jr. & Frances P. Rollins
Foundation
Frances Page Rollins
Kelly Leigh Ross
and William David Whisenant
Savannah Community Foundation
Amy Greenwood Sawyer
Murray and Randy Sawyer
Robert Charles Schreiner
Christoph E. Schweitzer
John Anthony Sipp
Nancy Newton Sipp
Allison Burnett Smith
Brenton Lohr Smith
The Eddie and Jo Allison Smith Family
Foundation, Inc.
Souls Grown Deep Foundation, Inc.
* Deceased
David William Southern
Marc George Stadiem
Hugh Stevens
Marilyn Carlson Stevens
Estate of George C. Stoney
Louise Stoney
Richard J. Talbert
Zandra Talbert
Edward McMillan Tate
and Elizabeth Clarke Whitaker
Petrus W. Tax
Blossom McGarrity Tindall
F. Rogers Toms Jr.
Trexler Foundation
Triangle Community Foundation
Jason Vuic
E. Craig Wall Sr. Foundation
Emily Newman Weil
David Weil
Charles M. Weiss
Siegfried Wenzel
Roberta Everett West
Jane Robinson Whitaker
William Asbury Whitaker
Barbara McDonald Wilkerson
J. Tracy Wilkerson
Mark Wilson
The Winston-Salem Foundation
Monette Wood
R. Stan Woodward
Lyn Davis Wooten
Antony TszChung Yiu
Friends
Up to $999
Muhammad Fathi Abd Al-Hadi
Mark Steven Abel
Rebecca McLellan Abel
J. Curtis Abell
Patsy Bost Abell
Ace Records, Ltd.
Jeanne Ackermann
Anthony F. Acquaviva
and Myungsa Kang
Anthony Wayne Adams
and Paula Pearson Adams
Barry Banfield Adams
Charles Willard Adcock Jr.
Sumayya Ahmed
William McKenzie Aiken
Sara Winstead Alden
Gloria Alderman
John Michael Alderman
Michael Shepard Alexander
Larry Paul Alford
Barbara C. Allen
James Lathan Allen Sr.
Julie Johns Allen
Anna Elise Allison
Jamesee Cheri Alston
Daniel Jon Althouse
Linda Akel Althouse
Carol Zielinski Anderson
John B. Anderson, Jr.
Julian Thomas Anderson
and Rebecca Wooten Anderson
Keri Bradford Anderson
and Paul Christopher Anderson
Mark Christopher Anderson
Phill Walker Anderson
Sarah Lane Anderson
Horace Andrews
Robert G. Anthony Jr.
Michele Archer
Catherine Lynne Atchison
and Thomas Sullivan
Brenda Pryor Atkins*
Michael J. Auer
Edward Robert Austin
Carol Ann Bader
Carol Baer
Tomas Baer
Felicia Nelson Baker
Herbert Baker
Thelma Baker
Susan Bales
Rebecca S. Ballentine
Julia Wallace Bambauer
Caroline Newson Barber
James Brown Barber
Milton Augustus Barber III
Ruth Watkins Barber
Jon Carr Barbour
Gary Fenton Barefoot
John Calvin Barefoot
Martha Bagby Barefoot
John Dallas Barile
Suzy Maynard Barile
Jean Anne Jones Barnes
Peter Adams Barnes
William Lesko Barney
Eniko Molnar Basa
Charles Lloyd Bateman Jr.
and Jennifer Ahn Hanner
Clare Smith Baum
Walter Gibbs Baum
Stephen Bartow Baxter
Jeffery S. Beam and Stanley Green Finch
20
Laura Rush Beasley
William Paca Beatson Jr.
Martha Tinsley Beaudrot
Richard Paul Beaudry
Sheila Badger Beaudry
Margaret Woodhouse Becker
John William Becton
and Nancy Baach Tannenbaum
Anne Mitchelle Begun
Cecelia Early Belk
Elizabeth Bell
G. Deaton Bell II
Mary Grady Koonce Bell
Victor Eros Bell III
Victor E. Bell Jr. & Jane M. Bell Family
Foundation
Amanda Brickell Bellows
Holly Lynn Pastirchak Benedict
R. James Benedict Jr.
Dewey Randolph Bennett
Larry Kester Benninger
Christina Elizabeth Benson
Dale Monroe Bentz
Gale Osborne Bergmann
Ronald Edward Bergquist
Bernice I. Bergup
Anne B. Berkley
Margaret Green Berkowitz
and Stephen Asher Berkowitz
Rhoda L. Berkowitz
Roger M. Berkowitz
Zelda Bernard
Bernard Foundation
Edward Hiltner Bertram III
Nancy Castles Bertram
Brian Orlando Beverly
Patricia Cain Beyle
Thad Lewis Beyle
Katherine L. Bick
William H. Biggers
Joan P. Bingham
Kristy Lynette Blackman
Leanna Lynn Blackmon
Kendall Leon Blackwell
Patricia Jane Blanton
and D. Robert McConnaughey
Philip M. Blatt and Paula M. Breen
Joan April Blazich
John Blew
Clark Blomquist
Dennis K. Blossom
Nancy Blossom
Catherine Ann Blue
and William Rector Erwin Jr.
James Charles Blythe
April Bocholis
Charles Bocholis
Catherine Claire Bodin
John Charles Boger
Hannah Sykes Bohannan
Hsi-Chu H. Bolick
Neil Eugene Bolick Jr.
Andrea Lee Bolland
Mark Evan Bonds
Kathleen Narum Bonfoey
Jack Stacy Boone
Mary L. Boone
George David Boozer
Carol Sears Botsch
Robert Emil Botsch
P. Scott Bouldin
Victoria Martinez Bouldin
Donald Arthur Boulton
Elaine Gettman Bourdeaux
Marta Renee Bowen
Ellen R. Bowman
Randall Hunter Bowman
Barbara Lane Boyd
Karen Denise Boyd
Margaret E. Boyenton
William Harwood Boyenton
Robert Franklin Brabham Jr.
Alethea Bragg
Brenda Sealey Branson
Richard Lanier Branson
Stephanie Ann Brantley
Deborah Griffin Branton
Michael Gerald Branton
Meredith Lynn Bratcher
and Walter Carr West III
David W. Brehmer
and Megan M. Matchinske
Jane Gilmore Brewer
Carol Scovil Brinkley
Martin Hal Brinkley
Michael Edward Brisson
Margie Britnell
Richard Lilly Broadwell
Paul H. Brodish
Mary Aldige Brogden
Brooklyn Arts Press
Edwin Willis Brooks
Faye D. Brooks
Michael W. Brooks
Patricia Perkins Brooks
Steven Edwards Brooks
Virginia Hunter Brooks
Charlotte Chandler Broughton
David Popham Broughton
CORRECTION
The honor roll of University Library donors for 2013-14
published in the Winter 2015 issue of Windows
magazine had some serious omissions. The generous
support of the donors listed below wasn’t publicly
acknowledged — and we are truly sorry for the error.
Patrons
Friends
$1,000 – $9,999
Up to $999
Billy Ebert Barnes Jr.
Julian Bossong
Mary Pleasants Bossong
J. Melvin Bowen
Herbert Brantley
Juanita Grant Brantley
Mary Earle Brown
Neilson Brown
Kathryn Virginia Clancy
Fred Hyams Deaton Jr.
Michael Nathan Driscoll
Eli N. Evans
Frank John Fischer III
Winona Fletcher
Margaret Van Hoy Hill
Eleanor G. Lowet
Henry Augustus Lowet
Sara Lindsey Lust
Judith Morgan
Neil Morgan
Katharine Babcock Mountcastle
Kenneth Franklin Mountcastle Jr.
Florence F. Peacock
James L. Peacock III
Alfred L. Purrington III
Suzanne Townsend Purrington
Meredith Austin Miller Rutter
Harold Murray Sawyer III
and Tara Nicole Taylor
Jane Webster Smith
Moyer Gray Smith Sr.
Kathleen Keim Stringfield
Samuel Coburn Stringfield
Banks Cooper Talley Jr.
Louise Wooten Talley
F. Rogers Toms Jr.
S. Dillon Wooten Jr.
Susan Bell Wooten
Jefferson Irwin Adams
Kathleen Munro Adams
Akshay Ahuja
Barbara C. Allen
Beverly Rice Allen
Kendra Lauren Allen
Sally Noecker Anderson
Sierra Hope Austin
Laura M. Baker
Thelma Baker
Gwendolyn Jinny Barlow
Leslie Chandler Batchelor
Laura Carpenter Bingham
Warren Louis Bingham
Leanna Lynn Blackmon
Paula M. Breen and Philip M. Blatt
Brian Wilson Brewer
Charlotte Chandler Broughton
David Popham Broughton
Norman Donald Brown
Johnny Edward Burns
John Philip Call
Mary Trimble Cameron
William Sherard Chapman Jr.
Shirley S. Chase
Anita Kirk Cleary
Sean Fulton Cleary
Barbara Barksdale Clowse
Ruth Burton Collins
Charlotte T. Cooney
William H. Cooney
Nancy Walker Cowan
Margaret Stephenson Davis
R. Means Davis Jr.
Arthur St Clair DeBerry
Mignon R. DeBerry
James DeCristo
Marianne DeCristo
Leslie McNeill Dees
Daniel Norbert Dickinson
Ama Carter Edwards
Samuel Ryan Edwards
David H. Evans Jr.
Wood Jonathan Farless
Micah Robert Fisher
Michele Wilson Fletcher
W. Miles Fletcher III
Brian Marc Freedman
Kim Marie Freedman
Stephen Mark Cumbie
and Druscilla French
Richard T. Froyen
Karen Wyrick Garrison
Steven Lynn Garrison
Elizabeth O’Shella Gatling
and Roy Gordon Pattishall
Gloria Shelton Gibson
Robert Starr Gillam
Susan Ann Gilley
Cheryl Ann Gordon
Karl David Gottschalk
and Dorothy Elizabeth Pugh
Katherine B. Greene
Richard H. Greene
Claudine Alonzo Gregorio
Gerald Lee Griffin
Ingunn Griffin
E. Jeffrey Griffith
George Talmadge Grigsby Jr.
Ramsdell Gurney Jr.
John Forrest Haire
Eric Ashley Hairston
Eugene Edward Hargrove
Harry H. Harkins Jr.
Bethany Paige Harris
Ronald J. Hickes
John D. Hobart
Rebecca Erin Hockfield
J. Gill Holl
Siri Lugg Holl
Ruth Alice Hoyle
Anna Pepper Huneycutt
D. Brian Huneycutt
Mary Lynne Hutchins
R. Wayne Hutchins
Carolyn Burnette Ingram
Kenneth S. Broun
Marjorie Broun
Alvin Maston Brown Jr.
D. Walker Brown
Frank C. Brown
Joy Gann Brown
Lane Harvey Brown
Mary Merritt Brown
Nancy Gilliland Brown
Timothy Bowditch Brown
and Barbara Miriam Elkins
Stephanie Willen Brown
Steven Anthony Brown Jr.
Walter Duncan Brown Jr.
Herbert Howard Browne Jr.
Frances F. deWitt Browne
Christopher Browning
William Fitzhugh Brundage
Peter Allen Brunnick
Vicki Hargrove Brunnick
Betsy Bryan
James Alexander Bryan II
Catherine Bryson
Jane Summers Bryttan
Julian R. Bryttan
James Wofford Buchanan Sr.
Sylvia Karen Bullock
Richard Alan Bunch
Melanie Gayle Bunn
Nannie Harbour Burby
Raymond Joseph Burby III
Margaret Elizabeth Burgwyn
John K. Burnett
John Lafayette Byrum
Martha Belle Caldwell
Leigh Fleming Callahan
Mary Trimble Cameron
Sue Catherine Campbell
Walter Elijah Campbell III
Jeannette Cannon
Robert L. Cannon
Paul Teige Cantey
Linda I. Cantrell
David Alan Caplan
Byron Earl Capps
Robert Carlin
Daniel Carmichael
Mary Alyce Carmichael
G. Paul Carr Jr.
Jean E. Carr
Martha Kim Carr
Charles Williams Carter Jr.
Patricia Derian Carter
W. Hodding Carter III
21
Charles Marshall Ingram
Toni Wall Jaudon
Kathy Lanita John
Kenneth Elliot John
N. Jack Jones
Anne Turner Keifer
John Conlon Keifer
Marie-Beatrice Rhyne Keller
David Ray Kennedy
Eddy M. Killette
Lynn M. Killette
Dean Howard King
Jessica Cobb King
Robin Lattimore
George Lensing Jr.
Mary Ann Linville
Ray Pate Linville
John Stephen Mackey
and Patricia Schoeberle Smith
George Anne Moss Marston
R. William Martin
Mavis Tanner Mayer
David Kemper McCue
Elizabeth Ann McCue
Lorna Khalil McGeorge
Elizabeth McKinnell
John Peter McKinnell Jr.
James Potter McNab
Cory Knox Menees
Susan Noecker Michel
Barbara Janette Morris
Susan Payne Moundalexis
Dorothy Hurley Osborn
William Douglas Overton
Jan Paris
Richard Allen Paschal
Lou Mickey Paules
Richard Stanley Paules
Robert Edward Perry Jr.
Gary James Pressley
Diane Race
William H. Race
Susan Elizabeth Read
and Randolph Ramsey Russell
Katherine Dancy Rhew
Steven Wayne Rhew
Herbert D. Rochen
Mavis K. Rochen
Donald Karl Rosenberg
Frieda Beilharz Rosenberg
Catherine Rose Rusin
Brian E. Schentag
Barbara Dobson Scott
Terry Lee Scott
David Allen Sharpe
Jordan M. Smith
Claude Henry Snow Jr.
Sarah Turnbull Snow
Mary P. Stephenson
Carl William Stratton
Nicholas Gray Sullivan
Logan Suriano
Nancy Ko Tao
Alan B. Teasley
John Butler Tomaro Jr.
Robert Moore Travis
Curtis Andrew Twiddy
Kathryn Ficklin Twiddy
Cynthia Worsham Urquhart
Richard Alexer Urquhart III
Carol Vatz
Thomas DeBot Vaughn
Martha Mebane Verdery
Laura Greer Vick
Jean Marshall Vickery
Andrea Monroe Weaver
Cameron L. Weaver
Stuart Alan West
Anne Mitchell Whisnant
David Eugene Whisnant
Elizabeth Clarke Whitaker
Betty Buller Whitehead
Clay C. Whitehead
Larry Howard Williams
Sylvia Grace Williams
Glenn Irvin Williamson Jr.
Kelly Poole Wood
Geoffrey William Wright
Margaretta Jane Yarborough
Caroline Waddell Zarzar
Theodore Rudolf Zarzar
Megan Wetherill Ziglar
William Richard Ziglar
James Patrick Cartmel
James Woodrow Cartwright
Phoebe McNeer Cartwright
Gretchen Alexa Case
and Stephen Burgin Roberts Jr.
Catherine McKnight Casteel
Frank David Castlebury III
Diana Cavano
Jeffrey Paul Cavano
Thomas Gerard Cech
John Amherst Cecil
Sarah Mettler Cecil
Jane Chambers
William Sherard Chapman Jr.
Elizabeth Ann Chenault
Billy Jones Cherry
John Edward Chesser Jr.
R. Michael Childs
Beverly Bailey Chinnis
Satish Chintapalli
Allison Davis Chrisco
Elizabeth Carroll Church
Rachel Elliott Churchill
James William Clark Jr.
Linda Loeb Clark
Margaret Allen Clark
Tony Franklin Clark
Amy Plyler Clarke
Louis Penn Clarke
Michael A. Clarke
Penelope T. Clarke
and T. Henry Clarke IV
Scott Russell Clarke
and Sarah Caroline Thuesen
Michael Jay Claxton
Anita Kirk Cleary
* Deceased
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015
Sean Fulton Cleary
David R. Clemmons
Kathy S. Clemmons
Margaret Metzler Clendenin
T. Barrier Clendenin Jr.
Susan Hicks Clifford
Phillip Edmond Cline
Barbara Barksdale Clowse
Edna Faye Pugh Cobb
Laurence Arthur Cobb
Mary Coffey
Ronald D. Cohen
Joan L. Colburn
Harvey Colchamiro
Anne Smith Cole
Joseph Lawrence Cole
Robert Feaster Coleman III
Marcella Harrer Congdon
Heather Sue Conklin
Daniel Patrick Connerton
Sally Bahnsen Connerton
Aliza Christina Conway
Fairley Bell Cook
James Coffield Cooke Jr.
Elizabeth Parsons Cooper
Grady Cooper Jr.
Dileeni Corea
Gehan Asoka Corea
Victoria Margaret Corke
Patricia P. Cormier
Raymond J. Cormier
Mona C. Couts
Nancy Walker Cowan
Eppie Bennett Cox
Joy Drury Cox
Bertha Stanley Crabtree
M. Richard Cramer
Bruce Hampton Crawford
Joseph Gregory Crespo
John Allen Crislip
Carol Council Croom
William David Croom Jr.
Lisa Renee Croucher
Brevard Barnett Crowell
David James Crowley
Robert Joseph Dabal
Frederic Gilbert Dalldorf
Jane Bultman Dalldorf
Erik Antony Dalton
Kathryn Howell Dalton
and Sean Larry Dalton
Robert Sethur Dalton
Van Womack Daniel III
Jane M. Danielewicz
Mary Benson Daniels
Robert James Daniels
William Alexander Darity Jr.
and Kirsten Mullen
Mary Bandy Daughtry
Parrish Hayes Daughtry
Louis Markham Dauner
and Geraldine Nada Wu
Thomas R. Davenport
Susan Ann Davi
William A. Davidson III
Davie Community Foundation
Stevan Davies
Amy Noel Davis
John William Davis Jr.
Thomas Fitzgerald Davis Jr.
J. Russell Davison
Linda Page Davison
* Deceased
Robert Allen Dawkins
Alvin Herbert Dawson Jr.
Deborah Valulick Dawson
John H. De Carlo
Mardell De Carlo
Meneta Phillips Deaton
Debutante Ball Society of Durham
James DeCristo
Marianne DeCristo
Amelia Barnum Dees-Killette
and David Earlon Killette
Leslie McNeill Dees
Winifred B. Delano
Mary Lynn Lewis DeLany
Helen Roxlo Delp
Bonnie Boyer Derr
Dailey Jonathan Derr
James Kenneth Desper
Farhad Diba
Deborah Carson Dibbert
Douglas Steven Dibbert
Laura Dickerson
J. Richard Dimsdale
Marisa Noel DiNovis
Carol Dixon
Susan Anne Dodge
and Joseph Thomas Thompson II
Laine Elizabeth Doggett
Kerry Patrick Donny-Clark
Peter Doran
Michael Marshall Dore
B. Glenwood Dorman Jr.
and Dwan Browning Dorman
D. Douglas Dorman
Kaitlyn Emelia Dorsky
Stephen A. Douglas
Vianne Douglas
Carolyn Green Dow
Linda Stopher Drake
Matthias C. Drake
Joshua Martin Drucker
and Kristin Emily Martin
Linda Drury
Timothy Charles Duffy
Nicole Natasha Duggins
Doug Duke
Alison Shepherd Duncan
Andrew Wayne Duncan
Kay Stirewalt Dunkley
Kenneth Malcolm Dunkley
Elizabeth Bramm Dunn
William Edward Dunstan III
Jean H. Durham
Woody L. Durham
Cara Moye Duryea
L. Daniel Duval III
and Chesca Yvonne Fox
Andrew A. Dzirkalis
Kate James Eakman
William Alfred Early III
Barbara Ross Earnhardt
Ellen Bullington Eason
Connie Clare Eble
Hossein Ebneyousef
Christopher Paul Edwards
and Pamela Strickland Edwards
Joshua Daniel Edwards
Keith Edwards
Laura Frances Edwards
John Nolan Eick
Monica M. Eiland
Robin Lissa Eisner
and William Andrew Polf
Maxwell Elbin Jr.
Elkhorn Publications
Philip Lovin Elliott Jr.
The Emirates Center for Strategic
Studies & Research
22
Raymond Alexander English
Sally-Hilda Erickson
Carl W. Ernst
Joseph Dixon Eskridge Jr.
Nora Gaskin Esthimer
Steven William Esthimer
David Wesley Etchison
Rose Marie Etheridge
C. Allan Eure
Susan Duncan Eure
Bobby Evans and
Gwen Kalyanapu Evans
David H. Evans Jr.
Elizabeth Evans
George J. Evans Jr.
James Arnold Everett
Cheryl Homzak Ewald
Dennis Lyn Ewald
Kimberly Cameron Fagan
Arthur John Faint
Raymond Walter Falk
Sarah Howle Fallaw
Robert W. Farley
and Cathy Dawn Moore
Martha L. Farmer
Robert L. Farmer
Annie C. Ferguson
Floyd M. Ferguson Jr.
Gordon James Ferguson
and Roberta A. Owen
Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund
Julia Filler
Finch Properties
Charles Franklin Finch
Michael Edward Fincher
Ruth-Marie E. Fincher
Elizabeth Weil Fisher
Heather M. Fitzwilliam
Jennifer Thomas Flanders
Jack David Fleer
Martha Hinkle Fleer
Jill Fleisher
Leslie Allen Fleisher
Adam Elfmon Fleishman
Dom Flemons
Michele Wilson Fletcher
W. Miles Fletcher III
Glenda Christine Lape Flora
and Joseph Martin Flora
Jonathan Andrew Flora
Stephen Ray Flora
Elijah Daniel Flowers III
Janet Loafman Flowers
Rebecca R. Floyd
Faith Underhill Fogle
Jaroslav Thayer Folda III
Linda Whitham Folda
Susan C. Fonte
Timothy Andrew Foskey
Gaines Milligan Foster
Elizabeth Angela Fournier
Carolyn S. Fowler
Gregory Thomas Fowler Sr.
Jennifer Leigh Fowler
Colleen Ann Fox
Erik Donald France
Linda Frankel
and Lewis Harvey Margolis
Donald Roy Franz
Margaret Ogilvy Franz
Diane Frazier
Teresa Michelle Frazier
Charlotte Winstead Frech
David Freeman
E. Bryant Frech
Samuel R. Freeman
and Annette Lareau-Freeman
Olivia Catherine Frere
Rachel J. Frew
Lila Ponder Friday
Lila P. Friday Revocable Trust
David James Frost
A. Dewane Frutiger
Monica Witterholt Fuller
and W. Scott Fuller
Nancy Scott Fuller
W. Erwin Fuller Jr.
Andrea Hodges Funk
Sandra Gail Funk
Martin Gafinowitz
Nicola Constance Lloyd Gafinowitz
James Russell Lowell Gallagher
Kathleen M. Gallagher
Jill Craver Galloway
Stuart Gansky
Andrea Phillips Garner
Brandon Scott Garner
Brooke A. Gardner
Edward Randy Gardner
and Victoria Jean Gardner
James Towles Gardner Jr.
Sanford Clyde Garner
Seda Gasparian
Janet K. Gauss
Gay Rakes Garden Club
Brad Gehrke
Carolyn J. Gelot
Raghuvir Baxiram Gelot
Catherine Gerdes
Jerry Bruce Gershenhorn
Nancy Jean Lane Gibbs
Robert Coleman Gibbs*
Gloria Shelton Gibson
John Kenneth Gibson
Sue Gainey Giles
Terry Scott Giles
Frank James Gilhooly
Robert Starr Gillam
Glenn Gillen
Melissa Masat Gillen
Susan Ann Gilley
Bernard Gilman
Donald Gilman Jr.
George Girton
John F. C. Glenn Jr.
Barbara Davis Goldman
Ruth Elizabeth Gonzalez
Kristen Lucille Gooch
and Thomas Wade Young
William R. Goodman Jr.
Michele Faye Gordon and Edgar Levy
Mary Jane Gorman
and W. Duncan McArthur Jr.
Karl David Gottschalk
Barry Goz
Rebecca Goz
Margaret Mooring Graham
W. Reece Graham IV
Susan Everett Gravely
and William Goley Ross
Derek Green
Ruth M. Greenberg
Ruth M. Greenberg Revocable Trust
Claudine Alonzo Gregorio
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015
Jane Marie Gress
Elizabeth Bragg Grey
E. Jeffrey Griffith
Michael Kent Griffin
Shirley Olds Griffin
Fumiko Ikeda Griggs
Richard Stuart Griggs
George Talmadge Grigsby Jr.
Elizabeth Glover Grimes
L. Charles Grimes
David Ray Groce
Erik John Gudris
Hooshang Guilak
Leslie Ann Gura
Philip F. Gura
Albert Earle Gurganus
Susan Perry Gurganus
Ramsdell Gurney Jr.
Samuel Cole Guy
Scott James Gwara
Thomas Baylor Hadzor
and Susan Cranford Ross
Armin A. Hagen
Jeanne T. Hagen
I. R. Stirling Haig
Sara Haig
Theodore E. Haigler Jr.
John Forrest Haire
Francis Joseph Hale III
Katherine Romans Hall
L. Eric Hallman
and Elizabeth Lafferty Woodman
Speed Hallman
Susan Walters Hallman
Mohamed Hamed
Martha Elizabeth Hamilton
and S. Collins Kilburn
David Murray Hammer
Dorothy A. Hammett
Stephen Hampshire
Sarah Elizabeth Hamrick
Ziad George Hanhan
Barbara Simmons Hannah
John William Hannah
Barbara Russell Hardin
Paul Hardin
D. Thomas Hardison
Donna Elizabeth Hardy
P. Curtis Hardy
Harry H. Harkins Jr.
Dorothy Gwyn Harper
and Stan Harper
Howard Harper
Jeanne Harper
Boyd Gregory Harris
Reuben Marshall Harris
Roger T. Harris
Katherine Gordon Harrison
Mary Dorward Harrison
William Mortimer Harrison Jr.
23
Sarah Henderson Harriss
Lee Kenion Hart
Oliver James Hart III
Mack Wayne Harvey
Lesley Apple Haskell
Anthony Earl Hatcher
and Tricia Inlow-Hatcher
John Hausmann
Susan D. Hausmann
John Hawryluk
Terry Hawryluk
Claudia Cagle Hayes
and William Edward Hayes
Lark Hayes
Barbara J. Haywood
Brendan Todd Haywood
Lisa Love Hazen
Thomas L. Hazen
Ye He
Thomas Hearn
Katherine Emily Heck
David George Hedgecock
Hilda J. Hedgecock
G. Jason Hedrick
Dorothea B. Heitsch
Peter Niels Heller
and Patricia Wellenkamp
Elizabeth S. Henderson
R. James Henderson
Mary Joyner Henry
Marc Hens
Elmer M. Heo
Bernard Lania Herman
Rebecca Young Herman
Tad Hershorn
Frederick Herzog
Kristin Karwehl Herzog
Joe Anderson Hewitt
and Susan K. Nutter
David M. Hiatt
Louise S. Hiatt
Ronald J. Hickes
Michael Ray Hill
Sara Stockton Hill
Ann Hillenbrand
Charlotte Carol Roberts Hinnant
J. Ray Hinnant Jr.
Jennifer Ruth Hirt
James Copeland Hobbs Jr.
Fred Colby Hobson Jr.
Linda Whitney Hobson
Rebecca Erin Hockfield
Sharon Rose Hockfield
Steven Alan Hockfield
Louise Chapman Hoffman
Robert Hanes Hoffman
Janis Gail Holder
J. Gill Holland
Siri Lugg Holland
Margaret Russ Holler
Roy Kemp Holler Sr.
Roger Allen Hollifield
Sue Carpenter Hollifield
Hunter Thomas Holloway
R. Ross Holloway
Dell Proctor Hollstein
Jean Wilson Hollstein
Barry Kevin Holmes
Julia Ashley Holmes
Elizabeth Myatt Holsten
H. Franklin Holt
Sandra E. Honnold
Thomas Charles Hood
Virginia Johnson Hood
Jewel Hoogstoel
Clarence Edgar Horton Jr.
Mary Coit Horton
Kilby Dixon Hoskins
Molly Bullard Howard
Samuel Harwell Howell Jr.
E. Alexander Howson
Erma Reep Hoyle
Leigh Hudgins
Katherine Joyce Hudson
Colin Hughes
Donald Thomas Hughston
P. Scott Hummel
James Logan Hunt
Ruth Setzer Hunt
Carol Richardson Hunter
Christopher Howard Hurst
Nicole Whisnant Hurst
Sallie Webb Huss
T. Hoke Huss
John Ambrose Hutcheson Jr.
Marilyn Beaver Hutcheson
Felicia Lily Tran Huynh
Edward Joseph Ifkovic
James Nelson Iglehart
Patricia Hamilton Iglehart
Carolyn Burnette Ingram
Charles Marshall Ingram
Ingram & Ingram
International Genealogical Search Inc.
Sharon Ireland
Sharon Ireland Revocable Trust
Khalid S. Ishaq
R. Arnold Isley
Caroline Finch Ives
Michael Stuart Ives Jr.
Daniel Warren Jackson
Walter A. Jackson
Betty Block James
Mohammad Jarrahi
George Javor
Angela M. Jeannet
Stephanie Jed
Marsha Jepsen
* Deceased
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015
Thomas Jepsen
Jassim Mohammed Jirjees
Rebecca R. Johnson
and Arthur Clayton Menius III
Sarah Moseley Johnson
Cecelia Thurmaier Jolls
Robert T. Jolls
Arthur Francis Jones II
and Carolyn Carleton Jones
Benny Ray Jones
and Tracy Alonzo Jones
Randall Dean Jones
Mary Bland Josey
Wayne Quay Justesen Jr.
Blair Cogdill Justice
Melinda Margaret Kaiser
Kimberley Herter Kaplan
Leah Robinson Karpen
Aubrey Alfred Keen
Greg Keener
Molly Wilkerson Keener
Richard J. Keever
David Reid Kelly
Frank Kelly
Michael Everett Kelly
Margaret F. Kemp
Thomas Dupre Kemp III
C. L. Kendall
Mary Anne Kendall
David Ray Kennedy
Edward D. Kennedy
Patricia S. Kennedy
Thomas Bishop Kennedy
Renee Keogh
Lisa Motsinger Kerner
Theodore Charles Kerner Jr.
Arash Khazeni
Nancy Litaker Khoury
Jeanette Cone Kimmel
Mary McNease Kinard
Amy Ransom Kincheloe
Andrew Hatcher Kincheloe
Dean Howard King
Marcia Anne Koomen
Brad Kosiba
Katherine Gray Kraft
Elizabeth Anne Kramer
Betty Leona Krimminger
and James Robert Wilson
Christine Manuel Kushner
David Scott Kushner
David Anthony Kuzminski
Wendy Johnson Kuzminski
Eleanor Lamb
Peter Samuel Landstrom
Susan Betts Landstrom
James Marion Laney
John Ashley Largen
Charles Francis Larrabee
Geraldine Gilmore Larson
Ray Larson
Emily Lee Lassiter
Rose Anna Laudicina
Catherine Grollman Lauritsen
Dorothy Kopp Lavine
Ray Lavine
David Ray Lawson
Frank Layman
Amy Mangual Leary
Sharon A. Leavitt
Arthur Lebo
Nancy R. Lebo
Elizabeth D. Lee
Gin-Ru Lee
Howard Nathaniel Lee
Kelly Johnson Lee
Leedom Lefferts
George Lensing Jr.
Constance Letrent
Richard L. Letrent
Cary Levine
Victoria Walden Levy
Yongbiao Li
Rebecca Godley Liberty
Harriet Lowry King
J. Kimball King
Jane Shivell King
and John Rutledge King
Jessica Cobb King
Janel Kinlaw
Patrick Francis Kinlaw
Jacqueline Nolen Kirkman
Karlene Knebel and Richard Allan Mann
Jane S. Knight
Marilyn Goodman Knowles
Michael Ray Knowles
Lynne H. Kohn
Richard H. Kohn
Richard Folmar Liebhart
Bonnie Davidson Liles
E. Allen Liles Jr.
Jeffrey Thomas Linder
Kathleen Keener Linder
Barbara Diane Lipsett
Shirley Banks Little
Katherine Greer Littlefield
Rena Hanya Liu
Lockheed Martin Employees Political
Action Committee
Alton Taylor Loftis
Sarah Pullen Logan
Linda Beth Logsdon
* Deceased
Christine Joy Loken-Kim
Woodrow Lomas
and Kathleen Riordan Speeth
A. Lee Lomax
Connie Lomax
Lomax Family Foundation
Joseph Hampton Long
Holly Lynn Loosen
Lingyun Lou
Carl Reavis Lounsbury
Kathryn A. Lowe
Brian Zachary Lund
Frieda Raper Lutz
Matthew Emery Mabry
Georgia Ann Machemer
John Stephen Mackey
and Patricia Schoeberle Smith
Avinash Chandra Maheshwary
David Michael Mahoney
John Wesley Mainwaring III
Elmer Taylor Malone Jr.
Emily Victoria Malone
Betsy June Cooke Malpass
Hanson Rufus Malpass
Marc Christopher L Mankins
Caroline Rowe Martens
Christopher Sargent Martens
Abbie Hartzel Martin
and Glenn Curtis Martin
Alice Jean Martin
R. William Martin
Stephen H. Martinat
Mark C. Mash
Elsie May Mason
and Julian D. Mason Jr.
Jeffrey Nelson Mason
Mary Ethel Mason
Zihan Muhammad Masood
Dorothy Calvert Mathis
William Connie Mathis Jr.
Elizabeth Anna Matson
Roy Thomas Matthews
Melissa Ross Matton
William Christopher Matton
Mavis Tanner Mayer
Lee S. Mayfield
Robert G. Mays
Stanley Ketron McAfee III
Glen Alan McAninch
Sandra Strickland McAninch
Timothy Joseph McArdle
Michael Dana McAtee
Betty Ray McCain
Henry McCarthy
Sarah Elizabeth McCleskey
Kimberly L. McCombs-Thornton
and Peter Austin Thornton
David Minerba McCorkle
and Carol Shaw
Donald L. McCrickard
Eleanor Fowler McCrickard
David Kemper McCue
Elizabeth Ann McCue
Kristin Krause McDonough
John Goodman McDougald
Molly K. McFatrich
Roy Alexander McGalliard
Katherine Tucker McGinnis
Eileen L. McGrath
and Thomas K. Tiemann
Margaret Regis McGuinn
William Ross McKeen
24
John Martin McKeon
Edwin Ray McLean
Gail Singletary McLean
William Sartor McLean
John Dillard McSween
Julia A. McVaugh
Michael R. McVaugh
Hassan Melehy
Cory Knox Menees
E. Joy Mermin
Paul Nathaniel Mermin
Lindsay Gray Merritt
Mark William Merritt
Michael Merschat
Ming-Wai Farrell Merschat
Barbara Merten
David Fischer Merten
Marguerite Russ Metcalf
Gerald E. Meyer
Jeffrey Meyer
Monica M. Meyer
Julie Teresa Mikus
James A. Miles and Toni Miles
Margaret Ann Miles
Mike Milewski and Emily S. Silverman
Anna Kristine Miller
Bradley Edward Miller
and Stephanie Jones Miller
Christopher Perry Miller
D. Edmond Miller
Elizabeth Miller
Megan Ann Miller
Roger G. Miller
Charles Everette Mills
Kathy Bryant Mills
William Ambrose Mills IV
Andrew Johnson Milnor
Charles Louis Milone*
Kaye Lanning Minchew
Honore Jean Missihoun
Memory Farmer Mitchell
William Leonard Mitchell III
Jessica Joan Mlotkowski
Sylvia Ann Moffitt
Jane Kelly Monroe
John Thaddeus Monroe Jr.
Frank S. Montes Jr.
Sarah Kaiser Montes
L. Grayson Montgomery
Sandra Roberts Montgomery
Janice L. Montross
William Scott Montross
Marvin Charles Mood
Robert A. Mook III
Dennis Duane Moore
George Elmer Moore III
James W. Moore
Margaret Moore
Robert Moore
Sandra Phillips Moore
and William Merrette Moore Jr.
Terry Allen Moore Jr.
Thea Tullman Moore
Deborah Jane Moose
and Robert David Vatz
Susan Mitchell Moose
Barbara B. Moran
Joseph Moran
George Fredrick Morgan
Belinda Hewlett Morris
and Robert Parker Morris Jr.
Donald S. Morris
Eugene McGregor Morris
Jo Anne Tatum Morris
Laura Anne Morrison
Mary Nunn Morrow
Marsha Hawkins Moses
Jeanne Moskal
Deanna Carlisle Moss
Kay Kincaid Moss
Katharine Babcock Mountcastle
Kenneth Franklin Mountcastle Jr.
Carol Moyer
Anthony David Muhlig
Susan Mullally
Ann G. Mullin
Patrick J. Mullin
Leslie Elmore Munson
Ethel Perzekow Murphy
Marilyn Murphy and William Wascher
Timothy George Murphy
William Kevin Myers
Linda A. Naylor
Paul Douglas Naylor
Gregory Hepler Needham
Jeffrey Brian Neelon
Elizabeth Spence Nelson
Julianne Beth Nelson
Martha Jane Nelson
Rebecca Lisa Nesvet
David H. Neunert
Victoria S. Neunert
Virginia Alexander Neustadt
William Arthur Neustadt
Jean Healy Neville
Robert Chatham Neville
Charlotte Henshaw Newby
Thomas A. Newby Jr.
Robert Barclay Newlin
Francis Lanneau Newton
Kimberly McPhatter Newton
H. Gudger Nichols Jr.
Jane Nixon
Robert Nixon
Thomas Jones Nixon IV
Celine Noel
Carolyn Elizabeth Norris
John Haeden Norwood
Kristine Donahue Norwood
Phyllis Cole Noyes
C. Thomas Nuzum
Jean G. Nuzum
Julie Blume Nye
J. Ronald Oakley
Christine Ewing Obert
H. Patrick Oglesby
Mary Norris Preyer Oglesby
Dwight David Oland
Stephan Charles Oliva
John M. O'Neill
Lynne O'Neill
Sally Anne Orcutt
Dennis Wayne Organ
Lynette Arlene Organ
Jennifer Ortiz
Norberto Ortiz
Ken Ostrand
Linda Ostrand
Helen M. Otterbourg*
Louis Wood Otterbourg
Kevin S. Owen
Lora Susan Owen
Karen Lynn Paar
David Chandler Pace Jr.
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015
Jody Gross Pagano
Joseph Stephen Pagano
Joan Brock Page
Robert Claude Page III
Abraham Palmer
Jan Paris
Leland M. Park
Karen Lynn Parker
Jeanne Roethe Parrish
Huston Paschal
Richard Allen Paschal
Dewey Harris Pate
Beverly Bush Patterson
Daniel Watkins Patterson
Henry Newton Patterson Jr.
Jane Smith Patterson
James Richard Patton Jr.
Robert Morris Paty
Charles Douglas Payet
Florence F. Peacock
James L. Peacock III
Peter Russell Peacock
Gene Pease and Pamela Pease
Jane H. Pease
Barbara Barrett Pedersen
Lee Grant Pedersen
Kimberly Lynn Pendleton
Pamela Poe Pepper
Howard B. Perry
Jan Ferris Perry
Jonathan Scott Perry
Richard W. Pfaff
Betsy Sheely Pfenning
Emma Christine Pham
Lucy Phenix
Earl Norfleet Phillips, Jr.
and Kimberly Glenn Phillips
J. Dickson Phillips Jr.
Jean Nunalee Phillips
Sandra Piller
Ashmead Pringle Pipkin
Nelie de Kok Plourde
Charles Aycock Poe Jr.
Patricia Forbes Poe
L. Frederick Pohl Jr.
William Robert Pollard
Daniel Rutledge Pollitt
and Linda Beth Weisel
Phoebe Ann Pollitt
Lisa Pollock
Harold Bowman Poteat
Dannye Gibson Powell
and Lewis E. Powell
Jon David Cho Powell
Robert Duane Powell
Virginia Waldrop Powell
William Stevens Powell*
C. Thomas Preston Jr.
David Eugene Price
Lisa Kanwit Price
25
Larry Carlton Pridgen
Barbara Alison Prillaman
Elizabeth C. Pringle
John J. Pringle
Patrick Wayne Pritchard
Dascheil Darrell Propes
Mary Fuller Propes
Barbara Pryor
Lali Pshyk
Sammy Pshyk
Dorothy Elizabeth Pugh
Jason Kenneth Purser
Michael Patrick Quigley
John Allen Quintus
Albert Rabil
Janet Rabil
Alexander Dudley Rabinowitz
R. Lee Rainey
Virginia Fohl Rainey
Raleigh Coin Club
Kerr Craige Ramsay II
Bets Ramsey
Edward Allison Ramsey
Louise George Ramsey
Elissa Kaye Randall
Stephen Wilson Raper
Yvonne Mettetal Rayburn
Raymond H. Jones Family Trust
J. Milton Read Jr.
Marjorie Shearin Read
Monica P. Rector
Peter W. Redfield
and Silvia Tomaskova Household
Mark Lafayette Reed III
Martha Sibley Reed
Margaret Stamm Rees
Philip Adrian Rees
Robert Lewis Remsburg III
Tammi-Sue Sellati Remsburg
Linwood Moninger Respess Jr.
Tucker Meyer Respess
Todd Steven Restel
Scott Douglas Reu
Alan Henry Reynolds
Katherine Dancy Rhew
Steven Wayne Rhew
David Edward Rhoades
Lisa Brooks Rhoades
Richard Judson Richardson
Sue Richardson
Van Waldron Richardson Jr.
Merle U. Richey
William McMurry Richey
Jean Ann Rick
Patricia Riker
Deborah Day Roach
Edgar Mayo Roach
Edward Denmore Robbins Jr.
Wanda Stewart Robbins
Gerry Robbins-Davidson
John Lawrence Roberson Jr.
David Lawrence Robert
Alison Wille Roberts
Bennett W. C. Roberts
and Snow Loy Roberts
Eric Michael Roberts
Johnie G. Robinson
Lorraine Robinson
Sharon D. Robinson
Trina Driskill Robinson
William Edmond Whiddon Robinson
Herbert D. Rochen
Mavis K. Rochen
Katherine Jane Roggenkamp
Leonard William Rogoff
Muriel G. Roll
Mary Ann Rood
Margaret Anne Rook
Annette E. Rooney
John David Rose
Merrill Rose
Wendy Schreiber Rose
Donald Karl Rosenberg
Frieda Beilharz Rosenberg
Robert Rosenthal
Alton Glenn Ross
Frances Turner Ross
Sue Fields Ross
Susan Donaldson Ross
Thomas Warren Ross Sr.
Kathryn Tesh Roundtree
Lynn Paul Roundtree
Marylou Rowe
Cornelia Boardman Royle
David Brian Layton Royle
Andrea S. Rubin
David Martin Rubin
David S. Rubin
JoAnn Rubin
Rebecca Frances Ruck
Rebecca C. Rueter
John Charles Rush
Ruby S. Rush
Robert Perry Rushmore
Catherine Rose Rusin
F. Kevin Russell
John B. Russell
and Peggy Taylor Russell
John Spotswood Russell
Kelley D. Russell
Tilden Andrew Russell
Beverly Bennett Rutstein
Ann M. Ryden
D. R. Ryden
John William Saari Jr.
Jacquelyn Saber
Michael Saber
Maria Lopez Salgado
Arvin Darius Sanders
Lash Gaither Sanford Jr.
Ruth Clark Saunders
Jeanne Clifford Sawyer
Anne L. Scaff
William K. Scarborough
Jordan Michael Scepanski
and H. Lea Wells
Carol Diamond Schauer
Nancy Alyea Schiebel
Christiane Schnaidt
Leslie Bruton Schneider
Robert Michael Schneider
John Martin Schnorrenberg
George Noel Schroeder
Zsuzsi K. Schroeder
Schwab Fund for Charitable Giving
Joseph Karl Schwarzer II
Melanie Elayne Schwarzer
Dianne R. Schwitzgebel
Gregory F. Schwitzgebel III
Eva Klempner Sclippa
Barbara Dobson Scott
Terry Lee Scott
Robert E. Seymour Jr.
Iraj Shammas
* Deceased
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015
John Reuben Shannon
Sylvia Pullen Shannon
Michael Blair Shapiro
Ashley Walker Sharp
and Thomas Warrigton Sharp
Audrey Sharp
David Allen Sharpe
Cynthia Stringer Shaw
Matthew Michael Shaw
Flora Robinson Shedd
Laura Jane Sheely
Austin Ryan Shepard
Giles Freemont Shepherd III
Eric Scott Sherrill
Shibusawa Eiichi Memorial Foundation
Harold Bundick Shill III
Beverly Washington Shimkus
Jill Shires
Christy Freeland Shivel
Chon Regan Shoaf Sr.
Cynthia Shockley
Linda Mothershed Shrader
Richard Alexander Shrader
Brandon Wickliffe Shreve
Dorothy Jennings Shreve
Hanna Brown Siler
Bryant Edward Simon
Ann Cary Simpson
Bland Simpson
Elizabeth Lillard Simpson
and William Anderson Simpson
George Lee Simpson III
Nancy Barrett Simpson
Adam Landon Sipe
Sybil Austin Skakle
John Harrison Skinner III
Elin O'Hara Slavick
Amelie Anderson Sloan
June Marie Small
James Lee Smalley Jr.
Suzanne Mertz Smalley
Caroline Mitchell Smith
Earl Jones Smith Jr.
Eric Tyler Smith
and Shannon Tracey Smith
Gail Puryear Smith
and Ralph Spencer Smith Jr.
J. Walker Smith Jr.
Jane Webster Smith
and Moyer Gray Smith Sr.
Joy Duncan Smith
Lee Smith
Lindsay Kathleen Smith
Melanie Renee Smith
Ralph Kenan Smith
Ronnie J. Smith
A. Garrett Snook
Sharon Mary Snook
Charles Edward Snowden
Lisa Maria Snowden
Betty S. Somers
Jae-Kyung Song
Carolyn Cook Spalding
Janice Costner Spangler
Patricia H. Spearman
Robert W. Spearman
Laurel Speer
Romulus Sanderson Spencer Jr.
Christopher Nils Spongberg
Susan Victoria Spragg
* Deceased
Marjorie Julian Spruill
Danielle Laura Spurlock
R. Hall Starnes
Margot B. Stein and Harry L. Watson
Nancy Steinberg
Robert Steinberg
Dale Richard Steinhauer
George M. Stephens
John Allen Stephens
Mary P. Stephenson
Carrie Langford Stockard
Eric John Stockton
Dana Stone
Richard G. Stone
W. Gene Story
Sue Sprunt Stoudemire
Victoria Stowell
Walter Otis Stowell
Jacqueline Radovanic Stramm
James Nance Stramm
Lee Hylton Strange
Carl William Stratton
Kylie Strother
Stephen Strother
Alan Raiford Strowd
Mary C. Sturgeon
Shelton Ayers Styers
Stan Styers
Natalia Kasprzak Suit
Nicholas Gray Sullivan
Robert Franklin Summers
Richard Superfine
Gerald D. Surh
Logan Suriano
Benjamin Matz Susman
Kay Travis Tabor
Marsha Huffman Tarte
Pamela Tatum
Carl Dewey Taylor
David C. Taylor
Elizabeth B. Taylor
Louis Gaston Taylor Jr.
Marvin Edward Taylor Jr.
Priscilla Patterson Taylor
Dwain P. Teague
Claudia D. Templeton
and Joseph Leslie Templeton
Jeffrey Allen Templeton
Linda Kay Ter Haar
Liza M. Terll
Elizabeth Cover Teviotdale
Christopher J. J. Thiry
Elizabeth Pearsall Thomas
Paul Deward Thomas
Sara Alice Folger Thomas
Charles LeRoy Thompson
Patricia Taylor Thompson
Vaida Diller Thompson
Amy Hausman Thomure
Mary Wise Thuesen
Theodore Johannes Thuesen
Ashley Conley Tillett
Justin Elbert Tillett
Andrew Barry Tilley
and Kristin Andrews Tilley
Ernest Haywood Tilley
Robert Sullivan Tinkler
Lou Perry Tippett
W. Lyndo Tippett
Larry Edward Tise
Ginger Holloway Tomberlin
Jason Earl Tomberlin
Susan Little Toulmin
Andrea Pope Towery
Frederick William Townes IV
Martha Louise Ham Townes
Calena Herring Townsend
William Hugh Townsend
Yusuke Toyoda
Jane Jackson Trask
Gary Randall Treadway
Virginia Agnew Trenholm
Jane Wilroy Trinkley
Ann Sagar Troxell
Kyle Evan Troxell
Samuel Augusta Truitt Jr.
Sandra Regionale Truitt
Jerry C. Tsao
William Pressly Tuck
Caulton Tudor
Robert Louis Turchin Jr.
Mylissa Skidmore Turner
Cynthia Worsham Urquhart
Richard Alexander Urquhart III
James Kirk Utt
Janice Black Utt
Anne Van Arsdall
Sabine Carolina van der Meulen
Carolyn H. Van Sant
Karen Elizabeth Vance
J. Daniel Vann III
Diane Booth Vannais
and Charles Allen Waldren
Rebecca Brogden Vargha
Michael James Varn
Carol Vatz
Daniel Burt Veazey
Vicki Jo Cody Veazey
Martha Mebane Verdery
Dorothy Verkerk
Marvin Davis Veronee
Guillermo J. Vicens
Jean Marshall Vickery
Robert Frederick Vogler
Steven Boyd Wade
James Richard Wagner
Joel Morris Wagoner
Presley M. Wagoner
Douglas Arthur Wait
Maegan Alyce Walker
Margaret Horner Walker
William Conway Walker
Jim Wallace
Nina Gray Wallace
Martha K. Walston
Frank P. Ward
Ellen M. Wardlaw
John Waller Wardlaw Jr.
Judy Murray Wartman
Samuel Joseph Wascher
Rachel Wasserman
David Clagett Waters
Marion C. Waters
Ritchie Devon Watson Jr.
Sue Forbes Watson
Thomas Lee Watson
Molly Crowell Watters
Jane Ann Calhoun Weaver
Ellen Chelsey Weig
Spencer G. Weig
26
Clarice Weinberg
and Richard J. Weinberg
Gerhard L. Weinberg
Janet I. Weinberg
Richard Weize
Edith Crockford Welch*
Elizabeth Hollers Welsby
Ian James Welsby
Holly Pearl Welstein
Andrew A. Weniger
Marlene Werner
Roger Dean Werner
Leighann Elizabeth Wessells
David McKinley West
Sue Diane West
Barbara Smith White
Nancy J. White
Robert Calvin White
Clarence Earl Whitefield
Betty Buller Whitehead
Clay C. Whitehead
Amanda Carrie Whiteleather
Lynn Whitener
Randah Ruth Whitley
W. Ralph Whitley II
Stewart Whitman
Alan Cochran Whitmore
Sarah Vann Peoples Whitmore
Cathleen Pappas Whitted
J. Turner Whitted
Robert Hamilton Wicker
Jane Feierabend Wiggins
Daniele S. Wikoff
Philip Christian Wikoff
Elizabeth Hardin Wiley
Minna S. Wiley
R. Haven Wiley Jr.
Benjamin Odell Williams
Jack Harrison Williams Jr.
Larry Howard Williams
and Sylvia Grace Williams
Melissa Atkinson Williams
Paul Brazell Williams
Jeanine Mary Williamson
Katherine M. Wilson
and William E. Wilson
Neill Emmett Wilson
Susan Hogan Wilson
Marjorie Lee Windelberg
J. Brent Wishart
Ellen W. Wittig
Joseph S. Wittig
Rebecca Binney Woodruff
Robert Edward Woodruff
Betty McFarland Wooldridge
Robert Howard Wooley
Alison Woomert
Randolph Luther Worth
Salli Parker Worth
Susan Kay Wrenn
Geoffrey William Wright
Zachary Hayes Wright
Theodore TaJen Wu
Darcy Wudel
Bernard Yang
Steve Woo-Suk Yang
Yang Family Dentistry
Milo Yelesiyevich
David Keith Yelton
Brian Kwang Hwa Yen
Melanie Pribisko Yen
Robin Rebecca Yontz
G. Smedes York
Rosemary Adair York
Sanford Lewis Younce Jr.
Ralph Franklin Young*
Virginia C. Young
Robert Erwin Younger
Sandra Millers Younger
Gregory Alan Yuziuk
Hiroko Ishikawa Yuziuk
June Mary Zaccone
Caroline Waddell Zarzar
Theodore Rudolf Zarzar
Yizhou Zhang
Chunsheng Zhou
Kathy Zhou
Megan Wetherill Ziglar
William Richard Ziglar
Nadia Zilper
Fred L. Zimmerman
Martha Weeks Zimmerman
Elizabeth Bryant Zollinger
Richard William Zollinger II
Charles G. Zug III
Danica Adriene Zupic
Upcoming Library Exhibitions
Chronicles of Empire: Spain in the Americas
SEPTEMBER 14, 2015 – JANUARY 10, 2016
Spain’s discovery, conquest and settlement of
the Western hemisphere is examined through the
outstanding holdings in Wilson Library’s Rare Book
Collection, including the Bernard J. Flatow Collection of
Latin American Cronistas, as well as other rare sixteenthand seventeenth-century volumes. These early printed
books demonstrate how the new graphic media communicated globally the story of Spain’s imperial enterprise, the
first truly global empire. This exhibition is part of the
Institute for the Study of the Americas commemoration:
“One Hundred Years of Latin American Studies at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 1915–2015.”
Saltarelli Exhibit Room, Wilson Library
Wootten and Johnston: Pioneer Female Photographers and North
Carolina’s Preservation Movement
OCTOBER 16, 2015 – JANUARY 21, 2016
During the 1930s photographers Bayard Wootten
and Frances Benjamin Johnston each embarked on
endeavors to document early southern architecture.
Their separate pathways led to The University of
North Carolina Press, which published two very
different books of their results. This exhibition features
modern prints made from Wootten and Johnston’s
photographic negatives, and examines the stories
behind their 1939 and 1941 publications. North
Carolina Collection Gallery, Wilson Library
Guantanamo Bay and The Library at Camp Delta, Guantanamo Bay
THROUGH SPRING 2016
Photographer Chris Sims (Duke Center for
Documentary Studies) traveled to the Guantanamo
Bay detention center. Military restrictions made
it impractical to photograph people, so he
photographed the environments that people there
have created and that they inhabit. One set of
photos is specifically about the prisoners’ library;
the other about the built environment on and around
the camp generally. Sims recently received the
Arte Laguna Prize. Davis Library Gallery
27
5
On-the-job training
program gives library
science graduates
an edge
9
Innovation and
interaction at the Hub
Research Hubs connect
scholars across campus,
around the world
12
Concerted Conservation
Southern Folklife Collection
to digitize world famous
concert series recordings
14
NONPROFIT
U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
UNC–CHAPEL HILL
The University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill
Campus Box 3920, Davis Library
Chapel Hill, NC 27514-8890
Fresh faces bring new
perspectives to the
Southern Historical
Collection
contents
3
18
Access Granted
Southern Folklife Collection
secures $986,000
preservation grant
19
Books as art
Honor Roll of Giving
Holsenbeck Fund brings
first-edition Sol LeWitt book
to Sloane Art Library
16
Instruments with Swing
Holsenbeck Fund brings
first-edition Sol LeWitt book
to Sloane Art Library
27
Library Exhibitions
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