Illuminating the Past - School of Information and Library Science

Transcription

Illuminating the Past - School of Information and Library Science
Published by PhotoBook Press
2836 Lyndale Ave. S.
Minneapolis, MN 55408
Designed at the School of Information and Library Science
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
216 Lenoir Drive
CB#3360, 100 Manning Hall
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3360
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is committed to equality of educational opportunity. The University does not discriminate in o
fering access to its educational programs and activities on the basis of age, gender, race, color, national origin, religion, creed, disability, veteran’s status
or sexual orientation. The Dean of Students (01 Steele Building, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-5100 or 919.966.4042) has been designated to handle
inquiries regarding the University’s non-discrimination policies.
© 2007
Illuminating the Past
A history of the first 75 years of the
University of North Carolina’s
School of Information and Library Science
Illuminating the past, imagining the future!
Dear Friends,
Welcome to this beautiful memory book for the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Information and Library
Science (SILS). As part of our commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the founding of the School, the words and photographs in
these pages will give you engaging views of the rich history we share. These are memories that do indeed illuminate our past and challenge us to imagine a vital and innovative future.
In the 1930’s when SILS began, the United States had fallen from being the land of opportunity to a country focused on economic survival. The income of the average American family had fallen by 40%, unemployment was at 25% and it was a perilous time for
public education, with most communities struggling to afford teachers and textbooks for their children. Given this backdrop, it is even
more impressive what the early SILS administrators, faculty and students were able to create and accomplish.
The 1930’s were also, however, a time when people eagerly sought out information and knowledge. Franklin Roosevelt was one
of many who influenced millions through radio broadcasts, and families delightedly tuned in to radio dramas and comedy shows, from
the Lone Ranger to George Burns and Gracie Allen. There were over 1300 foreign language newspapers being published in the United
States and tens of thousands in English. It was the golden age of the mystery novel, as people escaped into the books of authors like
Agatha Christie and Dashiell Hammett. Theater flourished, movie studios created Hollywood’s “Golden Age” and young people danced
to the music of the Big Bands. And from F. Scott Fitzgerald and John Steinbeck to Carl Sandburg and Dr. Seuss, the era produced some
of our country’s most distinguished and memorable fiction, poetry and children’s books.
While 75 years is a long time, many things have remained constant. Perhaps the most significant constant is that people continue
to seek out knowledge in its many forms and media. And the role that the founders of SILS understood and chose to sharpen, that of
trusted knowledge professionals who can guide and assist others to access, organize, visualize, create, share and archive the information
and knowledge they need and want, is today more in demand than ever.
As we at SILS look forward to the next 75 years and beyond, what does distinguish our world from that of the 1930’s is the pace
of change in the creation, sharing and archiving of knowledge. It took radio 38 years to reach an audience of 50 million and TV took
13 years. The Internet took only five years to involve that many users, MySpace took three years and both the iPod and YouTube took
only one year to reach that same 50-million-user milestone. ENIAC, considered the first true computer, did more arithmetic in 11 years
than the entire human race had from 50,000 B.C.E. to 1945. The amount of information produced in print and electronic format has
more than doubled in the last three years, and it is expected to more than quadruple in the next year. Successfully navigating through
this ever-growing universe of knowledge is one of the key challenges of the 21st century.
So the need for SILS endeavors and graduates has possibly never been as great as it is today. And as Lewis Carroll said, “It’s a
poor sort of memory that only works backward.” The past 75 years have positioned us to proceed energetically and optimistically with
the design and building of a new facility over the next few years, correlated with a comprehensive review, reshaping and expansion of
the School. As you will see as you read through this book, it has taken many people and ideas to get us to where we are today, and it will
take many more if SILS is to attain a future worthy of our past. We hope you will join with us as we move into the next 75 years of the
distinguished progression of the School, illuminating the past and imagining the future.
Sincerely,
José-Marie Griffiths, Dean
Fall, 2007
Table of Contents
6
The Library School in Chapel Hill
An essay by David Carr, Associate Professor
20 Imagining the Future
Profiles of the 12 deans who have led the School of Information and Library Science
36 Illuminating the Past
Photos and events from the first 75 years of the School of Information and Library Science
100 Alumni
Seventy-five years of graduates from the School of Information and Library Science
118 Index
119 Colophon
The Library School
in Chapel Hill
Essay by David Carr, Associate Professor
School of Information and Library Science
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
In the early years of our library school in Chapel Hill, a prospective student might have wondered how, exactly, to travel here.
The second sentence of an early catalog gets directly to the point: “One leaves the train at Durham (twelve miles distant), Raleigh (thirty
miles distant), or Greensboro (fifty miles distant) and takes a bus.” One would be living in a very different world than the one we live in
now, seventy-five years after the founding of education for librarianship at Carolina.
One would have a number of things to think of while on that train or bus. In the fourth decade of the Twentieth Century, the
Great Depression was deep and constraining: possibilities were scarce, higher education was unusual, and one might not readily be able
to invest in it. The tuition at the School in 1931-1932 was $25 per quarter (for North Carolina residents), twice that for those from
out of state. Room and board typically would add as much as $400 to the quarterly bill. Still, an arrival in Chapel Hill for library school
would have meant that a risky decision had been made. But, gazing out the window in that first decade, contemplating the decision to
study librarianship, not all the dimensions of the future would be clear.
The period of the Great Depression and the early New Deal contains many fateful moments, very few of them significant at the
time. In this period, the cyclotron is invented; the atom is split; the radioactive metal plutonium is identified and produced; plastics appear. Television exists; so do rockets, the electron microscope, and the electric guitar. American women have been able to vote for more
than a decade. About 40 percent of Americans are high school graduates. Fewer than 20 percent of Americans graduate from college.
Child labor is legal. Union actions often lead to violence: vigilantes kill miners in Kentucky; police kill strikers in Michigan, Ohio, and
Rhode Island.
William Faulkner publishes As I Lay Dying, Light in August, and Absalom, Absalom! John Steinbeck writes Of Mice and Men. The
Grapes of Wrath will appear at the end of the decade. Richard Wright publishes Uncle Tom’s Children and Thomas Wolfe publishes Of
Time and the River. Alfred Hitchcock directs The Man Who Knew Too Much, The Thirty-Nine Steps, and The Lady Vanishes.
Japan occupies Manchuria, goes to war in China. Adolph Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany; fascism overtakes Europe; the
Holocaust begins.
Aldous Huxley publishes Brave New World as our school is born.
For the student of library
and information science today, despite all
the changes of contexts
and tools, the wars and
worldwide transformations, the motives and
values one brings to
Chapel Hill might well
resemble those of seventyfive years ago.
One would likely have been unaware of these things while traveling to Chapel Hill to attend library school, but more than seventy years on, the world and the nation were clearly incubating
great social transformations at that time. European dictatorships were finding deep roots and testing
out their terrible, unrestrained powers; a worldly wariness and anticipation would have been wise, if
not prescient. The sudden revolutions of technology, soon to be sped up by world war, had begun to
quicken. Great works of art, serious and popular, were leavening the crusts of industry, politics and
economics. Most Americans were living humbly with their losses, an unknown future looming.
Looking back, a librarian in the class of 1932, or 1936, or 1940, would have graduated into a
world of nearly exploding knowledge, imminent fearful events, growing industry and science, and
great need for economic, educational and social progress, especially in the Southern United States.
Even with the arrival of a more open and more progressive world—and a less differentiated nation—our students continue to emerge into such a world. For the student of library and information
science today, despite all the changes of contexts and tools, the wars and worldwide transformations,
the motives and values one brings to Chapel Hill might well resemble those of seventy-five years ago.
Like librarians of earlier generations, we are still driven to serve knowledge in a world needing both more evidence and more control over its possibilities. The information professions remain
at the edge of the new, emerging, still-changing face of the world, where we have always sought to
be. For information professionals, each day it is possible to say that no one has been here before, or
seen exactly what we see. While we have always taken personal delight and professional responsibility over the realm of memory and service, we also anticipate crafting and applying new ways to keep
and communicate the human record. As we gaze out our Twenty-first Century windows, arriving at a
very different Chapel Hill in a deeply transformed state and nation, we think, still, about knowledge
in human hands.
Wilson Library—known in 1931 as the main campus library—was the home of the School of Library Science from its founding until the
School moved to Manning Hall in 1970. The library was renamed in 1952 in honor of the School’s founder, Louis Round Wilson.
“As part of the program
of social welfare now being worked out at Chapel
Hill, a library school is
needed, where librarians,
like lawyers and doctors
and teachers, may secure
expert professional
training.”
The auspicious beginnings of the School of Library Science in Chapel Hill reflect an
understanding of the human situation in North Carolina and beyond. A history of these beginnings
cites Dr. Louis Round Wilson on the need for our school.
In 1929, just as the new library building was finished on the UNC campus, Wilson wrote an
article on the “Library in Modern Education.” In that article, he said:
As part of the program of social welfare now being worked out at Chapel Hill, a library school is
needed, where librarians, like lawyers and doctors and teachers, may secure expert professional training. With its magnificent new building as a laboratory for the school, such an institution would not
only be in harmony with the program on which the University has embarked, it would offer opportunity through the sending out of trained librarians for the South to tap the vast reservoir of human
knowledge.
The School of Library Science opened at Chapel Hill in the fall of 1931, with a class of 37
students and five faculty members, including Dr. Wilson. The Carnegie Corporation offered a grant
of $100,000 to enable the School to operate for three years and make permanent its conditional accreditation from the American Library Association.
That reservoir has deepened and extended its banks since Dr. Wilson proposed our school.
Now, as the School celebrates its 75th anniversary, about three billion books will be sold by American publishers. More than 190,000 new titles appeared in a recent year. Information industry revenues will approach or surpass one trillion dollars. Software revenues alone will exceed one hundred
billion dollars. And libraries thrive. The American Library Association recently reported that
Ten years after some experts predicted the demise of the nation’s systems of libraries as a result of the
Internet explosion, the most current national data on library use shows that the exact opposite has
happened. Data released today…indicates that the number of visits to public libraries in the United
States increased 61 percent between 1994 and 2004. According to the 2007 State of America’s Libraries report, there were nearly two billion visits to U.S. libraries in fiscal year 2004.…In the case of
academic libraries, the number of visits exceeded more than one billion for the first time in 2004, up
more than 14 percent in just the previous two years.
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The concept of the librarian advanced at Chapel Hill by Dr. Wilson and his associates reflects
In 1929 Louis Round Wilson (center) called for the creation of a library school at the University of North Carolina to “offer opportunity through the sending
out of trained librarians for the South to tap the vast reservoir of human knowledge.” His vision was continued by subsequent deans of the School, including
Susan Grey Akers (right) and Lucile Kelling Henderson (left).
an early understanding of the vitality of the field and its role in the fabrication of a culture and an economy. In his words, the value of a
librarian is connected to “social welfare,” to the University’s role in its society, and to professional rigor matching law and medicine. The
offering of expanded “opportunity through the sending out of trained librarians for the South” may be most important in this prospect.
Wilson’s founding ideas, as carried on by his successors, are living ideas. When we look at our school now and over time, we might say
that it mirrors the idea of the library taking form and thriving in service to all people across society in Twentieth Century America and
beyond.
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When the University of
North Carolina created
our school, it met the
responsibility of all great
institutions to create a
process, a curriculum,
and an assemblage of
professional mentors,
all leading its ranks of
aspiring learners toward
professional competence
and service.
Professional preparation is a university’s response to the larger cultural need for
agents—those who practice law, medicine, pharmacy, journalism, education—people whose skills are
informed by process and knowledge, and whose values are guided by trust. A society that requires
professional services like librarianship and information provision is advanced and complex; moreover,
it is not finished and never will be done. A society in need of information resources and services is
changing, constructing itself, progressing toward something it has not yet been. When the University of North Carolina created our school, it met the responsibility of all great institutions to create
a process, a curriculum, and an assemblage of professional mentors, all leading its ranks of aspiring
learners toward professional competence and service.
While all preparations for formal professions have shared characteristics, the information
professions go beyond most others in their scope, because one task of librarians is to assure the
presence of good information wherever personal and professional decisions are made. Currency and
rigor, ethical standards, attention to community hopes and individual lives, an embrace of scholarship—these make all professionals who they are. But the work of the information professions is
made even more particular by the need for advocacy and transmission of knowledge, and our support
for learners in every other field, in every kind of life, at every level of knowledge. We are a profession
defined by what we freely give away, by the successes we make possible for other people, and by the
attention we give to their often unspoken needs.
Our intention has always been to serve, to help, to connect. When we are working at our best,
we anticipate where information needs to be, and we strive to assure its uneventful transit. Librarians and information scientists alike contribute their intellects to the control, guidance, description,
and organization of knowledge. It is our trust. It does not happen without us: we gather, assemble,
construct and assure thoughtful access to collections. We create situations where change happens
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Since the first class of library science students graduated on June 7, 1932, over 4,300 students have earned their degrees in library or information science from
the School, including these students from the class of 1955.
because grounded thoughts are possible. We manage the processes of discovery through the available records of the past and the present, evidences of success and failure. We reach out to users, explain the structures at hand, and advocate—without compromise—for
knowledge.
A full and thorough preparation for the information professions is complex and challenging. On one hand it is a profession where
structures and connections are created; without a taxonomy, or a catalog, or even the alphabetic shelf, chaos rules. On the other hand it
is a profession where each person in the institution presents a different problem or a new task, a situation of unique need, and a mind
of variable experience and intention. Between these two hands—the patterns and arrangements of evidence, and deep, unpredictable
inquiry without boundaries—we provide processes, tools, experiences, search strategies, explorations, advice, anticipation and hope.
Every day, our work is proven in the lives of library users. People bring dreams and imagined landscapes to us, and we transform them
into possibilities of inquiry and connection. How difficult could it be to learn, or to teach, this transformative skill?
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When we look at successive profiles of the School,
the patterns of change in
our field become clear. Librarianship has blended
with information science;
information science has
applied its perspectives to
information design and
retrieval, to archives, to
bioinformatics, to scholarly communication.
The catalog of our school began in April 1931 with a modest list, a modest faculty, and a
modest aspiration.
The growing interest in the Southeast in city and county public libraries, and the adoption of minimum standards for college and secondary school libraries…have increased the demand for trained
library workers in this part of the country. An increase in the number of libraries and the demand for
library workers in the Southern states are only a part of a nation-wide development.…
The curricula of the school offer a basic course preparing the student for general library work…in one
of three fields: elementary and high school libraries, city and county public libraries, or college and
university libraries.
Apart from Dr. Louis Round Wilson, Director and Professor, four faculty were present: Donald Coney, educated at the University of Michigan; Robert Bingham Downs, educated at Columbia
University; Susan Grey Akers, educated at Wisconsin and Chicago; and Nora Beust, also educated at
Wisconsin and Chicago. Courses were offered in cataloging and classification, reference and bibliography, book selection, trade and national bibliography, functions and use of libraries, introduction
to library work, and administration of libraries. Seventy-five years later, most of these are still in the
curriculum. So are some of the electives taught in 1931, for example, history of books and libraries,
and library work with children. Dr. Wilson also taught a course titled “The Library Movement in the
South,” devoted to “the relation of libraries to the educational system; the part played by educational
foundations and associations; the present library situation and future needs.”
In those first years, recommended electives from other departments were significant: educational statistics, curriculum construction, literary criticism, historiography, sociological statistics, and
“Sociology 209: Southern regional social problems,” taught by Professor Howard W. Odum, including “sociological categories and physical backgrounds, cultural patterns, processes of social change,
social incidence, individual and social differentiation, institutions and leadership, social programs…
and social research.” Our school was founded, in part, as an ancillary to the need to change southern
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America through libraries. By the end of the decade, Dr. Akers had become dean, the faculty remained small, but the electives expanded
to include economic statistics, public administration, regional problems and planning.
At mid-century, the School of Library Science had begun a transformation that doubled its faculty and enlarged its space on the
top floor of the Wilson Library, as librarianship expanded in response to rising American business and industry, leadership in economics, sciences, and the arts, and engagements abroad. With the introduction of the Master of Science in Library Science degree, courses
reflected the increasing complexity of the profession. The program of study included courses in research methods in librarianship;
government publications; reference work in science, social science, and humanities; special libraries; and “reading interests and guidance.”
By the 40th anniversary of the School, its current profile was outlined: the standards courses established in the era of Wilson and
Akers (both of whom were still alive, 40 years later) remain in the program. (History of libraries. Basic reference sources and methods.
The library in society.) But there is more evidence of an evolution in progress and a field of knowledge expanding at its edges. The curriculum offers courses on information systems in language research, comparative librarianship, information retrieval, librarianship and
the law, and seminars devoted to fine arts librarianship, theological librarianship, and medical librarianship.
Curricular change continues, and the School draws inspired students from all over the world to contribute in new ways to our
understanding. Doctoral degrees attract them with the promise of deep mentoring and transformative inquiry. Master’s degrees in librarianship and information science bring learners to Chapel Hill for medical librarianship, for archival studies, for digital librarianship,
for traditional services in physical spaces, and for virtual services in libraries without books. When we look at successive profiles of the
School, the patterns of change in our field become clear. Librarianship has blended with information science; information science has
applied its perspectives to information design and retrieval, to archives, to bioinformatics, to scholarly communication. And yet, in our
75th year, as our patterns of consistency are also clear; we continue to offer courses first offered when the School began.
Our courses are now grounded in information literacy, information ethics, and knowledge management. We study basic concepts
in the way that information, people, and technology interact to influence organizational effectiveness. We address systems, humancomputer interaction, and usability, and concepts of information retrieval and use. We prepare our students to grasp policy, to conduct
inquiry, and to express results in professional forums. While we are devoted to paper collections, we are also devoted to the effects of
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As it did when it was
conceived, the School of
Information and Library
Science seeks to advance
the profession and practice of librarianship and
information science;
to prepare students for
careers in the field of
information and library
science; and to make significant contributions to
the study of information.
technology on cognition and learning, especially among youth; yet we teach storytelling as well.
In one cluster of courses, we address information security (aspects of data integrity, privacy, and
security from several perspectives: legal issues, technical tools and methods, social and ethical concerns and standards); internet applications, concepts, and services, and the policy, management, and
implementation issues they raise; local area networks, distributed systems, network management and
systems analysis. Just as the curriculum of Louis Round Wilson encouraged students to look beyond
the coursework of librarianship, so does its contemporary version. A current course devoted to user
perspectives in information systems and services “explores the roles of information in human activity“
using “psychological, social, economic, political, task, and other situational perspectives.”
Perhaps Dr. Wilson would need a few explanations—of courses titled “User Interface Design,”
“Metadata Architectures and Applications,” and “Web Databases”—but once explained, their derivation from the living world of information and its urgencies would be clear. Although they change
focus and sometimes require new strategies of explanation and discourse, the constant professional
themes of the information professions do not disappear, or become less useful, or require less rigor.
We redefine our work as we do it, and as we apply it in a demanding world.
As it did when it was conceived, the School of Information and Library Science seeks to
advance the profession and practice of librarianship and information science; to prepare students
for careers in the field of information and library science; and to make significant contributions to
the study of information. We interpret these goals through teaching and advising our students; by
research and scholarly publishing; and by service to the School, the university, the state, and the
professional community. We are here to conduct inquiry devoted to information generation and use,
to prepare reflective, adaptive information professionals for action in the present and the future, and
to transfer to them an uncompromising advocacy for knowledge.
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Barely imagined at the School’s founding in 1931, technologies like computers have been readily integrated into the School’s curriculum. Now, all SILS students
own their own laptops and can take courses like “User Interface Design” and “Digital Libraries: Principles and Applications.”
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We stand at the edge of
change, inspired by our
students, while maintaining the continuities of the
information professions.
In any recent year a contemporary admissions committee is likely to have read several
personal statements from students that begin as they might have been written in 1931. I have always
wanted to be a librarian because I have always loved books, these statements will say. Some will go on to
describe how, as a child, they played librarian for the neighborhood, cataloging and checking out The
Secret of the Old Clock to playmates. The committee will look for more in the statement, of course,
but that beginning is not unusual, nor is it inappropriate. Books, information, data, knowledge, print,
film, digits, electrons—they are all to be collected, named, kept, organized, managed, viewed, examined, studied, used, compared, applied, combined, analyzed, read. As the multiple forms of knowledge evolve, we redefine and extend where we reach as educators, and where our school serves. The
applicant who writes about loving books in 2008 will know vastly more about the world than the
applicant of 1931: books may begin that applicant’s interests, but our school has long reached beyond
printed information—and soon after arriving, our student will extend beyond the page as well.
A world enveloped by information drives our library and information school at seventy-five.
We are unable to say with certainty what kind of professional world our students will face in the near
future; nor can we predict the speed of change. We do know that there is no limit to information, nor
to the possibilities of electronic exploration; more passionately than ever, we recognize the critical
need for the right knowledge in the right place. Still, we would be rash to predict the future, and that
is what makes the information professions a challenge to embrace. Every professional we teach needs
to be aware and prepared as a professional learner, an individual intellect who is capable of engaging
new problems in the most complex information environments.
Competent independent learners are the consequences of respect and time. Learning is fluid
and complex, neither entirely curricular nor usefully contained. And certainly our work must not
be judgmental, condescending or arrogant. We find it in the interstitial moments between insights.
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Although much about the School—
including even its name—has
changed since 1931, its core mission
remains the same: to prepare its
students to be “reflective, adaptive
information professionals for action
in the present and the future, and to
transfer to them an uncompromising
advocacy for knowledge.”
We regard the library user as a participant in a culture of this moment—a culture of fragility, volatility, and caution, always becoming
something new. With paper tools and virtual worlds at hand, we assume that a person has come to the library to review the evidence
and to think about its patterns and values. Given this trust, we look together for knowledge and ideas that will animate and strengthen
an awareness of the possible. This is what we have learned in seventy-five years of library school in Chapel Hill.
While our faculty may hesitate to make predictions—and certainly could not agree!—on the long-term patterns of the expanding information world, it is clear that teaching and research at Chapel Hill, and the contributions of those we educate, will make the
informed universe expand at an even faster rate. We stand at the edge of change, inspired by our students, while maintaining the continuities of the information professions. The work of the library school on the bus line from Durham, Raleigh, or Greensboro, retains its
social, intellectual, and scholarly character. Evolving continuities in the lively curricula of the School remain with us, among the traces
of both our origins and our aspirations for the information professions we serve. We all have these things in common: collections, tools,
policies, and knowledge of the human mind in process. Out of these, we nourish and define this school and all who come here.
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Imagining the Future
Profiles of the 12 deans who have led the
School of Information and Library Science
in its 75 year history
20
Five deans of the School of Information and Library Science cut the cake at the school’s 75th
anniversary celebrations on Sept. 18, 2006. From left to right, they are José-Marie Griffiths
(2004–present), Joanne Gard Marshall (1999–2004), Barbara Moran (1990–1999), Evelyn
Daniel (1985–1990) and Raymond Carpenter, Jr. (1970–1971).
21
Louis Round Wilson
1931–1932
Born on Dec. 27, 1876, Louis Round Wilson’s career at the University of North Carolina embraced much of his professional life.
During his 31-year tenure as university librarian, he was a major figure in the development of the university as well as its library and
school of library science.
At various periods, in addition to his post as librarian, Wilson promoted and served as director of university extension, founded
and directed the UNC Press, served as a fundraiser and edited the Alumni Review. He was one of the founders of the North Carolina
Library Association (1904), served as first chairman of the North Carolina Library Commission (1909-1916), worked diligently with
the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools in creating library standards, and was a founder and subsequent president of the
Southeastern Library Association.
After three decades of phenomenal achievement in North Carolina and the Southeast, Wilson accepted the invitation of Robert
Maynard Hutchins to become dean of the Graduate Library School of the University of Chicago. That school, established with a million-dollar grant from the Carnegie Corporation in 1926, had not made much progress during its first half-dozen years. However, the
decade of Wilson’s deanship (1932-42) proved to be a golden age for library education.
The Chicago Graduate Library School became a beehive of activity as Wilson, his faculty and his doctoral students probed into
various facets of librarianship, wrote articles and books, and came to dominate the profession intellectually.
Wilson’s publication record, already extensive at Chicago, continued after his retirement to Chapel Hill in 1942. He undertook
the editorship of the 18-volume Sesquicentennial History of the University of North Carolina, was the co-author with Maurice F. Tauber of
another landmark work, The University Library, and wrote three volumes of UNC history.
He taught part-time in the School of Library Science until 1959 and served as a adviser to President William C. Friday until
1969. He also conducted numerous university surveys, as well as a survey of the region, Libraries of the Southeast, the latter with Marian
A. Milczewski. He marked the centenary of his birth with publication of a new book, Louis Round Wilson’s Historical Sketches, issued a
22
month before the celebration.
Active in the American Library Association, Wilson accepted membership on the Board of Education for Librarianship during its
second year and served from 1925 to 1932. He was the ALA president (1935-36) and was one of the ALA officials chiefly interested
in federal support for libraries. In 1951, the ALA presented Wilson its highest award, honorary membership. In his centennial year, the
ALA added to his other honors the Melvil Dewey Medal.
Reprinted from the Spring 1980 edition of News from Chapel Hill, the School’s newsletter, observing Wilson’s death on Dec. 10, 1979, at the age of 102.
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Susan Grey Akers
1932–1954
Dr. Susan Grey Akers was one of the School’s original faculty members. At that time, no one realized that one year later, when
Louis Round Wilson would leave to go to the University of Chicago, Akers would be named acting director of the School.
Recognized from the beginning for her brilliant leadership, she was made director of the School in 1935, and in 1941 her title
was changed to dean. As the first woman to hold an academic deanship at the University, she had to overcome a lot of raised eyebrows.
There could not have been a better person to break the all-male domination of deanships on the campus. By her actions, she quickly
demonstrated to all faculty members that she deserved her lofty position.
Susan Grey Akers served as dean until 1954 and continued to teach until 1959. She gave encouragement and help to other women seeking faculty positions, and although progress was slow, women began to be recognized for their talents. Dr. Akers set an example
that at least made the administration realize that there was a place for women in the academic world.
“She was gracious, friendly and scholarly,” then UNC President William C. Friday said, “and will be remembered as one of the
leaders in teaching and administrating as the University grew from a relatively small campus to a large, complex institution. The University is grateful for the contributions of this great lady.”
Dr. Edward G. Holley, dean of the School at the time of Akers’ death in 1984, stated, “[Susan] established the foundations upon
which the School’s subsequent reputation has been built.”
In 1940, Dr. Akers secured the second $100,000 Carnegie Foundation endowment that made the School’s continued existence
possible. She earned her doctoral degree from the University of Chicago in 1932, and at that time was only the fourth person, and second woman, in the United States, to hold a doctorate in library science.
Most successful people in this world have a keen sense of humor to carry them through the tough roads they are forced to travel.
Dr. Akers kept her sense of humor to the very end. At the School’s 50th anniversary celebration in 1981, she attended a reception in her
honor and when Dr. Holley saluted her by saying, “Miss Akers, I’m glad you came,” she replied with a twinkle in her eye, “So am I.”
24
Dr. Akers pioneered the cause for women on this campus and she brought the University many honors. A lady with these credentials should not be soon forgotten.
This article originally ran in The Chapel Hill Newspaper in 1984; reprinted with permission in the Spring 1984 issue of News from Chapel Hill, the School’s newsletter.
25
Lucile Kelling Henderson
1954–1960
Lucile Kelling Henderson joined the UNC faculty in 1932, and was dean
from 1954 until her retirement in 1960. She supervised the School’s transition
from a fifth-year bachelor of library science degree program to a master of science
program.
During her deanship, the Epsilon chapter of Beta Phi Mu, the national honor
society, was chartered at UNC. Dean Henderson was considered ahead of her time
by many, advocating the establishment of a doctoral program in library and information science, which did not occur until 1977.
“She was one of those very dedicated and highly capable people who did so
much to give the university at Chapel Hill its great reputation,” said William C. Friday, president of the William R. Kenan Jr. Fund and
president emeritus of the UNC system, who knew Henderson as a colleague and neighbor. “What she did through the School as its
leader had enormous impact on libraries throughout the state and region.”
“Henderson was one of the first teachers employed by the School, which was established in 1931,” said Dr. Edward Holley, William R. Kenan professor and former dean of the School. “Her former students always tell me what an excellent teacher she was.”
Before coming to UNC, the Minnesota native taught at the University of Southern California, Mills College, Columbia University and New York State Teachers College. Henderson was the author of a dozen books and monographs, including Berbard Shaw
Around the World and joint author of Index Verborum Juvenalis. She also wrote numerous articles in professional magazines and many
short stories. She received her bachelor of arts degree from Whitman College in 1917 and her bachelor of library science degree from
New York State Library School in 1921. The Lucille Kelling Henderson Lectureship was established in her honor in 1991.
Reprinted from the Fall 1990 edition of News from Chapel Hill, the School’s newsletter, shortly after Henderson’s death on July, 29, 1990, at the age of 95.
26
Carlyle J. Frarey
1960–1964
Born in Springwater, New York, April 1, 1918, Carlyle Frarey was educated
at Canandaigua Academy, Canandaigua, N.Y., and Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio,
where he received the B.A. degree in 1939.
After service in World War II in the Army Air Force, Mr. Frarey entered the
School of Library Service of Columbia University, from which he received a B.S.
degree in 1947, and an M.S. in 1952.
In 1952, he was appointed assistant librarian, Duke University, Durham,
N.C. In 1954, he was appointed Associate Professor, School of Library Science,
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. For four years, he served as acting
dean of the School of Library Science, during which time the curriculum of the School was revised and reaccreditation of the School by
the Committee on Accreditation of the American Library Association took place.
In 1964, Frarey returned to Columbia University as senior lecturer in the School of Library Service and as assistant to the dean.
He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and of Beta Phi Mu, the national library science honor society.
Frarey was an active member of the American Library Association, the Association of American Library Schools, the New York
State Library Association, the New York Technical Services Librarians, and the Archons of Colophon, holding offices and committee appointments in all of them. He was a frequent contributor to library periodicals, and served as managing editor of the Journal of
Cataloging and Classification, 1953-56, and Library Resources and Technical Services, 1957 to 1960. From 1957 to 1969 he was a member
of the Dewey Decimal Classification Editorial Policy Committee, Forest Press, Inc., Lake Placid Club Education Foundation, serving as
its chairman from 1965 to 1969.
Reprinted from the Fall 1976 edition of News from Chapel Hill, shortly after Frarey’s death on Mar. 13, 1976, at the age of 57.
27
Margaret Ellen Kalp
1964–1967
A native of Middletown, NY, and a graduate of Douglass College, Margaret
Kalp received her M.A. degree in library science from the University of Michigan.
She also studied at Rutgers University and the University of Chicago. Before joining the UNC faculty she taught at the Hampton Institute Library School and at
George Peabody College.
Of Kalp, UNC President William Friday said, “Margaret Kalp served the
University faithfully and well. Those of us privileged to be her friend will greatly
miss this gracious lady.” UNC-CH Provost J. Charles Morrow said Kalp “served
with great effectiveness as a professor and administrator. The university and her colleagues are much in her debt for her leadership, dedication and able services.”
Kalp served the North Carolina Library Association as president, the American Library Association as a member of its council,
and the Association of American Library Schools and the American Association of School Librarians as a member of the board of
directors. She held a membership on the faculty of the Hampton Institute Library School during the last two years of its existence,
1937-39, long before civil rights legislation had been enacted. She had a keen appreciation for each individual regardless of race, creed or
station in life.
She served as teacher, full-time administrator, and part-time administrator of the UNC School of Library Science for 30 years.
Her many students consistently gave her high marks for her teaching ability and they frequently consulted her about their career plans.
Reprinted from the Summer 1978 edition of News from Chapel Hill, the School’s newsletter, shortly after Kalp’s death on April 26, 1978, at the age of 63.
28
Walter A. Sedelow, Jr.
1967–1970
Walter A. Sedelow, Jr., served as dean during the period Manning Hall was
being renovated in preparation for the School’s move in 1970. His previous experience on campus was as a professor with joint appointments in computer science and
sociology.
With his appointment to dean, the School began its first efforts in computer-related activities for the librarian. During his tenure, the first courses in data
processing for librarians were offered, and the first full-time faculty appointment
was made in this area. With these modest efforts, the foundation was laid for the
School’s future undergraduate and graduate programs in information science.
With his wife, Dr. Sally Yeates Sedelow, he made many contributions to the
literature of computer science, principally in the area of computing in the humanities. They served as authors or editors of numerous
monographs on the use of computers in language research. They have been referred to as pioneers in the history of humanities computing.
Dean Sedelow resigned in 1970 to accept a professional position at the University of Kansas at Lawrence. In 1985 he joined the
faculty of the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, where he remained until he retired in 1995. He now resides in Helen Springs,
Arkansas.
29
Raymond L. Carpenter, Jr.
1970–1971
Raymond Carpenter first came to the University of North Carolina School
of Library Science in 1956 as a master’s student. He was a lecturer in the School in
1958 and from 1960 to 1968, when he completed his Ph.D. in sociology. He joined
the permanent faculty in 1968 as associate professor and became a professor in
1981.
Carpenter enjoyed many highlights throughout his career in library science
and his years with the School at UNC. He maintained a research association with
the Institute for Research in Social Science, received a Senior Fulbright-Hays
Research Fellowship, served as acting dean of the School from 1970 through 1971,
and was a delegate for the International Federation of Library Associations.
Carpenter was regarded as a pillar of the profession, as well as of the School.
His prodigious research work includes a pioneering national study of gender differences in salary and status and the only national and
state level analysis of college library operations in terms of ALA’s standards (four-year and two-year). These studies and other published
work on public library economics and demographics at the national, regional, and state levels, language translation patterns and international librarianship, and international information transfer reflect his background in the social sciences.
Reprinted from the fall 1992 edition of News from Chapel Hill, the School’s newsletter.
30
Edward G. Holley
1972–1985
A major figure in 20th century American librarianship, Edward Holley served
his chosen profession as library administrator (director of libraries, University of
Houston, 1962-1971), library educator (dean & professor, School of Library Science at UNC-Chapel Hill, 1972-1985, and professor thereafter), and historian.
He has produced over 100 books, articles and essays. Indefatigable in his
service to librarianship, he has served on countless high level committees, worked
for accreditation standards, defended the MLS, testified before Congressional committees, and acted as library consultant. As ALA president during turbulent times
(1974-1975), he was largely responsible for establishing a federated system for
ALA (“every tub on its own bottom”), thereby saving the 100-year-old association from likely financial disaster. While at Houston, he
not only oversaw a major addition to the library and a significant enrichment of the collection, but was responsible for hiring Charles D.
Churchwell as assistant director for public services, the first black professional on that campus (1967).
As dean of the library School at Chapel Hill, he recruited stellar faculty, established a doctoral program, and expanded the
master’s program to two years, providing a core curriculum known famously to students during the Holley years as “The Block.” As
professor and advisor, he has been an inspiration to his students and has directed a number of significant doctoral dissertations.
He has been the recipient of almost every major award his profession can bestow, notable among them the ALA Scarecrow Press
Award; the ALA Melvil Dewey Award (1983); the ALA Joseph Lippincott Award (1987); the ACRL Academic/Research Librarian of
the Year Award (1988); and the Beta Phi Mu Award (1992). Holley was named William Rand Kenan, Jr., professor in 1989 and held
that distinguished professorship until his retirement at the end of 1995.
Reprinted from “Interview with Edward G. Holley” by Tommy Nixon, which is appeared on North Carolina Libraries, 56(2), Summer 1998, p.65-70.
31
Evelyn H. Daniel
1985–1990
Evelyn Daniel’s five-year term was marked by a number of significant accomplishments for the School. Chief among these was the increased breadth of the
School’s curriculum and research, symbolized by a change in name from the School
of Library Science to the School of Information and Library Science and by the
addition of two new degrees.
A master’s track in information science was initiated in 1988. The post-master’s Certificate of Advanced Study was added that same year.
In other changes, six new faculty were appointed. Enrollment increased from
120 matriculated students in 1985 to over 170 in 1990. Sources and amounts of
funded research also increased.
The School’s facilities were renovated to accommodate its growth and increasing reliance on technology. A new telephone system
was installed; and the laboratory, administrative office and some faculty offices were networked. The School’s auditorium was converted
to an electronic master classroom with new sound and visual systems. Faculty and staff were provided with individual computer workstations. In 1987, the School began offering two-way video teleclasses to a remote site.
Daniel reorganized the administrative offices, added two new professional positions and upgraded four staff positions. She
worked with the faculty to develop a Bylaws, Policy and Procedures manual, codifying and clarifying the School’s internal governance
and standard operating procedures. She also initiated a faculty-led strategic planning process.
Reprinted from the Fall 1989 edition of News from Chapel Hill, the School’s newsletter, shortly after Daniel’s retirement.
32
Barbara B. Moran
1990–1998
“The School of Information and Library Science has soared in quality and
size under Dr. Moran’s able stewardship,” said Michael Hooker, former UNC-Chapel Hill chancellor, when Barbara Moran announced she was stepping down as a
dean after eight years.
“She has added state-of-the-art technical resources, doubled the endowment,
brought undergraduates into the School and boosted graduate enrollment. She will
be sorely missed in the post of dean, but the university is fortunate that Barbara will
continue to share her expertise in the classroom.”
Among improvements during Moran’s years as dean was addition of the
undergraduate minor program in Fall 1996. Graduate enrollment increased 32 percent during her tenure and three new faculty and three other positions were added.
The School maintained its customary high marks from ranking organizations. In 1996, U.S. News & World Report ranked the School
second in the nation, tied with the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. Moran’s innovations as dean led to the School’s moving up to
the top spot in the U.S. News rankings in 1999.
During her years as dean, Moran was a member of the Chancellor’s Task Force on Instructional Technology and the Chancellor’s
Advisory Board on Women’s Issues. She also served UNC-CH as chair of the search committee for the dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences and as a member of the search committee for a chief information officer. In March 1996, Moran was named the Association
for Library and Information Science Education/H.W. Wilson Scholar to the State Academiy of Culture in St. Petersburg, Russia.
Reprinted from the Fall 1997 edition of News from Chapel Hill, the School’s newsletter, shortly before Moran’s retirement as the Dean.
33
Joanne Gard Marshall
1999–2004
“Under Dr. Marshall’s leadership, the School of Information and Library
Science initiated important educational programs that serve the state, and SILS
gained a four-fold increase in research funding,” said Provost Robert Shelton when
Marshall announced that she was stepping down from the dean’s post. “Her contributions have helped the School achieve prominence nationally and internationally.
Though her focus will shift, her dedication to the School remains unswerving.”
In addition to a new undergraduate degree in information science, SILS initiated dual master’s degree programs with Duke Medical School and UNC’s schools
of business, public health, nursing, government and art history under Marshall’s
leadership. New international programs were launched to engage scholars in the Czech Republic, Denmark, Singapore and Slovenia.
Research funding increased four-fold between 1999 and 2003, and the Ph.D. program more than doubled in enrollment to 49 students.
U.S. News & World Report ranked SILS as the number one library and information science school in the nation for the first time during
Marshall’s time as dean.
Marshall has received more than 20 research and professional service awards. In May 2004, she assumed an elected position as
president of the Medical Library Association. In recognition of her contribution to UNC and the field of information and library science, Provost Shelton awarded Marshall an alumni distinguished professorship.
34
José-Marie Griffiths
2004–present
José-Marie Griffiths was officially named dean in August 2004 after an extensive search.
Griffiths received a bachelor’s degree in physics in 1973 and a Ph.D. in information science in 1977 from University College, London.
Griffiths came to Carolina from the University of Pittsburgh, where she has
served as professor and held the Doreen E. Boyce Chair in Library and Information
Science, the university’s first endowed chair in information science, since 2001. She
was also an associate with the Learning Research and Development Center and the
first director of the university’s Sara Fine Institute for Interpersonal Behavior and Technology.
Her research focuses on the design, analysis, integration and economics of systems to create effective and valuable information
exchange between people, recorded knowledge and technology. Griffiths’ work also covers information retrieval, information system
and service evaluation, economics of information, information technology use in higher education, scientific and technical communication, diffusion of information and information and library science education. She has taught graduate classes at several British and U.S.
universities on topics including leadership, organization development, information technology integration and digital libraries.
Griffiths has led or participated in information and library science projects in more than 35 countries and has worked extensively
with the corporate community on information and library science issues. She has received three awards from the American Society for
Information Science and Technology in recognition of her significant contributions to the field.
Griffiths has more than 30 years of experience in teaching and university and information technology administration.
35
Illuminating the Past
Photos and events from the first 75 years of the
School of Information and Library Science
36
A staff member at the Library Science Library (now the School of Information and Library Science Library) looks through the library’s card catalog in 1985. The card catalog was the primary
means of finding resources in the library until it was supplemented with an electronic catalog. The
physical catalog was eventually removed once and for all.
37
1901
Louis Round Wilson becomes
University librarian, a position he
would hold for 31 years.
1904
The University offers its first
courses in library science during
the summer terms.
1906
The University offers courses in
library science during regular
school term.
1909
The University grants credit for
courses in library science.
1912
Enrollment in summer courses
warrants a visiting instructor in
library science at UNC.
1915
The University allows graduate
credit to students for a course in
bibliography.
1922
Dr. Wilson, in his Annual Report of
the Librarian, proposes that the
University offer summer courses
for school and city librarians.
38
An aerial view of Wilson Library from the Bell Tower in 1931. Wilson Library was the original
home of the School; it moved to Manning Hall (just out of frame to the right) in 1970. (photo
courtesy of the North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives)
39
1923
Dr. Wilson proposes, for the first
time in an Annual Report of the
Librarian, that the University
consider establishing a school of
library science.
1925
Dr. Wilson appointed chairman of
ALA Board of Education for Librarianship.
1926
Dr. Wilson, in his Annual Report of
the Librarian, “strongly urges” the
establishment of a school of library
science at UNC.
40
Manning Hall as it appeared before
any landscaping had been completed.
The School has been located in Manning Hall since 1970; before then,
Manning served as the home of the
Law School. (photo courtesy of the
North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives)
41
1929
Carnegie Corporation grants
$100,000 to the University for the
establishment of a school of library
science.
Announcement of the five-year
grant and of plans for school made
at dedication ceremonies for the
newly completed University Library building on October 19-22.
1931
School of Library Science classes
begin on September 17.
42
Desks sit empty at the School’s temporary quarters in the
early 1950s. (photo courtesy of the North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives)
43
1932
School provisionally accredited as
a Type II (graduate) library school
by the Board of Education for
Librarianship of the ALA.
First class of students graduates on
June 7.
Dr. Wilson resigns as librarian and
director of the School to become
dean of the University of Chicago
Graduate Library School.
Susan Grey Akers receives one of
the nation’s first Ph.D.s in library
science from University of Chicago
Graduate Library School. She
is named acting director of the
School of Library Science.
Louis Round Wilson poses on the steps of the main university library when it was renamed in his honor in 1952.
(photo by Sam Boone; photo courtesy of the North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives)
44
A student uses a microfilm machine. Microfilm is one of the many new technologies embraced by the School since its founding in 1931. (photo courtesy of the
North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives)
45
1934
School fully accredited for both
Type II and Type III (undergraduate)
library training by Board of Education for Librarianship of the ALA.
School admitted to membership
in the Association of American
Library Schools.
46
Students work in the Wilson Library reading room.
(photo courtesy of the North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives)
47
1935
School begins offering its regular
courses in consecutive summer
terms, so that students might earn
A.B. in L.S. by attendance during
summer sessions only.
Susan Grey Akers named director
of the School.
Alumni association formed as
The North Carolina Library School
Association and offers first tuition
scholarship to a student in the
School.
48
Linda Osterman, dean Susan Grey Akers, School founder Louis Round Wilson, Norma Royal
and dean Edward Holley pose at a School alumni meeting in 1972. Wilson and Akers were the
first two directors of the School. (photo courtesy of the North Carolina Collection Photographic
Archives)
49
1937
University assumes financial support of the School with state funds.
1939
North Carolina General Assembly
authorizes establishment of a
professional school in library science at the North Carolina College
for Negroes in Durham. Dr. Akers
agrees to help program get started
and serves as dean of both schools
until October 1946.
1940
Carnegie Corporation gives the
School a second $100,000 grant.
A librarian uses a book sorting machine in Wilson Library. (photo courtesy of the North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives)
50
Student assistants consult the Cardex file in the School of Library Science library. Giving students practical experience with library techniques has been a goal
of the School since its inception. (photo courtesy of the North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives)
51
Akers appointed dean.
1941
Degree granted by the School
changed from Bachelor of Arts in
Library Science to Bachelor of Science in Library Science.
1942
Dr. Wilson retires as dean at Chicago and returns to UNC as consultant and part-time professor.
1947
University approves School’s proposed Master of School Librarianship program.
52
Miss Jean Freeman talks with a
prospective student in the 1970s.
Freeman began working in the
School’s administrative office in Wilson Library on Sept. 1, 1941, where
she remained until she retired 36
years, eight deans and one building
change later.
53
1948
Dr. Wilson retires as consultant and
part-time professor.
1950
School offers first courses leading
to Master of School Librarianship.
1951
University approves School’s program leading to Master of Science
in Library Science degree.
Alumni association establishes
Susan Grey Akers Scholarship.
Dr. Wilson returns as visiting professor to teach two courses in the
MSLS program.
A student uses an early computer terminal in the School’s library. Computerized library techniques were introduced to
the School’s curriculum under dean Walter Sedelow. (photo courtesy of the North Carolina Collection Photographic
Archives)
54
Members of the School of Library Science class of 1956 pose on the steps of Wilson Library.
55
1953
School presents first candidates for
MSLS degree.
1954
Akers retires after 23 years as member of the faculty, three years as
acting director, six years as director
and 13 years as dean.
Lucile Kelling Henderson appointed dean of the School.
1955
School’s administrative board
approves abandonment of the
degree of bachelor of science in
library science.
56
Library science students had several choices of rooms to study in during the 1950s, including a study hall in Wilson
Library (left, in 1953) and the student lounge (above, in 1954).
57
1957
American Library Association
accredits School under its 1951
revised standards.
1958
North Carolina chapter of Beta Phi
Mu installed.
Faculty votes to discontinue master of school librarianship program.
1960
Carlyle J. Frarey becomes acting
dean of the School.
1963
Under Frarey’s leadership, School
introduces revised curriculum.
58
Library school alumni pose for a photo an alumni dinner at the 1955 American Library Association’s annual convention in Philadelphia.
59
1964
Margaret E. Kalp becomes acting
dean of the School.
1967
Walter A. Sedelow, Jr. becomes
dean of the School.
1968
Law School moves out of Manning
Hall.
60
Above: Prof. Haynes McMullen chats with former dean Margaret Kalp
in her office in 1976. Kalp served as acting dean of the School from 1964–
1967.
Left: Students read books and periodicals (of varying academic quality) in
December 1970.
61
1969
Manning Hall renovations begin.
1970
Raymond L. Carpenter, Jr. becomes
acting dean of the School.
School moves into Manning Hall
one day before fall registration.
62
In 1970 library science students gathered for a friendly
protest to a magazine ad claiming “the hairiest looking
sporty car in America” might scare away a few librarians. The ad read, “We may lose a few librarians for customers, but we think we’ll gain a few enthusiasts.” Vicki
Glasgow wrote the company, “Some of the hairiest people
I know are librarians.” Seated are, from left, Joyce Johnson, John Jones, Pamela Morgan, Mary Frizell, Kathy
Kaercher, and Martha McPhail. Standing are, from
left, Leslie Trainer, Bruce Westbrook, Dr. Raymond L.
Carpenter, Paul Odom, Eric Carlson, John Sturtevant,
Karen Lerner, Michael Tsaganos, Laura Olshan, Vicki
Glasgow, Barbara Yonce, Pete Buyer, Carole Sebastian,
Valerie Powers and Neville Grow. (Reprinted from the
Spring 2004 edition of the SILS newsletter)
63
1972
Edward G. Holley becomes dean of
the School.
1974
School begins providing library
services for EPA Library in Research
Triangle Park.
Holley inaugurated as 91st
president of the American Library
Association.
School introduces revised master’s
program, with a new 12-hour block
of basic material required of all
students.
64
Above: Students work in the reading room of the Library Science Library in the early 1970s.
Left: Dean Edward Holley chats with a student on a landing in Manning Hall. The School of
Library Science moved into Manning Hall just before the beginning of the Fall semester in 1970.
65
1975
Dr. Lester E. Asheim becomes
School’s first William Rand Kenan
Jr. Professor.
1976
Former acting dean Carlyle J. Frarey dies at the age of 57.
Dr. Wilson observes 100th birthday.
1977
Dr. Fred W. Roper becomes assistant dean.
66
Above: Library science students work in the Institute for Research in Social Science in the mid1970s.
Left: Prof. Fred Roper talks to his class about the reference process in an Introduction to Librarianship class (known as “The Block”).
67
1978
Former acting dean Margaret Ellen
Kalp dies, April 26.
1979
Dr. Wilson dies at the age of 102,
December 10.
1980
Jo Ann Hardison Bell becomes
School’s first doctoral degree
recipient.
68
Above: Students take a break from classes on the front steps of Manning Hall.
Left: Prof. Martin Dillon talks with students about information retrieval in 1978.
69
1981
School observes its 50th anniversary with four days of seminars,
reports and social events.
1982
Dr. Roper becomes associate dean.
1984
Former Dean Susan Grey Akers dies
on January 30 at the age of 94.
Dean Susan Grey Akers poses with Nancy Boone at a reception in Akers’ honor during the School’s 50th anniversary
celebrations.
70
Prof. Haynes McMullen (second from left) talks with (from left) David Jensen, Esther Bierbaum and Arlene Taylor, early students in the doctoral program
begun in 1978.
71
1985
Dr. Evelyn H. Daniel becomes dean.
1986
Dr. Roper resigns to become dean
of the library school at the University of South Carolina at Columbia.
1987
Dr. Barbara B. Moran becomes assistant dean.
72
Above: Library science faculty walk to the University Day celebrations in their academic regalia
in 1987. University Day, held on Oct. 12 each year since 1877, celebrates the beginnings of the
University of North Carolina and is marked with a procession of faculty, students and staff.
Left: Two new students look for their name tags during new student orientation in 1987.
73
1988
Name change to School of
Information and Library Science
becomes official.
School introduces post-graduate Certificate of Advanced Study
(CAS) degree.
School observes 15 years of providing library services to EPA Library.
74
Above: Prof. Robert Losee discusses information retrieval with a student in the late 1980s.
Left: Information and library science students meet with prospective employers at a career day in the 1980s.
75
1989
Dr. Holley named School’s second
William Rand Kenan Jr. Professor.
1990
Dr. Barbara Moran becomes dean.
Former Dean Lucile Kelling Henderson dies at the age of 95, July
29.
OCLC founder Frederick G. Kilgour
appointed distinguished research
professor.
Lester Asheim Scholarship Fund
endowed with $30,000.
76
Above: SILS dean Barbara Moran poses with Fred and Eleanor Kilgour at a luncheon in 1993.
Fred Kilgour founded the Online Computer Library Center in 1967 in Dublin, Ohio. He joined
the SILS faculty in 1990 as a distinguished research professor.
Left: A portrait of SILS dean Evelyn Daniel is hung in the School’s library shortly after she left
the post in 1990. Daniel remained at SILS as a professor after she stepped down as dean.
77
1991
Dr. Daniel becomes president of
the Association for Library and
Information Science Education
(ALISE).
Dr. Roper, dean of USC College of
Library and Information Science,
presents School’s first Lucile Kelling
Henderson Lecture.
Prof. Susan Steinfirst, who taught courses in children’s and young adult literature at SILS from 1976–1996, sits in
her office. Steinfirst died of cancer in March 1997, and the Susan Steinfirst Memorial Lecture series, which brings
children’s authors to lecture at the School, was begun two years later.
78
A group of SILS students works in the School’s library in the 1990s.
79
1992
Melissa M. Cain becomes School’s
first director of development.
School observes 60th anniversary
of its founding.
80
Above: SILS student Libby Grey hugs a well-wisher at the 1992 commencement reception. Grey
served as the president of the SILS Alumni Association from 1994–1995.
Left: Two students work in a SILS computer lab in the early 1990s.
81
1993
School offers first Oxford seminar,
“English Libraries and Librarianship.”
School’s newly created Board of
Visitors meets for the first time.
82
Above: Participants in the first Oxford summer seminar, “English Libraries and Librarianship,”
tour new construction at the British Library in 1993, the first year SILS offered the seminar. The
two-week summer seminar gives participants the chance to study the history of librarianship at
some of England’s most renowned libraries, like the British Library and the Bodleian.
Left: Two SILS students work on a cataloging assignment in the School’s library.
83
1994
Dr. Jerry Saye appointed associate
dean.
Frances Carroll McColl Professorship established with $250,000
gift from Hugh L. and Jane Spratt
McColl.
School observes 20 years of partnership with EPA.
Scaffolding surrounds Manning Hall in the summer of 1995. SILS’ home underwent a string of renovations in the
mid-1990s, including updates to its large lecture hall and the Information and Technology Resource Center.
84
Incoming SILS students talk during a picnic at the 1994 new student orientation.
85
1996
Dr. Helen Tibbo named assistant
dean.
SunSITE moves from basement of
Phillips Hall to second-floor lab in
Manning Hall.
86
Above: Prof. Bert Dempsey (center) sets up for a teleclass with the Office of Information Technology’s Jan Tax and Andy Brown in March
1996. (photo by Dan Sears)
Left: Prof. Helen Tibbo gives a lecture in the SILS Information and Technology Resource Center in July 1996. Tibbo was named assistant
dean that same year. (photo by Dan Sears)
87
1997
Dr. Susan Steinfirst, retired professor, dies of cancer at the age of 56.
A lecture fund is later established
in her name.
School observes 65th anniversary.
First three recipients of SILS undergraduate minor graduate from
UNC.
Professor Emeritus Lester E. Asheim
dies at the age of 83, July 1.
Dr. Stephanie Haas receives
School’s first Outstanding Teacher
of the Year award.
88
Above: SILS alumnus David Goble (MSLS, 1994) leads a teaching seminar in 1997.
Left: Elizabeth Wilson, SILS dean Barbara Moran, Penelope Wilson and SILS dean Edward
Holley prepare to cut the cake during the School’s 65th anniversary celebrations in 1997. The
Wilsons are daughters of the School’s founder, Louis Round Wilson.
89
1998
Children’s author and UNC graduate Mary Pope Osborne speaks as
the first Susan Steinfirst Lecturer.
1999
Dr. Joanne Gard Marshall becomes
dean.
School ties for first in U.S. News
& World Report rankings of top
graduate schools in the field.
School observes 25-year partnership with EPA Library.
School conducts its first mid-year
commencement ceremony.
Workers from facilities services hang a banner over the entrance to Manning Hall highlighting U.S. News & World
Report’s ranking SILS as the number one library and information science school in America in 1999.
90
A student, seen through many windows in the Walter Royal Davis Library, flips through a book in 1999. Davis Library became UNC-CH’s main campus
library in 1984 and currently contains over 2.5 million volumes, 2 million printed government documents and 3 million microforms.
91
2000
SILS becomes first school to have
its MSIS program accredited for a
full seven years by the ALA. The
School’s MSLS program, continually accredited since 1934, also
receives a full accreditation.
Associate Professor Dr. Paul Solomon becomes associate dean.
Thanks in part to a $4 million gift
from Red Hat Center, Metalab
becomes ibiblio.org.
2001
SILS announces introduction of
dual master’s degree programs
with Kenan-Flagler Business School
and the School of Public Health
School observes 70th anniversary.
92
Above: Paul Jones, a clinical professor at both SILS and the School of Journalism and Mass
Communications, talks to reporters during the unveiling of ibiblio.org on Sept. 11, 2000. The
Web site, supported in part by both schools, is “one of the largest ‘collections of collections’ on the
Internet…a conservancy of freely available information, including software, music, literature, art,
history, science, politics, and cultural studies.”
Left: SILS student Andrew Smith gets advice on clowning from instructor Julie Davis. Davis
presented the workshop “Send in the Clowns: Enhancing Children’s Programs and Storytelling
Through Clowning” in Manning Hall in October of 2000.
93
2002
International summer semester in
the Czech Republic, co-sponsored
by Charles University, begins in
Prague.
2003
Classes begin for newly-approved
BSIS undergraduate degree program.
Dual degree programs begin with
the School of Nursing, the Art
Department and the School of
Government.
Cooperative international program
in information management begins with institutions in Singapore
and Denmark.
School begins certificate program
in bioinformatics and offers school
library media certification through
distance education.
25th anniversary of the doctoral
program.
94
Above: Students and faculty pose for a group portrait outside Manning Hall during the Winter 2003 commencement ceremony. SILS
recognized the first five graduates of its bachelor of science in information science program in 2003.
Left: Students and faculty mingle in the Manning Hall lobby in 2003. In late 2006 the lobby was furnished with tables, chairs and stools
to create a collaborative student work area. SILS students, faculty and staff submitted ideas and voted in a contest to name the newly
redone space, eventually dubbing the lobby “The Public Domain.”
95
2004
Dual degree programs begin with
the School of Law and Duke University School of Medicine.
OCLC/Frederick G. Kilgour Lecture
in Information and Library Science established with a pledge of
$100,000 from the OCLC Online
Computer Library Center, Inc.
Dr. José-Marie Griffiths becomes
dean.
2005
The Louis Round Wilson Academy
meets for the first time.
The Louis Round Wilson Academy meets for the first time Oct. 6-7, 2005, in the Wilson Library on the campus of
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Academy, convened by SILS, is comprised of global thought
leaders and information revolutionaries who serve as advisors for the Knowledge Trust. The Knowledge Trust program is designed to address rapidly evolving information needs and to provide SILS with the investment required to
respond to these needs.
96
SILS students Shauna Griffin, Cindy McCracken and Kristen Boekelheide and SILS librarian Rebecca Vargha (seated at rear) organize books for a lending
library for Homestart, a Chapel Hill homeless shelter. Along with SILS student Meg McGinn, they collected over 250 books to start the Homestart library.
The group won the Special Libraries Association’s Outstanding Leadership by a Student Group award at the 2005 SLA annual conference for helping Homestart establish a library.
97
2006
Frederick Kilgour, founder of the
Online Computer Library Center
(OCLC), and distinguished research
professor, dies in August at 92.
2007
School observes 75th anniversary.
Donald W. King appointed distinguished research professor.
Students march from Manning Hall to the Frank Porter Graham Student Union to take part in
spring commencement exercises on May 13, 2007.
98
SILS dean José-Marie Griffiths addresses the audience at the School’s 75th anniversary celebrations on Sept. 18, 2006, in Memorial Hall. (photo by Dan
Sears)
99
Alumni
Seventy-five years of graduates from
the School of Information and Library Science
100
Edith Biddix
Tempe Boyd
Dorothy Brown
Ernestine Cloud
Olan Cook
Madeline Copeland
Elsa Craig
Marion Curtis
Mary Fleet
Jessie Griffin
Nina Hammond
Louise Jennings
Lena Keller
Eleanor Leonard
Virginia Martin
Evelyn Mullen
Elizabeth Pomeroy
Quinette Prentiss
Elinor Preston
Alice Prioleau
Della Shore
Ann Smith
Pearl Snodgrass
Louise Styne
Elizabeth Sussdorff
Susanne Tucker
Dorothy Walters
Florence Winslow
Margaret Wright
Hazel Baity
Evelyn Batts
Lella Beasley
Margaret Bullitt
Alberta Bush
Mary Delamar
Mary Kemp
Martha McFerrin
John McNeil
Emily Moore
Mary Pate
Eleanor Pearsall
Alma Skaggs
Wendell Smiley
Irene Strieby
Eleanor Titsworth
Mary Tucker
Icelle Wright
Lucile Althar
Edith Averitt
Fannie Bradley
Charlotte Flynn
1932
1933
1934
Emma Gregory
Sara Hamilton
Sara Hanlin
Louis Harrell
Minna LeGrand
Adelaide Maner
Dorothy Moss
Jessie Newby
Neville North
Gladys Otten
Ac Ruble
Mary Seagle
Mary Shore
Ruth Thomason
Betty (Long ) Zouck
Elizabeth Ayscue
Mary Blackburn
Catherine Cline
John Dudley
Mary Dudley
Elizabeth Durham
Bertha Edwards
Amy Fetzer
Sarah Glenn
James Greenaway
Minnie Kallam
Nancy McDaniel
Miilton Russell
Elizabeth Walker
Winona Walker
Victoria Young
Evelyn Blanchard
Virginia Bowen
Vella Burch
Lucile Cavenaugh
Sophronia Cooper
Mildred Davis
Elizabeth Eason
Herman Fussler
Arabella Gore
Ethel Hale
Rebekah Hash
Elmina Hearne
Polly Jacobson
Elmer Johnson
Joyce Killingsworth
Paul Knapp
Margaret Lasley
Florine Lewter
Martha Lineberry
Margaret Olmstead
Mary Poole
Mary Ruffin
Katharine Scoggin
Ruth Searles
Giles Sheperd
Hallie Sykes
Fant Thornley
Mary Weaver
H. Louise Weyher
Ruth Worley
Agnes Wren
Margaret Young
Janeth Younginer
1935
1936
Virginia Alexander
Ray Allen
Evelyn Boyd
Stanley Brown
Clyde Cantrell
Bertha Cobb
Ann Coleman
Margaret Combs
Nancy Felt
Mary Frazer
Jessie Fuller
Eleanor Hammond
Kenneth Hayes
Alice Hicks
Margaret Hodges
Sidney Holmes
Isabella Jinnette
Jeanne LeBlanc
Emily Loftin
Mary Loos
Hazel Mangum
Jane McDaniel
Betty McDermed
Jeanne McLaurin
Marguerite Morris
Edwin Osburn
Caroine Parks
Emory Pittenger
Rosa Quisenberry
Helen Rosser
Hazel Shiring
Mary Sloane
Beaulah Stroud
Georgia Thomas
Evelyn Todd
Howard Turner
Jane Wilson
Charles Woodbury
Alice Adams
Elizabeth Adkins
1937
Mary Agnes Anderson
Mary Elizabeth Bitting
Issac Brock
Ruth Brown
Frances Virginia Crumpler
Mary Cutlip
Kathleen Donahue
Margaret Doughton
Alice Lee Googe
Betty Gosnold
Hilda Greenberg
Paul Livingston Grier
Peggy Hampton
Nettie Herring
Ruth Colvard Hill
Walter Barnard Hill
Sarah (Bowling) Holland
Martha Eveline Jones
Mary Elizabeth King
Mae Kreeger
Rose Marie (Frazier) Lowery
Katherine Martin
Eleanor Mayes
Rosamond Mcanless
Margaret Elizabeth Montgomery
Elizabeth Page
Katherine Inez Poe
Ellis Carl Pratt
Ruth Dimm Prichard
Alice Pugh
Laura Alice Reed
Margaret Roush
Mary Seawell
Lou Sullivan Shine
Eileen Smith
Mary Stevenson
Margaret Tillett
Martha Jane Traylor
Elinor Walters
Bessie Watson
Virginia Williamson
Carolyn Wray
Tempe Yarborough
1939
1938
Agatha Adams
Estelle Ardrey
Helen Towne Armstrong
Berta Elise Arnold
Margaret Virginia Baker
Caroline Gordon Belser
Richard Titsworth Binford
Carolyn Ramsey Black
Susan B. Borden
Elisabeth Agnes Council
Annie Katherine Dement
Emily Dickenson
Oscar Paul Dickenson
Mary Elizabeth Facucette
Elizabeth Ferguson
Florence Pauline Fowlkes
Charlesanna Louise Fox
Eleanor Smith Godfrey
Marion Givens Grimes
Verna Mae Hahn
Mildred Catherine Herring
Ema Linton Holman
Frances Parker Howard
Margaret Ridley Long
Edith Roberts McIntosh
Mary Ochse McKee
Martha Morris
Elizabeth Gordon Moseley
Frances Ross Mullican
Lillian Lorraine Patterson
Mary Edith Plowden
Mary Eunice Query
Elizabeth Redfern
Nina Robinson
Isabel Shipley
Lois Smathers
Marguerite Smith
Samray Smith
Elizabeth Valentine
Sarah Vann
Ethel Walker
Hollis Warnock
Charlotte Wester
Adelaide Winslow
Mildred Young
1940
Page Ackerman
Ruth Andrew
Mary Charlotte Andrews
Mary Mitchell Baity
Lillian May Bennett
Dale Monroe Bentz
Willa M Boysworth
Mildred Brannen
Helen Gross Brown
Evelyn Anne Cary
Charlotte Crews
Julia Virginia Eddins
Margaret Bell Farley
Laura Aylett Fleming
Ola Irene Fleming
Mary Perry Garvin
Jane Gassaway
Katharine Moragne Graham
Sarah Bellamy Hall
Margaret Pauline Hamrick
101
Sarah Frances Howell
Sudie Kennon
Carolina Lewis
Sarah Catherine Loftin
Mary Green Matthews
Pattie Graves (Bartee) McIntyre
Suzanne Sparks McLaurin
Vivian Catherine Moose
Ola Maye Nicholson
Enid Rifner Parker
Margaret Frances Patterson
Eleanor Pearce
Vivian Christine Prince
Virginia Joyce Rector
William Lawrence Rhyne
Gay Athena Richardson
Felsie Riddle
Roberta Ruth Robertson
Eleanor Strowd
Grace Vick
Elaine von Oesen
Elizabeth Wharton
Nancy Wilson
Melvin Wood
1941
Mary Allaben
Margaret Allman
Adele Austin
Virginia Birkby
Naomi Bohnsdahl
Olivia B. Burwell
Jean Cochran
Frederick W. B. Coleman
Georgia C. Cowan
Geraldine Cox
Dorothy Crews
Gertrude E. (Coddington) Davis
Hanne Fanta
Kathleen Gilleland
Louise M Hall
Martha Dora Harris
Elizabeth Hodges
Irene Janes
Louise Johnson
Maggie Jones
A.V. (Vivien) Lawson
Olive Lee
Dorothy Linker
Winifred Lion
Helen Miller
Elizabeth A. Moran
Louise Patrick
Wm. H. Peacock
Christine Ponder
Kate S. Pyron
102
Bessie Shipp
Carolyn Smith
William Tatum
Margaret Teague
Margaret Thornton
Catherine Tysinger
Ann Watson
Stafford Webb
Mary Bell Winn
1943
1942
Rose Knox Belk
Lois Blake
Annette Bridges
Carrie Lanier Brittain
Jean Brotsman
Marjorie Burrus
Marguerite Carder
Shirley Chichester
Carman Clark
Anna Mary Conner
Roberta Cowles
Ruth D. ( Johnston) Davis
Jean Ellis
Barbara Fleece
Virginia Goff
Anna Groover
Mary Scott Gurley
Elizabeth Hough
Jean Howard
Ray Jordan
Jocelyn Juniper
Arthur Kittle
Ethel Knott
Henrietta (Logan) Kust
John Henry Lewis
Irene Mason
Mary Duncan McAnally
Mary Parham
J. Mitchell Reames
Miriam Revelise
Mary Ring
Mary Robnison
Elizabeth Sandifer
Catherine Scott
Carolyn Seeley
Alice Somerville
Margaret Starnes
Bethany Swearingen
Elizabeth Tarver
Nettie Taylor
Mary Orpah Ward
Mertys Ward
Rebecca Weant
Catherine Wells
Juanima Wells
Ana White
Carrie Virginia Anderson
Emily Askins
Tera Bailey
Elizabeth Barr
Elizabeth Bittle
Anne Coogan
Merna J. Cox
Katherine Dusenberry
Elizabeth Fuller
Luneele Geer
Leah Hargrove
Helen Haverty
Frances Hinton
Kathryn Johnson
Edna Ruth Jones
Dorothy Lane
Grace E. Lawrence
Virginia Lawson
Marion Lee
Frances Lowe
Helen Lumpkin
Margaret Moran
Margaret Mosimann
Rosaond Myers
Elizabeth New
Mary Ross Paysinger
Mary Posey
Marion Rigdon
Mozelle Spainhour
Margarita Suarez
Marjorie Wilkins
Lois Wilson
Mary Louise Wilson
Elizabeth Wood
Rosa May Anders
Margaret M. Atwood
Elsie Bryant
Dorothy Cole
Nancy Love Comfort
Georgia Mae Crews
Nannie Crowder
James Elder
Mary Goodman
Eunice Gowl
Virginia Greene
Priscilla Griffey
Lucille Higgs
Annie (Laurie) Jones
Desmond Koster
Verona McCrary
Roberta McKinnon
1944
Mary Melton
Marion Middleton
Helen Murrary
Mary Ella Osman
Margaret Palmer
Eleanor Smith
Elizabeth Stoney
Lois Waller
Lena Mae Williams
Roxanna Austin
Madge Blalock
Jean Blount
Josephine Bone
Hortense Boomer
Eleanor Boykin
Margaret Chapman
Clara Council
Dorothy Crowder
Margaret Duer
Angelica Freire
Alyce Fulton
Nita Gahagan
Adele Greenberg
Mildred Gurthrie
Montgomery McCrany
Eleanor McDermid
Sara Peasley
Marjorie Reavis
Luise Rowe
Sarah Shirley
Laura Spence
Mae Tucker
Emily Vander Linden
Julia Ward
Blanca Alvarez
Nell Brannen
Eugenie Chazal
Genevieve Correa
Frances Covington
Kathryn Cross
Emanuel Dondy
Eva Mae Grice
Dorothy Grigg
Gertrud Hexner
Virginia Phillips Holtz
Janet Houck
Minnie M. Huggins
M. Barrett Jones
Deborah Lewis
Kathleen McGhee
Ann Naulty
Maria Proctor
Jean Pugh
William Pullen
Margaret Renegar
Lillian Seaberg
Sally Smith
Marion Steele
Carlton P. West
Pauline M. Worthy
1945
1946
1947
Mary Edna Anders
Elizabeth Andrews
Frances Beale
Margaret Beam
Agnes Bittle
Janie Mary Cash
Gray Gillam
Gail Griffith
Dorothy Hart
Kate Mapp James
Richard Jente
Mary O. (Collins) Klosterman
Evelyn Kocher
Ruth Koenig
Annette Liles
Marie Lusk
Blair Lyle
Ann Martin
Jane Ann McGregor
Anne McLendon
Katherine Mouzon
Virginia Peters
Jean Phifer
William Powell
Martha Savage
Harley Spencer
Miriam Stamps
Margaret Stanton
Janet Stevens
Julia Sullivan
William Ticknor
John Waggoner
Anne I. Armstrong
Dorothy Atkins
Dorothy Avery
June Clark
Anne Crosser
Mildred Eller
Joan Farris
Dorothea Furber
Jessica Graham
Gene Dare Harrison
Helen Harrison
Catherine Heniford
1948
1950
Marvin Hogan
Frances King
Mary Edna Knight
Martha Kochenderfer
Helen Leslie
Laura May
Jessie McKee
Marjorie Miller
Mary Eleanor Parker
Jessie Pearson
Lorenna Jane Ross
Ronda Sawyer
Florence Tyler
Martha L. Wagnor
Ethel Wakefield
Betty Warren
Catherine Weir
Ann Wheeler
Nancy White
Martha Wilkinson
1949
Jane Amos
Martha Anderson
Dorothy Bondanella
Jean Brabham
Jane W. Bradford
Verena (Lewis) Bupon
Rhoda Burgess
Irene Burk
Grace Carnahan
Betty Cox
Elizabeth D. Geer
Susan Littlejohn Glen
Pauline Eupha Griffin
Virginia C. Grigg
Isabel Harding
Mary Sewell Helvey
Patricia Howard
Rachel Martin
Richard Matthews
Caroline McClevy
Sara Frances (Barnes) McDowell
Grayce H. McLamb
Arline Moore
Fannie Corbett O’Keef
Erma Paden
Mary Lee Parker
Carolyn Pleasants
Warren Pope
Marian Sanner
Alice L. Shank
Martha Frances Smith
Mary Virginia Walker
Elizabeth Fisher Winget
Wylma Corrine Woolard
Elizabeth Alexander
Myrtle Landen Beach
Jean S. Breland
Christain M.F. Brun
Mary E. Brundage
Elinor Dathryne Dixon
Dixie Lou Fisher
Elizabeth E. Flowers
Sallie Bacon Fort
Myra Louise Frizzell
Ellen Louise Gelco
Dorothy Harris
Flora Ellen Herman
Martha Vincent Jenkins
Mary Kessi
Sidney E. Matthews, Jr.
Clyde Joseph Miller
Andrew Clark Neal
Mary Anderson Spencer
Alice Anne Springs
Constance Ellen Stanley
Donald Grant Stave
Katherine Ruth Thompson
Jeanne Tillman
Frances Aline Todd
Jessica Valentine
Gloria Kathleen Whetstone
Mary Carolyn Wiggins
Inez B. Wilson
Jane Wright
Jessie F. Yellowby
1951
Majorie Jean Akers
Anne Elizabeth Andrews
Alice Freeman Ashley
Myra Helen Boozer
Charles Paul Cella, Jr.
Genevieve Willcox Chandler
Margaret McLendon Everett
Lillian Perry Freeman
Corinne Washington Green
Nancy Winston Haley
Ann Katherine Harlow
Cornelia Elizabeth Jones
Helen Marie King
Patti Ann Lambert
Ethel Johnson Lawson
Margaret Coleman Leake
Robert Ellis Lee
Mary Angelyn McNease
Audrey Taylor Mitchell
Richard M. Palcanis
Lucy Ann Parker
Claude Eward Petrie, Jr.
Dorothy Caroline Smith
1952
Annie Louise Bowman
Doris Ann Bradley
Thelma Nadine Burnett
Anne Rebecca Correll
Rebecca Wood Drane
Ruth Monroe Eggleston
Betty B. Reiley Farris
Ann Fuller Field
Maria Spady Fraser
Elizabeth Freeman
Connolly Currie Gamble, Jr.
James Harkins
Dorothy Aileen Hefner
Elizabeth Glasgow Howe
John Broadus Jones
Flora Susan Lockridge
Elizabeth Munro Seelinger
Eliza Reamey Smith
Charles Howard Stevens
Rhoda Jeanne Thomas
Virginia Penn Waldrop
Myrtle B. Watrous
1953
Cora Margaret Allman
Anglea Avizonis
Samuel Monroe Baker, Jr,
Elizabeth Grier Bolton
Joyce Estella Bruner
Perry Green Cannon
Bessie Ruth Cartwright
Helen Bloxom Cox
Mary Ellen Darst
Grace Gordon Dawson
Evan Ira Farber
Aaron Hurst Farnell
Mary Elizabeth Griggs
Alice Elizabeth Hamer
Betty Chapman Harrison
Miels Christopher Horton, Jr.
Ruth Wagner Latty
Edgar Pershing Lynch
Mary Adelaide McLarty
Betty Will McReynolds
Robert Alfred Miller
Tressie Virginia Myers
Mable Pauline Nelson
Davora Edmunds Nielson
Marion Louis Roberston
Lucille Guy Sullivan
Ola Belle Tillman
Donald Keith Wilson
Majorie Hilt Wilson
1954
Mary Elizabeth Anderson
Jane C. Bahsen
Nancy Bates
Mary Lilla Browne
Sarah Dott Call
Frances Elizabeth Carroll
Helen Younger Carter
Patrica Ford Cornwell
Georgia Fox Cox
Jacksie Cumby
Elizabeth Berry Foran
Caroline Chandler Heriot
Caroline Elizabeth Hieber
Charles Clifton Hopkins
Edwina Johnson
Celeste Johnston
Mary Frances Kennon
Melvin Kesner
Donald Nicholson MacKenzie
Charlotte Lucile Montgomery
Lake L. Newton
Martha Respess
Ethel Abernathy Rose
Pattie Jane Scott
Patrica Christine Smith
Eleanor Stephens
Ruth Stone
Maud Talley
Ellen Stewart Thomas
Nancy Jones Turner Chase
Elizabeth von Dohlen
Harry Thomas Walker
Mary Margaret Yelverton
Jane Dimmitt Zeigler
1955
Elizabeth Allan
Eugenia Babylon
Arnold Borden
Margaret Bull
Edward Daviss Byers, III
Neva F. Campbell
Helen Chase
Jane Iris Crutchfield
Mary Jane Crutchfield
Juanita Grant
Virginia J. Harris
Mary Davis Hill
Elizabeth Holder
Penelope Jarrell
Emily Lawrence
Jean Luffman
Rosalie Massengale
Florence Mead
Phyllis Myron
James M. Nicholson
Flint Norwood
Barbara Oldt
Betsy Ann Olive
Horace William O’Shea, Jr.
Vernie E. Pike
Edmund Ramsaur
Florence Songer
Gay Spivey
Elvin E. Strowd
1956
William Keville Ach
Carrie Gene Ashley
Mary Roberts Beattie
Frances Ann Bold
Geraldine Smith Booton
Mary Guy Boyd
Robert Marion Brooks, Jr.
Jane Woodruff Byrd
Mary Whitted Canada
Ann McDonald Cox
Charles Garland Cox, Jr.
Emma Stribling Dendy
Albert Diaz
Charlotte Georgi
Mary Virginia Harding
Catherine Marie Mayburry
Sunshine Burchell Murphy
John Wesley Pinkerton
Emma Wilder Pohl
Alice Wright Porter
Phyllis Ann Shepard
Lucy Teresa Vash
Doris Waugh
1957
Walter Monroe Barnard
Elna Capel
Emily Del Mar Chapman
Elizabeth Graves deCharms
Sylvia Diehl
Virginia Dober
Eleanor Driscoll
Joan Davis Eaton
Grace Betty Farrior
Frances Hall
Helen Readdick Hardee
Jean Marie Harris
Mary Elizabeth Hughes
Lucia Porcher Johnson
Gene D. Lanier
Amy Le Van
Sarah Billopp McAllister
103
Beatrice Montgomery
Georgianna Hayes Niven
Janie Elizabeth Norris
Mary Norwood
Sangster Parrott
John Peck
Theodore Edison Perkins
Irene Lynn Sleeth
Thelma Valeria Thompson
Alice Allene Wall
1958
Jean Irene Gorwill
David Hall
Evelyn M. Kocher
Peter Kudrik
Joyce Lansdell
Ruth Weaver Lucas
Gay S. Moore
Adriana Pannevis Orr
Bobbie Pearl Newman Redding
Rodney Grant Sarle
Phillip Shore
Joann Taylor
Natalie Tsonev
Jean T. Ward
Mary Elizabeth Wilbanks
Mary Jane Wing
1959
Herbert Henry Beckwith
Miriam Allen Bowman
Raymond L. Carpenter, Jr.
Elinor Marie Douglass
Mildred Hayward Farrow
Robert Gibbs
Richard Marr Graham
Miriam O. Irby
Lucinda Lanning
Alma Kerr Blount Longman
Mary Virginia Moore
Frances Thackston
Benny Ray Tucker
David Lane Vaughan
Joan Patricia Warren
1960
Virginia L. Barrett
Sara Storey Batten
Elizabeth Browning Bias
Kathleen Hambrough Cheape
Benjamin Franklin Clymer
Imogen Stuart Ficklen
Alice Gicovate
William Harold Johnson
Harriet Virginia Leonard
Joanne Jackson Lofquist
104
Joyce Catherine Moyers
Arline Parker
Dolores Victoria Sampedro
Valentine Lucielle Schmidt
Johnnie Ann Seymour
Mary Newman Simmons
Alva Ware Stewart
George Marvin Tatum
Kathleen Petra Wahl
Margaret Jean Warren
Billy Rayford Wilkinson
1961
James Wesley Bates
Margaret Elizabeth Battle
Sally Virginia Brown
Arline Butler Campbell
Dorothy Clyde Fuller
Elizabeth C. Harrison
Katherine Ann Knight
Robert Fain Looney
Carolyn Patricia Martin
Mary Frances Morris
Betty Jean Rhyne
Virginia McNeil Speiden
Frances Rebecca Walker
Anne Wheeler
Sara Catherine Wilkinson
Beverly Bernier
Barbara Branson
Abdul Chilmeran
Mary Hendricks
Margaret Husselbee
Hazel B. Linn
Agnes Little
Elizabeth McDavid
Olga Palotai
Annette Parsons
Theodore Perkins
Joe Rees
Fred Roper
Adelaide Schnell
Barbara Senn
Mary Thomas
Mabel Whedbee
George Browning
Mary Cameron
Daniel Jack Gore
Jeanne H Hudson
Carolyn Hutchinson
Ardie Kelly
Frederic LaCroix
Pat Carter Lowenburg
1962
1963
Kathleen McCulley
Murray McDonald
Michael Pipkin
Lindsay Polk
Joy Scruggs Stafford
William Stewart
Martha Walker
1964
Phyllis Andrews
Sam Boone
Martha Brandis
Pat Carpenter
Susan Csaky
Richard David
Anthony Dees
Joan Durrance
Susan Freegard
Emil Frey
Lois Fullerton
Katherine Gardner
Sarah Virginia Gray
Peggy Horney
Carolyn Hunter
Bain Johnson
Ann Daly (Kinken) Johnson
Richard Lancaster
Olga Lendvayova
Alma Skinner Mather
Leslie McNeil
Gerda Moore
Susan Payne
Herbert Poole
James Poteat
Alice Reaves
William C. Sizemore
Barbara Stanley
Eldon Tamblyn
Mary Ellen Thomas
M.K. Thompson
Josie Tomlinson
John Trotti
Coral Washington
Lillonteen Whitehurst
Minnie M. Wiggins
Helen B Blakely
Mike Briggs
Mary Brousseau
Rose Callahan
Nancy Capps
Constance Carter
Beth Chiles
Jane Colby
Nora Conrad
1965
Jane Coulbourn
Nancy Cowan
Carol Coxe
Janet Cranford
Mina Daniels
Peggy Duckworth
Grace Dunkley
Ray Durrance
Geraldine Eggleston
William Erwin
Frances Everhart
Kathleen Fay
Barbara Garrison
Dorothy Gilliam
Eliza Good
Pat (Barbee) Gray
Gay Hertzman
Betty Hipp
Janet Hunt
Richard Jackson
Ko Jones
Charles King
Polly Kyhn
Betsy Lackey
Barbara List
Winfried Lombogia
Isabel Masterton
Carse McDaniel
Marg Lane McDonald
Sara McGee
Katherine Mellard
Roberta Mellor
Helen Midgett
Patricia Nyswander
Bob Pollard
Dorothy Quinlan
Marilyn Searson
Mary Sue Simpson
Stefanie Stella
Rebecca Stephens
Marion Stoer
Linda Sutker
Sarah Taylor
Martha Turney
Sarah Wilson
Margaret Baker
Claribel Baskin
Denny Beaird
Jo Anne Bell
Lois Berry
Sue Branch
Barbara Bullard
Anne C. Bunting
Dean Burgess
1966
Mary Burt
Naomi Butler
Georgia Carmichael
Helen Carter
Louisa Cartledge
Carol Combs
Ruth Currie
Frances Danoff
Betty Davis
Louise Deshaies
Eunice Drum
Charlie Economous
James English
Judith Garitano
Helena Gierasimowicz
Ellen Gilfillan
Jane (Weaver) Griffiths
Jeannette Harrelson
Helen Jean Harris
Richard Harris
Donald Haynes
Sally Heindel
Shirley Henn
Marjorie Herrin
Joe Hewitt
Evelyn Rae (Scott) Hudson
Alma Husketh
Marcia Ingols
Linda Jones
Vickie Anderson Jones
Ada Astin Josey
James Lewis
Gary Luttrell
Nancy McBrayer
Christel McCanless
Robert McGee
Lynda McPherson
Rose Miele
Lois (McGirt) Miller
Willene Miller
Lois Moore
Mary Morris
Anne Morrow
Georgia Finnigan Mulligan
Roland Nicholson
Kathryn Olschner
Linda Osterman
Legare Padgett
John Parker
Susan B. Perry
Philip Podlish
Frederick Pohl
Linda Quinn
Alma Reitzel
Maria (Wornom) Rippe
Becky Ritchie
Mason Rose
Warren Sawyer
Barbara Sewell
Melvin Ron Simpson
Winifred Smith
Michael Sprinkle
Nancy U. Stanley
Sue Bennett Steele
Malone B. Stinson
Shirley Tarlton
Frances Taylor
Lucy Turnbull
Lois Upham
Joyce Upham
Helen Urquhart
Keith Vail
Kenneth Walter
Priscilla Warren
Margaret Weakley
Eula Wheeler
Frances Whilhoit
Michele Wiederkehr
1967
Alice Allen
Arlene Anderson
Betty Anderson
Ellen Anderson
Frances Autry
Herman Stephen Bekemeyer
Peggy Bellamy
Carolyn Berneking
Connie Edward Bolden
Barbara Bonomo
Purabi Bose
Nancy Boyd
Pam Carnes
Samuel Clay
Margaret Clifton
Sam Cook
Lenox Cooper
Susan Crane
Benjamin Crutchfield
Joyce Davis
Alice DeCamps
Angela Dermeyer
Linda Easley
Ruth Eddy
Melanie Ehrhart
Janet Loafman Flowers
Gaylle Garrison
Virginia Gibson
Dorothy Grimm
Myra Harscheid
Carroll Hicks
Ellis Hodgin
June Marie Huff
David Hunsucker
Jill Huntley
Nancy Jackson
Joann Johnson
John Johnson
Nina Johnson
Martha Jones
Artemis Kares
Father Ambrose Keefe
Margaret Kellogg
Yusuf Khoury
Bohdan Kohutiak
John Landrum
John Langen
Gail Llwewllyn
Edgar Lynch
Michelle MacCaughelty
Mary Maxwell
Dorothy McCombs
Susan McEnally
Eileen McIlvaine
Abigail McKinney
Molly Milner
Anita Monroe
Mrs. Lila Ward Morley
J. Irene Moser
Barbara (Grinter) Moss
Linda Neal
Charlotte Noell
Rose Marie Norwood
Charlotte (Chen) Ou
Lennart Pearson
Sandra Perry
Patricia Rich Phillips
Donald Richardson
Alfonso Rivellino
Andrea L. Ross
Sarah Rutherford
Jo Ellen Schlott
Rebecca Scoggin
Susan Scott
Janet Sheets
Peggy Creed Shouse
Ethel Slonaker
Constance Smith
Lynn Smith
Lydia Spivey
Pam Sprinkle
Helen Sullivan
Pamela Senn Toms
Sara Turley
William VanHoven
Mary Jane Ward
Betty Joyce Wear
Martha Weaver
Jo Ann West
Margaret Wheeler
Harrison White
Patricia White
Peggy White
Dixie Whittington
Mary C. Wise
Judith Woodburn
Alice (Hammond) Wooster
Elizabeth Wooten
James F. Wyatt
1968
Sandra Allen
Janet Arey
Gary Barefoot
Beverly Bebout
Nancy (Field) Beecham
David Bevan
Elizabeth Boardman
Elizabeth Bolden
Emily Boyce
Eunice Brock
Virginia Brooker
Jeanne Brooks
Vivian Brown
Lesley Brown
Margaret Brown
Ronald Carver
Peter Chang
Hsing Hsia Chen
Ann Clark
Mary Coe
Margaret Collier
Donna Coyte
James A Crouch
Kedron Davis
Joseph Dixon
Lester Duncan
Ann West Dwiggins
Mary Ellis
Julia England
Martha Sparks Evans
Gladys Faherty
Duane Fenstermann
Nell Benton Fuller
Florence Cayood Garrett
Nancy Gilbert
Elizabeth “Betty” Grant
Karen (Grant) Guyot
Don Guyot
Alfreida Hammett
Sandra Hanes
Marcia (McGukin) Hanna
Diane Harkins
Charlotta Hensley
Bruce High
Mary Holloway
Ann Hoover
Sallie Howard
Frances Howell
Lorriane Huppert
Thelma Hutchins
Mary Jardine
Mary Evelyn Jefferson
Jean Johnson
Anita Ker Johnson
Marguerite Johnson
Pauline Jung
Ann Kahan
Ann Terry Kincheloe
Bruce Knarr
Cindy (Hattie) Knight
Vera Koontz
Marian Krugman
Susan Lefler
Leonard Lewandowski
Doris Maness
Patricia Maroney
Dohn Martin
Sally McCrary
Jane McKean
Mary McMullen
Marjorie Memory
Don Meredith
Tran Thi Thu Minh
Sarah Mitchell
Guthrie Moore
Alan Nathanson
Eugene Neely
Nancy Patterson
Martin Pautz
Russel Charles Pease
Mary Pittenger
Mary Anne Rangel-Guerrero
Johanna Raper
Sybille Rechten
Judy Roberts
Norma Royal
Robert Shouse
Judith Sketoe
Ann Smith
Cassandra Smith
David Steinberg
Ariel Stephens
Jo Stroud
Sandra Umberger
Ellen Voss
Nancy Wallace
James Waller
Mildred Williams
Karen Wilson
John Womeldorf
Linda Ruth Young
Julie Zachowski
Jean Allen
Martha Bean
Natalie Bell
Anne Billeter
Ruth Cain
Elizabeth Campbell
Jill Caraway
Linda Carroll
Alexander Carver
Jane Carver
I Tze Isaac Chao
Nancy Clark
Betty Cleaver
Susan Cockrell
Charles (Fred) Coker
Ariel Colburn
Mary Sue Comstock
Susan Cowilich
Frankie Cubbedge
Madeline Currie
Katherine Daniel
Frances Davis
Joyce Dean
Lynn Dodge
Paul Dove
John Dykstra
Margaret Furr
Ruth Gault
Alice Gerald
Marian Goodman
Thomas Gordon
Mary Graff
Emily Graham
Phyllis Hall
Mary Anna Hall
Margaret Halliday
William Harrison
Lynn Herrick
William Hill
Lenora Hines
Mary Horres
Martha Jernigan
Jane Jones
Anne Kabler
Frances Knibb
Barbara Krueger
Louise LaCroix
James Lee
1969
105
Judy Lee
Margaret McCarthy
Elise McWhorter
Rochelle Messinger
Mary Miller
Albert Nelius
Margaret Newhard
Emily (Potter) Pensinger
Harriet Price
Mary Raines
Daria Rivela
Virginia Rolett
Edwina Rooker
Ann Smith
Nathaline Smith
Sandra Smith
Hazel Stephenson
Priscilla Sutcliff
Mary Lee Sweat
Sheila Terrill
Diane Terry
Marcia Trelease
Christine Underwood
Henri Veit
George Viele
Nellie Waltner
Julie Wanner
Lynn Ward
Gloria Watterson
Peggy Whalen
1970
Meredith Altshuler
Evelyn Andrews
Karen Berg
Kenneth Bishop
Lelea Bowling
Dennis Bruce
Marguerite Burgess
Alexandra Campbell
Elizabeth (McElwee) Cannon
Paula Cole
Edith DeMik
JoAnn Dick
Harvey Dixon
Carolyn Duesing
Christina Dunn
Mary Fasheh
Marialice Ferguson
Mary Flowe
Reecca Floyd
Linda Folda
Charles Fox
Judy Getz
Sue Gilkerson
Barbara Glasser
106
Martha Graham
James Gray
Martha Hagadorn
George Hellen
Darrell Hodgins
June Hubbard
Dorothy Jackson
Ann Jefferson
David Jensen
Katharine Johnson
Larry Johnson
Daniel Jones
James Justice
Ridley Kessler
Paula King
Mary Klontz
Margaret (Mattis) Knoerr
Carol (Triplette) Koenig
Kristin Krause
Fred Lambert
Joline Land
Bruce Langdon
Eva Lee
Sandra Lehnen
Verna Lomax
Rebecca Marlin
Juanita McCarthy
Sarah McLaughlin
Spencer Means
Kathleen Moore
Evelyn Moss
Linda Murphy
Janice Nicholson
Margaret Ogilvy
Nancy O’Neal
Andrea Pearlman
Carolyn Peters
Lynn Phillips
Jane Pickett
Celia Poe
James Raper
Robin Richards
Patricia Rocca
Mildred Sanders
Nellie Sanders
Ann Schadel
Joyce Shields
Patricia Snyder
Rickey Stith
Ann Stone
Sarah Stone
Madelyn Strange
Eunja Suhr
Judith Sutton
Dorlores Swindell
Betty (Chapman) Todd
Mary Sue Turner
Carmen Turner
Jeanne Walton
Judith Walton
Susan Ward
Ann-Marie Werz
Daniel Yanchisin
Betty Young
Araby Young
1971
Rebecca Ash
Daphne Barger
Judith Barnes
Margaret (Buff ) Blanchard
Clair (Pratt) Bledsoe
Jean Boinin
Frances Bragg
Beatrice Bruce
Imogene Burns
Peter Buyer
Peggie Byars
Helen Callison
Sally Cheng
Yung-Hsiao Cheng
Ju Chung
Robert Cole
Carolyn Comer
Marischa Cooke
William Cooper
Carlene Crisp
Alice Crocker
Murlin Croucher
June Daly
Susan Davi
Robert Davis
Barbara (Franklin) Deweerd
Sherry Dicks
Diana Dixon
Margaret Donegan
Janet Doyle
Lida Dunkleberger
Judith Farr
Judith Faust
Sarah Ferguson
Mary (Moore) Fleeman
Robert Foeller
James Foster
Nancy Frazier
Mary Frizell
Mary Katherine Gamewell
Donna Gant
Vicki Glascow
Carol (Keithley) Goodwin
Walter Gray
Cathleen Griffin
Neville Grow
Carol Hallman
Joseph Hammond
Howard Harris
Marion Hart
Mary Hartman
Sarah Harvey
Gloria Holland
Emily Holman
Margaret Hunt
Paul Hutzler
Shirley Jamison
Joyce Johnson
Leena Johnson
Richard Jones
John Jones
Marcella Jordan
Katherine Kaercher
Chris Kares
Carol Kem
Marcia Kingsley
Young He Koh
Jeanne Korman
Kathryn Kuzminski
Julia Laney
Joyce Lewis
Beverly Linton
Carolyn Lipscomb
Nancy Lufborrow
Leslie Mackler
Virginia Martin
Kathrine May
Valerie (Powers) Mayo
Janet McFarland
Martha McPhaile
Richard Mellown
Margaret Miller
John Minor
Laurance Mitlin
Peter Neal
Mark Neese
Myreen Nicholson
Charles Osburn
Lanny Parker
Ann Pettingil
Jean Poast
Mary Rakow
Nancy Richards
Alice Richmond
Philip Ritter
Ann Rogers
Gail Rogers
Susan Rose
Rhea Ross
Faye Schott
Nancy Scism
Helen Seagrave
Carole Sebastian
Carol Sexton
Hildred Shelton
Debra Shmeltz
William Simpson
Cheryl Stevenson
Maurice Taylor
Sara Thompson
Leslie Trainer
Alice (Estes) Tucker
Walter Tuttle
Elza Viles
Laurel Webster
Bruce Westbrook
Karen Weston
Robert Whitesides
Elizabeth Whittecar
Philip Williams
Ruth Yonuschot
Laura (Harris) Young
1972
Mark Alpert
Anna Andrews
Carolyn (Vaughn) Andrews
Robert Atkinson
Jenny Bailey
Lois Ballard
Jean Barnes
Margaret Bedard
Charla Berkley
Jean Biblo
Sara Brice
Patricia Burke
Annette Burr
John Callahan
Jerry Campbell
Robert Coley
Phyllis Cox
Anna Dvorak
Barbara Gabor
Margaret Gentry
Homa Ghasemi-Gonabadi
Mary Glenn
Homa Gonabadi
Lester Gosier
Karen Gottovi
Michael Gray
Shirley Gregory
Carl Griffler
Martha Grogan
Toni Grow
Anita Haller
Margaret Hammer
Charles Haney
Sandra Harrison
Ernest Hingkeldey
Marguerite Horn
Lesley Johnson
Elaine Johnson
Richardia Johnson
David Jones
Larry Keesee
Mary Kirchner
Phebe Kirkham
Janice Kopff
Carolyn Lane
Ann Lee
Johanna Lewis
Carolyn (Looney) Line
Linda Lockwood
Karen Lynema
James Martin
Jean Martinson
James May
Herbert McLeod
Robert Miller
Sara Mobley
John Moorman
Pamela Morgan
Carol Myers
Cynthia Newhall
Fred O’Bryant
Paul Odom
Laura Olshan
Eric Olson
Margaret Osburn
Dennis Pendleton
Alice Perry
Marita Quinnett
Martha Ransley
Barbara Rehder
Jessica Roberts
Ann Rowley
Janelle Sadler
William Schenck
Mary Ellen (Verzaro) Schwartz
Sherry Scott
Patricia Senn
Bernie Smith
Susan Smith
Caroline Smith
John Stalker
Elizabeth Stewart
Mary Stott
Janice Tate
Antoinette Thompson
Catherine Townsend
Carann Turner
Richard Walker
Katina Walser
Mary Wetzel
Donald White
Lynda White
Ruth Wilson
Martha Wilson
Nancy Withers
Elizabeth Wright
John Yelverton
Barbara Yonce
Phyllis Young
Robert Zeppa
Mary Arbuthnot
Christine Bahr
Elizabeth Bailey
Anne Baxter
Mary Boone
Carol Brantley
Susan Brinn
William Brown
Serena Burke
Margaret Butler
Margaret Calhoun
Anne Carmichael
Catherine Carr
Roberta Chesney
Forest Clark
Margaret Clark
Douglas Cooper
Elizabeth Cox
George Craddock
Lewis Daniels
Katherine Dunn
Sara Eckard
Roberta Engleman
Genene Evans
Katherine Findt
Gernot Gabel
Cherie Gilmore
Carol Glaser
Susan Hecht
Cedric Hepler
Laurie K. Hill
Eleanor Hind
Betty Horne
Susan Kern
Elizabeth Laney
Roger Leachman
Bertha Livingston
Carol Ludlow
Patricia Lynch
Margaret Martin
1973
Junith Martiniere
Betty Maynard
Jennifer McAdoo
Sandra McAnanich
Jimmy McKee
Mary Metter
Alice Marie Morrison
Howard Ogden
Patricia O’Neill
Dorothy Osborn
Elizabeth Percy
Eugene Pfaff
Kathryn Plaskett
Patricia Polentz
Carol ( Jennings) Pollock
Katherine Porter
Lucy Rauch
Virginia Reeves
Carol Rhodes
Eleanor Rollins
Nina Sagatov
Pauline Shaw
Carolyn Shelhorse
Linda Siegle
Deborah Slingluff
Dale Snair
Norman Spuling
Jeanette Stevens
Sibly Sturgis
Lynne Swaine
Martha Talley
Elva Thomas
Audrey Tobias
Charles Tomlinson
Julia Tunison
Riye Tutihasi
Elizabeth Tynan
Martha Tyson
Stephen Van Dyk
John Vedder
Carlotte Walker
Jeanette Waters
Susan Weiss
Christine Wenderoth
Marian Weston
Mary Willhite
Alice Wilson
Barbara Wonnacott
Heather Woodrow
Frances Woodward
Deborah Wright
Noreen Aboutok
Diane Bailes
Laurel Bain
1974
Barbara Baker
Ann Barringer
Nancy Beachley
Jean Beecher
Jessica Bonin
Doroth Combs
Daniel Cooley
Alita Cooper
Margaret Crow
Anne (Stanley) Davidson
Carolyn Davis
Melinda Davis
Gillian Debreczeny
Denise DeGutis
John Dennis
Jeffrey Earnest
David Farrell
Glenda Fowler
Gloria Frederick
Pam Friedman
Susan Galloway
Andrea Gorczyca
Kevin Grose
Pasty (Stokely) Hansel
Patricia Harrison
Tim Hays
Catherine Ho
Mary Houser
Sally Howard
Kathleen Hoye
Frances Jessee
Anne Johnston
William Kirchner
Nancy Kutulas
Susana (Hernandez) Kutulus
Stephanie Lea
Steven Leach
Rebecca Elaine Lewis
Nancy Link
Christine Love
Charles Lowry
Susan Mackler
Deborah McCabe
Michael McKenzie
Mary Ann Mitchell
Elizabeth Moore
Paul Newton
Celine Noel
Laura O’Shields
Roxanne Palmatier
David Paynter
Wilmouth Pearis
Michael Richmond
Harriet Selkowitz
Victoria Silek
Eric Smith
Mary Lee Stevens
Karen (Schubert) Stewart
John Stewart
Lee Strickland
Susan Tarr
Lynda (Herman) Thomas
Ellen Tinkler
Judy Via
Barbara Wagoner
Cheryl Ward
Anne Washburn
Leslie Wayne
Deborah Webster
Carolyn White
Susan Little White
Concepcion Wilson
Sandra Wilson
Lilla Wood
Blanche Wysor
Elizabeth Yamamori
Gale Adams
Lois Angeletti
Susan Baker
Susan Behling
Robert Bland
Deborah Bodner
Donna Boone
Beth Boone
Andrea Brown
Robert Burgin
Yvonne Carignan
Robert Carpenter
Elizabeth Chaplin
Sheng Dien Chiu
Donna Cornick
Carolyn Cox
Mary Cross
John Darling
Teresa Davidson
Charles Di Perna
Susan Dillard
Mary Dollins
Jane Dyer
Deborah Elliott
Margaret Eysmans
Joyce Farris
Julia Foster
James Fox
Mary Ann Fox
Margaret Fuller
Charles Gorday
James Granade
Linda Greenblatt
1975
107
Vivian Halperen
Kathryn Heninger
Janet Herkomer
Damon Hickey
Barbara Hicks
James Hooper
Laura Huff
Laurie Hunter
Frances Jennes
Diane Jennings
Jane Kelley
Damon Kickey
Sarah Kinnear
Rex Klett
Yun Fun Lai
Elizabeth Lasley
Deedy Lawson
Toby Mahan
Judith Martin
David Martz
Diantha McBride
Steven McCarver
Suzanne McClamrock
Coyla McCullough
Charles McDaniel
Florence McEachern
James Meehan
John Modlin
Lucinda Moose
Emily Newby
Erika Nissman
Clayton Owens
Margaret Paris
Pamela Pittman
Judy Poe
Patsy Pringle
Reid Putney
Marjorie Reith
Susan Richardson
William Robertson
Sandra Roscoe
Laura Schmidt
Delia Scrudder
Paul Sherer
Isabel Silver
Rochelle Skalsky
Jane Dyer Smith
Nancy Smith
Harold Stark
Iris Stevenson
Madelyn Strickland
Paul Suhr
Huan Rosa Tai
Steven Tanasoca
Cynthia Thompson
108
Gary Treadway
Jane Trimmer
John Via
Richard Waddell
Ellen Weiss
Lisa Wemett
Gretchen Whitney
Sherry Wilson
Sarah Winchester
Katerine Winslow
Anne Alexander
Elizabeth Anania
Barbara Anderson
Joyce Antrim
Martha Armstrong
Deborah Babel
Katherine Barka
Julia Barnett
Julia Beamguard
Lousia Benson
Beverly Bivens
Anne Boes
Barbara Boone
Robert Burger
Deborah Carver
Mary Catalfamo
Philip Cheney
Susan Coblentz
Judy Cook
Casandra Dahl
Kathryn Daniell
Sarah Davis
Carol (Dawson) Davis
Christopher Delany
Ann Devenish
Helen DeWitt
Philip Dheney
Roy Dicks
John Dillon
Phyllis Dougherty
Barbara Duval
Phyllis Edwards
Carolyn Farr
Douglas Fennell
Patti Fields
Nancy Finger
Barbara Fish
Barbara Fitzgerald
Donna Flake
Meredith Foltz
John Forys
Tindra Foti
Elizabeth Garland
Kathleen Geyer
1976
Sandra Glasgow
Susan Grambling
Mary Green
Willanna Griffin
Marlene Hansen
Janet Hart
Walter High
Thomas High
Mary Hill
Margarita (Cruz) Hinson
Richard Hinson
Sharon Howell
Robert Ivey
Mary Jackson
Eileen Johnson
Diane Kessler
Barbara Kincaid
Helen Kirchen
David Laizure
Rosemary Lands
Karin Lazarus
Nancy Leachman
Martha Lewis
Lynn Lockwood
Carolyn Long
Helene Lorber
William McGown
Anne McKeithen Goodman
Mary Ellen (Curtis) McKenzie
Wendell McLendon
Kathryn Mendenhall
Susan Miles
Leigh Moser
Margaret Nickels
Christine Nielson-Wurzbacher
Anne Okie
Crystal Orndoff
Phyllis Otto
Karen Owen
Carol Pekar
Karen (McEntyre) Perry
Douglas Perry
Peter Pickens
Patricia Powell
Virginia Price
Camilla Reid
Joseph Rosenblum
Robert Russell
Dixie Scott
Barbara Semonche
Richard Shaw
Caroline Shepard
Karol Shoenbaum
Katharine Silvasi
Beverly Simmons
Eva Sitton
Diane Smith
Alberta Smith
Stephen Squire
Robert Summers
Barbara Swaney
Katharine Tauber
Connie (Bryant) Thompson
John Walser
Michael Wessells
Jan Williams
Herbert Williams
Sarah Zach
1977
Leslie Abrams
Jennifer Alder
Larry Alford
Doretta Anderson
Benjamin Barefoot
Brooks Barnes
Carmen Barry
Mark Bayles
Mary Berry
Elizabeth Bezera
Martha (Powell) Birchenall
Charlene Bird
Alice Brenner
Sarah Bryant
Elizabeth (McElwee) Cannon
Anne Carlson
James (Stephen) Catlett
Bao-Cau Chang
Stephen Clark
Linda Clement
John Coleman
Mary Conger
Zoila Cruz
James Desper
Thomas Dillard
Sue Anna Dodd
Harold (Charles) Dyer
Alan Eaton
Ruth Eisenberg
Raymond English
Margaret Fields
Richard Frankel
Sue Freeman
Frances Fugate
Marsha Gainey
Mary Gamewell
Renee Gledhill-Earley
Susan Greear
Rosemary Green
Mary Gudac
Elizabeth Hall
Jon Harrison
Marian Hicks
Alice Hobson
Lisa Howorth
Robert Hudson
Marjorie Johnson
Fannie Jones
Donna Keklock
Marshall Keys
Barbara Kiehne
Karen Knight
Sarah Knight
Melody LaJoie
Daryle Lamb
Karen Larson
Barbara Long
Karen Long
Joan Lyon
May Mansbach
Marjorie Markoff
Patricia McConnell
Dorothy McDermott
Lorraine McNally
Margaret Meadows
Carol Meads
Eva Metzger
James Moore
Jean Moser
Susette Mottsman
Helga Nichols
Max O’Neal
Stephanie Perrin
Larry Pollard
Robert Quade
Mary Ann Reynolds
Beverly Richardson
Nancy Rogers
William Rorie
Patricia Ryckman
William Sanders
Patricia Saul
Jeanne Sawyer
Tucker Schecter
Edward Sheary
Mary A. St. Pierre
Donald Stacy
Margaret (Cage) Swearingen
Louise Symmes
Annette Tate
Louise Tharrington
Katherine Tormay
Susan Tulis
Margaret Tyner
Judith Van Noate
Dorinda Waddell
Lynne Waldruff
Frances Weaver
Nora Webb
Jane Weeks
Henrietta Wells
Mary Wilson
Cynthia Woodruff
1978
Elizabeth Adams
John Allison
Susan Artiglia
Lynne Barnette
William Barrows
Kathleen Baumwart
Jane Belsches
Mark Bonds
Patricia Boody
Katherine Bridges
Allen Brooks
Robert Byrd
Priscilla Caplan
David Carrozza
Arthur Chitty
Judy Clayton
Joseph Collins
George Conklin
Hugh Cooper
Russ Davidson
Patricia Dominquez
Catherine Doud
Ronnie Faulkner
Anita Gauthier
Janet Gibson
Barbara Goodson
Julian Green
Laura Griffiths
Kathryn Hall
Phillip Hall
Teri Herbert
Linda Hill
Siri Holland
Carolyn Holley
Jeffrey Huestis
Elizabeth Hylen
Judith Icard
Jan Johnson
Barbara (Cowlee) Johnstone
Susan Kerr
Mary Kesler
Alfred Kraemer
Geraldine Larson
Yi-hsia Lee
Grace LeLear
Demetria Lewis
Gwynne Lovelady
Cynthia Lowe
Cynthia Marshall
Deborah Mayo
Jett McCann
Grace McDougald
Dwight McInvaill
Stefanie Mendell
Ellen ( Joslin) Meolin
Barry Miller
Thomas Morbito
Linda Muir
Juleigh Muirhead
Virginia Munford
James Myrick
Karen Nedeski
Karin Negoro
Reid Newnam
Harry Noles
Nancy Norton
James Oliver
June Parker
Elizabeth Pearson
Mary Petrowski
Cynthia Puryear
Rosamond Putzel
Sharon Reily
Deborah (Warner) Rocklin
James Romer
Frieda Rosenberg
Julia Sadek
Lois Schultz
Janet Schwabe
Nancy Seamans
Jean Seamans
Brian Shanley
Susan Shehee
Suzanne Shell
Marion Shepherd
Charles Shreeves
Rose Simon
Timothy Smith
Christie Stephenson
Frances Sullivan
Edward Teague
Ellen Tillett
Jo Ann Travis
Hugh Treacy
Leigh Tucker
Jane Venzke
Daisy Whitesides
Jean Whitman
Dede Wingender
Robert Yehl
Maurice York
Susan Yost
1979
Susan Arnall
Skip Auld
Boobie Baird
Stuart Basefsky
Karan Berryman
Harvey Brenneise
Linda Brogan
Glenda Buck
Nola Callahan
Mary Chitty
Margaret Cline
Mary Crock
Martha Davis
Barbara Dean
Harold Farlow
Jackie (Brooks) Faustino
Carol Gaar
Barbara Gilbert
William Gragg
Arlene Hanerfeld
Carol Hedspeth
Mary Jones
Sarah Jones
Patricia Langelier
May Liu
Archibald Martin
Katherine Martin
Lesley Martin
Eunice McMillan
Loretta Mershon
Jan Morris
Evangeline Murphy
Rexanne Newnam
Marian Parker
Laura Parrish
Karen Parrott
Leslie Pearse
Barbara Post
Jane Roth
Charles Sieger
Arthur Smith
Martha Smith
Nancy Snowden
Ann Stringfield
Ellen Sutton
Rita Thompson
John Walker
Sally Wambold
Cheryl Wood
Margaretta Yarborough
Robin Anderson
Joseph Bain
1980
Martha Beals
Judy Ann Beck
Jo Ann Bell
Sylvia Bennett
Dana Beth
Peter Bileckj
Norbert (McLean) Black
Mary Ann Brown
Virginia Carrigan
Donald Chauncey
Pamela Cocks
Gloria Colvin
James Curtis
Terry Deer
Tim Dempsey
Karen ( Johnson) Dickerson
Thomas Dickerson
Mary Ann (Leake) Dillon
Elizabeth Estes
Perry Eury
Elisabeth Fairman
Margaret Federhart
Allene Goforth
Picket Guthrie
Julie (Hayden) Hipps
Edythe Huffman
Michael Hunter
Oliver Jaros
Gordon Jessee
Spencer Kearns
Robert Kilgore
Maria (Agnello) Kinnaird
Paul Knight
Jonathan LeBreton
Annette LeClair
James Leonard
Page Life
Jean (Sajor) Lind
Marcella Little
Jean Lyle
Nina Malyshev
Donna (Howe) Marsh
Diana McDuffee
Mark Pandick
Alexander Panzer
Barbara Perrotti
David Price
Edward Proctor
Pamela Puryear
Lynn Richardson
Karen Robertson
Jeanne Roethe
Leanne Seaver
Marilyn Skeels
Earl Smith
Elizabeth Smith
Duncan Smith
Rosemary Thorn
Jane Trumbull
Margaret Tulloch
Ann Unger
Susan Van Dyke (Bridges)
Desider Vikor
Barbara Walker
Wanda Weinberg
Donald Welsh
Michell Whichard
Teresa Whitley
Lynn Wiley
Nan Williamson
Carol Wilson
Nadyezhda Zilper
Victoria Adamitis
James Barns
Amy Beal
Yvonne Boyer
Johnny Burns
Susan Cheadle
Linda Chelmow
Patricia Connell
Edward Davis
Arlene Dowell
Ralph Draughon
Anne Elkins
Kenneth Elmore
Ian Ewing
Vivian Finkelstein
Elizabeth Fletcher
Linda Halstead
Mary Hawkins
Eva Haywood
Carson Holloway
William Ilgen
Sara (Kerns) King
Rebecca Knight
Nancy LaMere
Elizabeth Lanning
Marilyn Lewis
Carol Miller
Jane Morley
Floyd Price
Laura Robbins
Mary Roberts
Deborah Rubin
Mary Sawyer
Wendy Scott
Gale Shaffer
Jon Simons
Neal Sloan
1981
109
Barbara Smith
Jean Tate
Janice Thom
Rose Turner
John Ulmschneider
Luisa Villalba
Edward Waller
Susan Watkins
Lisa Williams
Teresa Wilson
Theodore Winter
Susan Wood
Joanna Wright
1982
William Addison
Catherine Agresto
Christopher Andrews
Robert Anthony, Jr
Winston Atkins III
Sue Bagnell
Anne Barnes
Jane Beebe
Sarah Bell
Esther Bierbaum
Sally Bray
Jennifer Brewer
Martha Bruning
Margaret Cobb
Donna Cohen
Eleanor Cook
Susan Dark
Laura (Beals) Davidson
Laura Drummond
Lisa Eudy
Elizabeth Evans
Cynthia Finnelly
Marsha Flora
Linda Fortney
Brenda Fortune
William Gattis
Janet Gebbie
Myra Godwin
Douglas Hurd
Mary Johnson
Amanda Jones
Dianne Jones
Joyce Kennedy
Sue (Crownfield) Kimmel
Rebecca Kleppe
Thomas Kruck
Caroline Mann
Julianna Mays
Cathleen McCarthy
Susan Metcalf
William Miller
110
Charlotte Nelson
Karen Nickeson
Joyce Ogburn
Anderson Orr
Serena (Plotnir) Paisley
Kathleen Payne
Faye Phillips
Mary Place-Beary
Patricia Prieto
Betty Ramsey
Jennifer (Cagle) Rish
Patricia (Etheridge) Rogers
Julie (White) Sanders
Ann Scott
Melissa Scott
William Singer
Martha Sink
Pamela Tankersley
Janine Tillett
William Wilkinson
Ina Williams
1983
Ann Arrowood
Fred Berg
Alice Bordsen
Margaret Briand
Joseph Carroll
Kathryn Carson
Elizabeth Chenault
Janice Chesser
Aline Chesson-Riddle
Victoria Crosson
Mary DeCoster
Barbara Dewey
Helen Diggs
Cecile Doty
David Downing
Martha Fagan
Marinanne (Moore) Frimmel
Kim Garmon
Michael Gelinne
Lee (Ivey) Gelinne
Ann Gray
Sally Hand
Marion Hanes
Leigh Hay
Edward Holley
Mary Holley
Sarah Huggins
Linda Huskey
Emily Hutton
Jeffrey Katz
David Keely
Joyce Kelly
Carolyn (Hoffman) Kotlas
Joy Krause
Fing-Yin Kuo
Janice Lester
Susanne Long
Frieda Lutz
Margaret Miles
Mary Mintz
Ann Moore
James Moyer
Mary (Such) Mulder
Brian Nielson
Martyvonne Nour
Joye Posey
Kenneth Reid
Donna Riley
Ellen Robinson
Cynthia Ruffin
Jean Sexton
Michael Shoop
Shawn Sibley
Charlotte Slocum
Steven Squires
Marlene Vikor
Emily Walker
Ann Weller
Kyoko Adachi
Martha Barefoot
Anne Barnes
Ellen Beckworth
Denise Boldt
James Boyles
Faith Brautigam
Mary Cameron
Elaine Carmichael
Norman Clark
Barbara Clements
James Coble
Jane Conner
Cynthia Crawford
Gregory Crawford
Christie Degener
Carolin Driggs
Elizabeth Dunn
Merrikay Everett
Richard Ewing
Terry (Weber) Ewing
Margaret Fain
Michael Fein
Frances Fife
Betty Golan
Linda Griggs
Robert Hebert
Paul Hessling
Karen Heuberger
1984
Laurel (Roe) Hick
David Holloway
Gerald Holmes
Ann Ingram
Jacqueline Kirkman
Kathryn Logan
Melanie Maupin
Susan McClintock
David McConnaughey
Christine Meyer
Noraini Bte Mohd Nor
Robert Molyneux
Sarah Nagle
Gail Newstein
Sandra Nyberg
Cynthia (Walters) Obrist
Mary Pitts
Gary Pressley
Johnny Quinn
Georgina Rains
Jean Rick
Cynthia Roberts
Judith Robinson
Julia Shaw
Carmela Southers
Debra (Smith) Timmers
Mary Vass
Elizabeth Wagner
Thomas Wall
Victoria West
Patricia Zang
1985
Susan Adams
Sallie Barringer
Julie Beamer
Susan Bello
June Brown
John Budd
Shivar Bunce
Cynthia Crouch
David Day
Jan Derthick
Keith Dunn
Richard Foster
Clara Fountain
Judith Goldberg
Dorothy Harland
Amy Healy
Paula Hinton
Donna (Polk) Hitchings
Katsuko Hotelling
Mary Jenkins
Barry Jones
Irene Kan
Rozalyn Kline
Judy Knight
John Lawrence
Rayna Lester
Mary Manire
Willard Mittleman
Suszanne Moe
Randall Mullis
Steven Peck
Ronnie Pitman
Julie Roach
Lynn Roundtree
Nancy Scott
James Shaw
Judy Shuster
Emma Simmons
Jane Stine
Suzanna Stribling
William Sudduth
Elizabeth (Benton) Sudduth
Althea Swann
Michael Taylor
Martha Taylor
Angela Thor
Rose Timmons
Shu-Chen Tu
Joseph Tuttle
Barbara Tysinger
Karen Wallace
Betty Whitener
Juanita Wilks
Betty Williams
Delmus Williams
Betty Wisecarver
Larry Wright
1986
Rachel Applegate
Neila Arnold
Deborah Barreau
Sandra Benedict
Connie Cartledge
Nientzu (Nancy) Chang
Pamela Clark
Deborah Coclanis
Kathryn Collier
Bryna Coonin
George Craddock
Bonnie Crotty
Mary Demaria
Anna Donnally
James Donoghue
David Dowell
Valerie Eslynwolford
Barbara Freedman
Katherine Fuller
Janet Gauss
John Gibson
David Golin
Patsy Heath
Donna Hughes
RW Hutchinson
Lois Ireland
Susan (McEnally) Jackson
Tara (Buck) Kester
Sue Laprao
Susan Martin
Julia McMullan
Barbara (Sloane) Minero
Dawn Mitchell
Richard Moul
Joan Patrick
Christine Petrecca
Sharon Quinn
Richard Ramponi
Mae (Holt) Rodney
Norma Sharf
Diane Shaw
Barbara Smith
Carolina (Warren) Spearman
Sandra Stratton
David Talbert
Laurie Taylor
Rebecca Trexler
Steve Weaver
Lowell Whatley
Philip White
Elizabeth Wilhelm
Holly Willet
Patricia Wood
Kuan Wu
Rebecca Young
Jean Allen
Kimberly Allen
David Bennett
Michael Birzenicks
Richard Boaz
Carol Branscomb
Rose Burris
Mary Buss
John Creech
Dorothy Davis
Gail Dickinson
Carolyn Dlugos
Gwyneth Duncan
Kathleen Dunleavy
Katherine Erwin
Carol Evans
James Falconi
Lucas Graves
Linda Gross
1987
Daavid Gunn
Marcia Hall
Preston Hoffman
Sindia Hwang
October Ivens
Sue Jackson
Elizabeth Keatley
Vickie Kline
Christine Kottcamp
Karen Kromer
Ellen Leadem
Teresa (Garrand) Leonard
Terry Marr
Michael Mason
Leslie McCall
Janet (Mohammed) McCallum
Charlotte McGlohon
Christine Meek
Scott Moore
Michelle Norton
Nancy Nuckles
Lisa Orgren-Streb
Barbara Peeler
Catherine Phillips
Lucy Powell
Margaret Powell
Kathleen (Ferrari) Redmond
Peter September
David Shea
Mie-Yue Shih
Brad Short
Mary Stine
Benjamin Trask
Kimberly Warren
Katherine Webb
Ellen Wente
Jan Wheat
Daniel Wheeler
Cynthia Wolff
P.K. Wong
Patty Allen
Donna Amjadi
Elizabeth Baron
Elizabeth Blevins
Linda Bodlak-Brown
Lisa Brantley
James Bullock
James Carmichael, Jr
Elizabeth Clewis
Robert Dalton
Belva Davis
Elaine Day
Lucretia Dickson
Robert Ellett
1988
George Gaumond
Kristin Gerhard-Ewing
Chris Goolsby
Timothy Gunter
Jamie Habecker
Cynthia Harper
W. Michael Havener
Steven Hirsch
Mary Horton
Lindsay Ideson
Margaret Jackson
Carl Kiefer
Anita Kiser
Jennifer Kraar
Rebecca Leousis
Elizabeth Lindsey
Elaine Mangrum
Robert Martin
Elizabeth McCue
Sung Been Moon
Leslie Mooney
Rita Moss
Judy Parker
Joan Redding
Teresa Ring
Janet Seabock
Donna Seymour
Kristina (Myren) Sheldon
Gloria Sheridan
Daniel Smith
Robert Spearman
Jan Squire
June (Dimmette) Stephenson
David Stockton
Leslee Summer
Joel Sutton
Suk-Yi Tang
Candace Thomas
Jennifer (Phillips) Timmerman
John Turbyfill
Michael Van Fossen
Hattie Vines
James Watkins
Fleeta Wilkinson
Margaret Williams
Paul Williford
Deborah Wright
Douglass Young
Ellen Adkins
Susan Appleby
Elizabeth Bartlett
Susan Benning
David Bickford
Philip Blue
1989
Margaret Boeringer
Dale Boles
Timothy Bucknall
Patricia Burke
Daren Callahan
Alice Campbell
Patricia Carleton
Teresa Cho
Linda Collins
Kathleen D’Angelo
Judith Davis
Elizabeth Dupree
June Eason
John Forbes III
Laura Gaskin
Marita Gonsalves
Charles Green
Jack Harton
Mary Hartvigas
Georgia Higley
Lucia Ho
Roslyn Holdzkom
Mitta Isley
Kathryn Johnston
Stacey Kimmel
Connie Koehler-Widney
Anne Koenig
Nancy Larkin
Alexander Lesueur
Abigail Lippincott
Susan Lohr
David Lonergan
Cathy Martin
Elizabeth McClenney
Serena McGuire
Nan McMurry
Suzanne Montogomery
Heather Niermann
Susan Norrisey
Cheryl Oakes
Gina Overcash
Joan Parsons
Sandra Poston
Sandra Pynn
Jennifer Roberts
Andrea Rohrbacher
Jacqueline Rose
Lindy Rose
Joel Rudy
Angela Ruffin
Carolyn Smith
George Stephens
Vicky Stigall
Christopher Stokes
Jane Stubblefield
Linda (Frost) TerHarr
Boris Teske
Linda Thomsen
Mary Tucker
Elizabeth Villeponteaux
Laurie Weakley
Rex Wessling
Michael West
Russell Wong
Karen Worley
Richard Arabi
Mary Ann Bates
Jeffrey Beall
Mark Blaisdell-Buck
Mary Breheny
Marvin Browning
Robert Burgin
Susan Carroll
Karen Cary
Martin Cerjan
Yun-Ming Chang
Patricia Conrad
Sara Cook
Walter Croom
Marion Cross
James Dirks
Gale Eaton
Suzanne Eggleston
Brenda Ellis
Michael Frye
Emily Gerstbacher
Patricia Hattler
Margaret Haworth
Elizabeth Hayden
Lois Hicks
Walter High
Arthur Hlavaty
Ming-Ju Huang
Malgorzata Hueckel
M.Dianitia Hutcheson
Sophia Jeffries
Diane Kester
William King
Kathryn Knierierm
Steven Laesch
Melissa Lamont
Jeanne Larocco
Deborah Lee
Richard Llewellyn
Jennifer Luxton
Sandra Lyles
Ann McLain
Mary McNabb
Susan McQueen
1990
111
Lisa Mitchell
Janice Mitchell-Love
Frank Molinek
Joella Montgomery
Eva Moss
Jennifer Murray
Frances Newton, Jr
Thomas Nixon
Sarah O’Brien
Elaine Potter
Susan Purgason
Meeghan (McNamara) Rosen
Kim Sanderson
Susan Sharpe
Hannah Stephens
April Stewart
Walter Stine
Zeleny Terretta
Martha Turney
Caroline Usher
Joan Viscounty
Steven Wade
David Waters
Alisa Whitt
Angelia Williams
Lenore Wise
Richard Alford
Michael Arseneau
Ronald Bass
Sandra Blankenship
Thomas Briggs
Linda Brinkley
Kathleen Brown
Hope Bryan
Katherine Ceraldi
Mark Crotteau
Joseph Davis
Marjo Dobbs
Lori Drum
A. Kathleen Dunn
Elizabeth Eubanks
Patricia Feehan
Erik France
Merilyn Givens
Pamela Goetze
Elizabeth Grey
Kelly Grogan
Rachel Harlan
Susan Hill
Marion Hirsch
Jane Hirst
Maureen Jones
Plummer Jones
Mary Leonard
112
1991
Ya-Tzu Liu
Gregory Lowchy
Deborah Lowman
Jennifer Manning
Sheila Martell
Barbarly McConnell
Jeannie McKnight
Ruth Monnig
Rebecca Moore
Fred Moss
Megan Mulder
Sally Munson
Kimberly Nelson
Shonra Newman
Jerilyn Oltman
Timothy Owens
Maude Parker
Anne Powers
Catherine Profeta
Mitchell Rosen
Mary Schwalbe
Shannon Starnes
Rebecca Stiles
Laurie Tepper
Alice Thomas
Kimberly Viscounty
Jane Watson
Mary Weaver
James Wendt
Leo Yakutis
1992
Ethan Annis
Sharon Arnette
David Barnett
Elizabeth Behrendt
Ruth Belovicz
Kitty Benson
Barbara Bertram
Paula Bindie
Lynne Bissette
Rebecca Burchette
Ashley Burnham
Ellen Cannon
Mary Catherman
Hal Coggins
Mary Darden
William DeSalvo
Susan Doss
Lucinda (Rodi) Edwards
Kathryn Ellis
Rachel Enrich
Susan Fairchild
David Farr
Angela Fullington
Joy Gambill
David Gleim
Martha Graves
Mary Greene
Janet Hill
Catherine Hitti
Cheryl Karr
Jeongjae Kim
Anne Kotch
Deborah Kriebel
Kathleen Krizek
Borree Kwok
Susan Levendosky
Beth Liebman
Caitlin Lietzan
John Little
Bonnie MacFarlane
Lisa Mahoney
Valerie Merrill
Sondra Oakley
Linda Parris
Janice Pope
Barbara Prince
Lisa Recupero
Elizabeth Roberts
Mary Rogers
David Singleton
Bonnie Spiers
Paula Sullenger
Robert Sumner
Elizabeth Tajiri
Teresa Teague
Victoria Walden
Kimberly Weatherford
Wendolyn White
Siu-Ki Wong
Yangqiu Yang
Jeongock Ahn
Barbara Albright
Stacie Alexander
Angela Andrews
Pamela Barnard
Elizabeth Beere
Marian Blecker
Dorothy Blunt
Ruth Canfield
Cameron Cardimon
Kenneth Carriveau, Jr.
Ha-Lin Chiu
Thomas Clark
Suzanne Corr
Jeannie Dilger
Margaret Doggett
Karen (McCully) Dow
Laura Elling
1993
Arabelle Fedora
James Gill
Jenifer Grady
Eric Griffith
Ronda Grizzle
Richard Hart
Martha Haswell
Julie Hipps
Rebecca Hollingsworth
Tina Hovekamp
Jane Hyde
Cynthia Jones
Janet Justis
Cynthia Kent
Janeane Kiger
Cheryl Klein
Wen-Chin Lan
Tung-fen Lee
Lynn Lonergan
Paula Lynch
Gean McBane
Melissa McBurney
Anne McFarland
Serena McGuire
Amy Micallef
Jeane-Marie Mills
Sung-Been Moon
Wendy Moore
Deborah Morley
Elizabeth Murphrey
Nancy Novotny
Elizabeth Pauk
Jeffrey Paul
Linda Peepers
Jessica Pfenning
Linda Rauenbuehler
Derek Rodriguez
Cynthia Rugh
Nancy Ryan
Janet Sanner
Elizabeth Schmidt
Sandra Schueter
Marion Shamu
Donna Shannon
Nancy Snyder
Susan Stephens
Lisa Stomberg
Ida Tobe
Elizabeth Urbanik
Russell Vanneman
Beth Walker
Mary Ellen Ward
Suzanne White
Lois Widmer
Robin Willis
Katherine R Wood
Toni Wooten
1994
Kristina Anderson
Mary Ann Barckhoff
Marilynn Brimmage
Susan Brinson
W.Carlton Brown
Melina Brown
Leigh Ann Bryant
Laura Burtle
Jennifer Cassidy
Lewis Caviness
Hyo-il Chang
Haesoon Cho
Steven Cramer
Daniel Daily
Lisa DiIorio-Smith
Donna DiMichele
Julie Doepken
Pamela Dutcher
William Edgar
Doralyn Edwards
Elizabeth Ellis
Ernesto Evangelista
James Farrugia
Darlene Fladager
Rachel Frick
Cynthia Frost
Denise George
David Goble
Michele Gordon
Roger Harris
Beth Harris
James Heinis
Jonathan Hoseman
Andrea Hubbard
Rebecca Jacob
Elin Jacob
Linda Johnson
Cynthia Keever
Naomi Kietzke
Elizabeth Klausman
Therese Lamoureux-Fallon
Chiou-Yan Lin
Wei Liu
Elizabeth Lyons
Nicole Magas
Esther Mandel
Seven Mantz
George May
Andrew May
Judith Mays
Kerith McFadden
Katherine McGinn
Mary McPherson-McNulty
Kristen Nilsen
Mari Nowitz
Lydia Olszak
Sandra Proctor
Jessica Randall
Susan Rathbun-Robinson
Marlys Ray
Nancy Rinker
Jodi Sanderlin
Lubomyra Sawczyn
Laura Smith
Virginia (Eagan) Spivey-Eagan
Mary Stevens
Carol Sugg
Martha Taylor
Susan Towe
Pi-huei Tung
William Wise
Junyao Xu
Teresa Young
Victoria Young
1995
Margaret Adams
Roger Akers
Michael Albrecht
Barbara Allchin
Barbara Aschenbrenner
Pamela Aubuchon-Fields
Susan Baker
Christi Blackley
Joel Bland
April Bohannan
George Brett
Melinda Brown
Amy Burris
Gary Byrd
Denise Chen
Thomas Kevin Cherry
Sukkyeong Cho
Kristen Conahan
Kerry Connard
Dana Cragg
Susan Crowell
Melissa Depper
Mark Donnelly
Heather Flanagan
Stephanie Ford
Cheryl Friedman
Cynthia Garvin
Anandasivam Gopal
Meredith Gradual
Ellen Greever
Kelly Gregory
Marybeth Grinnan
Debra Hanken
Daphne Hayer
Barrie Hayes
Thomas Hoffman
Erika Howder
Joanna Johnson
Andrew Koebrick
Jeanne Lauber
Kelley Lawton
Barbara Levergood
Vicki Lipski
Anne Lloyd
Timothy Maas
Michelle Martin
Mary Martin
Peter McCracken
Leah McGinnis
Laura Mizeras
Elizabeth Myers
Emily Nuernberger
Beth Olmstead
Irene Owens
Kathleen Pathe
Katherine Perry
Elaine Powell
Steven Powell
Audrey Rasmusson
Neva Robinson
JoAnne Rocker
Shannon Russell
Natalia Smith
Elizabeth Smith
Melinda Smith
Betty Strickland
Li Ping Tan
Meryl Vlatas
Mary Williams
Mark Wilson
Jane Witten
Roberta Wright
William Young
John Barden
Sara Berghausen
Angela Boone
Minhong Cai
Kelly Cannon
Kristin Chaffin
Rebecca Clifton
Rhonda Corcoran
Lisa Croucher
Rebecca Day
John Deasey
Theresa Dillon
Ann Dolman
1996
Jennifer Donaldson
Jennifer Duvernay
Adrienne Ehlert
Veronika Fantova
Judith Firebaugh
Susan Fourt
Irina Gabriadze
Stuart Gagnon
Brian Geiger
Darla Haney
Jane Harris
Sharlene Harris
Julia Hayden
Kathleen Heidecker
Andrew Hempe
Robert Henshaw
Terry Herblin
Barbara Hightower
Jill Hollingsworth
Elaine Hopkins
Linda Houseman
Jane Ibl
Sarah Ivey
Alicia Julian
Duckjae Kim
Marina Kisunko
Brynn Leise Mays
JeNeena Leonard
Megan Lewis
Shuk-Fan Liang
Joel Lloyd
Vera Lowe
Jamie MacInnis
Miriam Madden
Emily Mandelbaum
Stacey Marien
Diana Marshall
Amy McAbee
Linda McCormick
Douglas McGee
William McGloughlin
Joshua McKeon
Yael Meroz
Cathy Mundale
Jennifer O’Brien
Ann O’Neill
Konstantin Ozerov
Susan Pitard
Earla Pope
Kyle Poquette
Brian Raitz
Bridget Regan
Sharon Riley
Nathan Robertson
Martha Smith
William Spivey
Andrew Stinson
Coleen Sullivan
Angela Tauraso
Elaine Teague
Paula Tetirick
Charles Thomas
Robert Vreeland
Lisa Wilcox
Ryan Womack
Catherine Worcester
Lynn Zimmerman
Marcia Agness
Jeffery Alpi
John Ansley
Tracy Ansley
Nora Armstrong
Deborah Balsamo
Saianand Balu
John Bérubé
Phil Blank
Emily Brandel
Jennifer Broadbent
Elizabeth Broyles
Chrisite Buchanan
Joan Burgess
Michael Carter
Rebecca Carvajal
Steven Case
Shelley Chick-Gravel
Richard Clark
Kimberly Clarke
Frank Clover
Karen Collins
Amy Consolati
Rita Czeck
Judy Dew
Matthew Digan
Megan Dreger
Deborah Dupree
Krista Eberl
Lois Entner
Leah Ewing
Sally Fessler
Mary Frey
Jennifer Frye
Michelle Geyer
Katharyn Graham
Erika Grams
Burnette Green
Claire Harrington
Nathan Harwell
Waller Henson
George Huntley
1997
Andrew Ingham
Kirsten Ioos
Bilimjan Isataeva
Andrea Janska
Leah Jasper
Woo-Seob Jeong
Melissa Kendrick
Claire LaForce
Terri-Jo Lambert
Elisabeth Leonard
Barbara Linder
Elise Love
Theresa Lynch
Monique Mackey
W. John MacMullen
Lynette Malong
Kevin McAllister
Sarah McCleskey
Madelyn McCracken
Katherine (Nase) McLean
Manuel Michalowski
Laura Micham
Matthew Mielke
Heather Mitchell
Sara Morrison
Polly Mueller
James Murphy
Ilyas Naibov-Aylisli
Judith Nichols
Marni Overly
Judith Packer
Matthew Pardo
Kent Parks
Margeret Peacock
Lydia Peterson
Megan Phillips
Evelyn Poole-Kober
Lynn Pritcher
Jennifer Richards
Kimberly Ryan
Shannon (Rosenbaum) Salter
Damon Sauve
Christian Schaeffer
Barry Seaver
Sean Semone
Robin Shapiro
Timothy Shearer
Jennifer Smallwood
Danqi Song
Kimberly Stahl
Brent Stewart
Cynthia Sturdivant
Robert Sumner
Gretchen Terhaar
Jason Vaughan
113
Wendy Webber
Constance Weiland
John Westerhoff
Carole Williams
J.Reed Williams
Dana Wishnick
Kiduk Yang
Laura Abate
Scott Adams
Meredith Ault
Judith Austin
Marcella Barnhart
Brent Bianchi
Sharron Bortz
Patrick Bragg
Karin Breiwitz
Heather Bumbalough
Lynn Chandler
Lila Teresa Church
Keith Cogdill
Susan Colaric
June Copland
Michale Cummings
Elizabeth Dain
Jacqueline Dean
Lin Dou
Pamela Durgom
Susan Ebbs
Kevin Farley
Kathleen Feeney
Stephanie Fielder
Emily Fraser
Stephen Gant
Betty Garrison
Gary Geisler
Laura Godshall
Ann Goebel
Nicholas Graham
Karen Grigg
Peter Griswold
Christopher Gwyn
Shaoyi He
Crystal Holland
Yi Huang
Douglas Hudson
Sandra Hughes
Lynnea Jacobson
Matthew Jordy
Carol Joyner
Ralph Kaplan
Caroline Keizer
Steven Kelley
Carrie Knoblock
Mark Koyanagi
114
1998
Melissa Laytham
Karl Lietzan
Shawn Madden
Carol McColum
Karin Michel
Teresa Morris
Valeria Nasir
Muzghan Nazarova
Lisa Odum
Meghan O’Shaughnessy
Lee Anne Paris
Lisa Peterson
Paula Robinson
Lisa Rockwell
Susan Salpini
Jessamyn Saltysiak
Shawna Schnorr
Donald Sechler
Jonathan Sherman
Shannon Tennant
Karin Thomsen
Richard Thornett
Nancy Underwood
Christiane Voisin
Alice Wamunza
Terry Wise
Ashley Yandle
Danhong Yang
Ji-Hae Yoon
Richard Altman
Heidi Barry-Rodriguez
Ronald Bergquist
Tomeka Berry
William Bobzien IV
Danielle Borasky
Joshua Boyer
Tara Burgess
Elaine Cameron
June Carter
Les Chaffin
Heather Chapman
Catherine Clements
Kelly Coleman
Maria Collins
Calvin Craig
Lisa Crenshaw
Carl Danis
Shirley Dellenback
Sheila Denn
Margaret Duffy
Yvonne Duke
Victoria Edrington
Melissa Edwards
April Errickson
1999
Julie Fiorentino
Sarah Gehring
Maryann Gelato
Paul Gerwe
Ronald Gilmour
David Goldston
Lisa Greenbaum
Penelope Hamblin
Jennifer Hoffman
Robin Hollingsworth
Mitake Hollomon
Lucy Holman
Sarah (Giersch) Holsted
Thomas Jackson
Jeremy Jones
Jennifer Kellerman
Kimberly Kingsley
Donna Knock
Taneya Koonce
Jill Kuhn
John LaBarre
Daniel Lahue
Ashley Larsen
Lesley Lubin
Susan Lynn
Kelly Maglaughlin
Catherine Marsicek
Jessica Mathewson
Carolyn Matz
Courtney McGrath
Sharon McMannen
John McNealy
Kerri Meeks
Steven Melamut
Aimee Meuchel
Amelia Mitchell
Michael Mitchell
Rebecca Moore
Martha Mullenbach
Richard Murray
Lynn Narveson
Elizabeth Novak
Ericka Patillo
Elisa Paul
Theodore Peay
Kimberly Poe
Melanie Polutta
Jane Quigley
Jennifer Rawlings
Rhodney Reade
Aaron Redalen
Lucy Reid
Amy JoAn Richard
Emily Sadar
Timothy Sarraino
Alenka Sauperl
William Sexton
William Sibert, Jr.
David Smith
Lisa Stark
Shauna Stephenson
Jennifer Stewart
Jennifer Stowe
Vesselina Stoytcheva
Deborah Swain
Matthew Sylvain
Rong Tang
Lindsey Tear
Caroline Thomas
Maria Tsitseras
Naomi Tuttle
Edwin Van Duinen
Carol Vreeland
Debra Weiss
Megan Winget
Yangkun Zhang
Hui Zhao
Rajiv Zutshi
2000
Cora Adams
Tiffany Allen
John Alling
James Alumbaugh
Ruth Andrew
Kimberly (Hoover) Ashley
Claire Basney
Gary Boye
Christopher Brannon
Emily Brassell
Christine Bretz
Peter Buch
Jeanine Cali
Marilyn Carney
Donald Cervino
Laura Chessman
Kevin Clarke
Keith Cochran
Leah Davis
Claire De La Varre
Eun Doh
Heidi Dressler
Catherine Dudney
James Ebert
Miles Efron
Susan Erickson
Christine Ferris
Winifred Fordham
Pamela Foreman
Marianne Frimmel
Rachel Fuller
Susan Gardner
Mary Gillespie
Valerie Glenn
Susan Goode
Ann Goodwin
Michael Greco
Daniel Green
Suzanna Harper
Karen Hein
Ann Hemmens
Heidi Henderson
Mihoko Hosoi
Daniel Isaacs
James Jackson-Sanborn
Nancy Kaiser
Michael Kaufman
James Kelly
Anna Kemp
Victoria Kindon
Matthew Knuppel
Anne Lawrence
Clarence Lewis, III
Zhihui Liu
Julie Ludwig
Kristin Martin
Susan Mawhinney
Michelle McCullough
Betsy McGrath
Joshua McKim
Janet McLaughlin
Michael Middleton
Jennifer Mott
Xiangming Mu
Noelle Neu
Margaret Nystrom
Suzanna O’Donnell
Karen O’Keefe
Robert O’Kelly
Gretchen (Canada) Porter
Ann Poteet
Lisa Potter
Robyn Pretzloff
Jennie Radovsky
Scott Reavis
Bethany Ronnberg
Dawn Sanks
Jennifer Schupp
Christine Sedam
Elizabeth Shay
Christie Silbajoris
Eleanor Smith
William Smith, Jr
David Solar
Victoria Strickland-Cordial
Shayera Tangri
John Turner
Patricia Walker
Huahong Wang
Janice Webb
Jeanine Williamson
James Wilson
Katherine Wisser
Jian-Qing Wu
Airong Xu
Xiaohong Yang
2001
Laura Agnew
Harry Ahlas
Bradley Argue
Elisabeth (Lynch) Bacon
Donna Jo Baker
Brenda Beasley
Danielle Beaudin
James Berwick
Cynthia Blue
Nora Buttram
Peter Caggia
Amy Carlson
Clinton Chamberlain
Lisa Chinn
Clista Clanton
Anna Cleveland
James Damron
Jordan Davis
Zhen Deng
Justin Dopke
Kevin Doupe
Kimberly Duckett
Lindsey Dunn
Andrew Dzhigo
Melinda Ellison
Frances Flythe
Allison Fong
Lyda Fowler
Tao Gao
Wei Gao
Steven Gee
Lisha Gerber
Alison Gilchrest
Amy Gleeson
Robert Hall
Holly Harmes
Philip Hilligoss
Angela Hon
Susan Huffman
Robert Humphreys, Jr.
Amy Ising
Larry King
Adina Lack
Betsy Lazan
Rebecca Lee
Jennifer Longee
Barbara Marson
Miriam Matteson
Lokman Meho
Vikki Mercer
Youngjoo Moon
Jason Morningstar
Janet Murphy
Donna Nixon
Eric Obershaw
Nicholas Okrent
Darby Orcutt
Elizabeth (Hall) Palena
Naomi Parkhurst
Jennifer Parsons
Christine Quillen
Melanie Reeves
James Roth
Beth Rowe
Yukiko Sakai
Monecia Samuel
Lindsey Schell
Susan Sharpe
Paul Showalter
Debra Slone
Adam Smith
Andrew Smith
Lin Sun
David Timko
Hannah Toney
Thomas Vaughn
Katherine (Lawson) Vaughn
Paulina Vinyard
Fong (Monica) Vong
Gary Wilhelm
Joe Williams
Julie Winters
Heather Wolf
Jiangping Yu
2002
Tammy Allgood
Sarah Auman
Martha Ballenger
Cara Bonnett
Kenneth Brockway
Ron Brown
Jennifer Bulger
Molynda Cahall
Christy Case
Audrey Cash
Sambhavi Cheemalapati
Garad Davis
Jane Deacle
Ellen Decker
Dionne Dockendorf
Roger Donaghy
Serena Fenton
Brandi Florence
Melissa Florio
John Foster
Jolayne (Stoddard) Gotzkowsky
Kathryn Gundlach
Robert Hanrath
Corety Harper
Aisha Harvey
Neil Hollands
Stephanie Holmgreen
Patrick Howell
Kara Hyde
Rebecca Imamoto
Emily Jackson-Sanborn
Erica Jarvis
Corey Johnson
Kate Johnson
Jill Katte
Matthew Kern
Jessica Kilfoil
Sean Knowlton
Wen-Chin Lan
Ashley Langley
Barbara LeBlanc
Christopher Lee
Bridget Lerette
Holley Long
Susan Lovett
Xiaoran Lu
Kristen McConnell
Cynthia Merrill
Susan Mikkelsen
Sucharita Mohanty
Keven Morgan
David Myers
Kathryn Nasser
Kerri Odess-Harnish
Anne Osterman
Mary Parmelee
David Parramore
Yutao Peng
Dorothy Porter
Ruffin Priest
Richard Pullin
Rebecca Rhodes
Elizabeth Robbins
Mary Ruvane
Krista Schmidt
Zachariah Sharek
Catherine Signorile
Gayatri Singh
Avena-Lyn Smith
Christine Stachowicz
Emily Stambaugh
Leslie Sult
Endrina Tay
William Thomas
Joby Topper
Nicole Urquhart
Carla Valetich
Carol Viscount
Yuehong Wang
Jewel Ward
Emily Warmoth
Kristen Warren
Linwood Webster
Gretchen Westman
Lesley Whedbee
Kelly Wooten
Kiduk Yang
Yihua Zhang
Yuming Zhao
2003
Jennifer Arns
Matthew Bachtell
Jacqueline Barton
Anne Bauers
Brendan Biamon
Melanie Black
Sean Boothman
Kathleen Britto
James Britton
Benjamin Brunk
Anthony Bull
Kristen Bullard
Donald Chalfant
Shane Chang
Junghee Choi
Linda Daniel
Margaret DeYoung
Xiang Ding
Karen Duez
Helen Dunn
William Durland
Claire Eager
Jessica Eakin
Miles Efron
William Epps
Cristianne Fellowes
Michael Fernandez
Pnina Fichman-Shachaf
Gary Geisler
Elizabeth Getz
Patrick Giovinazzo
Rachel Graham
Michael Graves
Amy Gresko
Emily Guthrie
Alisa Haggard
Ann Hallyburton
Julianna Harris
Robert Hassett
Susan Heimbach
Wing Kee Ho
Miriam Intrator
Kristina Irvin
Karen Jeremiah
Yanfang Jiang
Rebecca (Soltys) Jones
Young-Sook Jung
Jana Kabrtova
Telemak Kamparosyan
Ewa Krol
Smyth Lai
In Hyuk Lee
Shuang-lin Lee
Meichun Li
Lu Liu
Dihui Lu
Jennisen Lucas
Kelly Maglaughlin
Anne McClusky
Obire Mojuetan
Hetna Naik
Danny Nguyen
Caroline Osborne
Kelly Overton
James Ovitt
Ok Nam Park
Christopher Peary
Leigh Pittman
Ingrid Pohl
Patrick Polinski
Elizabeth ( Johnson) Preston
Christy Richards
Joseph Ripp
Juliet Rumble
Rachelle Runkle
Mark Sanders
Steven Segedy
Melissa Sievers
Donald Sizemore
Annelise Sklar
Elizabeth Spackman
Richard Spinks
Nicole Stevenson
Wayne Stone
Anita Sundaram
Yin Tang
Melissa Tardiff
Gary Tinker
Regina Towery
115
Debbie Travers
Tracey Turner
Karen Waller
Nan Wang
April Wells
Li Wen
Lily Whisnant
Christine (Adessa) Wilkens
Laura Wright
Jun Wu
Jian Yang
Stacey Yusko
Jun Zhang
Ying Zhang
Li Zhao
2004
Kristin Andrews
Erik Bansleben
Carmen Beard
Whitney Berman
Stephanie Bertin
Harold Bethune
Jeffrey Bollinger
Renée (Siconolfi) Bosman
Brandy Bourne
Marlan Brinkley, Jr.
Hazel Brown
Mary Bryson
Jennifer Bullock
Andre Burton
Rebecca Cahill
Catherine Campbell
Nicholas Carr
Matthew Carroll
Paul Chang
Li Chen
Patrick Chen
Colleen Clancy
Charles Cobine
Jeremy Cooper
Nathan Cox
Michelle Cronquist
Katherine Crowder
Trisha Crutchfield
Erik Dalton
Cheryl Davis
Jennie Davis
Amy Davis
Taylor Debnam
Rachel Dickey
Michele (Hawkins) Doyle
Cornelia Dulmage
David Eckert
Carla Edwards
Jennifer Emanuel
116
Zachary Evans
Olapeju Fadiora
Rachel Farrell
Samira Fazel
Jean Ferguson
Kristin Fiore
Leonard Fiume
Amy Funderburk
Pushpinder Gill
Deborah Glackin
Marianne Gouge
Aletha Green
Jason Griffey
Richard Gruss
Wanda Gunther
Nathan Hanna
Nicolae Harsanyi
Sarah Hays
Jill Heritage
Christian Higgins
Terry Hill
Kelly Hoffmann
Christina Hull
Angelique Jenks-Brown
Shan Jiang
LaQuintes Jones
Susan Keesee
Rebecca Kemp
Seung-Lye Kim
Julie Kimbrough
Adam King
William Christopher Kline
Kenneth Knight
Laura Knodel
Margaret Lafferty
Sylvia Lambert
Kristin Lancaster
William Lazorchak
Ronald Leach
Kali Lewis
An Li
Christopher Chi-Ming Liang
Mei Lo
Patricia Losi
Xiaohua Luan
Jaime Margalotti
Tadra Martin
Michelle Mascaro
Tamelia Meekins
Robin Mize
Kate Moriarty
Xiangming Mu
Margaret Murray
Amanda Myers
James Neilson
Mao Ni
Brian O’Conner
Amy Pattee
Catherine Pellegrino
Brandon Perkins
Rebecca Pernell
Jonathan Perry
Robert Peterson
Andrew Phillips
Meredith Phillips
Johanna Powers
Monique Prince
Allison Puderbaugh
Evelyn Reavis
Susan Teague Rector
Sarah Reuning
John Reuning
Jennifer Rinalducci
David Roberts
Gundry Rowe
Patricia Schefcick
Nicky Sexton
Samuel Sims, Jr.
Sean Slovney
David Smithwick
Sarah Snow
Robert Speck
Jerry Spiller
Jill Stover
Lisa Stronski
Alicia Terrian
Cynthia Thomes
Matthew Turi
Rita Van Duinen
Megan von Isenburg
Chih-Yen Wang
Tracy Waterman
Justin Watt
Curtis Webster, Jr.
Mary White
Donald Wilkins II
Stewart Williams
Amy Willis
Amanda Wilson
Jenny Wong
2005
Anecia Allen
Anna Allison
John Atkinson
Stephen Barbe
Clifton Barnett
Maureen Barry
Christopher Bartholomew
Stephan Bayer
Nicholas Bellows
Ewald Beltz
Damien Berahzer
Rita Bhattacharyya
Alison Bradley
Matthew Braun
Ian Breaden
Jennifer Bulger
Anthony Caison
Kimberly Campbell
Deborah Carlos
Elizabeth Carlton
Brandon Carter
Hugh Cayless
Justin Chandler
Robin Chen
Laura Christopherson
Thomas Ciszek
Anita Crescenzi
Lourdes Cueva-Chacon
Mara Dabrishus
Christine Dickie
Brian Dietz
Dragomir Dimitrov
April Disque
Vijay Dollu
James Dominick
Lewis Dorman IV
Brendan Doss
Alexandra Duda
April Edlin
Halle Eisenman
Christina Ekeleme
Virginia Beth Ellington
Jonathan Elsas
Nelson Eubanks
Monte Evans
Sarah Falls
Larry Farrell
Timothy Farris
Alison Foley
Laura Fox
Jackson Fox
Krystal Foxx
Mary Gabehart
Keith Gatlin III
Valerie Gillispie
Emily Glenn
Larisa Good
Christine Granquist
Charles Gray
Tammy Greene
Shauna Griffin
Dana Hafertepen
Terrance Hairston
Ryan Hanna
William Hannah
Helen Hawkins
Tiffany Hayes
Eric Hoffman
Krisztian Horvath
John Howie, Jr.
Elizabeth Hubbe
Jaime Hunsinger
Benjamin Hunter
Peter Hymas
Todd Ito
Dean Jeffrey
Anita Jotwani
Deborah (Williams) Joyner
Jessica Kem
Marie Kennedy
Jesse Kister
Kathryn Knight
Samuel Kome
Brian Kubis
Anna Krampl
Robert Lambert
Anne LeBel
Alexandra Leinaweaver
Bin Li
Lizhong Liu
Celine Ma
Mahesh Madanamohanan
Corinne Mahoney
Sarah Matusz
Andrew May
Maureen McClarnon
Cynthia McCracken
Christie McDaniel
Meg McGinn
Niamh McGuigan
Eric Miller
Jonathan Miller
Naini Mistry
Christine (Russell) Mitchell
Margarite Nathe
Jennifer O’Bryan
Rebecca Pappert
Alida Pask
Manisha Patel
Scott Phinney
Kathleen Pierce
Cynthia Pierce
Joseph Pippin, Jr.
Martha Preddie
Joshua Purvis
Alison Raab
Marisa Ramirez
Jennifer Ricker
Peter Robson
Ileana Rodriguez
Mark Rosso
Abigail Rovner
Antoinette Satterfield
Amanda Serriff
Aaron Shah
Anne Skilton
Christopher Steele
Sarah Stokes
Michelle Stover
Chang Su
Susan Sylvester
Shell Adair Thaxton
Chia-Ling Tsai
Jessica Tyree
Alan Unsworth
John Vickery
Adam Webb
Jane Webster
Emily Weiss
James Wellman
Tammy Wells-Angerer
Elizabeth White
William White
Nora Wikoff
Jesse Wilbur
Kelly Wilkie
James Wilson
Kristen Wilson
Robert Wolf
Lorilee-Maye Woods
Meng Yang
Yuan Yue
Jessica Zellers
Stephanie Adams
Samira Akpan
Amanda Allgood
Jonathan Ashley
Mary Avinger
Angela Bardeen
Laura Barwick
Diana Belden
Ronald Bergquist
Jodi Berkowitz
Philip Binkowski
Matthew Bolen
Elizabeth Borene
Sherrie Bowser
Chelcy Boyer
Elisabeth Brown
Jesse Brown
Aaron Brubaker
Janice Bryant
Travis Bryant
2006
Vanessa Budnick
Jennifer Calvo
Ulysses Lamont Cannon
Abigail Carr
Benjamin Carter
Jason Casden
Sayan Chakraborty
Xi Chen
Diana Chike
Kevin Clair
Karissa Coburn
Emma Cryer
Julie Darnell
Nicholas Disabato
Ashley Doar
David Dodd
Dung Donie
Julie Doring
Meredith Evans
Sarah Fass
Emily Fidelman
Keith Folken
Thomas Forsythe
Sarah Garcia
Laurence Gavin
Michele Glasburgh
Betsy Gorbe
Smith Gregg
Erin Gumbel
Michael Habib
Sarah Haight
Haley Hall
Mary Hawyood
Bari Helms
Daniel Hendley
Patrick Herron
Margaret Hite
Emily Horner
Dawne Howard
Kerri Huff
Isaac Huffman
Anthony Hughes
Thomas Jackson
Kirston Johnson
Leigh Jones
Shanita Jones
Benn Joseph
Smith Joyce
Kathleen Keyser
Ronald Kirkley
Alicia Korenman
Terra Kridler
Susan Lauber
Kasia Leousis
Jennifer Lohmann
Christopher Maier
Monica McCormick
Rosalyn Metz
Casey Miller
Sandra Montgomery
Allison Moonitz
Risa Mulligan
Joseph Nicholson
Megan Oakleaf
Kelsy Peterson
Joan Petit
Robert Pitts
György Polczer
Sally Quiroz
Byron Sanders
John Schaefer
Gretchen Scronce
Peter Segall
Anuj Sharma
Elizabeth Sheehy
Rebecca Sigmon
Katherine Silton
Laura Smith
Jason Sokoloff
Molly Sorice
Gene Springs
Emily Stitsinger
Jeffery Sumpter
Mark Tamburello
Jillian Tanner
Stanislav Trembach
Alexandra Vidas
Alison Waldenberg
John Walker, Jr.
Jerry Waller
Jack Ward III
Stefanie Warlick
Rebecca Watkins
Sarah Watts
Marie Wheaton
William Whitt
Nancy Wilson
Megan Winget
Carol Woodcock
Wenyang Yi
Justin Alberti
Thea Allen
Elizabeth Appleton
Stephen Bahnaman
Kaye Balke
Jonathan Beam
April Brewer
Jesse Carter
Kathryn Champion
2007
Daphne Childres
Rachel Click
Robert Cooper
Theresa DeVoe
Margaret Dickson
Agatha Donkar
Leslee Farish
Philip Fulcher
Noel Fiser
Martina Gargard
Megan Griffin
Ellen Hampton
Jessica Harvey
Sagar Harwani
Gary Hausman
Megan Hendershot
Janice Hodges
Sarah Hodkinson
Thomas Howell
Emily Jack
Bin Jia
Gregory Johnson
Lawrence Keah Jr.
Margaret Keller
Sherief Khaki
Beth Ann Koelsch
Kari Kozak
Julia Kulla-Mader
LaTisha Lankford
Kevin Lanning
Eben Lehman
Trisha Long
Sarah (Gault) Loree
Chad Lowe
W. John MacMullen
Jenny McCraw
Heather McCullough
Christie McDaniel
Holly Mabry
Ronald Maddox
Travis Mason
Lynne Mohrfeld
James Mormando
Cristobal Palmer
Megan Perez
Rebecca Pierson
Kelly Potter
Meredith Rendall
Emily Riley
Lucas Rowe
Michelle Rubino
James Ruth
Gillian Sciacca
Alison Shahan
Aperna Sherman
Ashley Smith
Cassidy Sugimoto
Arthur Taylor
Amy Thompson
Lisa Thursby
Joshua Vossler
Jennifer Waldman
Dina Waxman
Angela Wilder
Baasil Wilder
Danielle Zynda
117
Index
A
Akers, Susan Grey 11, 14, 24–25, 44, 48, 49,
52, 56, 70. See also Susan Grey Akers
Scholarship
American Library Association 46, 58, 59, 64
Asheim, Lester 66, 88. See also Lester Asheim
Scholarship
Association for Library and Information Science Education 78
Association of American Library Schools 46
Bell, Jo Ann Hardison 68
Beta Phi Mu 58
Beust, Nora 14
Bierbaum, Esther 71
Board of Visitors 82
Boekelheide, Kristen 97
Boone, Nancy 70
British Library 83
Brown, Andy 87
Buyer, Pete 63
Cain, Melissa 80
Cardex 51
career day 75
Carlson, Eris 63
Carnegie Corporation 42, 50
Carpenter, Raymond Jr. 21, 30, 62, 63
Certificate of Advanced Study 74
commencement 90, 95, 98
Coney, Donald 14
Daniel, Evelyn 21, 32, 72, 77, 78
Davis, Julie 93
Davis Library 91
Dempsey, Bert 87
Dillon, Martin 69
Downs, Robert Bingham 14
EPA Library 64, 74, 90
118
B
Frances Carroll McColl Professorship 84
Frarey, Carlyle 27, 58, 66
Freeman, Jean 53
Frizell, Mary 63
Glasgow, Vicki 63
Goble, David 89
Grey, Libby 81
Griffin, Shauna 97
Griffiths, José-Marie 21, 35, 96, 99
Grow, Neville 63
F
G
H
Haas, Stephanie 88
Henderson, Lucile Kelling 11, 26, 76. See
also Lucile Kelling Henderson Lecture
Holley, Edward 31, 49, 64, 65, 76, 89
Homestart 97
C
ibiblio 92, 93
Information and Technology Resource Center
87
Institute for Research in Social Science 67
Jensen, David 71
Johnson, Joyce 63
Jones, John 63
Jones, Paul 93
D
E
I
J
K
Kaercher, Kathy 63
Kalp, Margaret Ellen 28, 60, 68
Kilgour, Eleanor 77
Kilgour, Frederick 76, 77, 98. See also OCLC/Frederick G. Kilgour Lecture
King, Donald 98
Knowledge Trust 96
Lerner, Karen 63
Lester Asheim Scholarship 76
Library Science Library. See SILS Library
L
Losee, Robert 75
Louis Round Wilson Academy 96
Lucile Kelling Henderson Lecture 78
Manning Hall 41, 60, 62, 65, 69, 84, 90, 95
Marshall, Joanne Gard 21, 34, 90
McColl, Hugh 84
McColl, Jane Spratt 84
McCracken, Cindy 97
McMullen, Haynes 61, 71
McPhail, Martha 63
Memorial Hall 99
microfilm 45
Moran, Barbara 21, 33, 72, 76, 77, 89
Morgan, Pamela 63
M
N
new student orientation 73, 85
North Carolina College for Negroes 50
North Carolina General Assembly 50
North Carolina Library School Association 48
OCLC/Frederick G. Kilgour Lecture 96
Odom, Paul 63
Olshan, Laura 63
Online Computer Library Center (OCLC)
77, 96. See also OCLC/Frederick G.
Kilgour Lecture
Osborne, Mary Pope 90
Osterman, Linda 49
Oxford summer seminar 83
Powers, Valerie 63
Prague summer seminar 94
Roper, Fred 66, 67, 70, 72, 78
Royal, Norma 49
Saye, Jerry 84
Sebastian, Carole 63
Sedelow, Walter Jr. 29, 60
O
P
R
S
SILS Alumni Association 81
SILS Library 37, 54, 65, 79, 83
Smith, Andrew 93
Solomon, Paul 92
Special Libraries Association 97
Steinfirst, Susan 78, 88. See also Susan Steinfirst Memorial Lecture
Sturtevant, John 63
SunSITE 86. See also ibiblio
Susan Grey Akers Scholarship 54
Susan Steinfirst Memorial Lecture 78
Tax, Jan 87
Taylor, Arlene 71
Tibbo, Helen 86, 87
Trainer, Leslie 63
Tsaganos, Michael 63
U.S. News & World Report 90
University Day 73
Vargha, Rebecca 97
T
This book was produced at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s
School of Information and Library Science in honor of the School’s 75th anniversary in 2007. It was designed by Nicholas Johnson under the direction of Wanda
Monroe, the SILS’ director of communications, and José-Marie Griffiths, dean of
SILS.
Sincere thanks for help with the production of this book go to Prof. David
Carr for his help researching and writing much of the text; Stephen Fletcher and
U
V
W
Westbrook, Bruce 63
William Rand Kenan Jr. Professorship 66, 76
Wilson, Elizabeth 89
Wilson, Louis Round 9, 10, 11, 14, 22–23, 38,
40, 44, 49, 52, 54, 66, 68
Wilson, Penelope 89
Wilson Library 9, 39, 47, 50, 55, 57
Yonce, Barbara 63
Colophon
Y
Keith Longiotti for their aid with the North Carolina Collection Photographic
Archives; Fred Roper for his valuable suggestions and insight into life at SILS
during his time student, faculty member and administrator; and Margaret Telfer
at PhotoBook Press for her guidance through the printing process (and putting up
with dozens of silly questions). Thanks also to the SILS Board of Visitors and the
75th Anniversary Planning Committee (listed in full on the next page) for their
work organizing the entire 75th anniversary celebration.
Photos used in this book were culled from the North Carolina Collection
Photographic Archives, the School of Information and Library Science archives and
Prof. Roper’s personal collection.
Body text and captions for the book are set in Adobe’s Jenson Pro, and section
headings are in Adobe’s Myriad Pro.
119
SILS 75th Anniversary Committee
David Goble, chair
Mary Boone
David Carr
Claudia Gollop
José-Marie Griffiths
Julie Harris
Shawn Jackson
Selden Lamoureux
Wanda Monroe
Dan Morrow
Wayne Pond
Sarah Snow
Karen Sobel
SILS Board of Visitors
David Goble, chair
Fred Roper, vice-chair
Michel Bézy
Mary Boone
Charles M. Brown
Joan Challinor
George Coe
David Ferriero
Beth Fitzsimmons
Karen Gottovi
Marge Hlava
Deborah Jakubs
Robert L. “Jay” Jordan
Marshall Keys
Peter McCracken
Dan Morrow
David Paynter
Judith C. Russell
Guy St. Clair
Mark Sanders
Duncan Smith
Sarah Snow
Jerry Thrasher
John Ulmschneider