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. 8 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 13 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