The Hunt Library Wins the Stanford Prize for Innovation in Research
Transcription
The Hunt Library Wins the Stanford Prize for Innovation in Research
NCSU Libraries Volume 30, No. 4, Summer, 2014 The Hunt Library Wins the Stanford Prize for Innovation in Research Libraries John Cotton Dana Award North Carolina Literary Festival Award-Winning Libraries 10 22 NCSU Libraries Volume 30, No. 4, Summer, 2014 14 VICE PROVOST AND DIRECTOR OF LIBRARIES: Susan K. Nutter EDITOR: Charles J. Samuels, Director of Publications GRAPHIC DESIGN: Charles J. Samuels, Brent Brafford photo by Makenzie Bryson 2 Friends of the Library Campus Box 7111 Raleigh, NC 27695 [email protected] 919-515-2841 Focus seeks to promote the services, activities, needs, and interests of the NCSU Libraries to the university, the Friends of the Library, and beyond. Unless otherwise noted, photographs are by Charles Samuels and Brent Brafford, NCSU Libraries, or Marc Hall, NC State University Communications Services. NCSU Libraries: www.lib.ncsu.edu Focus Online: www.lib.ncsu.edu/publications/ focusonline 5 24 18 On the Cover: The James B. Hunt Jr. Library on NC State’s Centennial Campus. Image © Jeff Goldberg–Esto This publication was printed at a cost of $1.42 per piece with funding by the Friends of the Library of North Carolina State University. ©2014 NCSU Libraries SUMMER, 2014 2 Libraries News 26 Friends of the Library News 28 Staff News 32 Libraries Personnel 10 Stanford Prize for Innovation 14 John Cotton Dana Award 18 North Carolina Literary Festival 22 IIDA/ALA Award 24 Designing Libraries Conference LIBRARIES NEWS LIBRARY PROGRAMS RECAP This past academic year has been another busy one, featuring a variety of programs that spanned the disciplines – from agriculture to 3D printing and computer science. GOING TO THE DOGS Dogmen are the workers behind the sport of greyhound racing: they care for, breed, train, and race these unique dogs. Last August, the NCSU Libraries’ own Gwynn Thayer, Gwyneth Thayer associate head and curator of the Libraries’ Special Collections, talked about her book, Going to the Dogs: Greyhound Racing, Animal Activism, and American Popular Culture, and shared fascinating information on dogmen’s historic role in the sport as well as their role as animal caretakers. Adam Rogers (NCSU Librarian), Dr. Ola Harrysson (Industrial and Systems Engineering), Chuck Hull (3D printing inventor), and Dr. Michael Dickey (Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering) joined our panel to discuss the future of 3D printing. WOMEN IN COMPUTER SCIENCE In November, the NCSU Libraries hosted a screening of the documentary SHE++, which exposes the alarming dearth of women in computer science and programming. For example, from 2000 to 2011, the number of first-year female undergraduates who expressed interest in a computer science major declined 79%. This statistic has ramifications for America’s ability to provide enough qualified graduates to meet the growing demand for workers in the field. Following the screening, a panel of NC State professors, students, and visiting guest Melanie Donny-Clark, senior software engineer at Google, discussed strategies for getting more young women interested in computer science. AMAZING ALUMNI AND STELLAR STUDENTS Alumni Richard Holcomb ’89 shared his career journey as part of the NCSU Libraries’ Amazing Alumni Series. After receiving an M.S. in Computer Science from NC State, Holcomb helped start multimillion-dollar technology companies and won awards as an entrepreneur and business leader. Then, in 2004, Holcomb changed course, purchasing the sustainable Coon Rock Farm in Hillsborough and becoming a leader in the sustainable agriculture movements in our community. a nonprofit Janice Odom, organization based director of the Caldwell Fellows on a penny-donation Program, Shreye model. As part of Saxena, and Ryan the Stellar Student O’Donnell. Series, O’Donnell and Saxena discussed their project and how they are employing the skills they are learning at NC State to build a better world. READ SMART The engaging Read Smart series continued, as NC State professors shared their expertise with readers in an ongoing book discussion series held at Cameron Village Regional Library. FIRESIDE TALES For the fourth year in a row, NCSU Libraries staff shared their talents in Fireside Tales, a holiday celebration with live music, stories, treats, and crafts for kids and their families. STUDENT SHORT FILM SHOWCASE In February, the NCSU Libraries hosted the fourth annual Student Short Film Showcase – two nights packed with extraordinary 16mm films, videos, and animations, all created by students, all under five minutes long. 3D PRINTING INNOVATORS Also in August, NC State scholars who use and study 3D printing shared the stage with Chuck Hull, the inventor of 3D printing, to talk about how 3D printing is transforming the way NC State brings ideas to life, both inside and outside the classroom. 2 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries Student moderator, Emily Bissett and farmer Richard Holcomb. Current NC State students Ryan O’Donnell and Shreye Saxena share a passion for creating meaningful social change. With a small team of students, they created Pennies 4 Progress, Stills from “Disko Momentum” by Margo Jordan (top), and “This is Procrastination” by Leesa Moore and Aaron Thomas (above). LIBRARIES NEWS THE HUNT LIBRARY FEATURED IN PBS ARCHITECTURE TV SERIES, COOL SPACES We have all known for a long time that the Hunt Library was ready for prime time. But now so does the rest of the country. Late this spring the building was extensively profiled in the nationally syndicated PBS series, Cool Spaces! (http://www.coolspaces.tv), a new prime time program designed to “profile some of this century’s most exciting architecture in the U.S.” Sponsored by the American Institute of Architects (AIA) and hosted by Boston architect and educator Stephen Chung, the new series focuses “on presenting cutting-edge, contemporary public buildings and spaces and the daring architects who push the boundaries of design and materials.” The program is appearing on over 100 public television stations across the country, with coverage in about 95% of households with televisions. However, you can see a trailer at go.ncsu.edu/coolspaces. The companion book to Cool Spaces!— also featuring the Hunt Library—can be from ordered from Amazon.com. Because the series is still under syndication, the Hunt Library episode is not yet available on the Internet. Clockwise from top left: Host Stephen Chung talks with a student on the Hunt Library’s monumental stairs, Gov. James B. Hunt, Jr. tells Chung about the importance of the building to all North Carolinians, architect Craig Dykers and Chung discuss LEED features of the building, Prof. Michael Young explains the interdisciplinary convergence that is the hallmark of the Hunt Library, Dykers and Chung relax in one of many unique spaces in the Hunt Library. NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 3 LIBRARIES NEWS SEEING POSSIBILITIES FOR WEARABLE COMPUTING MAKING GOOGLE GLASS™ AVAILABLE TO RESEARCHERS ON CAMPUS User Experience Librarian Adrienne Lai demonstrates Google Glass for students gathered at the Apple Technology Showcase in the Hunt Library. “Of course we’d like to play with it. We’ll take it for a week and push it to its limits.” That was the plan when Sina Bahram and Arpan Chakraborty picked up the first Google Glass™ available from the Hunt Library. And when two ambitious Ph.D. candidates take a promising new technology for a workout in the Computer Science Knowledge Discovery Lab, interesting things are bound to happen. That’s the mission of the Libraries’ Technology Lending Service: make things happen by making it easy for students and faculty to put their hands on tools that are changing how we learn, research, and earn our livings. By mounting a small screen in a glasses frame and allowing the wearer to use its onboard computing, optical, and audio power, Glass hopes to fundamentally transform how we interact with computers. Imagine yourself on vacation in Japan, for instance. Then look at a traffic sign or a menu and ask your glasses to translate it for you. Trying a challenging home repair? Just log into a website and have a master carpenter use the tiny camera on your glasses to see exactly what you are looking at and guide you through the work. That’s the promise. Though Glass isn’t generally available yet, the Libraries was able to obtain one through Google’s Explorer program, allowing researchers on campus to get a head start working with it. Bahram and Chakraborty focused on two opportunities during their week with Glass. First, Glass has relatively limited computing power and requires developers to work with Google’s programming languages. Within the week, though, the two had the Glass exchanging data with external servers, supplying all the horsepower anyone could want and allowing fellow students to start programing with whatever language they thought would work best. This extra power and flexibility opened the door to a core research interest for the lab, using Glass to improve accessibility for the visually impaired. The technology can and will be transformative for people with limited vision, explained Bahram, who is blind himself. Imagine, he explained, having your glasses tell you “ . . . USING NOVEL AND INNOVATIVE METHODS” MY #HUNTLIBRARY WINS ALA AWARD My #HuntLibrary (d.lib.ncsu.edu/ myhuntlibrary) has won another American Library Association Cutting-Edge Technology in Library Services award, our third in the last four years. 4 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries the cab you ordered has arrived by looking at the traffic in front of you, matching cars and colors against a database, and letting you know when the red 2013 Ford Fusion has pulled up to the curb. Or picking up a can and having your Glass scan its bar code and read out the contents. Or scanning a room as you enter, letting Glass use facial recognition software to check against photos in your iPhone contact list and tell you which of your friends are at the meeting or party. “Labs on campus might be hesitant at first to spend their research dollars on an unproven tool,” concludes Chakraborty. “But the Libraries’ Tech Lending Service lets them see how useful it is and move forward quickly.” Equally important, adds Bahram, “this is a great service for students who are going out and applying for a job at a startup. . . . When they can say—‘Yes, I’ve played with Google Glass for a semester; I understand how to develop for it’—that’s a big opportunity, a huge competitive advantage.” The social media application was honored along with three other programs nationwide “that are serving their communities using novel and innovative methods” and that can be replicated by other libraries to improve their services. Over 1,200 visitors to the new library used the app to upload over 3,600 of their favorite photos of the new library. The result: some great images for all to see and an outpouring of pride in the new facility. LIBRARIES NEWS AUTHOR MICHAEL POLLAN SPEAKS AT HUNT LIBRARY On May 16, the NCSU Libraries Friends of the Library and Quail Ridge Books & Music co-hosted Michael Pollan, bestselling author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma, for a sold-out event in the Hunt Library Auditorium. Pollan read from his most recent book, Cooked: A Natural History of Transformation, which features local barbecue pit-master Ed Mitchell (who was in attendance). Audience members then took the opportunity to ask Pollan his opinion on high-profile food topics such as the debate over gluten and the concern about genetically modified foods. The Friends of the Library appreciates its partnership with Quail Ridge Books & Music and looks forward to co-hosting more wonderful author events in the future! Left: Author Michael Pollan discusses his new book and takes questions from the audience. Below: Attendees enjoy a chat with Pollan as he signs books. Photos by Makenzie Bryson. LIBRARIES FACING BUDGET CUTS As part of the budget reductions levied on the university by the North Carolina General Assembly, the Libraries is absorbing a cut of more than $1.3 million for the fiscal year 2013/14, about 5% of our total budget. To meet these budget cuts, we have had to eliminate 27 positions and are currently canceling subscriptions to 642 journal titles. In addition, hours have been cut in the branch libraries, and the D. H. Hill Library and the Hunt Library are planning to substantially reduce the number of days per week when they are open 24 hours to meet the study and research schedules of students and faculty. Unfortunately, it is also possible that the university and the Libraries will face further cuts in the fiscal year that begins July 1, 2014. NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 5 LIBRARIES NEWS NEW LIBRARIES MOBILE TOURS APP The new NCSU Libraries Mobile Tours App allows you to explore the inspiring and sophisticated learning spaces and cutting-edge design of the James B. Hunt Jr. Library, with tours of the D. H. Hill Library as well. The NCSU Libraries Mobile Tours app has an easy-to-use interface that enables you begin exploring within minutes! Get the free app today. Go to the App Store for Apple devices at: go.ncsu. edu/libtourapp NCSU LIBRARIES ACQUIRES 80 YEARS OF ANIMAL RIGHTS AND ANIMAL WELFARE PAMPHLETS Of significant scholarly and historical importance, the collection spans a period of over eighty years from the 1870s to the 1950s, and includes a wealth of promotional, advocacy, and educational materials that shed Dr. Tom Regan light on the moral, social, medical and political dimensions of this complex movement. To expand its collection strengths in Animal Rights and Welfare, the Libraries Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) has acquired an important collection of nearly 400 rare pamphlets and other works relating to animal advocacy, animal rights, and animal welfare. These materials enhance the Libraries’ collecting efforts in an interdisciplinary field that engages scholars across the humanities, human and veterinary medicine, and the sciences. Download the Android version at: go.ncsu.edu/libtourandroid The new collection is already being put to use in NC State classrooms. A selection of the pamphlets was used to introduce students to primary source materials in a Biology class on Human-Animal Interaction. SCRC staff is now working with faculty to develop a class assignment using the historical pamphlets and contrasting them with contemporary animal rights and welfare records from the collections for the upcoming Fall 2014 semester. The acquisition of these pamphlets builds on the NCSU Libraries’ leadership in this 6 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries collecting area and augments existing archival processing initiatives including Acting for Animals: Revealing the Records of Animal Rights and Animal Welfare Movements, a 2011 grant that documents the animal welfare and the animal rights movements of the second half of the 20th century. The Acting for Animals grant was supported with funding from the Council on Library and Information Resources. Dr. Tom Regan, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at NC State, notes that “before the recent acquisition, the library’s holdings were the most comprehensive in the world. With the addition of these new materials, especially the ones from the nineteenth century, the library has strengthened its claim to preeminence.” The depth and breadth of the NCSU Libraries’ collections now provide a rich trove of primary resources to support research in animal advocacy, rights, and welfare from the 1870s to the present. EXHIBITS NEWS RECENT EXHIBITS Construction Documents: Building the James B. Hunt Jr. Library Photographs by Doug Van De Zande January–October 2014 D. H. Hill Exhibit Gallery Construction documents usually refer to a comprehensive set of architectural plans, but Raleigh photographer Doug Van de Zande created a different type of Construction Documents for the NCSU Libraries. From late 2010 through the fall of 2011 Van de Zande photographed the Hunt Library’s workers who moved earth, poured concrete, pulled wire, and clad the exterior with its iconic “fins.” These portraits, made with a traditional eight-by-ten inch view camera, offer a unique, behind-thescenes perspective on the people and process that brought the Hunt Library to life. Governor Hunt’s career. If you missed the installation, the exhibit can be viewed online at lib.ncsu. edu/hunt-legacy-of-leadership/. COMING THIS FALL Leading the Pack: Student Leaders at NC State November 2014 This exhibit draws from the NCSU Libraries Student Leadership Initiative, a compelling oral history project begun in 2010 that has archived dozens of video interviews from student leaders, as well as biographical essays and images. Current students, alumni, and the community alike will gain insight into the breadth and depth of leaders produced by NC State University. Explore the Student Leadership Initiative at http://d.lib. ncsu.edu/student-leaders. For more information about exhibits, please contact Molly Renda at [email protected]. James B. Hunt Jr.: A Legacy of Leadership February 1–March 14, 2014 James B. Hunt Jr. Library To coincide with Governor James B. Hunt, Jr.’s official portrait unveiling, hosted by the Office of the Chancellor on February 13, 2014, the NCSU Libraries was honored to create an exhibit that celebrated the roots and impact of Top: the Construction Documents photography exhibit. Right: the James B. Hunt, Jr. exhibit at Hunt Library. NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 7 Visitor Experience Librarian Deanna Day shows off the Faculty Research Commons as part of a tour of the Hunt Library. The Skyline Terrace is a popular sunny stop on tours of the Hunt Library. VISITING OUR LIBRARY OF THE FUTURE were involved in the planning and construction, and discuss service issues and post-occupancy lessons learned. Welcoming visitors has been a way of life at the James B. Hunt Jr. Library since its opening on January 2, 2013. In fact, more than 20,000 visitors have participated in the library’s hosted tours, and more than 2,000 inquisitive wanderers have downloaded the mobile tour for a private trek through our “Library of the Future.” The Hunt Library has become a world-wide sensation, with a presence on YouTube and visitors from over 50 countries including Australia, Japan, Senegal, Belarus, Poland, the UK, the UAE, France, Israel, Argentina, Germany, and Mexico. To meet demand, the library schedules regular walk-in tours and specialevent tours for alumni groups or University events such as Graduation Rather than diminishing over time, the demand for visiting the Hunt Library has been consistent, driven by community pride, word-of-mouth, and a consistent presence in the media. Since its opening, the library has been featured in more than 300 press pieces and won numerous awards. The visitors to the Hunt Library are a diverse group, ranging from architects and design firms to government agencies and community groups. Faculty, students, parents, and alumni are among the most prominent visitors, but librarians don’t lag far behind. In fact, the building has become a source of inspiration for librarians who are involved in their own building and renovation projects. To meet their specific needs, the Visitor Experience Team introduced 1 ½-day symposiums that allow participants to tour both the D. H. Hill and Hunt libraries, spend time with the IT staff, engage management who 8 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries or University Open House. Tours are scheduled at times that are least disruptive for library users and are not permitted during reading days and finals. The Visitor Experience Librarian coordinates all requests for tours to balance the interests of the public with the needs of students and faculty who require quiet space for study and research. If you or your group is interested in a tour, be sure to visit our webpage at www.lib.ncsu.edu/visit or send an e-mail to: [email protected]. STAFF NEWS STUDENT WORKER AWARDS On April 21, the Libraries’ Student Assistant Committee hosted the annual Student Appreciation Awards Ceremony to recognize the contributions of student workers throughout the academic year. The Outstanding Student of the Year award went to MaryGrace Gunnels, and this year’s Above & Beyond Award winners were Christopher Tomso and Pamela “Katrina” Pareja. At the event, each award winner’s accomplishments were described by their nominators. The Outstanding Student of the Year received a cash prize of $500 and an engraved brick in her honor that is installed in the walkway near the main entrance to the D. H. Hill Library. Each of the Above & Beyond winners received a cash prize of $250. CATHERINE BISHIR HONORED FOR FOSTERING LOCAL ARCHITECTURE SCENE On April 3, the Triangle chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) presented Catherine Bishir with their Isosceles Award, given annually to recognize a nonarchitect who has made “significant contributions to the improvement of the built environment or to the profession of architecture.” Bishir’s latest book, Crafting Lives: African American Artisans in New Bern, North Carolina, 1770-1900, was published by UNC Press in November. From top: Student of the Year, MaryGrace Gunnels; Above and Beyond winners, Christopher Tomso and Pamela “Katrina” Pareja. Past recipients of the Isosceles Award have included Dr. Stephen Scott, President of Wake Technical Community College; Jim Goodman of Capital Broadcasting for the American Tobacco Campus; NC House Representative Deborah Ross for legislative contributions to architecture; Bernie Reeves for support through his many publications; the North Carolina Museum of Art; and George Smart, founder of Triangle Modernist Houses. Catherine’s reaction to receiving the award was classic Bishir: “Holy banana peel, what a fabulous surprise!” NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 9 AWARD-WINNING LIBRARIES WITH VERVE THE HUNT LIBRARY AWARDED THE STANFORD PRIZE FOR INNOVATION IN RESEARCH LIBRARIES 10 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries © Jeff Goldberg–Esto ONE COULD NOT ASK TO BE FOUND IN BETTER COMPANY: the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, the Miguel de Cervantes Digital Library in Spain, The National Institute for Informatics in Japan, the New York Public Library, Harvard Law Library—a partial list of winners and commendations of merit for the Stanford Prize for Innovation in Research Libraries. Established by the Stanford University Libraries in 2013, the Stanford Prize is the newest and the most prestigious international award for celebrating “the innovative impulses” in our profession. Spaces that foster the types of collaborative interactions that today’s students and researchers require are among the Hunt Library’s most innovative features. “THE ‘THINK BIG’ ATTITUDE MAKES THIS A MODEL STUDY FOR UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES.” ELISABETH NIGGEMANN, GENERALDIREKTORIN, DEUTSCHE NATIONALBIBLIOTHEK “A CHALLENGE TO THE COMPLACENT.” DAME LYNNE BRINDLEY, MASTER OF PEMBROKE COLLEGE, OXFORD The Hunt Library is the only winner of the prize in 2014. The Hunt Library is infused with the most exciting teaching technologies. © Jeff Goldberg–Esto NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 11 Esto oldberg – © Jeff G 12 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries The panel of judges for this year’s award—including academic and library leaders from Oxford University, the University of Virginia, the German National Library, and the Library of Congress—cited NC State’s second main library as “a forward-looking and ambitious approach to supporting research and learning through a diverse array of advanced technologies. As a building, an integrated technology environment, and a suite of services, the Hunt Library is an innovative model for the research library as a high-technology research platform.” The Hunt Library is a forward-looking competitive advantage for NC State. “At a time when the roles of libraries are being challenged,” concluded Dongfang Shao, chief of the Asian Division at the Library of Congress, the Hunt Library “proves libraries are not just relevant, but are in fact essential to advance universities’ goals. In an innovative and visionary manner this program serves as a model for other research libraries to move forward within the digital age.” “THIS IS A PERVASIVE DILEMMA —HOW DO YOU TRANSFORM A PHYSICAL SPACE INTO A RESEARCH AND TEACHING PLATFORM IN THE DIGITAL ERA—BUT THE TEAM AT NCSU HAVE TACKLED THIS WITH VERVE AND A DISTINCTIVE ACUMEN.” CHARLES HENRY, PRESIDENT, COUNCIL ON LIBRARY AND INFORMATION RESOURCES NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 13 AWARD-WINNING LIBRARIES “You were the stars of the campaign.” The Hunt Library’s Public Relations Wins the John Cotton Dana Award R ecognized for substantially raising the profile of NC State University to a global audience, the communications around the opening the of the James B. Hunt Jr. Library have been honored with what is often billed as the library world’s most prestigious traditional prize: the John Cotton Dana Library Public Relations Award. Sponsored by EBSCO, the H.W. Wilson Foundation, and the American Library Association (ALA), the award has been given annually since 1946 to celebrate powerful campaigns that demonstrate the value of libraries to their users, funders, and donors. The Hunt Library communications were especially singled out for creating “a bold, new campaign that helped the community imagine ‘The Library of the Future.’” “Beyond the great technology, incredible facility and impressive media coverage, the true star of this campaign,” the award concluded, “was the 14 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries way the community told the story. Students were asked to imagine themselves in the space, and they took to the challenge wholeheartedly.” For those of you in our great NCSU Libraries community who uploaded photos to My #HuntLibrary, who posted Hunt praises to your Facebook accounts, whose Hunt tweets showed up on our website, or who appeared in one of the many Hunt Library videos, a big thanks! The My #HuntLibrary Instagram project is one great example of how the communications team tapped into the spirit of community in the opening of the Hunt Library. NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 15 “I feel like I’ve been handed the keys to the spaceship.” —Student on first visit to the Hunt Library under construction Every element of Hunt Library collateral was infused with the ”Hunt look.” “One word: bookBot.” —The Hunt Library in The Paris Review A video series produced by the Libraries’ communications team helped to rally excitement in the months leading up to the opening of the Hunt Library. A commemorative book about the Hunt Library was designed after the library opened to provide a keepsake, museumquality piece to thank donors for their support. The Hunt Library received great media coverage worldwide before and after its opening. NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 17 THE NORTH CAROLINA LITERARY FESTIVAL BRANCHES OUT Guest author Junot Díaz poses for a photo with a festival attendee at the North Carolina Literary Festival. F or many, literary festivals are a chance to gather with like-minded book lovers and learn about the latest in hardcover fiction, or hear a discussion with a favorite author. Folks who came to the 2014 North Carolina Literary Festival, held this spring at the Hunt Library, had to come prepared not only to do those things, but also to make comic books, compete in a bar trivia quiz, hear some rock-n-roll, taste bourbon with a cookbook author, enjoy aerialist storytelling, and immerse themselves in 18 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries multimedia art installations. They did get to meet their favorite author and get a book signed, but were encouraged to snap a ‘selfie’ and post it to Instagram as well. The North Carolina Literary Festival took place on April 3-6, 2014, attracted thousands of attendees from across the state, and hosted over 100 speakers, artists, musicians, activities, and entertainers including Pulitzer Prize winners Junot Díaz and Richard Ford, National Book Award winners James McBride and William T. Vollmann, and regional favorites Lee Smith, Wiley Cash, Jill McCorkle and Wilton Barnhardt. Award-winning videogame designer Davey Wreden spoke to the Festival’s theme (The Future of Reading), while UNCC professor Heather Marcelle Crickenberger dazzled festivalgoers with her Arcades Projections media installation in the Creativity Studio. The NC State College of Education offered a robust selection of children’s activities, which were supplemented by sponsored activities provided by PNC Bank and the Charlotte Hornets. Children’s authors including Jacqueline Davies, Kelly Starlings Lyon, and John Claude Bemis were on hand to read and sign books, and Festival favorite R.L. Stine had fans driving from hours away just to see their favorite childhood author. For the first time in the Festival’s history, the event branched out into downtown Raleigh, partnering with venues such as Cameron Bar & Grill for a Literary Trivia Night, The Oxford for a bourbon tasting with author Kathleen Purvis, an Irish Storytellers Viki Redding - Mindful I Left to right from top row: LaToya Hankins chats with attendees, Jill McCorkle introduces Junot Díaz, visitors make digital comics with volunteers from the College of Education, kids at the Lego creation tables, Jeff Polish at the Monti, Daniel Wallace and Ben Fountain, aerial storytelling from StoryUp!, visitors browse books for sale. Viki Redding - Mindful I NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 19 This page, left to right: attendees take part in a bookmaking workshop with NCSU librarians, kids enjoy greeting service dogs, the Lego building area is a huge hit, a digital comic page made with help from the College of Education, the popup book workshop, another photo comic page, author Richard Ford, the book-signing line for R. L. Stine, Marcelle Crickenberger’s media installation. event at Tir na nOg, a musical Storytellers event at The Pour House featuring The Morning After and author Daniel Wallace, and The Monti storytelling event at King’s Barcade, which featured authors R.L. Stine, Karen Joy Fowler, Jan Burke, Jami Attenberg, and Davey Wreden. The Festival culminated with several North Carolina-centered programs, including an interview with legendary short-story writer Elizabeth Spencer, a conversation between Michael Parker and Allan Gurganus, and the announcement of the new induct- ees to the North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame (Jaki Shelton Green, Betty Adcock, Shelby Stevenson, and Ronald Bayes). Attendees loved the opportunity to meet and interact with authors whose work they admire, and the Festival received wonderful feedback. Wake County Library Commissioner Maryanne Friend said that the Festival “created a beautiful literary garden that will grow and blossom and inspire so many people.” Safah Mahate, an NC State senior in biological sciences, posted on Instagram, “Got to meet my favorite Jessamyn Jade Rubio Jessamyn Jade Rubio 20 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries author, Deborah Blum, at the #nclitfest. Thanks for being even more amazing in person!” The North Carolina Literary Festival was presented by Laureate Sponsors PNC Bank, The State Library of North Carolina, Our State magazine, and the North Carolina State University Libraries Friends of the Library. Campus sponsors included the College of Humanities and Social Sciences and the Department of English, the Centennial Campus Partners, the Association of Retired Faculty, the Institute for Emerging Issues, and the College of Sciences. Right: the comics workshop. Below, left to right: James McBride, Lego creations, Paperhand Puppet Intervention, the First Novel panel, Kelly Starlings Lyon, R.L. Stine, Masters of Horror with R.L. Stine and Peter Straub, making comics with the iPad, posing for a photo with Lev Grossman. Jessamyn Jade Rubio Jessamyn Jade Rubio Jessamyn Jade Rubio Jessamyn Jade Rubio Jessamyn Jade Rubio Jessamyn Jade Rubio NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 21 AWARD-WINNING LIBRARIES FORM AND FUNCTION THE HUNT LIBRARY CITED FOR TOP INTERIOR DESIGN “Wonder if there will come a time when people take their first steps into the Hunt Library without that look of awe on their faces? Hope not.” If this recent student tweet captures some of what you felt when you walked into the space for the first time, then you now have professionals who share and salute your tastes. Students especially appreciate the functional spaces, the comfortable modern furniture, and the bright clear circulation provided by the interior design of the Hunt Library. The Hunt Library has been awarded one of this year’s ALA/IIDA Library Interior Design Awards. Sponsored by the International Interior Design Association and the American Library Association, the award honors “excellence in aesthetics, design, creativity, function, and satisfaction of the client’s objectives.” The Hunt Library was recognized as winner of the “Academic Libraries, Over 30,000 sq. ft.” category. The Hunt Library’s lead designer was Snøhetta; its executive architects were Clark Nexsen; and Another Inside Job consulted on interior design. Gwendolyn Emery—the NCSU Libraries’ Director of Library Environments—as well as other library staff, also played a significant role in envisioning and creating the interior of the building. Check out this amazing student-created website, The Chairs of Hunt Library: chairsofhuntlibrary.tumblr.com 22 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries © Jeff Goldberg–Esto The interior design of the Hunt Library blends colorful, functional architecture, artwork, and spaces with a collection of some of the most iconic modern mid-century furniture. Images by Benjamin William Scott and Gwen Wood Emery from the forthcoming book ChairHunt documenting the chair collection at the Hunt Library. HOSTING THE ONGOING DISCUSSION: DESIGNING LIBRARIES SUMMIT HELD AT THE HUNT LIBRARY O ne of the most satisfying results of opening what has been widely acclaimed as “the library of the future” has been sharing our experiences with the professional librarians and educators worldwide with whom we collaborate, share talent, and exchange ideas. Presentations by: above: Lucinda Covert-Vail, Associate Dean, Public Services, New York University Libraries; Right: Brian Mathews, Associate Dean for Learning and Outreach, University Libraries, Virginia Tech. Far right: Nancy Foster, Senior Anthropologist, Ithaka S + R. The Second Annual Designing Libraries for the 21st Century Conference was the perfect venue for continuing the discussions—both theoretical and practical—of how to conceive and build great libraries in the age of the digital, the age of collaboration. And the new Hunt Library was the perfect venue to help inspire those conversations. Sponsored by the NCSU Libraries, the University of Calgary, and the Coalition for Networked Information, the summit brought together almost 250 library leaders, higher education visionaries, architects, and others from the United States, Canada, Europe, and Australia on October 6-8, 2013. After a preconference day on “Technology Planning for a 21st Century Academic Library” that explored the skills, staffing, and the culture of change needed to implement an ambitious technology program in an academic library, Vice Provost and Director of Libraries Susan Nutter opened the conference itself with a talk on “Realizing the Vision,” a recap 24 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries of how the Hunt Library became a reality. Joan Lippincott, one of the profession’s most valued and grounded futurists, widened the discussion to the ways that library spaces can foster learning in this generation of students. A crowd favorite was Dr. Michael Young’s “One Professor’s View on the Hunt’s Research-Enabling Design—or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Library.” Professor Young, from NC State’s Department of Computer Science, was an early and dedicated partner in envisioning how technology in the Hunt Library could be a competitive edge for the university, especially in the Game Lab, which he now actively uses in his teaching, research, and as a key resource for the university’s Digital Games Research Center. The NCSU Libraries is continuing the discussion by providing periodic two-day “Library of the Future” symposia for professionals from libraries and other organizations who are considering or embarking on renovation or building programs of their own. NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 25 FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY NEWS FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY WELCOME RICHARD FORD TO THE 2014 NORTH CAROLINA LITERARY FESTIVAL On April 6, the Friends of the Library and Literary Festival sponsors gathered for a brunch hosted by Chancellor and Mrs. Woodson to welcome keynote speaker and Pulitzer Prize-winning author Above: Chancellor Woodson, Susan K. Nutter, and Richard Ford. Right and below: guests enjoy brunch and mingling at The Point. Top right: Richard Ford gives his keynote remarks at the North Carolina Literary Festival. Photographs by Marc Hall, NC State University Communications. 26 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries Richard Ford to the North Carolina Literary Festival. The event was held at The Point, the Chancellor’s residence located on Centennial Campus that was designed by FOL life member and Dean of the College of Design Marvin Malecha. The brunch offered guests the chance to meet and chat with Mr. Ford and several other festival authors including William T. Vollman, Ben Fountain, Therese Anne Fowler, and Wilton Barndhardt. During the event, Chancellor Woodson and Susan K. Nutter remarked on the tremendous impact that the Hunt Library has had on NC State. They also expressed their gratitude to the Friends of the Library for their ongoing support and described how excited they were for the opportunity to showcase the Hunt Library to thousands of festival attendees from across the state. Donor Spotlight: Dr. Ricky and Kim Bloomfield “...Living up to its promise...” Young alumni make library support a rallying point A t 17, Dr. Ricky Bloomfield (’04) had pretty definite plans to attend a prestigious local private university. NC State only made it on his list as “backup school.” Until he visited. The Park Scholarship he was offered was a significant draw, but it was really the sense of excitement and what he calls “the immersion in innovation” that he experienced on his brief trip to campus that set the direction for the rest of his life. Just listing Ricky’s undergraduate majors and minors gives you some sense of what he cherished at NC State. There are four—Chemistry, Secondary Education, Saxophone Performance, and Spanish. He’s not one to be put in a box. That ability to range wide and deep across disciplines led quickly not only to a medical degree, but to the successful iOS apps company he began while still in medical school. Soon he was engrossed in figuring out new ways that mobile applications could help transform the medical field, letting him, as he explains, “combine my passion taking care of patients one at a time with helping out patients millions at a time with medical technology.” Dr. Bloomfield is currently Director, Mobile Technology Strategy for Duke Health Technology Solutions, as well as Assistant Professor in Internal Medicine and Pediatrics at Duke University. Ricky’s wife, Kim Bloomfield (‘02 in Chemistry and Textile Chemistry), first learned about the Hunt Library on a tour while she was president of the Park Scholars Alumni Society, back when the building was still under construction. “I got excited about it,” she says with some understatement, given the couple’s ongoing passionate support of the new space. “Knowing how much Ricky loves technology and how much I loved studying up in the stacks at D. H. Hill, it was something we became interested in supporting.” “We are highly into education—and we have kids and want them to be excited about learning. It was a way that I could see getting my own children excited about NC State. And I was sure that the new iconic library would be a benefit to recruiting for the Park Scholarships.” Their two daughters, Ricky explains, will no doubt be NC State, Class of 2028. “When the Hunt Library was announced, packed full of technology—which is no surprise given NC State’s talents, areas of focus, and research—it really intrigued me,” Ricky continues. “We found out more about it and felt it was something we wanted to get behind.” Right after the building opened, they decided to sponsor and name a student workstation on the building’s 4th floor. The Bloomfield family, Ricky and Kim, with daughters Catherine and Miriam. Ricky explains their motivation: “we both went through the Park Scholars program, feel very fortunate in what we were given, and feel an obligation to give back to an institution that has given us so much. We want to see NC State continue to succeed, and the Hunt Library will serve as a rallying point for showcasing talent and innovation. For recruiting, there’s nothing better than taking prospective students to Hunt to show them what NC State can do and hint at the things that they themselves will do once they are here in proximity to all this innovation and technology. Giving back to something that will only make NC State stronger is a no-brainer.” Their message to young graduates is especially clear. Laughing that they are probably “skewing the age profile of NC State donors down a little,” Kim explains that “we subscribe to the idea that what you spend your money on shows what you believe in. When we began giving to NC State, it wasn’t large amounts—Ricky was still in med school. Recent graduates are sometimes intimidated by hearing about endowed faculty positions or big gifts. But smaller donations made regularly can make a big difference, and they’re more feasible for younger alumni. Our own gifts are not huge, and they did stretch our budget to begin with. But we realized that we can make a huge difference even if we can’t yet endow a chair or name a wing in the library. If recent graduates start from a younger age, this can really make a difference for decades before they enter their golden years.” As for their investment in the Hunt Library, both have been back many times since the space opened and both are happy, according to Ricky, that it is “living up to its promise as a space where you can let your creativity flow and combine the technologies in ways that are novel and interesting.” Like their own lives, “things are just getting started. The best is most certainly yet to come.” NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 27 STAFF NEWS NCSU LIBRARIES FELLOWS The NCSU Libraries Fellows Program develops future leaders for academic libraries, with a focus on science, engineering, and digital librarianship, on diversity, and on library management. For more than ten years, the program has attracted an impressive group of talented new graduates from universities throughout North America. NCSU Libraries Fellows are appointed for a two-year term as members of the library faculty, combining an assignment on an initiative of strategic importance with an appointment in a home department. The 2013-2015 Libraries Fellows class is Kevin Beswick, Jason Evans Groth, and Brendan O’Connell. ticipated in the development and administration of a consortial library system that serves four major universities. Previously, Beswick was an application developer at Equinox Software, where he worked to improve the build and installation processes for both Evergreen and its underlying framework, OpenSRF. He was also a customer experience representative at Chapters/Indigo Books in Sudbury, Ontario. At the 2011 Evergreen International Conference, Beswick presented “Testing 1…2…3…:Unit Testing in Evergreen.” He co-wrote “Quick Lookup Laptops in the Library: Leveraging Linux with a SLAX LiveCD,” which appeared in the Code4lib Journal. Beswick holds the Bachelor of Computer Science (Honours) from Laurentian University. Beswick is the Henry McDonald Tate Fellow. Established by Hope Tate, President of the Friends of the Library, this memorial endowment serves as a tribute to her late husband, who was a graduate of NC State in Computer Science. Beswick holds a home assignment in Information Technology and a strategic initiative in Digital Library Initiatives, focused on mobile-first library search and discovery tools. Kevin Beswick Kevin Beswick graduated with the Master of Library and Information Science from the University of Western Ontario. While pursuing his graduate studies, he served as library systems assistant in the J. N. Desmarais Library at Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario. In addition to management of public and staff workstations and server administration, he contributed to the development of a unit test suite for open source projects OpenSFR and Evergreen. He also developed a library reserves application, a library blog, study guides, and par- 28 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries Jason Evans Groth holds the Master of Library Science and Master of Information Science with Digital Libraries Specialization at Indiana University (IU), Bloomington. While completing his graduate studies, Evans Groth held a variety of positions on the IU campus and in the community. As the XML applications graduate assistant in the Digital Library Program at IU, he applied XML and XSLT technologies to a range of IU digital library projects, including the Victorian Women Writers Project and the Sage Costume Collection. He was the graduate assistant in the Media Preservation Initiative, where he evaluated media collections, and he was the media preservation assistant and film archivist for the IU Library Film Archives. In the IU School of Library and Information Science, he was a graduate assistant to two professors, and he served as a teaching assistant for courses at the IU Jacobs School of Music, including History of Rock and Roll 1970s/1980s. At the Monroe County Public Library, Evans Groth was the Project Manager for “It’s Your Money,” where he developed a curriculum and taught workshops on financial literacy. Before pursuing his graduate studies, Evans Groth was the Assistant Meeting Director for the Organization of American Historians. He is also an accomplished professional musician, having toured around the world STAFF NEWS as outreach intern for NC LIVE, promoting usage of NC LIVE resources, designing and assessing training programs, and conducting outreach visits to member libraries. His other library experience includes positions at the Chatham Community Library, the Chapel Hill Public Library, and Wesleyan University Olin Library. He has published an article entitled “eBooks as a Collection and a Service: a Public Library Instruction Program to Support eBook Use,” in the Journal of Library Innovation. O’Connell has also served as a teacher in a variety of settings. He taught English as a second language for Kaplan International Centers, and he designed and taught an after-school program on art and technology at a technology charter middle school in Harlem, New York. He was also a teaching fellow with the French Ministry of Education and Culture, where he designed and taught conversation courses in a French vocational high school and middle school. He holds the Bachelor of Arts in Music, with departmental honors, from Wesleyan University. Jason Evans Groth with acts such as Magnolia Electric Co., the Watson Twins, and Jens Lekman. He holds the Bachelor of Arts in History and English, with a minor in Telecommunications, from Indiana University, Bloomington. O’Connell’s home assignment is with User Experience. His strategic initiative will focus on data-informed collection building, based in Collection Management. Evans Groth is the Cyma Rubin Fellow. Cyma Rubin, past president of the Friends of the Library and holder of an honorary Doctor of Fine Arts from NC State, is an award-winning producer of musicals, documentaries, and exhibitions. Her generous support helps sustain the Fellows Program. Evans Groth’s home assignment is in User Experience, and he is working on a strategic initiative to curate born-digital resources, co-managed by the Special Collections Research Center and Digital Library Initiatives. Brendan O’Connell holds the Master of Science in Information and Library Science from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. O’Connell brings with him a broad range of experience. At the School of Information and Library Science, he was a research assistant for the Cyber-Infrastructure for the Billions of Electronic Records (CI-BER) project, where he assisted in the design of programs to download and extract metadata from federal government databases, and he was the Programming Co-Chair for Checked Out, developing and promoting programs to increase awareness of diversity issues at the school. He served Brendan O’Connell NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 29 STAFF NEWS The 2014-2016 Libraries Fellows class is Virginia Ferris, Josephine McRobbie, and Heidi Tebbe. Columbia University. She has published and presented on the topic of the Irish and African American interracial community in 19th-century New York. Ferris’s home department will be the Special Collections Research Center. Her strategic initiative assignment will be “Expanding Foundation and Corporate Support for Strategic Priorities,” as part of the Libraries’ advancement program. Virginia Ferris Virginia Ferris completed the Master of Science in Library Science, with a concentration in Archives and Record Management, at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-CH). While pursuing her graduate studies, Ferris was appointed as a Carolina Academic Libraries Associate, with an assignment in Special Collections. In this role, she arranged and described manuscripts and audiovisual materials, provided reference services, and completed a digitization field experience. Ferris came to the field of library and information science with a background in ethnographic research, music licensing, Irish Studies, oral history, and public history. She previously served as Oral Historian and Archival Assistant with the Glucksman Ireland House and worked for the Lower East Side Tenement Museum in New York City. Ferris’s research at UNC-CH focused on linked data and semantic web practices for archival description. She holds the Master of Arts in Irish and Irish American Studies from New York University and the Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology from Barnard College, 30 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries Josephine McRobbie Josephine McRobbie completed both the Master of Library Science and the Master of Arts in Folklore and Ethnomusicology at Indiana University (IU). While completing her graduate studies, McRobbie was a Strategic Media Access Resource Team Member for the Media Digitization and Preservation Initiative and the Local Coordinator for the 2013 Orphans Midwest Film Symposium. She served as a graduate assistant for the Survey of Hip-Hop course in the Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology and for Traditional Arts Indiana, in addition to completing an internship with the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Before pursuing graduate studies, McRobbie worked in public STAFF NEWS media, with a focus on arts and community reporting and production. She is also a touring and recording musician. McRobbie was a recipient of an American Folklore Society and National Endowment for the Arts Professional Development Grant (2013), a presenter at the American Folklore Society Annual Meeting (2012), and a delegate to the Smithsonian Folklore Festival (2012). Her Bachelor of Arts in Journalism and Sociology was also earned at Indiana University. McRobbie will be based in Collection Management as her home department. Her initiative assignment in Research and Information Services is, “How Do You Talk to a Building? Patron-facing tools for space and service discovery at the D. H. Hill Library.” metadata standards for ingestion of multimedia objects into a Digital Asset Management System and provided media for instructional projects to a variety of clients, such as the pharmacy industry and software engineering firms. At Purdue University Libraries, Tebbe served as Databib Intern in the Distributed Data Curation Center, where she created and updated cataloging records and evaluated sites for inclusion in Databib, a tool for identifying and locating online repositories of research data. Tebbe holds the Master of Science in Telecommunications, specializing in Immersive Media, and the Master of Arts in Astronomy, both from IU. She has served as an instructor, teaching and assisting professors in introductory and advanced astronomy courses and introductory telecommunications courses. Additionally, she was a research intern at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory. She holds the Bachelor of Science in Physics from the University of Missouri. Tebbe’s home department will be in Digital Library Initiatives. Her initiative assignment, “Aligning Collections with Emerging Needs in Research Informatics,” is based in Collection Management. Heidi Tebbe Heidi Tebbe earned the Master of Library Science at Indiana University. Prior to joining NCSU Libraries she was a Senior Media Developer/Multimedia Apps Developer at Option Six, a division of GP Strategies, where she designed and built interfaces, interactive media, and graphics for computer-based and instructor-led training. She lead a team to create processes and NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 31 STAFF NEWS OUR LIBRARY PERSONNEL The following are Libraries staff members who have joined us in recent years but have yet to be introduced. Gwynn Thayer The Libraries welcomes Gwyneth Thayer as Associate Head and Curator, Special Collections Research Center. As Associate Head and Curator, Thayer joined a multidimensional special collections program in support of research and teaching at NC State. She leads collaborative, strategic collection development initiatives for primary source material and helps to set priorities for collections processing and digitization. She is also responsible for planning and delivering a strong outreach program, including tours, lectures, and class visits for the NC State community. Thayer comes to NC State from her position as Archivist at the Tennessee State Library and Archives, where she directed education outreach programs for university and K-12 educators and students, and provided consulting and reference services. She was a key member of the digitization team and was involved in several statewide digitization projects, including “Looking Back at the Civil War,” a project that was featured on National Public Radio. She has written grant proposals 32 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries that resulted in awards from the American Library Association, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the National Historical Publications and Records Commission, and has managed several state and federal grants that help support local, county, and municipal archives and historical repositories across the state. Previously, Thayer was employed by the Gordon Jewish Community Center, where she conducted interviews with Holocaust survivors and their descendents, and by the Tennessee Holocaust Commission, participating in a statewide project to document the lives of Holocaust survivors and liberators currently living in Tennessee. Thayer has spoken at the Society of American Archivists Annual Meeting and the National Council for Public History Annual Meeting on topics relating to education and archives. Greyhound racing is an area of expertise, and she has presented to the International Society for Anthrozoology and the California American Studies Association on this topic. Her book, Going to the Dogs: A Cultural History of Greyhound Racing in American Culture, was published by the University Press of Kansas. She holds the Ph.D. in Public History from Middle Tennessee State University, the Master of Arts in the History of Art and Architecture from the University of Texas, and the Bachelor of Arts in English Literature and the History of Art and Architecture from Brown University. Charles Samuels joined the Libraries as Director of Publications. As Director of Publications, Samuels serves as managing editor for the NCSU Libraries’ print and online publications, including the Libraries’ magazine, Focus. Samuels brings to this position a strong and versatile background in design, content development, social networking for marketing and communication, and project management. His most recent position was as Senior Exhibit Designer/Graphic Designer at Design Dimension, Inc., a Raleigh firm whose clients include IBM, WakeMed, North Carolina State Parks, Museum of Life and Science, and NC State University. Samuels previously held positions with Beachway Press Publishing, an outdoor adventure guidebook publisher, and with J.W. Photo Labs. STAFF NEWS Samuels has produced books, brochures, and catalogs; logos and branding materials; interpretive exhibits; and environmental graphics and signage. Recent projects include the design and layout of the North Carolina Birding Trail guides and “Down Home – Jewish Life in North Carolina,” a traveling exhibit that includes imagery, descriptive text, audio-visual pieces, and immersive environments. Chuck Samuels holds the Bachelor of Environmental Design: Graphic Design from North Carolina State University. Sydney Thompson is the Associate Head, Access and Delivery Services. As Associate Head of Access and Delivery Services, Thompson shares management responsibility for the Chuck Samuels department and oversees interlibrary, delivery, collection inventory, and Thompson’s recent presentations include “Delivery maintenance services. She is charged to Services to the Global Network University” at lead the development of a comprehensive Order-tothe ALA National Conference and “Routing Rules Delivery process with the goal of making any library for Selective Document Delivery” at the ILLiad resource available to faculty and students when, International Conference. In 2009, she was selected where, and in whatever format they desire. as an ALA Emerging Leader. Thompson holds the Thompson brings with her a strong background in Master of Library Sciences from Queens College, delivery services and interlibrary loan. Most recently the Master of Arts in Sociology from the New she was the Delivery Services Librarian for the New School University, and the Bachelor of Arts in York University (NYU) Division of Libraries, and Sociology from the University of Alaska Anchorage. she served for a time as Interim Interlibrary Loan Supervisor at NYU’s Bobst Library. She has been responsible for a variety of projects to identify, develop, and implement user-focused services. She organized an ILLiad “tune-up,” resulting in improvements to interlibrary loan and document delivery workflow, created the Sydney Thompson Global Delivery Services department, and implemented scan and delivery services to all NYU libraries, including NYU Abu Dhabi. Thompson began at NYU Bobst Library as the Library Privileges Supervisor/ Evening Access Services Manager. Previously she worked at the New School Libraries, Adam and Sophie Gimbel Art and Design Library, where she served as Circulation Manager and as Stacks Manager and Weekend Supervisor. Before entering the library field, she worked as a research assistant for Circumpolar Research Associates and for the University of Alaska. THE FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY 2012–2013 HONOR ROLL As we look forward to the 2014-2015 academic year, we are grateful to recognize the support of our members and donors. Private funding for the Libraries provides the vital technologies, furnishings, and enhancements that give the Libraries its competitive edge. We thank the students, alumni, faculty, staff, retired faculty, and community members who are committed to the NCSU Libraries and the quality of its services to NC State students and researchers. Thanks for Your Support. 34 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries © Jeff Goldberg -/Esto 2012–2013 MEMORIAL AND HONORARY GIFTS The Friends of the Library received gifts in honor or memory of the following individuals during the 2012–2013 fiscal year. For information about how to pay tribute to a loved one through a gift in their name, please call Leia Droll at (919) 513-7033. NAMING OPPORTUNITIES BRICKS The Libraries would like to acknowledge the following gifts made in 2012, to support the renovations at the D. H. Hill Library and the planning and design of the Hunt Library on Centennial Campus. For more information, please visit www.lib.ncsu.edu/giving/namingopportunities or contact Friends of the Library Director Leia Droll at (919) 513-7033 or [email protected]. The following individuals honored both their loved ones and the NCSU Libraries by naming an engraved brick, installed in the entryway to the D.H. Hill Library overlooking NC State’s iconic brickyard. To order a brick, contact the Friends of the Library office at (919) 515-2841 or visit http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/giving/buyabrick. GIFTS IN MEMORY OF GIFTS IN HONOR OF BRICKS (WHITE) Andrew J. Bartley Mary Beasley Vinayak Devasthali Alvin Goldman Irving S. Goldstein Jeannette K. Gross Patrick R. Haikal Robin C. Hightower D. H. Hill, IV Carolyn King Barbara C. Kirby S. J. Lambert Elizabeth A. McMahan Elizabeth G. Osborne Marvin Siegel Nathaniel Stetson Herman & Loney Mae Alberti Lewis Clarke Deanna Day Thomas S. & Charlotte Ann Elleman Gloria W. Houser James B. Hunt, Jr. Bob Kennel Julie McVay Wyndham Robertson Ed Rosenberg Hannah Samuels Robert C. Seate, III David L. Stephan Stephen J. Toth, Jr. Sharon Broere Christian F. Casper Michael Gierdowski Kristen Haikal Anna B. Regensburger BRICKS (RED) Bonnie Baker Ojas Bapat Buhler Aeroglide Jamie Bradway Susan Bulfin Matthew Casey Prasanth Chimalapati Patrick J. Cleary Stephen Disney Elizabeth Eder Reza A. Ghiladi Lindsay Hall Catherine A. Hofmann Ann Marie Lipetzky Damian & Kate Maddalena NCSU Friends of the Library Michael Nutt James J.Paul Becky L. Pigg Sara E. Poole Andrew W. Radford Nur Aira binti Abd Rahim Kelly Reardon Christy Rivera Allison C. Rose Dena Silver Lynn B. Smith Mary Waligora NCSU Libraries - FOCUS | 35 2012–2013 HONOR ROLL OF FRIENDS DIRECTOR OF LIBRARIES’ CABINET $15,000 AND OVER AMX, LLC Roscoe R. & Mary Ann Braham, Jr. Carolina Tractor & Equipment Christie Digital Cisco Foundation Frank A. & Julia J. Daniels Extron Electronics Joyce Fischetti Haihui Huang & Jie Zheng iPearl, Inc. Robert B. & Sarah C. Jordan, III F. M. Kirby Foundation, Inc. Andrew W. Mellon Foundation NVIDIA Corporation Dennis C. & MaryCraven F. Poteat Sennheiser Electronic Corporation Skanska USA Building, Inc. Triangle Community Foundation, Inc. Ed & Agnes B. Weisiger J. Blount & Dargan M. Williams BENEFACTORS $5,000 TO $14,999 Carolyn D. & John Argentati Charles W. & Jane M. Arvey Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. BASF Corporation The Bell Family Foundation Richard H. & Cynthia P. Bernhard Robert H. & Carol W. Bilbro Corbett G. Buckle, Jr. Cree, Inc. Daniel Harvey Hill Family Trust Bil N. & Silvija A. Dry C. W. & Nadine Edwards C. Ann Elleman Gwen & Frank Emery John A. & Joy M. Heitmann, Jr. George L. & Rebecca E. Hodge Robert C. & Larita Kellison Myron W. & Sandra L. Kelly Robert P. & Elaine L. Kennel Mimi M. McKinney Geoffrey D. McLean Julie G. McVay Mac & Lindsay S. Newsom, III 36 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries Susan K. Nutter & Joe A. Hewitt Pura Vida Promotions, Inc. Scynexis, Inc. Michael K. Stoskopf & Suzanne Kennedy-Stoskopf Nan G. & Leighton W. Strader Edith D. & Richard E. Sylla James E. & Linda P. Turlington James R. & Mary E. Wilson George & Reba Worsley E. Douglas & Delores A. Yopp PATRONS $1,000 TO $4,999 C. Frank & Judy W. Abrams, Jr. Advanced Liquid Logic AgBiome, Inc. Beverly Z. Armstrong Asinex Association of Retired Faculty Bonnie L. Baker Banner Pharmacaps, Inc. Robert E. Beasley, Sr. bioMerieux, Inc. John W. & Catherine W. Bishir Donald L. & Maryann D. Bitzer Edgar J. & Ethel B. Boone Lloyd R. & Genevieve J. Bostian Henry & Sory G. Bowers Timothy W. Buie & Rose P. Britton The Business of Entertainment Chimerix, Inc. Arthur W. & Jean F. Cooper Cotton, Inc. Charles B. & Elizabeth A. Davey Patrick E. Deaton William L. & Catherine Diel Wesley O. & Leonor P. Doggett William L. & Linda L. Dowdy Salah E. & Amina I. Elmaghraby Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Charles A. Ford Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies Thomas R. & Sue B. Fulghum Elin E. Gabriel Eileen S. Goldgeier David W. & Colleen L. Goldsmith James H. & Ann B. Goodnight GrassRoots Biotechnology, Inc. Kristen R. Haikal Kerry S. Havner Ronald A. & Susan S. Heddleson Henkel Corporation Joseph E. Hightower Thomas N. & Miriam A. Hobgood, Jr. Gloria W. & J. Anthony Houser David R. & Martha K. Howard Melvin E. & Peggy J. Huffman IET USA, Inc. Institute for Hepatitis & Virus Research Intrexon Corporation Guy L. & Margaret W. Jones JSW Media C. Tim Kelley & Chung-Wei Katherine Ng H. Edward & Frances S. Knox Knox Brotherton Knox & Godfrey Carl C. & Evelyn Koch Liquidia Technologies, Inc. Isaac T. Littleton Richard H. Loeppert, Sr. W. Robert Maddin & Nancy Kuivila Charlotte M. Martin Carolyn Rae Miller & Carl F. Blackman Jivan Moaddeb Samuel A. & Linda B. Monroe Myers Bigel Sibley & Sajovec, PA Richard E. & Barbara Nance A. Gordon & Patricia L. Neville Novozymes North America, Inc. Nancy Lou Phillips Debra L. Pipines Alfred & Suzanne T. Purrington W. Trent & Wes Ragland, III Gregory K. and Lisa Raschke Stephen P. Reynolds & Susan S. Osborne Cyma Saltzman Rubin John P. & Virginia B. Sall Jo Anne Sanford & William E. Brewer, Jr. SAS Institute, Inc. Prathamesh R. Save Wendy L. Scott Leon R. & Mildred P. Simon Judith R. Smallwood Richard A. Speers State Employees Combined Campaign Harold E. & Janet Swaisgood Targacept, Inc. Tom Russell Charitable Foundation, Inc. Alan E. & Sara E. Tonelli Jeffrey S. Wasilewski Gil Wheless & Doug Nelson Garnett B. Whitehurst Butch & Brenda S. Wilson Geraldine K. Winstead W. Randolph & Susan W. Woodson Brandon & Amber C. Yopp Doug & Amanda W. Yopp Paul Z. & Dora L. Zia Jenifer Y. Zorner SPONSORS $500 TO $999 Aerie Pharmaceuticals, Inc. AKC Canine Health Foundation American Board of Anesthesiology, Inc. Kristin A. Antelman Richard C. & Elizabeth S. Axtell Richard Blanton & Candace Haigler BSN Medical, Inc. Quincy A. Byrd John D. Cooper, Jr. Carney McNicholas, Inc. Christian F. & Anne M. Casper Aaron D. Chiles Wayne C. Clark Christine L. D’Andrea Charles W. & JoAnne W. Dickinson, III Murray S. & Virginia C. Downs Risa S. Ellovich Marian G. Fragola & Jeremy Arkin GE Power Systems Gnarus Environmental Services Corp. Burton J. & Eleanore L. Greenberg Hassan A. & Nabila Hassan Anna Ball & Joe L. Hodge Innovation Research and Training, Inc. Jonathan C. & Lisa M. Johnson James A. Keenan Kenneth H. Kerr Robert C. Kochersberger, Jr. & Janet C. Watrous Matthew J. & Laroka Kostura Lee Hansley Gallery Bob & Carol J. Mattocks James R. & Janet R. McGraw Metabolon, Inc. David H. Mosier, Jr. Deanna J. Nelson Nomacorc, LLC Novan, Inc. Daniel R. & Elizabeth G. Page Hayne & Barbara G. Palmour, III John A. Papalas, III Eva F. Reynolds Terrell G. Russell & Kelly M. Marks Benton S. & Emma Garnett Satterfield Charles H. & Mary G. Sedberry Semprius, Inc. Phillip J. & Elise R. Stiles Hauping Sun Banks C. & Louise W. Talley, Jr. Emmette C. & Karen W. Taylor Thomas A. & Cynthia P. Trowbridge TyraTech Robert P. & Sallaine S. Upchurch Michael L. & Mary W. Walden Qiuming & Junhui G. Wei SUSTAINING FRIENDS $100 TO $499 Chris K. Abbott Nur Aira B. Abd Rahim J. Allen & Betty Adams Joseph W. Algaier Kristine M. & Jeffery A. Alpi Penny M. Amato Rasidul Amin Shu N. An & Ying Chen Geoffrey L. & Alexis S. Anderson Wilson & Jonlyn W. Angley Michael Archer James L. Armstrong David E. Aspnes & Cynthia J. Ball Ann G. Auerweck Kathryn B. & George L. Auman C. W. Averre, III Masud Azimi Barry A. Baker Troy Baker Brian H. & Catherine C. Baldwin Brendon W. Ball Alton J. & Catherine H. Banks Ojas A. Bapat J. Closs Barker Kevin C. & Karen D. Barlow Bill & Carol B. Barmann Robert A. & Shirley S. Barnhardt Thomas E. Barta Richard A. Bartley Amy H. Bass Joel E. & Dawn T. Battiste Burton F. & Pauline C. Beers, Sr. Fred & Ernestine L. 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Tyco International, Ltd. Xerox Corporation IN MEMORY: Elizabeth Davis Reid Murray Elizabeth Davis Reid Murray, Friend of the Library and widow of pioneering NC State Nuclear Engineering Professor Raymond L. Murray, passed away March 13, 2014, at Springmoor Life Care Retirement Community, Raleigh. The Murrays were longtime supporters of the Libraries and especially our annual book sale. Dr. Raymond Murray’s papers from his illustrious career are held in the NCSU Libraries’ Special Collections Research Center. Born in Wadesboro, NC, and a graduate of Meredith College, Elizabeth was an active volunteer and accomplished professional. Her earliest positions included continuity writer for Radio Station WPTF, Raleigh, and program manager for WADE Radio, Wadesboro, NC. She later served as Director, 40 | FOCUS - NCSU Libraries Meredith College News Bureau; women’s section editor and local history correspondent, Raleigh News and Observer; and member, Raleigh City Council. The Olivia Raney Local History Library houses the Elizabeth Reid Murray Research Collection. Elizabeth is survived by sons Michael Ernest Reid and James William (Susan) Reid, Jr; daughter Nancy Kennedy Reid Baker; a brother, Frank Little Davis; two grandchildren and ten nieces and nephews. Her first husband was WPTF radio presenter and former mayor of Raleigh James W. (Jim) Reid, who died in 1972. STAY IN TOUCH WITH US. Every effort has been made to accurately list the names of all donors to the Friends of the Library during the 2012–2013 fiscal year, which ran from July 1, 2012, through June 30, 2013. If there are any errors or omissions, please call or email the Friends of the Library office: NCSU Friends of the Library Campus Box 7111 Raleigh, NC 27695 [email protected] 919-515-2841 North Carolina State University NCSU Libraries Box 7111 Raleigh, NC 27695-7111 NONPROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID RALEIGH, NC PERMIT NO. 2353 Your Support Makes the Difference. http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/ giving/ways-to-give © Jeff Goldberg–Esto
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