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Published by the Friends of the Library • The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • Volume 13, number 2 • Fall 2004 U N I V E R S I T Y L I B R A R Y www. lib. unc. edu Sarah Michalak Answers the Call to Lead Carolina’s Libraries In May, Chancellor James Moeser honored Joe Hewitt’s outstanding service to the University Library with the surprise announcement that the Joe A. Hewitt Librarian’s Opportunity Fund had grown to almost $ 600,000 since the original gift from the John Wesley and Anna Hodgin Hanes Foundation was announced in April. More than 120 individuals added to the fund, which is designed to give Hewitt’s successors flexible endowment income to take advantage of new opportu-nities and challenges. Hewitt admitted to being “ so gratified by this honor, which is all about the Library’s future excellence, that I’m overwhelmed.” Friends and colleagues celebrated Hewitt’s service with a dinner in the Rare Book Collection reading room on May 20, as well as a symposium and reception on May 21. The Library also published Reflections, which chronicles the accomplishments of his tenure, in conjunction with the celebrations. The Library continues to welcome additions to the Joe A. Hewitt Fund. Gifts should be sent to the Joe A. Hewitt Librarian’s Opportunity Fund, c/ o Friends of the Library, P. O. Box 309, Chapel Hill, NC 27514- 0309. Hewitt Fund Triples as He Retires ON THE COVER: New University Librarian Sarah Michalak against the backdrop of the Walter Royal Davis Library. Michalak, previ-ously director of the J. Willard Marriott Library at the University of Utah, assumed her role at Carolina on September 20, 2004. Foreground photograph by Heidi Brett and Dale Larsen. Background photograph by Alison Duncan. Windows is published by the Friends of the Library under the auspices of the University Library, UNC- Chapel Hill. Send requests and comments to CB# 3920, Davis Library, Chapel Hill, NC 27514- 8890. Editor Tanya Fortner Managing Editor Kate Barnhart Editorial Board Kate Barnhart Michele Fletcher Tanya Fortner Writers Chrys Bullard Michele Fletcher Neil Fulghum Peggy Myers John Rutledge Photographs Kate Barnhart Heidi Brett Alison Duncan William Ferris Stephen Fletcher Janis Holder Matthew Kesterson Dale Larsen Rylanda Nickerson Jan Paris Bill Richards Andrew Ross Jenny Spiker Fred Stipe Thanks to Nancy Kaiser Design Alison Duncan 2 Photograph by Andrew Ross 3 by Chrys Bullard Sarah Michalak was just a child when her father gave her some career advice. “ Pharmacist and librarian are two good professions for women,” he said. “ Since you can’t do math, choose librarian.” Sarah took his advice to heart. Soon she placed three- by- five- inch cards in all her father’s books and fashioned a file to record their circulation. It was the first step toward a career she finds vital and engaging after thirty- three years. She is a passionate advocate for libraries— all libraries of any size or purpose. But the nation’s great university research libraries hold a special place in her heart. “ The top university research libraries are one of our nation’s most important assets and are a unique American contribution to our civilization,” she said. “ Serving as University librarian at Carolina gives me the opportunity to think, talk, live, and endlessly advocate for one of the greatest of these libraries.” Sarah Michalak Answers the Call to Lead Carolina’s Libraries She Knows When to Listen Photograph by Heidi Brett and Dale Larsen Intelligent and friendly and right Michalak ( pronounced MaHOLick) is honored to follow retiring University Librarian Joe Hewitt into the limelight. “ Joe is an extraordinary library leader,” she said. “ Following him could be intimidating, but he’s been so kind and generous with information, I feel fortunate.” Michalak previously served as director of the J. Willard Marriott Library at the University of Utah, a position she held since 1995. Like Carolina’s University Library, the Marriott Library is a member of the Association of Research Libraries ( ARL), an influential organization comprised of the 114 leading academic research libraries in North America. In 2003, Carolina’s University Library ranked fifteenth among university library members of the ARL and was the top library in the southeast. “ The community of research libraries in North America is relatively small,” Michalak said. “ Everyone knows everyone else and they know each other’s libraries.” After receiving an invitation to apply, and enticed by Carolina’s outstanding collec-tions, excellent staff, and reputation for innovation, Michalak wrote to the search committee. “ I felt that with my experience and interests I could make a contribution to one of the country’s great research libraries,” she said. “ When I started talk-ing to the search committee, everything just clicked. Even in a videoconference interview, I could sense a friendliness and quality of thinking that impressed me; and I had a lot of fun when I came to campus. The atmosphere seemed so intelligent and friendly and right.” While taking a campus tour, Michalak was inspired by what she called the “ living chain” of library history and philanthro-py— more than two hundred years repre-sented in South Building, Old Playmakers, Hill Hall, Wilson, House, and Davis. “ It felt so real when I could look back and see all the different buildings used as libraries. And from my reading of campus and library history, it is clear that from day one, donors have been there to support Carolina’s libraries, contributing extensively to collections and facilities. This long tradition of giving is still so evident today. I can’t wait to meet the community of donors who have contributed to the extraordinary excellence here.” A wealth of resources What began on Carolina’s campus as the nation’s first public university library has now grown to encompass more than 5.6 million volumes; approximately 5 million microforms; 2 million govern-ment publications; 21 million manuscripts; and thousands of audiovisuals, maps, photographs, and electronic titles. And according to Michalak, this wealth of collection resources is enhanced by another asset just as valuable. “ The librarians and staff at Carolina are outstanding,” she said. “ These are deeply committed people who exhibit a high level of professionalism, knowledge, and skill. They’re ready and happy to help beginning student and experienced researcher alike." They are also essential to Michalak’s vision for the future of the University Library. “ Continuing to build outstanding collections is our mandate and our trust,” she said. “ It is up to the nation’s libraries to acquire the primary and secondary record of our civilization and our time. Powerful information technologies are making it possible for research libraries to assemble collections and make them available locally in their native formats and globally via the Web.” She cites Documenting the American South, an initiative started under Hewitt’s tenure, as an excellent example. By assembling and digitizing select groupings of material on topics as varied as the North American Slave Narratives or the Library of Southern Literature, the architects of this project enriched already-important intellectual resources. Each of the topics is accompanied by explanatory and interpretive text. “ This is a great example of how building a library— in this case the digital library— not only supports scholarship but is in itself a scholarly activity,” she said. “ Librarians and curators are working together with faculty members and others to create this innovative new type of library collection, demonstrating once again that people are a tremendous asset at Carolina’s libraries.” Michalak has heard legislators debate the value of libraries and library buildings in the electronic information era. “ Special collections are part of our future, and we’re going to need buildings to house them for a very long time,” she said. “ Several generations from now, the primary format of collections may be electronic, but for the time being, paper-and print- based collecting is as vital as ever. Library buildings and library staff will be needed and used far into the future.” She describes her management style as consultative. “ I like library people. I like spending time with them,” she said. “ I rely on the staff and librarians to know best what our patrons need and I like for them to contribute to the decision- making process.” Addressing immediate challenges Protecting compensation for librari-ans and staff is a top priority. “ We must make sure these outstanding people are well compensated for the excellent work they do,” she said. “ We don’t want to lose the momentum we’ve already gained under ( Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor) Robert Shelton.” Shelton has also made strides in addressing one of Michalak’s most serious concerns: the cost of scholarly journals, which can rise as much as 10 percent a year. To protest this long- held pattern of price increases, he, along with the librarians and provosts at UNC- Chapel Hill, Duke, and N. C. State, decided not to subscribe to certain publishing packages in 2004. 4 “ Carolina helped make a statement heard nationwide,” Michalak said. “ Yes, we need to keep our library of scholarly journals current. But when the cost of journals rises annually, the acquisitions budget is challenged to find money just to keep up with current serials collections, let alone add important new titles. Libraries should be home to the best, most innovative technologies on campus. Our task is to engage technology to find alternatives that break up publishing’s 9- to- 10 percent hold on our budget each year.” She is also committed to the undergraduate experience at Carolina— making the library as friendly, accessible, and technology- infused as possible. Understanding how undergraduates study and obtain knowledge will be an integral part of that process— as will be an interi-or refurbishing of Davis Library. “ The University Library has the potential to make a lifelong impact on many of the University’s thousands of students,” she said, “ not just in 2004, but for generations to come. I’m very excited to be part of that process.” Provost Shelton is delighted to have her. “ Sarah brings a wealth of expertise in management, collection- building, and all other aspects of librarianship,” he said. “ Her passion for realizing the full potential of libraries will ensure that Carolina’s collections remain among the best in the world.” 5 Photograph by Stephen Fletcher “ The University Library has the potential to make a lifelong impact on many of the University’s thousands of students, not just in 2004, but for generations to come. I’m very excited to be part of that process.” SARAH MICHALAK Sarah Michalak speaks with library staff at a “ meet and greet” session her first day on the job. The Louis Round Wilson Library Photograph by Alison Duncan by Neil Fulghum, Keeper of the North Carolina Collection Gallery On October 21, 2004, the University Library celebrated the diamond anniver-sary of one of the most beautiful buildings on campus— the Louis Round Wilson Library, which was completed and dedicated in 1929. The day’s events began with an afternoon open house of the special collections in Wilson Library: the North Carolina Collection; the Rare Book Collection; and the Manuscripts Department, comprising the Southern Historical Collection, the Southern Folklife Collection, and the University Archives. A reception and the opening of the exhibi-tion, The Louis Round Wilson Library: Celebrating 75 Years of Public Service, followed in the North Carolina Collection Gallery. At six o’clock, University Librarian Emeritus Joe Hewitt presented a talk, “ The Louis Round Wilson Library: An Enduring Monument to Learning.” The exhibition examines Wilson Library’s development and highlights the wide array of public services housed in the facility through displays of period books, photographs, and artifacts. It will run through February 13, 2005. The original structure of Wilson Library reflects the skills of architect Arthur Cleveland Nash, who led or participated in the design and construction of many other structures at Carolina, including Spencer Dormitory, the Carolina Inn, and Kenan Stadium. Wilson Library’s styling— complete with Roman dome and imposing Corinthian columns— offered Nash an opportunity to express in limestone the visual power of neoclassi-cism in an era when red brick and colonial revival tastes dominated campus architec-ture. “ The Library” was not officially named in honor of former University Librarian Louis Round Wilson until 1956. Today the building remains a tribute to Wilson and his distinguished career. It also stands as a testament to Arthur Nash’s capabilities and to the combined intellectual curiosity of the students, faculty, and countless other researchers who have passed through the Library’s doors. 7 “ Wilson was built at a time when Carolina was establishing itself as the leading university in the Southeast and emerg-ing as a major public university nationally. The new library was the symbol of the academic excellence and high stature as an institution to which the University aspired. Wilson was also meant to help beautify the campus. It has served all of these goals extremely well.” JOE HEWITT University Librarian Emeritus Celebrating 75 Years of Public Service Photograph courtesy of North Carolina Collection Poster by Kristen Wall, K. Wall Design Wilson Library under construction, January 10, 1929. Poster commemorating Wilson Library’s diamond anniversary. 8 by John Rutledge, Bibliographer for West European Resources Howard Holsenbeck BSIR ’ 53, of Houston, Texas, likes to give where the “ need is greatest.” This longtime donor to the Friends of the Library, through a com-bination of expendable gifts and additions to a named endowment— the Howard Holsenbeck Library Fund— is helping the Library serve one of its major groups of users: graduate students working on theses or dissertations. Early each fall semester, I send an e- mail to directors of graduate research across campus, advertising that students may apply for research material support from the Holsenbeck Fund to acquire microfilm, reprints, books, AV material— just about anything that will help them and can become part of the Library’s permanent collection. The only proviso is that the student acknowledges the help via a letter or email to Holsenbeck. In 2003, a Ph. D. candidate in American history identified several sets of materials relating to the Cherokee nation that complemented but did not duplicate existing microfilm holdings. The Library acquired “ Reports of the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes, 1898- 1909” for her use. ( Following the passage of the Curtis Act of 1898, the Commission to the “ Five Civilized Tribes,” or Dawes Commission, dismantled the government and tribal resources of the Cherokee Nation.) It seems fitting that the flagship state university of North Carolina, the ancient home of the Cherokee people, should be a center for research on the Cherokee east of the Mississippi River. Another beneficiary wrote, “[ The Holsenbeck Fund], by allowing UNC Libraries to purchase copies of these oral histories from the U. S. Naval Institute, will enable me to hurdle a rather substantial roadblock placed in the path of my efforts to finish my dissertation this year. I had originally planned to read the oral histo-ries in question during a visit to the Naval Historical Center while on an extended trip to Washington last spring.” “ In Light of Reverence,” a documen-tary film purchased with Holsenbeck funds for a history student, examines the strug-gles of contemporary people to preserve their sacred spaces while respecting the right of non- Native people who also enjoy these places— places such as the Black Hills of South Dakota. Gifts such as Howard Holsenbeck’s help keep Carolina competitive with other institutions, many of which have more money for support of their graduate stu-dents. Holsenbeck sets a high standard and hopes to inspire others. In fact, he told us recently that each time he receives a letter from a grateful student, he writes a note back, urging the student to give to the Library once he or she has completed a degree and begun a career. Holsenbeck Fund Helps Library Serve Graduate Students by Michele Fletcher A $ 100,000 gift in April from the Lucius N. Littauer Fund in New York will add significant resources to the Library’s collecting effort for Jewish Studies. The gift, designated as a permanent endow-ment, will produce income to acquire books, journals, and other related materi-als in support of the University’s growing programs focused on Jewish life, culture, and religion. Last year, the College of Arts and Sciences, the home of the liberal arts at Carolina, established the Carolina Center for Jewish Studies to develop undergraduate and graduate instructional programs; encourage research on the Jewish experience in the United States, Europe, and Israel; and disseminate knowledge about the Jewish experience to the public beyond the University commu-nity. Working with faculty members, librarians developed a list of collecting priorities that will build resources for stu-dents, faculty, and other patrons. Henry A. Lowet ’ 54, a trustee of the Littauer Foundation and a longtime Friend of the Library, played a key role in helping the Library develop and refine the proposal. Joe Hewitt, University librarian emeritus, met Henry and his wife, Martha, for the first time in May when they were on cam-pus for Henry’s fiftieth reunion, and thanked him for his help in making this gift a reality. Lucius N. Littauer Judaica Book Fund Established “[ The Holsenbeck Fund], by allowing UNC Libraries to purchase copies of these oral histories from the U. S. Naval Institute, will enable me to hurdle a rather substantial roadblock placed in the path of my efforts to finish my dissertation this year.” A BENEFICIARY Howard Holsenbeck New Wilson Library Fellows Cumulative giving reaching $ 20,000 Jane H. Armfield William J. Armfield IV Daniel Joseph Breen Hope Holding Connell John Hewlette Connell Eugene W. Earle Marcie Ferris William R. Ferris Faryl Sims Moss H. Patrick Oglesby Mary Norris Preyer Oglesby Charles James Ragland, Jr. William R. Reevy Scott Hanchet Richardson Barbara Burch Safford Herbert James Shaffer Bell Tower $ 25,000 or more Joel Thomas Irving Clancy Gladys Hall Coates, Estate Margaret Susan Lewis, Estate W. Trent Ragland, Jr. Lucile Turner, Estate Kay Massey Weatherspoon Van Louis Weatherspoon Josephine Weeks, Estate Benefactors $ 10,000-$ 24,999 Richard E. Ballard Mike Boyd Nancy Faison Bryson Vaughn Douglas Bryson John Taylor Doggett Robert Douglas Gillikin Frank Borden Hanes, Sr. Jean Camp Harrell Ben M. Jones III Frances P. London James Edward Maloney C. Edward Pleasants Nancy Thompson Pleasants Claude Henry Snow, Jr. Sarah Turnbull Snow Elizabeth Spencer Richard Oates Steele Patrons $ 1,000-$ 9,999 Gloria Nassif Blythe Dennis M. Boucher J. Melvin Bowen Frederick Baker Bridgers Gloria Clancy Briggs Warren Marshall Briggs Mary Earle Brown Neilson Brown H. David Bruton John Woodfin Burress III Mary Louise Bizzell Burress John Eugene Cay III Kathryn Virginia Clancy Charlotte Copeland William J. Crowe Mary Lockwood Curry Thomas Hampton Cuthbertson Dave McAlister Davis Lyell Clark Dawes, Jr. Fred Hyams Deaton, Jr. Emilie Patton de Luca Erica Riefenberg Donnalley Kevin Thomas Donnalley Michael Nathan Driscoll Christopher Paul Edwards Pamela Strickland Edwards John P. Evans J. Douglas Eyre Olga Yobs Eyre Frank John Fischer III Jaroslav Thayer Folda III Linda Whitham Folda Emily Preyer Fountain Ernest Frankel Edward Randy Gardner Victoria Jean Gardner Alice Gerrard David Robinson Godschalk Lallie Moore Godschalk Peter Thacher Grauer Anne Howell Gray Bernard Gray Paul F. Grendler Eugene Gressman George Talmadge Grigsby, Jr. Gail Harrison Grossman Steven Howard Grossman Elise Pettrey Guthridge William Wallace Guthridge Louise McGwigan Hall Jane Ross Hammer C. Rush Hamrick, Jr. Peter Nickolas Hansen Charles Clement Hargrave Elizabeth George Hargrave George Mills Harper Mary Ann Harrell C. Bryce Hartley II James Jerome Hartzell Anna Ragland Hayes Luther Hartwell Hodges, Jr. Susan Winstead Holderness and Kenneth Floyd Ledford Phyllis Hale Hollowell W. Howard Holsenbeck Ronald Wesley Hyatt Joan Jacobson Dudley Lamont Jennings George Harvey Johnson Houston G. Jones Mary Coker Joslin William Joslin Margo Y. Kaiser Kathleen Lard Keffer Clarence Higgins Keller Joyce Dickman Keller John Thomas Kelly III Thomas Stephen Kenan III Bernard Klingenstein Alexander Kosma, Jr. Georgia Carroll Kyser Dana Borden Lacy Annie Gray Calhoun Lane R. Scott Langley, Jr. Dorothy Shuford Lanier Sharon Elizabeth Lawrence Dorothy P. Layton William Craig Leese Seymour Myer Levin Henry Wilkins Lewis Edward G. Lilly, Jr. Nancy Cobb Lilly Henry Augustus Lowet Richard Byron Lupton J. Ross Macdonald Margaret T. Macdonald Hannah Lacob Malkin Moses Montefiore Malkin Harold L. Marks John Lyle Matthews Betty Ray McCain John Lewis McCain Aileen T. McCauley Thomas F. McGee Edmund McIlhenny Pamela G. McIlhenny Laurie Merritt Cathy Dawn Moore Neil Morgan William A. Morgan Mary Nunn Morrow Charles Stephens Norwood, Jr. Dwight Stephen Oldham Richard Jay Osborne Malcolm Overstreet Partin E. Dudley Partrick, Jr. Dewey Harris Pate James Richard Patton, Jr. Mary Maughan Patton Henry Charles Pearson Edward R. Perl Marjorie P. Perl Ashmead Pringle Pipkin Evelyn M. Poole- Kober Dannye Romine Powell Virginia Waldrop Powell William Stevens Powell Oralia Preble- Niemi Britt Armfield Preyer Jane Bethell Preyer L. Richardson Preyer, Jr. and Marilyn Jacobs Preyer Mary Lou Prieto J. Norfleet Pruden III Alfred L. Purrington III C. Russell Reynolds Sandra D. Rich Stephen Allan Rich Scott Hanchet Richardson Martha Borden Roberson Wilborn Murray Roberson Janice Hurst Rostan John Peter Rostan III John Morris Ryan Oliver W. Sacks Eva Marie Saint Amy Greenwood Sawyer H. Murray Sawyer, Jr. W. Braxton Schell Peter J. Schledorn Eric Schopler Margaret D. Schopler Charles Milton Shaffer* Charlotte Winborne Shaffer Adrian A. Shelton Robert N. Shelton A. Pope Shuford Jim Shuford Stephenson Pope Shuford Allen Coleman Smith Edward Calvin Smith, Jr. Eve Hargrave Smith Jo Allison Clary Smith Sherwood Hubbard Smith, Jr. C. B. Squire Stillwell Family Robert Edwards Stone Samuel Coburn Stringfield George Vaughn Strong Nancy King Tanner Pell Tanner Rebecca Eve Tillet Blossom McGarrity Tindall George Brown Tindall Charles Brent Trexler, Jr. Jamie Ward Suzanne Lowe Weerts Charles M. Weiss Shirley F. Weiss Leona Paschal Whichard Willis Padgett Whichard Cathleen Pappas Whitted Ashley Lefler Wilson John Bernhardt Wilson, Jr. Thomas Meares Woodbury Jonathan Yardley Ralph Franklin Young Virginia C. Young Friends $ 10-$ 999 Charles Marc Abbey Henry Gray Absher Anne Churchwell Adams LeNeve Hodges Adams Charles Willard Adcock, Jr. Maneesha Agarwal D. Alexander Albright Mary Katherine Aldin Mary Jane Aldrich- Moodie Michael Shepard Alexander Larry Paul Alford Joseph Samuel Algranti David Michael Allen Tiffany Eatman Allen Walser Haddon Allen, Jr. William L. Allen III W. Don Allison Neely Currin Alt Josef Anderle Karen W. Andersen Esley Offit Anderson, Jr. Frank Anderson Jane Carlton Anderson Jean B. Anderson Paul Christopher Anderson Sarah Lane Anderson Amanda Irvin Andresen Richard N. L. Andrews Walton White Andrews William Leake Andrews Robert Gladstone Anthony, Jr. Victoria Foss Armentrout Kimberly Adams Armstrong Michael Aschner Annye Elizabeth Atteberry Michael Joseph Auer William Thomas Auman Edward Robert Austin Susan Lipman Austin Michelle Helen Avelar- Schnell F. Gloyd Awalt, Jr. Ellyn Bache Brian Thomas Bachman Michele Suzanne Bachman Varnell Badgett William D. Badgett Steven Wayne Bailey Lee Ann Baity Brian Keith Baker Cynthia Darlene Baker Dean Paul Baker James Bryant Baker William L. Baker III Amy Jo Ballantine Mignon Ballard Nada Louise Ballator Rebecca Sutherland Ballentine Stephen Brian Bambara O. Gordon Banks Leslie Banner G. Sprite Barbee III James Brown Barber Milton Augustus Barber III Jon Carr Barbour Cynthia Fox Barcklow Gary Fenton Barefoot John Calvin Barefoot Kay Townsend Barefoot Craig Martin Barfield M. Kate Barnhart Rebecca Anne Barnhouse Frank Hauser Barr Harriet Hylton Barr Deborah Kay Barreau Phyllis Campbell Barrett Thaddeus Jones Barringer III Doris Hasty Barron Anna Stout Barry Kristen Basmajian William Spainhour Bason Marcia Ingols Batchelor L. Kristin King Bates G. Scott Batten Ayers Whitton Baughman Clare Smith Baum Walter Gibbs Baum Joan Baxter Ronald Bayes 9 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Honor Roll of Giving 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. * deceased The names in bold are first- time donors. Jeffery S. Beam Kevin Lloyd Beaman Leanne Barnett Bean Jane McCaskey Beatty Joseph Robert Beatty Margaret Woodhouse Becker John William Becton Ronald Henry Bedard Billy Beeman Anne Mitchelle Begun Cecelia Early Belk James Sherman Belk, Jr. Christine Demeritt Bell Clara Bond Bell Gerald D. Bell Mack Bell II Victor Eros Bell III Charles Myron Benner Charlotte Stumph Bennett Larry Kester Benninger Dale Monroe Bentz Bernice I. Bergup Anne B. Berkley Stephen Russell Berry William James Berry, Jr. Edward Hiltner Bertram III Nancy Castles Bertram Doris Waugh Betts John Monie Betts, Jr. Lowry Matthews Betts Thad Lewis Beyle Mary Ellen Barnes Bierck William H. Biggers Laura Carpenter Bingham Warren Louis Bingham Donna Law Binzer Melissa Dee Birkhofer Catherine W. Bishir John William Black, Jr. Canelia Hinnant Blackwell Kendall Leon Blackwell James Cyril Blaine Jean Burdette Blaine Catherine Ann Blair Margaret Ann Blanchard* Thomas Albert Bland, Sr. Lydia L. Blanton Patricia Jane Blanton Frank A. Blazich Evo Bluestein Catherine Claire Bodin Charles Boewe John Charles Boger Andrea Lee Bolland Dbnnoise Yondevia Boney Sion Alford Boney Kathleen Narum Bonfoey Patricia Purcell Bonham Robert Hanes Borden Julian Redwine Bossong Mary Pleasants Bossong Donald Arthur Boulton Ellen R. Bowman Barbara Lane Boyd Karen Denise Boyd William Perry Boyd William Harwood Boyenton Robert Franklin Brabham, Jr. Martha Glenn Bradshaw Anita Wilkinson Brame James Ballard Brame, Jr. Jack Rudisill Brantley, Sr. Deborah Griffin Branton Michael Gerald Branton Hildegard F. Brauer, Estate Elizabeth Gardner Braxton Charmaine Susan Brickman Martin Hal Brinkley Joseph Wayne Brittain, Jr. Nancy Awbrey Brittain Robin Lenee Broadnax Charles Wilson Broadwell Lisa Mitchell Broitman Victor H. Brombert George Mercer Brooke, Jr. Roy Washington Brooks, Jr. Catharine Brosman Graham Calib Brosnan Edwin L. Brown Jane Hetherington Brown Joy Gann Brown Kathleen Rae Brown Leslie Ellen Brown Nicolette Friederich Brown Norman DePaul Brown Norman Donald Brown Robert Pleasant Brown Royall R. Brown, Estate Wiley Grissom Brown Herbert Howard Browne, Jr. Lewis Shore Brumfield Eleanor Godfrey Bruno Martha J. Bruske Brian Thomas Bryant Robin Riley Bryson James Wofford Buchanan, Sr. Beth Anne Buchholz Carl William Buchholz Richard P. Buck Robert Lynn Buckner Matthew Jay Burbank Nannie Harbour Burby Raymond Joseph Burby III William R. Burk Marcilynn Anne Burke John K. Burnett Michael Brandon Burnett Christopher Michael Burnette Catherine Williams Burns Sarah Higi Burns Amy Schwartz Bush Eric T. Bushnell Betty Jo Mooring Butler Clifford R. Butler, Jr. Lelia Clinard Butler Linda Lynch Butler Lindley Smith Butler Rebecca Player Butler Francis John Byrd John Lafayette Byrum Myra H. Cain Joseph Michael Calabria Margaret H. Caldwell Doris S. Calhoun John Philip Call Mary Trimble Cameron Alice Marable Campbell Frances Alexander Campbell Sue Catherine Campbell Janine Canan Courtenay Williams Cann Allan Rountree Cannon Betty Gibson Cannon Clarence Ray Cannon Douglas Sebren Cannon Jeannette Cannon Louis S. Cannon Robert L. Cannon Susan Connor Cannon Paul Teige Cantey Julie Dupree Cantu Virginia Spake Capparella Robert Carlin Betsy Steele Carr G. Watts Carr III Charles Williams Carter, Jr. H. William Carter, Jr. Hilary Therese Carter Leonard Hewell Carter, Jr. James Patrick Cartmel Kathy Marie Carver Jocelyn Rozelle Cash Jerry Clyde Cashion Frank David Castlebury III Trudy Elizabeth Castlebury George H. V. Cecil John Amherst Cecil Dino S. Cervigni Marilyn E. Cervigni Marvin Chaikin Robert Edward Champion John Edward Chandler III Mary Maddrey Chandler Ann Charters Barbara F. Chatham Gabriel Chau Edwin Rives Cheek Elizabeth Ann Chenault T. Kevin Cherry John Edward Chesser, Jr. J. Ben Chilton Beverly Bailey Chinnis Dale Martin Chodorow Jamal M. Choudry James William Clark, Jr. Linda Loeb Clark Margaret Allen Clark Ruth W. Clark Tony Franklin Clark Michael A. Clarke Timothy D. Clarke Michael Jay Claxton Mary Peters Clayman David Bernard Clayton T. Barrier Clendenin, Jr. Phillip Edmond Cline Robert Lee Cloyd Bettie Tillitt Cobb Ann Guiton Coburn William McWhorter Cochrane David Hampton Coe E. Wilson Coffin Joshua Peyrot Cohen Harvey Colchamiro Ruth Burton Collins William Enoch Collins Matthew Vaughn Compton Marcella Harrer Congdon Heather Sue Conklin Caroline Jane Connelly Jane S. Connelly Anne Rullman Cook Matthew Porter Cook James Coffield Cooke, Jr. Betty Bruton Cooney Glinda Sue Cooper Leland Ross Cooper, Sr. Lenox Gore Cooper, Jr. Victoria Margaret Corke Anne Eckerson Corley Paul E. Corneilson Judith Anne Cornell Peter Burton Corson, Jr. Alice Robinson Cotten Jerry Wayne Cotten Patricia B. Courtright Mona C. Couts Ben M. Covington, Jr. Cynthia Diane Cowan Nancy Walker Cowan Christopher Ross Cox Eppie Bennett Cox M. Richard Cramer James Grant Crawford Tracy Brown Crawford Gilda J. Cree Philip Robert Cree James Patrick Creech Sally Wood Creech William Ayden Creech Sandra M. Croot Betty Crowe Andres Xavier Crowley Peter Cullen Debbie Russell Cureton John Duncan Currie, Jr. Mary Virginia Spruill Currie Larry Curtis Robert Joseph Dabal George Anthony Dahir W. Grant Dahlstrom Robert Sethur Dalton Van Womack Daniel III Jane M. Danielewicz Julia Jones Daniels Robert James Daniels Thomas Francis Darden II Thomas Cook Darrell Mary Bandy Daughtry Louis Markham Dauner Susan Ann Davi William A. Davidson III Archibald Kimbrough Davis II Archie H. Davis Boyd Hill Davis Dwight Groome Davis, Jr. Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 In March, John Wilson, middle, donated to the Music Library this late nineteenth-century cabinet card signed by the composer Johannes Brahms ( 1833- 1897). The photo-graph— of Brahms— is by Fritz Luckhardt ( 1843- 1894). Wilson, former mayor of Wilson, North Carolina, found the cabinet card in 1945 during his military service in Bonn, Germany, where it had been discarded on a trash heap. Pictured with Wilson are Susan Fisher and Music Librarian Phil Vandermeer. 10 Photograph by Kate Barnhart Edward Milton Davis, Jr. Jerry M. Davis Joshua Clark Davis Mary Schoeberle Davis Nancy Katherine Davis Richard Akin Davis R. P. Stephen Davis, Sr. S. Van Davis Sarah Irwin Davis Thomas Fitzgerald Davis, Jr. J. Russell Davison Robert Allen Dawkins Todd Bentley Daymont William Howard Deane Robert Edgar Deans, Jr. Arthur St Clair DeBerry Gillian M. Debreczeny Paul Debreczeny John H. De Carlo Mardell De Carlo Steven B. DeCillis Heath Kendal Dedmond Anthony Roane Dees Leslie McNeill Dees William Archie Dees, Jr. Alexander J. DeGrand Elizabeth T. DeGuzman Gabriela de la Vega Helen Roxlo Delp Janie Johnson DeMario Stephen Gerard De May Betty Hill Dennis Anthony James Depkin Mary Boyer Derr James Allen Dervin Laura Hodgson De Vivo Deborah Carson Dibbert Douglas Steven Dibbert Bruce Dominick DiCintio Laura Dickerson Paula Dianne Dickerson Daniel Norbert Dickinson Donald H.. Dickinson Victoria Green Dickson Richard Smith Dixon, Jr. Robert Dolson Frank A. Dominguez Patricia Buck Dominguez Mary K. Donaldson- Evans Nancy Lynn Dooly Michael Marshall Dore Judith Wimberly Dorminey A. Anson Dorrance IV Virginia Pou Doughton Louisa Millard Douglass Carolyn Green Dow Mary C. Dowe Robin Kelly Dozier Linda Stopher Drake W. Magruder Drake Edward Rick Dreibelbis Kathleen Morgan Drowne Wendy Walters Dufour Roberta Ann Dunbar Kay Stirewalt Dunkley Kenneth Malcolm Dunkley Edwin Harper Dunlap Neil Dunlap Elizabeth Bramm Dunn Harold Macon Dunnagan William Edward Dunstan III L. Daniel Duval III Severn Parker Costin Duvall Teddie Lois Dyson Barbara Ross Earnhardt H. Shelton Earp III Jo Anne L. Earp Leslie Frank Eason, Jr. Mark Eastman Connie Clare Eble Constance Cryer Ecklund Cobi Bree Edelson Blanche B. Edwards Susan Usher Eggert Monica Marie Eiland C. Maxwell Elbin, Jr. Delwin Lerone Elder Glen H. Elder, Jr. Frederic L. Eldridge Mary- Frances Eldridge Carolyn Worcester Elfland Ernest L. Eliel Eva Eliel Barbara Miriam Elkins Philip Stephen Elkins, Jr. Robert Anthony Ellison Elena Elms Joseph L. Emery, Jr. Susan Patterson Emmerson Matthias Ender Jennifer Jordan Engel Patrick D. Engel Ray English, Jr. Raymond Alexander English Sally- Hilda Erickson Susan Joy Erickson Joseph Dixon Eskridge, Jr. Nora Gaskin Esthimer Steven William Esthimer David Wesley Etchison Brad Allen Evans David H. Evans, Jr. Elizabeth Evans Helen Wolfe Evans Piper King Evans James Arnold Everett Harris Factor Kimerly Walter Fahs Billy Faier Arthur John Faint Raymond Walter Falk Martha Lassiter Farmer Robert Leon Farmer Connie Barnes Farris William Charles Farris Roy Edgar Fauber Robin C. Faulkner Ian Heyward Fay Florence Fearrington Deborah Allen Fein Judith Jones Felder Robert Brabham Felder Floyd Ferguson Frances Ferguson Richard Henry Ferguson, Sr. Laura Suzanne Fernandez David Ferriero Donald Carl Fidler Anne Marsh Fields James Wylie Fields Elizabeth Marshall Fink Richard Finneran Micah Robert Fisher Sandra Strawn Fisher Thomas Grantham Fisher Carey Elizabeth Fitzmaurice Heather M. Fitzwilliam Leslie Allen Fleisher Michele Wilson Fletcher Stephen J. Fletcher W. Miles Fletcher III Joseph Martin Flora Stephen Ray Flora Jonathan Andrew Flory Helen F. Flowers Janet Loafman Flowers D. Glenn Fogle Faith Underhill Fogle Rebecca Noell Fontaine Susan Childs Fonte Michelle Alligood Fore Milton D. Forsyth, Jr. James Donald Fortenberry Janet Hanner Fortenberry Timothy Andrew Foskey Dennis Arthur Foster Glenda W. Foushee Chesca Yvonne Fox Cindy Beth Fox Gwen Corbert Fox William Henry Fox, Jr. Elizabeth Fox- Genovese Catherine Ann Frank John Hope Franklin Diane Frazier Nancy Robison Frazier R. Parrish Freeman, Jr. Frank S. French Stanton Graves French, Jr. Virginia French Ida Howell Friday William Clyde Friday Richard T. Froyen Patricia Kelley Fullagar Monica Witterholt Fuller Nancy Scott Fuller W. Erwin Fuller, Jr. W. Scott Fuller Margaret Ellen Fulton Rodney Tamaar Funderburk Andrea Hodges Funk Sandra Gail Funk Richard Benton Fuquay Benjamin Michael Furnas Lilian R. Furst Jane Susan Gabin Charles W. Gaddy Mary Kathleen Gallagher Laura Leigh Gamble Evelyn Shurley Ganley Karen Leder Gansky Stuart Alan Gansky James Towles Gardner, Jr. Margaret Borden McKinnon Gardner Rebecca Lynn Gardner Ronni Miller Gardner Sanford Daniel Garelik Andrea Phillips Garner Sanford Clyde Garner Austin Aldrich Garrison Elizabeth A. Garrison Mary Henry Garvey Ronald Lewis Gatlin Karen Weyher Gavigan Timothy Wayne Gee Anne Dantzler Geer Catherine Gerdes Bob Gibb Robert Coleman Gibbs John Kenneth Gibson Laura Carson Giles Robert Starr Gillam Susan Ann Gilley Diane Houser Gillikin Erin Inez Gillikin Michael Brondell Gillikin Bernard Gilman Donald Gilman, Jr. Honre Frank Gitelman Erica D. Glover Lucy Ann Glover Jerry Christopher Goff Keilah Kuzminski Goff Meta Skinner Goff Kristy Gail Goins Elizabeth Ashley Gonda John Edmond Gonzales Kristen Lucille Gooch Gregory Milton Goode Harry Gooder Henry Goodrich William Meredith Goodridge Michele Faye Gordon Lisa Gormley L. R. Gorrell Karl David Gottschalk Rebecca Goz William Porter Grace Margaret H. Gracey Angelia Longfellow Graf Margaret Mooring Graham W. Reece Graham IV James Robert Graves, Jr. Tracy Nelson Graybill Nancy Sue Grebenkemper Andrea Tolson Green Bluma Kafka Greenberg Ruth M. Greenberg Jack Phillip Greene Wendy Faye Greene Mary Layne Shine Gregg 11 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 From left, John Cohen, David Amram, and Rare Book Collection Curator Charles McNamara converse during the Allen Ginsberg exhibit opening at the Beats conference in April. Photograph by Bill Richards Claudine Alonzo Gregorio Marcella T. Grendler Jane Marie Gress Elizabeth Bragg Grey Elizabeth Billups Gribble A. Glenn Griffin, Jr. Emma Kathryn Griffis Ken Griffis Clay Hudson Griffith E. Jeffery Griffith Gareth Edward Griffith Richard Stuart Griggs Joe W. Grisham Jonathan Reed Grubbs Norris Grady Grubbs Jennifer Marie Guerra Elizabeth Ann Guido Selma H. Gulack Ganesh Muthian Gunasekaran Agness Wiggins Gunter Philip F. Gura Ramsdell Gurney, Jr. Robert Clifton Guthrie Robert Gutman Sam Cole Guy Joseph Dale Guyer Herbert Nelson Hackney Edward Hacskaylo Armin A. Hagen Jeanne T. Hagen Penelope Lilly Hagood Theodore E. Haigler, Jr. John Forrest Haire Peter Wilson Hairston Doris Weaver Haisley Troy Kenneth Hales Buford Hall Charles Martin Hall Katherine Romans Hall Speed Hallman Arthur D. Halpern Emily Halpern Courtney Walsh Hamer Holley Morris Hamilton Martha Elizabeth Hamilton David Murray Hammer Sarah Elizabeth Hamrick Jack A. Hanchrow Barbara Cottrell Hancock F. Borden Hanes, Jr. Katie Ann Hanson Barbara Russell Hardin Paul Hardin Diana Dixon Hardison Perry Hardison Frank Gerald Hardister, Sr. P. Curtis Hardy Rufus Dwight Hare William Ruth Harmon Howard Harper Katrina Latisha Harper Margaret Taylor Harper J. Scott Harrell, Jr. Elizabeth Varnado Harrer Boyd Gregory Harris Kathryn M. Harris Rodger S. Harris Roger T. Harris Trudier Harris Carla Smith Harrison Lee Kenion Hart Oliver James Hart III Jonathan Hartlyn Patricia Neufeld Hartman Peter David Hartman Chris Hartmann Natalie Ann Harvey Lesley Apple Haskell Gabriella Riggio Haspel W. Barnes Hauptfuhrer Jeffrey Hayden Julian Mixon Hayes Theodore W. Hayes Glenn Keeler Hayslett Alice Cheshire Haywood Mary Haywood Mitch Hazouri John Miles Headley Katherine Emily Heck Louis Roy Heckler David George Hedgecock G. Jason Hedrick Peter Niels Heller Russell Wagner Helms Kurt Hemmer Karla A. Henderson Susan Adelaide Henretta Robert F. Henry, Jr. Karen Stelle Henshaw Jan G. Hensley John Henry Hepp IV John A. Herbert Kala R. Herlands Andrew Michael Herman Billy Harvey Herring Joseph A. Herzenberg Kristin Karwehl Herzog Joe Anderson Hewitt and Susan K. Nutter Robert G. Heyneman Ronald J. Hickes Stephen Vincent Higdon Thomas Dupree Higgins, Jr. Susan Snyder Hight Jeanine Hogrefe Hightower Kenneth Nelson Hightower Marilyn Rachel Higi Edward Arthur Hill Kimberly Latta Hill Mary Lamberton Hill Rachelle Elizabeth Hill Robert Benjamin Hill, Jr. Sara Stockton Hill Ann Hillenbrand Rebecca Tatum Hilstad John Charles Hine J. Ray Hinnant, Jr. John Charles Hinson, Jr. Linda M. Hinson Natalie Barlowe Hinton Paula Pearce Hinton David Wayne Hitchings Gayla Lindsay Hitchings Jane Gregory Hobson Linda Whitney Hobson William Patrick Hobson Joshua Hockensmith Rachel Lynne Hockfield Steven Alan Hockfield Dorothy Davis Hodder Kirstie Hodge- Lopez Betty Arnold Hodges L. Edward Hodges, Jr. C. Grant Hoffman Carl Christian Hoffmann Kathleen Perkerson Hoffmann Carolyn M. Hoke Janis Gail Holder David L. Holdzkom Roslyn Perper Holdzkom William Earl Hollamon, Jr. J. Gill Holland Siri Lugg Holland Leon Milo Hollingsworth Sara Cook Holloway Barry Kevin Holmes Julia Ashley Holmes Mary Hayes Barber Holmes Deidre Holmes DuBois Elizabeth Myatt Holsten David Lowrey Holt Douglas R. Honnold Sandra E. Honnold Jewel Hoogstoel J. Reid Hooper Michele Lynn Hooper Mark Ronald Arthur Horn Mary Coit Horton Kilby Dixon Hoskins Pamela Horkan Hosty Molly Bullard Howard Sherri Ivey Howard Billy Shaw Howell, Jr. Bobbye Jo Howell Samuel Harwell Howell, Jr. Erma Reep Hoyle Ruth Alice Hoyle Patrick Joseph Huber Danny Allan Hudson Beejal Kachalia Huff Todd Mitchell Huff John Albert Hughes John Leslie Humber P. Scott Hummel Jo Ann Hundley Susan Pearson Hunsinger Christopher Ronald Hunt Doris Ann Hunt, Estate Douglass Hunt Natalie Mureen Hunter James Franklin Hurley III Loyse A. Hurley Christopher Howard Hurst Nicole Whisnant Hurst T. Hoke Huss John Ambrose Hutcheson, Jr. R. Wayne Hutchins Emily Elizabeth Huzl Richard P. Hydell Eric J. Hyman John L. Idol Lynn Moody Igoe Eleanor Roberts Ilgen William David Ilgen Henry Immerwahr John Robert Ingle A. G. Ingram Alice Jane Graham Ingram James C. Ingram 12 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Photograph by Andrew Ross Provost Robert Shelton addresses the crowd at the campus- wide retirement reception honoring Joe Hewitt in Davis Library on May 21. Grayson Paul Isenberg Cheryl Lynn Kaufman Isley John Alexander Jackson, Jr. Mary Amanda Jackson Walter A. Jackson Judith McNease James Katherine James William Stuart James Hannelore L. Jarausch George Javor David Allen Jewell Martie Leonhardt Jewell Kathy Lanita John Anne Hilliard Johnson Cyrus Murry Johnson, Jr. David Dalton Johnson Earl Johnson, Jr. Joel Alan Johnson Margery Scott Johnson Mary Caldon Johnson Steven Eric Johnson Anne M. Johnston Billy David Jolley Benjamin Adams Jolly A. Wesley Jones Arthur Francis Jones II Leslie Hartley Jones Meriwynn Gaddis Jones Plummer Alston Jones, Jr. Randall Dean Jones Raymond Henderson Jones, Jr. John Richard Jordan, Jr. Whitmel Madison Joyner Nancy Claire Julian David Robert Jurman Wayne Quay Justesen, Jr. Blair Cogdill Justice James Thomas Justice IV Melinda Margaret Kaiser Nancy Jennifer Kaiser Wayne Campbell Kannaday M. Keith Kapp Joanne Chris Kares Leah Robinson Karpen Chris Karrenstein Harold L. Katz L. Melvin Katz Robert Charles Kaufman Aubrey Alfred Keen Daniel Firing Keever Anne Turner Keifer Penny Egbert Keiter Dennis Earl Keith Marie- Beatrice Rhyne Keller Richard Alan Keller Robert Michael Keller David Reid Kelly Michael Everett Kelly Carol Ritzen Kem Thomas Dupre Kemp III C. L. Kendall Mary Anne Kendall Miriam L. Kennard Anne McCarthy Kennedy David Ray Kennedy Edward D. Kennedy Thomas Bishop Kennedy William Benjamin Kennedy John Nelson Kent Lisa Motsinger Kerner Theodore Charles Kerner, Jr. Jennifer Lee Johnston Kerns James L. Kerr Rodney Dale Kesler Fred Waggoner Kiger Eleanor M. Kilgour Frederick G. Kilgour Louisa Erickson Kilgroe Amelia Dees Killette Mary McNease Kinard Cyrus Baldwin King Harriet Lowry King James Kimball King David Franklin Kinney Annette Ligon Kirk A. Larkin Kirkman Rosa Dickinson Kirkman William Joseph Kirsch Marymelda Hall Kizer Jennifer Leigh Kiziah Marjorie Holland Klem Nadine Kloecker- Dunn Michael Ray Knowles Ann Gay Koegel Gerhard Koeppel Jane Kolson Kenneth Kolson Jennifer Shou- Ching Koo Richard J. Kowalsky Katherine Gray Kraft Benjamin Charles Kramer Anna I. Krampl Betty Leona Krimminger Frances Williams Kunstling Christine Manuel Kushner David Scott Kushner Ruth Wharton Kuykendall Harriett Talley Lacey Lionel Carson Lackey John Morrison Lafferty Laura Tron Lafferty David Alan Lagos Gary B. Lake Lester Crawford Lamon Selden Durgom Lamoureux David Landy Ann Orgain Lane Elizabeth Jordan Laney James Marion Laney Ransom Andrew Langford Susan Ruppalt Lantz John Ashley Largen Charles Francis Larrabee Geraldine Gilmore Larson Mary Buoyer Larson Steven Wayne Larson Marilyn Searson Lary S. Robert Lathan John McChesney Latimer, Jr. Katherine Armistead Latimer Catherine Grollman Lauritsen Laurie Taylor Leadbetter Amy Mangual Leary Charles Edward Leasure, Jr. Harriet Quinn Leasure Ann Donovan Lee Eleanor Carroll Lee Randall Walker Lee Susan Dill Lee Victor Darrel Lee Aaron Markus Lefkowitz Marjorie Thomas LeGwin Jeffrey Saul Lehrfeld George Lensing, Jr. Ruth Slobodkin Lepie Mark Stuart Lerner Scott Paul Leslie Jay Lester Alice N. Levin Madeline G. Levine Claire Levitt Frederick Levitt David Olin Lewis Herschel Horton Lewis Glenn Matthew Liacouras Page West Life Stewart Lillard Betsy Lindemuth Jeffrey Thomas Linder LaDonna Bollinger Lindgren William Wesley Lindley Don Raymond Linn Susan Ficker Linn Carmen Turner Lipe Alison Catherine Lipow George Roscoe Little, Jr. Thomas Allen Little, Jr. Isaac Thomas Littleton III Xuefeng Liu Patrick Christopher Livingood Susannah Berkley Livingood Walter P. Lloyd, Jr. William R. Loeser Sarah Pullen Logan Linda Beth Logsdon Fred Williams London Lawrence Foushee London, Sr. Joseph Hampton Long Holly Lynn Loosen Anthony George Lo Re Roger W. Lotchin Patricia Anne Loverich C. Townsend Ludington, Jr. Brian Zachary Lund Christina Anne Lund Catherine A. Lutz David Maxwell Lyerly Kathy A. Maboll Stuart Elaine MacDonald Georgia Ann Machemer Sara Mack Charles R. Mackey Heidi Koch Madden Wendell Carlton Maddrey Robert Wilson Madry, Jr. Aldo P. Magi Darien Dorn Mahaffee Jane B. Majors James Blair Malcolm Michele Lynn Malvesti Marc Christopher L. Mankins John E. Manley Richard Allan Mann Jennifer Elizabeth Manning May Lynn Goldstein Mansbach Dennis Michael Marcin Lynn Steele Marcin Karen Brunson Margolis Margaret Varley Markham Arthur Sanders Marks Gregory Alan Marks Margaret Brown Maron Gustavo P. Maroni Albert Barnes Marshall, Jr. Elizabeth Bandy Marshall Jean Beeks Marston Susan R. Marston Caroline Rowe Martens D. G. Martin, Jr. Harriet Wall Martin J. Paul Martin R. William Martin Susan A. Martin Stephen H. Martinat Jona Elizabeth Martino Julian D. Mason, Jr. C. Knox Massey, Jr. Mary Ann Keith Massey Michael Allen Massey William Preston Massey Morgan Anne Masten Elizabeth Matheson Donald G. Mathews William Connie Mathis, Jr. Daniel Stewart Mattern Margie Richmond Matthews Roy Thomas Matthews Melissa Ross Matton J. Douglas Mattox Lisa Stockman Mauriello Robert Christopher Mauriello Mavis Tanner Mayer Stanley Ketron McAfee III Robert John McCabe Leslie Carol McCall Donna Haines McCann William Howe McCarthy William Charles McClammy David Matthew McClendon Kimberly L. McCombs Thornton D. Robert McConnaughey Carol Webster McCormack Donald L. McCrickard Eleanor Fowler McCrickard Elizabeth Ann McCue John Goodman McDougald Blair Moseley McDow Barbara Disher McGeachy Rick McGee Katherine Tucker McGinnis John Stephen McGovern Eileen McGrath Martha Winston McGrath James Michael McGuffey Justin Emmett McGuire Tracy Lawson McGuire Kenneth M. McIntyre Martha Clampitt McKay Timothy Shepard McKeithan Bettie Haughton McLaughlin Dorothy T. McLaughlin S. Bryce McLaughlin Thomas B. McLaughlin Edwin Ray McLean William Sartor McLean James Potter McNab Charles B. McNamara Genna Rae McNeil John Dillard McSween Michael R. McVaugh Eric John Meehan Elizabeth C. Meehan- Black Virat Vijaykumar Mehta Steven Jay Melamut Ted Alan Mellnik Cecilia Husbands Menard Paul Nathaniel Mermin James Gordon Merrill Gerald E. Meyer Philip Edward Meyer John Edward Mickey Vasa D. Mihailovich Stephanie Nargesian Miksis Sharon Burger Milikowsky Bradley Edward Miller Carolynn Little Miller Helen R. Miller Marjorie Penton Miller Roger G. Miller Stephanie Jones Miller Charles Everette Mills Marissa Dawn Mills Barbara Bounds Milone Charles Louis Milone Kaye Lanning Minchew Leslie Dawn Minor Kshitij Pankaj Mistry Memory Farmer Mitchell William Leonard Mitchell III Joseph Pike Mitchener James Michael Moakley Fred Gilbert Mock, Jr. Barbara Modisett John R. Modisett Sylvia Ann Moffitt Laura- Leigh Gardner Mohr Claire Vickery Mongoven Thomas Luke Mongoven Fred Bruton Monroe Meggan Everidge Monroe Eric Lawrence Montenyohl Sarah Kaiser Montes L. Grayson Montgomery Sandra Roberts Montgomery Susan Montgomery Marvin Charles Mood James W. Moore John Franklin Moore Marie D. Moore Steven Richard Moore Terry Allen Moore, Jr. Timothy Ray Moore Victor Bailey Moore, Jr. Deborah Jane Moose Ruth M. Moose Barbara B. Moran George Fredrick Morgan Robert Ray Morgan Donald S. Morris Eleanor Saunders Morris Jerry Morris Richard Morris Ronnie Morris Helen Holt Morrison Laura Anne Morrison R. Edward Morrissett, Jr. 13 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Photograph by Andrew Ross Doris Betts speaks at the May 20 retirement dinner held in Joe Hewitt’s honor. Calvin Luther Morton, Jr. Nell Hatley Morton Morris D. Moser Jeanne Moskal Dan Moss, Jr. Fred Morris Moss, Jr. George Henry Moss, Jr. Kay Kincaid Moss Kenneth Franklin Mountcastle, Jr. Carol Ellen Mulholland Patrick J. Mullin Danny Harold Mullis Margaret Levy Mullis Ethel Perzekow Murphy Mary Teresa Murphy Timothy George Murphy William P. Murphy C. Douglas Murray Elizabeth Reid Murray William K. Murray K. Darwin Murrell Jeannie Stovall Musslewhite Brian Patrick Myers Eric Benjamin Myers James M. Myers Margaret Cleary Myers William Kevin Myers Ava Hartman Nackman Lee Richard Nackman Tal Moshe Nahir Joseph Natale Linda A. Naylor Paul Douglas Naylor Gregory Hepler Needham John Kendall Nelson Julianne Beth Nelson L. Nelson Marie Nesnow David H. Neunert Victoria S. Neunert William Arthur Neustadt Beverly Griffin Neuville Jean Healy Neville Kathryn Galloway Newkirk Laurie Freeman Newlin Claire M. Newman Francis Lanneau Newton Theodore James Newton, Jr. Luke Dang Nguyen Diana Schaedle Nicholson Thomas Jones Nixon IV Celine Noel Lisa R. Norberg Laurie Jane Norman Carolyn Elizabeth Norris J. Stanton Northrup, Jr. Julia Nunnally Northrup Phyllis Cole Noyes Robert D. Nudelman Julie Blume Nye J. Ronald Oakley Christine Ewing Obert John O’Brien Sarah O’Brien Elizabeth Long O’Connell Margaret Anne O’Connor John Ward O’Hale Shirley Patterson O'Keefe Jean Grubb O’Neal Adriana Pannevis Orr Oliver Hamilton Orr, Jr. Stephanie Cunningham Ortiz Laurie Beth Osborne Katherine Weaver Otterbourg Louis Wood Otterbourg John Weldon O'Tuel III Glenn Thomas Overcash Lora Susan Owen Roberta A. Owen Raymond Eugene Owens, Jr. Karen Lynn Paar Carl Pagter Raymond Palma Daniel Jeffrey Palmieri Judith M. Panitch Brette Clark Parise William Charles Parise Kristin Park Leland M. Park Arthur Michael Parker, Jr. Elizabeth Graham Parker Scott Edward Parker Barbara W. Parks Jane B. Parr Barbara Parramore Catherine Adams Parrish James Thomas Parrish, Jr. Jeanne Roethe Parrish Maya C. Parson David Partington Beth C. Paschal Richard Allen Paschal Beverly Bush Patterson Daniel Watkins Patterson Henry Newton Patterson, Jr. Jennifer McKay Patterson Ronnie Howard Patterson Joseph Walter Patusky Charles Douglas Payet S. Houston Payne, Jr. Peter Russell Peacock Martha Woodard Pearlman Paul Sheldon Pearlman Stephen Hale Pearman Mary Helen Pearsall Mary Bryan Taylor Pearson Melissa Jason Pearson Benjamin Gary Pease Jane H. Pease William H. Pease John William Peddycord Barbara Barrett Pedersen Lee Grant Pedersen Carol Frederick Pekar Susan Baker Pekarske Edward Olin Pendarvis III J. A. Pendergast Edwin Anderson Penick, Jr. Jane- Clark Cheshire Penick Cristina Leuba Perez Gail Perry R. Thomas Perry Julie Sydnor Peterman Benjamin Alexander Peters Douglas L. Peters Karen Blair Petersen Frederick George Petrick, Jr. Margaret Pfaff Richard W. Pfaff Nancy Smith Pfeiffer Betsy Sheely Pfenning H. Hyman Philips, Jr. Joy Lester Philips Clay Matthew Phillips J. Dickson Phillips, Jr. S. Davis Phillips James Edward Phoenix Ann Pike Bob Pike Nathan Laughlin Pilkington Gene Pinder Joel Arthur Pineles Victoria F. Pineles Rorin Morse Platt L. Frederick Pohl, Jr. Marcy Leigh Policastro Jeffrey Kemp Politis William Robert Pollard David Matthew Poole Elizabeth Tayloe Pope L. B. Pope Joanne Popeck Charles A. Porter Harold Bowman Poteat Guy Glenn Potter Debbie Chaffin Potts Dannya Gibson Powell Lewis E. Powell Erica Lyn Prater C. Thomas Preston, Jr. Charles Lewis Price William S. Price, Jr. Larry Carlton Pridgen Robert Wilson Pridgen T. Gregory Prince Elizabeth C. Pringle John J. Pringle Patrick Wayne Pritchard Sonia Marie Privette David G. Provost James Worrell Pruett Joseph Vincent Quinn John Allen Quintus Daniel Ray Radiloff Barbara Blanton Ramsey Louise Ramsey Walter Rand III Wilton Rankin Derris Lea Raper C. Michael Ray Josephine Medlin Ray Yvonne Mettetal Rayburn Ellen Tillett Rayner J. Milton Read, Jr. Marjorie Shearin Read Ann Clayton Reaves Hubert Douglas Reaves, Jr. Kenneth J. Reckford David Marshall Redmond, Jr. Mark Lafayette Reed III Margaret Stamm Rees Philip Adrian Rees Benjamin Franklin Reeves Mavis Mann Reeves William R. Reevy Linwood Moninger Respess, Jr. Tucker Meyer Respess Carol Reuss David Edward Rhoades Lisa Brooks Rhoades G. Patrick Rhodes Kathleen Whitham Rhodes Pamela K. Rhodes Jeffrey Doyle Richardson Richard J. Richardson Van Waldron Richardson, Jr. Merle U. Richey Sandy Fleischman Richman Wynn Patterson Rickey Matthew Scott Roberson Bennett W. C. Roberts Eric Michael Roberts Peter John Robinson Richard Hill Robinson III Sally D. Robinson Sheila Herman Robinson William Edmond Whiddon Robinson Randall Maitland Roden Beverly Scott Rodgers William Charles Roeder Katherine Jane Roggenkamp Leonard William Rogoff Samuel Burke Rollins James William Romer Jane Wells Romer John Herbert Roper Benjamin Lacy Rose, Jr. Edward M. Rose Nancy Jane Rose Wendy Schreiber Rose Frieda Beilharz Rosenberg David Asher Rosenstein Judith Levin Rosenstein Alton Glenn Ross Frances Turner Ross Kelly Leigh Ross and William D. Whisenant Michael Anthony Ross Morris Ross Sue Fields Ross Aleda V. Roth Goldie Rothenberg Jennifer Hodges Rotter Paymon Rouhanifard Lynn Paul Roundtree Marylou Rowe Cornelia Boardman Royle David Brian Layton Royle David S. Rubin Carolyn Warren Rugen John Allen Ruggles Rosalie Varn Ruggles Raquel M. Ruiz John Charles Rush Robert Perry Rushmore F. Kevin Russell John B. Russell John Spotswood Russell Sallie Shuping Russell Scott Christopher Russell John Butler Rutledge Jan Martin Rybnicek Linda Saaremaa Richard James Sackmann Maria Lopez Salgado Rosalie S. Samson Claire Ann Sanders John Lassiter Sanders Michelle Goodwin Santa Steven Michael Sartorio Howell C. Sasser, Jr. Diane Hyde Sasson Antoinette Watkin Satterfield John Roberts Satterfield, Jr.* Barbara Boyd Sauer Ruth Clark Saunders Susan Murphy Saunders Patricia E. Sawin Jeanne Clifford Sawyer Anne L. Scaff J. Shelton Scales Stacy Crockett Scales S. Chad Scarboro Patricia Carruthers Scarborough Thomas A. H. Scarborough William K. Scarborough William A. Schaffer David Ben Schauer Michael Gerard Schell Gordon Schenck William Ziegler Schenck Eileen E. Schledorn Christiane Schnaidt Deborah Rutchka Schneider Leslie Bruton Schneider Robert Michael Schneider Barbara Brandon Schnorrenberg John Martin Schnorrenberg Harry Paul Schrank, Jr. Erik Anton Schreiner Dorothy Cutting Schroeder George Noel Schroeder Jane Mish Schutt William B. Schwartz, Jr. Christoph E. Schweitzer Jack Lamar Scism Nancy Fox Scism Jacqueline Rogers Scott John Layne Scott Robert Walter Scott Edward Butler Scruggs Lisa Kay Seago Falls Thomason Seagrave Peter George Seaman, Jr. Margaret Gordon Seiler Mary Duke B. Trent Semans Anne Lassiter Sessoms Betty Jordan Sessoms Faison Thomson Sessoms H. Douglas Sessoms Linda Baroody Setliff John Wilbur Sharp Frank Stedman Shaw Rollin Shaw John Phillip Shearin Wiley Henry Shearin, Jr. Laura Jane Sheely Amal Tayel Shehata Michael Ray Shelor Margaret E. Shenton Carol L. Sherman Kalman Sherman Steven Sherman Mary Jervey Shields Jill Shires Chon Regan Shoaf Tara Brooke Shoe Lenoir Gwyn Shook Linda Mothershed Shrader Richard Alexander Shrader Brian Scott Shuman Carl M. Shy Eve Carol Shy Joan Leonard Sibley Thomas Edward Sibley Charlotte Simpson Sigmon E. Bruce Sigmon, Jr. Bland Simpson George Lee Simpson III Nancy Barrett Simpson Ross Joseph Simpson, Jr. Stanley Albert Simpson Anastatia Sims Mabel Whedbee Sisco Nancy Howard Sitterson Eva Whetstone Sitton Evan Russell Sitton William Henry Skeels III John Harrison Skinner III Jolie Weinstein Skinner William Pailin Skinner III Earl Slick Anne Dye Sloop Barbara Jo Smith Charlotte Hord Smith Colin C. F. Smith David John Smith Earl Jones Smith, Jr. Edward Henry Smith Eleanor Huske Smith Everard Hall Smith III J. McNeill Smith, Jr. Jane C. Smith Jeremy Smith Jordan M. Smith Kenneth Royster Smith, Jr. Martha Stribling Smith Moyer Gray Smith, Sr. Norris W. Smith Patricia Schoeberle Smith Pinkney Craig Smith Ralph Kenan Smith Robert Oscar Smith Roy Elmer Smith Sidney Rufus Smith, Jr. Sylvia Jean Smith W. Britton Smith, Jr. Howard E. Smither William Davis Snider Helen Easter Snow Herbert Norris Snowden III James Robert Snypes Stuart Solomon 14 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Richard A. Soloway Diane H. Sonnenwald Kathleen Kerry Soukup Janice Costner Spangler Patricia H. Spearman Robert W. Spearman Frances Keating Spencer Ross Dee Spencer Richard K. Spottswood Carolyn Andrews Squires Peter Staffel Betsy Ross Howe Stafford Lee Roy Stanley Mary Kellam Stanley Robert Allen Stanley R. Hall Starnes Katharine Elaine Starrett June Landergren Steel Marianne Steiner Lonnie George Stephenson Mary P. Stephenson Blanche Bonner Stevens E. Walker Stevens, Jr. H. Hugh Stevens, Jr. William Hartin Stevenson III Alva W. Stewart Ann Stewart Carol McKay Stewart Pearson H. Stewart Philip Stewart David Stick Eric John Stockton Donald A. Stone, Jr. Lee A. Stone Richard G. Stone George C. Stoney W. Gene Story Dale Oliver Stouch, Jr. Nikolay P. Stoynov Lee Hylton Strange Carl William Stratton Albrecht B. Strauss Diane Wheeler Strauss Joseph Strelka Michael David Strother Keegan Fay Stroup Suzanne Yelverton Stroup Alan Raiford Strowd Anne Watson Strowd Elvin Emerson Strowd Walter Cabot Sturdivant Mary C. Sturgeon Frank Stutz Geraldine Dillard Stutz R. Stanley Styers Sharon Eileen Sullivan Robert Franklin Summers Heather Angela Summey David Spurgeon Sumner Roberta Dunlap Sumpter Richard Superfine Elizabeth Royall Sutton H. Bryan Sutton, Jr. Maxine McMahon Swalin Maureen Elizabeth Sweeney Luke Horace Swindler, Jr. Kay Travis Tabor Mark Taddonio Lori Ray Taggart Katharine Tannahill Nancy Baach Tannenbaum Ellyn Pell Tanner James Mahan Tanner, Jr. James Townsend Tanner, Sr. Sarah Fearnside Tanner Carole Southerland Tarry Marsha Huffman Tarte Sarah Lindsay Tate Petrus W. Tax David C. Taylor J. Carlton Taylor, Sr. John Ecklin Taylor Martha Mallary Taylor N. Ferebee Taylor* Roy Dail Taylor Linda Kay Ter Haar Liza M. Terll Carol Smolka Terry Jeffrey Scott Terry Elizabeth Cover Teviotdale Angela Pegram Tharrington Elizabeth Pearsall Thomas Janet A. Thomas L. Parke Thomas Sara Alice Folger Thomas Charles LeRoy Thompson Helene Willingham Thompson Lucinda Smith Thompson Patricia Taylor Thompson Mary Wise Thuesen Sarah Caroline Thuesen William Oliver Thweatt Justin Elbert Tillett Andrew Barry Tilley Ernest Haywood Tilley Kristin Andrews Tilley Rollie Tillman, Jr. Marilyn Schroder Timmerman Norris Watson Timmerman Carol M. Tobin Ronald W. Tobin Stuart Kittredge Todd Arrel D. Toews Delma Ross Tolan, Jr. Lisa Carol Tolbert Luisa Rodriguez Tolsma F. Rogers Toms, Jr. Wanda Porter Towler William Hugh Townsend Stella Anderson Trapp Ginger R. Travis Joseph Collins Travis Gary Randall Treadway Edward Treverton Jane Wilroy Trinkley Stephanie Anne Trojan Deanne Deese Trollinger Kyle Evan Troxell Carole Watterson Troxler George Wesley Troxler William Finch Troxler, Jr. Elaine Osteen Truckner Bryan Hill Tucker Rachael Knott Tucker Robert Cinnamond Tucker Rosa Lee Brake Tucker Robert Louis Turchin, Jr. Amos Granger Tyndall Beverley Lester Tyndall Robin Schafer Tyndall Benson Lewis Tyner Martha Croxton Tyson Ruel W. Tyson, Jr. Lenora Ucko Charles Albert Underwood, Jr. Caroline M. Unick G. Rivers Upchurch Richard Alexander Urquhart III Daniel E. Uyesato Genene Evans Uyesato Alexander Spyros Vallianos Karen Elizabeth Vance David John Vandenbergh Lydia Bodman Vandenbergh Sabine Carolina van der Meulen William Chace VanderWolk J. Daniel Vann III Carolyn H. Van Sant Deborah Baker Vanyo Michael James Varn Carol Vatz Robert David Vatz Jason Brian Vaughan Rosalie Venturella Martha Mebane Verdery W. Lane Verlenden III Nancy Loyd Vernon Marvin Davis Veronee Martha Sarbaugh Veto Robert Elliott Veto Laura Greer Vick Jean Marshall Vickery Mary O. ’ Fallon Vinzani Jane McKean Vogel Robert Frederick Vogler Stephanie Elisabeth von Isenburg Steven Boyd Wade David Lawrence Wagner Brian Keith Walker Carolyn Andrews Wallace Nina Gray Wallace Wesley Herndon Wallace Nellie Laird Waltner Bobby J. Ward Sherry Vestal Ward William Thornton Ward John Waller Wardlaw, Jr. Jeffrey Dennis Warren Lindsay Carter Warren, Jr. Rebecca Drane Warren Elizabeth L. Warren- Mikes Kimyatta Chanequa Washington Allison Lange- McGill Wasko Richard Christopher Waters Alan D. Watson Harry L. Watson Jennifer Lynn Watson Ritchie Devon Watson, Jr. Thomas Lee Watson Molly Crowell Watters John Webb R. Beverly R. Webb David Weil Gerhard L. Weinberg Edith Crockford Welch J. Edmund Welch* Jameson Paul Wells Elizabeth Hollers Welsby Barbara K. Wendell Robin H. Wendell Arthur S. Werner Lynn Elise Wesson David McKinley West Bert W. Westbrook Don Gist Wetherbee Helen Jane Wettach Peggy Watkins Wharton R. Andrew Wheeler Elizabeth Clarke Whitaker William Asbury Whitaker James R. White James Wilson White Nancy Hanes White Robert F. White Tera Melissa White Clarence Earl Whitefield Jane Pittard Whitefield Randah Ruth Whitley Thomas M. Whitmore Floyd Gilbert Whitney III C. Phillip Whitworth Christopher Wicher Jay Wiener Donna Stroup Wightman R. Mark Wightman Elizabeth Hardin Wiley Barbara McDonald Wilkerson J. Tracy Wilkerson Sarah Louise Wilkerson- Freeman 15 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Photograph by Andrew Ross Guests enjoy the spread at Joe Hewitt’s retirement reception in Davis Library. J. Edgar Williams Jack Harrison Williams, Jr. Larry Howard Williams Paul Brazell Williams Peter Pescud Williams, Sr. Wiley J. Williams Joel R. Williamson Michael Willis Emily Herring Wilson James R. Wilson Kristen Wilson Robert Church Wilson IV John Fleming Wily III Marjorie Lee Windelberg Christopher John Windolph Charles McKimmon Winston, Sr. Jane Pettis Wiseman John Brent Wishart Lois Wistrand Abner Carr Withers, Jr. Karin Wittenburg Joseph S. Wittig Rebecca Ann Dial Wolf Herman Hubert Wommack IV Jane Minor Woodin James Allen Woolard Betty McFarland Wooldridge Alison Woomert Gerald Killian Worsley Randolph Luther Worth Salli Parker Worth Susan Kay Wrenn Annette Cox Wright Sara Barrett Wright Geraldine Nada Wu Sandra Wurth- Hough Albert D. Wylie III David Price Yancey Margaretta Jane Yarborough David Keith Yelton G. Smedes York Daniel Robert Young Kathy M. Young Maria Alston Davis Young Ronald Edwin Young Thomas Wade Young Christine Ann Youngblood Gregory Alan Yuziuk June Mary Zaccone Scott Thomas Zander Janine Mary Zanin Narja Anna Zarella Ann A. Zener, Estate Joel Fredrick Zeugner Kimberly Frederick Zeugner Nadia Zilper Elizabeth S. Zimmerman Janet Rose Zipser Elizabeth Bryant Zollinger Richard William Zollinger II Sherrie Elizabeth Zweig Organizations American Political Science Review Asheville Addiction Consultants Assoc Bank of Stanley/ Uwharrie Cap Corp Beta Phi Mu Epsilon The Bookshop, Inc. Borden Fund, Inc. Ruth Camp Campbell Charitable Trust Chapel Hill Family Medicine, PA Crawford- Norwood Company, Inc. Custom Brick Company, Inc. Bob Dolan Books Fairbanks Center for Motion Picture Study Gilcrease Museum Hanes Charitable Lead Trust George H. Johnson Family Charitable Lead Trust Librarian’s Association at UNC- CH North Caroliniana Society Peters Books Ready Mixed Concrete Co. Grace Jones Richardson Trust Terraquest Environmental Consultants PC The Tipperary Corporation, Inc. Treble Clef Music Press Laurance Triplette, Inc. UNC General Alumni Association University Woman's Club Foundations Bell Family Foundation Bernard Foundation Bryson Foundation LTD Burch- Safford Foundation, Inc. Colchamiro Family Foundation Norman & Edna Freehling Foundation O. Max Gardner Foundation John W. and Anna H. Hanes Foundation Ella Ann L. & Frank B. Holding Foundation Hurley Trammell Foundation Kyser Foundation Seymour Levin Foundation Lucius N. Littauer Foundation, Inc. Malkin Family Foundation George H. Moss, Jr. and Mary Alice Moss Foundation Randleigh Foundation Trust A. Alex Shuford Foundation, Inc. E. C. Smith, Jr. & C. B. Smith Foundation, Inc. Trexler Foundation Wayne Foundation Thomas Henry Wilson & Family Foundation Memorial Gifts Memorial Gifts Received in Honor of the Following: Talmadge Moose Deborah Schledorn Meredith Thomson Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Photograph by Andrew Ross Library Loses Great Leader James F. Govan, University librarian from 1973 to 1992, passed away on October 2, at age 78. In partnership with the late Chancellor Ferebee Taylor, Govan was architect of much of the growth of the physical plant of the Library, as well as its services. He was instrumental in the construc-tion of the 1977 Wilson Library stack addition, the building of Walter Royal Davis Library, the renovation of Wilson Library, the establishment of Triangle Research Libraries Network, the adoption of the online cataloging system, and the Library’s participation as founding member of SOLINET ( Southeastern Library Network). The Library collections more than doubled under his leadership. The Hanes Foundation gave the four-millionth volume in his honor at his retirement in 1992. He also served on the boards of and as chair of the Center for Research Libraries and SOLINET as well as president of the Association of Research Libraries during his distin-guished career. “ He guided the Library through a period of rapid change and growth and significantly improved the standing of the Library among research university libraries nationally,” says Joe A. Hewitt, who succeeded Govan. “ We are greatly in his debt for his strong leadership and determined advocacy for the Library and Library staff during his tenure. For many of us, Dr. Govan was not only a leader, but also a dear friend and inspiring mentor, and he will be deeply missed.” Govan is survived by his wife, Ann Bright Govan, of Chattanooga, and their four children. A memorial service will be held in the Wilson Library Pleasants Family Assembly Room later in the academic year. The date and time will be announced. Bill Guthridge presents Joe Hewitt with a number 23 jersey signed by Carolina basketball coaching greats Dean Smith, Roy Williams, and Bill Guthridge, at Hewitt’s retirement dinner in the Rare Book Collection reading room. James F. Govan in 1992. Photograph by Jerry Cotten 16 by Peggy Myers When Gilda Cree was growing up in Queens, New York, she could see two full- length movies, the newsreel, a cartoon, and coming attractions—“ All that for eleven cents! It was wonderful,” she says now. It turns out her future husband, and partner in appreciation of film and theater, was doing the same thing in Florida. Philip Cree grew up in Florida and came to Chapel Hill as a freshman. Although he returned to Florida after earning his business degree and spent forty- two years in the aviation insurance industry, he never got Chapel Hill out of his mind. “ Chapel Hill graduates tend to be pretty chauvinistic about their alma mater,” Cree said. “ Gilda kept asking, ‘ What IS it with you people?’” Then Gilda joined Philip for his forty- fifth UNC class reunion trip. That’s when she became one of “ those people.” During that trip the couple decided to move from Florida to the Chapel Hill area. The Crees have decided to support two areas of the University that they love, through gifts in their estate planning. Through a bequest, they will endow permanent funds to benefit the University Library and PlayMakers Repertory Company. The Philip R. and Gilda J. Cree Library Fund will support the purchase of materials for the Media Resources Center in the Undergraduate Library. “ We’re movie freaks” says Gilda. They have a personal library of more than 120 movie titles. Touring the newly renovated Undergrad with a group of alumni, they were thrilled to discover the collection of movies, performances, audio recordings, and music in the Media Resources collection. The Crees believe in the Library as a crucial center for learning materials on the University campus. They’ve been influenced by their friends Farrel and Welshie Potts, whose gifts also support purchases of Library materials. Through their endowed fund, Philip and Gilda Cree are ensuring that future Carolina students will continue to have access to media that enrich their classroom, research, and recreation experiences at Carolina. Thanks to Jenny Spiker and PlayMakers for their assistance with this article. 17 “ All That for Eleven Cents!” Bequests: Giving with Clear Intent Like Philip and Gilda Cree, you may want to consider making a gift to Carolina by including the University Library in your will. Your will is a statement about what matters most in your life. By making a will, you can ensure that your intentions are clearly expressed, and that they will be followed by those administering your estate. Bequests may take various forms, as described below. Your bequest may be unrestricted or designated for a specific purpose within the Library or the University. We would be happy to help you draft specific language about your bequest for you to share with your attorney. Specific bequest states a specific amount or asset amount. It may be a gift of cash, securities, real estate, or tangible property ( i. e., books, manuscripts, or artwork). Residuary bequest names the University Library to receive all or a percentage of the remainder of the estate after specific bequests have been fulfilled. Contingent bequest takes effect only if all primary beneficiaries named in the will are predeceased. Declaring the University Library a contingent beneficiary can prevent the property from going to the state if there are no heirs. For more information on how to make a bequest or on other planned giving opportunities, please contact Michele Fletcher Director of Library Development CB# 3900, Davis Library Chapel Hill, NC 27514 ( 919) 962- 3437 Michele_ Fletcher@ unc. edu Photograph by Jenny Spiker Philip and Gilda Cree 18 In late July, special collections conservators from around the country gathered in the Conservation Lab in Wilson Library for a four- day workshop, “ Values and Decision- making in Special Collections Conservation.” The workshop, co- sponsored by the University Library and the American Institute for Conservation, was developed and led by the Library’s special collections conserva-tor, Jan Paris. Wilson Library staff mem-bers and guest scholars who work with primary sources in special collections also participated in some of the sessions. Raquel Cogell joined the University Library staff on August 16 as the first Black Culture and History Librarian. Three weeks later, on September 7, the Black Culture and History Library— the first new branch library on campus in more than thirty- five years— officially opened its doors. The Library is housed in the new freestanding facility of the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History, which was established in 1988. Cogell, formerly of Emory University in Atlanta, has overall management responsi-bility for the new Library, which houses a collection of some ten thousand volumes and other resources supporting teaching and research in African American and African diaspora studies, and is open to anyone interested in these subjects. In addition— as part of an innovative “ bou-tique” library concept— Cogell provides special individualized services to staff; fac-ulty; visiting scholars; and students affiliat-ed with the Stone Center, the Institute of African American Research, and the Department of African and Afro- American Studies. She will act as liaison to the rich collections of African American source materials in a variety of formats, dispersed among many campus and regional libraries— a role that might have her intro-ducing visiting scholars to collections and library staff, arranging for checkout of materials, and visiting collections at Duke, North Carolina Central, and North Carolina State universities. Photograph by Jan Paris Photograph by Rylanda Nickerson Cogell is First Black Culture and History Librarian Values and Decision- making in Special Collections Conservation Two years ago, then- University Librarian Joe Hewitt compiled a booklet of reader comments for the thousandth- entry celebration of Documenting the American South ( DAS or DocSouth), the Library’s acclaimed digital publishing initiative that brings Southern history, literature, and culture to the World Wide Web. The title chosen for the booklet was “ Keep Up the Good Work( s)”— a plea lifted directly from several grateful readers’ messages. “ Our readers’ comments on DAS are a rich source of inspiration and direction as we continue this effort,” wrote Hewitt in the preface. As the Library strives to keep up the good works, use of DocSouth steadily increases and readers’ comments continue to pour in. Student life in antebellum Chapel Hill This July, the University Library was awarded a federal Library Services and Technology Act grant by the State Library of North Carolina, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources, to add another DocSouth chapter, True and Candid Compositions: The Lives and Writings of Antebellum Students in North Carolina. This section of the site will bring together for the first time 109 man-uscript documents written primarily by students attending the University of North Carolina between 1795, the year in which the institution opened its doors, and 1868, when the devastation of the Civil War closed them again. These documents depict students’ daily activities, their views of academic work, their social and political interests, and their hopes for the future. Erika Lindemann, professor of English at UNC- Chapel Hill, provides edi-torial, historical, and contextual informa-tion in her introduction. Most materials are drawn from the Southern Historical Collection, the University Archives, and the North Carolina Collection. True and Candid Compositions adds to the extensive holdings ( 1,270 items, or about 170,000 pages) of DocSouth’s seven other sections: First- Person Narratives of the American South, 1860 to 1920; Library of Southern Literature, Beginnings to 1920; North American Slave Narratives; The Southern Homefront, 1861 to 1865; The Church in the Southern Black Community, Beginnings to 1920; The North Carolina Experience, Beginnings to 1940; and North Carolinians and the Great War. 1.2 million checkouts or 20 million hits DocSouth recorded about 1.2 million electronic circulations in the first six months of 2004. Circulation statistics for electronic texts often simply reflect hits. For DocSouth, librarians try to ascertain how many people are actually looking at the contents of the site’s texts— the electronic equivalent of checking a book out of a library. Only those hits to files that represent the intellectual content of the electronic text are counted. This helps to avoid inflating statistics with hits on image files, menu pages, etc. The ratio is 1: 20; one electronic “ check- out” equals twenty hits, which means that the site had more than 20 million hits from February 2004 through July 2004. 19 DocSouth: Keeping Up the Good Works “ I was able to find where my granddad was during WW1. I actually went there and found the towns of Moranville, Grimaucourt, and the forest of Cognon. Nothing has been changed in the forest of Cognon since the war. The German trenches are still there, and the whole area is covered in bomb craters. I found two large shell cases. Thanks for posting the information.” “ My name is Pamela and I’m in the 7th grade. I am working ahead on my national history day project for this coming school year. I am doing it on communication of the underground railroad. Your site is helping me tons!!!! I have been able to look at a lot of primary sources and get the story on slaves and how they were helped to freedom, and also on how they were treated. Thank you for letting me use your site.” “ I’m a professor at Boston University, working frequently in area prisons with our Prison Education Project. Incarcerated students asked me to teach an African American histo-ry class, but prison rules and budget make it difficult to get the books we need behind bars. Your website is a real godsend; I’m delighted to be able to bring these valuable primary sources into the prisons— thanks so much for all the hard work you've put into this user- friendly wealth of infor-mation.” Readers Express Gratitude: Wilson Library celebrated its seventy-fifth anniversary in October 2004 ( see page 7). Not by chance, the Southern Historical Collection, known affectionately as “ the Southern,” celebrates its seventy-fifth a few months later, in January 2005, with a major exhibit of treasures; a talk by Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor of History and director of the Southern Oral History Program at UNC-Chapel Hill; and a major scholarly confer-ence. The Southern was officially estab-lished in the new Louis Round Wilson Library on January 14, 1930. A generous gift from Sarah Graham Kenan allowed J. G. de Roulhac Hamilton, professor of history, the means to begin implementing his vision of a unique repository of manu-script materials about our region. A persuasive and tenacious collector, Hamilton traveled back and forth across the South in a series of what he dubbed his “ faithful Fords,” gathering manuscript materials from the homes, offices, and even barns of his fellow Southerners. He acquired the nickname “ Ransack Hamilton” from librarians and archivists in other states who envied him his budget and his ability to locate and bring home collections. Thanks to the new Wilson Library, he could promise donors a fire-proof building, security for the materials, and access provided by an experienced reference staff. The Southern was soon acknowledged as the intellectual home of the community of scholars of the American South. Today the Southern Historical Collection holds more than fifteen million manuscript items, which document more than three centuries of Southern history and culture; and it remains the premier research center for the study of the American South. Together with its sister collections— the Southern Folklife Collection and the University Archives— that form the Manuscripts Department on the fourth floor of Wilson Library, the Southern draws twenty- five hundred on-site visits a year and its staff responds to more than eight thousand reference ques-tions from online and on- site patrons. Tim West, who became director of Manuscripts and curator of the Southern Historical Collection in October 2003, sees the seventy- fifth anniversary celebra-tion as an opportunity to look forward as well as back at the accomplishments of the Southern. “ Hamilton really did dream big and I think he would be quite satisfied with the realization of his concept over the years. And we want to keep dreaming big. This will involve meeting the challenges of continuing to build traditional archival col-lections, as well as capturing the electron-ic formats of the digital age that Hamilton could not foresee. We now must also develop new ways to serve researchers online and through digitization.” The University Library invites you to join in the celebration on January 13, 2005, at the opening reception for Southern Sources: An Exhibition Celebrating 75 Years of the Southern Historical Collection and the talk by Professor Jacquelyn Dowd Hall. Please see the calendar on page 23 for more details. 20 “ The Southern” Celebrates 75 Years Advertisement from the Duncan Malloy Papers in the Southern Historical Collection. Runaway slave poster from the Manigault Family Papers in the Southern Historical Collection. “ Southern Sources: A Symposium Celebrating 75 Years of the Southern Historical Collection” The Southern Historical Collection will host “ Southern Sources: A Symposium Celebrating 75 Years of the Southern Historical Collection” at Wilson Library on March 18 and 19, 2005. Some of the most distinguished historians of the American South will present papers on the role of archives in historical produc-tion within the context of the antebellum plantation era, the Civil War, the New South, the Jim Crow South, and the South since 1954. Registration is required and forms will be available in November 2004. For more information, contact Laura Clark Brown at ( 919) 962- 1345 or mss@ email. unc. edu. 21 University Archives and Records Service staff and students completed several “ dirty” projects last fall and this spring in order to rescue some of the University’s valuable public records from less than desirable base-ment storage areas. School of Information and Library Science student Lewis Dorman, wearing a surgical mask for protection, screens records prior to boxing them for removal. Pulitzer Prize- winner Alice Walker, center, toured the Manuscripts Department before heading to North Carolina State University to be the kickoff speaker at the North Carolina Literary Festival in April. Here, Walker views treasures of the Southern Historical Collection with her literary agent, Wendy Weil, left, and Southern Historical Collection Assistant Curator Lynn Holdzkom. Documents on the table include slave Jonas Elias Pope’s 1851 certificate of freedom, and letters between Alice Walker and psychiatrist/ writer Robert Coles. Southern Folklife Collection on the Back Porch At 9: 30 p. m. on Sunday, September 26, 2004, WUNC- FM’s Back Porch Music initiated a monthly half- hour segment devoted to rare and archival recordings from the University Library’s Southern Folklife Collection. Back Porch Music is the longest continually running, locally produced program on WUNC 91.5 FM. Each week the program presents a wide range of acoustic- based folk music— from contemporary singer/ songwriters to old- time musicians of the 1920s and ’ 30s, and from classic Celtic music to the blues. Back Porch Music airs Fridays and Saturdays from 8: 00 p. m. to 11: 00 p. m. ( hosted by Freddy Jenkins), and Sundays from 8: 00 p. m. to 11: 00 p. m. ( hosted by Keith Weston). Photograph by Janis Holder Photograph courtesy of WUNC Photograph by William Ferris 22 On a Thursday evening in late April of this year, many members of the UNC- Chapel Hill community gathered on a patio in the heart of campus to watch the mystery of Rosebud unfold. It was a screening of the classic film, Citizen Kane, for the premiere of the second annual Finehout Summer Film Series, presented by Davis Library and the Undergraduate Library’s Media Resources Center. A gift from alumnus Robert Finehout ’ 43 inspired the series. Mitch Whichard, head of circulation at Davis Library, began the Finehout Series to introduce the vast holdings of 16mm films held in the Library’s Media Resources Center collection. Additionally, the Finehout Series celebrates the vitality of film by promoting the experience of viewing a format ( 16mm) that is becoming increasingly rare in academic library collections nationwide. Each of the series has highlighted a number of classic fea-ture films from the Finehout Collection, including Stage Coach, Anatomy of a Murder, Rear Window, The Maltese Falcon, and Alfred Hitchcock’s first feature- length talking film, Blackmail. Robert Finehout ( Class of 1943) donated much of his film collection to the Library in 2002. Consisting of several hundred items— wartime training and informational films, classroom films, TV documentary series, many Warner Bros. and Walt Disney cartoon anthologies, and numerous feature film classics— the Finehout Collection offers a wide variety of films that support a myriad of research and instructional activities on campus. Finehout enrolled in the School of Journalism at UNC- Chapel Hill in 1941 after attending a small community college in New Jersey for two years. Of his time at Carolina he recalls, “ The legendary ‘ Skipper’ Coffin was my mentor . . . with his deadly blue- pencil that excised purple prose and various syntactic abuses.” Professor Walter Spearman shared Finehout’s interest in films, and encour-aged him to write a regular film review column for The Daily Tar Heel, entitled “ The Sound Track.” Upon his graduation and return to New Jersey, Finehout began working for Association Films, a leading national distributor and marketer of industrial, educational, and entertainment films. As promotional director, Finehout produced catalogs, news releases, and feature sto-ries to generate bookings for their clients’ films. Many of these were “ sponsored films,” that is, films underwritten by cor-porations or other special interest groups. These films were unique in that they could reach a wide range of viewers, from niche clubs to theater and television audiences. “ Mercifully free of overt advertising,” these films were often widely accepted, making it “ an exciting time in a burgeon-ing field,” according to Finehout. So exciting, in fact, that Finehout began collecting and archiving a wide range of these films, all of which were produced as 16mm prints. Through the years, Finehout continued his collecting, focusing primarily on films that he feels “ may have otherwise been lost, dump-stered, or forgotten.” Concurrent with his collecting, Finehout began writing histori-cal pieces and essays on motion pictures, as well as on corporate archiving and the communications industry in general. His articles have appeared in Variety, American Cinematographer, Back Stage, Film News, and many other related-interest publications. In 1991, after retiring from Modern Talking Picture Service ( successor to Association Films), he formed Antiquary Video, which specializes in World War II documentaries. The Library considers it especially fortunate to receive this gift from Robert Finehout at a time when many libraries no longer collect 16 mm films. For more information on the Finehout Collection, please visit the Media Resources Center at www. lib. unc. edu/ house/ mrc/. Robert Finehout Film Collector and Friend of the Library Photograph courtesy of North Carolina Collection Robert Finehout���s senior photograph from the Yackety Yack. 23 This fall, the University Library released Favored by Fortune: George W. Watts and the Hills of Durham, the third book in its fledgling publishing program. In this collective biography, local author and journalist Howard E. Covington, Jr., examines the lives and legacies of George Washington Watts, John Sprunt Hill, George Watts Hill, and George Watts Hill, Jr. Over four generations, they helped to build the Tar Heel State through enterprises such as Central Carolina Bank, the Carolina Inn, and Watts Hospital, as well as through government service, visionary advocacy, and generous philanthropy to numerous institutions, including the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The book ( ISBN 0- 8078- 2917- X) costs $ 34.95 and may be ordered from the UNC Press ( http:// uncpress. unc. edu or ( 919) 966- 3561). Also available through the Press are the Library’s previously published books: Essays on William Chambers Coker, Passionate Botanist by Mary Coker Joslin, and Country Music Sources: A Biblio- Discography of Commercially Recorded Traditional Music by Guthrie T. Meade, Jr. Friends of the Library Calendar of Events, 2004- 2005 November 11, 2004 Ferris in Focus: The Work of William R. Ferris, Joel Williamson Distinguished Professor of History 5: 00 p. m. Exhibit opening 5: 30 p. m. Remarks Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor, Wilson Library December 9, 2004 Thirteenth Annual Winter Stories Program for Children of All Ages with Performances by Jeffery Beam, Kate Barnhart, and Jill Shires 5: 00 p. m. Reception 5: 30 p. m. Program Lobby and Pleasants Family Assembly Room, 2nd Floor, Wilson Library January 13, 2005 Southern Sources: An Exhibition Celebrating 75 Years of the Southern Historical Collection 5: 00 p. m. Exhibit opening Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, 3rd Floor, Wilson Library 5: 45 p. m. Talk by Jacquelyn D. Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor of History and Director of the Southern Oral History Program at UNC- Chapel Hill Rare Book Collection Reading Room, 3rd Floor, Wilson Library March 29, 2005 Gladys Coates University History Lecture, “ True and Candid Compositions: The Lives and Writings of Antebellum Students in North Carolina” 5: 00 p. m. Reception North Carolina Collection Gallery, 2nd Floor, Wilson Library 5: 45 p. m. Lecture by Erika Lindemann, Professor of English Pleasants Family Assembly Room, 2nd Floor, Wilson Library April 7, 2005 A Talent to Deceive: Mystery and Detective Fiction in the Rare Book Collection 5: 00 p. m. Reception and exhibit opening Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, 3rd Floor, Wilson Library 5: 45 p. m. Talk ( speaker to be announced) Pleasants Family Assembly Room, 2nd Floor, Wilson Library For more information, contact the Friends of the Library at ( 919) 962- 4207 or liza_ terll@ unc. edu. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Campus Box 3920, Davis Library Chapel Hill, NC 27514- 8890 Non- Profit Organization U. S. Postage P A I D Permit No. 177 Chapel Hill, NC Wilson Library Exhibits Campaigning in the South Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor July 15, 2004 – November 10, 2004 A Tale of Two Cities: The Estiennes of Paris and Geneva, 1550- 1660 Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, 3rd Floor September 15, 2004 – December 31, 2004 The Louis Round Wilson Library: Celebrating 75 Years of Public Service North Carolina Collection Gallery, 2nd Floor October 21, 2004 – February 13, 2005 Ferris in Focus: The Work of William R. Ferris Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor November 11, 2004 – December 31, 2004 Southern Sources: An Exhibition Celebrating 75 Years of the Southern Historical Collection Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, 3rd Floor January 13, 2005 – March 31, 2005 Staff Favorites from the Southern Historical Collection Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor January 13, 2005 – March 31, 2005 TAR HEEL INK: A History of Student Publications at UNC- Chapel Hill North Carolina Collection Gallery, 2nd Floor March 1, 2005 – May 31, 2005 A Talent to Deceive: Mystery and Detective Fiction in the Rare Book Collection Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, 3rd Floor April 7, 2005 – August 31, 2005 Moving? Downsizing? Reorganizing? The Friends of the Library Book Sale is always looking for books. To arrange your donation, contact Liza Terll at ( 919) 962- 4207 or liza_ terll@ unc. edu. We will be happy to pick up or to accept delivery. Is there a “ Library Lover” on your holiday gift list? Do you want to simplify your shopping? Consider making a gift to the Friends of the Library in honor of a friend or family member. We will send them a special card in December informing them of your gift ( unless you want to be a secret admirer!). We’ll send both of you the Windows newsletter and invitations to Friends events, and list you in a special section of our Honor Roll. This gift can work for you, too. Next time someone asks you what you want for your birthday, suggest they make a gift to the Friends of the Library— in your honor! To take advantage of this unique gift opportunity, contact Kate Barnhart at ( 919) 843- 5660 or kate_ barnhart@ unc. edu. Photograph by Hemera Poster by Alison Duncan, Alison Duncan Design Photograph by Fred Stipe 25 by Chrys Bullard Sarah Michalak was just a child when her father gave her some career advice. “ Pharmacist and librarian are two good professions for women,” he said. “ Since you can’t do math, choose librarian.” Sarah took his advice to heart. Soon she placed three- by- five- inch cards in all her father’s books and fashioned a file to record their circulation. It was the first step toward a career she finds vital and engaging after thirty- three years. She is a passionate advocate for libraries— all libraries of any size or purpose. But the nation’s great university research libraries hold a special place in her heart. “ The top university research libraries are one of our nation’s most important assets and are a unique American contribution to our civilization,” she said. “ Serving as University librarian at Carolina gives me the opportunity to think, talk, live, and endlessly advocate for one of the greatest of these libraries.” Sarah Michalak Answers the Call to Lead Carolina’s Libraries She Knows When to Listen Photograph by Heidi Brett and Dale Larsen
Object Description
Description
Title | Windows. |
Other Title | Windows (Chapel Hill, N.C.) |
Date | 2004 |
Description | Vol. 13, no. 2 (fall 2004) |
Digital Characteristics-A | 1900 KB; 25 p. |
Digital Format |
application/pdf |
Full Text | Published by the Friends of the Library • The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • Volume 13, number 2 • Fall 2004 U N I V E R S I T Y L I B R A R Y www. lib. unc. edu Sarah Michalak Answers the Call to Lead Carolina’s Libraries In May, Chancellor James Moeser honored Joe Hewitt’s outstanding service to the University Library with the surprise announcement that the Joe A. Hewitt Librarian’s Opportunity Fund had grown to almost $ 600,000 since the original gift from the John Wesley and Anna Hodgin Hanes Foundation was announced in April. More than 120 individuals added to the fund, which is designed to give Hewitt’s successors flexible endowment income to take advantage of new opportu-nities and challenges. Hewitt admitted to being “ so gratified by this honor, which is all about the Library’s future excellence, that I’m overwhelmed.” Friends and colleagues celebrated Hewitt’s service with a dinner in the Rare Book Collection reading room on May 20, as well as a symposium and reception on May 21. The Library also published Reflections, which chronicles the accomplishments of his tenure, in conjunction with the celebrations. The Library continues to welcome additions to the Joe A. Hewitt Fund. Gifts should be sent to the Joe A. Hewitt Librarian’s Opportunity Fund, c/ o Friends of the Library, P. O. Box 309, Chapel Hill, NC 27514- 0309. Hewitt Fund Triples as He Retires ON THE COVER: New University Librarian Sarah Michalak against the backdrop of the Walter Royal Davis Library. Michalak, previ-ously director of the J. Willard Marriott Library at the University of Utah, assumed her role at Carolina on September 20, 2004. Foreground photograph by Heidi Brett and Dale Larsen. Background photograph by Alison Duncan. Windows is published by the Friends of the Library under the auspices of the University Library, UNC- Chapel Hill. Send requests and comments to CB# 3920, Davis Library, Chapel Hill, NC 27514- 8890. Editor Tanya Fortner Managing Editor Kate Barnhart Editorial Board Kate Barnhart Michele Fletcher Tanya Fortner Writers Chrys Bullard Michele Fletcher Neil Fulghum Peggy Myers John Rutledge Photographs Kate Barnhart Heidi Brett Alison Duncan William Ferris Stephen Fletcher Janis Holder Matthew Kesterson Dale Larsen Rylanda Nickerson Jan Paris Bill Richards Andrew Ross Jenny Spiker Fred Stipe Thanks to Nancy Kaiser Design Alison Duncan 2 Photograph by Andrew Ross 3 by Chrys Bullard Sarah Michalak was just a child when her father gave her some career advice. “ Pharmacist and librarian are two good professions for women,” he said. “ Since you can’t do math, choose librarian.” Sarah took his advice to heart. Soon she placed three- by- five- inch cards in all her father’s books and fashioned a file to record their circulation. It was the first step toward a career she finds vital and engaging after thirty- three years. She is a passionate advocate for libraries— all libraries of any size or purpose. But the nation’s great university research libraries hold a special place in her heart. “ The top university research libraries are one of our nation’s most important assets and are a unique American contribution to our civilization,” she said. “ Serving as University librarian at Carolina gives me the opportunity to think, talk, live, and endlessly advocate for one of the greatest of these libraries.” Sarah Michalak Answers the Call to Lead Carolina’s Libraries She Knows When to Listen Photograph by Heidi Brett and Dale Larsen Intelligent and friendly and right Michalak ( pronounced MaHOLick) is honored to follow retiring University Librarian Joe Hewitt into the limelight. “ Joe is an extraordinary library leader,” she said. “ Following him could be intimidating, but he’s been so kind and generous with information, I feel fortunate.” Michalak previously served as director of the J. Willard Marriott Library at the University of Utah, a position she held since 1995. Like Carolina’s University Library, the Marriott Library is a member of the Association of Research Libraries ( ARL), an influential organization comprised of the 114 leading academic research libraries in North America. In 2003, Carolina’s University Library ranked fifteenth among university library members of the ARL and was the top library in the southeast. “ The community of research libraries in North America is relatively small,” Michalak said. “ Everyone knows everyone else and they know each other’s libraries.” After receiving an invitation to apply, and enticed by Carolina’s outstanding collec-tions, excellent staff, and reputation for innovation, Michalak wrote to the search committee. “ I felt that with my experience and interests I could make a contribution to one of the country’s great research libraries,” she said. “ When I started talk-ing to the search committee, everything just clicked. Even in a videoconference interview, I could sense a friendliness and quality of thinking that impressed me; and I had a lot of fun when I came to campus. The atmosphere seemed so intelligent and friendly and right.” While taking a campus tour, Michalak was inspired by what she called the “ living chain” of library history and philanthro-py— more than two hundred years repre-sented in South Building, Old Playmakers, Hill Hall, Wilson, House, and Davis. “ It felt so real when I could look back and see all the different buildings used as libraries. And from my reading of campus and library history, it is clear that from day one, donors have been there to support Carolina’s libraries, contributing extensively to collections and facilities. This long tradition of giving is still so evident today. I can’t wait to meet the community of donors who have contributed to the extraordinary excellence here.” A wealth of resources What began on Carolina’s campus as the nation’s first public university library has now grown to encompass more than 5.6 million volumes; approximately 5 million microforms; 2 million govern-ment publications; 21 million manuscripts; and thousands of audiovisuals, maps, photographs, and electronic titles. And according to Michalak, this wealth of collection resources is enhanced by another asset just as valuable. “ The librarians and staff at Carolina are outstanding,” she said. “ These are deeply committed people who exhibit a high level of professionalism, knowledge, and skill. They’re ready and happy to help beginning student and experienced researcher alike." They are also essential to Michalak’s vision for the future of the University Library. “ Continuing to build outstanding collections is our mandate and our trust,” she said. “ It is up to the nation’s libraries to acquire the primary and secondary record of our civilization and our time. Powerful information technologies are making it possible for research libraries to assemble collections and make them available locally in their native formats and globally via the Web.” She cites Documenting the American South, an initiative started under Hewitt’s tenure, as an excellent example. By assembling and digitizing select groupings of material on topics as varied as the North American Slave Narratives or the Library of Southern Literature, the architects of this project enriched already-important intellectual resources. Each of the topics is accompanied by explanatory and interpretive text. “ This is a great example of how building a library— in this case the digital library— not only supports scholarship but is in itself a scholarly activity,” she said. “ Librarians and curators are working together with faculty members and others to create this innovative new type of library collection, demonstrating once again that people are a tremendous asset at Carolina’s libraries.” Michalak has heard legislators debate the value of libraries and library buildings in the electronic information era. “ Special collections are part of our future, and we’re going to need buildings to house them for a very long time,” she said. “ Several generations from now, the primary format of collections may be electronic, but for the time being, paper-and print- based collecting is as vital as ever. Library buildings and library staff will be needed and used far into the future.” She describes her management style as consultative. “ I like library people. I like spending time with them,” she said. “ I rely on the staff and librarians to know best what our patrons need and I like for them to contribute to the decision- making process.” Addressing immediate challenges Protecting compensation for librari-ans and staff is a top priority. “ We must make sure these outstanding people are well compensated for the excellent work they do,” she said. “ We don’t want to lose the momentum we’ve already gained under ( Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor) Robert Shelton.” Shelton has also made strides in addressing one of Michalak’s most serious concerns: the cost of scholarly journals, which can rise as much as 10 percent a year. To protest this long- held pattern of price increases, he, along with the librarians and provosts at UNC- Chapel Hill, Duke, and N. C. State, decided not to subscribe to certain publishing packages in 2004. 4 “ Carolina helped make a statement heard nationwide,” Michalak said. “ Yes, we need to keep our library of scholarly journals current. But when the cost of journals rises annually, the acquisitions budget is challenged to find money just to keep up with current serials collections, let alone add important new titles. Libraries should be home to the best, most innovative technologies on campus. Our task is to engage technology to find alternatives that break up publishing’s 9- to- 10 percent hold on our budget each year.” She is also committed to the undergraduate experience at Carolina— making the library as friendly, accessible, and technology- infused as possible. Understanding how undergraduates study and obtain knowledge will be an integral part of that process— as will be an interi-or refurbishing of Davis Library. “ The University Library has the potential to make a lifelong impact on many of the University’s thousands of students,” she said, “ not just in 2004, but for generations to come. I’m very excited to be part of that process.” Provost Shelton is delighted to have her. “ Sarah brings a wealth of expertise in management, collection- building, and all other aspects of librarianship,” he said. “ Her passion for realizing the full potential of libraries will ensure that Carolina’s collections remain among the best in the world.” 5 Photograph by Stephen Fletcher “ The University Library has the potential to make a lifelong impact on many of the University’s thousands of students, not just in 2004, but for generations to come. I’m very excited to be part of that process.” SARAH MICHALAK Sarah Michalak speaks with library staff at a “ meet and greet” session her first day on the job. The Louis Round Wilson Library Photograph by Alison Duncan by Neil Fulghum, Keeper of the North Carolina Collection Gallery On October 21, 2004, the University Library celebrated the diamond anniver-sary of one of the most beautiful buildings on campus— the Louis Round Wilson Library, which was completed and dedicated in 1929. The day’s events began with an afternoon open house of the special collections in Wilson Library: the North Carolina Collection; the Rare Book Collection; and the Manuscripts Department, comprising the Southern Historical Collection, the Southern Folklife Collection, and the University Archives. A reception and the opening of the exhibi-tion, The Louis Round Wilson Library: Celebrating 75 Years of Public Service, followed in the North Carolina Collection Gallery. At six o’clock, University Librarian Emeritus Joe Hewitt presented a talk, “ The Louis Round Wilson Library: An Enduring Monument to Learning.” The exhibition examines Wilson Library’s development and highlights the wide array of public services housed in the facility through displays of period books, photographs, and artifacts. It will run through February 13, 2005. The original structure of Wilson Library reflects the skills of architect Arthur Cleveland Nash, who led or participated in the design and construction of many other structures at Carolina, including Spencer Dormitory, the Carolina Inn, and Kenan Stadium. Wilson Library’s styling— complete with Roman dome and imposing Corinthian columns— offered Nash an opportunity to express in limestone the visual power of neoclassi-cism in an era when red brick and colonial revival tastes dominated campus architec-ture. “ The Library” was not officially named in honor of former University Librarian Louis Round Wilson until 1956. Today the building remains a tribute to Wilson and his distinguished career. It also stands as a testament to Arthur Nash’s capabilities and to the combined intellectual curiosity of the students, faculty, and countless other researchers who have passed through the Library’s doors. 7 “ Wilson was built at a time when Carolina was establishing itself as the leading university in the Southeast and emerg-ing as a major public university nationally. The new library was the symbol of the academic excellence and high stature as an institution to which the University aspired. Wilson was also meant to help beautify the campus. It has served all of these goals extremely well.” JOE HEWITT University Librarian Emeritus Celebrating 75 Years of Public Service Photograph courtesy of North Carolina Collection Poster by Kristen Wall, K. Wall Design Wilson Library under construction, January 10, 1929. Poster commemorating Wilson Library’s diamond anniversary. 8 by John Rutledge, Bibliographer for West European Resources Howard Holsenbeck BSIR ’ 53, of Houston, Texas, likes to give where the “ need is greatest.” This longtime donor to the Friends of the Library, through a com-bination of expendable gifts and additions to a named endowment— the Howard Holsenbeck Library Fund— is helping the Library serve one of its major groups of users: graduate students working on theses or dissertations. Early each fall semester, I send an e- mail to directors of graduate research across campus, advertising that students may apply for research material support from the Holsenbeck Fund to acquire microfilm, reprints, books, AV material— just about anything that will help them and can become part of the Library’s permanent collection. The only proviso is that the student acknowledges the help via a letter or email to Holsenbeck. In 2003, a Ph. D. candidate in American history identified several sets of materials relating to the Cherokee nation that complemented but did not duplicate existing microfilm holdings. The Library acquired “ Reports of the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes, 1898- 1909” for her use. ( Following the passage of the Curtis Act of 1898, the Commission to the “ Five Civilized Tribes,” or Dawes Commission, dismantled the government and tribal resources of the Cherokee Nation.) It seems fitting that the flagship state university of North Carolina, the ancient home of the Cherokee people, should be a center for research on the Cherokee east of the Mississippi River. Another beneficiary wrote, “[ The Holsenbeck Fund], by allowing UNC Libraries to purchase copies of these oral histories from the U. S. Naval Institute, will enable me to hurdle a rather substantial roadblock placed in the path of my efforts to finish my dissertation this year. I had originally planned to read the oral histo-ries in question during a visit to the Naval Historical Center while on an extended trip to Washington last spring.” “ In Light of Reverence,” a documen-tary film purchased with Holsenbeck funds for a history student, examines the strug-gles of contemporary people to preserve their sacred spaces while respecting the right of non- Native people who also enjoy these places— places such as the Black Hills of South Dakota. Gifts such as Howard Holsenbeck’s help keep Carolina competitive with other institutions, many of which have more money for support of their graduate stu-dents. Holsenbeck sets a high standard and hopes to inspire others. In fact, he told us recently that each time he receives a letter from a grateful student, he writes a note back, urging the student to give to the Library once he or she has completed a degree and begun a career. Holsenbeck Fund Helps Library Serve Graduate Students by Michele Fletcher A $ 100,000 gift in April from the Lucius N. Littauer Fund in New York will add significant resources to the Library’s collecting effort for Jewish Studies. The gift, designated as a permanent endow-ment, will produce income to acquire books, journals, and other related materi-als in support of the University’s growing programs focused on Jewish life, culture, and religion. Last year, the College of Arts and Sciences, the home of the liberal arts at Carolina, established the Carolina Center for Jewish Studies to develop undergraduate and graduate instructional programs; encourage research on the Jewish experience in the United States, Europe, and Israel; and disseminate knowledge about the Jewish experience to the public beyond the University commu-nity. Working with faculty members, librarians developed a list of collecting priorities that will build resources for stu-dents, faculty, and other patrons. Henry A. Lowet ’ 54, a trustee of the Littauer Foundation and a longtime Friend of the Library, played a key role in helping the Library develop and refine the proposal. Joe Hewitt, University librarian emeritus, met Henry and his wife, Martha, for the first time in May when they were on cam-pus for Henry’s fiftieth reunion, and thanked him for his help in making this gift a reality. Lucius N. Littauer Judaica Book Fund Established “[ The Holsenbeck Fund], by allowing UNC Libraries to purchase copies of these oral histories from the U. S. Naval Institute, will enable me to hurdle a rather substantial roadblock placed in the path of my efforts to finish my dissertation this year.” A BENEFICIARY Howard Holsenbeck New Wilson Library Fellows Cumulative giving reaching $ 20,000 Jane H. Armfield William J. Armfield IV Daniel Joseph Breen Hope Holding Connell John Hewlette Connell Eugene W. Earle Marcie Ferris William R. Ferris Faryl Sims Moss H. Patrick Oglesby Mary Norris Preyer Oglesby Charles James Ragland, Jr. William R. Reevy Scott Hanchet Richardson Barbara Burch Safford Herbert James Shaffer Bell Tower $ 25,000 or more Joel Thomas Irving Clancy Gladys Hall Coates, Estate Margaret Susan Lewis, Estate W. Trent Ragland, Jr. Lucile Turner, Estate Kay Massey Weatherspoon Van Louis Weatherspoon Josephine Weeks, Estate Benefactors $ 10,000-$ 24,999 Richard E. Ballard Mike Boyd Nancy Faison Bryson Vaughn Douglas Bryson John Taylor Doggett Robert Douglas Gillikin Frank Borden Hanes, Sr. Jean Camp Harrell Ben M. Jones III Frances P. London James Edward Maloney C. Edward Pleasants Nancy Thompson Pleasants Claude Henry Snow, Jr. Sarah Turnbull Snow Elizabeth Spencer Richard Oates Steele Patrons $ 1,000-$ 9,999 Gloria Nassif Blythe Dennis M. Boucher J. Melvin Bowen Frederick Baker Bridgers Gloria Clancy Briggs Warren Marshall Briggs Mary Earle Brown Neilson Brown H. David Bruton John Woodfin Burress III Mary Louise Bizzell Burress John Eugene Cay III Kathryn Virginia Clancy Charlotte Copeland William J. Crowe Mary Lockwood Curry Thomas Hampton Cuthbertson Dave McAlister Davis Lyell Clark Dawes, Jr. Fred Hyams Deaton, Jr. Emilie Patton de Luca Erica Riefenberg Donnalley Kevin Thomas Donnalley Michael Nathan Driscoll Christopher Paul Edwards Pamela Strickland Edwards John P. Evans J. Douglas Eyre Olga Yobs Eyre Frank John Fischer III Jaroslav Thayer Folda III Linda Whitham Folda Emily Preyer Fountain Ernest Frankel Edward Randy Gardner Victoria Jean Gardner Alice Gerrard David Robinson Godschalk Lallie Moore Godschalk Peter Thacher Grauer Anne Howell Gray Bernard Gray Paul F. Grendler Eugene Gressman George Talmadge Grigsby, Jr. Gail Harrison Grossman Steven Howard Grossman Elise Pettrey Guthridge William Wallace Guthridge Louise McGwigan Hall Jane Ross Hammer C. Rush Hamrick, Jr. Peter Nickolas Hansen Charles Clement Hargrave Elizabeth George Hargrave George Mills Harper Mary Ann Harrell C. Bryce Hartley II James Jerome Hartzell Anna Ragland Hayes Luther Hartwell Hodges, Jr. Susan Winstead Holderness and Kenneth Floyd Ledford Phyllis Hale Hollowell W. Howard Holsenbeck Ronald Wesley Hyatt Joan Jacobson Dudley Lamont Jennings George Harvey Johnson Houston G. Jones Mary Coker Joslin William Joslin Margo Y. Kaiser Kathleen Lard Keffer Clarence Higgins Keller Joyce Dickman Keller John Thomas Kelly III Thomas Stephen Kenan III Bernard Klingenstein Alexander Kosma, Jr. Georgia Carroll Kyser Dana Borden Lacy Annie Gray Calhoun Lane R. Scott Langley, Jr. Dorothy Shuford Lanier Sharon Elizabeth Lawrence Dorothy P. Layton William Craig Leese Seymour Myer Levin Henry Wilkins Lewis Edward G. Lilly, Jr. Nancy Cobb Lilly Henry Augustus Lowet Richard Byron Lupton J. Ross Macdonald Margaret T. Macdonald Hannah Lacob Malkin Moses Montefiore Malkin Harold L. Marks John Lyle Matthews Betty Ray McCain John Lewis McCain Aileen T. McCauley Thomas F. McGee Edmund McIlhenny Pamela G. McIlhenny Laurie Merritt Cathy Dawn Moore Neil Morgan William A. Morgan Mary Nunn Morrow Charles Stephens Norwood, Jr. Dwight Stephen Oldham Richard Jay Osborne Malcolm Overstreet Partin E. Dudley Partrick, Jr. Dewey Harris Pate James Richard Patton, Jr. Mary Maughan Patton Henry Charles Pearson Edward R. Perl Marjorie P. Perl Ashmead Pringle Pipkin Evelyn M. Poole- Kober Dannye Romine Powell Virginia Waldrop Powell William Stevens Powell Oralia Preble- Niemi Britt Armfield Preyer Jane Bethell Preyer L. Richardson Preyer, Jr. and Marilyn Jacobs Preyer Mary Lou Prieto J. Norfleet Pruden III Alfred L. Purrington III C. Russell Reynolds Sandra D. Rich Stephen Allan Rich Scott Hanchet Richardson Martha Borden Roberson Wilborn Murray Roberson Janice Hurst Rostan John Peter Rostan III John Morris Ryan Oliver W. Sacks Eva Marie Saint Amy Greenwood Sawyer H. Murray Sawyer, Jr. W. Braxton Schell Peter J. Schledorn Eric Schopler Margaret D. Schopler Charles Milton Shaffer* Charlotte Winborne Shaffer Adrian A. Shelton Robert N. Shelton A. Pope Shuford Jim Shuford Stephenson Pope Shuford Allen Coleman Smith Edward Calvin Smith, Jr. Eve Hargrave Smith Jo Allison Clary Smith Sherwood Hubbard Smith, Jr. C. B. Squire Stillwell Family Robert Edwards Stone Samuel Coburn Stringfield George Vaughn Strong Nancy King Tanner Pell Tanner Rebecca Eve Tillet Blossom McGarrity Tindall George Brown Tindall Charles Brent Trexler, Jr. Jamie Ward Suzanne Lowe Weerts Charles M. Weiss Shirley F. Weiss Leona Paschal Whichard Willis Padgett Whichard Cathleen Pappas Whitted Ashley Lefler Wilson John Bernhardt Wilson, Jr. Thomas Meares Woodbury Jonathan Yardley Ralph Franklin Young Virginia C. Young Friends $ 10-$ 999 Charles Marc Abbey Henry Gray Absher Anne Churchwell Adams LeNeve Hodges Adams Charles Willard Adcock, Jr. Maneesha Agarwal D. Alexander Albright Mary Katherine Aldin Mary Jane Aldrich- Moodie Michael Shepard Alexander Larry Paul Alford Joseph Samuel Algranti David Michael Allen Tiffany Eatman Allen Walser Haddon Allen, Jr. William L. Allen III W. Don Allison Neely Currin Alt Josef Anderle Karen W. Andersen Esley Offit Anderson, Jr. Frank Anderson Jane Carlton Anderson Jean B. Anderson Paul Christopher Anderson Sarah Lane Anderson Amanda Irvin Andresen Richard N. L. Andrews Walton White Andrews William Leake Andrews Robert Gladstone Anthony, Jr. Victoria Foss Armentrout Kimberly Adams Armstrong Michael Aschner Annye Elizabeth Atteberry Michael Joseph Auer William Thomas Auman Edward Robert Austin Susan Lipman Austin Michelle Helen Avelar- Schnell F. Gloyd Awalt, Jr. Ellyn Bache Brian Thomas Bachman Michele Suzanne Bachman Varnell Badgett William D. Badgett Steven Wayne Bailey Lee Ann Baity Brian Keith Baker Cynthia Darlene Baker Dean Paul Baker James Bryant Baker William L. Baker III Amy Jo Ballantine Mignon Ballard Nada Louise Ballator Rebecca Sutherland Ballentine Stephen Brian Bambara O. Gordon Banks Leslie Banner G. Sprite Barbee III James Brown Barber Milton Augustus Barber III Jon Carr Barbour Cynthia Fox Barcklow Gary Fenton Barefoot John Calvin Barefoot Kay Townsend Barefoot Craig Martin Barfield M. Kate Barnhart Rebecca Anne Barnhouse Frank Hauser Barr Harriet Hylton Barr Deborah Kay Barreau Phyllis Campbell Barrett Thaddeus Jones Barringer III Doris Hasty Barron Anna Stout Barry Kristen Basmajian William Spainhour Bason Marcia Ingols Batchelor L. Kristin King Bates G. Scott Batten Ayers Whitton Baughman Clare Smith Baum Walter Gibbs Baum Joan Baxter Ronald Bayes 9 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Honor Roll of Giving 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. * deceased The names in bold are first- time donors. Jeffery S. Beam Kevin Lloyd Beaman Leanne Barnett Bean Jane McCaskey Beatty Joseph Robert Beatty Margaret Woodhouse Becker John William Becton Ronald Henry Bedard Billy Beeman Anne Mitchelle Begun Cecelia Early Belk James Sherman Belk, Jr. Christine Demeritt Bell Clara Bond Bell Gerald D. Bell Mack Bell II Victor Eros Bell III Charles Myron Benner Charlotte Stumph Bennett Larry Kester Benninger Dale Monroe Bentz Bernice I. Bergup Anne B. Berkley Stephen Russell Berry William James Berry, Jr. Edward Hiltner Bertram III Nancy Castles Bertram Doris Waugh Betts John Monie Betts, Jr. Lowry Matthews Betts Thad Lewis Beyle Mary Ellen Barnes Bierck William H. Biggers Laura Carpenter Bingham Warren Louis Bingham Donna Law Binzer Melissa Dee Birkhofer Catherine W. Bishir John William Black, Jr. Canelia Hinnant Blackwell Kendall Leon Blackwell James Cyril Blaine Jean Burdette Blaine Catherine Ann Blair Margaret Ann Blanchard* Thomas Albert Bland, Sr. Lydia L. Blanton Patricia Jane Blanton Frank A. Blazich Evo Bluestein Catherine Claire Bodin Charles Boewe John Charles Boger Andrea Lee Bolland Dbnnoise Yondevia Boney Sion Alford Boney Kathleen Narum Bonfoey Patricia Purcell Bonham Robert Hanes Borden Julian Redwine Bossong Mary Pleasants Bossong Donald Arthur Boulton Ellen R. Bowman Barbara Lane Boyd Karen Denise Boyd William Perry Boyd William Harwood Boyenton Robert Franklin Brabham, Jr. Martha Glenn Bradshaw Anita Wilkinson Brame James Ballard Brame, Jr. Jack Rudisill Brantley, Sr. Deborah Griffin Branton Michael Gerald Branton Hildegard F. Brauer, Estate Elizabeth Gardner Braxton Charmaine Susan Brickman Martin Hal Brinkley Joseph Wayne Brittain, Jr. Nancy Awbrey Brittain Robin Lenee Broadnax Charles Wilson Broadwell Lisa Mitchell Broitman Victor H. Brombert George Mercer Brooke, Jr. Roy Washington Brooks, Jr. Catharine Brosman Graham Calib Brosnan Edwin L. Brown Jane Hetherington Brown Joy Gann Brown Kathleen Rae Brown Leslie Ellen Brown Nicolette Friederich Brown Norman DePaul Brown Norman Donald Brown Robert Pleasant Brown Royall R. Brown, Estate Wiley Grissom Brown Herbert Howard Browne, Jr. Lewis Shore Brumfield Eleanor Godfrey Bruno Martha J. Bruske Brian Thomas Bryant Robin Riley Bryson James Wofford Buchanan, Sr. Beth Anne Buchholz Carl William Buchholz Richard P. Buck Robert Lynn Buckner Matthew Jay Burbank Nannie Harbour Burby Raymond Joseph Burby III William R. Burk Marcilynn Anne Burke John K. Burnett Michael Brandon Burnett Christopher Michael Burnette Catherine Williams Burns Sarah Higi Burns Amy Schwartz Bush Eric T. Bushnell Betty Jo Mooring Butler Clifford R. Butler, Jr. Lelia Clinard Butler Linda Lynch Butler Lindley Smith Butler Rebecca Player Butler Francis John Byrd John Lafayette Byrum Myra H. Cain Joseph Michael Calabria Margaret H. Caldwell Doris S. Calhoun John Philip Call Mary Trimble Cameron Alice Marable Campbell Frances Alexander Campbell Sue Catherine Campbell Janine Canan Courtenay Williams Cann Allan Rountree Cannon Betty Gibson Cannon Clarence Ray Cannon Douglas Sebren Cannon Jeannette Cannon Louis S. Cannon Robert L. Cannon Susan Connor Cannon Paul Teige Cantey Julie Dupree Cantu Virginia Spake Capparella Robert Carlin Betsy Steele Carr G. Watts Carr III Charles Williams Carter, Jr. H. William Carter, Jr. Hilary Therese Carter Leonard Hewell Carter, Jr. James Patrick Cartmel Kathy Marie Carver Jocelyn Rozelle Cash Jerry Clyde Cashion Frank David Castlebury III Trudy Elizabeth Castlebury George H. V. Cecil John Amherst Cecil Dino S. Cervigni Marilyn E. Cervigni Marvin Chaikin Robert Edward Champion John Edward Chandler III Mary Maddrey Chandler Ann Charters Barbara F. Chatham Gabriel Chau Edwin Rives Cheek Elizabeth Ann Chenault T. Kevin Cherry John Edward Chesser, Jr. J. Ben Chilton Beverly Bailey Chinnis Dale Martin Chodorow Jamal M. Choudry James William Clark, Jr. Linda Loeb Clark Margaret Allen Clark Ruth W. Clark Tony Franklin Clark Michael A. Clarke Timothy D. Clarke Michael Jay Claxton Mary Peters Clayman David Bernard Clayton T. Barrier Clendenin, Jr. Phillip Edmond Cline Robert Lee Cloyd Bettie Tillitt Cobb Ann Guiton Coburn William McWhorter Cochrane David Hampton Coe E. Wilson Coffin Joshua Peyrot Cohen Harvey Colchamiro Ruth Burton Collins William Enoch Collins Matthew Vaughn Compton Marcella Harrer Congdon Heather Sue Conklin Caroline Jane Connelly Jane S. Connelly Anne Rullman Cook Matthew Porter Cook James Coffield Cooke, Jr. Betty Bruton Cooney Glinda Sue Cooper Leland Ross Cooper, Sr. Lenox Gore Cooper, Jr. Victoria Margaret Corke Anne Eckerson Corley Paul E. Corneilson Judith Anne Cornell Peter Burton Corson, Jr. Alice Robinson Cotten Jerry Wayne Cotten Patricia B. Courtright Mona C. Couts Ben M. Covington, Jr. Cynthia Diane Cowan Nancy Walker Cowan Christopher Ross Cox Eppie Bennett Cox M. Richard Cramer James Grant Crawford Tracy Brown Crawford Gilda J. Cree Philip Robert Cree James Patrick Creech Sally Wood Creech William Ayden Creech Sandra M. Croot Betty Crowe Andres Xavier Crowley Peter Cullen Debbie Russell Cureton John Duncan Currie, Jr. Mary Virginia Spruill Currie Larry Curtis Robert Joseph Dabal George Anthony Dahir W. Grant Dahlstrom Robert Sethur Dalton Van Womack Daniel III Jane M. Danielewicz Julia Jones Daniels Robert James Daniels Thomas Francis Darden II Thomas Cook Darrell Mary Bandy Daughtry Louis Markham Dauner Susan Ann Davi William A. Davidson III Archibald Kimbrough Davis II Archie H. Davis Boyd Hill Davis Dwight Groome Davis, Jr. Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 In March, John Wilson, middle, donated to the Music Library this late nineteenth-century cabinet card signed by the composer Johannes Brahms ( 1833- 1897). The photo-graph— of Brahms— is by Fritz Luckhardt ( 1843- 1894). Wilson, former mayor of Wilson, North Carolina, found the cabinet card in 1945 during his military service in Bonn, Germany, where it had been discarded on a trash heap. Pictured with Wilson are Susan Fisher and Music Librarian Phil Vandermeer. 10 Photograph by Kate Barnhart Edward Milton Davis, Jr. Jerry M. Davis Joshua Clark Davis Mary Schoeberle Davis Nancy Katherine Davis Richard Akin Davis R. P. Stephen Davis, Sr. S. Van Davis Sarah Irwin Davis Thomas Fitzgerald Davis, Jr. J. Russell Davison Robert Allen Dawkins Todd Bentley Daymont William Howard Deane Robert Edgar Deans, Jr. Arthur St Clair DeBerry Gillian M. Debreczeny Paul Debreczeny John H. De Carlo Mardell De Carlo Steven B. DeCillis Heath Kendal Dedmond Anthony Roane Dees Leslie McNeill Dees William Archie Dees, Jr. Alexander J. DeGrand Elizabeth T. DeGuzman Gabriela de la Vega Helen Roxlo Delp Janie Johnson DeMario Stephen Gerard De May Betty Hill Dennis Anthony James Depkin Mary Boyer Derr James Allen Dervin Laura Hodgson De Vivo Deborah Carson Dibbert Douglas Steven Dibbert Bruce Dominick DiCintio Laura Dickerson Paula Dianne Dickerson Daniel Norbert Dickinson Donald H.. Dickinson Victoria Green Dickson Richard Smith Dixon, Jr. Robert Dolson Frank A. Dominguez Patricia Buck Dominguez Mary K. Donaldson- Evans Nancy Lynn Dooly Michael Marshall Dore Judith Wimberly Dorminey A. Anson Dorrance IV Virginia Pou Doughton Louisa Millard Douglass Carolyn Green Dow Mary C. Dowe Robin Kelly Dozier Linda Stopher Drake W. Magruder Drake Edward Rick Dreibelbis Kathleen Morgan Drowne Wendy Walters Dufour Roberta Ann Dunbar Kay Stirewalt Dunkley Kenneth Malcolm Dunkley Edwin Harper Dunlap Neil Dunlap Elizabeth Bramm Dunn Harold Macon Dunnagan William Edward Dunstan III L. Daniel Duval III Severn Parker Costin Duvall Teddie Lois Dyson Barbara Ross Earnhardt H. Shelton Earp III Jo Anne L. Earp Leslie Frank Eason, Jr. Mark Eastman Connie Clare Eble Constance Cryer Ecklund Cobi Bree Edelson Blanche B. Edwards Susan Usher Eggert Monica Marie Eiland C. Maxwell Elbin, Jr. Delwin Lerone Elder Glen H. Elder, Jr. Frederic L. Eldridge Mary- Frances Eldridge Carolyn Worcester Elfland Ernest L. Eliel Eva Eliel Barbara Miriam Elkins Philip Stephen Elkins, Jr. Robert Anthony Ellison Elena Elms Joseph L. Emery, Jr. Susan Patterson Emmerson Matthias Ender Jennifer Jordan Engel Patrick D. Engel Ray English, Jr. Raymond Alexander English Sally- Hilda Erickson Susan Joy Erickson Joseph Dixon Eskridge, Jr. Nora Gaskin Esthimer Steven William Esthimer David Wesley Etchison Brad Allen Evans David H. Evans, Jr. Elizabeth Evans Helen Wolfe Evans Piper King Evans James Arnold Everett Harris Factor Kimerly Walter Fahs Billy Faier Arthur John Faint Raymond Walter Falk Martha Lassiter Farmer Robert Leon Farmer Connie Barnes Farris William Charles Farris Roy Edgar Fauber Robin C. Faulkner Ian Heyward Fay Florence Fearrington Deborah Allen Fein Judith Jones Felder Robert Brabham Felder Floyd Ferguson Frances Ferguson Richard Henry Ferguson, Sr. Laura Suzanne Fernandez David Ferriero Donald Carl Fidler Anne Marsh Fields James Wylie Fields Elizabeth Marshall Fink Richard Finneran Micah Robert Fisher Sandra Strawn Fisher Thomas Grantham Fisher Carey Elizabeth Fitzmaurice Heather M. Fitzwilliam Leslie Allen Fleisher Michele Wilson Fletcher Stephen J. Fletcher W. Miles Fletcher III Joseph Martin Flora Stephen Ray Flora Jonathan Andrew Flory Helen F. Flowers Janet Loafman Flowers D. Glenn Fogle Faith Underhill Fogle Rebecca Noell Fontaine Susan Childs Fonte Michelle Alligood Fore Milton D. Forsyth, Jr. James Donald Fortenberry Janet Hanner Fortenberry Timothy Andrew Foskey Dennis Arthur Foster Glenda W. Foushee Chesca Yvonne Fox Cindy Beth Fox Gwen Corbert Fox William Henry Fox, Jr. Elizabeth Fox- Genovese Catherine Ann Frank John Hope Franklin Diane Frazier Nancy Robison Frazier R. Parrish Freeman, Jr. Frank S. French Stanton Graves French, Jr. Virginia French Ida Howell Friday William Clyde Friday Richard T. Froyen Patricia Kelley Fullagar Monica Witterholt Fuller Nancy Scott Fuller W. Erwin Fuller, Jr. W. Scott Fuller Margaret Ellen Fulton Rodney Tamaar Funderburk Andrea Hodges Funk Sandra Gail Funk Richard Benton Fuquay Benjamin Michael Furnas Lilian R. Furst Jane Susan Gabin Charles W. Gaddy Mary Kathleen Gallagher Laura Leigh Gamble Evelyn Shurley Ganley Karen Leder Gansky Stuart Alan Gansky James Towles Gardner, Jr. Margaret Borden McKinnon Gardner Rebecca Lynn Gardner Ronni Miller Gardner Sanford Daniel Garelik Andrea Phillips Garner Sanford Clyde Garner Austin Aldrich Garrison Elizabeth A. Garrison Mary Henry Garvey Ronald Lewis Gatlin Karen Weyher Gavigan Timothy Wayne Gee Anne Dantzler Geer Catherine Gerdes Bob Gibb Robert Coleman Gibbs John Kenneth Gibson Laura Carson Giles Robert Starr Gillam Susan Ann Gilley Diane Houser Gillikin Erin Inez Gillikin Michael Brondell Gillikin Bernard Gilman Donald Gilman, Jr. Honre Frank Gitelman Erica D. Glover Lucy Ann Glover Jerry Christopher Goff Keilah Kuzminski Goff Meta Skinner Goff Kristy Gail Goins Elizabeth Ashley Gonda John Edmond Gonzales Kristen Lucille Gooch Gregory Milton Goode Harry Gooder Henry Goodrich William Meredith Goodridge Michele Faye Gordon Lisa Gormley L. R. Gorrell Karl David Gottschalk Rebecca Goz William Porter Grace Margaret H. Gracey Angelia Longfellow Graf Margaret Mooring Graham W. Reece Graham IV James Robert Graves, Jr. Tracy Nelson Graybill Nancy Sue Grebenkemper Andrea Tolson Green Bluma Kafka Greenberg Ruth M. Greenberg Jack Phillip Greene Wendy Faye Greene Mary Layne Shine Gregg 11 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 From left, John Cohen, David Amram, and Rare Book Collection Curator Charles McNamara converse during the Allen Ginsberg exhibit opening at the Beats conference in April. Photograph by Bill Richards Claudine Alonzo Gregorio Marcella T. Grendler Jane Marie Gress Elizabeth Bragg Grey Elizabeth Billups Gribble A. Glenn Griffin, Jr. Emma Kathryn Griffis Ken Griffis Clay Hudson Griffith E. Jeffery Griffith Gareth Edward Griffith Richard Stuart Griggs Joe W. Grisham Jonathan Reed Grubbs Norris Grady Grubbs Jennifer Marie Guerra Elizabeth Ann Guido Selma H. Gulack Ganesh Muthian Gunasekaran Agness Wiggins Gunter Philip F. Gura Ramsdell Gurney, Jr. Robert Clifton Guthrie Robert Gutman Sam Cole Guy Joseph Dale Guyer Herbert Nelson Hackney Edward Hacskaylo Armin A. Hagen Jeanne T. Hagen Penelope Lilly Hagood Theodore E. Haigler, Jr. John Forrest Haire Peter Wilson Hairston Doris Weaver Haisley Troy Kenneth Hales Buford Hall Charles Martin Hall Katherine Romans Hall Speed Hallman Arthur D. Halpern Emily Halpern Courtney Walsh Hamer Holley Morris Hamilton Martha Elizabeth Hamilton David Murray Hammer Sarah Elizabeth Hamrick Jack A. Hanchrow Barbara Cottrell Hancock F. Borden Hanes, Jr. Katie Ann Hanson Barbara Russell Hardin Paul Hardin Diana Dixon Hardison Perry Hardison Frank Gerald Hardister, Sr. P. Curtis Hardy Rufus Dwight Hare William Ruth Harmon Howard Harper Katrina Latisha Harper Margaret Taylor Harper J. Scott Harrell, Jr. Elizabeth Varnado Harrer Boyd Gregory Harris Kathryn M. Harris Rodger S. Harris Roger T. Harris Trudier Harris Carla Smith Harrison Lee Kenion Hart Oliver James Hart III Jonathan Hartlyn Patricia Neufeld Hartman Peter David Hartman Chris Hartmann Natalie Ann Harvey Lesley Apple Haskell Gabriella Riggio Haspel W. Barnes Hauptfuhrer Jeffrey Hayden Julian Mixon Hayes Theodore W. Hayes Glenn Keeler Hayslett Alice Cheshire Haywood Mary Haywood Mitch Hazouri John Miles Headley Katherine Emily Heck Louis Roy Heckler David George Hedgecock G. Jason Hedrick Peter Niels Heller Russell Wagner Helms Kurt Hemmer Karla A. Henderson Susan Adelaide Henretta Robert F. Henry, Jr. Karen Stelle Henshaw Jan G. Hensley John Henry Hepp IV John A. Herbert Kala R. Herlands Andrew Michael Herman Billy Harvey Herring Joseph A. Herzenberg Kristin Karwehl Herzog Joe Anderson Hewitt and Susan K. Nutter Robert G. Heyneman Ronald J. Hickes Stephen Vincent Higdon Thomas Dupree Higgins, Jr. Susan Snyder Hight Jeanine Hogrefe Hightower Kenneth Nelson Hightower Marilyn Rachel Higi Edward Arthur Hill Kimberly Latta Hill Mary Lamberton Hill Rachelle Elizabeth Hill Robert Benjamin Hill, Jr. Sara Stockton Hill Ann Hillenbrand Rebecca Tatum Hilstad John Charles Hine J. Ray Hinnant, Jr. John Charles Hinson, Jr. Linda M. Hinson Natalie Barlowe Hinton Paula Pearce Hinton David Wayne Hitchings Gayla Lindsay Hitchings Jane Gregory Hobson Linda Whitney Hobson William Patrick Hobson Joshua Hockensmith Rachel Lynne Hockfield Steven Alan Hockfield Dorothy Davis Hodder Kirstie Hodge- Lopez Betty Arnold Hodges L. Edward Hodges, Jr. C. Grant Hoffman Carl Christian Hoffmann Kathleen Perkerson Hoffmann Carolyn M. Hoke Janis Gail Holder David L. Holdzkom Roslyn Perper Holdzkom William Earl Hollamon, Jr. J. Gill Holland Siri Lugg Holland Leon Milo Hollingsworth Sara Cook Holloway Barry Kevin Holmes Julia Ashley Holmes Mary Hayes Barber Holmes Deidre Holmes DuBois Elizabeth Myatt Holsten David Lowrey Holt Douglas R. Honnold Sandra E. Honnold Jewel Hoogstoel J. Reid Hooper Michele Lynn Hooper Mark Ronald Arthur Horn Mary Coit Horton Kilby Dixon Hoskins Pamela Horkan Hosty Molly Bullard Howard Sherri Ivey Howard Billy Shaw Howell, Jr. Bobbye Jo Howell Samuel Harwell Howell, Jr. Erma Reep Hoyle Ruth Alice Hoyle Patrick Joseph Huber Danny Allan Hudson Beejal Kachalia Huff Todd Mitchell Huff John Albert Hughes John Leslie Humber P. Scott Hummel Jo Ann Hundley Susan Pearson Hunsinger Christopher Ronald Hunt Doris Ann Hunt, Estate Douglass Hunt Natalie Mureen Hunter James Franklin Hurley III Loyse A. Hurley Christopher Howard Hurst Nicole Whisnant Hurst T. Hoke Huss John Ambrose Hutcheson, Jr. R. Wayne Hutchins Emily Elizabeth Huzl Richard P. Hydell Eric J. Hyman John L. Idol Lynn Moody Igoe Eleanor Roberts Ilgen William David Ilgen Henry Immerwahr John Robert Ingle A. G. Ingram Alice Jane Graham Ingram James C. Ingram 12 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Photograph by Andrew Ross Provost Robert Shelton addresses the crowd at the campus- wide retirement reception honoring Joe Hewitt in Davis Library on May 21. Grayson Paul Isenberg Cheryl Lynn Kaufman Isley John Alexander Jackson, Jr. Mary Amanda Jackson Walter A. Jackson Judith McNease James Katherine James William Stuart James Hannelore L. Jarausch George Javor David Allen Jewell Martie Leonhardt Jewell Kathy Lanita John Anne Hilliard Johnson Cyrus Murry Johnson, Jr. David Dalton Johnson Earl Johnson, Jr. Joel Alan Johnson Margery Scott Johnson Mary Caldon Johnson Steven Eric Johnson Anne M. Johnston Billy David Jolley Benjamin Adams Jolly A. Wesley Jones Arthur Francis Jones II Leslie Hartley Jones Meriwynn Gaddis Jones Plummer Alston Jones, Jr. Randall Dean Jones Raymond Henderson Jones, Jr. John Richard Jordan, Jr. Whitmel Madison Joyner Nancy Claire Julian David Robert Jurman Wayne Quay Justesen, Jr. Blair Cogdill Justice James Thomas Justice IV Melinda Margaret Kaiser Nancy Jennifer Kaiser Wayne Campbell Kannaday M. Keith Kapp Joanne Chris Kares Leah Robinson Karpen Chris Karrenstein Harold L. Katz L. Melvin Katz Robert Charles Kaufman Aubrey Alfred Keen Daniel Firing Keever Anne Turner Keifer Penny Egbert Keiter Dennis Earl Keith Marie- Beatrice Rhyne Keller Richard Alan Keller Robert Michael Keller David Reid Kelly Michael Everett Kelly Carol Ritzen Kem Thomas Dupre Kemp III C. L. Kendall Mary Anne Kendall Miriam L. Kennard Anne McCarthy Kennedy David Ray Kennedy Edward D. Kennedy Thomas Bishop Kennedy William Benjamin Kennedy John Nelson Kent Lisa Motsinger Kerner Theodore Charles Kerner, Jr. Jennifer Lee Johnston Kerns James L. Kerr Rodney Dale Kesler Fred Waggoner Kiger Eleanor M. Kilgour Frederick G. Kilgour Louisa Erickson Kilgroe Amelia Dees Killette Mary McNease Kinard Cyrus Baldwin King Harriet Lowry King James Kimball King David Franklin Kinney Annette Ligon Kirk A. Larkin Kirkman Rosa Dickinson Kirkman William Joseph Kirsch Marymelda Hall Kizer Jennifer Leigh Kiziah Marjorie Holland Klem Nadine Kloecker- Dunn Michael Ray Knowles Ann Gay Koegel Gerhard Koeppel Jane Kolson Kenneth Kolson Jennifer Shou- Ching Koo Richard J. Kowalsky Katherine Gray Kraft Benjamin Charles Kramer Anna I. Krampl Betty Leona Krimminger Frances Williams Kunstling Christine Manuel Kushner David Scott Kushner Ruth Wharton Kuykendall Harriett Talley Lacey Lionel Carson Lackey John Morrison Lafferty Laura Tron Lafferty David Alan Lagos Gary B. Lake Lester Crawford Lamon Selden Durgom Lamoureux David Landy Ann Orgain Lane Elizabeth Jordan Laney James Marion Laney Ransom Andrew Langford Susan Ruppalt Lantz John Ashley Largen Charles Francis Larrabee Geraldine Gilmore Larson Mary Buoyer Larson Steven Wayne Larson Marilyn Searson Lary S. Robert Lathan John McChesney Latimer, Jr. Katherine Armistead Latimer Catherine Grollman Lauritsen Laurie Taylor Leadbetter Amy Mangual Leary Charles Edward Leasure, Jr. Harriet Quinn Leasure Ann Donovan Lee Eleanor Carroll Lee Randall Walker Lee Susan Dill Lee Victor Darrel Lee Aaron Markus Lefkowitz Marjorie Thomas LeGwin Jeffrey Saul Lehrfeld George Lensing, Jr. Ruth Slobodkin Lepie Mark Stuart Lerner Scott Paul Leslie Jay Lester Alice N. Levin Madeline G. Levine Claire Levitt Frederick Levitt David Olin Lewis Herschel Horton Lewis Glenn Matthew Liacouras Page West Life Stewart Lillard Betsy Lindemuth Jeffrey Thomas Linder LaDonna Bollinger Lindgren William Wesley Lindley Don Raymond Linn Susan Ficker Linn Carmen Turner Lipe Alison Catherine Lipow George Roscoe Little, Jr. Thomas Allen Little, Jr. Isaac Thomas Littleton III Xuefeng Liu Patrick Christopher Livingood Susannah Berkley Livingood Walter P. Lloyd, Jr. William R. Loeser Sarah Pullen Logan Linda Beth Logsdon Fred Williams London Lawrence Foushee London, Sr. Joseph Hampton Long Holly Lynn Loosen Anthony George Lo Re Roger W. Lotchin Patricia Anne Loverich C. Townsend Ludington, Jr. Brian Zachary Lund Christina Anne Lund Catherine A. Lutz David Maxwell Lyerly Kathy A. Maboll Stuart Elaine MacDonald Georgia Ann Machemer Sara Mack Charles R. Mackey Heidi Koch Madden Wendell Carlton Maddrey Robert Wilson Madry, Jr. Aldo P. Magi Darien Dorn Mahaffee Jane B. Majors James Blair Malcolm Michele Lynn Malvesti Marc Christopher L. Mankins John E. Manley Richard Allan Mann Jennifer Elizabeth Manning May Lynn Goldstein Mansbach Dennis Michael Marcin Lynn Steele Marcin Karen Brunson Margolis Margaret Varley Markham Arthur Sanders Marks Gregory Alan Marks Margaret Brown Maron Gustavo P. Maroni Albert Barnes Marshall, Jr. Elizabeth Bandy Marshall Jean Beeks Marston Susan R. Marston Caroline Rowe Martens D. G. Martin, Jr. Harriet Wall Martin J. Paul Martin R. William Martin Susan A. Martin Stephen H. Martinat Jona Elizabeth Martino Julian D. Mason, Jr. C. Knox Massey, Jr. Mary Ann Keith Massey Michael Allen Massey William Preston Massey Morgan Anne Masten Elizabeth Matheson Donald G. Mathews William Connie Mathis, Jr. Daniel Stewart Mattern Margie Richmond Matthews Roy Thomas Matthews Melissa Ross Matton J. Douglas Mattox Lisa Stockman Mauriello Robert Christopher Mauriello Mavis Tanner Mayer Stanley Ketron McAfee III Robert John McCabe Leslie Carol McCall Donna Haines McCann William Howe McCarthy William Charles McClammy David Matthew McClendon Kimberly L. McCombs Thornton D. Robert McConnaughey Carol Webster McCormack Donald L. McCrickard Eleanor Fowler McCrickard Elizabeth Ann McCue John Goodman McDougald Blair Moseley McDow Barbara Disher McGeachy Rick McGee Katherine Tucker McGinnis John Stephen McGovern Eileen McGrath Martha Winston McGrath James Michael McGuffey Justin Emmett McGuire Tracy Lawson McGuire Kenneth M. McIntyre Martha Clampitt McKay Timothy Shepard McKeithan Bettie Haughton McLaughlin Dorothy T. McLaughlin S. Bryce McLaughlin Thomas B. McLaughlin Edwin Ray McLean William Sartor McLean James Potter McNab Charles B. McNamara Genna Rae McNeil John Dillard McSween Michael R. McVaugh Eric John Meehan Elizabeth C. Meehan- Black Virat Vijaykumar Mehta Steven Jay Melamut Ted Alan Mellnik Cecilia Husbands Menard Paul Nathaniel Mermin James Gordon Merrill Gerald E. Meyer Philip Edward Meyer John Edward Mickey Vasa D. Mihailovich Stephanie Nargesian Miksis Sharon Burger Milikowsky Bradley Edward Miller Carolynn Little Miller Helen R. Miller Marjorie Penton Miller Roger G. Miller Stephanie Jones Miller Charles Everette Mills Marissa Dawn Mills Barbara Bounds Milone Charles Louis Milone Kaye Lanning Minchew Leslie Dawn Minor Kshitij Pankaj Mistry Memory Farmer Mitchell William Leonard Mitchell III Joseph Pike Mitchener James Michael Moakley Fred Gilbert Mock, Jr. Barbara Modisett John R. Modisett Sylvia Ann Moffitt Laura- Leigh Gardner Mohr Claire Vickery Mongoven Thomas Luke Mongoven Fred Bruton Monroe Meggan Everidge Monroe Eric Lawrence Montenyohl Sarah Kaiser Montes L. Grayson Montgomery Sandra Roberts Montgomery Susan Montgomery Marvin Charles Mood James W. Moore John Franklin Moore Marie D. Moore Steven Richard Moore Terry Allen Moore, Jr. Timothy Ray Moore Victor Bailey Moore, Jr. Deborah Jane Moose Ruth M. Moose Barbara B. Moran George Fredrick Morgan Robert Ray Morgan Donald S. Morris Eleanor Saunders Morris Jerry Morris Richard Morris Ronnie Morris Helen Holt Morrison Laura Anne Morrison R. Edward Morrissett, Jr. 13 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Photograph by Andrew Ross Doris Betts speaks at the May 20 retirement dinner held in Joe Hewitt’s honor. Calvin Luther Morton, Jr. Nell Hatley Morton Morris D. Moser Jeanne Moskal Dan Moss, Jr. Fred Morris Moss, Jr. George Henry Moss, Jr. Kay Kincaid Moss Kenneth Franklin Mountcastle, Jr. Carol Ellen Mulholland Patrick J. Mullin Danny Harold Mullis Margaret Levy Mullis Ethel Perzekow Murphy Mary Teresa Murphy Timothy George Murphy William P. Murphy C. Douglas Murray Elizabeth Reid Murray William K. Murray K. Darwin Murrell Jeannie Stovall Musslewhite Brian Patrick Myers Eric Benjamin Myers James M. Myers Margaret Cleary Myers William Kevin Myers Ava Hartman Nackman Lee Richard Nackman Tal Moshe Nahir Joseph Natale Linda A. Naylor Paul Douglas Naylor Gregory Hepler Needham John Kendall Nelson Julianne Beth Nelson L. Nelson Marie Nesnow David H. Neunert Victoria S. Neunert William Arthur Neustadt Beverly Griffin Neuville Jean Healy Neville Kathryn Galloway Newkirk Laurie Freeman Newlin Claire M. Newman Francis Lanneau Newton Theodore James Newton, Jr. Luke Dang Nguyen Diana Schaedle Nicholson Thomas Jones Nixon IV Celine Noel Lisa R. Norberg Laurie Jane Norman Carolyn Elizabeth Norris J. Stanton Northrup, Jr. Julia Nunnally Northrup Phyllis Cole Noyes Robert D. Nudelman Julie Blume Nye J. Ronald Oakley Christine Ewing Obert John O’Brien Sarah O’Brien Elizabeth Long O’Connell Margaret Anne O’Connor John Ward O’Hale Shirley Patterson O'Keefe Jean Grubb O’Neal Adriana Pannevis Orr Oliver Hamilton Orr, Jr. Stephanie Cunningham Ortiz Laurie Beth Osborne Katherine Weaver Otterbourg Louis Wood Otterbourg John Weldon O'Tuel III Glenn Thomas Overcash Lora Susan Owen Roberta A. Owen Raymond Eugene Owens, Jr. Karen Lynn Paar Carl Pagter Raymond Palma Daniel Jeffrey Palmieri Judith M. Panitch Brette Clark Parise William Charles Parise Kristin Park Leland M. Park Arthur Michael Parker, Jr. Elizabeth Graham Parker Scott Edward Parker Barbara W. Parks Jane B. Parr Barbara Parramore Catherine Adams Parrish James Thomas Parrish, Jr. Jeanne Roethe Parrish Maya C. Parson David Partington Beth C. Paschal Richard Allen Paschal Beverly Bush Patterson Daniel Watkins Patterson Henry Newton Patterson, Jr. Jennifer McKay Patterson Ronnie Howard Patterson Joseph Walter Patusky Charles Douglas Payet S. Houston Payne, Jr. Peter Russell Peacock Martha Woodard Pearlman Paul Sheldon Pearlman Stephen Hale Pearman Mary Helen Pearsall Mary Bryan Taylor Pearson Melissa Jason Pearson Benjamin Gary Pease Jane H. Pease William H. Pease John William Peddycord Barbara Barrett Pedersen Lee Grant Pedersen Carol Frederick Pekar Susan Baker Pekarske Edward Olin Pendarvis III J. A. Pendergast Edwin Anderson Penick, Jr. Jane- Clark Cheshire Penick Cristina Leuba Perez Gail Perry R. Thomas Perry Julie Sydnor Peterman Benjamin Alexander Peters Douglas L. Peters Karen Blair Petersen Frederick George Petrick, Jr. Margaret Pfaff Richard W. Pfaff Nancy Smith Pfeiffer Betsy Sheely Pfenning H. Hyman Philips, Jr. Joy Lester Philips Clay Matthew Phillips J. Dickson Phillips, Jr. S. Davis Phillips James Edward Phoenix Ann Pike Bob Pike Nathan Laughlin Pilkington Gene Pinder Joel Arthur Pineles Victoria F. Pineles Rorin Morse Platt L. Frederick Pohl, Jr. Marcy Leigh Policastro Jeffrey Kemp Politis William Robert Pollard David Matthew Poole Elizabeth Tayloe Pope L. B. Pope Joanne Popeck Charles A. Porter Harold Bowman Poteat Guy Glenn Potter Debbie Chaffin Potts Dannya Gibson Powell Lewis E. Powell Erica Lyn Prater C. Thomas Preston, Jr. Charles Lewis Price William S. Price, Jr. Larry Carlton Pridgen Robert Wilson Pridgen T. Gregory Prince Elizabeth C. Pringle John J. Pringle Patrick Wayne Pritchard Sonia Marie Privette David G. Provost James Worrell Pruett Joseph Vincent Quinn John Allen Quintus Daniel Ray Radiloff Barbara Blanton Ramsey Louise Ramsey Walter Rand III Wilton Rankin Derris Lea Raper C. Michael Ray Josephine Medlin Ray Yvonne Mettetal Rayburn Ellen Tillett Rayner J. Milton Read, Jr. Marjorie Shearin Read Ann Clayton Reaves Hubert Douglas Reaves, Jr. Kenneth J. Reckford David Marshall Redmond, Jr. Mark Lafayette Reed III Margaret Stamm Rees Philip Adrian Rees Benjamin Franklin Reeves Mavis Mann Reeves William R. Reevy Linwood Moninger Respess, Jr. Tucker Meyer Respess Carol Reuss David Edward Rhoades Lisa Brooks Rhoades G. Patrick Rhodes Kathleen Whitham Rhodes Pamela K. Rhodes Jeffrey Doyle Richardson Richard J. Richardson Van Waldron Richardson, Jr. Merle U. Richey Sandy Fleischman Richman Wynn Patterson Rickey Matthew Scott Roberson Bennett W. C. Roberts Eric Michael Roberts Peter John Robinson Richard Hill Robinson III Sally D. Robinson Sheila Herman Robinson William Edmond Whiddon Robinson Randall Maitland Roden Beverly Scott Rodgers William Charles Roeder Katherine Jane Roggenkamp Leonard William Rogoff Samuel Burke Rollins James William Romer Jane Wells Romer John Herbert Roper Benjamin Lacy Rose, Jr. Edward M. Rose Nancy Jane Rose Wendy Schreiber Rose Frieda Beilharz Rosenberg David Asher Rosenstein Judith Levin Rosenstein Alton Glenn Ross Frances Turner Ross Kelly Leigh Ross and William D. Whisenant Michael Anthony Ross Morris Ross Sue Fields Ross Aleda V. Roth Goldie Rothenberg Jennifer Hodges Rotter Paymon Rouhanifard Lynn Paul Roundtree Marylou Rowe Cornelia Boardman Royle David Brian Layton Royle David S. Rubin Carolyn Warren Rugen John Allen Ruggles Rosalie Varn Ruggles Raquel M. Ruiz John Charles Rush Robert Perry Rushmore F. Kevin Russell John B. Russell John Spotswood Russell Sallie Shuping Russell Scott Christopher Russell John Butler Rutledge Jan Martin Rybnicek Linda Saaremaa Richard James Sackmann Maria Lopez Salgado Rosalie S. Samson Claire Ann Sanders John Lassiter Sanders Michelle Goodwin Santa Steven Michael Sartorio Howell C. Sasser, Jr. Diane Hyde Sasson Antoinette Watkin Satterfield John Roberts Satterfield, Jr.* Barbara Boyd Sauer Ruth Clark Saunders Susan Murphy Saunders Patricia E. Sawin Jeanne Clifford Sawyer Anne L. Scaff J. Shelton Scales Stacy Crockett Scales S. Chad Scarboro Patricia Carruthers Scarborough Thomas A. H. Scarborough William K. Scarborough William A. Schaffer David Ben Schauer Michael Gerard Schell Gordon Schenck William Ziegler Schenck Eileen E. Schledorn Christiane Schnaidt Deborah Rutchka Schneider Leslie Bruton Schneider Robert Michael Schneider Barbara Brandon Schnorrenberg John Martin Schnorrenberg Harry Paul Schrank, Jr. Erik Anton Schreiner Dorothy Cutting Schroeder George Noel Schroeder Jane Mish Schutt William B. Schwartz, Jr. Christoph E. Schweitzer Jack Lamar Scism Nancy Fox Scism Jacqueline Rogers Scott John Layne Scott Robert Walter Scott Edward Butler Scruggs Lisa Kay Seago Falls Thomason Seagrave Peter George Seaman, Jr. Margaret Gordon Seiler Mary Duke B. Trent Semans Anne Lassiter Sessoms Betty Jordan Sessoms Faison Thomson Sessoms H. Douglas Sessoms Linda Baroody Setliff John Wilbur Sharp Frank Stedman Shaw Rollin Shaw John Phillip Shearin Wiley Henry Shearin, Jr. Laura Jane Sheely Amal Tayel Shehata Michael Ray Shelor Margaret E. Shenton Carol L. Sherman Kalman Sherman Steven Sherman Mary Jervey Shields Jill Shires Chon Regan Shoaf Tara Brooke Shoe Lenoir Gwyn Shook Linda Mothershed Shrader Richard Alexander Shrader Brian Scott Shuman Carl M. Shy Eve Carol Shy Joan Leonard Sibley Thomas Edward Sibley Charlotte Simpson Sigmon E. Bruce Sigmon, Jr. Bland Simpson George Lee Simpson III Nancy Barrett Simpson Ross Joseph Simpson, Jr. Stanley Albert Simpson Anastatia Sims Mabel Whedbee Sisco Nancy Howard Sitterson Eva Whetstone Sitton Evan Russell Sitton William Henry Skeels III John Harrison Skinner III Jolie Weinstein Skinner William Pailin Skinner III Earl Slick Anne Dye Sloop Barbara Jo Smith Charlotte Hord Smith Colin C. F. Smith David John Smith Earl Jones Smith, Jr. Edward Henry Smith Eleanor Huske Smith Everard Hall Smith III J. McNeill Smith, Jr. Jane C. Smith Jeremy Smith Jordan M. Smith Kenneth Royster Smith, Jr. Martha Stribling Smith Moyer Gray Smith, Sr. Norris W. Smith Patricia Schoeberle Smith Pinkney Craig Smith Ralph Kenan Smith Robert Oscar Smith Roy Elmer Smith Sidney Rufus Smith, Jr. Sylvia Jean Smith W. Britton Smith, Jr. Howard E. Smither William Davis Snider Helen Easter Snow Herbert Norris Snowden III James Robert Snypes Stuart Solomon 14 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Richard A. Soloway Diane H. Sonnenwald Kathleen Kerry Soukup Janice Costner Spangler Patricia H. Spearman Robert W. Spearman Frances Keating Spencer Ross Dee Spencer Richard K. Spottswood Carolyn Andrews Squires Peter Staffel Betsy Ross Howe Stafford Lee Roy Stanley Mary Kellam Stanley Robert Allen Stanley R. Hall Starnes Katharine Elaine Starrett June Landergren Steel Marianne Steiner Lonnie George Stephenson Mary P. Stephenson Blanche Bonner Stevens E. Walker Stevens, Jr. H. Hugh Stevens, Jr. William Hartin Stevenson III Alva W. Stewart Ann Stewart Carol McKay Stewart Pearson H. Stewart Philip Stewart David Stick Eric John Stockton Donald A. Stone, Jr. Lee A. Stone Richard G. Stone George C. Stoney W. Gene Story Dale Oliver Stouch, Jr. Nikolay P. Stoynov Lee Hylton Strange Carl William Stratton Albrecht B. Strauss Diane Wheeler Strauss Joseph Strelka Michael David Strother Keegan Fay Stroup Suzanne Yelverton Stroup Alan Raiford Strowd Anne Watson Strowd Elvin Emerson Strowd Walter Cabot Sturdivant Mary C. Sturgeon Frank Stutz Geraldine Dillard Stutz R. Stanley Styers Sharon Eileen Sullivan Robert Franklin Summers Heather Angela Summey David Spurgeon Sumner Roberta Dunlap Sumpter Richard Superfine Elizabeth Royall Sutton H. Bryan Sutton, Jr. Maxine McMahon Swalin Maureen Elizabeth Sweeney Luke Horace Swindler, Jr. Kay Travis Tabor Mark Taddonio Lori Ray Taggart Katharine Tannahill Nancy Baach Tannenbaum Ellyn Pell Tanner James Mahan Tanner, Jr. James Townsend Tanner, Sr. Sarah Fearnside Tanner Carole Southerland Tarry Marsha Huffman Tarte Sarah Lindsay Tate Petrus W. Tax David C. Taylor J. Carlton Taylor, Sr. John Ecklin Taylor Martha Mallary Taylor N. Ferebee Taylor* Roy Dail Taylor Linda Kay Ter Haar Liza M. Terll Carol Smolka Terry Jeffrey Scott Terry Elizabeth Cover Teviotdale Angela Pegram Tharrington Elizabeth Pearsall Thomas Janet A. Thomas L. Parke Thomas Sara Alice Folger Thomas Charles LeRoy Thompson Helene Willingham Thompson Lucinda Smith Thompson Patricia Taylor Thompson Mary Wise Thuesen Sarah Caroline Thuesen William Oliver Thweatt Justin Elbert Tillett Andrew Barry Tilley Ernest Haywood Tilley Kristin Andrews Tilley Rollie Tillman, Jr. Marilyn Schroder Timmerman Norris Watson Timmerman Carol M. Tobin Ronald W. Tobin Stuart Kittredge Todd Arrel D. Toews Delma Ross Tolan, Jr. Lisa Carol Tolbert Luisa Rodriguez Tolsma F. Rogers Toms, Jr. Wanda Porter Towler William Hugh Townsend Stella Anderson Trapp Ginger R. Travis Joseph Collins Travis Gary Randall Treadway Edward Treverton Jane Wilroy Trinkley Stephanie Anne Trojan Deanne Deese Trollinger Kyle Evan Troxell Carole Watterson Troxler George Wesley Troxler William Finch Troxler, Jr. Elaine Osteen Truckner Bryan Hill Tucker Rachael Knott Tucker Robert Cinnamond Tucker Rosa Lee Brake Tucker Robert Louis Turchin, Jr. Amos Granger Tyndall Beverley Lester Tyndall Robin Schafer Tyndall Benson Lewis Tyner Martha Croxton Tyson Ruel W. Tyson, Jr. Lenora Ucko Charles Albert Underwood, Jr. Caroline M. Unick G. Rivers Upchurch Richard Alexander Urquhart III Daniel E. Uyesato Genene Evans Uyesato Alexander Spyros Vallianos Karen Elizabeth Vance David John Vandenbergh Lydia Bodman Vandenbergh Sabine Carolina van der Meulen William Chace VanderWolk J. Daniel Vann III Carolyn H. Van Sant Deborah Baker Vanyo Michael James Varn Carol Vatz Robert David Vatz Jason Brian Vaughan Rosalie Venturella Martha Mebane Verdery W. Lane Verlenden III Nancy Loyd Vernon Marvin Davis Veronee Martha Sarbaugh Veto Robert Elliott Veto Laura Greer Vick Jean Marshall Vickery Mary O. ’ Fallon Vinzani Jane McKean Vogel Robert Frederick Vogler Stephanie Elisabeth von Isenburg Steven Boyd Wade David Lawrence Wagner Brian Keith Walker Carolyn Andrews Wallace Nina Gray Wallace Wesley Herndon Wallace Nellie Laird Waltner Bobby J. Ward Sherry Vestal Ward William Thornton Ward John Waller Wardlaw, Jr. Jeffrey Dennis Warren Lindsay Carter Warren, Jr. Rebecca Drane Warren Elizabeth L. Warren- Mikes Kimyatta Chanequa Washington Allison Lange- McGill Wasko Richard Christopher Waters Alan D. Watson Harry L. Watson Jennifer Lynn Watson Ritchie Devon Watson, Jr. Thomas Lee Watson Molly Crowell Watters John Webb R. Beverly R. Webb David Weil Gerhard L. Weinberg Edith Crockford Welch J. Edmund Welch* Jameson Paul Wells Elizabeth Hollers Welsby Barbara K. Wendell Robin H. Wendell Arthur S. Werner Lynn Elise Wesson David McKinley West Bert W. Westbrook Don Gist Wetherbee Helen Jane Wettach Peggy Watkins Wharton R. Andrew Wheeler Elizabeth Clarke Whitaker William Asbury Whitaker James R. White James Wilson White Nancy Hanes White Robert F. White Tera Melissa White Clarence Earl Whitefield Jane Pittard Whitefield Randah Ruth Whitley Thomas M. Whitmore Floyd Gilbert Whitney III C. Phillip Whitworth Christopher Wicher Jay Wiener Donna Stroup Wightman R. Mark Wightman Elizabeth Hardin Wiley Barbara McDonald Wilkerson J. Tracy Wilkerson Sarah Louise Wilkerson- Freeman 15 Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Photograph by Andrew Ross Guests enjoy the spread at Joe Hewitt’s retirement reception in Davis Library. J. Edgar Williams Jack Harrison Williams, Jr. Larry Howard Williams Paul Brazell Williams Peter Pescud Williams, Sr. Wiley J. Williams Joel R. Williamson Michael Willis Emily Herring Wilson James R. Wilson Kristen Wilson Robert Church Wilson IV John Fleming Wily III Marjorie Lee Windelberg Christopher John Windolph Charles McKimmon Winston, Sr. Jane Pettis Wiseman John Brent Wishart Lois Wistrand Abner Carr Withers, Jr. Karin Wittenburg Joseph S. Wittig Rebecca Ann Dial Wolf Herman Hubert Wommack IV Jane Minor Woodin James Allen Woolard Betty McFarland Wooldridge Alison Woomert Gerald Killian Worsley Randolph Luther Worth Salli Parker Worth Susan Kay Wrenn Annette Cox Wright Sara Barrett Wright Geraldine Nada Wu Sandra Wurth- Hough Albert D. Wylie III David Price Yancey Margaretta Jane Yarborough David Keith Yelton G. Smedes York Daniel Robert Young Kathy M. Young Maria Alston Davis Young Ronald Edwin Young Thomas Wade Young Christine Ann Youngblood Gregory Alan Yuziuk June Mary Zaccone Scott Thomas Zander Janine Mary Zanin Narja Anna Zarella Ann A. Zener, Estate Joel Fredrick Zeugner Kimberly Frederick Zeugner Nadia Zilper Elizabeth S. Zimmerman Janet Rose Zipser Elizabeth Bryant Zollinger Richard William Zollinger II Sherrie Elizabeth Zweig Organizations American Political Science Review Asheville Addiction Consultants Assoc Bank of Stanley/ Uwharrie Cap Corp Beta Phi Mu Epsilon The Bookshop, Inc. Borden Fund, Inc. Ruth Camp Campbell Charitable Trust Chapel Hill Family Medicine, PA Crawford- Norwood Company, Inc. Custom Brick Company, Inc. Bob Dolan Books Fairbanks Center for Motion Picture Study Gilcrease Museum Hanes Charitable Lead Trust George H. Johnson Family Charitable Lead Trust Librarian’s Association at UNC- CH North Caroliniana Society Peters Books Ready Mixed Concrete Co. Grace Jones Richardson Trust Terraquest Environmental Consultants PC The Tipperary Corporation, Inc. Treble Clef Music Press Laurance Triplette, Inc. UNC General Alumni Association University Woman's Club Foundations Bell Family Foundation Bernard Foundation Bryson Foundation LTD Burch- Safford Foundation, Inc. Colchamiro Family Foundation Norman & Edna Freehling Foundation O. Max Gardner Foundation John W. and Anna H. Hanes Foundation Ella Ann L. & Frank B. Holding Foundation Hurley Trammell Foundation Kyser Foundation Seymour Levin Foundation Lucius N. Littauer Foundation, Inc. Malkin Family Foundation George H. Moss, Jr. and Mary Alice Moss Foundation Randleigh Foundation Trust A. Alex Shuford Foundation, Inc. E. C. Smith, Jr. & C. B. Smith Foundation, Inc. Trexler Foundation Wayne Foundation Thomas Henry Wilson & Family Foundation Memorial Gifts Memorial Gifts Received in Honor of the Following: Talmadge Moose Deborah Schledorn Meredith Thomson Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2003, to June 30, 2004 Photograph by Andrew Ross Library Loses Great Leader James F. Govan, University librarian from 1973 to 1992, passed away on October 2, at age 78. In partnership with the late Chancellor Ferebee Taylor, Govan was architect of much of the growth of the physical plant of the Library, as well as its services. He was instrumental in the construc-tion of the 1977 Wilson Library stack addition, the building of Walter Royal Davis Library, the renovation of Wilson Library, the establishment of Triangle Research Libraries Network, the adoption of the online cataloging system, and the Library’s participation as founding member of SOLINET ( Southeastern Library Network). The Library collections more than doubled under his leadership. The Hanes Foundation gave the four-millionth volume in his honor at his retirement in 1992. He also served on the boards of and as chair of the Center for Research Libraries and SOLINET as well as president of the Association of Research Libraries during his distin-guished career. “ He guided the Library through a period of rapid change and growth and significantly improved the standing of the Library among research university libraries nationally,” says Joe A. Hewitt, who succeeded Govan. “ We are greatly in his debt for his strong leadership and determined advocacy for the Library and Library staff during his tenure. For many of us, Dr. Govan was not only a leader, but also a dear friend and inspiring mentor, and he will be deeply missed.” Govan is survived by his wife, Ann Bright Govan, of Chattanooga, and their four children. A memorial service will be held in the Wilson Library Pleasants Family Assembly Room later in the academic year. The date and time will be announced. Bill Guthridge presents Joe Hewitt with a number 23 jersey signed by Carolina basketball coaching greats Dean Smith, Roy Williams, and Bill Guthridge, at Hewitt’s retirement dinner in the Rare Book Collection reading room. James F. Govan in 1992. Photograph by Jerry Cotten 16 by Peggy Myers When Gilda Cree was growing up in Queens, New York, she could see two full- length movies, the newsreel, a cartoon, and coming attractions—“ All that for eleven cents! It was wonderful,” she says now. It turns out her future husband, and partner in appreciation of film and theater, was doing the same thing in Florida. Philip Cree grew up in Florida and came to Chapel Hill as a freshman. Although he returned to Florida after earning his business degree and spent forty- two years in the aviation insurance industry, he never got Chapel Hill out of his mind. “ Chapel Hill graduates tend to be pretty chauvinistic about their alma mater,” Cree said. “ Gilda kept asking, ‘ What IS it with you people?’” Then Gilda joined Philip for his forty- fifth UNC class reunion trip. That’s when she became one of “ those people.” During that trip the couple decided to move from Florida to the Chapel Hill area. The Crees have decided to support two areas of the University that they love, through gifts in their estate planning. Through a bequest, they will endow permanent funds to benefit the University Library and PlayMakers Repertory Company. The Philip R. and Gilda J. Cree Library Fund will support the purchase of materials for the Media Resources Center in the Undergraduate Library. “ We’re movie freaks” says Gilda. They have a personal library of more than 120 movie titles. Touring the newly renovated Undergrad with a group of alumni, they were thrilled to discover the collection of movies, performances, audio recordings, and music in the Media Resources collection. The Crees believe in the Library as a crucial center for learning materials on the University campus. They’ve been influenced by their friends Farrel and Welshie Potts, whose gifts also support purchases of Library materials. Through their endowed fund, Philip and Gilda Cree are ensuring that future Carolina students will continue to have access to media that enrich their classroom, research, and recreation experiences at Carolina. Thanks to Jenny Spiker and PlayMakers for their assistance with this article. 17 “ All That for Eleven Cents!” Bequests: Giving with Clear Intent Like Philip and Gilda Cree, you may want to consider making a gift to Carolina by including the University Library in your will. Your will is a statement about what matters most in your life. By making a will, you can ensure that your intentions are clearly expressed, and that they will be followed by those administering your estate. Bequests may take various forms, as described below. Your bequest may be unrestricted or designated for a specific purpose within the Library or the University. We would be happy to help you draft specific language about your bequest for you to share with your attorney. Specific bequest states a specific amount or asset amount. It may be a gift of cash, securities, real estate, or tangible property ( i. e., books, manuscripts, or artwork). Residuary bequest names the University Library to receive all or a percentage of the remainder of the estate after specific bequests have been fulfilled. Contingent bequest takes effect only if all primary beneficiaries named in the will are predeceased. Declaring the University Library a contingent beneficiary can prevent the property from going to the state if there are no heirs. For more information on how to make a bequest or on other planned giving opportunities, please contact Michele Fletcher Director of Library Development CB# 3900, Davis Library Chapel Hill, NC 27514 ( 919) 962- 3437 Michele_ Fletcher@ unc. edu Photograph by Jenny Spiker Philip and Gilda Cree 18 In late July, special collections conservators from around the country gathered in the Conservation Lab in Wilson Library for a four- day workshop, “ Values and Decision- making in Special Collections Conservation.” The workshop, co- sponsored by the University Library and the American Institute for Conservation, was developed and led by the Library’s special collections conserva-tor, Jan Paris. Wilson Library staff mem-bers and guest scholars who work with primary sources in special collections also participated in some of the sessions. Raquel Cogell joined the University Library staff on August 16 as the first Black Culture and History Librarian. Three weeks later, on September 7, the Black Culture and History Library— the first new branch library on campus in more than thirty- five years— officially opened its doors. The Library is housed in the new freestanding facility of the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History, which was established in 1988. Cogell, formerly of Emory University in Atlanta, has overall management responsi-bility for the new Library, which houses a collection of some ten thousand volumes and other resources supporting teaching and research in African American and African diaspora studies, and is open to anyone interested in these subjects. In addition— as part of an innovative “ bou-tique” library concept— Cogell provides special individualized services to staff; fac-ulty; visiting scholars; and students affiliat-ed with the Stone Center, the Institute of African American Research, and the Department of African and Afro- American Studies. She will act as liaison to the rich collections of African American source materials in a variety of formats, dispersed among many campus and regional libraries— a role that might have her intro-ducing visiting scholars to collections and library staff, arranging for checkout of materials, and visiting collections at Duke, North Carolina Central, and North Carolina State universities. Photograph by Jan Paris Photograph by Rylanda Nickerson Cogell is First Black Culture and History Librarian Values and Decision- making in Special Collections Conservation Two years ago, then- University Librarian Joe Hewitt compiled a booklet of reader comments for the thousandth- entry celebration of Documenting the American South ( DAS or DocSouth), the Library’s acclaimed digital publishing initiative that brings Southern history, literature, and culture to the World Wide Web. The title chosen for the booklet was “ Keep Up the Good Work( s)”— a plea lifted directly from several grateful readers’ messages. “ Our readers’ comments on DAS are a rich source of inspiration and direction as we continue this effort,” wrote Hewitt in the preface. As the Library strives to keep up the good works, use of DocSouth steadily increases and readers’ comments continue to pour in. Student life in antebellum Chapel Hill This July, the University Library was awarded a federal Library Services and Technology Act grant by the State Library of North Carolina, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources, to add another DocSouth chapter, True and Candid Compositions: The Lives and Writings of Antebellum Students in North Carolina. This section of the site will bring together for the first time 109 man-uscript documents written primarily by students attending the University of North Carolina between 1795, the year in which the institution opened its doors, and 1868, when the devastation of the Civil War closed them again. These documents depict students’ daily activities, their views of academic work, their social and political interests, and their hopes for the future. Erika Lindemann, professor of English at UNC- Chapel Hill, provides edi-torial, historical, and contextual informa-tion in her introduction. Most materials are drawn from the Southern Historical Collection, the University Archives, and the North Carolina Collection. True and Candid Compositions adds to the extensive holdings ( 1,270 items, or about 170,000 pages) of DocSouth’s seven other sections: First- Person Narratives of the American South, 1860 to 1920; Library of Southern Literature, Beginnings to 1920; North American Slave Narratives; The Southern Homefront, 1861 to 1865; The Church in the Southern Black Community, Beginnings to 1920; The North Carolina Experience, Beginnings to 1940; and North Carolinians and the Great War. 1.2 million checkouts or 20 million hits DocSouth recorded about 1.2 million electronic circulations in the first six months of 2004. Circulation statistics for electronic texts often simply reflect hits. For DocSouth, librarians try to ascertain how many people are actually looking at the contents of the site’s texts— the electronic equivalent of checking a book out of a library. Only those hits to files that represent the intellectual content of the electronic text are counted. This helps to avoid inflating statistics with hits on image files, menu pages, etc. The ratio is 1: 20; one electronic “ check- out” equals twenty hits, which means that the site had more than 20 million hits from February 2004 through July 2004. 19 DocSouth: Keeping Up the Good Works “ I was able to find where my granddad was during WW1. I actually went there and found the towns of Moranville, Grimaucourt, and the forest of Cognon. Nothing has been changed in the forest of Cognon since the war. The German trenches are still there, and the whole area is covered in bomb craters. I found two large shell cases. Thanks for posting the information.” “ My name is Pamela and I’m in the 7th grade. I am working ahead on my national history day project for this coming school year. I am doing it on communication of the underground railroad. Your site is helping me tons!!!! I have been able to look at a lot of primary sources and get the story on slaves and how they were helped to freedom, and also on how they were treated. Thank you for letting me use your site.” “ I’m a professor at Boston University, working frequently in area prisons with our Prison Education Project. Incarcerated students asked me to teach an African American histo-ry class, but prison rules and budget make it difficult to get the books we need behind bars. Your website is a real godsend; I’m delighted to be able to bring these valuable primary sources into the prisons— thanks so much for all the hard work you've put into this user- friendly wealth of infor-mation.” Readers Express Gratitude: Wilson Library celebrated its seventy-fifth anniversary in October 2004 ( see page 7). Not by chance, the Southern Historical Collection, known affectionately as “ the Southern,” celebrates its seventy-fifth a few months later, in January 2005, with a major exhibit of treasures; a talk by Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor of History and director of the Southern Oral History Program at UNC-Chapel Hill; and a major scholarly confer-ence. The Southern was officially estab-lished in the new Louis Round Wilson Library on January 14, 1930. A generous gift from Sarah Graham Kenan allowed J. G. de Roulhac Hamilton, professor of history, the means to begin implementing his vision of a unique repository of manu-script materials about our region. A persuasive and tenacious collector, Hamilton traveled back and forth across the South in a series of what he dubbed his “ faithful Fords,” gathering manuscript materials from the homes, offices, and even barns of his fellow Southerners. He acquired the nickname “ Ransack Hamilton” from librarians and archivists in other states who envied him his budget and his ability to locate and bring home collections. Thanks to the new Wilson Library, he could promise donors a fire-proof building, security for the materials, and access provided by an experienced reference staff. The Southern was soon acknowledged as the intellectual home of the community of scholars of the American South. Today the Southern Historical Collection holds more than fifteen million manuscript items, which document more than three centuries of Southern history and culture; and it remains the premier research center for the study of the American South. Together with its sister collections— the Southern Folklife Collection and the University Archives— that form the Manuscripts Department on the fourth floor of Wilson Library, the Southern draws twenty- five hundred on-site visits a year and its staff responds to more than eight thousand reference ques-tions from online and on- site patrons. Tim West, who became director of Manuscripts and curator of the Southern Historical Collection in October 2003, sees the seventy- fifth anniversary celebra-tion as an opportunity to look forward as well as back at the accomplishments of the Southern. “ Hamilton really did dream big and I think he would be quite satisfied with the realization of his concept over the years. And we want to keep dreaming big. This will involve meeting the challenges of continuing to build traditional archival col-lections, as well as capturing the electron-ic formats of the digital age that Hamilton could not foresee. We now must also develop new ways to serve researchers online and through digitization.” The University Library invites you to join in the celebration on January 13, 2005, at the opening reception for Southern Sources: An Exhibition Celebrating 75 Years of the Southern Historical Collection and the talk by Professor Jacquelyn Dowd Hall. Please see the calendar on page 23 for more details. 20 “ The Southern” Celebrates 75 Years Advertisement from the Duncan Malloy Papers in the Southern Historical Collection. Runaway slave poster from the Manigault Family Papers in the Southern Historical Collection. “ Southern Sources: A Symposium Celebrating 75 Years of the Southern Historical Collection” The Southern Historical Collection will host “ Southern Sources: A Symposium Celebrating 75 Years of the Southern Historical Collection” at Wilson Library on March 18 and 19, 2005. Some of the most distinguished historians of the American South will present papers on the role of archives in historical produc-tion within the context of the antebellum plantation era, the Civil War, the New South, the Jim Crow South, and the South since 1954. Registration is required and forms will be available in November 2004. For more information, contact Laura Clark Brown at ( 919) 962- 1345 or mss@ email. unc. edu. 21 University Archives and Records Service staff and students completed several “ dirty” projects last fall and this spring in order to rescue some of the University’s valuable public records from less than desirable base-ment storage areas. School of Information and Library Science student Lewis Dorman, wearing a surgical mask for protection, screens records prior to boxing them for removal. Pulitzer Prize- winner Alice Walker, center, toured the Manuscripts Department before heading to North Carolina State University to be the kickoff speaker at the North Carolina Literary Festival in April. Here, Walker views treasures of the Southern Historical Collection with her literary agent, Wendy Weil, left, and Southern Historical Collection Assistant Curator Lynn Holdzkom. Documents on the table include slave Jonas Elias Pope’s 1851 certificate of freedom, and letters between Alice Walker and psychiatrist/ writer Robert Coles. Southern Folklife Collection on the Back Porch At 9: 30 p. m. on Sunday, September 26, 2004, WUNC- FM’s Back Porch Music initiated a monthly half- hour segment devoted to rare and archival recordings from the University Library’s Southern Folklife Collection. Back Porch Music is the longest continually running, locally produced program on WUNC 91.5 FM. Each week the program presents a wide range of acoustic- based folk music— from contemporary singer/ songwriters to old- time musicians of the 1920s and ’ 30s, and from classic Celtic music to the blues. Back Porch Music airs Fridays and Saturdays from 8: 00 p. m. to 11: 00 p. m. ( hosted by Freddy Jenkins), and Sundays from 8: 00 p. m. to 11: 00 p. m. ( hosted by Keith Weston). Photograph by Janis Holder Photograph courtesy of WUNC Photograph by William Ferris 22 On a Thursday evening in late April of this year, many members of the UNC- Chapel Hill community gathered on a patio in the heart of campus to watch the mystery of Rosebud unfold. It was a screening of the classic film, Citizen Kane, for the premiere of the second annual Finehout Summer Film Series, presented by Davis Library and the Undergraduate Library’s Media Resources Center. A gift from alumnus Robert Finehout ’ 43 inspired the series. Mitch Whichard, head of circulation at Davis Library, began the Finehout Series to introduce the vast holdings of 16mm films held in the Library’s Media Resources Center collection. Additionally, the Finehout Series celebrates the vitality of film by promoting the experience of viewing a format ( 16mm) that is becoming increasingly rare in academic library collections nationwide. Each of the series has highlighted a number of classic fea-ture films from the Finehout Collection, including Stage Coach, Anatomy of a Murder, Rear Window, The Maltese Falcon, and Alfred Hitchcock’s first feature- length talking film, Blackmail. Robert Finehout ( Class of 1943) donated much of his film collection to the Library in 2002. Consisting of several hundred items— wartime training and informational films, classroom films, TV documentary series, many Warner Bros. and Walt Disney cartoon anthologies, and numerous feature film classics— the Finehout Collection offers a wide variety of films that support a myriad of research and instructional activities on campus. Finehout enrolled in the School of Journalism at UNC- Chapel Hill in 1941 after attending a small community college in New Jersey for two years. Of his time at Carolina he recalls, “ The legendary ‘ Skipper’ Coffin was my mentor . . . with his deadly blue- pencil that excised purple prose and various syntactic abuses.” Professor Walter Spearman shared Finehout’s interest in films, and encour-aged him to write a regular film review column for The Daily Tar Heel, entitled “ The Sound Track.” Upon his graduation and return to New Jersey, Finehout began working for Association Films, a leading national distributor and marketer of industrial, educational, and entertainment films. As promotional director, Finehout produced catalogs, news releases, and feature sto-ries to generate bookings for their clients’ films. Many of these were “ sponsored films,” that is, films underwritten by cor-porations or other special interest groups. These films were unique in that they could reach a wide range of viewers, from niche clubs to theater and television audiences. “ Mercifully free of overt advertising,” these films were often widely accepted, making it “ an exciting time in a burgeon-ing field,” according to Finehout. So exciting, in fact, that Finehout began collecting and archiving a wide range of these films, all of which were produced as 16mm prints. Through the years, Finehout continued his collecting, focusing primarily on films that he feels “ may have otherwise been lost, dump-stered, or forgotten.” Concurrent with his collecting, Finehout began writing histori-cal pieces and essays on motion pictures, as well as on corporate archiving and the communications industry in general. His articles have appeared in Variety, American Cinematographer, Back Stage, Film News, and many other related-interest publications. In 1991, after retiring from Modern Talking Picture Service ( successor to Association Films), he formed Antiquary Video, which specializes in World War II documentaries. The Library considers it especially fortunate to receive this gift from Robert Finehout at a time when many libraries no longer collect 16 mm films. For more information on the Finehout Collection, please visit the Media Resources Center at www. lib. unc. edu/ house/ mrc/. Robert Finehout Film Collector and Friend of the Library Photograph courtesy of North Carolina Collection Robert Finehout���s senior photograph from the Yackety Yack. 23 This fall, the University Library released Favored by Fortune: George W. Watts and the Hills of Durham, the third book in its fledgling publishing program. In this collective biography, local author and journalist Howard E. Covington, Jr., examines the lives and legacies of George Washington Watts, John Sprunt Hill, George Watts Hill, and George Watts Hill, Jr. Over four generations, they helped to build the Tar Heel State through enterprises such as Central Carolina Bank, the Carolina Inn, and Watts Hospital, as well as through government service, visionary advocacy, and generous philanthropy to numerous institutions, including the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The book ( ISBN 0- 8078- 2917- X) costs $ 34.95 and may be ordered from the UNC Press ( http:// uncpress. unc. edu or ( 919) 966- 3561). Also available through the Press are the Library’s previously published books: Essays on William Chambers Coker, Passionate Botanist by Mary Coker Joslin, and Country Music Sources: A Biblio- Discography of Commercially Recorded Traditional Music by Guthrie T. Meade, Jr. Friends of the Library Calendar of Events, 2004- 2005 November 11, 2004 Ferris in Focus: The Work of William R. Ferris, Joel Williamson Distinguished Professor of History 5: 00 p. m. Exhibit opening 5: 30 p. m. Remarks Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor, Wilson Library December 9, 2004 Thirteenth Annual Winter Stories Program for Children of All Ages with Performances by Jeffery Beam, Kate Barnhart, and Jill Shires 5: 00 p. m. Reception 5: 30 p. m. Program Lobby and Pleasants Family Assembly Room, 2nd Floor, Wilson Library January 13, 2005 Southern Sources: An Exhibition Celebrating 75 Years of the Southern Historical Collection 5: 00 p. m. Exhibit opening Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, 3rd Floor, Wilson Library 5: 45 p. m. Talk by Jacquelyn D. Hall, Julia Cherry Spruill Professor of History and Director of the Southern Oral History Program at UNC- Chapel Hill Rare Book Collection Reading Room, 3rd Floor, Wilson Library March 29, 2005 Gladys Coates University History Lecture, “ True and Candid Compositions: The Lives and Writings of Antebellum Students in North Carolina” 5: 00 p. m. Reception North Carolina Collection Gallery, 2nd Floor, Wilson Library 5: 45 p. m. Lecture by Erika Lindemann, Professor of English Pleasants Family Assembly Room, 2nd Floor, Wilson Library April 7, 2005 A Talent to Deceive: Mystery and Detective Fiction in the Rare Book Collection 5: 00 p. m. Reception and exhibit opening Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, 3rd Floor, Wilson Library 5: 45 p. m. Talk ( speaker to be announced) Pleasants Family Assembly Room, 2nd Floor, Wilson Library For more information, contact the Friends of the Library at ( 919) 962- 4207 or liza_ terll@ unc. edu. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Campus Box 3920, Davis Library Chapel Hill, NC 27514- 8890 Non- Profit Organization U. S. Postage P A I D Permit No. 177 Chapel Hill, NC Wilson Library Exhibits Campaigning in the South Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor July 15, 2004 – November 10, 2004 A Tale of Two Cities: The Estiennes of Paris and Geneva, 1550- 1660 Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, 3rd Floor September 15, 2004 – December 31, 2004 The Louis Round Wilson Library: Celebrating 75 Years of Public Service North Carolina Collection Gallery, 2nd Floor October 21, 2004 – February 13, 2005 Ferris in Focus: The Work of William R. Ferris Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor November 11, 2004 – December 31, 2004 Southern Sources: An Exhibition Celebrating 75 Years of the Southern Historical Collection Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, 3rd Floor January 13, 2005 – March 31, 2005 Staff Favorites from the Southern Historical Collection Manuscripts Department, 4th Floor January 13, 2005 – March 31, 2005 TAR HEEL INK: A History of Student Publications at UNC- Chapel Hill North Carolina Collection Gallery, 2nd Floor March 1, 2005 – May 31, 2005 A Talent to Deceive: Mystery and Detective Fiction in the Rare Book Collection Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, 3rd Floor April 7, 2005 – August 31, 2005 Moving? Downsizing? Reorganizing? The Friends of the Library Book Sale is always looking for books. To arrange your donation, contact Liza Terll at ( 919) 962- 4207 or liza_ terll@ unc. edu. We will be happy to pick up or to accept delivery. Is there a “ Library Lover” on your holiday gift list? Do you want to simplify your shopping? Consider making a gift to the Friends of the Library in honor of a friend or family member. We will send them a special card in December informing them of your gift ( unless you want to be a secret admirer!). We’ll send both of you the Windows newsletter and invitations to Friends events, and list you in a special section of our Honor Roll. This gift can work for you, too. Next time someone asks you what you want for your birthday, suggest they make a gift to the Friends of the Library— in your honor! To take advantage of this unique gift opportunity, contact Kate Barnhart at ( 919) 843- 5660 or kate_ barnhart@ unc. edu. Photograph by Hemera Poster by Alison Duncan, Alison Duncan Design Photograph by Fred Stipe 25 by Chrys Bullard Sarah Michalak was just a child when her father gave her some career advice. “ Pharmacist and librarian are two good professions for women,” he said. “ Since you can’t do math, choose librarian.” Sarah took his advice to heart. Soon she placed three- by- five- inch cards in all her father’s books and fashioned a file to record their circulation. It was the first step toward a career she finds vital and engaging after thirty- three years. She is a passionate advocate for libraries— all libraries of any size or purpose. But the nation’s great university research libraries hold a special place in her heart. “ The top university research libraries are one of our nation’s most important assets and are a unique American contribution to our civilization,” she said. “ Serving as University librarian at Carolina gives me the opportunity to think, talk, live, and endlessly advocate for one of the greatest of these libraries.” Sarah Michalak Answers the Call to Lead Carolina’s Libraries She Knows When to Listen Photograph by Heidi Brett and Dale Larsen |
OCLC number | 24857570 |