Fall 2006 - UNC Libraries - UNC

U N I V E R S I T Y L I B R A R Y
www.lib.unc.edu
“The Undergrad”
evolves to meet
student needs
Published by the Friends of the Library • The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • Volume 15, number 2 • Fall 2006
Photograph by Crystal Street
Windows is published by the Friends
of the Library under the auspices of
the University Library, UNC-Chapel
Hill. Send requests and comments to
CB# 3920, Davis Library,
Chapel Hill, NC 27514-8890.
Interim Editor
Joanna Worrell
Editorial Board
Michele Fletcher
Peggy Myers
Writers
Michele Fletcher
Judy Panitch
Jan Paris
Joanna Worrell
Photographs
Stephen Fletcher
Bill Richards
Fred Stipe
Crystal Street
Thanks to
Rachel Canada
Robin S.D. Chen
Stephen Fletcher
Peggy Myers
Judy Panitch
Jan Paris
Sarah Poteete
Fred Stipe
Margaretta Yarborough
Design
Alison Duncan
New Specialties Extend Library’s Reach
When I began my career in
1970, the typical research library
was staffed by librarians and
library assistants, a few library
clerks, mail room staff, and perhaps a handyman. As library
operations have grown more complex over the last three decades,
libraries have welcomed employees who offer very different types of skills.
That is certainly the case at Carolina.
In reference services, for example,
specialties are multiplying. Amanda Henley,
our geographic information systems
(GIS) librarian, holds an M.A. in geography.
She guides researchers in the use of
sophisticated GIS software that brings the
power of computer mapping to a whole
range of research problems.
Our systems office employs nearly
20 people, including desktop computer specialists, server managers, applications programmers and Web page designers. Indeed,
technology is transforming jobs throughout
the library. Pam Sessoms, an expert in new
virtual reference systems that connect
patrons online in real time with a librarian,
also does programming and software set-up.
She additionally works with technologies
that enable people with disabilities to use
library materials and services.
The care of our collections requires
multiple specialties. Conservator Jan Paris
specializes in treating fine bindings and
antique papers. She is an expert in repairing large flat paper such as antique maps or
oversize Civil War muster sheets, making it
safe to handle them while preserving their
historical integrity. Preservation librarian
Andrew Hart administers a comprehensive
program of care for general collections so
that library resources are always available
for those who need them. He also integrates
traditional preservation methods, such as
bookbinding, with digitization and other new
technologies.
Management of our accounts and
business practices are in the hands of a
certified public accountant, Catherine
Gerdes. Mari Marsh, accredited as a senior
professional in human resources, is our
personnel officer. Two professional development officers, Michele Fletcher and Peggy
Myers, raise funds to support our programs.
Phil Vandermeer, a Ph.D. musicologist, oversees the Music Library.
Teresa Chapa, with a Ph.D. in Latin
American and Spanish literature,
selects Iberian and Latin American
publications for the library. Neil
Fulghum, keeper of the North
Carolina Collection Gallery, brings
museum training to the stewardship
and exhibit of the artifacts under his care.
Lately we have begun to require the
assistance of a lawyer, Deborah Gerhardt,
copyright and scholarly communications
director. Deborah’s review of licenses and
the electronic reserves program ensures
that library practices conform to copyright
law without relinquishing rights of fair use.
She advises faculty members about copyright considerations when they use images,
music clips and video in their work, and
about how to retain copyright in the books
and articles they publish.
I have heard visitors and new library
employees comment with surprise at the
varied skills and talents that today’s
research library requires. This is without
question one of the greatest changes in
libraries since my career began. At the
same time, Carolina’s librarians have never
wavered in their commitment to recruiting
and appointing outstanding staff, whether
from the library profession or, in recent
years, from other fields of expertise.
As part of that commitment to quality,
we seek to lead in all we do. In this issue of
Windows you will find evidence of leadership, from ongoing service improvements for
undergraduates, to a report on national
offices held by our librarians, to new gifts
that enhance our premier collections of
materials on the American South. If you talk
with any of the many leaders in Carolina’s
libraries, you will find intelligence, altruism,
faith in the value of research libraries and
concern that our patrons receive the best
possible service. This is as true of our new
specialists as it is of the excellent librarians
and staff we have traditionally employed.
There’s no question about it, the people of
Carolina’s library are among the University’s
greatest assets.
Photograph by Bill Richards
ON THE COVER: After observing the
photographs of Bill Bamberger and Margaret
Sartor on display at the Robert B. House
Undergraduate Library earlier this fall,
students record their reactions. The visit was
part of JOMC 102, “Exploring the Visual
World,” a class in visual literacy taught by
lecturer Jock Lauterer. One student reflected,
“It makes me want to go out and take a
picture, it’s so inspiring.”
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Many students, including senior
Lauren Russell, still use the
Undergrad for time-honored pen-andpaper assignments and study time.
Crystal Street
“The Undergrad” evolves
to meet student needs
secret. Now the lab features a storefront
with windows that make it visible to all
from the larger resource room.
According to Undergrad Librarian
Leah McGinnis Dunn, keeping the library
up-to-date is an important part of its
mission to introduce undergraduates to
Carolina’s libraries.
Since reopening in August 2002, she
and her staff have worked hard to continually meet the learning and informational
needs of today’s students by offering the
latest in technology.
“It’s really a technology-driven
library,” Dunn says. She cites the Media
Resources Center as a prime example.
The MRC, located in the lower level
of the Undergrad, offers a wide variety of
services and access to state-of-the-art
software and digital editing equipment.
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Its collection features thousands of
videos, documentaries and movies, as
well as hundreds of screenplays and
popular music on LP and CD. Many can
be checked out, and the MRC provides
viewing and listening facilities for
David Laney
When the R.B. House Undergraduate
Library reopened in August 2002 after a
major renovation, no one anticipated that
student demand would call for more construction less than four years later.
Thanks to the endowment for the
Undergrad, established by donors during
the Carolina First campaign, funds were
at hand to do what needed to be done –
keep up with services students need.
The digital media lab in the Library’s
Media Resources Center (MRC ) expanded
this summer to accommodate additional
workstations and meet the growing technological needs of students and other
library patrons.
Previously, the lab was only accessible through staff offices, making it hard to
find and allowing students who knew
about the lab to keep it a well-guarded
The revamped digital media lab in the
Media Resources Center features an
attractive storefront entrance.
Crystal Street
David Laney
The digital audio lab in the Media Resources Center features
an Apple PowerMac, 88-key weighted MIDI keyboard, mixing
board, and more, in addition to professional audio software.
in-house use.
The MRC’s Digital Media Lab, however, is quickly becoming one of the most
popular services among students and
faculty alike.
Originally, the multimedia editing lab
had only three workstations, but lab usage
over the first two years prompted the staff
to add three more stations in the existing
space.
According to Greg Klaiber, media labs
manager, the lab’s usage statistics in the
last year matched what they had been in
the previous three years combined. That
created the need for even more workstations to meet student demand for the
services.
To improve services this time, however, the lab underwent structural renovations, opening up new space for additional
workstations and giving it more visibility.
The renovations were funded by the
Undergraduate Library Endowment.
The lab now features 11 worksta-
While technology is quickly growing, the
Undergrad still contains magazine and book
collections for more traditional study.
tions, each containing a wide range of
video hardware and the latest professional
editing software. In addition, the lab
has two duplication stations with the
capability to copy up to seven CDs or
DVDs simultaneously.
An audio studio equipped with a variety of digital editing software completes
the lab’s offerings. The audio lab also features an 88-key weighted MIDI keyboard,
condenser mics and a mixing board.
Students use the lab for a variety of
reasons, from personal projects to class
assignments and everything in between.
Taylor Johnson, a junior
Communication Studies major, uses the
audio studio several times a week. He’s
producing an album for a local rap artist,
and he considers the studio’s recording
software and equipment a major benefit to
him. Although his work isn’t for a class,
Johnson points out the importance of
having this creative outlet in his life.
“Recording is a passion, a pastime
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and a stress reliever,” he says.
The lab is also a valuable tool for
many classes.
Heather Ross, an English graduate
student and senior teaching fellow at
the University, has used the MRC and its
editing lab in her classes for the past
several years.
Students in her ENGL 102 class
used the lab to produce public service
announcements for a class project.
Students worked in small groups and
spent five weeks planning, filming and
editing the PSAs on addictive diseases.
They used the MRC for all technical
aspects of the production, from renting
cameras and light kits to editing the
videos in the digital labs.
This semester, Ross teaches a
self-designed class that relies heavily on
the MRC’s resources. “Documenting this
American Life” requires students to
create a collection of documentaries
or short films. Like her other class, the
students use the MRC for all aspects of
the production.
Creating video projects has become
so popular that 39 students are enrolled
in the class. According to Ross, many of
those were students who had taken her
composition class and wanted to keep
doing video projects.
Ross notes the importance of
integrating technology in a student’s
education.
“The students coming through today
grew up with this technology,” she says.
“To keep pace with them we have to
integrate technology as a resource.”
She also sees technology as an
incentive to get the students to learn
more.
“I’m taking something that has entertainment value for them in their personal
lives and letting them apply that technology in an academic setting,” Ross says.
“It engages them, and I can get more out
of them in the classroom.”
Closely related to the MRC is the
Collaboratory, which is designed to
support faculty members’ online course
“The students coming
through today grew up
with this technology.
To keep pace with them
we have to integrate
technology as a resource.”
HEATHER ROSS
English graduate student and
senior teaching fellow
development and student digital and
multimedia projects.
The Collaboratory, based in the
Claude and Sarah Snow Room and one
other room, features PCs and Macs,
scanners and a variety of design,
multimedia and productivity software.
While the digital media capabilities
offered by the Undergrad are an
important part of academic and library
life for students and other library
patrons, the Undergrad’s status as a
technology-oriented library is not
necessarily the standard.
“One thing that makes our services
unique is that we are library-funded and
managed,” says Winifred Fordham Metz,
librarian and head of the Media
Resources Center. “A lot of other
schools’ media centers are funded
through information technology offices or
other administrative units.” At Carolina,
library administration felt services and
collections belong together whenever
possible.
According to Dunn, the Undergrad is
continually evolving to meet student
needs. Plans are currently in the works
to create group presentation practice
spaces so that students can have a place
to practice multimedia presentations.
And for those who still regard
reading books and magazines in the
library as major memories of undergraduate life, do not fret. House Library is
keeping current book and periodical
collections and the stacks are filled daily
with students who read and browse in
ways that remain familiar.
Crystal Street
Students work on editing projects in the Digital Media Lab.
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Granddaughter enhances R. B. House Library
with gift of photos
Bill Bamberger
“Leaf Burning,” Bahama, N.C., 1980.
Works by internationally known
North Carolina photographers now are on
display in the Robert B. House
Undergraduate Library.
Ann Stewart, a Chapel Hill art
consultant who represents the artists,
donated the photos recently to the
University Library. She is the granddaughter of House, chancellor of the
university from 1945 to 1957, for whom
the library is named.
“I’m thrilled that this wonderful art
will have a permanent home in the House
library,” Stewart said.
Ten large-format black and white
prints by two of the photographers —
Bill Bamberger and Margaret Sartor —
were hung in the Christopher B. Smith
Instructional Lab on the library’s main
floor, room 124. A 40-by-50-inch color
mural by Alex Harris also recently joined
them. The photos depict scenes of the
American South from the early 1980s
through 2002.
The photographers are well-established artists and authors, Stewart said.
Their works are in the permanent
collections of major museums including
the San Francisco Museum of Modern
Art, the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los
Angeles, the Museum of Modern Art and
the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New
York and the North Carolina Museum of
Art in Raleigh.
Since the Undergraduate Library
was renovated in 2002, placing quality
artwork there has been a priority of the
UNC Library’s public art committee, said
Kate Barnhart, committee chair and an
assistant in the library of the School of
Information and Library Science.
The value of the photographs counts
toward the University’s Carolina First
Campaign goal of $2 billion.
All three artists have UNC connections. Bamberger attended the university
on a Morehead Scholarship, a four-year
merit award, graduating in 1979. Sartor
graduated in 1981. Harris has taught
American studies courses.
Stewart’s ties to UNC go beyond her
kinship with House. She was a student
in Carolina’s religious studies department
in the 1970s and has served on the
advisory board of the UNC Institute for
the Arts and Humanities. Her father,
William S. Stewart, was a business law
professor at Carolina.
Stewart said she and the artists are
very pleased that the photographs will
be on permanent display in the library:
“To have the photography live by having
it seen all the time is a wonderful thing.”
Because the lab is sometimes used
for classes, visitors are encouraged to
call the library at (919) 962-1355 before
visiting.
A student in Jock Lauterer’s photography class
studies “Katherine in the Playhouse Built by
her Father,” by Margaret Sartor. The students
used a class session in September to
view and study the photos.
Crystal Street
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DocSouth Launches “The First Century of
the First State University”
Documenting the American South
launched “The First Century of the First
State University” on June 19, 2006. This
collection presents a wealth of sources
documenting the creation and growth of
the University of North Carolina during
the period from 1776 to 1875.
These primary sources include
letters, books, maps, receipts, bills,
subscription lists, trustee and faculty
meeting minutes, architectural drawings
and catalogs.
Most of the materials in the collection are from the University Library of
the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, primarily the North
Carolina Collection, the Southern
Historical Collection, and the University
Archives, with additional documents
supplied by the North Carolina State
Archives and Columbia University.
The collection was funded by the
University Library, using monies primarily from the Samuel and Gertrude Willis
Memorial Fund. This funding permitted
the selection, transcription, digitization
and encoding of 319 manuscripts (1,250
scanned page images with text transcription), 24 books and the creation of
273 biographical sketches.
“The First Century of the First State
University” begins with the documents
that outline the General Assembly’s creation of a board to oversee “an university supported by permanent funds,” and
William R. Davie’s description of the
land upon which the school would be
built. The collection goes on to chronicle
the university’s growth as well as the
lives of UNC faculty, staff, trustees and
students.
The hundred-year growth of the
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university ends with the hardships
brought on by the Civil War and then
Reconstruction, and several documents
demonstrate the difficulties the university struggled with as it closed its first
century.
“The First Century of the First State
University” complements “True and
Candid Compositions: The Lives and
Writings of Antebellum Students at the
University of North Carolina.” Between
these two collections, users can browse
and search 440 primary documents by
proper names, including personal
names, places, and organizations.
To visit “The First Century of the
First State University,” go to http://
docsouth.unc.edu/unc/.
ABOVE: Old East, ca. 1797. Pen and ink
sketch by John Pettigrew. From the North
Carolina Collection Photographic Archives.
Dooley Family donates
letters of Civil War soldier,
creates endowment
After Robert W. Parker joined the
Second Virginia Cavalry in 1861, he
wrote to his loved ones whenever he
could.
Some letters reflected the grueling
life of the soldier — complaints about
rations and camp routines, requests for
clothing, horses and ink. Others captured the uncertainty of life in wartime:
“Dear Beck,” he began in 1863 to
his wife, Rebecca, “Though this note
may never reach you there is nothing
like trying to get one to you [sic] Of
course, you have been in great suspense
as to my being dead or alive.”
Parker’s letters, dating through
almost all of the Civil War, now speak to
modern readers from a new home in the
Southern Historical Collection of Wilson
Library.
The Dooley family of Charlotte,
Parker’s descendants, recently donated
the 350-item Robert W. Parker Papers
to the library. The family also
Fred Stipe
Standing (left to right): Elizabeth Dooley, Nina Dooley McLean, Rebecca McLean, Robert
Dooley, Anne Dooley, Susan Dooley ’82, Carolina Dooley, Catherine Dooley, Nancy Lee
McLean, and David Dooley ’86. Seated (left to right): Helen Dooley, Nancy and Tom Dooley,
and Laura Dooley.
8
established the Parker-Dooley Fund for
Southern History with a gift of $250,000
to the Southern Historical Collection.
The gift counts toward the university’s Carolina First Campaign goal of
$2 billion.
“This is the final chapter and a
new beginning in the journey of a family
treasure that started with my greatgrandfather’s first letter,” said David
Dooley, executive vice president at
Charlotte-based R.T. Dooley
Construction Co.
The papers complement strong Civil
War collections already held by the UNC
Library, said Tim West, manuscripts
curator and director of the Southern
Historical Collection.
“We have hundreds of collections
featuring letters from soldiers,” West
said. “However, it’s rare to see a run of
correspondence that covers the war in
Virginia from the very beginning to the
very end.” Approximately 300 of the
letters are from Parker to his wife, his
parents and other relatives.
West expects the collection to
attract researchers interested in
military life and in the way the war
affected families. “You come to understand that these were real people
living day-by-day in extremely trying
circumstances,” said West. “You get a
sense of what the typical Confederate
soldier felt and understood about what
was happening.”
The human dimension of the story is
heightened, West said, by its end.
Although Parker saw relatively little
14 months left to reach goal
combat over the course of the war, he
was killed in 1865 at Appomattox
Courthouse, the war’s final battle before
the surrender of Robert E. Lee. He died
just 40-50 miles from his home near
Bedford, Va., which then was called
Liberty.
The saga of the letters did not end
with Parker’s death. In recent years, the
Dooley family had the letters professionally conserved, transcribed and bound.
They also consulted Dr. Peter S.
Carmichael, a historian at the University
of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Carmichael enlisted one of his
students, Catherine Wright, who
graduated recently with a master’s
degree in history. Over the past year,
Wright annotated the transcripts,
explaining and identifying places and
people mentioned in the letters.
She also wrote analyses of Parker’s
views and an introduction, then grouped
these elements and the transcripts into
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The Library
remains on track
to achieve its
ambitious goal of
raising $35 million by December
31, 2007, with
$30 million in hand. New donors, like
the Dooley family featured on this
page, and longtime donors, including
Trent Ragland and Howard
Holsenbeck, helped make the 2006
fundraising year a good one. Gifts
continue to give our Library a competitive edge in making collections and
services available to the entire community. We hope more Friends supporters will step up to help us meet or
even surpass this challenge in the
remaining months.
Two donors with long ties to the
Library left significant bequests in the
past year. Gloria Clancy Briggs (’46)
left $50,000 to the Warren Briggs
(’71) Jr. Memorial Fund. Established
by Gloria and her husband, Warren,
after the death of their son in 1982,
the fund supports acquisitions in philosophy. Her bequest more than doubled the principal of the endowment
and will help support the research
and study of students and faculty
members in one of Carolina’s topranked departments.
Elizabeth Grier Bolton (’33, MLS
’53) was a longtime librarian at
Carolina. After her retirement she
pursued her poetry and was for a
number of years a lively interviewer on
the local cable access television channel and a regular attendee of Friends
of the Library events. She left more
than $60,000 to the Library’s unrestricted endowment for use at the
University Librarian’s discretion.
Melba Remig Saltarelli ’57 and
her husband, Cedio, introduced
Melba’s aunt Hazel Storer to Sarah
Michalak, Tim West and me in order
to arrange a splendid and unusual gift
of papers to the Southern Historical
Collection. Mrs. Storer’s late husband
Douglas was the marketing genius
behind the original “Ripley’s Believe it
or Not” and later, he and she were
involved in the early days of television
and broadcast journalism. Her
bequest of papers, tapes and memorabilia that document their long
careers includes one of the original
chimes that rang out “NBC” on national television and a very early portable
television.
Excerpts from Robert W.
Parker’s letters to his wife,
Rebecca
Waterford, Loudon Cty, Nov. 11, 1861
“…A toungue cannot express the pleasure it would offer me to be with you and
the sweet little babe if to stay but a few
minutes you can’t imagine how bad I
want to see you both. I received the
little lock of his hair you sent me in
mas letter I think it the pretties little
lock I ever saw. I hardly know what
color to call it. It is not very lite or dark
it seems to be between the two. Take
good care of him which I know you will
and kiss him for me…”
March 10, 1865 (one of the last
letters Parker wrote before his death
at Appomattox Courthouse)
Excerpt from Rebecca’s letter
to Robert, May 16, 1862
“…I reckon you are getting anxious to
hear from poor little Moorman again, as
he was very sick when I wrote last; but I
am more than glad to inform you he
has got well again; and is now playing
his shadow on the wall; I had no idea
this time last week that he would live
two days longer; but he is still spaired
to cheer my drooping spirits with his
sweet prattle and winning ways; he
feels more precious to me than ever; I
tried to make up my mind to give him
up willingly, but I couldn’t do it, I finally
concluded I could give him up if you
could see him first; but I don’t believe
that would make any difference for he
seems to be a part of my existence;
and it would be almost like tearing life
itself away to take my precious babe
from me; Oh if you could only see him:
I hope you can come home soon.”
Fred Stipe
“…I have not been able to get any
reliable information as to where the
yankeys are but they have not been
nighed here than 20 miles of his place
and are said to be going down the river
reported 30 miles down the river this
morning but all this is rumours. I
suppose the generals know where they
are but we can’t find out all our troops
are in fine spirits and I think they will
do their duty I don’t know how to tell
you where or how to direct your letters
to me but hope to be able to inform
you in a day or two.”
Helen Dooley closely examines the Civil War letters of her great-great-great-great
grandfather, Robert W. Parker, in the Southern Historical Collection.
a proposed book. Her collection, with
the working title “Lee’s Last Casualty:
The Civil War Letters of Robert W.
Parker,” is being considered for
publication.
The transcripts are especially helpful because many of the originals are
hard to read, West said: “They reflect
the conditions in which they were written. Some of the papers are poor-quality
scraps, with torn sections and worn
areas, and with cramped writing that
makes use of every available inch.”
When the time came to find a home
for their treasured documents, the
Dooleys turned to family friend Erskine
Bowles, president of the 16-campus
University of North Carolina. Bowles
connected the Dooleys with the
Southern Historical Collection.
West’s plans for the Parker-Dooley
Fund honor this UNC connection. A key
use of the endowment will be a competitive stipend to support graduate
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students and young faculty from UNC
institutions other than UNC-Chapel Hill
who wish to conduct research in the
Southern Historical Collection. West
also will establish a Parker-Dooley
Award to recognize excellent writing by
Carolina students based on Southern
Historical Collection holdings.
“I could not be more excited about
the impact the Parker-Dooley Fund can
have on the lives of faculty, students
and visiting scholars,” David Dooley
said. “As my family and I grow our
business, we have come to realize the
competitive advantage intellectual
capital plays in our success. A strong
university system plays into our strategy
and raises the knowledge tides for all
North Carolinians.”
The Southern Historical Collection
in Wilson Library is open from 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Mondays through Fridays and
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays. For more
information, call (919) 962-1345.
Branch donates collection to Library
interviews that he recorded with leading
figures of the Civil Rights movement and
experts in the field. Ralph D. Abernathy,
Harry Belafonte, Kwame Toure (Stokely
Carmichael), James Farmer and Sargent
Shriver are all represented.
Dr. William Ferris, Joel R.
Williamson eminent professor of history
and senior associate director of the
Center for the Study of the American
South says that Branch’s work is essential to our understanding of the civil
rights movement.
“The oral histories that Taylor
Branch conducted are truly a national
treasure,” says Ferris. “This collection
constitutes a legacy for future generations who will seek to understand the
civil rights movement and the courageous people who made it possible.”
Stephen Fletcher
Taylor Branch, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of the three-part history
America in the King Years spoke at the
University in April to celebrate the
opening of the Taylor Branch Collection
in the Southern Historical Collection in
Wilson Library.
In addition to speaking on “Miracles
and Myths from the King Years,” Branch
was also on hand for a reception and
book signing.
Branch’s appearance marked both
the conclusion of America in the King
Years and the beginning of a next life for
the painstaking notes, drafts and
recorded interviews that Branch has
donated to the University Library and
which are now available for use.
The centerpiece of the Branch
Collection is more than 500 hours of
Wilson Library Honors William S. Powell
1) Gimghoul Castle, home to a
secret student society, has
members at which university?
A) Duke University
B) UNC-Chapel Hill
C) Wake Forest University
D) Elon University
2) Which North Carolina-born
president declared war on Mexico
on 13 May 1846?
A) Andrew Johnson
B) James K. Polk
C) Andrew Jackson
D) None of the above
3) Mount Mitchell is
A) The highest point in the eastern
United States
B) One of the oldest rock formations
in the United States
C) The highest point in North Carolina
D) All of the above
4) Where did Caleb Bradham invent
Pepsi-Cola in 1893?
A) Raleigh
B) Durham
C) Greensboro
D) New Bern
Answers: 1. B, 2. B, 3. D, 4. D
On Thursday, Nov. 30, Wilson Library
will hold a publication celebration to
honor William S. Powell, editor of the
Encyclopedia of North Carolina. The book
is being published by UNC Press this fall.
A reception will take place at 5 p.m.
in the Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit
Room, with the program following at
6 p.m. in the Pleasants Family Assembly
Room.
Test your knowledge of North
Carolina facts by taking the following quiz
based on information in the Encyclopedia
of North Carolina. Answers can be found
below.
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Based on entries from the Encyclopedia of
North Carolina, edited by William S. Powell,
the University of North Carolina Press, published in association with the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library, 2006.
Visit www.encylopediaofnorthcarolina.org.
Honor Roll of Giving
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2005, to June 30, 2006
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.
Bell Tower
H. Murray Sawyer, Jr.
Nancy Howard Sitterson
Frances Angas Weaver
Patrons
$1,000 – $9,999
Zelda Bernard
Gloria Nassif Blythe
J. Melvin Bowen
Frederick Baker Bridgers
Charles Wilson Broadwell
Mary Earle Brown
Neilson Brown
H. David Bruton
Norwood Eason Bryan, Jr.
John Woodfin Burress III
Mohammed Mujtaba Dar
Dave McAlister Davis
Joan Barber Davis
Fred Hyams Deaton, Jr.
Emilie Patton de Luca
John Taylor Doggett
Erica Riefenberg Donnalley
Kevin Thomas Donnalley
Michael Nathan Driscoll
Jackson Elliott Dube, Jr.
Kate Edgar
Eli N. Evans
John P. Evans
Pat Evans
Florence Fearrington
Frank John Fischer III
C. Rush Hamrick, Jr.
Charles Clement Hargrave
Elizabeth George Hargrave
Margaret Taylor Harper
Mary Ann Harrell
Louis Harris
C. Bryce Hartley II
Anna Ragland Hayes
Charles H. Hendricks
Harrell Bruce Hill
Carl Christian Hoffmann
Kathleen Perkerson Hoffmann
Susan Winstead Holderness
and Kenneth Floyd Ledford
Phyllis Hale Hollowell
Kirston C. Johnson
Dana Borden Lacy
Annie Gray Calhoun Lane
R. Scott Langley, Jr.
Linda Susan Lee
Edward G. Lilly, Jr.
Nancy Cobb Lilly
Lena Dunn Lo
Eleanor G. Lowet
Henry Augustus Lowet
Richard Byron Lupton
Calvin Lytle
J. Ross Macdonald
Margaret T. Macdonald
Hannah Lacob Malkin
Moses Montefiore Malkin
Betty Ray McCain
$25,000 or more
Daniel Lewis Bernstein
Elizabeth Grier Bolton (Estate)
Gloria Clancy Briggs (Estate)
Nancy Faison Bryson
Vaughn Douglas Bryson
John Eugene Cay III
Clancy and Theys Construction Co.
Arthur St. Clair DeBerry
Robert T. Dooley, Jr.
Susan K. Fellner
W. Howard Holsenbeck
Richard James Murphy*
Possum Town Photographs, Inc.
W. Trent Ragland, Jr.
Edward Calvin Smith, Jr.
Jo Allison Clary Smith
Hazel Anderson Storer (Estate)
Don Sturkey
Benefactors
$10,000 – $24,999
Richard E. Ballard
Thomas Braswell Battle
Jack Bernhardt
Hope Holding Connell
John Hewlette Connell
Sarah Irwin Davis
David Sanders Dooley
Robert T. Dooley III
Robert Douglas Gillikin
Jane Ross Hammer
Frank Borden Hanes, Sr.
Frances P. London
Paul J. Magnarella
James Edward Maloney
Sunanda McGarvey
Nina Dooley McLean
Lisa Ann Napp
Ready Mixed Concrete Co.
Randall Maitland Roden
and Ann Stewart
Subir Roy
The postcards pictured on the following pages are from the collection of Durwood
Barbour of Raleigh (UNC Class of 1952). Mr. Barbour is in the process of donating
his collection of 7,500 historical postcards to the North Carolina Collection.
Mary Louise Bizzell Burress
Leah Burt
Thomas Roberts Cannon
William Sherard Chapman, Jr.
Shirley S. Chase
Kathryn Virginia Clancy
Evangeline Hinson Clark
Robert Burns Clark, Jr.
E. Wilson Coffin
Ben M. Covington, Jr.
Philip Robert Cree
Thomas Hampton Cuthbertson
Robert Joseph Dabal
Archibald Taylor Fort
Joseph L. Giles
David Robinson Godschalk
Lallie Moore Godschalk
Anne Howell Gray
Bernard Gray
John Gray
Josephine Whitman Gray
Archie Green
Gail Harrison Grossman
Steven Howard Grossman
Elise Pettrey Guthridge
William Wallace Guthridge
Abram Dalton Jones
Ben M. Jones III
Houston G. Jones
Raymond Henderson Jones, Jr.
Melinda Margaret Kaiser
Clarence Higgins Keller
Joyce Dickman Keller
John Thomas Kelly III
Thomas Stephen Kenan III
A. Larkin Kirkman
Rosa Dickinson Kirkman
Bernard Klingenstein
Kimberly Kyser
12
Dolly McGinn
Edmund McIlhenny
Pamela G. McIlhenny
Sally McKinnon
Craig L. Michalak
Sarah C. Michalak
Cathy Dawn Moore
Judith Morgan
Neil Morgan
William A. Morgan
Eleanor Saunders Morris
McLendon Graham Morris
Mary Nunn Morrow
David C. Morton
Faryl Sims Moss
Kenneth Franklin Mountcastle, Jr.
Charles Stephens Norwood, Jr.
Mary Norris Preyer Oglesby
Dwight Stephen Oldham
Malcolm Overstreet Partin
Debra Lynn Patrick
Henry Charles Pearson
Edward R. Perl
Marjorie P. Perl
Kevin Michael Phillips
C. Edward Pleasants
Nancy Thompson Pleasants
Evelyn M. Poole-Kober
Farrel Franklin Potts
Welsh Davidson Potts
Virginia Waldrop Powell
William Stevens Powell
Oralia Preble-Niemi
J. Norfleet Pruden III
Alfred L. Purrington III
Charles James Ragland, Jr.
Nancy Anne Ader Ragland
Erica Meyer Rauzin
C. Russell Reynolds
Sandra Danneman Rich
Stephen Allan Rich
Phyllis J. Ringler
John Minott Rivers, Jr.
Martha Borden Roberson
Wilborn Murray Roberson
Edward Rolen
Edward Tyler Rollins, Jr.
Kelly Leigh Ross and
William David Whisenant
Janice Hurst Rostan
John Peter Rostan III
John Spotswood Russell
Sallie Shuping Russell
Barbara Burch Safford
Cedio S. Saltarelli
Melba Remig Saltarelli
Amy Greenwood Sawyer
W. Braxton Schell
Robert Charles Schreiner
Catherine Schweitzer
Christoph E. Schweitzer
Charles Milton Shaffer, Jr.
Adrian A. Shelton
Robert N. Shelton
Laura Weatherspoon Shwedo
Allen Coleman Smith
Debbie Smith
Moyer Gray Smith, Jr.
Claude Henry Snow, Jr.
Sarah Turnbull Snow
Herbert Norris Snowden III
C. Dixon Spangler, Jr.
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2005, to June 30, 2006
Ann Lewallen Spencer
C. B. Squire
Richard Oates Steele
Samuel Coburn Stringfield
Chester Hogan Sykes
Nancy King Tanner
Pell Tanner
Blossom McGarrity Tindall
George Brown Tindall
Charles Brent Trexler, Jr.
James Paul Tyndall, Jr.
Timothy B. Tyson
Janet Von der Heide
Neva A. Wall
Charles M. Weiss
Shirley F. Weiss
Molly Johnson Weston
Willis Padgett Whichard
Jane Robinson Whitaker
William Asbury Whitaker
Nancy Hanes White
Cathleen Pappas Whitted
J. Turner Whitted
Ashley Lefler Wilson
John Wilson
John Bernhardt Wilson, Jr.
Susan Prasse Winston
Jonathan Yardley
Ralph Franklin Young
Virginia C. Young
Megan Wetherill Ziglar
William Richard Ziglar
Kay M. Anthony
Robert G. Anthony, Jr.
Jon D. Arrington
Jamin Frederick Asay
Rebecca W. Ashburn
Brent William Ashcraft
Michael Joseph Auer
William Thomas Auman
Edward Robert Austin
Susan Lipman Austin
Laurence G. Avery
F. Gloyd Awalt, Jr.
Varnell Badgett
Stephanie Jackson Bagwell
Benjamin Bailey, Jr.
Dean A. Bailey
Raymond Cone Barker III
William Lesko Barney
Mary Kate Barnhart
Frank Hauser Barr
Harriet Hylton Barr
Milly S. Barranger
Phyllis Campbell Barrett
Doris Hasty Barron
Anna Stout Barry
Colin Kelly Batten, Sr.
G. Scott Batten
Paul John Bauer
Ayers Whitton Baughman
Clare Smith Baum
Walter Gibbs Baum
Joan Baxter
Margaret Green Berkowitz
Rhoda L. and Roger M.
Berkowitz
Stephen Asher Berkowitz
Edward Hiltner Bertram III
Nancy Castles Bertram
Mary Best
Thad Lewis Beyle
Elizabeth Ann Bezera
Mary Ellen Barnes Bierck
William H. Biggers
Laura Carpenter Bingham
Warren Louis Bingham
Catherine W. Bishir
John William Black, Jr.
Laura Hughes Blackley
Kathleen Narum Bonfoey
Lori Ann Bono
The Bookshop, Inc.
Robert Hanes Borden
Henry C. Boren
Donald Arthur Boulton
Maryellen Bowers
Wayne A. Bowers
Ellen R. Bowman
Barbara Lane Boyd
William Perry Boyd
Stephanie Soroka Boyles
Wayne R. Boyles III
Robert Franklin Brabham, Jr.
William Henry Bracey
S. J. Bradley
J. Todd Bailey
Robert Rives Bailey
Cynthia Darlene Baker
Mary Layne Baker
Thelma Baker
Susan Bales
Rebecca Sutherland Ballentine
Ibrez Rafiq Bandukwala
O. Gordon Banks
Elizabeth Durham Banner
Leslie Banner
James Brown Barber
Jon Carr Barbour
M. Durwood Barbour
Gary Fenton Barefoot
John Calvin Barefoot
Walter Shepherd Barge
Jeffery S. Beam
Kevin Lloyd Beaman
Leanne Barnett Bean
Richard Paul Beaudry
Sheila Badger Beaudry
Margaret Woodhouse Becker
John William Becton
Cecelia Early Belk
Danny Bell, Jr.
Holly Mack Bell
John Luther Bell, Jr.
R. James Benedict, Jr.
Larry Kester Benninger
Christina Elizabeth Benson
Dale Monroe Bentz
Bernice I. Bergup
Anne B. Berkley
Canelia Hinnant Blackwell
Kendall Leon Blackwell
Stephen Alexander Blackwood
Lydia L. Blanton
Patricia Jane Blanton
Frank A. Blazich
Cheryl Jane Block
Elizabeth Susan Taylor Block
Lawrence Steven Block
George Beale Bloomer
Bob Dolan Books
Catherine Claire Bodin
Charles Boewe
John Charles Boger
Andrea Lee Bolland
Mark Evan Bonds
Sion Alford Boney
Alethea Bragg
Deborah Griffin Branton
Michael Gerald Branton
Gloria Clancy Briggs*
Warren Marshall Briggs
Carol Scovil Brinkley
Martin Hal Brinkley
Nancy Awbrey Brittain
Richard Lilly Broadwell
Mary Aldige Brogden
George Mercer Brooke, Jr.*
Martha Moffitt Brooks
Stephen Marshall Brooks
Steven Edwards Brooks
Charlotte Chandler Broughton
David Popham Broughton
Blaine Warren Brown
$10 – $999
Charles Marc Abbey
Patsy Bost Abell
Anne Churchwell Adams
Cynthia Clay Adams
LeNeve Hodges Adams
Ada Solutions
Ed Adkins and Hulene Hill
William McKenzie Aiken
Robert Albright
Larry Paul Alford
Barbara Carol Allen
Sidney Herman Allen, Jr.
Tiffany Eatman Allen
William L. Allen III
Shu An
Karen W. Andersen
Mary Sweaney Andersen
Jean B. Anderson
Paul Christopher Anderson
Rebecca Wooten Anderson
Sarah Lane Anderson
Suzanne Luter Anderson
Amanda Irvin Andresen
Walton White Andrews
Courtesy of Durwood Barbour
Friends
13
Edwin L. Brown
Jane Hetherington Brown
Joy Gann Brown
Lane Harvey Brown
Leslie Ellen Brown
Norman DePaul Brown
Herbert Howard Browne, Jr.
Clyde E. Browning
Mika Stegall Bruce
Susan Farmer Bruce
Eleanor Godfrey Bruno
Robin Riley Bryson
Rebecca Cole Bucci
James Wofford Buchanan, Sr.
Carl William Buchholz
Jeffrey Allen Buckwalter
Mary Jo Maxwell Buckwalter
Elizabeth Farrior Buford
Jane Bultman
Nannie Harbour Burby
Raymond Joseph Burby III
Margaret Elizabeth Burgwyn
John K. Burnett
Timothy Brooks Burnett
Sean Patrick Burrus
Brian Craig Butler
Clifford R. Butler, Jr.
Linda Lynch Butler
Lindley Smith Butler
Peggie Calhoun Byars
Francis John Byrd
John Lafayette Byrum
Andrew Cahan
Phyllis Cahoon
Lisa Jeffries Caldwell
Doris S. Calhoun
John Philip Call
Helen Beatty Callahan
Leigh Fleming Callahan
Mary Trimble Cameron
Alice Marable Campbell
Sue Catherine Campbell
Sharon Elizabeth Campen
Allan Rountree Cannon
Betty Gibson Cannon
Jeannette Cannon
Robert L. Cannon
Paul Teige Cantey
Leon J. Capetanos
Scott Edward Carlson
G. Watts Carr III
Charles Williams Carter, Jr.
H. William Carter, Jr.
Hilary Therese Carter
Leonard Hewell Carter, Jr.
James Woodrow Cartwright
Jerry Clyde Cashion
Audrey Harmon Cassibry
Frank David Castlebury III
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2005, to June 30, 2006
Christopher Ross Cox
Eppie Bennett Cox
Robert Vinsant Cox
Kent Leslie Coyle
M. Richard Cramer
Adelaide Austell Craver
Richard Davidson Craver
Tracy Brown Crawford
William Harris Crawford III
B. Grimes Williams Creasy
Mary C. Cridlebaugh
John Allen Crislip
Randolph Delano Crittenton
Jennifer Katherine Crow
Johan C. Cummings
John Duncan Currie, Jr.
Peggy Currie
Custom Brick Company, Inc.
Hildegarde O. R. Dahl
W. Grant Dahlstrom
Lewis Chandler Deans
Gillian M. Debreczeny
Paul Debreczeny
John H. De Carlo
Mardell De Carlo
Barbara Epps Deering
Thomas Searle Deering, Jr.
Anthony Roane Dees
Amelia Barnum Dees-Killette
Helen Roxlo Delp
Janie Johnson DeMario
Betty Hill Dennis
Mary Boyer Derr
Alan C. Dessen
John Patrick Devins
Deborah Carson Dibbert
Douglas Steven Dibbert
Bruce Dominick DiCintio
Laura Dickerson
Robert Arthur Dickson
Andrew Wayne Duncan
Betty Smith Duncan
Kenneth Malcolm Dunkley
Edwin Harper Dunlap
Elizabeth Bramm Dunn
William Edward Dunstan III
L. Daniel Duval III
Severn Parker Costin Duvall
Marilyn Dyer
William Alfred Early III
Barbara Ross Earnhardt
Leslie Frank Eason, Jr.
Connie Clare Eble
Roy A. Edelfelt
Charleen Greer Edge
Henry Ehrenhoft
Monica Marie Eiland
R. Michelle Ekanayake-Lin
Carolyn Worcester Elfland
Ernest L. Eliel
David Wesley Etchison
Blair Q. Evans
David H. Evans, Jr.
Elizabeth Evans
George J. Evans, Jr.
Helen Wolfe Evans
James Arnold Everett
Sarah Anne Everhart
J. Douglas Eyre
Olga Yobs Eyre
Arthur John Faint
Linda Lee Farmer
Robert Leon Farmer
Christina Lyndrup Farrell
Deborah Allen Fein
Tyler Neil Felgenhauer
Floyd Ferguson
Gordon James Ferguson
Thomas Russell Ferguson, Jr.
Laura Suzanne Fernandez
Robert Sethur Dalton
Sean Larry Dalton
Nan Dameron
Van Womack Daniel III
Jane M. Danielewicz
Lucy C. Daniels
Robert James Daniels
Mary Bandy Daughtry
Louis Markham Dauner
Dana Lynn Davenport
Susan Ann Davi
William A. Davidson III
Archibald Kimbrough Davis II
Archie H. Davis
Dwight Groome Davis, Jr.
Fred Davis
Harriet Davis
Nancy Katherine Davis
Thomas Fitzgerald Davis, Jr.
Robert Allen Dawkins
William Howard Deane
Victoria Green Dickson
Richard H. Diller
Blaine Dillon
Melissa Dillon
Richard Smith Dixon, Jr.
Charles Edgar Dobbin
Frank A. Dominguez
Patricia Buck Dominguez
Michael Marshall Dore
Judith Wimberly Dorminey
A. Anson Dorrance IV
Bret Michael Dougherty
Virginia Pou Doughton
Carolyn Green Dow
Mary C. Dowe
Linda Stopher Drake
E. Rick Dreibelbis
Timothy Charles Duffy
Roberta Ann Dunbar
Alison Shepherd Duncan
Allyson Duncan
Eva Eliel
Barbara Miriam Elkins
Philip Lovin Elliott, Jr.
Albert Luther Ellis III
Helen Scott Ellis
Mary Frances Best Ellis
Robert Anthony Ellison
Douglas Allen Elvers
Jennifer Jordan Engel
Patrick D. Engel
Roberta Ann Engleman
Ray English, Jr.
Raymond Alexander English
Sally-Hilda Erickson
Susan Joy Erickson
Carl W. Ernst
Sam J. Ervin IV
Joseph Dixon Eskridge, Jr.
George H. Esser
Nora Gaskin Esthimer
Steven William Esthimer
William R. Ferris
June Montague Ficklen
Donald Carl Fidler
Caroline Elizabeth Finch
Michael Edward Fincher
Elizabeth Marshall Fink
Michael Joseph Fischer
Elizabeth Weil Fisher
Micah Robert Fisher
Rebecka Rutledge Fisher and
Edwin B. Fisher, Jr.
Sandra Strawn Fisher
Thomas Grantham Fisher, Sr.
Daniel Jay Fishman
David Raymond Fitzsimmons II
Heather M. Fitzwilliam
Bernard Joseph Flatow
Leslie Allen Fleisher
Michele Wilson Fletcher
Joseph Martin Flora
Stephen Ray Flora
Courtesy of Durwood Barbour
Trudy Elizabeth Castlebury
John Claiborne Cates, Jr.
George H. V. Cecil
John Amherst Cecil
Nancy Cecil
Dino S. Cervigni
Catherine P. Chandler
John Edward Chandler III
Steven Alan Channing
Teresa Chapa
Norman Phillip Chapel
Gabriel Chau
James T. Cheatham III
Edwin Rives Cheek
Ying Chen
Elizabeth Ann Chenault
John Edward Chesser, Jr.
J. Ben Chilton
Stanley Chojnacki
Jewel Buffaloe Christian
Joseph A. Cima
James William Clark, Jr.
Jennifer Munro Clark
John Clark
Linda Loeb Clark
Michael A. Clarke
Scott Russell Clarke
Michael Jay Claxton
David R. Clemmons
Kathy Clemmons
T. Barrier Clendenin, Jr.
Phillip Edmond Cline
Rebecca Wrenn Cline
Robert Wayne Cline
R. Clark Cloyd
Robert Lee Cloyd
Bettie Tillitt Cobb
John Collier Cobb
Jimmy R. Coble
Ann Guiton Coburn
David Hampton Coe
John Shepard Cogswell
Jerry Cohen
Ronald D. Cohen
Joe Colavita
Harvey Colchamiro
Colchamiro Family Foundation
Rogers K. Coleman
Ruth Burton Collins
Heather Sue Conklin
Pamela Hays Connell
Jane S. Connelly
James Coffield Cooke, Jr.
Betty Bruton Cooney
Grady Cooper, Jr.
Leland Ross Cooper, Sr.
Lenox Gore Cooper, Jr.
Charlotte Copeland
Anne Eckerson Corley
Alice Robinson Cotten
Jerry Wayne Cotten
Patricia B. Courtright
Mona C. Couts
Cynthia Diane Cowan
Nancy Walker Cowan
Catherine Carlen Cox
14
Helen F. Flowers
Janet Loafman Flowers
John Baxton Flowers III
D. Glenn Fogle
Faith Underhill Fogle
Jaroslav Thayer Folda III
Linda Whitham Folda
Susan Childs Fonte
Janet Cummings Fortune
Timothy Andrew Foskey
Christopher Lee Fowler
Chesca Yvonne Fox
Cindy Beth Fox
Gwen Corbert Fox
William Henry Fox, Jr.
Elizabeth Fox-Genovese
John Hope Franklin
Margaret Ogilvy Franz
Diane Frazier
Rachel J. Frew
Ida Howell Friday
Lila Ponder Friday
William Clyde Friday
Richard T. Froyen
Patricia Kelley Fullagar
Nancy Scott Fuller
W. Erwin Fuller, Jr.
Margaret Ellen Fulton
Richard Benton Fuquay
Lilian R. Furst
Mary Kathleen Gallagher
William D. Galloway
George Raymond Gamble
James Towles Gardner, Jr.
Margaret Borden McKinnon
Gardner
Rebecca Lynn Gardner
Andrea Phillips Garner
Sanford Clyde Garner
Ronald Lewis Gatlin
Raymond Gavins
Samuel F. Gerber
Catherine Gerdes
Jerry Bruce Gershenhorn
Robert Coleman Gibbs
Gloria Shelton Gibson
John Kenneth Gibson
Bryan Albin Giemza
Robert Starr Gillam
Susan Ann Gilley
Harold L. Gillis, Sr.
Bernard Gilman
Donald Gilman, Jr.
Carol H. Girton
George Girton
Joseph T. Glathaar
Erica D. Glover
Deborah Jean Goessling
J. Christopher Goff
Keilah Kuzminski Goff
Meta Skinner Goff
Darlene B. Gooch
Kristen Lucille Gooch
Gregory Milton Goode
Harry Gooder
Samuel Haim Goodstein
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2005, to June 30, 2006
William R. Harmon
Susan Petty Harmon
Howard Harper
Trudier Harris
Katherine Gordon Harrison
Lee Kenion Hart
Oliver James Hart III
Jonathan Hartlyn
Patricia Neufeld Hartman
Peter David Hartman
Mack Wayne Harvey
Lesley Apple Haskell
Gabriella Riggio Haspel
Elizabeth Smith Hassell
Kelly Garrett Hawkins
Richard Dax Hawkins
Alice Cheshire Haywood
Katherine Emily Heck
Herbert Alan Hedden
David George Hedgecock
Ann Hillenbrand
K. Jackson Hilliard, Jr.
J. Ray Hinnant, Jr.
John Charles Hinson, Jr.
Linda Morse Hinson
Jane Gregory Hobson
William Patrick Hobson
Joshua Hockensmith
Steven Alan Hockfield
Dorothy Davis Hodder
Kirstie Hodge-Lopez
Louise Chapman Hoffman
Jean Holcomb
Janis Gail Holder
David L. Holdzkom
Roslyn Perper Holdzkom
Hilary White Holladay
J. Gill Holland
Siri Lugg Holland
Douglas Hollingsworth
Richard Howard Hudson
Catherine Williams Huemmer
Sue Cooper Huffman
G. Michael Hugo
John Leslie Humber
P. Scott Hummel
Jo Ann Hundley
Betty Debnam Hunt
Courtney Shelton Hunt
Douglass Hunt
William Robert Huntley
James Franklin Hurley III
Christopher Howard Hurst
Nicole Whisnant Hurst
T. Hoke Huss
R. Wayne Hutchins
Emily Elizabeth Huzl
Ronald Wesley Hyatt
W. Ron Hyatt
Richard P. Hydell
William Stuart James
George Javor
Angela M. Jeannet
Carey Jean Jefferson
John Lee Jernigan
Selena Shade Jimenez
Kathy Lanita John
Anne Hilliard Johnson
Mary Caldon Johnson
Rebecca R. Johnson
Karen Denise Johnson-Webb
Anne Marie Johnston
Joseph Andrew Johnston
Billy David Jolley
A. Wesley Jones
Arthur Francis Jones II
Debbie Jones
Gabriel Thomas Jones
Leslie Hartley Jones
Meriwynn Gaddis Jones
G. Jason Hedrick
Peter Niels Heller
Richard E. Lee Henderson
Susan Adelaide Henretta
Gayle Allen Henrotte
Jan G. Hensley
Emily Elizabeth Herbert
Andrew Michael Herman
John Peter Hernandez
William Dallas Herring
Patrick James Herron
Kristin Karwehl Herzog
Robert G. Heyneman
Katherine Jenner Higginbotham
R. Don Higginbotham
Susan Snyder Hight
Edward Arthur Hill
Jeanne Marie Hill
Kimberly Latta Hill
Michael Ray Hill
Sara Stockton Hill
Edward Shelton Holmes
Mary Hayes Barber Holmes
Deidre Holmes DuBois
Elizabeth Myatt Holsten
David Lowrey Holt
Home Health Agency of
Chapel Hill
Sandra E. Honnold
J. Reid Hooper
Michele Lynn Hooper
Barbara Thomas Horton
Kilby Dixon Hoskins
Edward Lee House, Jr.
Hilary Ren Howard
Molly Bullard Howard
Sherri Ivey Howard
Billy Shaw Howell, Jr.
Bobbye Jo Howell
Christopher Dean Howell
Erma Reep Hoyle
Ruth Alice Hoyle
Eric J. Hyman
John L. Idol
Eleanor Roberts Ilgen
William David Ilgen
Jennifer Ines
Annette Morrell Ingle
John Robert Ingle
A. G. Ingram
Alice Jane Graham Ingram*
Grayson Paul Isenberg
Khalid S. Ishaq
Mary R. Ishaq
Cheryl Lynn Kaufman Isley
Satoshi Ito
Bessie Ruth Jackson
Daniel Warren Jackson
John Alexander Jackson, Jr.
Walter A. Jackson
Betty Block James
Judith McNease James
Katherine James
Randall Dean Jones
Tracy Alonzo Jones
James M. Jordan
Mary Bland Josey
Nancy Campbell Joyner
Raymond Edward Joyner
Reid Lyon Joyner
Vivan Lee Tessier Joyner
Whitmel Madison Joyner
David Robert Jurman
Blair Cogdill Justice
Nancy Jennifer Kaiser
M. Keith Kapp
Joanne Chris Kares
Leah Robinson Karpen
Thelma Hancock Kasper
Harold L. Katz
Robert Charles Kaufman
Aubrey Alfred Keen
Anne Turner Keifer
John Conlon Keifer
Courtesy of Durwood Barbour
Michele Faye Gordon
Richard P. Gordon
L. R. Gorrell
Gilbert Gottlieb*
Karl David Gottschalk
Barry Goz
Rebecca Goz
Jeremy Charles Graham
Margaret Mooring Graham
Mark L. Graham II
Nicholas MacKenzie Graham
W. Reece Graham IV
Mary A. Graves
Russell B. Graves
Lyons Gray
Nancy Sue Grebenkemper
Bluma Kafka Greenberg
Ruth M. Greenberg
Jenifer King Greene
R. Terrance Greenlund
Gary Raymond Greer
Claudine Alonzo Gregorio
Marcella T. Grendler
Paul F. Grendler
Elizabeth Bragg Grey
E. Jeffrey Griffith
George Talmadge Grigsby, Jr.
Joe W. Grisham
David Ray Groce
Shendan Tarrou Grove
Jonathan Reed Grubbs
Priscilla Alden Guild
Eric David Gunzenhauser
Ramsdell Gurney, Jr.
Pickett Murray Guthrie
Joseph Dale Guyer
Lucy Haagen
Herbert Nelson Hackney
Jacqueline Hagan
Theodore E. Haigler, Jr.
John Forrest Haire
Peter Wilson Hairston, Jr.
Doris Weaver Haisley
Zesely Bryan Haislip, Jr.
Donald R. Hakes
Troy Kenneth Hales
John Hamilton Haley III
Katherine Romans Hall
Louise McGwigan Hall
Speed Hallman
Susan Walters Hallman
Megan C. Halsband
Alfred Thompson Hamilton, Jr.
Martha Elizabeth Hamilton
David Murray Hammer
Sarah Elizabeth Hamrick
F. Borden Hanes, Jr.
John William Hannah
Jennifer Ahn Hanner
James L. Hanrahan
John D. Hanrahan
Katie Ann Hanson
Barbara Russell Hardin
Paul Hardin
P. Curtis Hardy
Anne W. Harmon and
15
Noel DiMarinisi Kelley
Carol Ritzen Kem
Betty Kenan
C. L. Kendall
Anne McCarthy Kennedy
David Ray Kennedy
Edward D. Kennedy
Thomas Bishop Kennedy
William Benjamin Kennedy
John Nelson Kent
Lisa Motsinger Kerner
Theodore Charles Kerner, Jr.
James L. Kerr
Shilpa Madangopal Khatri
Fred Waggoner Kiger
Eleanor M. Kilgour
Frederick G. Kilgour*
Susan Warren Kimbrell
Ina G. Kimbrough
Mary McNease Kinard
Mark William Kindem
Cyrus Baldwin King
James Kimball King
Jane Shivell King
John Rutledge King
Caroline Connelly Kinlaw
Francis Harvey Kinlaw
David Franklin Kinney
Phillip J. Kirk, Jr.
Suzon O. Kister
Marymelda Hall Kizer
Jennifer Leigh Kiziah
Marjorie Holland Klem
Nadine Kloecker-Dunn
Michael Ray Knowles
Geoff Knudsen
Ann Gay Koegel
Jane Kolson
Kenneth Kolson
Robert Rodgers Korstad
Louise V. Kowalsky
Richard J. Kowalsky
Katherine Gray Kraft
Betty Leona Krimminger
Charles Kurzman
Ki-Yul Kwon
Shirley Lally
Madeleine Carter Lamb
Thomas Willis Lambeth
Lester Crawford Lamon
Selden Durgom Lamoureux
Ann Orgain Lane
E. Brent Lane
James Marion Laney
Ransom Andrew Langford
Stephen Douglas Largent, Jr.
Geraldine Gilmore Larson
S. Robert Lathan
John McChesney Latimer, Jr.
Katherine Armistead Latimer
Barbara Anne Lau
Catherine Grollman Lauritsen
Richard H. Lawson
Todd Layfer
Dan R. Leach
Derek Paul Leadbetter
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2005, to June 30, 2006
Arthur Sanders Marks
Sandra K. Marlow
Margaret Brown Maron
Jean Beeks Marston
Susan R. Marston
Caroline Rowe Martens
Christopher Sargent Martens
Harry Corpening Martin
R. William Martin
Julian D. Mason, Jr.
C. Knox Massey, Jr.
Mary Ann Keith Massey
Michael Allen Massey
Elizabeth Matheson
Donald G. Mathews
William Connie Mathis, Jr.
Elizabeth Anna Matson
Daniel Stewart Mattern
Roy Thomas Matthews
J. Douglas Mattox
Marty Hardin McGee
Matthew D. McGee
Katherine Tucker McGinnis
John Stephen McGovern
Susan Elizabeth McGrady
Eileen Lucy McGrath
Martha Winston McGrath
Margaret King McKinney
Henry A. McKinnon, Jr.
Bettie Haughton McLaughlin
Dorothy T. McLaughlin
S. Bryce McLaughlin
Edwin Ray McLean
William Sartor McLean
Sallie Armfield McMillion
James Potter McNab
Charles B. McNamara
Jane G. McNeary
Becca Marie McNeely
Genna Rae McNeil
Kaye Lanning Minchew
Barbara Lee Edwards Mineiro
Memory Farmer Mitchell
Joseph Pike Mitchener
Fred Gilbert Mock, Jr.
James C. Moeser
Sylvia Ann Moffitt
Laura-Leigh Gardner Mohr
Lynne Anne Mohrfeld
Claire Vickery Mongoven
Luke Mongoven
Fred Bruton Monroe
John Thaddeus Monroe, Jr.
Edward Davidson Montgomery, Jr.
L. Grayson Montgomery
Sandra Roberts Montgomery
Marvin Charles Mood
Anne Nichols Moore
Bradford Layton Moore
Cecelia D. Moore
George Henry Moss, Jr.
Kay Kincaid Moss
William Marion Moss
Conya Sacry Moye
James Edward Moyer
Ann G. Mullin
Patrick J. Mullin
Danny H. Mullis
Margaret Levy Mullis
Ethel Perzekow Murphy
Mary Teresa Murphy
Timothy George Murphy
William P. Murphy
K. Darwin Murrell
Lawrence Joseph Myers
Margaret Cleary Myers
Ava Hartman Nackman
Lee Richard Nackman
Tal Moshe Nahir
Donna Jean Nance
Mavis Tanner Mayer
Brandon James Maynard
E. Kevin Maynor
Robert Luzolo Mbemba
Angela Richardson McAfee
Jeffrey Alan McAfee
Stanley Ketron McAfee III
Leslie Carol McCall
Donna Haines McCann
William Howe McCarthy
Kimberly L. McCombs-Thornton
D. Robert McConnaughey
Carol Webster McCormack
Sara McCoy
William Octavius McCoy
Raymond William McCraw
Donald L. McCrickard
Eleanor Fowler McCrickard
John Goodman McDougald
Blair Moseley McDow
Barbara Disher McGeachy
Elizabeth Grimes McRae
Michael R. McVaugh
Steven Jay Melamut
Ted Alan Mellnik
Arthur Clayton Menius III
Paul Nathaniel Mermin
Gerald E. Meyer
Megan K. Meyer
Stephanie Nargesian Miksis
Margaret Ann Miles
Emily Von Borries Milks
Bradley Edward Miller
Carolynn Little Miller
Christopher Perry Miller
Helen R. Miller
Marjorie Penton Miller
Roger G. Miller
Stephanie Jones Miller
Charles Everette Mills
Barbara Bounds Milone
Charles Louis Milone
Dennis Duane Moore
James W. Moore
John Franklin Moore
Marie D. Moore
Steven Richard Moore
Terry Allen Moore, Jr.
Victor Bailey Moore, Jr.
Deborah Jane Moose
Ruth M. Moose
Barbara B. Moran
George Fredrick Morgan
Robert Ray Morgan
Anna Grimaldi Morosoff
Donald S. Morris
Jo Morris
Helen Holt Morrison
James Charles Morrison
Laura Anne Morrison
R. Edward Morrissett, Jr.
Jeanne Moskal
Fred Morris Moss, Jr.
Florence Thomas Nash
Joseph Natale
Linda A. Naylor
Paul Douglas Naylor
Donald Nelson
John Kendall Nelson
David H. Neunert
Victoria S. Neunert
William Arthur Neustadt
Kathryn Galloway Newkirk
Robert Barclay Newlin
Claire M. Newman
Francis Lanneau Newton
Kimberly McPhatter Newton
Louise Partrick Newton*
Dianne Murray Nicholas
Judith B. Nisbet
Sallie Nixon
Thomas Jones Nixon IV
Bob Nodelman
Celine Noel
Courtesy of Durwood Barbour
Laurie Taylor Leadbetter
Amy Mangual Leary
Charles Edward Leasure, Jr.
Harriet Quinn Leasure
J. Matthew Leatherman
Alice Pei-Ning Lee
Ann Donovan Lee
Eleanor Carroll Lee
Nancy Raquel Lee
Randall Walker Lee
Susan Dill Lee
Tamila Vines Lee
William Craig Leese
Nancy Y. Leinbach
Philip Leinbach
George Lensing, Jr.
David Roy Lent
Diane R. Leonard
Bridget Theresa Lerette
Jay Lester
Judy Lester
Kathleen Leutze
Seymour Myer Levin
Madeline G. Levine
Sheryl Joy Lieb-Kaplan
Page West Life
Stewart Lillard
Jeffrey Thomas Linder
LaDonna Bollinger Lindgren
William Clarke Lindley, Jr.
William Wesley Lindley
Elizabeth Baker Lindsey
Don Raymond Linn
Susan Ficker Linn
Ray Pate Linville
Isaac Thomas Littleton III
Xuefeng Liu
Patrick Christopher Livingood
William R. Loeser
Sarah Pullen Logan
Irving Hilburn Long
Walker Anderson Long
Betty C. Longiotti
Holly Lynn Loosen
Roger W. Lotchin
Patricia Anne Loverich
Patricia Hayman Lowry
C. Townsend Ludington, Jr.
Christina Anne Lund
Mary Lycan
David Maxwell Lyerly
Matthew Emery Mabry
Georgia Ann Machemer
Lucinda H. MacKethan
Andrew Lawrence Mackie
Aldo P. Magi
Darien Dorn Mahaffee
James Blair Malcolm
Jheanne Ranee Malit
Douglas Owen Malone
Hanson Rufus Malpass
Marc Christopher L. Mankins
John E. Manley
Richard Allan Mann
Jennifer Elizabeth Manning
L. J. Manuel
Matthew Francis Markie
16
Lisa R. Norberg
Laurie Jane Norman
Carolyn Elizabeth Norris
Phyllis Cole Noyes
Julie Blume Nye
J. Ronald Oakley
James Graham Oates, Jr.
Christine Ewing Obert
Sarah O’Brien
Jean Grubb O’Neal
Oliver Hamilton Orr, Jr.
Stephanie Cunningham Ortiz
Laurie Beth Osborne
Richard Jay Osborne
Toby Beth Osofsky
Louis Wood Otterbourg
Glenn Thomas Overcash
David Owens
Karen Lynn Paar
Ruth Palmquist
David Earl Pardue, Jr.
Jan Paris
Kristin Park
Leland M. Park
Elizabeth Graham Parker
Marie Smithwick Parker
Roy Parker, Jr.
Sarah Elizabeth Parker
Jeanne Roethe Parrish
E. Dudley Partrick, Jr.
Beth C. Paschal
Richard Allen Paschal
Dewey Harris Pate
Daniel Pater
Henry Newton Patterson, Jr.
Jennifer McKay Patterson
Ronnie Howard Patterson
James Singleton Patty
Charles Douglas Payet
Florence F. Peacock
James L. Peacock III
Peter Russell Peacock
Mary Helen Pearsall
Stanley William Pearson
Benjamin Gary Pease
Jane H. Pease
William H. Pease
Barbara Barrett Pedersen
Lee Grant Pedersen
Robert K. Peet
Carol Frederick Pekar
J. A. Pendergast
Jane-Clark Cheshire Penick
Jennifer Michna Penn
Steven Parnell Penn
A. Carl Penney
Pamela Poe Pepper
Phillip Landon Perkinson
Gail Perry
Julie Sydnor Peterman
Karen Blair Petersen
Karl Petersen
Frederick George Petrick, Jr.
Andrew Tertullian Petti
Margaret C. Pfaff
Richard W. Pfaff
Nancy Smith Pfeiffer
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2005, to June 30, 2006
Todd Steven Restel
David Edward Rhoades
Lisa Brooks Rhoades
Jonathan Stewart Rhyne
Robert Vann Richards
Van Waldron Richardson, Jr.
Merle U. Richey
Heather Louise Richwine
Joseph Michael Ritter
Alfonso Louis Rivellino
Matthew Scott Roberson
Bennett W. C. Roberts
Eric Michael Roberts
Jerry Travis Roberts
Peter John Robinson
Sally D. Robinson
Richard Andrew Rodden
Beverly Scott Rodgers
Mary Breazeale Roe
Larry Roediger
Rosalie Varn Ruggles
Raquel M. Ruiz
John Charles Rush
Robert Perry Rushmore
Catherine Rose Rusin
Robert Brice Russ
F. Kevin Russell
John B. Russell
Scott Christopher Russell
Beverly Bennett Rutstein
Patricia Louise Ryckman
Linda Saaremaa
Maria Lopez Salgado
Rosalie S. Samson
Ann Beal Sanders
Claire Ann Sanders
John Lassiter Sanders
Barbara Boyd Sauer
Ruth Clark Saunders
Susan Murphy Saunders
Robert Walter Scott
Scott Realty Company
Laura Hunter Scruggs
Benjamin F. Seagle III
Falls Thomason Seagrave
Peter George Seaman, Jr.
Cameron Neal Sellers
Lisa Doliner Sellers
Mary Duke B. Trent Semans
Amy Senta
Stephen Senta
Anne Lassiter Sessoms
Betty Jordan Sessoms
Faison Thomson Sessoms
H. Douglas Sessoms
Linda Baroody Setliff
Patricia Senn Setzer
Robert E. Seymour, Jr.
Mohamed Elfatih Shaaeldin
Mukesh Shah
Bryant Edward Simon
Ann Cary Simpson
Bland Simpson
George Lee Simpson III
Nancy Barrett Simpson
Stanley Albert Simpson
Anastatia Sims
Joseph Ferrell Singleton
Mabel Whedbee Sisco
Eva Whetstone Sitton
Evan Russell Sitton
William Henry Skeels III
John Harrison Skinner III
William Pailin Skinner III
Amelie Anderson Sloan
Anne Dye Sloop
June Marie Small
Lindley Moffett Small
Alesha Joy Smith
Allison Burnett Smith
Katherine Jane Roggenkamp
Leonard William Rogoff
Samuel Burke Rollins
James William Romer
Jane Wells Romer
Margaret Anne Rook
Edward M. Rose
Nancy Jane Rose
Wendy Schreiber Rose
David Asher Rosenstein
Judith Levin Rosenstein*
Alton Glenn Ross
Frances Turner Ross
Egbert Thomas Rouse
David Sheldon Routh
Jenny Duncan Routh
Marylou Rowe
Cornelia Boardman Royle
David Brian Layton Royle
David S. Rubin
Carolyn Warren Rugen
John Allen Ruggles
Evelyn R. Savitzky
Harold Murray Sawyer III
Jeanne Clifford Sawyer
Carolyn Saylor
Anne L. Scaff
J. Shelton Scales
Stacy Crockett Scales
Elizabeth Ann Scanlon
David Ben Schauer
Michael Gerard Schell
Christiane Schnaidt
Deborah Rutchka Schneider
Leslie Bruton Schneider
Robert Michael Schneider
John Martin Schnorrenberg
Harry Paul Schrank, Jr.
Dorothy Cutting Schroeder
George Noel Schroeder
Gregory Schuchard
Mark Schultz
Jane Mish Schutt
William B. Schwartz, Jr.
Tatjana Shapkina
Barbara Ann Shaw
Wiley Henry Shearin, Jr.
Amal Tayel Shehata
George Frank Sheldon
Michael Ray Shelor
Robert B. Shepard
David James Sheridan
Kirby Pfeiffer Sheridan
Kalman Sherman
Steven Sherman
Jill Shires
Angela Renee Shoffner
Linda Mothershed Shrader
Richard Alexander Shrader
Carl M. Shy
Eve Carol Shy
Joan Leonard Sibley
Thomas Edward Sibley
Robert Morgan Sickles
Charlotte Simpson Sigmon
E. Bruce Sigmon, Jr.
Barbara Jo Smith
Brenton Lohr Smith
Caroline Mitchell Smith
Charles Smith
Colin Carl Fleming Smith
David John Smith
Earl Jones Smith, Jr.
Everard Hall Smith III
J. McNeill Smith, Jr.
Jane C. Smith
Jordan M. Smith
Judith B. Smith
Kenneth Royster Smith, Jr.
Kent Turbyfill Smith
Martha Stribling Smith
Moyer Gray Smith, Sr.
Patricia Schoeberle Smith
Ralph Kenan Smith
Sherwood Hubbard Smith, Jr.
Sidney Rufus Smith, Jr.
Sylvia Jean Smith
William Davis Snider
Courtesy of Durwood Barbour
Betsy Sheely Pfenning
H. Hyman Philips, Jr.
Joy Lester Philips
J. Dickson Phillips, Jr.
S. Davis Phillips
W. I. Phillips
James Edward Phoenix
Shantanu Phukan
Ann Pike
Bob Pike
Ashmead Pringle Pipkin
Rorin Morse Platt
Nelie de Kok Plourde
Zobeida Mahiquez Podgorski
James Frederick Poetzinger
L. Frederick Pohl, Jr.
Jeffrey Kemp Politis
Christopher Brian Polt
L. B. Pope
Robert Pope
W. Travis Porter
Harold Bowman Poteat
Guy Glenn Potter
Debbie Chaffin Potts
Dannye Romine Powell
C. Thomas Preston, Jr.
L. Richardson Preyer, Jr.
Marilyn Jacobs Preyer
Norris Watson Preyer
Carey Baumgarten Price
Charles Lewis Price*
William S. Price, Jr.
Larry Carlton Pridgen
Robert Wilson Pridgen
Elizabeth C. Pringle
John J. Pringle
Patrick Wayne Pritchard
Sonia Marie Privette
John Edward Pueschel
Patricia J. Pukkila
Enrique Pupo-Walker
Michael Johnston Putzel
Joseph Vincent Quinn
John Allen Quintus
C. Antoinette Qutami
Katherine S. Rains
Julia Hutton Randall
Wilton Rankin
Derris Lea Raper
Stephen Wilson Raper
James Thomas Rast
Andrew Abraham Ratoff
C. Michael Ray
Josephine Medlin Ray
Yvonne Mettetal Rayburn
J. Milton Read, Jr.
Mark Lafayette Reed III
Margaret Stamm Rees
Philip Adrian Rees
William R. Reevy
Mary Reichel
Bryan Reid
Katharine L. Reid
Kristin Elizabeth Reinfurt
Eric Renault
Linwood Moninger Respess, Jr.
Tucker Meyer Respess
17
Helen Easter Snow
Glenn H. Snyder
James Robert Snypes
Richard A. Soloway
Janice Costner Spangler
W. Keats Sparrow
Christopher T. Speh
Matthew B. Spencer
Romulus Sanderson Spencer, Jr.
Christopher Nils Spongberg
William T. Sprinkle
Laurence Gray Sprunt
Betsy Ross Howe Stafford
John Howell Starks, Jr.
R. Hall Starnes
Marilee Haithcock Starr
Mary Craig Douglas Stauffer
June Landergren Steel
Joseph Flake Steelman
Douglas W. Steeples
George M. Stephens
Lonnie George Stephenson
Mary P. Stephenson
H. Hugh Stevens
Fred Stevie
Pearson H. Stewart
David Stick
Carrie Langford Stockard
Eric John Stockton
Dana Stone
Lee A. Stone
Richard G. Stone
George C. Stoney
W. Gene Story
Dale Oliver Stouch, Jr.
Mary Christine Stowell
Nathan S. Straight
Lee Hylton Strange
Carl William Stratton
Albrecht B. Strauss
Diane Wheeler Strauss
Joseph Strelka
Michael David Strother
Alan Raiford Strowd
Anne Watson Strowd
Elvin Emerson Strowd
Mary C. Sturgeon
Frank Stutz
Geraldine Dillard Stutz
R. Stanley Styers
Helen Margaret Sullivan
Sharon Sullivan
Robert Franklin Summers
Richard Superfine
Amish Chandrakant Sura
Gerald D. Surh
Bryan Sutton, Jr.
Maxine McMahon Swalin
Sean Sweeney
Arlene Giselle Sweeting
C. Downing Tait, Jr.
Richard J. Talbert
Nancy Baach Tannenbaum
Ellyn Pell Tanner
James Mahan Tanner, Jr.
James Townsend Tanner, Sr.
Sarah Fearnside Tanner
Includes all gifts received by the Library from July 1, 2005, to June 30, 2006
John Boone Trotti
Kyle Evan Troxell
Carole Watterson Troxler
Anne Trupkiewicz
Shu-Chen Hung Tu
Bryan Hill Tucker
Rachael Tucker
Robert Cinnamond Tucker
Robert Louis Turchin, Jr.
John Davis Turner
Mylissa Skidmore Turner
Remus Strother Turner
Stephen Brett Twitty
Robin Schafer Tyndall
Ruel W. Tyson, Jr.
Caroline M. Unick
Richard Alexander Urquhart III
Peter D. Usher
Daniel E. Uyesato
Frederick W. Vogler
Robert Frederick Vogler
Steven Boyd Wade
Daryl Farrington Walker
John Preston Walker, Jr.
Paul Kent Walker
Nina Gray Wallace
Sally A. Walters
Clarence Robert Walton
Lisa Ward
Sherry Vestal Ward
William Thornton Ward
John Waller Wardlaw, Jr.
Lindsay Carter Warren, Jr.
Marie Zurl Warren
Rebecca Drane Warren
Joyce A. Waterbury
Alan D. Watson
Harry L. Watson
Randah Ruth Whitley
Alan Cochran Whitmore
Floyd Gilbert Whitney III
C. Phillip Whitworth
Robert Hamilton Wicker
John William Wienants
Benson Reid Wilcox
Elizabeth Hardin Wiley
Barbara McDonald Wilkerson
J. Tracy Wilkerson
Tom Wilkinson
Catherine Berryhill Williams
Cindy Britt Williams
J. Derek Williams
J. Edgar Williams
Kathryn Frances Williams
Larry Howard Williams
Wiley J. Williams
Michael Willis
Bernard Foundation
Borden Fund, Inc.
Bryson Foundation LTD
Camp Younts Foundation
Cay Foundation
Community Foundation of
Greater Greensboro
Community Foundation of
Greater Memphis
E.C. Smith, Jr. & C.B. Smith
Foundation, Inc.
Ella Ann L. & Frank B. Holding
Foundation
Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund
Foundation for the Carolinas
Frank Borden Hanes Charitable
Lead Trust
George H. Moss, Jr. and
Mary Alice Moss Foundation
Georges Lurcy Charitable &
Educational Trust
Norman & Edna Freehling
Foundation
Randleigh Foundation Trust
Sigma XI, University of NC Chapter
Thomas Henry Wilson & Family
Foundation
Thomas H. Maren Foundation
Trexler Foundation
Winston-Salem Foundation
Geoffrey William Wright
Randolph Blake Wright*
Sara Barrett Wright
Zachary Hayes Wright
Geraldine Nada Wu
Bertram Wyatt-Brown
Albert D. Wylie III
Margaretta Jane Yarborough
David Keith Yelton
Ronald Edwin Young
Thomas Wade Young
Gregory Alan Yuziuk
June Mary Zaccone
Scott Thomas Zander
Janine Mary Zanin
Yan Zhang
Shuqing Zhao
Richard T. Zieger
Nadia Zilper
Honoring
Gifts received in honor
of the following:
Mark Reed
Memorial Gifts
Courtesy of Durwood Barbour
Nancy Ko Tao
Carole Southerland Tarry
Marsha Huffman Tarte
Anna Brita Tate
David Philip Tatich
Casey Taylor
David C. Taylor
David H. Taylor
Donna Groot Taylor
Eben Taylor
Edmund Taylor
John Ecklin Taylor
Mark Edward Taylor
Martha Mallary Taylor
Roy Dail Taylor
C. Edward Teague III
Claude Edward Teague, Jr.
Gregg Allan Teague
Jeffrey Allen Templeton
Jean Tenenbaum
Linda Kay Ter Haar
Liza M. Terll
Terraquest Environmental
Consultants PC
Elizabeth Cover Teviotdale
L. Parke Thomas
Paul Deward Thomas
Sara Alice Folger Thomas
Helen Donnell Thompson
Lucinda Smith Thompson
Mary Wise Thuesen
Sarah Caroline Thuesen
William Oliver Thweatt
Tom Tiemann
Justin Elbert Tillett
Andrew Barry Tilley
Ernest Haywood Tilley
Kristin Andrews Tilley
Audrey Boone Tillman
Otis Edward Tillman, Jr.
Rollie Tillman, Jr.
Robert Sullivan Tinkler
Carol M. Tobin
Stuart Kittredge Todd
Arrel D. Toews
Lisa Carol Tolbert
Thomas L. Toler
Joe P. Tolson
Ginger Holloway Tomberlin
Jason Earl Tomberlin
F. Rogers Toms, Jr.
Anne Wilson Tordi
Alicia Aleene Towler
Brock Dale Towler
Wanda Porter Towler
Stella Anderson Trapp
Ginger R. Travis
Joseph Collins Travis
Robert Moore Travis
Gary Randall Treadway
Virginia Agnew Trenholm
Thomas R. Trice
Jane Wilroy Trinkley
Laura Anne Trotter
Genene Evans Uyesato
Anne Van Arsdall
Karen Elizabeth Vance
David John Vandenbergh
Lydia Bodman Vandenbergh
Philip Vandermeer
J. Daniel Vann III
Carolyn H. Van Sant
Michael James Varn
Julia Carolyn Varner
Carol Vatz
Robert David Vatz
Martha Mebane Verdery
Nancy Loyd Vernon
Laura Greer Vick
Jean Marshall Vickery
Arthur Vidrine IV
Sally Couch Vilas
Jane McKean Vogel
Thomas Lee Watson
Kay Massey Weatherspoon
Andrea Monroe Weaver
John Webb
R. Beverly R. Webb
Victor John Weigman, Jr.
Gerhard L. Weinberg
Edith Crockford Welch
Elizabeth Hollers Welsby
Alice M. Welsh
Robin H. Wendell
Marci Jennifer Wessels
Lynn Elise Wesson
David McKinley West
Helen Jane Wettach
James R. White
Kathleen Kinser White
Marjorie E. White
Clarence Earl Whitefield
Emily Herring Wilson
Helen O. Wilson
I. Glenn Wilson
Jeremy Wilson
Robert Church Wilson IV
Mark Wingfield
Wayne E. Wingfield
Edmund M. Wise, Jr.
John Brent Wishart
Joseph S. Wittig
Herman Hubert Wommack IV
Amorn Wongsarnpigoon
Lerwut Wongsarnpigoon
Helen Wood
James Allen Woolard
Betty McFarland Wooldridge
Alison Woomert
Randolph Luther Worth
Susan Kay Wrenn
18
Elizabeth S. Zimmerman
Yetta Goldstein Ziolkowski
Janet Rose Zipser
Tony Ziselberger
Elizabeth Bryant Zollinger
Richard William Zollinger II
Charles G. Zug III
Organizations
American Political Science Review
Bladen County DDS
Debutante Ball Society of Durham
Historic Flat Rock, Inc.
Margaret Herrick Library
National Humanities Center
North Caroliniana Society
Foundations
Battle Foundation
Gifts received in memory
of the following:
James Elbie Blake
Gloria Clancy Briggs
Charles Edward Eaton
Archie R. Fields
Michael Stephen Gray
Louise P. Newton
Jack Shanahan
Kenneth Shearer
Helen Smith
* deceased
Bold = first time donors to the Library
Librarians lead professional groups
Four librarians from the University Library are leading or have
recently been elected to lead their specialized national and international professional organizations. The four office holders are:
“Carolina has a long
and proud history at the
Andrew S. Hart, Preservation Librarian
Hart was elected in May 2006 to serve as vice chair/chair elect
of the Preservation and Reformatting Section (PARS) of the Association
for Library Collections and Technical Services, a division of the
American Library Association (ALA).
Patrick J. Mullin, Associate University Librarian for
forefront of our profession. To have so many
of our staff elected to
Technical Services and Systems
national and interna-
Mullin concluded his year-long term as the president of the
Library and Information Technology Association (LITA), a division
of ALA, in 2006 and then will serve for one year as past president.
tional office confirms
Philip Vandermeer, Music Librarian
libraries and librarians
Vandermeer will serve from 2007-09 as president of the Music
Library Association (MLA), following a term as president-elect.
continue to make.”
Rebecca Vargha, School of Information and Library
SARAH MICHALAK
Science Librarian
University Librarian
the impact that UNC’s
Vargha is serving as 2006-07 president of the Special Libraries
Association (SLA), a nonprofit global membership organization for
information professionals and their strategic partners.
New Leadership on the Friends of the
Library Board of Directors
The Friends of the Library board of
directors expressed thanks to Moyer
Smith as he turned over his chairman’s
gavel to old friend Jo Clary Smith at the
board meeting in April. Norfleet Pruden
stepped up to first vice chair and Faryl
Moss accepted the opportunity to serve
as second vice chair, assuring a great succession of leaders for the next six years.
Four board members stepped down in
April—Nancy Bryson, Ben Jones, Bill
Moore and Pell Tanner. New board
members whose terms begin this fall are
David Dooley, Sandra Moore, Kelly Ross
and Nancy King Tanner. We also send a
fond farewell to student members Amelia
Kaye and David Werry, proud graduates
in May 2006, and welcomed John Wulsin
and Fletcher Gregory to succeed them.
Members serve three-year, renewable
terms.
19
Szary Named Director of the Wilson
Library, AUL for Special Collections
The University Library appointed
Richard Szary director of the Louis Round
Wilson Library and associate university
librarian for Special Collections, effective
September 1.
In this newly created position, Szary
provides leadership for the Louis Round
Wilson Library, which consists of the
Manuscripts Department (comprising the
Southern Historical Collection, Southern
Folklife Collection and University
Archives), the North Carolina Collection
(including the North Carolina Collection
Gallery and Photographic Archives) and
the Rare Book Collection.
One of Szary’s chief responsibilities is
to merge these individual collections into
an integrated special collections library
that serves the needs of scholars and students today and into the future, said
Sarah C. Michalak, university librarian
and associate provost for University
Libraries.
“This is a critical and exciting
moment for the Wilson Library and for
special collections at Carolina,” Michalak
said. “Rich Szary brings a deep understanding of special collections and keen
insight into their value and potential. His
leadership will help advance the reputation of the Wilson Library as one of the
premiere special collections libraries in
the country.”
Additionally, Szary will administer the
University Library’s expanding digital collections department, including its awardwinning Documenting the American South
digital library and the new Carolina Digital
Library.
Szary said that he sees the combined
focus of the position as a way to “further
special collections’ missions of documenting our society and culture and of bringing
them alive for teaching, research and
personal enrichment.
“Rich Szary brings a
deep understanding of
special collections and
keen insight into their
value and potential.
His leadership will help
advance the reputation
of the Wilson Library...”
SARAH MICHALAK
University Librarian
“I look forward to joining the staff of
UNC’s library in making the special collections” of the Wilson Library an even more
valuable and accessible resource for the
university, the state and the wider scholarly community," he said.
20
Szary comes to UNC from the Yale
University Library, where he served since
1991 as the Carrie S. Beinecke Director of
Manuscripts and Archives and University
Archivist, and, prior to that, as the assistant head of Manuscripts and Archives.
From 1985 to 1988, Szary was assistant
project manager and then program manager at the Smithsonian Institution’s Office
of Information Resource Management. He
previously held posts at the Smithsonian
Institution Archives as assistant and
associate archivist.
Szary has written and published
extensively, especially in the area of
archival description. He holds a B.A. in
History from DePaul University in Chicago
and an M.A. in Asian Studies from the
University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign. In 2000, he was named a
Fellow of the Society of American
Archivists, the highest honor bestowed on
individuals by that organization.
The 1612 King James Bible,
before and after
Photos by Jan Paris
After an almost 400-year journey
from London to Chapel Hill, a copy of the
1612 King James Bible arrived at the
Rare Book Collection in the arms of longtime donor Ben Jones. This rare volume,
the first quarto edition of the Authorized
Version, is a treasure in any condition. But
when it arrived at the Library in several
pieces, Jan Paris, the Library’s conservator for Special Collections, just couldn’t let
it stay that way.
The 17th-century book had been rebound at least once and its current binding most likely dated from the 19th century. Although the binding wasn’t
contemporary with the book, it had served
it well for more than 100 years and had
become part of the book’s history. As such
it deserved to be repaired, not discarded
for a new binding.
The first step was to ensure that the
textblock structure was stable. The sewing
was intact, but the title page and several
preliminary leaves were missing. Stains
from water and other more mysterious
sources dotted the textblock, and some
leaves, especially at the front and back,
had small tears. The outer leaves were
cleaned lightly to remove any loose surface dirt, and the tears were repaired with
lightweight Japanese tissue and paste
made from wheat starch. Over the years,
the book had acquired other repairs done
with a range of papers and adhesives, but
they didn’t appear to be damaging the
paper. Even though some of them appear
rather heavy-handed to our contemporary
eye, they were left to preserve the record
of this book’s life.
The Library obtained a digital image
of the title page from another copy of the
same edition, which was printed onto
handmade paper and bound in to serve as
the first leaf of text. The front and back
cover boards were reattached, and the
spine was covered with new leather, in an
operation called rebacking. The original
leather spine was adhered on top of the
rebacking leather, and any visible new
leather was toned to blend in. A specially
made cloth-covered box, in the Library’s
environmentally controlled stacks, keeps
the now-conserved Bible safe well into the
future.
21
Works of Irish
authors on display
in Wilson
Bob Dylan and Robbie Robertson, Knoxville, Tenn. Oct. 8, 1965. From the Robert Bolton
Collection #20408, Southern Folklife Collection, Wilson Library, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill.
A new exhibit, “Nobel Times Four:
Yeats, Shaw, Beckett and Heaney,” will be
on exhibit in the Louis Round Wilson
Library through December 31, 2006.
The exhibit showcases the Rare Book
Collection’s vast holdings in modern Irish
literature. The four authors represented W.B. Yeats, George Bernard Shaw, Samuel
Beckett and Seamus Heaney - are winners
of the Nobel Prize for Literature. Works by
noted Irish author James Joyce, who was
not a laureate, also will be on display. The
exhibit is open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays,
and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays. Call (919)
962-1143 for information.
Exhibit showcases photographs
of famous musicians
Recently discovered photographs of
musicians Bob Dylan, John Coltrane,
Dizzy Gillespie and Thelonious Monk are
part of a new exhibition in the
Manuscripts Department of the Louis
Round Wilson Library.
“The Untamed World: Photographs
by Robert Bolton, 1964-1969,” opened
Aug. 31 with a free public reception,
viewing and remarks by the photographer’s son and exhibit curators. The exhibition will be on display through Dec. 31.
In addition to nine concert and backstage images from the Downbeat Jazz
Festival in Chicago, the Atlanta Jazz
Festival and a Bob Dylan Concert, all
taken in 1965, the exhibition includes 21
documentary-style photographs. Many
are of scenes and people around Bolton’s
native Knoxville, Tenn., as well as subjects and street scenes in North Carolina,
Manhattan, Louisiana and Georgia.
22
The images represent a small portion of the Robert Bolton Collection,
which is now part of the Southern
Folklife Collection. The 18,000 prints and
negatives contained in the collection will
be ready for research use early next
year.
John Coltrane, Downbeat Jazz Festival,
Chicago, 14-15 August 1965. From the
Robert Bolton Collection #20408, Southern
Folklife Collection, Wilson Library, University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
For more information,
contact the Friends of the Library
at (919) 962-4207 or
[email protected].
Wilson Library Exhibits
January 23–May 31, 2007
I Raised My Hand to Volunteer: Protests in 1960s Chapel Hill
Manuscripts Department, Wilson Library
January 18–April 1, 2007
Uncovering the Maya: Highlights from the George Stuart Collection
Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, Wilson Library
February 15–May 31, 2007
Carolina Faces: An Exhibit of Photographs by Don Sturkey
N.C. Collection Gallery, Wilson Library
Friends of the Library Calendar of Events, 2006–2007
November 30, 2006
The Encyclopedia of North Carolina: Publication Celebration Honoring William S. Powell
William C. Friday will interview Bill Powell about this collaboration with 550 contributors, the Library and the
UNC Press. Copies will be available for purchase from the Bull’s Head Bookshop.
5:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
Reception, Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, Wilson Library
William C. Friday interviews Bill Powell, Pleasants Family Assembly Room
December 7, 2006
14th Annual Winter Stories Program for Children of All Ages
Brian Sturm, assistant professor of information and library science, and student Megan Hendershot return
with spell-binding storytelling to continue this cherished tradition of words and music about the coldest
season of the year.
5:00 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
Reception, Wilson Library Lobby
Program, Pleasants Family Assembly Room
January 18, 2007
Uncovering the Maya: Highlights from the George Stuart Collection
5:00 p.m.
Reception, Melba Remig Saltarelli Exhibit Room, Wilson Library
6:00 p.m.
Program, Pleasants Family Assembly Room
January 23, 2007
I Raised My Hand to Volunteer: Student Protests in 1960s Chapel Hill
This exhibit opening will feature a talk by Peter Filene, Bowman and Gordon Gray Distinguished Term
Professor of History.
5:00 p.m.
5:45 p.m.
Reception, Manuscripts Department, Wilson Library
Program, Pleasants Family Assembly Room
In addition to this opening program, the Library will host three related panel discussions featuring
UNC graduates and others who were involved in protests during the 1960s. All three panel discussions
will begin at 5:30 p.m. in the Pleasants Family Assembly Room.
January 30
February 6
Pressing the Hold-outs: The Desegregation Sit-ins of 1963-64
Speaking Out-of-Bounds: Communism, Race, Intellectual Freedom and the Speaker Ban
Controversy of the Mid-Sixties
February 13 Stomping Down: The Food Workers Strike of 1969 and the Black Student Movement
March 22, 2007
Carolina Faces
Award-winning photographer Don Sturkey will speak about his career in conjunction with the exhibit of his
photographs in the N.C. Collection Gallery.
5:00 p.m.
5:45 p.m.
Reception, N.C. Collection Gallery, Wilson Library
Program, Pleasants Family Assembly Room
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Non-Profit Organization
U.S. Postage
PAID
Permit No. 177
Chapel Hill, NC
The University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill
Campus Box 3920, Davis Library
Chapel Hill, NC 27514-8890
This image appears on one of the
more than 7,500 historical postcards
being donated to the North Carolina
Collection by Durwood Barbour of
Raleigh. For more postcard images,
see pages 12–18.