Windows |
Previous | 15 of 44 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
|
This page
All
|
Published by the Friends of the Library • The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • Volume 17, number 2 • Fall 2008 U N I V E R S I T Y L I B R A R Y www.lib.unc.edu Dear Friends, A theme we return to again and again in Windows is giving. In this issue, we highlight two kinds of giving, each one essential for a great library. In our main feature, you will meet Jim and Mary Patton, who recently presented us with a gift of magnificent first and special editions of the works of James Joyce. This gift builds our great collection, contributing to a thoughtfully constructed, coherent whole, in which all the pieces enhance the prestige and value of the others. Intellectually and stylistically, Joyce’s work is a bridge between the 19th and 20th centuries. It assumes this place in our library as well, where it contributes to the understanding that can already be gained from our notable English and American literary collections of those eras. In other words, a great library collection is more than the sum of the individual works it contains. Even more important, the Pattons’ gift strengthens our ability to support primary research by allowing scholars to encounter the physical book and artifact. In the Patton Collection, researchers will find limited editions with hand-drawn images; a dazzling assortment of artistic bindings; and a range of sizes, from two-page pamphlets to large folios. Collections such as this teach us much about 19th- and early 20th-century paper, printing, and coloration, and also about the way Joyce and his readers experienced his printed work. This type of research is vitally important and will continue to be a central part of the library’s mission, no matter how many books are eventually available on the Web. This issue features a second kind of giving as well, and that is the fine work of our public services staff. Every day, our experts offer generously the gift of their knowledge, experience, information-gathering skills, and persistence. The spirit of going the extra mile motivates our staff to seek obscure information, locate and request difficult-to- find volumes in libraries a world away, or guide a student through all the steps of writing a research paper. Their contribu-tions also support teaching, the very heart of the academic enterprise. Our librarians work with faculty members — assembling the bibliography to support a syllabus, placing course readings online, creating Web sites that bring key resources together in one place, and teaching students to search the library catalog and specialized databases. I know you will enjoy getting to meet the staff members featured in this issue and will recognize the many gifts they give to our patrons. At Carolina there is much for Friends of the Library to admire and support — prestigious collections, fine buildings, and an awesome staff. Embracing it all is a web of giving that includes all of you, and, in certain ways, all of us. And who are the true beneficiaries of this giving? Friends and staff of the library know that it is the generations of young women and men who learn here at Carolina among these and many other intellectual riches and who ultimately become the leaders and shapers of our society. University Library Grows Through Giving 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# 3900, Davis Library, Chapel Hill, NC 27514-8890. Editor Sarah Poteete Editorial Board Michele Fletcher Peggy Myers Writers Amy Baldwin Michele Fletcher Tanya Fortner Peggy Myers Judy Panitch Ginger Travis Photographs Justin Bowman Bill Richards Fred Stipe Alicia Towler Design Alison Duncan Thanks to Anne Belott Katherine Carlson Liza Terll Margaretta Yarborough Photograph by Bill Richards 2 ON THE COVER: Katherine Carlson, graduate student in the English Department at UNC, holding a volume of Ulysses from the Patton Collection said "It's definitely a two-handed book!" Meeting Jim and Mary Patton you’re hard pressed to think of a pair with more enjoy-ment of life and more urge to do, even in retirement — to paint, write, make photo-graphs, go snowshoeing, hike over the continental divide, and promote arts insti-tutions around the country. It’s also hard to imagine two people who have taken more pleasure from the things they’ve col-lected over a lifetime: wine, art, books. “We drink the wine, we look at the paint-ings, we read the books,” said Jim Patton during a campus visit a few years ago. “We are surrounded by them; we use them every day.” Fortunately, their urge to share that pleasure — to see others use and enjoy the books they have loved for so long — has resulted in the Pattons making impor-tant gifts to UNC’s Rare Book Collection for more than a decade. They previously gave valuable collections of works by Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes, James Dickey, and Seamus Heaney. In 2005 they also stated their intention to make a bequest of the rest of their book collec-tions to UNC — nearly complete collec-tions of works by Robinson Jeffers, T.S. Eliot, James Joyce, and Thomas Pynchon, among others. These will be added to the James R. and Mary M. Patton Collection. This year the Pattons decided to speed things up. To the Rare Book Collection they gave outright one of the finest collec-tions of works by James Joyce still in pri-vate hands. (They had previously given UNC their copy of Ulysses, number 20 from the first series of 100 volumes that were printed, all signed by Joyce. See “And What a Spectacular Bequest It Will Be” by Charles McNamara in Windows, Spring 2005, pp 4-5.) 3 by Ginger Travis ’78 Jim and Mary Patton: Collectors, Donors, Doers Mary and Jim Patton in their home. “How Do You Learn if You Don’t Have a Chance to See?”Photograph provided by the Pattons. The appraised value of their Joyce collection, not including Ulysses, is $1.3 million. Among the rare items is a signed copy of The Exiles, Joyce’s only play. (“I bid against the University of Texas for that one,” Jim Patton says). Pomes Penyeach appears in different treatments, including plain chapbook form (1931) and later beau-tiful limited editions, one reproducing the poems in Joyce’s hand-writing with initial letters drawn and painted by his daughter Lucia, and another in a 1993 Bernd Klüser edi-tion with etchings by Sean Scully. “These materials add texture and understanding of the culture in which the author was working and the way he was interpreted,” says Libby Chenault, Rare Book librarian. “The impression of the author’s hand gives you a connection with the author that you’d not have in other ways…For some people it is the image, how it looks on the private-press book page; for other people, it’s the sound and the cadence.” The Pattons’ gift of their Joyce collec-tion enhances the Rare Book Collection’s already-formidable holdings in 19th and 20th century Irish writers, notably George Bernard Shaw, William Butler Yeats, Samuel Beckett, and Seamus Heaney. Libby Chenault notes that students doing dissertation research in this period of Irish literature report finding as much useful material in Chapel Hill as in Ireland — thanks to collectors, including the Pattons, who gave their cherished collec-tions a permanent home here. A home in the Rare Book Collection closes the circle for the Pattons as book collectors. James Richard Patton, Jr. (Class of 1948) made his first signifi-cant purchase while still a Carolina undergraduate: a first edition of The Californians by the poet Robinson Jeffers, and it cost him $40 at the Bulls Head. The price was then almost as much as a quarter’s tuition, and it took Jim a long time to pay for the book. “It was a lot of money. And that was the start. [Professor Lyman] Cotten was a great inspiration for me in that area. I did my honors thesis on Jeffers. “Chapel Hill was such an enriching, startling discovery for me. It opened a world I hardly knew existed. You could sit in a carrel, pick up a book and read it, have your own private place. I was inspired to read, to probe areas I’d never thought about. Carolina was a great launching base for me.” Mary Maughan and Jim Patton both grew up in Durham and met in high school. She was a painter who attended Woman’s College (later UNC-G) in Greensboro. The two married while Jim was in law school and Mary was commut-ing to the Rhode Island School of Design from their home in Boston. After gradua-tion, the Pattons took off for several adventurous years of travel and residence in France and Vietnam. They soon started buying paintings together as well as books. But Jim draws a distinction. “I was a book collector,” Jim Patton says. “A collector pursues one of every-thing, focuses on a particular artist, gets the best. We’re not art collectors. Art we buy piece by piece because we love that particular piece.” As their income went up, particularly after Jim started his own international-law firm in Washington, D.C. (now Patton, Boggs LLP), they bought paintings by 20th century masters — Motherwell, Frankenthaler, Gottlieb, and Kelly. The paintings soon took over the walls of their house in Washington and later their retirement homes in Tucson and Aspen. Jim Patton says he bought most of his Joyce collection in the 1980s. He had been hooked by Ulysses, despite its difficulty. “It was so surprising and so different that I became intrigued. I became convinced this was [the work of] one of the great writers in the English language.” (He says much the same of Thomas Pynchon. And of Seamus Heaney, “I fell in love with his poetry the first time I read it.”) He also quickly learned the discipline of collecting — the book world’s rules — that items must be rare and in pristine condition. About his Joyce collection he says, “It’s significant. [But] a few things are missing. I couldn’t find them in the quality and uniqueness I was looking for as a collector. It’s like Eliot. There are about 4 or 5 Eliots I’m missing. The Eliot collection is more complete than the 4 “...[W]e want people to use it, to see it. There’s nothing like seeing the original.” 5 Joyce. It had to be first-rate and [rare].” How does he feel having given his Joyce collection to Carolina now rather than at the end of his lifetime? “I have to be honest. Giving parts or giving all of them away permanently is a wrench. It can be painful. I don’t have any James Joyce now and that makes me sad. But outweighing that is the pleasure of giving and knowing [the collection] will be cared for, viewed, and will inspire other people.” He adds, “With some collectors there’s not any heart or soul in it. They just sell the stuff.” Mary Patton says, “These [books] are like our children. Letting them go is bad enough but you have to make the decision and let them go to the right place. We enjoy seeing other people involved in what has given us joy.” Pain, pleasure, joy, and love — the Pattons don’t mince words about their passion for books and art. And they have made a joint decision, they say, eventually to send it all back to North Carolina for the enjoyment of others: the paintings and other art works to the N.C. Museum of Art in Raleigh and the books to the Rare Book Collection at UNC. Jim Patton says that it’s particularly important to keep a book collection together. Echoing that statement, Libby Chenault says that the Rare Book Collection at UNC can provide exactly what the Pattons and other collectors want: a permanent home where their collection will remain together under the collector’s name, in a place that has emotional resonance for the collector, and where the books and other materials will be safe, will be accessible to scholars, and will be exhibited. An exhibit of the Pattons’ entire Joyce collection will open in April of 2009. Despite living 50 years in Washington and now in their beloved West, Jim and Mary Patton have kept North Carolina in their hearts. Jim Patton has never gotten over UNC: “Teaching and learning are so important. UNC gave me the start. Those memories, that start, we’re giving in recognition of that, also because we want people to use it, to see it. There’s nothing like seeing the original. How do you learn if you don’t have a chance to see? It’s very exciting.” UNC’s libraries have been trans-formed by computers — but you knew that. What you may not know, even if you graduated as recently as the 1990s, is how much the culture and services of Carolina’s libraries have changed. Briefly described here are some of the big trends. But remember this: changes in the library’s tools, services, and even its culture all revolve around one unchanging core value of a true research library — to provide the best possible and most complete information to scholars. That’s the why. Everything else is how. Technology: Instant messaging is a favored medium for 18-to-22-year-olds asking reference questions. The Web gives the University Library a worldwide audience — and, more important, a North Carolina-wide audience; the library’s brand-new, elegantly easy Web page is the online entrance inviting people to come in. In the classroom, photocopied research guides are out; digital course pages are in. Librarians create Web-based course pages tailored to the specific research assignments of a class and designed to fit neatly inside Blackboard, the University’s course management system. New services: Carolina BLU (Brings the Library to You) book delivery allows faculty and students to request what they need and have it delivered to their office or the nearest library branch. Soon an article delivery service will offer scanned copies of print articles sent to the desktop. Librarians are finding new ways to deliver informa-tion to users in an effort to meet the rising expectations of young people used to getting what they want quickly and conveniently. Teaching and collaboration: Librarians offer online tutorials, one-on- one research consultations, and actual classes in the library to teach users how to find and evaluate informa-tion for specific classes (Art 157) or a subject area (biology) — and how to present work in the form of Web sites, PowerPoint, and video documentaries. In this kind of work, librarians must reach across boundaries and collaborate with others on campus. The world is flat, wrote Thomas Friedman, and that’s true for librarians, too. As Diane Strauss says, “We’ve become increasingly collaborative, and we see that as vital to our success.” Outreach: Rural high schools and middle schools now send classes to visit our libraries. And, conversely, our librarians train School of Information and Library Science graduate students to teach basic information-literacy classes at public libraries in Durham, Chapel Hill, and Carrboro. Librarians in the Carolina Digital Library and 6 Service, SeSrevrivciece, by Ginger Travis ’78 “We haven’t jettisoned the traditional services; we’ve added new services.” DIANE STRAUSS associate university librarian for collections and services “Today there’s a much greater role for outreach. Not only do we want people to come in but if you can’t come in we’ll come to you.” LISA NORBERG director of public services The University Library: Archives (CDLA) have begun to digitize UNC’s vast special collections to provide greater access to the state and the world. Marketing the library: It’s a new day when librarians use phrases like “marketing the library” and “we com-pete with Google.” Carolina’s librarians work very hard to bring new users into the library both physically and online. Parents of new students get a letter from Sarah Michalak about the library, and parents hear about the library again with their students at orientation. Resident advisors invite librarians to talk to students in their dorms. The library is on Facebook. And the “social library” — the Undergrad — holds its famous exam “coffee break” every semester on the first night of exams. If we can get them in the door, service will keep them coming back! UNC Libraries on the Web “The unattainable goal is to make everything so easy, so seamless, so transparent, so barrier-free that users can find and use all the resources the library makes available to them — without help.” TIM SHEARER coordinator of Web development Tim Shearer and his five-person Web team, and the User Interface Design Committee (especially Pam Sessoms, Kim Vassiliadis, and Lisa Norberg), have just given the UNC Libraries a new online front door, and it’s a beauty. The library’s new Web-based front page is extremely clear, uncluttered, and attractive; it contains almost everything you could possibly need just one to three clicks away. Access the catalog, renew your books, take a tutorial in physics research, read American Civil War diaries and letters, chat with a reference librarian, research study-abroad destinations and learn how to cite sources in your research — it’s so easy that even the Luddites should love it. This wealth at the end of the wire (or wireless) isn’t just for UNC faculty and students. By clicking on “Classes and Tours” then “Collaboration,” you’ll see that community work-shops are offered at public libraries in Durham, Chapel Hill, and Carrboro to teach computer non-sophisticates the basics of emailing, making an Excel spread-sheet, or searching for medical infor-mation online. Under “Web Site A to Z” is a program called NCLive.org, funded by the NC General Assembly, that allows North Carolinians to sign up with their public libraries for a user name and password giving them online access to many of the rich subscription services normally offered only to people in North Carolina’s academic libraries. These features are all about providing the citizens of North Carolina the tools to find information, wherever they may live in the Tar Heel state. Behind the library’s simple, easy-to- open, Web-based front door lies some serious complexity. But the beauty of a great interface is that we users never have to see the library Web team sweat. What we care about is that the design committee and the programmers have made it easy for us. Tim Shearer points to Google and Apple as two tech companies that really understand that ease of use — the interface — is what it’s all about. Add UNC Libraries online (www.lib.unc.edu) to that list. Brauer Math/Physics Library “Being a librarian means being a teacher. Learn how to teach and you can do librarianship really well.” ZARI KAMAREI math-physics librarian With her BA in physics, minor in math, and a BA-equivalent in chemistry, Zari Kamarei is a great fit with her library’s users — and all the more so because she’s happily adopted the com-munication tools of a younger generation so that she can reach them: instant messaging, texting, and even social networking via Facebook (a great way to publicize a workshop). Today’s kids, she says, are multitaskers, listening while 7 Zari Kamarei Tim Shearer they type, and they’re just as happy (and maybe happier) to meet you elec-tronically as face to face. Nevertheless, their questions are as basic as those asked by students 30 years ago: “What floor are the books on?” “So I’m learning about X-ray diffraction; where do I find the data?” Librarians today put a great empha-sis on teaching users rather than simply retrieving information for them. When Zari Kamarei executes an online search for hard-to-find data, she doesn’t just hand it to the student; she shows the student how she found it. The message: “You can do it, too, and here’s how.” Obviously, in this kind of librarianship it helps a lot if librarians like and under-stand undergraduates and grad stu-dents. “You just need to get in their world,” Zari Kamarei says. “It’s actually exciting to be with kids that age.” In the sciences it’s now often the practice for faculty members to give their classes datasets to work on (for instance, to run a statistical package), and librarians are the ones who find the database and post it to a Web site for the class. It takes great online-search skills, but what Zari Kamarei would tell you is this: “We’ve gone from being physically present in libraries to a virtu-al world of accessing information. But the librarian has always been there, from the physical to the virtual. All these devices are for one reason and one reason alone: reference.” New tools, same honorable goals: Find. Evaluate. Teach. Interlibrary Loan “ . . . [T]he world’s greatest inventions are the dishwasher, the pill, and interlibrary loan.” attributed to DORIS BETTS in the Virginia Library Association newsletter, Dec. 1996. “We’re in the business of resource sharing.” GENEVA HOLLIDAY head of interlibrary services What do you do when our library’s 6 million books, 60,000 journals, and magnificent special collections still don’t have every item you need for your dissertation research? You search the online record of the world’s libraries (accessible through www.lib.unc.edu), and then you fill out an electronic request form. If your sought-after book is in a Triangle library, it will arrive in a couple of days; outside the Triangle, one to two weeks. A requested article, digitized and sent electronically, may appear in just three days. (In the 1970s it took three weeks.) For this boon to scholarship, you pay — if you’re associ-ated with UNC — nothing. Last year UNC’s Interlibrary Loan borrowed 7,900 books, microforms, dissertations and videos, along with 4,400 articles. Going the other way, our library lent 22,200 items (mostly books) and 13,000 articles (digitized). Not all countries’ libraries lend, but the culture of sharing on behalf of scholarship is deeply, deeply ingrained in the U.S. and Canada, says Geneva Holliday. Not surprisingly, at UNC 60 percent of borrowers are graduate students, and 15 percent of all borrowers come from just one department: history. Since requests these days are made online, Holliday and her staff see borrowers less often: “Happy users we rarely see.” But the confused and unsuccessful searchers wind up on their email screens, their phones, their doorstep. “We solve mysteries,” she says. And then she and the staff do the one thing it takes to make a searcher happy: “We get the information to the user.” 8 8 Geneva Holliday “Keep it simple.” MITCH WHICHARD head of circulation House Undergraduate Library “Service is paramount. Our mission is to give students a good experience. We’re a teaching library.” SUCHI MOHANTY reference and instruction librarian “We’re competing with user-friendly systems like Google and Wikipedia. Our information is better [in the Undergrad] but access is key. It must be as easy as possible and we must be as helpful as possible.” KIM VASSILIADIS instructional design and technology librarian Students love the Undergrad. “It’s the social library,” says Suchi Mohanty. (“It was always the social library,” says a 1970s alum). The place buzzes with 18-to-22-year-old energy. Not coincidentally, the librarians of the Undergrad are young, too. How has the Undergrad managed to remain so popular? The renovation of House made it beautiful and comfortable again. But people make the difference. The Undergrad’s librarians are skilled in the methods students use to seek and communicate information today. Yes, librarians still teach raw young scholars the time-honored research skills — where to find infor-mation, how to evaluate it, even how to present it. But librarians use all the digital technologies students use, plus a few more. For exam-ple, reference librari-ans take thousands of questions annually via instant message. (Computer chat — students love it). Librarians can navigate, and show students how to navigate, electronic pathways to unpublished databases and electronic journals — foreign lands to first-years. And librarians can show students how to create the short documentary videos, web sites, and PowerPoint presentations that profes-sors may require in lieu of the old 10-page paper. The scanners, comput-ers, cameras, and recording and editing equipment are housed in the Collaboratory and the Media Resource Center; so are librarians/teachers. It’s all in the Undergrad. And that’s a big part of why House Undergraduate Library, at age 40, still has what it takes to get ’em through the door: The place is cool. And the librarians rock. The North Carolina Collection “A lot of our material is going online. [The North Carolina Collection] is such a wonderful resource for the people of North Carolina, but most have such a hard time getting here.” JASON TOMBERLIN North Carolina Collection public services librarian In 2007-2008 the North Carolina Collection got 10,000 requests for help. Who was asking? They were first-year students in English 101-102 with writing assignments on student life at Carolina in decades past or on their own hometowns. They were graduate students like the geographer seeking to map the locations of old textile mills in relation to the occurrence of a certain birth defect in the southern piedmont counties. One was a university chancel-lor emeritus wanting to find the exact location of “Cyprett’s bridge” as a reference point for the 1792 committee 9 Suchi Mohanty assists a student in the Undergrad Library Kim Vassiliadis Jason Tomberlin 10 selecting a site for UNC. Some were alumni looking themselves up in old copies of the Yackety Yack. And there were genealogists by the vanload. The collection is a treasure. But since access is so difficult for people off campus, NC Collection librarians are now digitizing frequently consulted materials like old city directories; these will become available online, saving users a trip to Chapel Hill. Likewise the new virtual museum of the university soon will be the responsibility of NCC librarians to maintain and expand. Like other librarians, NCC staff members are teaching users to do more for themselves; for example, by learning how to search the online catalog before they visit. And the librarians are blog-ging up a storm to attract more users by showing off the collection in all its glory — the serious, the whimsical, the weird. Check out their blog for yourself — and enjoy: “North Carolina Miscellany: Exploring the History, Literature and Culture of the Tar Heel State” at www.lib.unc.edu/blogs/ncm/ Davis Library Circulation “We take pride in the fact that patrons find what they want. If they have problems we respond quickly.” MITCH WHICHARD head of circulation “Keep it simple” — that’s what Mitch Whichard and his Circulation staff try to do for Davis Library’s users. For the staff, though, it’s complex. Last year Circulation had 419,886 transactions (check-outs and renewals) on a total of 1.5 million items in Davis. The Circulation staff must ensure that the entire collection and book stacks in general are shelved and re-shelved cor-rectly and that the materials are well-maintained. New items, as they arrive, need to get on the shelves fast. And the staff must be able to communicate quickly with users whether books are available or not. To manage such a large operation, Circulation uses a computer system that integrates the catalog and the actual books (you search the catalog to see if the library owns a book, and if it does, you instantly know whether it’s on the shelves or checked out). Also — and this is a big deal — the system is Web-based, meaning that someone off cam-pus, from Carrboro to Canberra, can check the catalog and locate the book. It’s so simple for the user — today. Yet when Mitch Whichard arrived in Circulation in 1991 there were only four computers in the department, and books were checked out with key-punched cards. (Key punching computer cards — there’s a lost art!) Circulation’s latest innovation is a service rolled out in August: document delivery. At a student or faculty mem-ber’s request, the library will send books to that person’s departmental office or departmental library, saving the user time and steps. For all the automatic processes, the human touch remains. When users with overdue books appeal their notices with tales of woe, Mitch Whichard responds personally to every one: “I don’t believe in generic responses.” When the easy things stay easy and the hard things are handled well — that’s a brand of service that keeps library users happy. Mitch Whichard Bill and Virginia Powell have spent their lifetimes serving North Carolina — he researching, writing, and teaching about our state’s people, places, and history and she as his indispensable collaborator, fact-checker, proofreader, schedule coordinator, and chauffeur. The result has been an absolutely stunning output of books, articles, essays, and lectures that have helped countless people better understand and appreciate the rich and diverse heritage of North Carolina. In April 2008, as a special tribute to Bill for his 89th birthday and a thank you to Virginia for years of support and service, the University Library and a number of friends and alumni created the William S. Powell and Virginia W. Powell Library Fund for North Carolina. This permanent endowed fund, based in the North Carolina Collection in Wilson Library, will support continuing acquisi-tions and permit an increased emphasis on outreach activities — sharing the history, literature, and culture of North Carolina with the various communities the Powells have served so well. These outreach activities may eventually include traveling exhibits of library materials, facsimiles, and artifacts; a speakers program that provides librarians to make presentations about the state to school, museum, civic, and cultural groups; and special projects with community histori-ans and cultural leaders to expand our collections and encourage cooperative collecting. The publication of the Encyclopedia of North Carolina in November 2006 is just the most recent accomplishment of the Powells’ lifetime partnership. Their relationship with the Library is deep-rooted. In 1952, Bill Powell became assistant librarian in the North Carolina Collection; in 1958 he was promoted to curator. As curator he helped build what is now regarded as the premier research collection of any single state in this country. It seems most fitting that the Powell Fund will benefit this collection and be a permanent tribute to the contributions they have made to the library, the University and the state. For information on the William S. Powell and Virginia W. Powell Library Fund for North Carolina, please contact the Library Development Office at (919) 843-5651. New Fund to Honor Bill and Virginia Powell will Benefit the NCC 11 A MESSAGE FROM DIRECTOR AMY BALDWIN It is with great pleasure that I announce the theme of the 2009 festival — A Celebration of Reading and Writing. From the moment I stepped foot on campus in mid-May I have spent much of my time speaking with more than 200 individuals — professors, campus admin-istrators, librarians, community leaders, community donors, corporate partners, and North Carolina authors. Enthusiasm for the festival is widespread and there is tremendous support for the event. And it is evident that our community is interest-ed in all types and styles of writing and reading. While the basis of our theme is to describe the intention of the festival, it also allows for the inclusion of varied and diver-sified styles of writing. As we move forward with planning the fes-tival we continue to build relation-ships that will allow us to honor and highlight our North Carolina writers, as well as introduce our community to writers from around the country. One area of great importance will be outreach to children, including readings, pop-up books, picture books, and storytelling. We are also striving to include the entire state in the festival through the North Carolina Literary Festival On The Road program, which will send a North Carolina author to six libraries throughout the state to speak with their communities in the two weeks leading up to the festival. Our Carolina stu-dents will also add a valuable contribution to the festival through their participation as writers and readers, and through their leadership as volunteers during the event. The festival website, www.ncliteraryfestival.org, launched in October and will be continually updated as the festival nears. Community assistance will be needed to help with a variety of tasks at the festival, so please make sure to register to volunteer when the volunteer opportunities are posted in late winter. The author/session schedule will be released in 2009, and we promise that you will be pleased with the list of participating authors! In the meantime, mark the festival dates on your calendar — September 10–13, 2009. 12 A Celebration of Reading and Writing The 2008 North Carolina Literary Festival Holly Smith has been appointed as the Grace McSpadden Overholser Archival Fellow for African American Studies. Ms. Smith will work with and expand African American–related materials in the Southern Historical Collection, also updat-ing current online guides and improving material accessibility. Since her appoint-ment on July 1 Ms. Smith has created a small exhibit of manuscript materials for an undergraduate research conference and provided instruction in the use of archival resources for two classes in the UNC history department. Research she did when working as an historical interpreter in Colonial Williamsburg sparked her own interest in archives and working with original source materials. Before coming to UNC, she served as an archival and research assistant at Tufts University. She holds a B.A. from the College of William and Mary, an M.A. in history from Yale University and an M.S. from Simmons College with a concentration in archival management. The Overholser Fellow posi-tion was created by a gift from Nan and Bob Keohane in memory of Nan’s mother. 13 We are pleased to announce that the North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives’ Stephen Fletcher is the chair-elect of the Visual Materials Section of the Society of American Archivists. He will serve as chair beginning at the conclusion of next year’s annual meeting in Austin, Texas. Fletcher led a session titled “Toward a Best Practices Guide to Collecting Born-digital Photographs” at the annual meeting of the SAA held in San Francisco June 26-30. The room had seating for 60 people, but 120 people attended — and others were turned away due to the fire code. He also gave a twenty-minute pres-entation on the blog “A View to Hugh” to those attending the Manuscripts Section’s meeting. Be sure to check out the blog at http://www.lib.unc.edu/blogs/morton/. At the April board meeting of the Friends of the Library, Chairman Jo Smith of Grimesland handed over the leadership to Charlotte attorney Norfleet Pruden AB ’70. The eighth person to hold the position since the board began in 1986, Pruden will serve for two years. To recog-nize Smith’s devotion to Carolina’s library and football team, the board presented her with a framed Hugh Morton photo-graph of Choo Choo Justice. Smith grew up with an abiding commitment to Carolina’s team because her father, esteemed ACC referee Wilburn Clary, took her to all the games. Providing ongoing leadership for the library’s fund raising and “friend” raising effort, members of the Friends of the Library board have steadily expanded its reach and impact. Doug Eyre, professor emeritus of geog-raphy, chaired the group for the first 10 years or so because no one was ready to step up to the challenge. When Borden Hanes took over from Eyre in 1990, the group had enough members to plan for succession. Now the terms are only two years; first and second vice chairs stand ready to suc-ceed and the group has grown from 12 to 38 members representing a much wider geographical range from the original all- North Carolina roster. Because of the untimely death of first vice chair Faryl Moss AB ’66, the succession of leadership changed. Hugh Stevens AB ’65, JD ’68 of Raleigh stepped up to first vice chairman and Murray Sawyer AB’68 of Wilmington, Delaware, to second vice chair. Four individuals have accepted the invitation to join the board: Mary P. Bossong AB ’90, MBA ’98 of Raleigh; Sally Cone AB ’76, JD ’78 of Greensboro; Stephen De May AB ’84 of Charlotte; and Nancy Sipp AB ’83 of New York, NY. Three of the four new members are attorneys, carrying on a long-term but unplanned tradition of membership. Of the 38 cur-rent members, seven have law degrees! Three students have joined as well: Analise Jenkins, Rebecca Merrick, and Sarah Shapiro. They all love their library! Overholser Fellow Named Stephen Fletcher Elected Section Chair at SAA Annual Meeting New Leaders, New Members Friends of the Library Board John Keats penned some of the most quoted lines in English poetry --- “A thing of beauty is a joy forever;” “Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard are sweeter.” On November 20, the poet who would “sooner fail than not be among the great-est” will take a place of honor at UNC’s Library, with the dedication of Keats’s “Poems,” published in 1817, as the 6-mil-lionth volume in the library’s collection. The first edition is part of a 500-item Keats collection, purchased in 2008 with support from the John Wesley and Anna Hodgin Hanes Foundation of Winston- Salem. Through its foundation, the Hanes family has funded each of the library’s millionth volumes, in an arrangement that UNC librarians believe to be unique. With this addition, UNC marks its status as the 19th university library in North America to achieve the 6 million volume milestone. Jeanne Moskal, professor of English at UNC and editor of the Keats-Shelley Journal, said that the collection will fortify undergraduate education, noting that she regularly brings classes to the Rare Book Collection. “With each visit, four or five students catch intellectual fire when they see early editions of authors they have studied. Keats is already a favorite among my students, who see him sharing their own emerging-adult issues of articulating a vocation and of discovering love and sexuality. These books will strengthen the vividness of that affinity.” While Keats was little appreciated in his day, a proliferation of elegant “gift books” and anthologies in the 19th and 20th centuries eventually placed his work back in the eye of the public. Increased critical attention beginning in the second half of the 19th century cemented his place in the literary canon. In November, a selection of Keats editions will be on display in the Melba Remig Saltarelli Room in Wilson Library, along with works by writers who inspired Keats; remembrances of the poet by con-temporaries such as Percy Bysshe Shelley and Lord Byron; and notable editions of authors influenced by Keats. In a 21st-century twist, the library will digitize selections from the 6-millionth volume gift and will make them freely available on the Internet through an ongoing arrangement with the Internet Archive (http://www.archive.org). “Books are our special heritage,” said Sarah Michalak, University Librarian and Associate Provost for University Libraries. “By celebrating this remarkable collection as our 6-millionth volume, we honor a major milestone and a truly generous tra-dition of the Hanes family.” 14 Keats’s Poems is Library’s 6-Millionth Volume Frank Hanes with selections from the Keats Collection 15 New 2008 Wilson Library Fellows Cumulative Giving Reaching $20,000 John William Becton Nancy Baach Tannenbaum Annie Gray Calhoun Lane Nolan Delano Lovins Edward R. Perl Marjorie P. Perl Lewis W. Powell Dannye Gibson Powell John Peter Rostan Janice Hurst Rostan Clarence Earl Whitefield Jane Pittard Whitefield Joan Wilentz Bell Tower $25,000 or More Arhoolie Records William Spainhour Bason (Estate) Nancy Faison Bryson Vaughn Douglas Bryson John Eugene Cay III Cay Foundation John Taylor Doggett M. Cecil Ernst* Sarah Fore Gaines (Estate) Gordon Gold W. Howard Holsenbeck Nolan Delano Lovins Ellice & Rosa McDonald Foundation, Inc. Andrew W. Mellon Foundation William A. Morgan James Richard Patton, Jr. Mary Maughan Patton Dannye Gibson Powell Lewis E. Powell Randleigh Foundation Trust Mark Lafayette Reed III Martha Sibley Reed Ann Gawthrop Sawyer H. Murray Sawyer, Jr. Eunice Nickerson Tyler (Estate) Watson-Brown Foundation Kay Massey Weatherspoon Van Louis Weatherspoon Joan Wilentz Benefactors $10,000 – $24,999 Douglas Stevenson Arnold Richard E. Ballard John William Becton and Nancy Baach Tannenbaum Gloria Nassif Blythe Thomas Watson Brown, Sr. (Estate) Carter Family Memorial Music Center CBT Charitable Trust Raymond James Charitable Endowment Fund Frances P. London North Caroliniana Society Mary Bernice T. Percy Ready Mixed Concrete Co. Blair Donald Shwedo, Sr. Laura Weatherspoon Shwedo Charles Brent Trexler, Jr. Frances Angas Weaver Jane Robinson Whitaker William Asbury Whitaker Clarence Earl Whitefield Jane Pittard Whitefield Wiley J. Williams Camp Younts Foundation Patrons $1,000 – $9,999 Douglas Ochs Adler Prudence S. Adler Laurence G. Avery Daniel Wilson Barefoot Kay Townsend Barefoot Wilton James Bruce Bastin Ayers Whitton Baughman G. Alexander Bernhardt, Jr. James Cyril Blaine Jean Burdette Blaine J. Melvin Bowen Frederick Baker Bridgers Warren Marshall Briggs Charles Wilson Broadwell Patty Frizzell Brooks W. Lester Brooks, Jr. Mary Earle Brown Neilson Brown Richard P. Buck William R. Burk Burlington Industries Foundation John Woodfin Burress III Mary Louise Bizzell Burress Betsy Steele Carr George Watts Carr III Kelli Carroll and David Graham Ross William Sherard Chapman, Jr. Shirley S. Chase William Polk Cheshire Clancy and Theys Construction Kathryn Virginia Clancy Phillip Gram Clark, Sr. Evangeline Hinson Clark Robert Burns Clark, Jr. Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta Betty Bruton Cooney Gilda Cree Philip R. Cree Mary Virginia Spruill Currie Robert Joseph Dabal Yetta Danneman (Estate) Dave McAlister Davis Harriet Davis Joan Barber Davis Emilie Patton de Luca Fred Hyams Deaton, Jr. Edwin Harrison Dixon, Jr. Nancy Head Dixon Erica Riefenberg Donnalley Kevin Thomas Donnalley Michael Nathan Driscoll Timothy Charles Duffy Meyer Edwin Dworsky Kate Edgar John Marsden Ehle Rosemary Harris Ehle David G. Ernsthausen Elizabeth Evans John P. Evans Pat Evans Florence Fearrington Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Frank John Fischer III Janet Loafman Flowers Archibald Taylor Fort Vicki Jo Fowler Elizabeth Green Fuller E. Paul Gardner Ronni Miller Gardner George Horner Gibson Judith Clark Gibson Alice Cowles Giles Joseph L. Giles Donald Gilman, Jr. David Robinson Godschalk Lallie Moore Godschalk Anne Howell Gray Bernard Gray Gail Harrison Grossman Steven Howard Grossman Elise Pettrey Guthridge William Wallace Guthridge S. Revelle Gwyn C. Rush Hamrick, Jr. F. Borden Hanes, Jr. Margaret Taylor Harper Mary Ann Harrell C. Bryce Hartley II Anna Ragland Hayes Wyat W. Helsabeck Charles H. Hendricks Andrew Michael Herman Edward Jay Hockfield Steven Alan Hockfield Susan Winstead Holderness Eric J. Hyman Lynn Moody Igoe (Estate) Dudley L. Jennings (Estate) Houston G. Jones Raymond Henderson Jones, Jr. Melinda Margaret Kaiser Clarence Higgins Keller Joyce Dickman Keller John Thomas Kelly III Betty Kenan Thomas Stephen Kenan III Eleanor M. Kilgour Jeanette Cone Kimmel David Franklin Kinney A. Larkin Kirkman Rosa Dickinson Kirkman Bernard Klingenstein Dana Borden Lacy Graham G. Lacy Annie Gray Calhoun Lane Charles Thomas Lane R. Scott Langley, Jr. Kenneth Floyd Ledford Linda Susan Lee Jay Lester Judy Lester Richard Folmar Liebhart Edward G. Lilly, Jr. Nancy Cobb Lilly Henry Augustus Lowet Richard Byron Lupton J. Ross Macdonald Margaret T. Macdonald James Edward Maloney Darren McGehee Anne Whittington McLendon William Woodard McLendon Sarah C. Michalak Cathy Dawn Moore Dennis Duane Moore Sara Giles Moore Foundation Eleanor Saunders Morris Mary Nunn Morrow Faryl Sims Moss* Charles Stephens Norwood, Jr. Nancy Bridgers Norwood Dwight Stephen Oldham Karen Orth Louis Wood Otterbourg Marie Smithwick Parker Roy Parker, Jr. Malcolm Overstreet Partin Beverly Bush Patterson Daniel Watkins Patterson Edward R. Perl Marjorie P. Perl C. Edward Pleasants Nancy Thompson Pleasants Evelyn M. Poole-Kober Farrel Franklin Potts Welsh Davidson Potts Virginia Waldrop Powell William Stevens Powell Presbyterian Historical Society Kathryn Cobb Preyer Norris Watson Preyer J. Norfleet Pruden III Alfred L. Purrington III Suzanne Townsend Purrington Charles James Ragland, Jr. David E. Ragland Nancy Anne Ader Ragland Russ Reynolds Sally Baumann Reynolds Richard Judson Richardson 16 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 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. The following images are from the Hugh Morton Photograph and Film Collection and the Durwood Barbour North Carolina Postcard Collection Scott Hanchet Richardson Sue Richardson Charlotte Bryan Rodman E.T., Jr. & Frances Rollins Foundation Frances Page Rollins Kelly Leigh Ross Janice Hurst Rostan John Peter Rostan III Barbara Burch Safford Charles D. Safford Marvin Saltzman Amy Greenwood Sawyer Harold Murray Sawyer III W. Braxton Schell* Catherine Schweitzer Christoph E. Schweitzer Charles Milton Shaffer, Jr. Harriet Houston Shaffer Nancy Howard Sitterson Simon C. Sitterson III Allen Coleman Smith Allison Burnett Smith Brenton Lohr Smith Debbie Smith The Eddie and Jo Allison Smith Family Foundation Edward Calvin Smith, Jr. Jo Allison Clary Smith Moyer Gray Smith, Jr. Claude Henry Snow, Jr. Sarah Turnbull Snow Herbert Norris Snowden III Ann Lewallen Spencer Elizabeth Sprunt Laurence Gray Sprunt Richard Oates Steele Samuel Coburn Stringfield Chester Hogan Sykes Nancy King Tanner Pell Tanner C. Edward Teague III Georgie Sears Brewer Tilley Blossom McGarrity Tindall Virginia Agnew Trenholm Trexler Foundation Lucile Turner (Estate) Diana L. Walstad R. Beverly R. Webb Alice M. Welsh Molly Johnson Weston Leona Paschal Whichard Willis Padgett Whichard William David Whisenant Cathleen Pappas Whitted J. Turner Whitted Benson Reid Wilcox Winston-Salem Foundation Megan Wetherill Ziglar William Richard Ziglar Friends $10– $999 Charles Marc Abbey Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Anne Churchwell Adams LeNeve Hodges Adams Samantha Agbeblewu Maureen Beth Ahmad William McKenzie Aiken D. Alexander Albright Robert C. Albright Gloria Alderman John Michael Alderman Betty Acey Alexander Elizabeth Jean Alexander Michael Shepard Alexander Larry Paul Alford Amy Case Allen Barbara C. Allen Dawn Allen Shu An Patrick Maxwell Anders Mary Sweaney Andersen Barbara Shaw Anderson Paul Christopher Anderson Robert Nelson Anderson III Sarah Lane Anderson Amanda I. Andresen Jeffry J. Andresen Carol Andrews Walton White Andrews Katherine A. Anthony Robert G. Anthony, Jr. Stephen Marc Appell Kenning Arlitsch Thomas A. Arnel Rebecca W. Ashburn Rebecca Ashburn Patricia Ashley Robert Ashley Association of NC Boards of Health Stephen Dwight Atkinson Annye Elizabeth Atteberry Michael J. Auer Edward Robert Austin Susan Lipman Austin Avalon Medical Group F. Gloyd Awalt, Jr. Carol Baer Tomas Baer M. Andrew Bagwell Stephanie Jackson Bagwell Dayna Lynn Gardner Baird Brian Keith Baker Charles Louis Baker Christopher Paul Baker Doris Ledford Baker Felicia Nelson Baker James Bryant Baker James M. Baker Nancy L. Baker Ross Young Baker Shirley K. Baker Thelma Baker Thomas Eugene Baker James Mahlon Bales Susan Bales Rebecca Sutherland Ballentine Stephen Brian Bambara O. Gordon Banks Leslie Banner G. Sprite Barbee III James Brown Barber Jon Carr Barbour M. Durwood Barbour Reid Barbour Angela L. Bardeen Gary Fenton Barefoot John Calvin Barefoot Martha Bagby Barefoot John Dallas Barile Suzy Maynard Barile Michael Derek Barnes Elaine E. Barney William Lesko Barney Mary Kate Barnhart Rebecca Anne Barnhouse Frank Hauser Barr Harriet Hylton Barr Milly S. Barranger Deborah Kay Barreau Phyllis Campbell Barrett Keith Gordon Bartholomew William Harrell Baskin III Wanda Bassett Hardy Elmo Batchelor, Jr. Marcia Ingols Batchelor Jack Bates Jerry Bates David Line Batty 17 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Lyn Marie Batty Paul John Bauer Jessica Baxter Rosann Bazirjian Sylvia Beacham-Hughes Jeffery S. Beam Leanne Barnett Bean Richard Paul Beaudry Sheila Badger Beaudry Judy C. Beaver Margaret Woodhouse Becker Walter B. Beeker, Jr. Lenora Beggs Carol Grotnes Belk Cecelia Early Belk Irwin Belk Bell Family Foundation Clara Bond Bell Danny Bell Elizabeth Dooley Bell John Luther Bell, Jr. Mack Bell II* Mary Grady Koonce Bell Victor Eros Bell III John George Bellios II Thomas W. Belton R. James Benedict, Jr. Betty G. Bengston Karen Benkert Lawrence Benkert Charlotte Stumph Bennett Larry Kester Benninger Sheila Weston Benninger Christina Elizabeth Benson Dale Monroe Bentz Mary Gail Menius Bentz Bernice I. Bergup Anne B. Berkley Margaret Green Berkowitz Rhoda L. Berkowitz Roger M. Berkowitz Stephen Asher Berkowitz Michael Kalen Berkut Bernard Foundation Elizabeth Denning Berryhill William Irwin Berryhill, Jr. Edward Hiltner Bertram III Nancy Castles Bertram Mary Best Beta Phi Mu Epsilon Doris Waugh Betts Elizabeth Ann Bezera Mary Ellen Barnes Bierck Joan P. Bingham Laura Carpenter Bingham Warren Louis Bingham Ceres B. Birkhead Canelia Hinnant Blackwell Kendall Leon Blackwell Catherine Ann Blair Virginia Archer Blakeslee Lynn W. Blanchard Patricia Jane Blanton Frank A. Blazich Julia C. Blixrud Elizabeth Susan Taylor Block Lawrence Steven Block Avrom Bluestein Eleanore Bluestein Evo Bluestein Elaine Fink Blumenthal Jerome Bruce Blumenthal John Alexander Blythe Catherine Claire Bodin Charles Boewe Mary S. Boewe Jennifer Brackenbury Boger John Charles Boger Hannah Sykes Bohannan Hsi-chu H. Bolick Andrea Lee Bolland Suzie Bolotin Victor M. Bonacheff Dorothea Bonds Mark Evan Bonds Robert A. Boone George David Boozer Henry C. Boren Fred W. Boring Julian Redwine Bossong Mary Pleasants Bossong Sanford Little Boswell Edmond Anthony Boudreaux III Donald Arthur Boulton Marta Renee Bowen Maryellen Bowers Wayne A. Bowers* Ellen R. Bowman Barbara Lane Boyd Karen Denise Boyd William Perry Boyd Margaret E. Boyenton William Harwood Boyenton Larry M. Boyer Merle N. Boylan Stephanie Soroka Boyles Wayne R. Boyles III Robert Franklin Brabham, Jr. Ellis E. Bradford Gail Bradley S. J. Bradley Martha Glenn Bradshaw Renee Byrd Bradshaw Alethea Bragg Deborah Griffin Branton Michael Gerald Branton Meredith Lynn Bratcher Elise Holmes Braun David W. Brehmer Madge Briggs Carol Scovil Brinkley Martin Hal Brinkley Richard Lilly Broadwell Marjory Oakey Brodie Mary Aldige Brogden Stephen Marshall Brooks Edwin L. Brown George-Anne Willard Brown Jane Hetherington Brown Joy Gann Brown Katrina Marie Brown Laura Clark Brown Leslie Ellen Brown Matthew Brown Nicolette Friederich Brown Norman DePaul Brown Stephen D. Brown Timothy Bowditch Brown Herbert Howard Browne, Jr. Clyde E. Browning Matthew J. Bruccoli Melinda Tyser Brunner Eleanor Godfrey Bruno Frieda Bryant Bruton H. David Bruton Betsy Bryan James Alexander Bryan II Robin Riley Bryson Jane Summers Bryttan Julian R. Bryttan Rebecca Cole Bucci Edward A. Buchanan James Wofford Buchanan, Sr. Charlotte Clay Buell Deanna J. Buhr Kenneth S. Buhr Julian W. Bunn, Jr. Alison Bunting Wade Bunting Matthew Jay Burbank Nannie Harbour Burby Raymond Joseph Burby III Raquel Anjanette Bushnell Brian Craig Butler Clifford R. Butler, Jr. Lelia Clinard Butler Linda Lynch Butler Lindley Smith Butler Robert Dean Buysse Virginia Anderson Buysse Francis John Byrd Robert Lowe Byrd John Lafayette Byrum Charles J. Cain Myra H. Cain Martha Belle Caldwell John Philip Call Leigh Fleming Callahan Anne Madeleine Calvignac Mary Trimble Cameron Mary Kathryn Campbell Sue Catherine Campbell Walter Elijah Campbell III Waltrene M. Canada Eleanor Cannan Tom Cannan Bill Cannon Clarence Ray Cannon Douglas Sebren Cannon Elizabeth Weaver Cannon Jeannette Cannon Robert L. Cannon Dorothy Phillips Cansler Paul Teige Cantey Julie Dupree Cantu Diana Berez Caplow Michael Caplow Margarita Mercedes Cardona Barbara A. Carmody G. Paul Carr, Jr. Jean E. Carr Charles Williams Carter, Jr. Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 18 Hilary Therese Carter H. William Carter, Jr. Leonard Hewell Carter, Jr. Margaret Kelley Carter Valerie Knox Carter Laura Jane Cartner James Woodrow Cartwright Phoebe McNeer Cartwright Mary M. Case Jerry Clyde Cashion Audrey Harmon Cassibry Stephanie B. Casteel Frank David Castlebury III Trudy Elizabeth Castlebury John Claiborne Cates, Jr. Katherine Petrou Catlett Arthur Thomas Cavano, Jr. Janet Jeffrey Cavano David Cecelski George H. V. Cecil John Amherst Cecil Nancy Cecil Halley Elizabeth Cella Dino S. Cervigni Marilyn E. Cervigni Steven M. Chandler Margaret J. Chanin Michael Henry Chanin Teresa Chapa Chapel Hill Historical Society Kellie Shoffner Chapman Gabriel Chau Barbara Ott Chavious Kenneth E. Chavious Brenning Bunch Cheatham James T. Cheatham III Edwin Rives Cheek Ying Chen Elizabeth Ann Chenault T. Kevin Cherry John Edward Chesser, Jr. J. Ben Chilton Lorraine Chin Beverly Bailey Chinnis Jewel Buffaloe Christian Ross Anthony Cidlowski James William Clark, Jr. Jennifer Munro Clark John Levan Demaree Clark Linda Loeb Clark Margaret Allen Clark Martha Keeler Clark Tony Franklin Clark Michael A. Clarke Penelope T. Clarke T. Henry Clarke IV Michael Jay Claxton Marlene Elise Clay Mechelle Cash Clayton T. Barrier Clendenin, Jr. Susan Hicks Clifford Nancy M. Cline Phillip Edmond Cline R. Clark Cloyd Robert Lee Cloyd Jim Coble Raquel Cogell Huddy Cohen Jerry Cohen Ronald D. Cohen Harvey Colchamiro Stephen W. Cole Emmy Lou Coleman Joseph William Collins Megan Wrenn Collins Pauline Bryson Collins Ruth Burton Collins Sarah Prince Colton Laura Carolyn Comer Community Foundation of Greater Memphis Community Foundation of Western North Carolina Marcella Harrer Congdon Robert Beattie Congdon Heather Sue Conklin Daniel Patrick Connerton Sally Bahnsen Connerton Loren Connors Helen Harney Conrad Robert Franklin Conrad Anne Rullman Cook James Coffield Cooke, Jr. Sydney Stafford Cooke Elizabeth Parsons Cooper Glinda Sue Cooper Grady Cooper, Jr. Leland Ross Cooper, Sr. Lenox Gore Cooper, Jr. Laurel Archer Copp Victoria Margaret Corke Anne Eckerson Corley Paul E. Corneilson Gary Cornog Alice Robinson Cotten Jerry Wayne Cotten Alan Cottrell Jonathan Morris Courtland Mona C. Couts Robert M. Coven Cynthia Diane Cowan Nancy Walker Cowan Christopher Ross Cox Eppie Bennett Cox Valerie Purdie Cozart Patricia L. Crabtree M. Richard Cramer James Grant Crawford Samuel Lee Crawford Catherine Crepack Joseph Gregory Crespo John Allen Crislip Margaret L. Crist Rebecca Susan Crist Brevard Barnett Crowell John Duncan Currie, Jr. Kathryn Watson Currie Mark Currie Peggy Currie Lee Godwin Currin Robert Tyree Currin III Andrew Cutright Kathryn Howell Dalton Robert Sethur Dalton Sean Larry Dalton Dana D’Andraia Frank D’Andraia Marie L. Torrey Danforth Van Womack Daniel III Jane M. Danielewicz Robert James Daniels Thomas Cook Darrell Mary Bandy Daughtry Louis Markham Dauner Susan Ann Davi Boyd Hill Davis Fred Davis Nancy Allison Davis Nancy Katherine Davis Richard Akin Davis Thomas Fitzgerald Davis, Jr. J. Russell Davison Linda Page Davison Raymond Howard Dawson John H. De Carlo Mardell De Carlo Stephen Gerard De May William Howard Deane Cordelia Lewis Deans Robert Edgar Deans, Jr. Arthur St Clair DeBerry Mignon R. DeBerry Gillian M. Debreczeny Paul Debreczeny* Debutante Ball Society of Durham Barbara Epps Deering Thomas Searle Deering, Jr. Anthony Roane Dees (Estate) Leslie McNeill Dees Amelia Barnum Dees-Killette Christie Turner Degener Helen Roxlo Delp Janie Johnson DeMario Betty Hill Dennis Bonnie Boyer Derr Dailey Jonathan Derr Marit Derrer Barbara I. Dewey Bill Dewey Deborah Carson Dibbert Douglas Steven Dibbert Henry Dickens & Co Robert Arthur Dickson Victoria Green Dickson Blaine Dillon Melissa Dillon Richard Smith Dixon, Jr. Robert Dale Dixon Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Dodge Susan Anne Dodge Laine Elizabeth Doggett Eileen Kay Doherty Bob Dolan Books Frank A. Dominguez Patricia Buck Dominguez Michael Marshall Dore Knut Dorn A. Anson Dorrance IV. M’Liss Gary Dorrance Mary Alice Dorton Virginia Pou Doughton Carolyn Green Dow Mary Catherine Dowe Sean B. Downing Linda Stopher Drake Matthias C. Drake E. Rick Dreibelbis Kathleen Morgan Drowne Joshua Martin Drucker Deidre Holmes DuBois Aurora Sharp Dudley Roberta Ann Dunbar Alison Shepherd Duncan Andrew Wayne Duncan Betty Smith Duncan Catherine Alford Duncan Gwyneth Maureen Duncan Homer Gray Duncan II Alvis Eugene Dunn Elizabeth Bramm Dunn Leah McGinnis Dunn Harold Macon Dunnagan Suzanne Verbeck Dunnagan William Edward Dunstan III Wayne K. Durrill L. Daniel Duval III Holly Dzwilefsky H Louie Eargle William Alfred Early III Barbara Ross Earnhardt Jean A. Earnhardt John C. Earnhardt, Jr. Ellen Bullington Eason Leslie Frank Eason, Jr. Connie Clare Eble EBSCO Industries Inc. Gary Eckstein Amanda C. Edwards Monica M. Eiland Donna C. Eisen C. Maxwell Elbin, Jr. Marie D. Eldridge Carolyn Worcester Elfland Ernest L. Eliel* Eva Eliel Barbara Miriam Elkins Philip Lovin Elliott, Jr. Ellis and Ellis Inc. Marion A. Ellis Robert Anthony Ellison Bryan Jason Elsaesser Empire Books Jennifer Jordan Engel Patrick Daniel Engel Roberta Ann Engleman Raymond Alexander English Sally-Hilda Erickson Susan Joy Erickson Brenda Petty Eskridge E. Stanford Eskridge, Jr. Nora Gaskin Esthimer Steven William Esthimer David Wesley Etchison Joanne D. Eustis Blair Q. Evans George J. Evans, Jr. James Evans Nell B. Evans Cheryl Homzak Ewald Dennis Lyn Ewald J. Douglas Eyre Olga Yobs Eyre Jessica Eden Factor Arthur John Faint Eugene Fairbanks Sarah Howle Fallaw Martha L. Farmer Robert L. Farmer Ming-Wai Allyssa Farrell Connie Barnes Farris William Charles Farris 19 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Roy Edgar Fauber Ronnie Wayne Faulkner J. Alan Feduccia Olivia Taylor Feduccia Judith Jones Felder Robert Brabham Felder Floyd Ferguson Gordon James Ferguson Richard Henry Ferguson, Sr. Thomas Russell Ferguson, Jr. Maria Fernandez Marcie Ferris Martin T. Ferris Nancy S. Ferris William R. Ferris Kirill Fesenko Carol Feuer Lawrence Feuer Virginia Fick Donald Carl Fidler F. Thomas Field Sue Burroughs Field John R. Files Michael Edward Fincher Elizabeth Marshall Fink Charissa Louise Fischer Michael Joseph Fischer Peter Graham Fish Edwin B. Fisher, Jr. Elizabeth Weil Fisher Micah Robert Fisher Michael David Fisher Rebecka Fisher Sandra Strawn Fisher Thomas Grantham Fisher, Sr. Carey Elizabeth Fitzmaurice Heather M. Fitzwilliam Jack David Fleer Martha Hinkle Fleer Leslie Allen Fleisher Jacquelyn Lee Fleming Michele Wilson Fletcher W. Miles Fletcher III Christine Flora Joseph Martin Flora Stephen Ray Flora Helen F. Flowers Joan H. Floyd D.Glenn Fogle Faith Underhill Fogle Jaroslav Thayer Folda III Linda Whitham Folda Susan C. Fonte Sarah Forbes Michelle Alligood Fore Kerri Forney Tanya C. Fortner Timothy Andrew Foskey Dennis Arthur Foster Chesca Yvonne Fox Cindy Beth Fox Gwen Corbert Fox William Henry Fox, Jr. Catherine Ann Frank Linda Frankel Margaret Ogilvy Franz Diane Frazier Nancy Robison Frazier Judy French Rachel J. Frew Ida Howell Friday Lila Ponder Friday William Clyde Friday Barbara G. Friedman Richard T. Froyen Cynthia Fugate R. Neil Fulghum Monica Witterholt Fuller Nancy Scott Fuller W. Erwin Fuller, Jr. W. Scott Fuller Carol H. Fullerton Gregory L. Fullerton Margaret Ellen Fulton Andrea Hodges Funk Sandra Gail Funk Richard Benton Fuquay Prafull Gadani Mary Kathleen Gallagher Karen L. Gansky Stuart Gansky Weixiang Gao Edward Randy Gardner James Towles Gardner, Jr. Kirsten Anne Gardner Rebecca Lynn Gardner Victoria Jean Gardner Andrea Phillips Garner Sanford Clyde Garner David Q. Garrison Helen H. Garrison Alma Garro Robert K. Garro Ronald Lewis Gatlin Anne Dantzler Geer Diane M. Gennaro Lori Perkins George Catherine Gerdes Jean Ballantyne Gerhardt Robert Coleman Gibbs Gloria Shelton Gibson John Kenneth Gibson Helen Giduz Roland Giduz Bryan Albin Giemza Sir Humphrey Gilbert Chapter of NC Society Sue Gainey Giles Terry Scott Giles Robert Starr Gillam Susan Ann Gilley Bernard Gilman Carol H. Girton George Girton Joseph T. Glathaar John F. C. Glenn, Jr. Erica D. Glover Deborah Jean Goessling J. Christopher Goff Keilah Kuzminski Goff Meta Skinner Goff Clara W. Golay Kristen Lucille Gooch Harry Gooder Cheryl Ann Gordon Michele Faye Gordon Jean Gosling William A. Gosling Jeffrey Charles Goss Karl David Gottschalk Barry Goz Rebecca Goz Bryan Patrick Grady Jacqueline Dean Graham Margaret Mooring Graham Nicholas MacKenzie Graham W. Reece Graham IV Walter Mac Gray Nancy Sue Grebenkemper Andrea Tolson Green Michael D. Green Paul Eliot Green, Jr. Bluma Kafka Greenberg Ruth M. Greenberg R. Terrance Greenlund Claudine Alonzo Gregorio Fletcher Harrison Gregory III Mary Dashiell Gregory Marcella T. Grendler Paul F. Grendler Elizabeth Bragg Grey A. Glenn Griffin, Jr. Carolyn Taylor Griffin Christopher Warren Griffin Martha Broadaway Griffin E. Jeffrey Griffith Linda Mackie Griggs Malcolm David Griggs Richard Stuart Griggs George Talmadge Grigsby, Jr. Joe W. Grisham David Ray Groce Cynthia W. Gudeman Erik John Gudris Gareth Guest Lenore Beth Guidoni Agness Wiggins Gunter Leslie Ann Gura Philip F. Gura Ramsdell Gurney, Jr. Robert Clifton Guthrie Samuel Cole Guy Herbert Nelson Hackney Thomas Baylor Hadzor Jacqueline Hagan Armin A. Hagen Jeanne T. Hagen Karla L. Hahn Theodore E. Haigler, Jr. John Forrest Haire Troy Kenneth Hales Charles Martin Hall Elizabeth Hughes Hall Jacquelyn D. Hall Joseph Walton Hall III 20 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Speed Hallman Susan Walters Hallman Arthur D. Halpern Emily Halpern James Auman Haltom Helen Graves Halva Brenda Hamilton Craig Hamilton Holley Michelle Morris Hamilton Martha Elizabeth Hamilton David Murray Hammer Jane Ross Hammer Edith V. Hammond C. Merritt Hampton Sarah Elizabeth Hamrick Barbara Cottrell Hancock Ziad George Hanhan Clark Hanjian Jennifer Ahn Hanner Perry Hardison Donna Elizabeth Hardy P. Curtis Hardy Harry H. Harkins, Jr. Joey Bruce Harlow Anne Wilson Harmon William Ruth Harmon W. Selby Harney, Jr. Dorothy Gwyn Harper Howard Harper Jeanne Harper Stan Harper Otto Harrassowitz Barbara J. Harris Boyd Gregory Harris Kathryn M. Harris Rob Harris Rodger S. Harris Roger T. Harris Steven Emmett Harris Trudier Harris Katherine Gordon Harrison Sarah Henderson Harriss Andy Hart Lee Kenion Hart Lynn C. Hart Oliver James Hart III Jonathan Hartlyn Patricia Neufeld Hartman Peter David Hartman Brian Victor Hartzog Lee Helvenston Harvard Mack Wayne Harvey Sharon M. Harvey Lesley Apple Haskell Gabriella Riggio Haspel Martha Hauptman Geoffrey Wilfred Taylor Hawkins Opal Winchester Hawkins Scott Hayes Theodore W. Hayes Alfred Milton Haynes, Jr. Alice Cheshire Haywood Ye He John Miles Headley Fred M. Heath Herbert Alan Hedden David George Hedgecock G. Jason Hedrick J. Heffelfinger Charles D. Heiser Donna McKinney Heiser Peter Niels Heller Richard E. L. Henderson Susan Adelaide Henretta Kala R. Herlands Joseph Herzenberg (Estate) Kristin Karwehl Herzog Joe Anderson Hewitt Robert G. Heyneman David Marshall Hiatt Louise Staley Hiatt Ronald J. Hickes Stephen Vincent Higdon Katherine Jenner Higginbotham R. Don Higginbotham* Susan Snyder Hight Jeanine Hogrefe Hightower Kenneth Nelson Hightower Anne Gibson Hill Edward Arthur Hill Harriet T. Hill James Allen Hill, Jr. Janet Hill Kimberly Latta Hill Michael Ray Hill Ann Hillenbrand J. Ray Hinnant, Jr. David Wayne Hitchings Gayla Lindsay Hitchings Elizabeth H. Hobbs James Copeland Hobbs, Jr. R. Branson Hobbs* W. Sands Hobgood, Jr. Jane Gregory Hobson Rebecca Erin Hockfield Betty Arnold Hodges L. Edward Hodges, Jr. Carl Christian Hoffmann Kathleen Perkerson Hoffmann Louise Chapman Hoffman Janis Gail Holder Jeremy Holderfield David L. Holdzkom Roslyn Perper Holdzkom William Earl Hollamon, Jr. J. Gill Holland J. Ronald Holland Robert E. Holland III Siri Lugg Holland Geneva R. Holliday Barry Kevin Holmes Connie Holmes Edward Shelton Holmes Julia Ashley Holmes Mary Hayes Barber Holmes* Elizabeth Myatt Holsten Helen Joan Holt Gregory Allan Holton Sandra E. Honnold Jewel Hoogstoel Robert E. Hoogstoel Michele L. Hooper Jeffrey L. Horrell Barbara Thomas Horton Krisztian Horvath Kilby Dixon Hoskins Aaron Wood Houghton Sarah Eileen Houghton Edward Lee House Molly Bullard Howard Billy Shaw Howell, Jr. Bobbye Jo Howell Christopher Dean Howell Wanda Edwards Howell Erma Reep Hoyle Ruth Alice Hoyle Patrick Joseph Huber Linda Hudson Ronald Carlisle Hudson Sam Hudson John Robert Huggins Rebekah Hudson Huggins G. Michael Hugo Jean Luffman Humber John Leslie Humber P. Scott Hummel Betsy L. Humphreys Christopher Ronald Hunt Douglass Hunt James Logan Hunt Ruth Setzer Hunt Claire Stenclik Hunter Christopher Howard Hurst Nicole Whisnant Hurst Sallie Huss T. Hoke Huss R. Wayne Hutchins John L. Idol Marjorie S. Idol Eleanor Roberts Ilgen William David Ilgen Annette Morrell Ingle John Robert Ingle Ingram & Ingram Charles Marshall Ingram James C. Ingram Joel Isenberg Nancy D. Isenberg Khalid S. Ishaq Mary R. Ishaq* Caroline Finch Ives Michael Stuart Ives, Jr. Daniel Warren Jackson Walter A. Jackson Deborah Jakubs Betty Block James Charles Henry James Judith McNease James Katherine James William Stuart James Dione Latrice Jarrett George Javor Carey Jean Jefferson Jewish Community Foundation of Durham/Chapel Hill David Jimenez Kathy Lanita John Brad Johnson Craig Andrew Johnson Cyrus Murry Johnson, Jr. David Dalton Johnson Jay Johnson Joel Alan Johnson Kurt Johnson Mary Caldon Johnson Mary-Parke Johnson Rebecca R. Johnson Richard K. Johnson Yewande Joy Johnson Johnson's Jewelers, Inc. Andrew L. Johnston Anne Marie Johnston Billy David Jolley Harley E. Jolley Cecelia Thurmaier Jolls Robert T. Jolls Arthur Francis Jones II A. Wesley Jones Barry Jackson Jones Benny Ray Jones Bonnie Richards Jones Carolyn Carleton Jones Deborah Anne Jones Leslie Hartley Jones Meriwynn Gaddis Jones Randall Dean Jones Robert Edward Jones Stephen Thomas Jones Tracy Alonzo Jones W. Davis Jones IV Brenda Moore Harlow Jordan John Richard Jordan, Jr. Heather Joseph Mary Bland Josey Vivian Lee Joyner Whitmel Madison Joyner William Stafford Joyner Nancy Claire Julian David Robert Jurman Wayne Quay Justesen, Jr. Blair Cogdill Justice James Thomas Justice IV Marian Hall Justice Nancy Jennifer Kaiser Zahra B. Kamarei Norman Kane William P. Kane Wayne Campbell Kannaday Joanne Chris Kares Thomas L. Karnes Leah Robinson Karpen Jonathan Arnold Karpinos Harold L. Katz Aubrey Alfred Keen Allan Keith Thomas Jeffery Keith Marie-Beatrice Rhyne Keller Robert Michael Keller Joan Kellett Michael Kellett 21 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 David Reid Kelly Carol Ritzen Kem Margaret F. Kemp Thomas Dupre Kemp III C. L. Kendall Mary Anne Kendall Miriam L. Kennard Anne McCarthy Kennedy David Ray Kennedy Edward D. Kennedy Patricia S. Kennedy Thomas Bishop Kennedy William Benjamin Kennedy Mahlon Day Kenny John Nelson Kent Lisa Motsinger Kerner Theodore Charles Kerner, Jr. James L. Kerr David Harris Kiel Fred Waggoner Kiger S. Collins Kilburn Julie Kimbrough Frank Efird Kinard Mary McNease Kinard Andrew Hatcher Kincheloe Mark William Kindem Cyrus Baldwin King Harriet Lowry King James Kimball King George M. Kingman Marie-Claire Kirch Roger Norman Kirkman Suzon O. Kister Marjorie Holland Klem Paul R. Klem Rabecca Ann Klemp Nadine Kloecker-Dunn Edmund Tayloe Knott Rena Terrell Knott Michael Ray Knowles William B. Knox Ann Gay Koegel Phyllis Gentry Koehnline William Angus Koehnline Jeffrey Scott Koeze Katharine Reid Koeze Marcia Anne Koomen Robert Rodgers Korstad Louise V. Kowalsky Richard J. Kowalsky Katherine Gray Kraft Anthony James Kramer Betty Leona Krimminger Greyson Gates Kuhn Frances Williams Kunstling Charles Kurzman David Alan Lagos Jane Lamm W. Franklin Lamm Selden Durgom Lamoureux James L. Lancaster Bruce Landesman Margaret Landesman Peter Samuel Landstrom Susan Betts Landstrom E. Brent Lane David Laney Elizabeth Jordan Laney Ruth Laney Ransom Andrew Langford Stephen Frederick Lapham Geraldine Gilmore Larson Jo Anne Larson T. Wingate Lassiter S. Robert Lathan John McChesney Latimer, Jr. Katherine Armistead Latimer Catherine Grollman Lauritsen Dorothy Lavine Ray Lavine Sellers Crisp Lawrence Richard H. Lawson Robert H. Lawton MyAn Thi Le Amy Mangual Leary Charles Edward Leasure, Jr. Harriet Quinn Leasure Sharon A. Leavitt Ann Donovan Lee Eleanor Carroll Lee Hugh Alfred Lee, Jr. Mary Gwyn Lee Randall Walker Lee Susan Dill Lee Jennifer Lefeaux Nancy Y. Leinbach Philip Leinbach George Lensing, Jr. David Roy Lent Diane R. Leonard Ruth Slobodkin Lepie Debra Ann Letchworth The Seymour and Carol Levin Foundation Carol C. Levin Seymour Myer Levin Madeline G. Levine Steven I. Levine Claire Levitt Frederick Levitt Herschel Horton Lewis Jessie Belle Lewis John Baker Lewis, Jr. Megan Elizabeth Lewis Yongbiao Li Allan Roy Life Page West Life Kenneth Yu-Chung Lin Michael M. Lindemann Suzanne L. Lindemann Betsy Lindemuth Jeffrey Thomas Linder Kathleen Keener Linder Jerzy Linderski William Wesley Lindley Crystal Lineberry Anita Linkous William Linkous, Jr. Mary Ann Linville Ray Pate Linville Barbara Diane Lipsett Loyd Harry Little, Jr. Elizabeth Sproles Lloyd Paul John Lloyd Walter P. Lloyd, Jr. Lena Dunn Lo Anthony George Lo Re Page M. Lo Re William R. Loeser Alton Taylor Loftis Sarah Pullen Logan Linda Beth Logsdon Fred Williams London Walker Anderson Long Phyllis Morris Lotchin Roger W. Lotchin Lingyun Lou Betsy Caudle Lowman Joseph Clare Lowman Patricia Hayman Lowry Edwin Lu Nancy Luberoff Christina Anne Lund Georgia Ann Machemer Sara Mack Sally Osborne Mackie Aldo P. Magi Daniel Mahar Avinash Chandra Maheshwary David Michael Mahoney Barry George Maine Sandra Lynne Alley Maine Jane B. Majors James Blair Malcolm Douglas Owen Malone Krisellen Maloney John E. Manley Richard Allan Mann David T. Manning Jennifer Elizabeth Manning May Lynn Goldstein Mansbach Gary Marchionini Lewis Harvey Margolis Margaret Varley Markham Matthew Francis Markie Margaret H. Marks Maria L. Marshall D.G. Martin, Jr. Harriet Wall Martin James Edwin Martin, Jr. J. Paul Martin Kristin Emily Martin Nancy O'Bryan Martin Robert J. Martin, Jr. R. William Martin Julian D. Mason, Jr. Mary Ethel Mason C. Knox Massey, Jr. Mary Ann Keith Massey Michael Allen Massey Greg Masterson Margaret Masterson Megan M. Matchinske William Connie Mathis, Jr. Elizabeth Anna Matson Lydia Blanton Matthews J. Douglas Mattox Julie Ellen Mayberry Jill B. Mayer Mavis Tanner Mayer Stanley Ketron McAfee III Betty Ray McCain Ashley Blythe McCall Michael Wallace McCall William Howe McCarthy D. Robert McConnaughey Gary McConnell David Minerba McCorkle John Luther McCormick Monica Jean McCormick Marilyn C. McCraw Raymond William McCraw Donald L. McCrickard Eleanor Fowler McCrickard Elizabeth Ann McCue John Goodman McDougald Katherine Tucker McGinnis John Stephen McGovern John P. McGowan Eileen L. McGrath Martha Winston McGrath Edmund McIlhenny Pamela G. McIlhenny Cecilia McKay Marek McKenna John Martin McKeon Margaret King McKinney Jill Morrison McKinstry Bettie Haughton McLaughlin Dorothy T. McLaughlin Robert Theodore McLaughlin S. Bryce McLaughlin Gail Singletary McLean William Sartor McLean Ann Joye McLeod James Potter McNab Alan Howard McNamee Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 22 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 23 Elizabeth Grimes McRae John Dillard McSween Denny Mecham Ellen S. Medearis Elizabeth C. Meehan-Black Steven Jay Melamut H. Craig Melchert Menden, Freiman & Zitron LLP Arthur Clayton Menius III E. Joy Mermin Paul Nathaniel Mermin Chrisie Messer Deborah Raenette Meyer Gerald E. Meyer Larry Charles Michael Gladys Michalak Russell S. Michalak Charles J. Michels Victoria Dixon Mikow-Porto Stephanie Nargesian Miksis Kimberly Smith Miles Margaret Ann Miles Emily Von Borries Milks Amey Southerland Miller Bradley Edward Miller Carolynn Little Miller Christopher Perry Miller Elizabeth Miller Helen R. Miller Marjorie Penton Miller Roger G. Miller Stephanie Jones Miller Charles Everette Mills Jessica Leigh Mills Marissa Mills Barbara Bounds Milone Charles Louis Milone Kaye Lanning Minchew Mary Wyche Mintz Angeline M. Mitchell Anne Norwood Mitchell Gary D. Mitchell John Fletcher Mitchell Memory Farmer Mitchell Susan E. Mitchell William Graham Champion Mitchell, Jr. William Leonard Mitchell III Joseph Pike Mitchener Fred Gilbert Mock, Jr. Cynthia Thompson Modlin J. Wayne Modlin James C. Moeser Susan Dickerson Moeser Sylvia Ann Moffitt Sucharita M. Mohanty Lynne Anne Mohrfeld Fred Bruton Monroe Jane Kelly Monroe John Thaddeus Monroe, Jr. Gustavo S. Montana Joan Ann Montana Sarah Kaiser Montes L. Grayson Montgomery Sandra Roberts Montgomery Marvin Charles Mood Cecelia D. Moore James Gregory Moore James W. Moore Terry Allen Moore, Jr. Thea Tullman Moore Zachary D. Moore Deborah Jane Moose Ruth M. Moose Susan Mitchell Moose Barbara B. Moran Joseph Moran Alesha Smith Morgan George Fredrick Morgan Judith Morgan Neil Morgan Robert Ray Morgan Anna Grimaldi Morosoff Donald S. Morris Helen Holt Morrison Laura Anne Morrison Linsey Noelle Morrison R. Edward Morrissett, Jr. James A. Morton Tracy Taft Morton Irene Moser Morris D. Moser Fred Morris Moss, Jr. George Henry Moss, Jr. Kay Kincaid Moss William Marion Moss Amal Mostafa Katharine Babcock Mountcastle Kenneth Franklin Mountcastle, Jr. James Edward Moyer Ruth Muller Ann G. Mullin Patrick J. Mullin Prue Mulrine Jay P. Mumma Susan G. Munroe Ethel Perzekow Murphy Timothy George Murphy Raymond L. Murray K. Darwin Murrell Margaret Cleary Myers Robert F. Myers Russell W. Myers William Kevin Myers Ava Hartman Nackman Lee Richard Nackman Julie Nalesnik Joseph Natale Linda A. Naylor Paul Douglas Naylor NC Museum of History James G. Neal Gregory Hepler Needham Ed Neely Gail A. Neely John Kendall Nelson Julianne Beth Nelson L. Nelson Laurie Jo Neuerburg Leslie Nelson David H. Neunert Victoria S. Neunert William Arthur Neustadt Quincy D. Newell Robert Barclay Newlin Christopher Newlon Elizabeth Newlon Francis Lanneau Newton Carol Nguyen Dianne Murray Nicholas Diana Schaedle Nicholson Sallie Nixon Thomas Jones Nixon IV Celine Noel Lisa R. Norberg Laurie Jane Norman Carolyn Elizabeth Norris David A. Norris Gary Norris Jane Snyder Norris Thomas Lloyd Norris, Jr. William H. Northacker Mike Norwood Robert Michael Nosow Phyllis Cole Noyes Robert D. Nudelman Susan K. Nutter Julie Blume Nye J. Ronald Oakley Christine Ewing Obert Lesley O’Brien Faith P. O’Donnell William J. O’Donnell Joyce Lanier Ogburn H. Patrick Oglesby Mary Norris Preyer Oglesby Dwight David Oland Jean Grubb O’Neal Megan Elizabeth O’Neill Yukio Ono Sherri Rho Ontjes Charlotte Orth John V. Orth Noreen Orth Richard Jay Osborne Edgar Otto Glenn Thomas Overcash James H. Ovitt* Kevin S. Owen Lora Susan Owen Roberta A. Owen Scott Owens Tammi Michele Owens Vicki Lynn Palefsky Laura Y. Palmer Judith M. Panitch David Earl Pardue, Jr. Rebecca Sharpe Pardue Jan Paris Leland M. Park Matilda McDonald Parker Scott Edward Parker William Baylies Parker, Jr. Jeanne Roethe Parrish E. Dudley Partrick, Jr. Richard Allen Paschal Dewey Harris Pate Andrew Henry Patterson III Jennifer McKay Patterson Ronnie Howard Patterson Elizabeth Ann Pauk Florence F. Peacock James L. Peacock III Thomas Rhea Peake Martha Woodard Pearlman Paul Sheldon Pearlman Mary Helen Pearsall James A. Pearsol Benjamin Gary Pease Jane H. Pease William H. Pease Robert Erwin Peaseley Wayne Peay Barbara Barrett Pedersen Lee Grant Pedersen Margaret Peeples Robert K. Peet Carol Frederick Pekar Susan Baker Pekarske Jennifer Michna Penn Steven Parnell Penn Priscilla Mae Penney Lee M. Penyak PEO Sisterhood Chapter X Anne J. Peoples Theda Perdue Jason Marc Perlmutter Daniel E. Perry Douglas Frank Perry Gail Perry Margaret Taylor Perry Mary Ellen Smith Perry Monica Pauline Petcovic Julie Sydnor Peterman Karen Blair Petersen Frederick George Petrick, Jr. Margaret C. Pfaff Richard W. Pfaff Betsy Sheely Pfenning H. Hyman Philips, Jr. Joy Lester Philips Nancy C. Phillips Richard A. Phillips James Edward Phoenix Terry Lee Pierce Ann Pike Bob Pike Ashmead Pringle Pipkin Craig Wesley Pippert Rorin Morse Platt Nelie de Kok Plourde Helen B. Poe James Frederick Poetzinger L. Frederick Pohl, Jr. David J. Polewka Marcy Leigh Policastro Jeffrey Kemp Politis Dean A. Pollack William Robert Pollard Scott Porter James Vincent Porto, Jr. Harold Bowman Poteat Sarah Parker Poteete Guy Glenn Potter Debbie Chaffin Potts Elizabeth Powell Claire Bledsoe Pratt Stephen Hamilton Pratt Oralia Preble-Niemi 24 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Dennis Adam Press William S. Price, Jr. Larry Carlton Pridgen Mary Lou Prieto Elizabeth C. Pringle John J. Pringle Martha Cole Pritcher Sonia Marie Privette Sara Elizabeth Pugh Patricia J. Pukkila Michael Johnston Putzel Joseph Vincent Quinn Zina Quinn John Allen Quintus Albert Rabil Janet Rabil William H. Race Colin Radford Merlyna Radford Vivian Raftery R. Lee Rainey Virginia Fohl Rainey Kerr Craige Ramsay II Bets Ramsey Louise Ramsey Sonia Rapapaport Derris Lea Raper Stephen Wilson Raper Rare Books &MSS Library OSU Benjamin Knox Rasmussen Gary C. Rasmussen Marilyn R. Rasmussen James Thomas Rast Erica Meyer Rauzin Diane Gambill Rawson C. Michael Ray Josephine Medlin Ray Yvonne Mettetal Rayburn Kenneth J. Reckford Monica P. Rector F. Marion Redd Peter W. Redfield Dale V. Reed Deborah Veasey Reed G. Gray Reed John Shelton Reed, Jr. Joy Forsythe Reed William R. Reed Dorie Reents-Budet Margaret Stamm Rees Philip Adrian Rees William Reese Benjamin Franklin Reeves William R. Reevy Mary Reichel Mr. and Mrs. Albert P. Reichert Albert P. Reichert, Jr. Burnam W. Reichert Jennifer Reichner Ann Lesslie Reid Bryan Reid Katharine Lee Reid Lowry Reid, Jr. Martin Karl Reidinger Robert Lewis Remsburg, Jr. Robert Lewis Remsburg III Tammi-Sue Sellati Remsburg Linwood Moninger Respess, Jr. Tucker Meyer Respess Alan Henry Reynolds David Edward Rhoades Lisa Brooks Rhoades Philip Alexander Rhodes, Jr. Sandra Danneman Rich Stephen Allan Rich Frank Michael Richards Van Waldron Richardson, Jr. Sandy Fleischman Richman Carla Rickerson Alton Rivers Connie Rivers Edward Denmore Robbins, Jr. Wanda Stewart Robbins Bennett W. C. Roberts David Ray Roberts James S. Roberts Jerry Travis Roberts Rosemary Roberts Snow Loy Roberts Hilda Froud Robinson Nancy Howes Robinson Peter John Robinson William Edmond Whiddon Robinson Beverly Scott Rodgers Katherine Jane Roggenkamp Tanya Orie Rogo Leonard William Rogoff Samuel Burke Rollins James William Romer Jane Wells Romer Adam Cortez Ronan Margaret Anne Rook Edward M. Rose Nancy Jane Rose Wendy Schreiber Rose Donald Karl Rosenberg Frieda Beilharz Rosenberg David Asher Rosenstein Alton Glenn Ross Frances Turner Ross Susan Cranford Ross David B. Roth Kathryn Tesh Roundtree Lynn Paul Roundtree Maria Rouphail David Sheldon Routh Jenny Duncan Routh Beth Lynn Rowe Marylou Rowe Michael Rowe Lynne Worley Royall Michelle Lee Royall Cornelia Boardman Royle David Brian Layton Royle John Allen Ruggles Rosalie Varn Ruggles Raquel M. Ruiz Carole E. Runnion Alice Sprenger Rupen Robert A. Rupen John Charles Rush Robert Perry Rushmore Gregory Reich Russ Shannon Edge Russ F. Kevin Russell John B. Russell John Spotswood Russell Peggy Taylor Russell Scott Christopher Russell John Butler Rutledge Beverly Bennett Rutstein Elizabeth Shreve Ryan John Morris Ryan Linda Saaremaa James Richard Saintsing Maria Lopez Salgado Bart Daniele Salvaggio M. David Samples Joshua Richard San Souci Gloria Sanchez Ann Beal Sanders Claire Ann Sanders Ed Sanders John Lassiter Sanders Lash Gaither Sanford, Jr. Diane Hyde Sasson Jack M. Sasson Ruth Clark Saunders Susan Murphy Saunders Jeanne Clifford Sawyer Carolyn Saylor Larry Saylor Anne L. Scaff Patricia Carruthers Scarborough William K. Scarborough Augusta Russel Scattergood Jay Henry Scattergood Jordan Michael Scepanski Frances Heutte Schaefer Stephen Peter Schaefer David Ben Schauer Michael Gerard Schell Lotte Schindel Christiane Schnaidt Deborah Rutchka Schneider Daniel Edward Schneider Leslie Bruton Schneider Robert Michael Schneider W. T. Schneider Barbara Brandon Schnorrenberg John Martin Schnorrenberg Erik Anton Schreiner Robert Charles Schreiner George Noel Schroeder Dorothy Cutting Schroeder Zsuzsi K. Schroeder J. Albert Schultz Jack Lamar Scism Nancy Fox Scism David Scott Jacqueline Rogers Scott John Layne Scott Vann Barden Scott, Jr. Peter George Seaman, Jr. Kacem Sebti 25 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Dhruva R. Sen Anne Lassiter Sessoms Betty Jordan Sessoms Faison Thomson Sessoms H. Douglas Sessoms* Frank Seta Julie Seta Jill K. Sexton William P. Sexton Pearl F. Seymour Robert E. Seymour, Jr. Vanessa Jasmine Shadoian David Shafer Tatjana Shapkina Carol Shaw Giles Freemont Shepherd III Steven Sherman Harold Bundick Shill III Dorothy Gray Shinn Ronald W. Shinn Jill Shires Angela Renee Shoffner Al Shpuntoff Linda Mothershed Shrader Richard Alexander Shrader Zhao Shuqing Carl M. Shy Eve Carol Shy Joan Leonard Sibley Thomas Edward Sibley Heather Lynn Siekkinen Darrin Simmons Debra Simon Herman Simon Ursula Simon George Lee Simpson III Nancy Barrett Simpson Stanley Albert Simpson* Anastatia Sims Jamie Kristine Sims Joel Michael Sipress Mabel Whedbee Sisco Eva Whetstone Sitton William Henry Skeels III John Harrison Skinner III G. William Small, Jr. June Marie Small Lindley Moffett Small Warren H. Small, Jr. Avena-Lyn Smith Brian Richard Smith Caroline Mitchell Smith Charles Smith Clarence Edwin Smith III Clyde Smith, Jr. Earl Jones Smith, Jr. Everard Hall Smith III Gary Lester Smith, Jr. Gilbert Dale Smith Jane C. Smith Jane Parker Smith Jeff Smith J. McNeill Smith, Jr. Jordan M. Smith Judith B. Smith Laura Robertson Smith Moyer Gray Smith, Sr. Natalia N. Smith Patricia Schoeberle Smith Ralph Kenan Smith William S. Smith William Whitfield Smith Young Merritt Smith, Jr. SMW Construction Inc. Helen Easter Snow James McNeil Snow Kay Griffith Snow Barbara H. Snyder Frank S. Snyder Glenn H. Snyder Geraldine Solomon Harriet S. Solomon Paul Solomon Stuart Solomon Richard A. Soloway Errol Shevket Somay David William Southern W. Keats Sparrow Patricia H. Spearman Robert W. Spearman Frances Keating Spencer Romulus Sanderson Spencer, Jr. Ross Dee Spencer Thomas Spencer Christopher Nils Spongberg Danielle Laura Spurlock Christine Stachowicz Philip A. Stadter Betsy Ross Howe Stafford J. Gilbert Stallings Betsy Kidd Starling James R. Starling R. Hall Starnes Marilee Haithcock Starr Douglas W. Steeples Diane Steinhaus Elizabeth Pittman Stephenson June Boddie Stephenson Lonnie George Stephenson Mary P. Stephenson Hugh Stevens George Stevenson, Jr. Joshua Tanner Stewart Pearson H. Stewart David Stick Carrie Langford Stockard J. Mitsi Stoioff Lee A. Stone Richard G. Stone George C. Stoney W. Gene Story Dale Oliver Stouch, Jr. Mary Stowell Walter Otis Stowell Lee Hylton Strange Carl William Stratton Diane Wheeler Strauss Joseph Strelka Ellen Ragan Strong George V. Strong Michael David Strother Keegan Fay Stroup Suzanne Yelverton Stroup Alan Raiford Strowd Anne Watson Strowd Elvin Emerson Strowd Tom Stumpf Don Sturkey Brian Sturm Frank Stutz Geraldine Dillard Stutz Shelton Ayers Styers Stan Styers Helen Margaret Sullivan Sharon Sullivan Theresa Christin Sullivan Brooke B. Sumerford Rees M. Sumerford Robert Franklin Summers Edith Shuford Summey John Hood Summey Richard Superfine Gerald D. Surh Bryan Sutton, Jr. Elizabeth Royall Sutton Lynn A. Sutton Maureen Elizabeth Sweeney Sue Szary Richard Szary Lori Ray Taggart C. Downing Tait, Jr. Toshiyuki Takamiya Richard J. Talbert James Mahan Tanner, Jr. Sarah Fearnside Tanner Marsha Huffman Tarte John A. Tate, Jr. Marjorie Warlick Tate Petrus W. Tax Charles Edwards Taylor David C. Taylor Diane Jackson Taylor Eben Taylor Edmund Taylor Hala Taylor James Harvey Taylor, Jr. Jay Taylor Jim Taylor Lawrence Arthur Taylor, Jr. Marian Dew Taylor Marian H. Taylor Michael William Taylor Roy Dail Taylor Sherry Taylor Susan Chandler Taylor Gregg Allan Teague Jordan Leigh Teague Jeffrey Allen Templeton Lee Templeton Linda Kay Ter Haar Liza M. Terll Elizabeth Cover Teviotdale Youli A. Theodosiadou Patricia Thibodeau Think Excellence LLC Anne Wall Thomas Gordon Montez Thomas Harry Osborne Thomas Janet A. Thomas L. Parke Thomas Sara Alice Folger Thomas Sharon Holmes Thomas Tiffany Diane Thomas Charles LeRoy Thompson James Lee Thompson, Jr. J. Mark Thompson Joseph Thomas Thompson II Lucinda Smith Thompson Najeema Washington Thompson Patricia Taylor Thompson Susan McCoy Thompson Vaida Diller Thompson Jeffrey Todd Thornton Mary Wise Thuesen David Lawrence Thurmond Helen R. Tibbo Tom Tiemann Paul H. Tiesinga Justin Elbert Tillett Andrew Barry Tilley Ernest Haywood Tilley Kristin Andrews Tilley Rollie Tillman, Jr. Robert Sullivan Tinkler Carol M. Tobin Kathy Todd Stuart Kittredge Todd Arrel D. Toews Delma Ross Tolan, Jr. Lisa Carol Tolbert John Butler Tomaro, Jr. Silvia Tomaskova 26 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Ginger Holloway Tomberlin Jason Earl Tomberlin Ashly Patricia-Ann Tomlinson F. Rogers Toms, Jr. Stella Anderson Trapp Margaret Ann Trauner Karyn Traut Thomas W. Traut Joseph Collins Travis Gary Evans Trawick Gary Randall Treadway Emma Treml Vladimir Guy Treml Edward Treverton Jane Wilroy Trinkley Stephanie Anne Trojan Ann Sagar Troxell Kyle Evan Troxell Carole Watterson Troxler George Wesley Troxler Albert Glenworth Trunnell III Amy Stokes Trunnell Shu-Chen Hung Tu James William Tucker Jill Bennett Tucker Robert Cinnamond Tucker Jennifer Jean Tuttle Curtis Andrew Twiddy Kathryn Ficklin Twiddy Monica L. Twork James Paul Tyndall, Jr. Martha Croxton Tyson Ruel Willoughby Tyson, Jr. Daniel E. Uyesato Genene Evans Uyesato Anne Van Arsdall Sabine Carolina van der Meulen Michael G. Van Fossen Carolyn H. Van Sant Renne Carol Vance David John Vandenbergh Lydia Bodman Vandenbergh J. Daniel Vann III Rebecca Brogden Vargha Michael James Varn Wayne R. Vason Kimberley Vassiliadis Carol Vatz Robert David Vatz Patricia J. Vaught Martha Mebane Verdery Marvin Davis Veronee Laura Greer Vick Jean Marshall Vickery Arthur Vidrine IV Sally Couch Vilas James Vincent Jeanne Vincent Mary O’Fallon Vinzani Joseph Viscomi Jane McKean Vogel Steve Vogel Frederick W. Vogler Robert Frederick Vogler Steven Boyd Wade Douglas Arthur Wait Eric Waldbaum Anne Waldman Daryl Farrington Walker Maegan Alyce Walker James William Wall Nina Gray Wallace Caroline Jane Walters Sally A. Walters Doris Moore Ward Gregory H. Ward Penny S. Ward Robert Marion Ward Ellen M. Wardlaw John Waller Wardlaw, Jr. Steven Alan Warner Jeffrey Dennis Warren Marie Zurl Warren Rebecca Drane Warren Elizabeth L. Warren-Mikes Sue Forbes Watson Ritchie Devon Watson, Jr. Molly Crowell Watters Deborah Theresa Watts Jane Ann Calhoun Weaver Suzanne Lowe Weerts Gerhard L. Weinberg Jannet I. Weinberg Edith Crockford Welch H. Lea Wells Elizabeth Hollers Welsby Kathleen Joanne Welshimer Barbara K. Wendell Robin H. Wendell Lynn Elise Wesson David McKinley West Walter Carr West III Peggy Watkins Wharton Richard Lindsey Wharton R. Andrew Wheeler Elizabeth Clarke Whitaker Shirley Blue Whitaker Deborah Harris Whitehead Donna Whitley Randah Ruth Whitley Alan Cochran Whitmore Floyd Gilbert Whitney III Robert Hamilton Wicker Donna Stroup Wightman R. Mark Wightman Geoffrey Wilcher Elizabeth Hardin Wiley Barbara McDonald Wilkerson J. Tracy Wilkerson Catherine Berryhill Williams J. Derek Williams J. Edgar Williams Jack Harrison Williams, Jr. Larry Howard Williams Laura Williams Daniel Lawrence Wilson Helen O. Wilson I. Glenn Wilson Lizabeth A. Wilson Robert Church Wilson IV Marjorie Lee Windelberg Christopher John Windolph John B. Winfield David N. Wirth Maggie Wirth Edmund M. Wise, Jr. Elisabeth H. Wise Jane Pettis Wiseman John Brent Wishart Karin Wittenborg Joseph S. Wittig Kathleen A. Wojciehowski Cheryl Wolf Edwin D. Wolf Marilyn D. Wood William Wade Wood James Allen Woolard Betty McFarland Wooldridge Alison Woomert Randolph Luther Worth Salli Parker Worth Susan Kay Wrenn Geoffrey William Wright Zachary Hayes Wright Geraldine Nada Wu Weimin Xi Margaretta Jane Yarborough Mark Yarborough YBP Library Services G. Smedes York Maurice Clifton York Rosemary Adair York Perry Deane Young Philip Young Ralph Franklin Young Ronald Edwin Young Thomas Wade Young Virginia C. Young Gregory Alan Yuziuk June Mary Zaccone Fatemeh Zafarani Joel Fredrick Zeugner Kimberly Frederick Zeugner Richard T. Zieger Elizabeth Bryant Zollinger Richard William Zollinger II Charles G. Zug III Honoring Gifts Received in Honor of the Following: Krishna Aluri Flora Hanchrow Jack Hanchrow Thomas Matthew Charles McNamara Daniel W. Patterson William S. and Virginia Powell Stephen Rich Memorial Gifts Gifts Received in Memory of the Following: Victor E. Bell, Jr. Samuel M. Boone M. Mailly Davis Walter Royal Davis Paul Debreczeny Isabel Eten Louise McGwigan Hall Laura Harris Don Higginbotham George Watts Hill, Jr. Ronald Hyatt Elmer G. Isley Margaret E. Isley Arnold Klapper Craig Michalak Nancy Mills Dorothy Moss Faryl S. Moss Shirley Glasser Murnick John Natale Claire M. Newman Marilyn Renzo Tom Shores Lois Strother Larry Thornton Ray B. Wesson, Jr. Agnes W. Whitton Earl Whitton John E. Wilson, Jr. Wilson Library Exhibits Through January 15, 2009 Campaigning and Race in the South 1890s - 1990s: Selections from the Southern Historical Collection Southern Historical Collection, 4th Floor Wilson Library Through January 31, 2009 Soapboxes and Tree Stumps: Political Campaigning in North Carolina North Carolina Collection Gallery Through March 15, 2009 Presenting John Keats Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room Friends of the Library Events November 20, 2008 A Celebration of the Six Millionth Volume in the University Library Collection Keats and His Circle: Reading Shakespeare Talk by Beth Lau, professor of English at California State University, Long Beach and author of Keats‘s Paradise Lost and Keats‘s Reading of the Romantic Poets. In conjunction with the exhibit opening of “Presenting John Keats,” the gift of the Six Millionth Volume to the University Library by the John Wesley and Anna Hodgin Hanes Foundation of Winston-Salem. 5:00 p.m. Reception, Melba Remig Saltarelli Room 5:45 p.m. Program, Pleasants Family Assembly Room December 11, 2008 16th Annual Winter Stories Program for Children of All Ages Brian Sturm, associate professor of information and library science, returns with spell-binding storytelling to continue this cherished tradition of words and music. 5:00 p.m. Reception, Lobby, Wilson Library 5:30 p.m. Program, Pleasants Family Assembly Room 27 Mark your Calendar The Sloane Art Library is revitalizing the atmosphere of research and study by using its 10-foot columns as the grounds for artwork by students. Shown here, "Floating in the Night," is the work of recent M.F.A. graduate Brad Reagan. For more information, please see our website at www.lib.unc.edu or 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 A Nursery of Patriotism: the University at War, 1861-1945 http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/exhibits /patriotism/ North Carolina Maps http://www.lib.unc.edu/dc/ncmaps/ Facing Controversy: Struggling with Capital Punishment in North Carolina http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/exhibits/penalty/ Visit these on the Web Medieval Medical Illustrations http://www.lib.unc.edu/dc/mackinney/ The Russia Beyond Russia (RBR) Digital Library http://www.lib.unc.edu/savine/RBR/ Campaigns and Causes: Political Memorabilia in North Carolina http://www.lib.unc.edu/ncc/ gallery/political/political.html
Object Description
Description
Title | Windows |
Other Title | Windows (Chapel Hill, N.C.) |
Date | 2008 |
Description | Volume 17, Number 2, (Fall 2008) |
Digital Characteristics-A | 4592 KB; 28 p. |
Digital Format | application/pdf |
Full Text | Published by the Friends of the Library • The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • Volume 17, number 2 • Fall 2008 U N I V E R S I T Y L I B R A R Y www.lib.unc.edu Dear Friends, A theme we return to again and again in Windows is giving. In this issue, we highlight two kinds of giving, each one essential for a great library. In our main feature, you will meet Jim and Mary Patton, who recently presented us with a gift of magnificent first and special editions of the works of James Joyce. This gift builds our great collection, contributing to a thoughtfully constructed, coherent whole, in which all the pieces enhance the prestige and value of the others. Intellectually and stylistically, Joyce’s work is a bridge between the 19th and 20th centuries. It assumes this place in our library as well, where it contributes to the understanding that can already be gained from our notable English and American literary collections of those eras. In other words, a great library collection is more than the sum of the individual works it contains. Even more important, the Pattons’ gift strengthens our ability to support primary research by allowing scholars to encounter the physical book and artifact. In the Patton Collection, researchers will find limited editions with hand-drawn images; a dazzling assortment of artistic bindings; and a range of sizes, from two-page pamphlets to large folios. Collections such as this teach us much about 19th- and early 20th-century paper, printing, and coloration, and also about the way Joyce and his readers experienced his printed work. This type of research is vitally important and will continue to be a central part of the library’s mission, no matter how many books are eventually available on the Web. This issue features a second kind of giving as well, and that is the fine work of our public services staff. Every day, our experts offer generously the gift of their knowledge, experience, information-gathering skills, and persistence. The spirit of going the extra mile motivates our staff to seek obscure information, locate and request difficult-to- find volumes in libraries a world away, or guide a student through all the steps of writing a research paper. Their contribu-tions also support teaching, the very heart of the academic enterprise. Our librarians work with faculty members — assembling the bibliography to support a syllabus, placing course readings online, creating Web sites that bring key resources together in one place, and teaching students to search the library catalog and specialized databases. I know you will enjoy getting to meet the staff members featured in this issue and will recognize the many gifts they give to our patrons. At Carolina there is much for Friends of the Library to admire and support — prestigious collections, fine buildings, and an awesome staff. Embracing it all is a web of giving that includes all of you, and, in certain ways, all of us. And who are the true beneficiaries of this giving? Friends and staff of the library know that it is the generations of young women and men who learn here at Carolina among these and many other intellectual riches and who ultimately become the leaders and shapers of our society. University Library Grows Through Giving 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# 3900, Davis Library, Chapel Hill, NC 27514-8890. Editor Sarah Poteete Editorial Board Michele Fletcher Peggy Myers Writers Amy Baldwin Michele Fletcher Tanya Fortner Peggy Myers Judy Panitch Ginger Travis Photographs Justin Bowman Bill Richards Fred Stipe Alicia Towler Design Alison Duncan Thanks to Anne Belott Katherine Carlson Liza Terll Margaretta Yarborough Photograph by Bill Richards 2 ON THE COVER: Katherine Carlson, graduate student in the English Department at UNC, holding a volume of Ulysses from the Patton Collection said "It's definitely a two-handed book!" Meeting Jim and Mary Patton you’re hard pressed to think of a pair with more enjoy-ment of life and more urge to do, even in retirement — to paint, write, make photo-graphs, go snowshoeing, hike over the continental divide, and promote arts insti-tutions around the country. It’s also hard to imagine two people who have taken more pleasure from the things they’ve col-lected over a lifetime: wine, art, books. “We drink the wine, we look at the paint-ings, we read the books,” said Jim Patton during a campus visit a few years ago. “We are surrounded by them; we use them every day.” Fortunately, their urge to share that pleasure — to see others use and enjoy the books they have loved for so long — has resulted in the Pattons making impor-tant gifts to UNC’s Rare Book Collection for more than a decade. They previously gave valuable collections of works by Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes, James Dickey, and Seamus Heaney. In 2005 they also stated their intention to make a bequest of the rest of their book collec-tions to UNC — nearly complete collec-tions of works by Robinson Jeffers, T.S. Eliot, James Joyce, and Thomas Pynchon, among others. These will be added to the James R. and Mary M. Patton Collection. This year the Pattons decided to speed things up. To the Rare Book Collection they gave outright one of the finest collec-tions of works by James Joyce still in pri-vate hands. (They had previously given UNC their copy of Ulysses, number 20 from the first series of 100 volumes that were printed, all signed by Joyce. See “And What a Spectacular Bequest It Will Be” by Charles McNamara in Windows, Spring 2005, pp 4-5.) 3 by Ginger Travis ’78 Jim and Mary Patton: Collectors, Donors, Doers Mary and Jim Patton in their home. “How Do You Learn if You Don’t Have a Chance to See?”Photograph provided by the Pattons. The appraised value of their Joyce collection, not including Ulysses, is $1.3 million. Among the rare items is a signed copy of The Exiles, Joyce’s only play. (“I bid against the University of Texas for that one,” Jim Patton says). Pomes Penyeach appears in different treatments, including plain chapbook form (1931) and later beau-tiful limited editions, one reproducing the poems in Joyce’s hand-writing with initial letters drawn and painted by his daughter Lucia, and another in a 1993 Bernd Klüser edi-tion with etchings by Sean Scully. “These materials add texture and understanding of the culture in which the author was working and the way he was interpreted,” says Libby Chenault, Rare Book librarian. “The impression of the author’s hand gives you a connection with the author that you’d not have in other ways…For some people it is the image, how it looks on the private-press book page; for other people, it’s the sound and the cadence.” The Pattons’ gift of their Joyce collec-tion enhances the Rare Book Collection’s already-formidable holdings in 19th and 20th century Irish writers, notably George Bernard Shaw, William Butler Yeats, Samuel Beckett, and Seamus Heaney. Libby Chenault notes that students doing dissertation research in this period of Irish literature report finding as much useful material in Chapel Hill as in Ireland — thanks to collectors, including the Pattons, who gave their cherished collec-tions a permanent home here. A home in the Rare Book Collection closes the circle for the Pattons as book collectors. James Richard Patton, Jr. (Class of 1948) made his first signifi-cant purchase while still a Carolina undergraduate: a first edition of The Californians by the poet Robinson Jeffers, and it cost him $40 at the Bulls Head. The price was then almost as much as a quarter’s tuition, and it took Jim a long time to pay for the book. “It was a lot of money. And that was the start. [Professor Lyman] Cotten was a great inspiration for me in that area. I did my honors thesis on Jeffers. “Chapel Hill was such an enriching, startling discovery for me. It opened a world I hardly knew existed. You could sit in a carrel, pick up a book and read it, have your own private place. I was inspired to read, to probe areas I’d never thought about. Carolina was a great launching base for me.” Mary Maughan and Jim Patton both grew up in Durham and met in high school. She was a painter who attended Woman’s College (later UNC-G) in Greensboro. The two married while Jim was in law school and Mary was commut-ing to the Rhode Island School of Design from their home in Boston. After gradua-tion, the Pattons took off for several adventurous years of travel and residence in France and Vietnam. They soon started buying paintings together as well as books. But Jim draws a distinction. “I was a book collector,” Jim Patton says. “A collector pursues one of every-thing, focuses on a particular artist, gets the best. We’re not art collectors. Art we buy piece by piece because we love that particular piece.” As their income went up, particularly after Jim started his own international-law firm in Washington, D.C. (now Patton, Boggs LLP), they bought paintings by 20th century masters — Motherwell, Frankenthaler, Gottlieb, and Kelly. The paintings soon took over the walls of their house in Washington and later their retirement homes in Tucson and Aspen. Jim Patton says he bought most of his Joyce collection in the 1980s. He had been hooked by Ulysses, despite its difficulty. “It was so surprising and so different that I became intrigued. I became convinced this was [the work of] one of the great writers in the English language.” (He says much the same of Thomas Pynchon. And of Seamus Heaney, “I fell in love with his poetry the first time I read it.”) He also quickly learned the discipline of collecting — the book world’s rules — that items must be rare and in pristine condition. About his Joyce collection he says, “It’s significant. [But] a few things are missing. I couldn’t find them in the quality and uniqueness I was looking for as a collector. It’s like Eliot. There are about 4 or 5 Eliots I’m missing. The Eliot collection is more complete than the 4 “...[W]e want people to use it, to see it. There’s nothing like seeing the original.” 5 Joyce. It had to be first-rate and [rare].” How does he feel having given his Joyce collection to Carolina now rather than at the end of his lifetime? “I have to be honest. Giving parts or giving all of them away permanently is a wrench. It can be painful. I don’t have any James Joyce now and that makes me sad. But outweighing that is the pleasure of giving and knowing [the collection] will be cared for, viewed, and will inspire other people.” He adds, “With some collectors there’s not any heart or soul in it. They just sell the stuff.” Mary Patton says, “These [books] are like our children. Letting them go is bad enough but you have to make the decision and let them go to the right place. We enjoy seeing other people involved in what has given us joy.” Pain, pleasure, joy, and love — the Pattons don’t mince words about their passion for books and art. And they have made a joint decision, they say, eventually to send it all back to North Carolina for the enjoyment of others: the paintings and other art works to the N.C. Museum of Art in Raleigh and the books to the Rare Book Collection at UNC. Jim Patton says that it’s particularly important to keep a book collection together. Echoing that statement, Libby Chenault says that the Rare Book Collection at UNC can provide exactly what the Pattons and other collectors want: a permanent home where their collection will remain together under the collector’s name, in a place that has emotional resonance for the collector, and where the books and other materials will be safe, will be accessible to scholars, and will be exhibited. An exhibit of the Pattons’ entire Joyce collection will open in April of 2009. Despite living 50 years in Washington and now in their beloved West, Jim and Mary Patton have kept North Carolina in their hearts. Jim Patton has never gotten over UNC: “Teaching and learning are so important. UNC gave me the start. Those memories, that start, we’re giving in recognition of that, also because we want people to use it, to see it. There’s nothing like seeing the original. How do you learn if you don’t have a chance to see? It’s very exciting.” UNC’s libraries have been trans-formed by computers — but you knew that. What you may not know, even if you graduated as recently as the 1990s, is how much the culture and services of Carolina’s libraries have changed. Briefly described here are some of the big trends. But remember this: changes in the library’s tools, services, and even its culture all revolve around one unchanging core value of a true research library — to provide the best possible and most complete information to scholars. That’s the why. Everything else is how. Technology: Instant messaging is a favored medium for 18-to-22-year-olds asking reference questions. The Web gives the University Library a worldwide audience — and, more important, a North Carolina-wide audience; the library’s brand-new, elegantly easy Web page is the online entrance inviting people to come in. In the classroom, photocopied research guides are out; digital course pages are in. Librarians create Web-based course pages tailored to the specific research assignments of a class and designed to fit neatly inside Blackboard, the University’s course management system. New services: Carolina BLU (Brings the Library to You) book delivery allows faculty and students to request what they need and have it delivered to their office or the nearest library branch. Soon an article delivery service will offer scanned copies of print articles sent to the desktop. Librarians are finding new ways to deliver informa-tion to users in an effort to meet the rising expectations of young people used to getting what they want quickly and conveniently. Teaching and collaboration: Librarians offer online tutorials, one-on- one research consultations, and actual classes in the library to teach users how to find and evaluate informa-tion for specific classes (Art 157) or a subject area (biology) — and how to present work in the form of Web sites, PowerPoint, and video documentaries. In this kind of work, librarians must reach across boundaries and collaborate with others on campus. The world is flat, wrote Thomas Friedman, and that’s true for librarians, too. As Diane Strauss says, “We’ve become increasingly collaborative, and we see that as vital to our success.” Outreach: Rural high schools and middle schools now send classes to visit our libraries. And, conversely, our librarians train School of Information and Library Science graduate students to teach basic information-literacy classes at public libraries in Durham, Chapel Hill, and Carrboro. Librarians in the Carolina Digital Library and 6 Service, SeSrevrivciece, by Ginger Travis ’78 “We haven’t jettisoned the traditional services; we’ve added new services.” DIANE STRAUSS associate university librarian for collections and services “Today there’s a much greater role for outreach. Not only do we want people to come in but if you can’t come in we’ll come to you.” LISA NORBERG director of public services The University Library: Archives (CDLA) have begun to digitize UNC’s vast special collections to provide greater access to the state and the world. Marketing the library: It’s a new day when librarians use phrases like “marketing the library” and “we com-pete with Google.” Carolina’s librarians work very hard to bring new users into the library both physically and online. Parents of new students get a letter from Sarah Michalak about the library, and parents hear about the library again with their students at orientation. Resident advisors invite librarians to talk to students in their dorms. The library is on Facebook. And the “social library” — the Undergrad — holds its famous exam “coffee break” every semester on the first night of exams. If we can get them in the door, service will keep them coming back! UNC Libraries on the Web “The unattainable goal is to make everything so easy, so seamless, so transparent, so barrier-free that users can find and use all the resources the library makes available to them — without help.” TIM SHEARER coordinator of Web development Tim Shearer and his five-person Web team, and the User Interface Design Committee (especially Pam Sessoms, Kim Vassiliadis, and Lisa Norberg), have just given the UNC Libraries a new online front door, and it’s a beauty. The library’s new Web-based front page is extremely clear, uncluttered, and attractive; it contains almost everything you could possibly need just one to three clicks away. Access the catalog, renew your books, take a tutorial in physics research, read American Civil War diaries and letters, chat with a reference librarian, research study-abroad destinations and learn how to cite sources in your research — it’s so easy that even the Luddites should love it. This wealth at the end of the wire (or wireless) isn’t just for UNC faculty and students. By clicking on “Classes and Tours” then “Collaboration,” you’ll see that community work-shops are offered at public libraries in Durham, Chapel Hill, and Carrboro to teach computer non-sophisticates the basics of emailing, making an Excel spread-sheet, or searching for medical infor-mation online. Under “Web Site A to Z” is a program called NCLive.org, funded by the NC General Assembly, that allows North Carolinians to sign up with their public libraries for a user name and password giving them online access to many of the rich subscription services normally offered only to people in North Carolina’s academic libraries. These features are all about providing the citizens of North Carolina the tools to find information, wherever they may live in the Tar Heel state. Behind the library’s simple, easy-to- open, Web-based front door lies some serious complexity. But the beauty of a great interface is that we users never have to see the library Web team sweat. What we care about is that the design committee and the programmers have made it easy for us. Tim Shearer points to Google and Apple as two tech companies that really understand that ease of use — the interface — is what it’s all about. Add UNC Libraries online (www.lib.unc.edu) to that list. Brauer Math/Physics Library “Being a librarian means being a teacher. Learn how to teach and you can do librarianship really well.” ZARI KAMAREI math-physics librarian With her BA in physics, minor in math, and a BA-equivalent in chemistry, Zari Kamarei is a great fit with her library’s users — and all the more so because she’s happily adopted the com-munication tools of a younger generation so that she can reach them: instant messaging, texting, and even social networking via Facebook (a great way to publicize a workshop). Today’s kids, she says, are multitaskers, listening while 7 Zari Kamarei Tim Shearer they type, and they’re just as happy (and maybe happier) to meet you elec-tronically as face to face. Nevertheless, their questions are as basic as those asked by students 30 years ago: “What floor are the books on?” “So I’m learning about X-ray diffraction; where do I find the data?” Librarians today put a great empha-sis on teaching users rather than simply retrieving information for them. When Zari Kamarei executes an online search for hard-to-find data, she doesn’t just hand it to the student; she shows the student how she found it. The message: “You can do it, too, and here’s how.” Obviously, in this kind of librarianship it helps a lot if librarians like and under-stand undergraduates and grad stu-dents. “You just need to get in their world,” Zari Kamarei says. “It’s actually exciting to be with kids that age.” In the sciences it’s now often the practice for faculty members to give their classes datasets to work on (for instance, to run a statistical package), and librarians are the ones who find the database and post it to a Web site for the class. It takes great online-search skills, but what Zari Kamarei would tell you is this: “We’ve gone from being physically present in libraries to a virtu-al world of accessing information. But the librarian has always been there, from the physical to the virtual. All these devices are for one reason and one reason alone: reference.” New tools, same honorable goals: Find. Evaluate. Teach. Interlibrary Loan “ . . . [T]he world’s greatest inventions are the dishwasher, the pill, and interlibrary loan.” attributed to DORIS BETTS in the Virginia Library Association newsletter, Dec. 1996. “We’re in the business of resource sharing.” GENEVA HOLLIDAY head of interlibrary services What do you do when our library’s 6 million books, 60,000 journals, and magnificent special collections still don’t have every item you need for your dissertation research? You search the online record of the world’s libraries (accessible through www.lib.unc.edu), and then you fill out an electronic request form. If your sought-after book is in a Triangle library, it will arrive in a couple of days; outside the Triangle, one to two weeks. A requested article, digitized and sent electronically, may appear in just three days. (In the 1970s it took three weeks.) For this boon to scholarship, you pay — if you’re associ-ated with UNC — nothing. Last year UNC’s Interlibrary Loan borrowed 7,900 books, microforms, dissertations and videos, along with 4,400 articles. Going the other way, our library lent 22,200 items (mostly books) and 13,000 articles (digitized). Not all countries’ libraries lend, but the culture of sharing on behalf of scholarship is deeply, deeply ingrained in the U.S. and Canada, says Geneva Holliday. Not surprisingly, at UNC 60 percent of borrowers are graduate students, and 15 percent of all borrowers come from just one department: history. Since requests these days are made online, Holliday and her staff see borrowers less often: “Happy users we rarely see.” But the confused and unsuccessful searchers wind up on their email screens, their phones, their doorstep. “We solve mysteries,” she says. And then she and the staff do the one thing it takes to make a searcher happy: “We get the information to the user.” 8 8 Geneva Holliday “Keep it simple.” MITCH WHICHARD head of circulation House Undergraduate Library “Service is paramount. Our mission is to give students a good experience. We’re a teaching library.” SUCHI MOHANTY reference and instruction librarian “We’re competing with user-friendly systems like Google and Wikipedia. Our information is better [in the Undergrad] but access is key. It must be as easy as possible and we must be as helpful as possible.” KIM VASSILIADIS instructional design and technology librarian Students love the Undergrad. “It’s the social library,” says Suchi Mohanty. (“It was always the social library,” says a 1970s alum). The place buzzes with 18-to-22-year-old energy. Not coincidentally, the librarians of the Undergrad are young, too. How has the Undergrad managed to remain so popular? The renovation of House made it beautiful and comfortable again. But people make the difference. The Undergrad’s librarians are skilled in the methods students use to seek and communicate information today. Yes, librarians still teach raw young scholars the time-honored research skills — where to find infor-mation, how to evaluate it, even how to present it. But librarians use all the digital technologies students use, plus a few more. For exam-ple, reference librari-ans take thousands of questions annually via instant message. (Computer chat — students love it). Librarians can navigate, and show students how to navigate, electronic pathways to unpublished databases and electronic journals — foreign lands to first-years. And librarians can show students how to create the short documentary videos, web sites, and PowerPoint presentations that profes-sors may require in lieu of the old 10-page paper. The scanners, comput-ers, cameras, and recording and editing equipment are housed in the Collaboratory and the Media Resource Center; so are librarians/teachers. It’s all in the Undergrad. And that’s a big part of why House Undergraduate Library, at age 40, still has what it takes to get ’em through the door: The place is cool. And the librarians rock. The North Carolina Collection “A lot of our material is going online. [The North Carolina Collection] is such a wonderful resource for the people of North Carolina, but most have such a hard time getting here.” JASON TOMBERLIN North Carolina Collection public services librarian In 2007-2008 the North Carolina Collection got 10,000 requests for help. Who was asking? They were first-year students in English 101-102 with writing assignments on student life at Carolina in decades past or on their own hometowns. They were graduate students like the geographer seeking to map the locations of old textile mills in relation to the occurrence of a certain birth defect in the southern piedmont counties. One was a university chancel-lor emeritus wanting to find the exact location of “Cyprett’s bridge” as a reference point for the 1792 committee 9 Suchi Mohanty assists a student in the Undergrad Library Kim Vassiliadis Jason Tomberlin 10 selecting a site for UNC. Some were alumni looking themselves up in old copies of the Yackety Yack. And there were genealogists by the vanload. The collection is a treasure. But since access is so difficult for people off campus, NC Collection librarians are now digitizing frequently consulted materials like old city directories; these will become available online, saving users a trip to Chapel Hill. Likewise the new virtual museum of the university soon will be the responsibility of NCC librarians to maintain and expand. Like other librarians, NCC staff members are teaching users to do more for themselves; for example, by learning how to search the online catalog before they visit. And the librarians are blog-ging up a storm to attract more users by showing off the collection in all its glory — the serious, the whimsical, the weird. Check out their blog for yourself — and enjoy: “North Carolina Miscellany: Exploring the History, Literature and Culture of the Tar Heel State” at www.lib.unc.edu/blogs/ncm/ Davis Library Circulation “We take pride in the fact that patrons find what they want. If they have problems we respond quickly.” MITCH WHICHARD head of circulation “Keep it simple” — that’s what Mitch Whichard and his Circulation staff try to do for Davis Library’s users. For the staff, though, it’s complex. Last year Circulation had 419,886 transactions (check-outs and renewals) on a total of 1.5 million items in Davis. The Circulation staff must ensure that the entire collection and book stacks in general are shelved and re-shelved cor-rectly and that the materials are well-maintained. New items, as they arrive, need to get on the shelves fast. And the staff must be able to communicate quickly with users whether books are available or not. To manage such a large operation, Circulation uses a computer system that integrates the catalog and the actual books (you search the catalog to see if the library owns a book, and if it does, you instantly know whether it’s on the shelves or checked out). Also — and this is a big deal — the system is Web-based, meaning that someone off cam-pus, from Carrboro to Canberra, can check the catalog and locate the book. It’s so simple for the user — today. Yet when Mitch Whichard arrived in Circulation in 1991 there were only four computers in the department, and books were checked out with key-punched cards. (Key punching computer cards — there’s a lost art!) Circulation’s latest innovation is a service rolled out in August: document delivery. At a student or faculty mem-ber’s request, the library will send books to that person’s departmental office or departmental library, saving the user time and steps. For all the automatic processes, the human touch remains. When users with overdue books appeal their notices with tales of woe, Mitch Whichard responds personally to every one: “I don’t believe in generic responses.” When the easy things stay easy and the hard things are handled well — that’s a brand of service that keeps library users happy. Mitch Whichard Bill and Virginia Powell have spent their lifetimes serving North Carolina — he researching, writing, and teaching about our state’s people, places, and history and she as his indispensable collaborator, fact-checker, proofreader, schedule coordinator, and chauffeur. The result has been an absolutely stunning output of books, articles, essays, and lectures that have helped countless people better understand and appreciate the rich and diverse heritage of North Carolina. In April 2008, as a special tribute to Bill for his 89th birthday and a thank you to Virginia for years of support and service, the University Library and a number of friends and alumni created the William S. Powell and Virginia W. Powell Library Fund for North Carolina. This permanent endowed fund, based in the North Carolina Collection in Wilson Library, will support continuing acquisi-tions and permit an increased emphasis on outreach activities — sharing the history, literature, and culture of North Carolina with the various communities the Powells have served so well. These outreach activities may eventually include traveling exhibits of library materials, facsimiles, and artifacts; a speakers program that provides librarians to make presentations about the state to school, museum, civic, and cultural groups; and special projects with community histori-ans and cultural leaders to expand our collections and encourage cooperative collecting. The publication of the Encyclopedia of North Carolina in November 2006 is just the most recent accomplishment of the Powells’ lifetime partnership. Their relationship with the Library is deep-rooted. In 1952, Bill Powell became assistant librarian in the North Carolina Collection; in 1958 he was promoted to curator. As curator he helped build what is now regarded as the premier research collection of any single state in this country. It seems most fitting that the Powell Fund will benefit this collection and be a permanent tribute to the contributions they have made to the library, the University and the state. For information on the William S. Powell and Virginia W. Powell Library Fund for North Carolina, please contact the Library Development Office at (919) 843-5651. New Fund to Honor Bill and Virginia Powell will Benefit the NCC 11 A MESSAGE FROM DIRECTOR AMY BALDWIN It is with great pleasure that I announce the theme of the 2009 festival — A Celebration of Reading and Writing. From the moment I stepped foot on campus in mid-May I have spent much of my time speaking with more than 200 individuals — professors, campus admin-istrators, librarians, community leaders, community donors, corporate partners, and North Carolina authors. Enthusiasm for the festival is widespread and there is tremendous support for the event. And it is evident that our community is interest-ed in all types and styles of writing and reading. While the basis of our theme is to describe the intention of the festival, it also allows for the inclusion of varied and diver-sified styles of writing. As we move forward with planning the fes-tival we continue to build relation-ships that will allow us to honor and highlight our North Carolina writers, as well as introduce our community to writers from around the country. One area of great importance will be outreach to children, including readings, pop-up books, picture books, and storytelling. We are also striving to include the entire state in the festival through the North Carolina Literary Festival On The Road program, which will send a North Carolina author to six libraries throughout the state to speak with their communities in the two weeks leading up to the festival. Our Carolina stu-dents will also add a valuable contribution to the festival through their participation as writers and readers, and through their leadership as volunteers during the event. The festival website, www.ncliteraryfestival.org, launched in October and will be continually updated as the festival nears. Community assistance will be needed to help with a variety of tasks at the festival, so please make sure to register to volunteer when the volunteer opportunities are posted in late winter. The author/session schedule will be released in 2009, and we promise that you will be pleased with the list of participating authors! In the meantime, mark the festival dates on your calendar — September 10–13, 2009. 12 A Celebration of Reading and Writing The 2008 North Carolina Literary Festival Holly Smith has been appointed as the Grace McSpadden Overholser Archival Fellow for African American Studies. Ms. Smith will work with and expand African American–related materials in the Southern Historical Collection, also updat-ing current online guides and improving material accessibility. Since her appoint-ment on July 1 Ms. Smith has created a small exhibit of manuscript materials for an undergraduate research conference and provided instruction in the use of archival resources for two classes in the UNC history department. Research she did when working as an historical interpreter in Colonial Williamsburg sparked her own interest in archives and working with original source materials. Before coming to UNC, she served as an archival and research assistant at Tufts University. She holds a B.A. from the College of William and Mary, an M.A. in history from Yale University and an M.S. from Simmons College with a concentration in archival management. The Overholser Fellow posi-tion was created by a gift from Nan and Bob Keohane in memory of Nan’s mother. 13 We are pleased to announce that the North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives’ Stephen Fletcher is the chair-elect of the Visual Materials Section of the Society of American Archivists. He will serve as chair beginning at the conclusion of next year’s annual meeting in Austin, Texas. Fletcher led a session titled “Toward a Best Practices Guide to Collecting Born-digital Photographs” at the annual meeting of the SAA held in San Francisco June 26-30. The room had seating for 60 people, but 120 people attended — and others were turned away due to the fire code. He also gave a twenty-minute pres-entation on the blog “A View to Hugh” to those attending the Manuscripts Section’s meeting. Be sure to check out the blog at http://www.lib.unc.edu/blogs/morton/. At the April board meeting of the Friends of the Library, Chairman Jo Smith of Grimesland handed over the leadership to Charlotte attorney Norfleet Pruden AB ’70. The eighth person to hold the position since the board began in 1986, Pruden will serve for two years. To recog-nize Smith’s devotion to Carolina’s library and football team, the board presented her with a framed Hugh Morton photo-graph of Choo Choo Justice. Smith grew up with an abiding commitment to Carolina’s team because her father, esteemed ACC referee Wilburn Clary, took her to all the games. Providing ongoing leadership for the library’s fund raising and “friend” raising effort, members of the Friends of the Library board have steadily expanded its reach and impact. Doug Eyre, professor emeritus of geog-raphy, chaired the group for the first 10 years or so because no one was ready to step up to the challenge. When Borden Hanes took over from Eyre in 1990, the group had enough members to plan for succession. Now the terms are only two years; first and second vice chairs stand ready to suc-ceed and the group has grown from 12 to 38 members representing a much wider geographical range from the original all- North Carolina roster. Because of the untimely death of first vice chair Faryl Moss AB ’66, the succession of leadership changed. Hugh Stevens AB ’65, JD ’68 of Raleigh stepped up to first vice chairman and Murray Sawyer AB’68 of Wilmington, Delaware, to second vice chair. Four individuals have accepted the invitation to join the board: Mary P. Bossong AB ’90, MBA ’98 of Raleigh; Sally Cone AB ’76, JD ’78 of Greensboro; Stephen De May AB ’84 of Charlotte; and Nancy Sipp AB ’83 of New York, NY. Three of the four new members are attorneys, carrying on a long-term but unplanned tradition of membership. Of the 38 cur-rent members, seven have law degrees! Three students have joined as well: Analise Jenkins, Rebecca Merrick, and Sarah Shapiro. They all love their library! Overholser Fellow Named Stephen Fletcher Elected Section Chair at SAA Annual Meeting New Leaders, New Members Friends of the Library Board John Keats penned some of the most quoted lines in English poetry --- “A thing of beauty is a joy forever;” “Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard are sweeter.” On November 20, the poet who would “sooner fail than not be among the great-est” will take a place of honor at UNC’s Library, with the dedication of Keats’s “Poems,” published in 1817, as the 6-mil-lionth volume in the library’s collection. The first edition is part of a 500-item Keats collection, purchased in 2008 with support from the John Wesley and Anna Hodgin Hanes Foundation of Winston- Salem. Through its foundation, the Hanes family has funded each of the library’s millionth volumes, in an arrangement that UNC librarians believe to be unique. With this addition, UNC marks its status as the 19th university library in North America to achieve the 6 million volume milestone. Jeanne Moskal, professor of English at UNC and editor of the Keats-Shelley Journal, said that the collection will fortify undergraduate education, noting that she regularly brings classes to the Rare Book Collection. “With each visit, four or five students catch intellectual fire when they see early editions of authors they have studied. Keats is already a favorite among my students, who see him sharing their own emerging-adult issues of articulating a vocation and of discovering love and sexuality. These books will strengthen the vividness of that affinity.” While Keats was little appreciated in his day, a proliferation of elegant “gift books” and anthologies in the 19th and 20th centuries eventually placed his work back in the eye of the public. Increased critical attention beginning in the second half of the 19th century cemented his place in the literary canon. In November, a selection of Keats editions will be on display in the Melba Remig Saltarelli Room in Wilson Library, along with works by writers who inspired Keats; remembrances of the poet by con-temporaries such as Percy Bysshe Shelley and Lord Byron; and notable editions of authors influenced by Keats. In a 21st-century twist, the library will digitize selections from the 6-millionth volume gift and will make them freely available on the Internet through an ongoing arrangement with the Internet Archive (http://www.archive.org). “Books are our special heritage,” said Sarah Michalak, University Librarian and Associate Provost for University Libraries. “By celebrating this remarkable collection as our 6-millionth volume, we honor a major milestone and a truly generous tra-dition of the Hanes family.” 14 Keats’s Poems is Library’s 6-Millionth Volume Frank Hanes with selections from the Keats Collection 15 New 2008 Wilson Library Fellows Cumulative Giving Reaching $20,000 John William Becton Nancy Baach Tannenbaum Annie Gray Calhoun Lane Nolan Delano Lovins Edward R. Perl Marjorie P. Perl Lewis W. Powell Dannye Gibson Powell John Peter Rostan Janice Hurst Rostan Clarence Earl Whitefield Jane Pittard Whitefield Joan Wilentz Bell Tower $25,000 or More Arhoolie Records William Spainhour Bason (Estate) Nancy Faison Bryson Vaughn Douglas Bryson John Eugene Cay III Cay Foundation John Taylor Doggett M. Cecil Ernst* Sarah Fore Gaines (Estate) Gordon Gold W. Howard Holsenbeck Nolan Delano Lovins Ellice & Rosa McDonald Foundation, Inc. Andrew W. Mellon Foundation William A. Morgan James Richard Patton, Jr. Mary Maughan Patton Dannye Gibson Powell Lewis E. Powell Randleigh Foundation Trust Mark Lafayette Reed III Martha Sibley Reed Ann Gawthrop Sawyer H. Murray Sawyer, Jr. Eunice Nickerson Tyler (Estate) Watson-Brown Foundation Kay Massey Weatherspoon Van Louis Weatherspoon Joan Wilentz Benefactors $10,000 – $24,999 Douglas Stevenson Arnold Richard E. Ballard John William Becton and Nancy Baach Tannenbaum Gloria Nassif Blythe Thomas Watson Brown, Sr. (Estate) Carter Family Memorial Music Center CBT Charitable Trust Raymond James Charitable Endowment Fund Frances P. London North Caroliniana Society Mary Bernice T. Percy Ready Mixed Concrete Co. Blair Donald Shwedo, Sr. Laura Weatherspoon Shwedo Charles Brent Trexler, Jr. Frances Angas Weaver Jane Robinson Whitaker William Asbury Whitaker Clarence Earl Whitefield Jane Pittard Whitefield Wiley J. Williams Camp Younts Foundation Patrons $1,000 – $9,999 Douglas Ochs Adler Prudence S. Adler Laurence G. Avery Daniel Wilson Barefoot Kay Townsend Barefoot Wilton James Bruce Bastin Ayers Whitton Baughman G. Alexander Bernhardt, Jr. James Cyril Blaine Jean Burdette Blaine J. Melvin Bowen Frederick Baker Bridgers Warren Marshall Briggs Charles Wilson Broadwell Patty Frizzell Brooks W. Lester Brooks, Jr. Mary Earle Brown Neilson Brown Richard P. Buck William R. Burk Burlington Industries Foundation John Woodfin Burress III Mary Louise Bizzell Burress Betsy Steele Carr George Watts Carr III Kelli Carroll and David Graham Ross William Sherard Chapman, Jr. Shirley S. Chase William Polk Cheshire Clancy and Theys Construction Kathryn Virginia Clancy Phillip Gram Clark, Sr. Evangeline Hinson Clark Robert Burns Clark, Jr. Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta Betty Bruton Cooney Gilda Cree Philip R. Cree Mary Virginia Spruill Currie Robert Joseph Dabal Yetta Danneman (Estate) Dave McAlister Davis Harriet Davis Joan Barber Davis Emilie Patton de Luca Fred Hyams Deaton, Jr. Edwin Harrison Dixon, Jr. Nancy Head Dixon Erica Riefenberg Donnalley Kevin Thomas Donnalley Michael Nathan Driscoll Timothy Charles Duffy Meyer Edwin Dworsky Kate Edgar John Marsden Ehle Rosemary Harris Ehle David G. Ernsthausen Elizabeth Evans John P. Evans Pat Evans Florence Fearrington Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Frank John Fischer III Janet Loafman Flowers Archibald Taylor Fort Vicki Jo Fowler Elizabeth Green Fuller E. Paul Gardner Ronni Miller Gardner George Horner Gibson Judith Clark Gibson Alice Cowles Giles Joseph L. Giles Donald Gilman, Jr. David Robinson Godschalk Lallie Moore Godschalk Anne Howell Gray Bernard Gray Gail Harrison Grossman Steven Howard Grossman Elise Pettrey Guthridge William Wallace Guthridge S. Revelle Gwyn C. Rush Hamrick, Jr. F. Borden Hanes, Jr. Margaret Taylor Harper Mary Ann Harrell C. Bryce Hartley II Anna Ragland Hayes Wyat W. Helsabeck Charles H. Hendricks Andrew Michael Herman Edward Jay Hockfield Steven Alan Hockfield Susan Winstead Holderness Eric J. Hyman Lynn Moody Igoe (Estate) Dudley L. Jennings (Estate) Houston G. Jones Raymond Henderson Jones, Jr. Melinda Margaret Kaiser Clarence Higgins Keller Joyce Dickman Keller John Thomas Kelly III Betty Kenan Thomas Stephen Kenan III Eleanor M. Kilgour Jeanette Cone Kimmel David Franklin Kinney A. Larkin Kirkman Rosa Dickinson Kirkman Bernard Klingenstein Dana Borden Lacy Graham G. Lacy Annie Gray Calhoun Lane Charles Thomas Lane R. Scott Langley, Jr. Kenneth Floyd Ledford Linda Susan Lee Jay Lester Judy Lester Richard Folmar Liebhart Edward G. Lilly, Jr. Nancy Cobb Lilly Henry Augustus Lowet Richard Byron Lupton J. Ross Macdonald Margaret T. Macdonald James Edward Maloney Darren McGehee Anne Whittington McLendon William Woodard McLendon Sarah C. Michalak Cathy Dawn Moore Dennis Duane Moore Sara Giles Moore Foundation Eleanor Saunders Morris Mary Nunn Morrow Faryl Sims Moss* Charles Stephens Norwood, Jr. Nancy Bridgers Norwood Dwight Stephen Oldham Karen Orth Louis Wood Otterbourg Marie Smithwick Parker Roy Parker, Jr. Malcolm Overstreet Partin Beverly Bush Patterson Daniel Watkins Patterson Edward R. Perl Marjorie P. Perl C. Edward Pleasants Nancy Thompson Pleasants Evelyn M. Poole-Kober Farrel Franklin Potts Welsh Davidson Potts Virginia Waldrop Powell William Stevens Powell Presbyterian Historical Society Kathryn Cobb Preyer Norris Watson Preyer J. Norfleet Pruden III Alfred L. Purrington III Suzanne Townsend Purrington Charles James Ragland, Jr. David E. Ragland Nancy Anne Ader Ragland Russ Reynolds Sally Baumann Reynolds Richard Judson Richardson 16 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 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. The following images are from the Hugh Morton Photograph and Film Collection and the Durwood Barbour North Carolina Postcard Collection Scott Hanchet Richardson Sue Richardson Charlotte Bryan Rodman E.T., Jr. & Frances Rollins Foundation Frances Page Rollins Kelly Leigh Ross Janice Hurst Rostan John Peter Rostan III Barbara Burch Safford Charles D. Safford Marvin Saltzman Amy Greenwood Sawyer Harold Murray Sawyer III W. Braxton Schell* Catherine Schweitzer Christoph E. Schweitzer Charles Milton Shaffer, Jr. Harriet Houston Shaffer Nancy Howard Sitterson Simon C. Sitterson III Allen Coleman Smith Allison Burnett Smith Brenton Lohr Smith Debbie Smith The Eddie and Jo Allison Smith Family Foundation Edward Calvin Smith, Jr. Jo Allison Clary Smith Moyer Gray Smith, Jr. Claude Henry Snow, Jr. Sarah Turnbull Snow Herbert Norris Snowden III Ann Lewallen Spencer Elizabeth Sprunt Laurence Gray Sprunt Richard Oates Steele Samuel Coburn Stringfield Chester Hogan Sykes Nancy King Tanner Pell Tanner C. Edward Teague III Georgie Sears Brewer Tilley Blossom McGarrity Tindall Virginia Agnew Trenholm Trexler Foundation Lucile Turner (Estate) Diana L. Walstad R. Beverly R. Webb Alice M. Welsh Molly Johnson Weston Leona Paschal Whichard Willis Padgett Whichard William David Whisenant Cathleen Pappas Whitted J. Turner Whitted Benson Reid Wilcox Winston-Salem Foundation Megan Wetherill Ziglar William Richard Ziglar Friends $10– $999 Charles Marc Abbey Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Anne Churchwell Adams LeNeve Hodges Adams Samantha Agbeblewu Maureen Beth Ahmad William McKenzie Aiken D. Alexander Albright Robert C. Albright Gloria Alderman John Michael Alderman Betty Acey Alexander Elizabeth Jean Alexander Michael Shepard Alexander Larry Paul Alford Amy Case Allen Barbara C. Allen Dawn Allen Shu An Patrick Maxwell Anders Mary Sweaney Andersen Barbara Shaw Anderson Paul Christopher Anderson Robert Nelson Anderson III Sarah Lane Anderson Amanda I. Andresen Jeffry J. Andresen Carol Andrews Walton White Andrews Katherine A. Anthony Robert G. Anthony, Jr. Stephen Marc Appell Kenning Arlitsch Thomas A. Arnel Rebecca W. Ashburn Rebecca Ashburn Patricia Ashley Robert Ashley Association of NC Boards of Health Stephen Dwight Atkinson Annye Elizabeth Atteberry Michael J. Auer Edward Robert Austin Susan Lipman Austin Avalon Medical Group F. Gloyd Awalt, Jr. Carol Baer Tomas Baer M. Andrew Bagwell Stephanie Jackson Bagwell Dayna Lynn Gardner Baird Brian Keith Baker Charles Louis Baker Christopher Paul Baker Doris Ledford Baker Felicia Nelson Baker James Bryant Baker James M. Baker Nancy L. Baker Ross Young Baker Shirley K. Baker Thelma Baker Thomas Eugene Baker James Mahlon Bales Susan Bales Rebecca Sutherland Ballentine Stephen Brian Bambara O. Gordon Banks Leslie Banner G. Sprite Barbee III James Brown Barber Jon Carr Barbour M. Durwood Barbour Reid Barbour Angela L. Bardeen Gary Fenton Barefoot John Calvin Barefoot Martha Bagby Barefoot John Dallas Barile Suzy Maynard Barile Michael Derek Barnes Elaine E. Barney William Lesko Barney Mary Kate Barnhart Rebecca Anne Barnhouse Frank Hauser Barr Harriet Hylton Barr Milly S. Barranger Deborah Kay Barreau Phyllis Campbell Barrett Keith Gordon Bartholomew William Harrell Baskin III Wanda Bassett Hardy Elmo Batchelor, Jr. Marcia Ingols Batchelor Jack Bates Jerry Bates David Line Batty 17 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Lyn Marie Batty Paul John Bauer Jessica Baxter Rosann Bazirjian Sylvia Beacham-Hughes Jeffery S. Beam Leanne Barnett Bean Richard Paul Beaudry Sheila Badger Beaudry Judy C. Beaver Margaret Woodhouse Becker Walter B. Beeker, Jr. Lenora Beggs Carol Grotnes Belk Cecelia Early Belk Irwin Belk Bell Family Foundation Clara Bond Bell Danny Bell Elizabeth Dooley Bell John Luther Bell, Jr. Mack Bell II* Mary Grady Koonce Bell Victor Eros Bell III John George Bellios II Thomas W. Belton R. James Benedict, Jr. Betty G. Bengston Karen Benkert Lawrence Benkert Charlotte Stumph Bennett Larry Kester Benninger Sheila Weston Benninger Christina Elizabeth Benson Dale Monroe Bentz Mary Gail Menius Bentz Bernice I. Bergup Anne B. Berkley Margaret Green Berkowitz Rhoda L. Berkowitz Roger M. Berkowitz Stephen Asher Berkowitz Michael Kalen Berkut Bernard Foundation Elizabeth Denning Berryhill William Irwin Berryhill, Jr. Edward Hiltner Bertram III Nancy Castles Bertram Mary Best Beta Phi Mu Epsilon Doris Waugh Betts Elizabeth Ann Bezera Mary Ellen Barnes Bierck Joan P. Bingham Laura Carpenter Bingham Warren Louis Bingham Ceres B. Birkhead Canelia Hinnant Blackwell Kendall Leon Blackwell Catherine Ann Blair Virginia Archer Blakeslee Lynn W. Blanchard Patricia Jane Blanton Frank A. Blazich Julia C. Blixrud Elizabeth Susan Taylor Block Lawrence Steven Block Avrom Bluestein Eleanore Bluestein Evo Bluestein Elaine Fink Blumenthal Jerome Bruce Blumenthal John Alexander Blythe Catherine Claire Bodin Charles Boewe Mary S. Boewe Jennifer Brackenbury Boger John Charles Boger Hannah Sykes Bohannan Hsi-chu H. Bolick Andrea Lee Bolland Suzie Bolotin Victor M. Bonacheff Dorothea Bonds Mark Evan Bonds Robert A. Boone George David Boozer Henry C. Boren Fred W. Boring Julian Redwine Bossong Mary Pleasants Bossong Sanford Little Boswell Edmond Anthony Boudreaux III Donald Arthur Boulton Marta Renee Bowen Maryellen Bowers Wayne A. Bowers* Ellen R. Bowman Barbara Lane Boyd Karen Denise Boyd William Perry Boyd Margaret E. Boyenton William Harwood Boyenton Larry M. Boyer Merle N. Boylan Stephanie Soroka Boyles Wayne R. Boyles III Robert Franklin Brabham, Jr. Ellis E. Bradford Gail Bradley S. J. Bradley Martha Glenn Bradshaw Renee Byrd Bradshaw Alethea Bragg Deborah Griffin Branton Michael Gerald Branton Meredith Lynn Bratcher Elise Holmes Braun David W. Brehmer Madge Briggs Carol Scovil Brinkley Martin Hal Brinkley Richard Lilly Broadwell Marjory Oakey Brodie Mary Aldige Brogden Stephen Marshall Brooks Edwin L. Brown George-Anne Willard Brown Jane Hetherington Brown Joy Gann Brown Katrina Marie Brown Laura Clark Brown Leslie Ellen Brown Matthew Brown Nicolette Friederich Brown Norman DePaul Brown Stephen D. Brown Timothy Bowditch Brown Herbert Howard Browne, Jr. Clyde E. Browning Matthew J. Bruccoli Melinda Tyser Brunner Eleanor Godfrey Bruno Frieda Bryant Bruton H. David Bruton Betsy Bryan James Alexander Bryan II Robin Riley Bryson Jane Summers Bryttan Julian R. Bryttan Rebecca Cole Bucci Edward A. Buchanan James Wofford Buchanan, Sr. Charlotte Clay Buell Deanna J. Buhr Kenneth S. Buhr Julian W. Bunn, Jr. Alison Bunting Wade Bunting Matthew Jay Burbank Nannie Harbour Burby Raymond Joseph Burby III Raquel Anjanette Bushnell Brian Craig Butler Clifford R. Butler, Jr. Lelia Clinard Butler Linda Lynch Butler Lindley Smith Butler Robert Dean Buysse Virginia Anderson Buysse Francis John Byrd Robert Lowe Byrd John Lafayette Byrum Charles J. Cain Myra H. Cain Martha Belle Caldwell John Philip Call Leigh Fleming Callahan Anne Madeleine Calvignac Mary Trimble Cameron Mary Kathryn Campbell Sue Catherine Campbell Walter Elijah Campbell III Waltrene M. Canada Eleanor Cannan Tom Cannan Bill Cannon Clarence Ray Cannon Douglas Sebren Cannon Elizabeth Weaver Cannon Jeannette Cannon Robert L. Cannon Dorothy Phillips Cansler Paul Teige Cantey Julie Dupree Cantu Diana Berez Caplow Michael Caplow Margarita Mercedes Cardona Barbara A. Carmody G. Paul Carr, Jr. Jean E. Carr Charles Williams Carter, Jr. Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 18 Hilary Therese Carter H. William Carter, Jr. Leonard Hewell Carter, Jr. Margaret Kelley Carter Valerie Knox Carter Laura Jane Cartner James Woodrow Cartwright Phoebe McNeer Cartwright Mary M. Case Jerry Clyde Cashion Audrey Harmon Cassibry Stephanie B. Casteel Frank David Castlebury III Trudy Elizabeth Castlebury John Claiborne Cates, Jr. Katherine Petrou Catlett Arthur Thomas Cavano, Jr. Janet Jeffrey Cavano David Cecelski George H. V. Cecil John Amherst Cecil Nancy Cecil Halley Elizabeth Cella Dino S. Cervigni Marilyn E. Cervigni Steven M. Chandler Margaret J. Chanin Michael Henry Chanin Teresa Chapa Chapel Hill Historical Society Kellie Shoffner Chapman Gabriel Chau Barbara Ott Chavious Kenneth E. Chavious Brenning Bunch Cheatham James T. Cheatham III Edwin Rives Cheek Ying Chen Elizabeth Ann Chenault T. Kevin Cherry John Edward Chesser, Jr. J. Ben Chilton Lorraine Chin Beverly Bailey Chinnis Jewel Buffaloe Christian Ross Anthony Cidlowski James William Clark, Jr. Jennifer Munro Clark John Levan Demaree Clark Linda Loeb Clark Margaret Allen Clark Martha Keeler Clark Tony Franklin Clark Michael A. Clarke Penelope T. Clarke T. Henry Clarke IV Michael Jay Claxton Marlene Elise Clay Mechelle Cash Clayton T. Barrier Clendenin, Jr. Susan Hicks Clifford Nancy M. Cline Phillip Edmond Cline R. Clark Cloyd Robert Lee Cloyd Jim Coble Raquel Cogell Huddy Cohen Jerry Cohen Ronald D. Cohen Harvey Colchamiro Stephen W. Cole Emmy Lou Coleman Joseph William Collins Megan Wrenn Collins Pauline Bryson Collins Ruth Burton Collins Sarah Prince Colton Laura Carolyn Comer Community Foundation of Greater Memphis Community Foundation of Western North Carolina Marcella Harrer Congdon Robert Beattie Congdon Heather Sue Conklin Daniel Patrick Connerton Sally Bahnsen Connerton Loren Connors Helen Harney Conrad Robert Franklin Conrad Anne Rullman Cook James Coffield Cooke, Jr. Sydney Stafford Cooke Elizabeth Parsons Cooper Glinda Sue Cooper Grady Cooper, Jr. Leland Ross Cooper, Sr. Lenox Gore Cooper, Jr. Laurel Archer Copp Victoria Margaret Corke Anne Eckerson Corley Paul E. Corneilson Gary Cornog Alice Robinson Cotten Jerry Wayne Cotten Alan Cottrell Jonathan Morris Courtland Mona C. Couts Robert M. Coven Cynthia Diane Cowan Nancy Walker Cowan Christopher Ross Cox Eppie Bennett Cox Valerie Purdie Cozart Patricia L. Crabtree M. Richard Cramer James Grant Crawford Samuel Lee Crawford Catherine Crepack Joseph Gregory Crespo John Allen Crislip Margaret L. Crist Rebecca Susan Crist Brevard Barnett Crowell John Duncan Currie, Jr. Kathryn Watson Currie Mark Currie Peggy Currie Lee Godwin Currin Robert Tyree Currin III Andrew Cutright Kathryn Howell Dalton Robert Sethur Dalton Sean Larry Dalton Dana D’Andraia Frank D’Andraia Marie L. Torrey Danforth Van Womack Daniel III Jane M. Danielewicz Robert James Daniels Thomas Cook Darrell Mary Bandy Daughtry Louis Markham Dauner Susan Ann Davi Boyd Hill Davis Fred Davis Nancy Allison Davis Nancy Katherine Davis Richard Akin Davis Thomas Fitzgerald Davis, Jr. J. Russell Davison Linda Page Davison Raymond Howard Dawson John H. De Carlo Mardell De Carlo Stephen Gerard De May William Howard Deane Cordelia Lewis Deans Robert Edgar Deans, Jr. Arthur St Clair DeBerry Mignon R. DeBerry Gillian M. Debreczeny Paul Debreczeny* Debutante Ball Society of Durham Barbara Epps Deering Thomas Searle Deering, Jr. Anthony Roane Dees (Estate) Leslie McNeill Dees Amelia Barnum Dees-Killette Christie Turner Degener Helen Roxlo Delp Janie Johnson DeMario Betty Hill Dennis Bonnie Boyer Derr Dailey Jonathan Derr Marit Derrer Barbara I. Dewey Bill Dewey Deborah Carson Dibbert Douglas Steven Dibbert Henry Dickens & Co Robert Arthur Dickson Victoria Green Dickson Blaine Dillon Melissa Dillon Richard Smith Dixon, Jr. Robert Dale Dixon Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Dodge Susan Anne Dodge Laine Elizabeth Doggett Eileen Kay Doherty Bob Dolan Books Frank A. Dominguez Patricia Buck Dominguez Michael Marshall Dore Knut Dorn A. Anson Dorrance IV. M’Liss Gary Dorrance Mary Alice Dorton Virginia Pou Doughton Carolyn Green Dow Mary Catherine Dowe Sean B. Downing Linda Stopher Drake Matthias C. Drake E. Rick Dreibelbis Kathleen Morgan Drowne Joshua Martin Drucker Deidre Holmes DuBois Aurora Sharp Dudley Roberta Ann Dunbar Alison Shepherd Duncan Andrew Wayne Duncan Betty Smith Duncan Catherine Alford Duncan Gwyneth Maureen Duncan Homer Gray Duncan II Alvis Eugene Dunn Elizabeth Bramm Dunn Leah McGinnis Dunn Harold Macon Dunnagan Suzanne Verbeck Dunnagan William Edward Dunstan III Wayne K. Durrill L. Daniel Duval III Holly Dzwilefsky H Louie Eargle William Alfred Early III Barbara Ross Earnhardt Jean A. Earnhardt John C. Earnhardt, Jr. Ellen Bullington Eason Leslie Frank Eason, Jr. Connie Clare Eble EBSCO Industries Inc. Gary Eckstein Amanda C. Edwards Monica M. Eiland Donna C. Eisen C. Maxwell Elbin, Jr. Marie D. Eldridge Carolyn Worcester Elfland Ernest L. Eliel* Eva Eliel Barbara Miriam Elkins Philip Lovin Elliott, Jr. Ellis and Ellis Inc. Marion A. Ellis Robert Anthony Ellison Bryan Jason Elsaesser Empire Books Jennifer Jordan Engel Patrick Daniel Engel Roberta Ann Engleman Raymond Alexander English Sally-Hilda Erickson Susan Joy Erickson Brenda Petty Eskridge E. Stanford Eskridge, Jr. Nora Gaskin Esthimer Steven William Esthimer David Wesley Etchison Joanne D. Eustis Blair Q. Evans George J. Evans, Jr. James Evans Nell B. Evans Cheryl Homzak Ewald Dennis Lyn Ewald J. Douglas Eyre Olga Yobs Eyre Jessica Eden Factor Arthur John Faint Eugene Fairbanks Sarah Howle Fallaw Martha L. Farmer Robert L. Farmer Ming-Wai Allyssa Farrell Connie Barnes Farris William Charles Farris 19 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Roy Edgar Fauber Ronnie Wayne Faulkner J. Alan Feduccia Olivia Taylor Feduccia Judith Jones Felder Robert Brabham Felder Floyd Ferguson Gordon James Ferguson Richard Henry Ferguson, Sr. Thomas Russell Ferguson, Jr. Maria Fernandez Marcie Ferris Martin T. Ferris Nancy S. Ferris William R. Ferris Kirill Fesenko Carol Feuer Lawrence Feuer Virginia Fick Donald Carl Fidler F. Thomas Field Sue Burroughs Field John R. Files Michael Edward Fincher Elizabeth Marshall Fink Charissa Louise Fischer Michael Joseph Fischer Peter Graham Fish Edwin B. Fisher, Jr. Elizabeth Weil Fisher Micah Robert Fisher Michael David Fisher Rebecka Fisher Sandra Strawn Fisher Thomas Grantham Fisher, Sr. Carey Elizabeth Fitzmaurice Heather M. Fitzwilliam Jack David Fleer Martha Hinkle Fleer Leslie Allen Fleisher Jacquelyn Lee Fleming Michele Wilson Fletcher W. Miles Fletcher III Christine Flora Joseph Martin Flora Stephen Ray Flora Helen F. Flowers Joan H. Floyd D.Glenn Fogle Faith Underhill Fogle Jaroslav Thayer Folda III Linda Whitham Folda Susan C. Fonte Sarah Forbes Michelle Alligood Fore Kerri Forney Tanya C. Fortner Timothy Andrew Foskey Dennis Arthur Foster Chesca Yvonne Fox Cindy Beth Fox Gwen Corbert Fox William Henry Fox, Jr. Catherine Ann Frank Linda Frankel Margaret Ogilvy Franz Diane Frazier Nancy Robison Frazier Judy French Rachel J. Frew Ida Howell Friday Lila Ponder Friday William Clyde Friday Barbara G. Friedman Richard T. Froyen Cynthia Fugate R. Neil Fulghum Monica Witterholt Fuller Nancy Scott Fuller W. Erwin Fuller, Jr. W. Scott Fuller Carol H. Fullerton Gregory L. Fullerton Margaret Ellen Fulton Andrea Hodges Funk Sandra Gail Funk Richard Benton Fuquay Prafull Gadani Mary Kathleen Gallagher Karen L. Gansky Stuart Gansky Weixiang Gao Edward Randy Gardner James Towles Gardner, Jr. Kirsten Anne Gardner Rebecca Lynn Gardner Victoria Jean Gardner Andrea Phillips Garner Sanford Clyde Garner David Q. Garrison Helen H. Garrison Alma Garro Robert K. Garro Ronald Lewis Gatlin Anne Dantzler Geer Diane M. Gennaro Lori Perkins George Catherine Gerdes Jean Ballantyne Gerhardt Robert Coleman Gibbs Gloria Shelton Gibson John Kenneth Gibson Helen Giduz Roland Giduz Bryan Albin Giemza Sir Humphrey Gilbert Chapter of NC Society Sue Gainey Giles Terry Scott Giles Robert Starr Gillam Susan Ann Gilley Bernard Gilman Carol H. Girton George Girton Joseph T. Glathaar John F. C. Glenn, Jr. Erica D. Glover Deborah Jean Goessling J. Christopher Goff Keilah Kuzminski Goff Meta Skinner Goff Clara W. Golay Kristen Lucille Gooch Harry Gooder Cheryl Ann Gordon Michele Faye Gordon Jean Gosling William A. Gosling Jeffrey Charles Goss Karl David Gottschalk Barry Goz Rebecca Goz Bryan Patrick Grady Jacqueline Dean Graham Margaret Mooring Graham Nicholas MacKenzie Graham W. Reece Graham IV Walter Mac Gray Nancy Sue Grebenkemper Andrea Tolson Green Michael D. Green Paul Eliot Green, Jr. Bluma Kafka Greenberg Ruth M. Greenberg R. Terrance Greenlund Claudine Alonzo Gregorio Fletcher Harrison Gregory III Mary Dashiell Gregory Marcella T. Grendler Paul F. Grendler Elizabeth Bragg Grey A. Glenn Griffin, Jr. Carolyn Taylor Griffin Christopher Warren Griffin Martha Broadaway Griffin E. Jeffrey Griffith Linda Mackie Griggs Malcolm David Griggs Richard Stuart Griggs George Talmadge Grigsby, Jr. Joe W. Grisham David Ray Groce Cynthia W. Gudeman Erik John Gudris Gareth Guest Lenore Beth Guidoni Agness Wiggins Gunter Leslie Ann Gura Philip F. Gura Ramsdell Gurney, Jr. Robert Clifton Guthrie Samuel Cole Guy Herbert Nelson Hackney Thomas Baylor Hadzor Jacqueline Hagan Armin A. Hagen Jeanne T. Hagen Karla L. Hahn Theodore E. Haigler, Jr. John Forrest Haire Troy Kenneth Hales Charles Martin Hall Elizabeth Hughes Hall Jacquelyn D. Hall Joseph Walton Hall III 20 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Speed Hallman Susan Walters Hallman Arthur D. Halpern Emily Halpern James Auman Haltom Helen Graves Halva Brenda Hamilton Craig Hamilton Holley Michelle Morris Hamilton Martha Elizabeth Hamilton David Murray Hammer Jane Ross Hammer Edith V. Hammond C. Merritt Hampton Sarah Elizabeth Hamrick Barbara Cottrell Hancock Ziad George Hanhan Clark Hanjian Jennifer Ahn Hanner Perry Hardison Donna Elizabeth Hardy P. Curtis Hardy Harry H. Harkins, Jr. Joey Bruce Harlow Anne Wilson Harmon William Ruth Harmon W. Selby Harney, Jr. Dorothy Gwyn Harper Howard Harper Jeanne Harper Stan Harper Otto Harrassowitz Barbara J. Harris Boyd Gregory Harris Kathryn M. Harris Rob Harris Rodger S. Harris Roger T. Harris Steven Emmett Harris Trudier Harris Katherine Gordon Harrison Sarah Henderson Harriss Andy Hart Lee Kenion Hart Lynn C. Hart Oliver James Hart III Jonathan Hartlyn Patricia Neufeld Hartman Peter David Hartman Brian Victor Hartzog Lee Helvenston Harvard Mack Wayne Harvey Sharon M. Harvey Lesley Apple Haskell Gabriella Riggio Haspel Martha Hauptman Geoffrey Wilfred Taylor Hawkins Opal Winchester Hawkins Scott Hayes Theodore W. Hayes Alfred Milton Haynes, Jr. Alice Cheshire Haywood Ye He John Miles Headley Fred M. Heath Herbert Alan Hedden David George Hedgecock G. Jason Hedrick J. Heffelfinger Charles D. Heiser Donna McKinney Heiser Peter Niels Heller Richard E. L. Henderson Susan Adelaide Henretta Kala R. Herlands Joseph Herzenberg (Estate) Kristin Karwehl Herzog Joe Anderson Hewitt Robert G. Heyneman David Marshall Hiatt Louise Staley Hiatt Ronald J. Hickes Stephen Vincent Higdon Katherine Jenner Higginbotham R. Don Higginbotham* Susan Snyder Hight Jeanine Hogrefe Hightower Kenneth Nelson Hightower Anne Gibson Hill Edward Arthur Hill Harriet T. Hill James Allen Hill, Jr. Janet Hill Kimberly Latta Hill Michael Ray Hill Ann Hillenbrand J. Ray Hinnant, Jr. David Wayne Hitchings Gayla Lindsay Hitchings Elizabeth H. Hobbs James Copeland Hobbs, Jr. R. Branson Hobbs* W. Sands Hobgood, Jr. Jane Gregory Hobson Rebecca Erin Hockfield Betty Arnold Hodges L. Edward Hodges, Jr. Carl Christian Hoffmann Kathleen Perkerson Hoffmann Louise Chapman Hoffman Janis Gail Holder Jeremy Holderfield David L. Holdzkom Roslyn Perper Holdzkom William Earl Hollamon, Jr. J. Gill Holland J. Ronald Holland Robert E. Holland III Siri Lugg Holland Geneva R. Holliday Barry Kevin Holmes Connie Holmes Edward Shelton Holmes Julia Ashley Holmes Mary Hayes Barber Holmes* Elizabeth Myatt Holsten Helen Joan Holt Gregory Allan Holton Sandra E. Honnold Jewel Hoogstoel Robert E. Hoogstoel Michele L. Hooper Jeffrey L. Horrell Barbara Thomas Horton Krisztian Horvath Kilby Dixon Hoskins Aaron Wood Houghton Sarah Eileen Houghton Edward Lee House Molly Bullard Howard Billy Shaw Howell, Jr. Bobbye Jo Howell Christopher Dean Howell Wanda Edwards Howell Erma Reep Hoyle Ruth Alice Hoyle Patrick Joseph Huber Linda Hudson Ronald Carlisle Hudson Sam Hudson John Robert Huggins Rebekah Hudson Huggins G. Michael Hugo Jean Luffman Humber John Leslie Humber P. Scott Hummel Betsy L. Humphreys Christopher Ronald Hunt Douglass Hunt James Logan Hunt Ruth Setzer Hunt Claire Stenclik Hunter Christopher Howard Hurst Nicole Whisnant Hurst Sallie Huss T. Hoke Huss R. Wayne Hutchins John L. Idol Marjorie S. Idol Eleanor Roberts Ilgen William David Ilgen Annette Morrell Ingle John Robert Ingle Ingram & Ingram Charles Marshall Ingram James C. Ingram Joel Isenberg Nancy D. Isenberg Khalid S. Ishaq Mary R. Ishaq* Caroline Finch Ives Michael Stuart Ives, Jr. Daniel Warren Jackson Walter A. Jackson Deborah Jakubs Betty Block James Charles Henry James Judith McNease James Katherine James William Stuart James Dione Latrice Jarrett George Javor Carey Jean Jefferson Jewish Community Foundation of Durham/Chapel Hill David Jimenez Kathy Lanita John Brad Johnson Craig Andrew Johnson Cyrus Murry Johnson, Jr. David Dalton Johnson Jay Johnson Joel Alan Johnson Kurt Johnson Mary Caldon Johnson Mary-Parke Johnson Rebecca R. Johnson Richard K. Johnson Yewande Joy Johnson Johnson's Jewelers, Inc. Andrew L. Johnston Anne Marie Johnston Billy David Jolley Harley E. Jolley Cecelia Thurmaier Jolls Robert T. Jolls Arthur Francis Jones II A. Wesley Jones Barry Jackson Jones Benny Ray Jones Bonnie Richards Jones Carolyn Carleton Jones Deborah Anne Jones Leslie Hartley Jones Meriwynn Gaddis Jones Randall Dean Jones Robert Edward Jones Stephen Thomas Jones Tracy Alonzo Jones W. Davis Jones IV Brenda Moore Harlow Jordan John Richard Jordan, Jr. Heather Joseph Mary Bland Josey Vivian Lee Joyner Whitmel Madison Joyner William Stafford Joyner Nancy Claire Julian David Robert Jurman Wayne Quay Justesen, Jr. Blair Cogdill Justice James Thomas Justice IV Marian Hall Justice Nancy Jennifer Kaiser Zahra B. Kamarei Norman Kane William P. Kane Wayne Campbell Kannaday Joanne Chris Kares Thomas L. Karnes Leah Robinson Karpen Jonathan Arnold Karpinos Harold L. Katz Aubrey Alfred Keen Allan Keith Thomas Jeffery Keith Marie-Beatrice Rhyne Keller Robert Michael Keller Joan Kellett Michael Kellett 21 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 David Reid Kelly Carol Ritzen Kem Margaret F. Kemp Thomas Dupre Kemp III C. L. Kendall Mary Anne Kendall Miriam L. Kennard Anne McCarthy Kennedy David Ray Kennedy Edward D. Kennedy Patricia S. Kennedy Thomas Bishop Kennedy William Benjamin Kennedy Mahlon Day Kenny John Nelson Kent Lisa Motsinger Kerner Theodore Charles Kerner, Jr. James L. Kerr David Harris Kiel Fred Waggoner Kiger S. Collins Kilburn Julie Kimbrough Frank Efird Kinard Mary McNease Kinard Andrew Hatcher Kincheloe Mark William Kindem Cyrus Baldwin King Harriet Lowry King James Kimball King George M. Kingman Marie-Claire Kirch Roger Norman Kirkman Suzon O. Kister Marjorie Holland Klem Paul R. Klem Rabecca Ann Klemp Nadine Kloecker-Dunn Edmund Tayloe Knott Rena Terrell Knott Michael Ray Knowles William B. Knox Ann Gay Koegel Phyllis Gentry Koehnline William Angus Koehnline Jeffrey Scott Koeze Katharine Reid Koeze Marcia Anne Koomen Robert Rodgers Korstad Louise V. Kowalsky Richard J. Kowalsky Katherine Gray Kraft Anthony James Kramer Betty Leona Krimminger Greyson Gates Kuhn Frances Williams Kunstling Charles Kurzman David Alan Lagos Jane Lamm W. Franklin Lamm Selden Durgom Lamoureux James L. Lancaster Bruce Landesman Margaret Landesman Peter Samuel Landstrom Susan Betts Landstrom E. Brent Lane David Laney Elizabeth Jordan Laney Ruth Laney Ransom Andrew Langford Stephen Frederick Lapham Geraldine Gilmore Larson Jo Anne Larson T. Wingate Lassiter S. Robert Lathan John McChesney Latimer, Jr. Katherine Armistead Latimer Catherine Grollman Lauritsen Dorothy Lavine Ray Lavine Sellers Crisp Lawrence Richard H. Lawson Robert H. Lawton MyAn Thi Le Amy Mangual Leary Charles Edward Leasure, Jr. Harriet Quinn Leasure Sharon A. Leavitt Ann Donovan Lee Eleanor Carroll Lee Hugh Alfred Lee, Jr. Mary Gwyn Lee Randall Walker Lee Susan Dill Lee Jennifer Lefeaux Nancy Y. Leinbach Philip Leinbach George Lensing, Jr. David Roy Lent Diane R. Leonard Ruth Slobodkin Lepie Debra Ann Letchworth The Seymour and Carol Levin Foundation Carol C. Levin Seymour Myer Levin Madeline G. Levine Steven I. Levine Claire Levitt Frederick Levitt Herschel Horton Lewis Jessie Belle Lewis John Baker Lewis, Jr. Megan Elizabeth Lewis Yongbiao Li Allan Roy Life Page West Life Kenneth Yu-Chung Lin Michael M. Lindemann Suzanne L. Lindemann Betsy Lindemuth Jeffrey Thomas Linder Kathleen Keener Linder Jerzy Linderski William Wesley Lindley Crystal Lineberry Anita Linkous William Linkous, Jr. Mary Ann Linville Ray Pate Linville Barbara Diane Lipsett Loyd Harry Little, Jr. Elizabeth Sproles Lloyd Paul John Lloyd Walter P. Lloyd, Jr. Lena Dunn Lo Anthony George Lo Re Page M. Lo Re William R. Loeser Alton Taylor Loftis Sarah Pullen Logan Linda Beth Logsdon Fred Williams London Walker Anderson Long Phyllis Morris Lotchin Roger W. Lotchin Lingyun Lou Betsy Caudle Lowman Joseph Clare Lowman Patricia Hayman Lowry Edwin Lu Nancy Luberoff Christina Anne Lund Georgia Ann Machemer Sara Mack Sally Osborne Mackie Aldo P. Magi Daniel Mahar Avinash Chandra Maheshwary David Michael Mahoney Barry George Maine Sandra Lynne Alley Maine Jane B. Majors James Blair Malcolm Douglas Owen Malone Krisellen Maloney John E. Manley Richard Allan Mann David T. Manning Jennifer Elizabeth Manning May Lynn Goldstein Mansbach Gary Marchionini Lewis Harvey Margolis Margaret Varley Markham Matthew Francis Markie Margaret H. Marks Maria L. Marshall D.G. Martin, Jr. Harriet Wall Martin James Edwin Martin, Jr. J. Paul Martin Kristin Emily Martin Nancy O'Bryan Martin Robert J. Martin, Jr. R. William Martin Julian D. Mason, Jr. Mary Ethel Mason C. Knox Massey, Jr. Mary Ann Keith Massey Michael Allen Massey Greg Masterson Margaret Masterson Megan M. Matchinske William Connie Mathis, Jr. Elizabeth Anna Matson Lydia Blanton Matthews J. Douglas Mattox Julie Ellen Mayberry Jill B. Mayer Mavis Tanner Mayer Stanley Ketron McAfee III Betty Ray McCain Ashley Blythe McCall Michael Wallace McCall William Howe McCarthy D. Robert McConnaughey Gary McConnell David Minerba McCorkle John Luther McCormick Monica Jean McCormick Marilyn C. McCraw Raymond William McCraw Donald L. McCrickard Eleanor Fowler McCrickard Elizabeth Ann McCue John Goodman McDougald Katherine Tucker McGinnis John Stephen McGovern John P. McGowan Eileen L. McGrath Martha Winston McGrath Edmund McIlhenny Pamela G. McIlhenny Cecilia McKay Marek McKenna John Martin McKeon Margaret King McKinney Jill Morrison McKinstry Bettie Haughton McLaughlin Dorothy T. McLaughlin Robert Theodore McLaughlin S. Bryce McLaughlin Gail Singletary McLean William Sartor McLean Ann Joye McLeod James Potter McNab Alan Howard McNamee Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 22 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 23 Elizabeth Grimes McRae John Dillard McSween Denny Mecham Ellen S. Medearis Elizabeth C. Meehan-Black Steven Jay Melamut H. Craig Melchert Menden, Freiman & Zitron LLP Arthur Clayton Menius III E. Joy Mermin Paul Nathaniel Mermin Chrisie Messer Deborah Raenette Meyer Gerald E. Meyer Larry Charles Michael Gladys Michalak Russell S. Michalak Charles J. Michels Victoria Dixon Mikow-Porto Stephanie Nargesian Miksis Kimberly Smith Miles Margaret Ann Miles Emily Von Borries Milks Amey Southerland Miller Bradley Edward Miller Carolynn Little Miller Christopher Perry Miller Elizabeth Miller Helen R. Miller Marjorie Penton Miller Roger G. Miller Stephanie Jones Miller Charles Everette Mills Jessica Leigh Mills Marissa Mills Barbara Bounds Milone Charles Louis Milone Kaye Lanning Minchew Mary Wyche Mintz Angeline M. Mitchell Anne Norwood Mitchell Gary D. Mitchell John Fletcher Mitchell Memory Farmer Mitchell Susan E. Mitchell William Graham Champion Mitchell, Jr. William Leonard Mitchell III Joseph Pike Mitchener Fred Gilbert Mock, Jr. Cynthia Thompson Modlin J. Wayne Modlin James C. Moeser Susan Dickerson Moeser Sylvia Ann Moffitt Sucharita M. Mohanty Lynne Anne Mohrfeld Fred Bruton Monroe Jane Kelly Monroe John Thaddeus Monroe, Jr. Gustavo S. Montana Joan Ann Montana Sarah Kaiser Montes L. Grayson Montgomery Sandra Roberts Montgomery Marvin Charles Mood Cecelia D. Moore James Gregory Moore James W. Moore Terry Allen Moore, Jr. Thea Tullman Moore Zachary D. Moore Deborah Jane Moose Ruth M. Moose Susan Mitchell Moose Barbara B. Moran Joseph Moran Alesha Smith Morgan George Fredrick Morgan Judith Morgan Neil Morgan Robert Ray Morgan Anna Grimaldi Morosoff Donald S. Morris Helen Holt Morrison Laura Anne Morrison Linsey Noelle Morrison R. Edward Morrissett, Jr. James A. Morton Tracy Taft Morton Irene Moser Morris D. Moser Fred Morris Moss, Jr. George Henry Moss, Jr. Kay Kincaid Moss William Marion Moss Amal Mostafa Katharine Babcock Mountcastle Kenneth Franklin Mountcastle, Jr. James Edward Moyer Ruth Muller Ann G. Mullin Patrick J. Mullin Prue Mulrine Jay P. Mumma Susan G. Munroe Ethel Perzekow Murphy Timothy George Murphy Raymond L. Murray K. Darwin Murrell Margaret Cleary Myers Robert F. Myers Russell W. Myers William Kevin Myers Ava Hartman Nackman Lee Richard Nackman Julie Nalesnik Joseph Natale Linda A. Naylor Paul Douglas Naylor NC Museum of History James G. Neal Gregory Hepler Needham Ed Neely Gail A. Neely John Kendall Nelson Julianne Beth Nelson L. Nelson Laurie Jo Neuerburg Leslie Nelson David H. Neunert Victoria S. Neunert William Arthur Neustadt Quincy D. Newell Robert Barclay Newlin Christopher Newlon Elizabeth Newlon Francis Lanneau Newton Carol Nguyen Dianne Murray Nicholas Diana Schaedle Nicholson Sallie Nixon Thomas Jones Nixon IV Celine Noel Lisa R. Norberg Laurie Jane Norman Carolyn Elizabeth Norris David A. Norris Gary Norris Jane Snyder Norris Thomas Lloyd Norris, Jr. William H. Northacker Mike Norwood Robert Michael Nosow Phyllis Cole Noyes Robert D. Nudelman Susan K. Nutter Julie Blume Nye J. Ronald Oakley Christine Ewing Obert Lesley O’Brien Faith P. O’Donnell William J. O’Donnell Joyce Lanier Ogburn H. Patrick Oglesby Mary Norris Preyer Oglesby Dwight David Oland Jean Grubb O’Neal Megan Elizabeth O’Neill Yukio Ono Sherri Rho Ontjes Charlotte Orth John V. Orth Noreen Orth Richard Jay Osborne Edgar Otto Glenn Thomas Overcash James H. Ovitt* Kevin S. Owen Lora Susan Owen Roberta A. Owen Scott Owens Tammi Michele Owens Vicki Lynn Palefsky Laura Y. Palmer Judith M. Panitch David Earl Pardue, Jr. Rebecca Sharpe Pardue Jan Paris Leland M. Park Matilda McDonald Parker Scott Edward Parker William Baylies Parker, Jr. Jeanne Roethe Parrish E. Dudley Partrick, Jr. Richard Allen Paschal Dewey Harris Pate Andrew Henry Patterson III Jennifer McKay Patterson Ronnie Howard Patterson Elizabeth Ann Pauk Florence F. Peacock James L. Peacock III Thomas Rhea Peake Martha Woodard Pearlman Paul Sheldon Pearlman Mary Helen Pearsall James A. Pearsol Benjamin Gary Pease Jane H. Pease William H. Pease Robert Erwin Peaseley Wayne Peay Barbara Barrett Pedersen Lee Grant Pedersen Margaret Peeples Robert K. Peet Carol Frederick Pekar Susan Baker Pekarske Jennifer Michna Penn Steven Parnell Penn Priscilla Mae Penney Lee M. Penyak PEO Sisterhood Chapter X Anne J. Peoples Theda Perdue Jason Marc Perlmutter Daniel E. Perry Douglas Frank Perry Gail Perry Margaret Taylor Perry Mary Ellen Smith Perry Monica Pauline Petcovic Julie Sydnor Peterman Karen Blair Petersen Frederick George Petrick, Jr. Margaret C. Pfaff Richard W. Pfaff Betsy Sheely Pfenning H. Hyman Philips, Jr. Joy Lester Philips Nancy C. Phillips Richard A. Phillips James Edward Phoenix Terry Lee Pierce Ann Pike Bob Pike Ashmead Pringle Pipkin Craig Wesley Pippert Rorin Morse Platt Nelie de Kok Plourde Helen B. Poe James Frederick Poetzinger L. Frederick Pohl, Jr. David J. Polewka Marcy Leigh Policastro Jeffrey Kemp Politis Dean A. Pollack William Robert Pollard Scott Porter James Vincent Porto, Jr. Harold Bowman Poteat Sarah Parker Poteete Guy Glenn Potter Debbie Chaffin Potts Elizabeth Powell Claire Bledsoe Pratt Stephen Hamilton Pratt Oralia Preble-Niemi 24 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Dennis Adam Press William S. Price, Jr. Larry Carlton Pridgen Mary Lou Prieto Elizabeth C. Pringle John J. Pringle Martha Cole Pritcher Sonia Marie Privette Sara Elizabeth Pugh Patricia J. Pukkila Michael Johnston Putzel Joseph Vincent Quinn Zina Quinn John Allen Quintus Albert Rabil Janet Rabil William H. Race Colin Radford Merlyna Radford Vivian Raftery R. Lee Rainey Virginia Fohl Rainey Kerr Craige Ramsay II Bets Ramsey Louise Ramsey Sonia Rapapaport Derris Lea Raper Stephen Wilson Raper Rare Books &MSS Library OSU Benjamin Knox Rasmussen Gary C. Rasmussen Marilyn R. Rasmussen James Thomas Rast Erica Meyer Rauzin Diane Gambill Rawson C. Michael Ray Josephine Medlin Ray Yvonne Mettetal Rayburn Kenneth J. Reckford Monica P. Rector F. Marion Redd Peter W. Redfield Dale V. Reed Deborah Veasey Reed G. Gray Reed John Shelton Reed, Jr. Joy Forsythe Reed William R. Reed Dorie Reents-Budet Margaret Stamm Rees Philip Adrian Rees William Reese Benjamin Franklin Reeves William R. Reevy Mary Reichel Mr. and Mrs. Albert P. Reichert Albert P. Reichert, Jr. Burnam W. Reichert Jennifer Reichner Ann Lesslie Reid Bryan Reid Katharine Lee Reid Lowry Reid, Jr. Martin Karl Reidinger Robert Lewis Remsburg, Jr. Robert Lewis Remsburg III Tammi-Sue Sellati Remsburg Linwood Moninger Respess, Jr. Tucker Meyer Respess Alan Henry Reynolds David Edward Rhoades Lisa Brooks Rhoades Philip Alexander Rhodes, Jr. Sandra Danneman Rich Stephen Allan Rich Frank Michael Richards Van Waldron Richardson, Jr. Sandy Fleischman Richman Carla Rickerson Alton Rivers Connie Rivers Edward Denmore Robbins, Jr. Wanda Stewart Robbins Bennett W. C. Roberts David Ray Roberts James S. Roberts Jerry Travis Roberts Rosemary Roberts Snow Loy Roberts Hilda Froud Robinson Nancy Howes Robinson Peter John Robinson William Edmond Whiddon Robinson Beverly Scott Rodgers Katherine Jane Roggenkamp Tanya Orie Rogo Leonard William Rogoff Samuel Burke Rollins James William Romer Jane Wells Romer Adam Cortez Ronan Margaret Anne Rook Edward M. Rose Nancy Jane Rose Wendy Schreiber Rose Donald Karl Rosenberg Frieda Beilharz Rosenberg David Asher Rosenstein Alton Glenn Ross Frances Turner Ross Susan Cranford Ross David B. Roth Kathryn Tesh Roundtree Lynn Paul Roundtree Maria Rouphail David Sheldon Routh Jenny Duncan Routh Beth Lynn Rowe Marylou Rowe Michael Rowe Lynne Worley Royall Michelle Lee Royall Cornelia Boardman Royle David Brian Layton Royle John Allen Ruggles Rosalie Varn Ruggles Raquel M. Ruiz Carole E. Runnion Alice Sprenger Rupen Robert A. Rupen John Charles Rush Robert Perry Rushmore Gregory Reich Russ Shannon Edge Russ F. Kevin Russell John B. Russell John Spotswood Russell Peggy Taylor Russell Scott Christopher Russell John Butler Rutledge Beverly Bennett Rutstein Elizabeth Shreve Ryan John Morris Ryan Linda Saaremaa James Richard Saintsing Maria Lopez Salgado Bart Daniele Salvaggio M. David Samples Joshua Richard San Souci Gloria Sanchez Ann Beal Sanders Claire Ann Sanders Ed Sanders John Lassiter Sanders Lash Gaither Sanford, Jr. Diane Hyde Sasson Jack M. Sasson Ruth Clark Saunders Susan Murphy Saunders Jeanne Clifford Sawyer Carolyn Saylor Larry Saylor Anne L. Scaff Patricia Carruthers Scarborough William K. Scarborough Augusta Russel Scattergood Jay Henry Scattergood Jordan Michael Scepanski Frances Heutte Schaefer Stephen Peter Schaefer David Ben Schauer Michael Gerard Schell Lotte Schindel Christiane Schnaidt Deborah Rutchka Schneider Daniel Edward Schneider Leslie Bruton Schneider Robert Michael Schneider W. T. Schneider Barbara Brandon Schnorrenberg John Martin Schnorrenberg Erik Anton Schreiner Robert Charles Schreiner George Noel Schroeder Dorothy Cutting Schroeder Zsuzsi K. Schroeder J. Albert Schultz Jack Lamar Scism Nancy Fox Scism David Scott Jacqueline Rogers Scott John Layne Scott Vann Barden Scott, Jr. Peter George Seaman, Jr. Kacem Sebti 25 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Dhruva R. Sen Anne Lassiter Sessoms Betty Jordan Sessoms Faison Thomson Sessoms H. Douglas Sessoms* Frank Seta Julie Seta Jill K. Sexton William P. Sexton Pearl F. Seymour Robert E. Seymour, Jr. Vanessa Jasmine Shadoian David Shafer Tatjana Shapkina Carol Shaw Giles Freemont Shepherd III Steven Sherman Harold Bundick Shill III Dorothy Gray Shinn Ronald W. Shinn Jill Shires Angela Renee Shoffner Al Shpuntoff Linda Mothershed Shrader Richard Alexander Shrader Zhao Shuqing Carl M. Shy Eve Carol Shy Joan Leonard Sibley Thomas Edward Sibley Heather Lynn Siekkinen Darrin Simmons Debra Simon Herman Simon Ursula Simon George Lee Simpson III Nancy Barrett Simpson Stanley Albert Simpson* Anastatia Sims Jamie Kristine Sims Joel Michael Sipress Mabel Whedbee Sisco Eva Whetstone Sitton William Henry Skeels III John Harrison Skinner III G. William Small, Jr. June Marie Small Lindley Moffett Small Warren H. Small, Jr. Avena-Lyn Smith Brian Richard Smith Caroline Mitchell Smith Charles Smith Clarence Edwin Smith III Clyde Smith, Jr. Earl Jones Smith, Jr. Everard Hall Smith III Gary Lester Smith, Jr. Gilbert Dale Smith Jane C. Smith Jane Parker Smith Jeff Smith J. McNeill Smith, Jr. Jordan M. Smith Judith B. Smith Laura Robertson Smith Moyer Gray Smith, Sr. Natalia N. Smith Patricia Schoeberle Smith Ralph Kenan Smith William S. Smith William Whitfield Smith Young Merritt Smith, Jr. SMW Construction Inc. Helen Easter Snow James McNeil Snow Kay Griffith Snow Barbara H. Snyder Frank S. Snyder Glenn H. Snyder Geraldine Solomon Harriet S. Solomon Paul Solomon Stuart Solomon Richard A. Soloway Errol Shevket Somay David William Southern W. Keats Sparrow Patricia H. Spearman Robert W. Spearman Frances Keating Spencer Romulus Sanderson Spencer, Jr. Ross Dee Spencer Thomas Spencer Christopher Nils Spongberg Danielle Laura Spurlock Christine Stachowicz Philip A. Stadter Betsy Ross Howe Stafford J. Gilbert Stallings Betsy Kidd Starling James R. Starling R. Hall Starnes Marilee Haithcock Starr Douglas W. Steeples Diane Steinhaus Elizabeth Pittman Stephenson June Boddie Stephenson Lonnie George Stephenson Mary P. Stephenson Hugh Stevens George Stevenson, Jr. Joshua Tanner Stewart Pearson H. Stewart David Stick Carrie Langford Stockard J. Mitsi Stoioff Lee A. Stone Richard G. Stone George C. Stoney W. Gene Story Dale Oliver Stouch, Jr. Mary Stowell Walter Otis Stowell Lee Hylton Strange Carl William Stratton Diane Wheeler Strauss Joseph Strelka Ellen Ragan Strong George V. Strong Michael David Strother Keegan Fay Stroup Suzanne Yelverton Stroup Alan Raiford Strowd Anne Watson Strowd Elvin Emerson Strowd Tom Stumpf Don Sturkey Brian Sturm Frank Stutz Geraldine Dillard Stutz Shelton Ayers Styers Stan Styers Helen Margaret Sullivan Sharon Sullivan Theresa Christin Sullivan Brooke B. Sumerford Rees M. Sumerford Robert Franklin Summers Edith Shuford Summey John Hood Summey Richard Superfine Gerald D. Surh Bryan Sutton, Jr. Elizabeth Royall Sutton Lynn A. Sutton Maureen Elizabeth Sweeney Sue Szary Richard Szary Lori Ray Taggart C. Downing Tait, Jr. Toshiyuki Takamiya Richard J. Talbert James Mahan Tanner, Jr. Sarah Fearnside Tanner Marsha Huffman Tarte John A. Tate, Jr. Marjorie Warlick Tate Petrus W. Tax Charles Edwards Taylor David C. Taylor Diane Jackson Taylor Eben Taylor Edmund Taylor Hala Taylor James Harvey Taylor, Jr. Jay Taylor Jim Taylor Lawrence Arthur Taylor, Jr. Marian Dew Taylor Marian H. Taylor Michael William Taylor Roy Dail Taylor Sherry Taylor Susan Chandler Taylor Gregg Allan Teague Jordan Leigh Teague Jeffrey Allen Templeton Lee Templeton Linda Kay Ter Haar Liza M. Terll Elizabeth Cover Teviotdale Youli A. Theodosiadou Patricia Thibodeau Think Excellence LLC Anne Wall Thomas Gordon Montez Thomas Harry Osborne Thomas Janet A. Thomas L. Parke Thomas Sara Alice Folger Thomas Sharon Holmes Thomas Tiffany Diane Thomas Charles LeRoy Thompson James Lee Thompson, Jr. J. Mark Thompson Joseph Thomas Thompson II Lucinda Smith Thompson Najeema Washington Thompson Patricia Taylor Thompson Susan McCoy Thompson Vaida Diller Thompson Jeffrey Todd Thornton Mary Wise Thuesen David Lawrence Thurmond Helen R. Tibbo Tom Tiemann Paul H. Tiesinga Justin Elbert Tillett Andrew Barry Tilley Ernest Haywood Tilley Kristin Andrews Tilley Rollie Tillman, Jr. Robert Sullivan Tinkler Carol M. Tobin Kathy Todd Stuart Kittredge Todd Arrel D. Toews Delma Ross Tolan, Jr. Lisa Carol Tolbert John Butler Tomaro, Jr. Silvia Tomaskova 26 Includes all gifts received by the library from July 1, 2007, to June 30, 2008 Ginger Holloway Tomberlin Jason Earl Tomberlin Ashly Patricia-Ann Tomlinson F. Rogers Toms, Jr. Stella Anderson Trapp Margaret Ann Trauner Karyn Traut Thomas W. Traut Joseph Collins Travis Gary Evans Trawick Gary Randall Treadway Emma Treml Vladimir Guy Treml Edward Treverton Jane Wilroy Trinkley Stephanie Anne Trojan Ann Sagar Troxell Kyle Evan Troxell Carole Watterson Troxler George Wesley Troxler Albert Glenworth Trunnell III Amy Stokes Trunnell Shu-Chen Hung Tu James William Tucker Jill Bennett Tucker Robert Cinnamond Tucker Jennifer Jean Tuttle Curtis Andrew Twiddy Kathryn Ficklin Twiddy Monica L. Twork James Paul Tyndall, Jr. Martha Croxton Tyson Ruel Willoughby Tyson, Jr. Daniel E. Uyesato Genene Evans Uyesato Anne Van Arsdall Sabine Carolina van der Meulen Michael G. Van Fossen Carolyn H. Van Sant Renne Carol Vance David John Vandenbergh Lydia Bodman Vandenbergh J. Daniel Vann III Rebecca Brogden Vargha Michael James Varn Wayne R. Vason Kimberley Vassiliadis Carol Vatz Robert David Vatz Patricia J. Vaught Martha Mebane Verdery Marvin Davis Veronee Laura Greer Vick Jean Marshall Vickery Arthur Vidrine IV Sally Couch Vilas James Vincent Jeanne Vincent Mary O’Fallon Vinzani Joseph Viscomi Jane McKean Vogel Steve Vogel Frederick W. Vogler Robert Frederick Vogler Steven Boyd Wade Douglas Arthur Wait Eric Waldbaum Anne Waldman Daryl Farrington Walker Maegan Alyce Walker James William Wall Nina Gray Wallace Caroline Jane Walters Sally A. Walters Doris Moore Ward Gregory H. Ward Penny S. Ward Robert Marion Ward Ellen M. Wardlaw John Waller Wardlaw, Jr. Steven Alan Warner Jeffrey Dennis Warren Marie Zurl Warren Rebecca Drane Warren Elizabeth L. Warren-Mikes Sue Forbes Watson Ritchie Devon Watson, Jr. Molly Crowell Watters Deborah Theresa Watts Jane Ann Calhoun Weaver Suzanne Lowe Weerts Gerhard L. Weinberg Jannet I. Weinberg Edith Crockford Welch H. Lea Wells Elizabeth Hollers Welsby Kathleen Joanne Welshimer Barbara K. Wendell Robin H. Wendell Lynn Elise Wesson David McKinley West Walter Carr West III Peggy Watkins Wharton Richard Lindsey Wharton R. Andrew Wheeler Elizabeth Clarke Whitaker Shirley Blue Whitaker Deborah Harris Whitehead Donna Whitley Randah Ruth Whitley Alan Cochran Whitmore Floyd Gilbert Whitney III Robert Hamilton Wicker Donna Stroup Wightman R. Mark Wightman Geoffrey Wilcher Elizabeth Hardin Wiley Barbara McDonald Wilkerson J. Tracy Wilkerson Catherine Berryhill Williams J. Derek Williams J. Edgar Williams Jack Harrison Williams, Jr. Larry Howard Williams Laura Williams Daniel Lawrence Wilson Helen O. Wilson I. Glenn Wilson Lizabeth A. Wilson Robert Church Wilson IV Marjorie Lee Windelberg Christopher John Windolph John B. Winfield David N. Wirth Maggie Wirth Edmund M. Wise, Jr. Elisabeth H. Wise Jane Pettis Wiseman John Brent Wishart Karin Wittenborg Joseph S. Wittig Kathleen A. Wojciehowski Cheryl Wolf Edwin D. Wolf Marilyn D. Wood William Wade Wood James Allen Woolard Betty McFarland Wooldridge Alison Woomert Randolph Luther Worth Salli Parker Worth Susan Kay Wrenn Geoffrey William Wright Zachary Hayes Wright Geraldine Nada Wu Weimin Xi Margaretta Jane Yarborough Mark Yarborough YBP Library Services G. Smedes York Maurice Clifton York Rosemary Adair York Perry Deane Young Philip Young Ralph Franklin Young Ronald Edwin Young Thomas Wade Young Virginia C. Young Gregory Alan Yuziuk June Mary Zaccone Fatemeh Zafarani Joel Fredrick Zeugner Kimberly Frederick Zeugner Richard T. Zieger Elizabeth Bryant Zollinger Richard William Zollinger II Charles G. Zug III Honoring Gifts Received in Honor of the Following: Krishna Aluri Flora Hanchrow Jack Hanchrow Thomas Matthew Charles McNamara Daniel W. Patterson William S. and Virginia Powell Stephen Rich Memorial Gifts Gifts Received in Memory of the Following: Victor E. Bell, Jr. Samuel M. Boone M. Mailly Davis Walter Royal Davis Paul Debreczeny Isabel Eten Louise McGwigan Hall Laura Harris Don Higginbotham George Watts Hill, Jr. Ronald Hyatt Elmer G. Isley Margaret E. Isley Arnold Klapper Craig Michalak Nancy Mills Dorothy Moss Faryl S. Moss Shirley Glasser Murnick John Natale Claire M. Newman Marilyn Renzo Tom Shores Lois Strother Larry Thornton Ray B. Wesson, Jr. Agnes W. Whitton Earl Whitton John E. Wilson, Jr. Wilson Library Exhibits Through January 15, 2009 Campaigning and Race in the South 1890s - 1990s: Selections from the Southern Historical Collection Southern Historical Collection, 4th Floor Wilson Library Through January 31, 2009 Soapboxes and Tree Stumps: Political Campaigning in North Carolina North Carolina Collection Gallery Through March 15, 2009 Presenting John Keats Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room Friends of the Library Events November 20, 2008 A Celebration of the Six Millionth Volume in the University Library Collection Keats and His Circle: Reading Shakespeare Talk by Beth Lau, professor of English at California State University, Long Beach and author of Keats‘s Paradise Lost and Keats‘s Reading of the Romantic Poets. In conjunction with the exhibit opening of “Presenting John Keats,” the gift of the Six Millionth Volume to the University Library by the John Wesley and Anna Hodgin Hanes Foundation of Winston-Salem. 5:00 p.m. Reception, Melba Remig Saltarelli Room 5:45 p.m. Program, Pleasants Family Assembly Room December 11, 2008 16th Annual Winter Stories Program for Children of All Ages Brian Sturm, associate professor of information and library science, returns with spell-binding storytelling to continue this cherished tradition of words and music. 5:00 p.m. Reception, Lobby, Wilson Library 5:30 p.m. Program, Pleasants Family Assembly Room 27 Mark your Calendar The Sloane Art Library is revitalizing the atmosphere of research and study by using its 10-foot columns as the grounds for artwork by students. Shown here, "Floating in the Night," is the work of recent M.F.A. graduate Brad Reagan. For more information, please see our website at www.lib.unc.edu or 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 A Nursery of Patriotism: the University at War, 1861-1945 http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/exhibits /patriotism/ North Carolina Maps http://www.lib.unc.edu/dc/ncmaps/ Facing Controversy: Struggling with Capital Punishment in North Carolina http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/exhibits/penalty/ Visit these on the Web Medieval Medical Illustrations http://www.lib.unc.edu/dc/mackinney/ The Russia Beyond Russia (RBR) Digital Library http://www.lib.unc.edu/savine/RBR/ Campaigns and Causes: Political Memorabilia in North Carolina http://www.lib.unc.edu/ncc/ gallery/political/political.html |
OCLC number | 24857570 |