Libraries

Fall 2011 volume 25, no. 1 Duke University

Fall 2011 volume 25, no. 1 Libraries

University Librarian Deborah Jakubs Editor Aaron Welborn Members of the Library Advisory Board 4 Notes Harsha Murthy (Chair) ESQ T’81; H. Ross Arnold III T’67 L’76; Virginia Barber G’60; Douglas G. Beckstett T’74; Merilee Huser 10 Crown Jewel Bostock W’62; Sara H. Brandaleone W’65; Alan J. Brod P’04; Maryann Bruce T’82; Jerry P. Chappell W’62; Ann Q. Curry T’65; Presenting the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Faith P. Diamond T’84; Barbara L. Dugan; Randolph R. Few Jr. Manuscript Library E’82; Gretchen Schroder Fish W’68; Geoffrey Freeman; Harry H. Harkins Jr. T’73; Elizabeth L. Harper T’06; Rita DiGiallonardo Holloway; Harold Honickman; Richard H. Jones T’73; David Kim 16 Duke University Libraries Annual Report 2010–2011 T’86; Carol L. Kohn W’60; Bradley J. Korman T’87; Steven H. Korman P’86; Robert N. Laughlin Jr. T’68; Matthew M. McKenna P’08; Douglas Eric McNeely T’84; Martha Hamilton Morris W’65; 18 Rememberer-in-Chief Eric Osserman T’81; Jeanne Shapiro Savitt T’89; Adam Silver T’84; Stewart Smith P’11; Michael Swotes T’85; Timothy D. Warmath Meet the New University Archivist T’84; Victoria Bostock Waters T’85; Lizabeth B. Weaver; Rebecca H. Williams T’82; Tex Williams; Diana Williams-Shanks T’80; William A Fond Farewell W. Wilson P’02 19 Members of the Executive Committee of the Friends of the Duke University Libraries 20 In Their Own Words Kathy World W’72 (Chair); Judith Ruderman G’76 (Vice Chair); Recorded Stories of America’s Jim Crow Past Andrew Armacost; Pauletta Bracy; Canon Brodar T’13; Barbara Collie; Macey Colvin; Judy Dearlove; Leslie Dillon W’62; Jim Harper Now Available T’59; Andi Houseworth T’03; Carson Holloway T’75; Deborah Lane B’92; Walker Mabe T’79; Leland Phelps P’68; Frances Rollins W’58, P’91, ’93; Ruth Ross W’68; Sally Schauman W’59; Alice Sharpe 22 Graphic Content W’71; Mary Dunn Siedow; Deborah Spears G’87; David Stein; John Valentine T’71; Ginger Wilson W’62 23 Meg’s Picks Duke University Libraries (ISSN 0895-4909) is published twice a year by Duke University Libraries, Durham, NC 27708-0193 New and Noteworthy Books for the USA, (919) 660-5816. It is distributed to Duke University Business-Minded Reader Find Us on Facebook faculty members and library staff, to members of The Friends of the Duke University Libraries, and to other libraries. Letters to Stay connected with the Duke University the editor, inquiries, and changes of address should be sent to 24 Writer’s Page Libraries and get updates on events, services, the Editor, Duke University Libraries, Box 90193, Durham, NC 27708-0193 USA. Feeding on Dreams tutorials, archival photos, trivia, and more. Copyright © 2011 Duke University Libraries. Photography by facebook.com/dukelibraries Mark M. Zupan except where otherwise noted. 26 A New Way to Give (and Avoid the Tax Man) Designed by Pam Chastain Design, Durham, NC. Printed by Triangle Communications Group. Printed on recycled paper 27 Duke University Libraries Donor List visit our online edition: July 1, 2010–June 30, 2011 library.duke.edu/magazine Notes Library Consortium Relocates to Duke Exhibits The Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL), Perkins Gallery Photography Gallery the largest regional research library consortium in the U.S., recently relocated its offices to Duke University, where it will October/January October/December be based in Bostock Library on Duke’s West Campus. The Iraq | Perspectives: Photographs by Benjamin Lowy organization was previously headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. Benjamin Lowy’s powerful and arresting color ASERL has more than three dozen member libraries, including Duke. For more than 50 photographs taken through Humvee windows years, the association has brought together leaders from research and state libraries and military-issue night vision goggles capture in the southeast to foster inter-institutional resource sharing and collaboration. ASERL the desolation of a war-ravaged Iraq as well as sponsors educational opportunities for librarians and information professionals and Duke’s Thompson Writing Program takes the tension and anxiety of U.S. soldiers and Iraqi provides expanded information and research capability for governmental agencies. The organization also offers an online portal to rare Civil War era materials held by libraries student writing beyond the classroom walls civilians. Lowy is the winner of the Center for across the South, services to facilitate the rapid delivery of interlibrary loan materials, and into the public eye. Through exhibits of Documentary Studies/Honickman First Book Prize and other programs. student work at the Nasher Museum and in Photography. Perkins Library, public blogs, the Deliberations January/July first-year journal of writing, service-learning The Puerto Rican Diaspora: Photographs projects in Durham, the annual “Critical Ink” by Frank Espada research showcase, and the Reader Project, Frank Espada’s black-and-white gelatin silver prints many first-year Writing 20 students gain document the rural and the urban experience of experience in writing for a public audience.

niversity Medical Center Archives Puerto Rican migrants to the United States in the 1970s and 1980s. The Libraries recently acquired January/April Duke U Espada’s papers, a rich resource on social activism, “I Recall the Experience Sweet and Sad”: Memories of the Civil War migration, and civil rights in the 20th century. To mark the sesquicentennial of the Civil War, this exhibit will showcase the memoirs of men and women who lived through it—Union and Confederate nurses, a former slave turned camp nurse and laundress, a southern woman married to a Union soldier, and a poet whose

work as an army hospital nurse inspired spada View the Libraries’ exhibits online at some of his greatest works. The curators will highlight particular items of interest from the library.duke.edu/exhibits holdings of the David M. Rubenstein Rare

Book & Manuscript Library to supplement the Photo by Frank E Photo by Benjamin Lowy showcased memoirs, including song sheets, photographs, manuscripts, sheet music, Biddle Rare Book Room Cases November/January artifacts, and maps. From Campus to Cockpit: Duke University During World April/July War II What Does Your Doctor Know? In the wake of Pearl Harbor, the Duke University From early Greek theory to modern-day community answered Uncle Sam’s call. Curricular practice, this exhibit will examine the changes and cooperative relationships with the changing role of education and training in the government fostered a surge in engineering formation of medical curriculum in Western studies, advanced experimental research, and medicine. Varying models and examples of scholarly output. Enrollment grew with an influx of medical education will be on display, including women and soldiers, eager to put their intelligence dissections in early Western Europe to the and bravery to work for the war. The war years also Generally, the Photography and Perkins formation of Duke University’s medical school brought the 1942 Rose Bowl to Duke’s campus— galleries are open Monday-Saturday, in 1930. the only Rose Bowl ever played outside Pasadena. 9am–9pm, and 10am–9pm on Sunday. This exhibit displays artifacts that document the Visit library.duke.edu/exhibits for more collaborative, industrious, and generous spirit of the information, or call (919) 684-3009 to Duke community during wartime. confirm hours.

4 Duke University Libraries Fall 2011 5 Rare Music Series on Hiatus Plans for the popular Rare Music series co-hosted by Duke University Notes Events Libraries and the Duke University Musical Instrument Collections (DUMIC) December 6 have been put on hold this year, due to the departure of DUMIC curator Dr. History of Medicine Lecture Brenda Scott to pursue her own scholarly and artistic ventures. We wish Francis A. Neelon, M.D., associate professor emeritus at Duke, will give her well and thank her for a long and fruitful collaboration. For the last five a talk on “Caleb Parry and the Brief Life of Parry’s Disease.” This talk is years, Rare Music has enabled the Libraries and DUMIC to bring a unique part of the Duke/UNC collaborative History of Medicine speaker series, form of live music to Duke. The programs consistently feature brilliant sponsored by the Trent History of Medicine Society and the UNC Bullitt scholars and performers who share a passion for musical history, the science of music, and the art of instrument making. Although Rare Music History of Medicine Club. Tuesday, December 6, 5:30pm, Medical Center is on hold, there will still be other music performances in the Libraries. Library, Room 102 Notably, the popular Lunchtime Classics series by the Ciompi Quartet will continue in their new venue in the Gothic Reading Room this year to January 27 accommodate larger audiences. DukeReads: Melissa Malouf The Death of Socrates, Jacques-Louis David (1787) DukeReads features Duke faculty discussing books that have significantly affected their life, Humanities Writ Large their path, and their thinking. In this live recording A major campus-wide initiative promises to significantly in the library, Melissa Malouf, associate professor strengthen the humanities at Duke, particularly in the areas of of the practice of English, and WUNC’s Frank undergraduate education and research, thanks to a five-year Stasio discuss A Serious Way of Wondering, by grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The effort, dubbed Reynolds Price. Friday, January 27, 4pm, Perkins “Humanities Writ Large,” is aimed at redefining the role of the Library, Biddle Rare Book Room humanities in undergraduate education through a series of related approaches, including humanities labs (such as the Haiti February 7 Lab in the Franklin Humanities Institute), an intensive focus on Intimate Wars: A Reading with Merle Hoffman undergraduate research, visiting faculty fellows from liberal arts Hoffman will read from her memoir Intimate Wars: The Life and Times of colleges and historically black colleges and universities, and the Woman Who Brought Abortion from the Back Alley to the Board Room new models of library engagement and support. Part of the grant Ciompi Quartet (forthcoming, The Feminist Press). Tuesday, February 7, 4pm, Perkins will support the creation of a Humanities Academic Technology Library, Biddle Rare Book Room Consultant position within the Libraries, who will support and February 14 foster new areas of research and teaching developed through Ciompi Quartet Lunchtime Classics the project. See library.duke.edu In this special lunchtime series of performances, the Ciompi Quartet for more library news explores the connections between Haydn and Shostakovich. Admission is free. No food is provided, but audience members are encouraged to bring lunch. Tuesday, February 14, 12pm, Perkins Library, Gothic Reading Room Justice Cascade Wins WOLA-Duke Book Award February 16 To Free a Family The Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) and Duke University What was it like for a mother to flee slavery, have selected Kathryn Sikkink’s The Justice Cascade: How Human Rights Prosecutions Are Changing World Politics (Norton, 2011) as the winner leaving her children behind? Sydney Nathans, of the 2011 WOLA-Duke Human Rights Book Award. Sikkink is a Regents Duke professor emeritus of history and author Professor and the McKnight Presidential Chair of Political Science at the of To Free a Family: The Journey of Mary Walker University of Minnesota. She was honored at a special reception in the (forthcoming, Harvard UP), tells the remarkable Biddle Rare Book Room in November and presented with a $1,000 cash story of Mary Walker, a slave who fled North award. WOLA, a human rights research Things That Go Bump in the Stacks Carolina in 1848 for refuge in the north and spent and advocacy group established in 1974, On Halloween, the staff of the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & the next seventeen years trying to reconnect and Duke University created the award Manuscript Library held a special “Haunted Library Screamfest” for with her family. In recreating her journey, Nathans to honor the best current, non-fiction Duke students, dragging out some of the creepiest and most macabre book published in English on human gives voice to a hidden epic of emancipation and items from the shadowy depths of the library’s vaults. Among the many rights, democracy, and social justice in an untold story of the Civil War era. Thursday, February 16, 4pm, Perkins strange and gruesome items on display were cases of glass eyeballs contemporary Latin America. The books Library, Biddle Rare Book Room from the History of Medicine Collections, horror comics from the 1950s are evaluated by a panel of experts drawn and 1960s, the earliest known illustration of Frankenstein’s monster, from academia, journalism, and public February 24 a letter signed by Bela Lugosi, letters to Duke’s Parapsychology Lab policy circles. In addition to the Libraries’ Heroes and Villains: The Library Party describing poltergeists, and centuries-old treatises on witchcraft, Archive for Human Rights, the Duke Human Save the date! The Duke University Libraries and Duke Marketing Club apparitions, and the supernatural. The event took place in the Biddle Rights Center and the Duke Center for present Heroes and Villains: The Library Party, inspired by the Edwin and Rare Book Room and included plenty of Halloween candy, of course. Latin American and Caribbean Studies Terry Murray Comic Book Collection. This event is free and open to all co-sponsor the award. members of the Duke community. Friday, February 24, 9pm, Perkins and Bostock Libraries and the von der Heyden Pavilion 6 Duke University Libraries Fall 2011 7 Notes Duke Grad Wins National Book Collectors Contest

Every other year in February, the Friends of Duke University Libraries and the Gothic Bookshop co-sponsor the Jeremy North Book Collectors Contest to recognize and encourage student bibliophiles at Duke. This year’s graduate-level winner was Mitch Fraas, Ph.D. candidate in history, for his collection on Anglo-American legal printing Digital Collection Documents from 1702 to the present. As the first-place winner, Fraas was eligible to enter into History of Outdoor Advertising the National Collegiate Book Collecting See Rock City. Eat Mor Chikin. Exit Here. Like them or Music Library Gets a Facelift Contest in Washington, D.C.—which he not, billboards are part of the American landscape. Duke University’s Music Library, located in also won! The award ceremony took place spada They educate, entertain, and frustrate us, cluttering up Dissecting History the Biddle Music Building on East Campus, on October 21 at the Library of Congress. Ara Tourian, associate professor emeritus of reopened this fall after being closed for the landscape and guiding us to fresh coffee and clean Fraas received a $2,500 cash prize and medicine (center), discusses the anatomical renovations throughout the summer. An interior restrooms. They also provide a fascinating window on drawings of Leonard da Vinci with first-year was accompanied by Deborah Spears, a staircase now links the upper and lower levels, American culture. Now more than 27,000 historical images Photo by Frank E Duke medical students during the School member of the Executive Committee of the giving the library a single entrance and exit. of billboards and other outdoor advertisements have been of Medicine’s annual Anatomy Day. Every Friends of Duke University Libraries. Fraas’s Much of the old shelving has been removed, Libraries Receive Papers of Noted Photographer and Activist digitized and made available online by Duke University fall, approximately 100 first-year medical collection began when he was studying opening up space for quiet study and increasing Libraries, thanks to a grant from the National Historical Frank Espada began photographing Puerto Rican immigrants in the U.S. in the 1950s. His students visit the History of Medicine the legal history of the British Empire and the amount of natural light throughout the Publications and Records Commission. The new digital Collections to gain a better appreciation of images documenting Puerto Rican communities and their struggle to survive in America became interested in briefs from the King’s library. New seating and tables have been collection, ROAD 2.0, brings together a vast collection of how the workings of the human body have installed, and a new seminar room has been have been exhibited across the country. Now the photographs and papers that preserve Privy Council. After he obtained a 1791 historical advertising images from the John W. Hartman been represented and understood over time. added, which can double as a quiet study space. the stories of the communities he visited are available for research and study at Duke. The Privy Council brief from Bombay, he began Center for Sales, Marketing & Advertising History. The Materials on display included everything Best of all, the renovation allows more music collection of over 16,000 items joins a growing collection of Latin American and Caribbean actively pursuing Anglo-American appellate collection also documents the evolution of the outdoor from fourteenth-century Islamic manuscripts materials to be housed on-site, offering users materials in the Libraries’ Archive of Documentary Arts. Alex Harris, a founder of Duke’s briefs and ephemeral legal printing. advertising medium. What started as a specialized format to twentieth-century anatomical atlases. more music at their fingertips. Center for Documentary Studies and of DoubleTake Magazine, called the acquisition “a cause for celebration,” describing Espada’s photographs as “an enormously important limited to highly skilled sign painters and small family- and intimate body of work about the Puerto Rican Diaspora, the civil rights movement, the owned companies has become dominated by national HIV epidemic, and other subjects, photographs and words that encompass particular lives conglomerates who communicate their messages through Zitser Named National Humanities Fellow Smith Wins Best Article Award and yet manage to evoke our common humanity.” An exhibit drawn from the Frank Espada digital signboards and computer generated images. photographs will go on display next year. Dr. Ernest (Erik) Zitser, librarian for Slavic and East Kevin Smith, Director of Scholarly European Studies, has been named a National Communications at Duke University Humanities Center Fellow for 2011-2012. The National Libraries, is the winner of the 2011 Johns Humanities Center, located in North Carolina’s Hopkins University Press Award for best Research Triangle Park, awards nearly $1,500,000 in article in the journal portal: Libraries and School Library Gets a Boost From Pepsico Tech fellowships every year to enable scholars to take leave the Academy. Smith’s article, “Copyright Mentor Program from their regular academic duties and pursue research Renewal for Libraries: Seven Steps Toward The Durham School of the Arts is a magnet middle and high school focused on the visual and at the Center. Zitser is the first librarian ever to receive a User-Friendly Law,” appeared in the performing arts. Over 1,400 students attend DSA, and Newsweek has ranked it among the top 1 the prestigious award. During his time at the Center, he journal’s January 2010 issue. “The article percent of public high schools in the country. But the school’s library hasn’t been able to keep pace will be working on an annotated translation of what is provides a new perspective on where with the rising trajectory of the institution as a whole. For the last year, Dorothy Black has been trying arguably the first modern autobiography in the Russian language, written by copyright really needs reform, and gives the reader a clear treatment to address that problem. Black coordinates the Duke University Libraries Pepsico K-12 Technology Prince Boris Ivanovich Korybut-Kurakin (1676-1727), brother-in-law of Peter of a very complex topic,” said portal editor Sarah M. Pritchard, dean of Mentorship Program, a position that allows her to work closely with educators throughout the Durham the Great. The autobiography, which has never been translated into English, is Libraries at Northwestern University. “Smith presented an extensive Public Schools. Earlier this year, Black wrote a successful $10,000 grant to the State Library of North based on an original manuscript from the St. Petersburg Institute of History of and creative piece of analysis with recommendations that could Carolina on behalf of DSA, requesting funds to buy more books in the areas of the arts and social the Russian Academy of Sciences. In addition to the translation, Zitser is also have genuine and lasting impact across the worlds of publishing and sciences. She also wrote a successful “Doing Good in the Neighborhood” grant to the Duke-Durham preparing a critical edition of this manuscript for publication in Russia itself. education were they to be adopted.” Winning articles are judged Neighborhood Partnership, which helped launch a book club for African-American boys and one for This year’s 32 National Humanities Center Fellows, hailing from institutions on the quality of research methodology, how well they place library Partnership eighborhood students who speak English as a second language. That grant also helped purchase a 55-inch TV for around the world, were selected from more than 400 applicants and represent issues in a broader academic context, whether they make a significant the library, which book club participants used to Skype with the author of one of the books they had more than a dozen fields of humanistic scholarship. contribution to the professional literature, timeliness, and quality of been reading! According to Black, since the new school year started, the new TV has been running writing. Smith blogs regularly on copyright, publishing, and intellectual

Duke-Durham N book trailers, movies, and slide shows that pique the interest of students and teachers. property issues at blogs.library.duke.edu/scholcomm.

8 Duke University Libraries Fall 2011 9 Crown Jewel Presenting the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library In the heart of campus is a building that contains 20 centuries worth of history and culture, from ancient

papyri to the records of modern advertising agencies. Its holdings number more than 350,000 printed

volumes and 20 million items in manuscript and archival collections. Now Duke’s Rare Book, Manuscript, and

Special Collections Library has a new name. Soon it will have a new home.

A Transformative Gift scheduled to be renovated in the final phase of the Perkins Project, a multi- A great library is one of the purest year library renovation project that expressions of a university’s spirit. It’s began a decade ago. The renovation will where the transfer of knowledge from one transform one of the oldest and most generation to the next never ceases. Once recognizable buildings on West Campus in a while, the next generation transfers into a state-of-the-art research facility something back. where students, faculty, and visitors can Earlier this year, Duke University engage with the Libraries’ collection of trustee David M. Rubenstein announced rare and unique scholarly materials. that he would give $13.6 million to the Duke University The Perkins Project began with the construction of Libraries. It is the largest donation the Libraries have ever Bostock Library and the von der Heyden Pavilion, both received. In recognition of this extraordinary gift, Duke’s completed in 2005, followed by the renovation of Perkins Board of Trustees approved a measure to rename the special Library between 2006 and 2008. The final phase is slated to collections library in Rubenstein’s honor. The David M. begin late in 2012 and will focus on the original 1928 West Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library was welcomed as Campus library building and its 1948 addition (including the the newest point of pride on campus. iconic Gothic Reading Room and Mary Duke Biddle Rare “Nationally, David Rubenstein has been a strong Book Room), which together comprise the new Rubenstein supporter of libraries and archives, and of the way the preserved Library. past can increase present understanding,” said President This portion of the main university library complex Richard H. Brodhead. “We at Duke are grateful for this is at the very heart of the Gothic campus designed by the magnificent gift, which will ensure access to documents that Horace Trumbauer architectural firm. The cornerstone for the are part of our shared intellectual and cultural heritage.” university is visible at the foot of the library tower. Situated at The Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, the intersection of the West Campus quadrangles, it is easily

Duke Photography housed in the original West Campus library building, is accessible to scholars, students, and visitors.

10 Duke University Libraries Fall 2011 11 manager. He graduated magna cum laude from Duke in 1970 A Place of Exploration and Discovery All of these materials have one thing in common—they and serves as vice chair of the university’s Board of Trustees. He are the real deal, the primary sources of knowledge and history. Duke’s collections are open to everyone—students, scholars, and and his wife, Alice Rogoff Rubenstein, have three grown children. In this age of digitization and e-books, it is still possible to see a those with a curiosity about the past. Roughly 40 percent of the Rubenstein’s appreciation for historical documents is well 500-year-old copy of the Nuremberg Chronicle up-close and in Rubenstein Library’s registered researchers every year are Duke known, as is his support for the libraries, museums, archives, person, or hold in your hands a fragile letter written by an African undergraduates, and another 50 percent are visiting scholars from and other cultural institutions that preserve them. In 2007, he American slave. across the country and around the globe. If you earn a master’s purchased the last privately owned copy of the Magna Carta That kind of face-to-face encounter with original or doctorate degree from Duke, one of the last items on your and placed it on permanent loan to the National Archives in documents and artifacts is what real-world research is all about. graduation checklist is depositing your thesis or dissertation in Washington D.C., so that the public could view the document. Every year, scholars from Duke and other institutions use the the University Archives—part of the Rubenstein Library. He has also bought of a copy of the 1863 Emancipation Rubenstein Library’s rich holdings to write new histories, explore In addition to the University Archives, the Rubenstein Proclamation, signed by Abraham Lincoln, which he loaned significant lives, study ecological change, trace the evolution of Library is home to several specialized research centers, each one to the White House. (It now hangs in the Oval Office.) And texts, understand cultural shifts, and create new art and literature. representing a collecting area of particular breadth and depth. earlier this year, Rubenstein purchased the first map printed in In the process, they advance the frontiers of knowledge and These include the Sallie Bingham Center for Women’s History North America, depicting the boundaries of the new American increase our appreciation for the range of human experience. and Culture; the John Hope Franklin Research Center for nation and showing the “Stars and Stripes” for the first time, and African and African American History and Culture; the John W. A Crowning Finish “Libraries are at the heart of any great educational likewise loaned it to the Library of Congress. Hartman Center for Sales, Advertising & Marketing History; the institution,” said Rubenstein. “This renovation and modernization “The Rubenstein Library will be a distinguished, enduring Such inspiring work deserves an equally inspiring setting. The Archive of Documentary Arts; the Human Rights Archive; and program will help ensure that the Rare Book and Manuscript institution that will collect, protect and make accessible rare upcoming renovation will increase the research, instruction, the History of Medicine Collections. Library’s priceless collection is preserved and accessible to scholars and unique documents, satisfy intellectual curiosity, stimulate storage, and exhibition capabilities of the Rubenstein Library. It There are also individual collections of note. For instance, and the public for decades to come. learning and facilitate the creation of new scholarship,” said will also address the need for state-of-the-art stacks with high- did you know that Duke boasts one of the top three collections of “When I was a student at Duke I worked at the library, so Deborah Jakubs, the Rita DiGiallonardo Holloway University tech security and a closely-monitored environment. Walt Whitman manuscripts and publications in the world (along this gift also reflects my appreciation for that opportunity and the Librarian and vice provost for library affairs. “David Rubenstein’s The original stacks were built for standard-size books, not with the Library of Congress and the New York Public Library)? important role it played in my academic experience,” Rubenstein generosity enables us to create the kind of home for special the oversized folios and oddly shaped artifacts that are frequently Or that no one has a better collection on the history of modern added. collections that Duke deserves, designed with the students and found in special collections libraries. The stack levels are also economic thought, including the personal papers of nine Nobel A Baltimore native, Rubenstein is co-founder and scholars of today and tomorrow in mind. Researchers well beyond cramped, not up to current fire and safety codes, and navigable Prize winners? managing director of The Carlyle Group, a global alternative asset our campus will also benefit from this gift.” only by vintage 1920s and 1940s elevators.

Timeline of the Perkins Project 2000 2001 2002 2005 Provost Peter Lange establishes the Perkins Library Construction of After two years of planning, the Bostock Library and the von der Renovation Committee, charging it with thinking Library Service Center project to expand and renovate the Heyden Pavilion officially open to the creatively about the nature of library services and facilities is completed, to Duke University Libraries is approved public. Renovation work begins on the and with making recommendations regarding the design accommodate materials by the University’s Board of Trustees. first floor of Perkins Library. and function of Perkins Library. that must be moved off- site during construction and renovations. 2003 2000–2002 Construction begins on Bostock 2006 Working with the Boston Library, named in honor the Bostock A transformed first floor of Perkins is architectural firm Shepley Bulfinch, family, Roy and Merilee and their unveiled. Work begins on renovating the committee obtains input three children, Victoria Bostock other floors of the library. from all segments of the campus Waters, Matthew Bostock, and Kate community—faculty, staff, Bostock Shefferman. Construction undergraduates, and graduate and also begins on the von der Heyden professional students. Together, Pavilion, named for Karl and Mary the architects and the committee Ellen von der Heyden in recognition produce a vision statement, space of their generous financial support program, and master plan for the and leadership at the university. university library.

12 Duke University Libraries Fall 2011 13 character of these signature Duke spaces will be preserved, but When the renovation is complete, the Rubenstein Rare About David M. Rubenstein their finishes, furnishings, lighting, technology infrastructure, Book & Manuscript Library will provide a striking culmination and exhibition facilities will be enhanced. to the Perkins Project. It also promises to become one of the David M. Finally, the library’s main entrance will be redesigned crown jewels of Duke, a splendid symbol of the adventurous and Rubenstein is with new doors, windows, and lighting to give the entire library creative life of the mind. co-founder and complex a more unified and welcoming presence on the historic At their best, libraries inspire, inform, and educate. The managing director West Quad. re-envisioned and re-invigorated Rubenstein Library will be the of The Carlyle Construction work is expected to begin in late 2012 and intellectual center Duke deserves, one that can match the lofty Group, a global continue for several years. In the meantime, library staff are aspirations of a university that wants to change the world. alternative asset developing plans to relocate materials, services, and personnel manager. He to the third floor of Perkins Library, which will become the co-founded the Rubenstein Library’s temporary home during the renovation. The firm in 1987. Since plan will be implemented in phases so that library operations and During the renovation, the entire stack core will be then, Carlyle has services can be maintained throughout the project and researchers removed—from basement level to roof—and replaced with a grown into a firm can continue to work with special collections materials. new floor structure that will support high-density shelving. It managing more “The Cornerstone Phase of the Perkins Project will will be an engineering feat unlike anything seen on campus. To than $150 billion bring the Rubenstein Library’s rich collections to centerstage,” accomplish it, the Libraries are working with architectural firm from 36 offices said Naomi Nelson, director of the Rubenstein Library. Shepley Bulfinch, who also designed the much-loved Bostock around the world. “Our transformed spaces will welcome visitors, students, and Library and von der Heyden Pavilion, as well as the highly Rubenstein is a 1970 magna cum laude graduate of scholars to engage with history and the arts through interactive successful renovation of Perkins Library. Duke, where he was elected Phi Beta Kappa. Following exhibitions, specialized classrooms, and a variety of research The new special collections reading room will accommodate Duke, he graduated in 1973 from the University of Chicago settings. In our new event spaces, the Duke community and more people than the current space, and it will offer researchers Law School, where he was an editor of the Law Review, and wider public will come together to discuss and debate how our more elbow-room per person. There will also be designated spaces practiced law for several years in New York and Washington, understanding of the past shapes our vision for the future. The for collaborative research. D.C. From 1977 to 1981, during the Carter Administration, Rubenstein Library will be a new focal point on campus for Updates will also extend to the Mary Duke Biddle Rare Mr. Rubenstein was Deputy Assistant to the President for inquiry and innovation.” Book Room and the Gothic Reading Room. The charm and Domestic Policy. Rubenstein is an active civic leader and serves on numerous boards, including those of the Smithsonian Institution, Johns Hopkins University, the University of Chicago, The Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, The Timeline of the Perkins Project John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Rubenstein is 2012–13 among those who have pledged to donate more than half of Renovation work scheduled their wealth to philanthropic causes or charities as part of 2008 to commence on Rubenstein The Giving Pledge established by Warren Buffett and Bill Perkins floors 2-4 open, Library. Library administration, Gates. completely upfitted 2011 staff, collections, and services and re-configured. The David M. Rubenstein will move out of the facility He is also an avid reader, averaging about six books Link, a state-of-the-art pledges $13.6 million to to temporary swing space in per week—though he is not a Kindle user—and an teaching and learning the Libraries. The Board Perkins and Bostock Libraries. outspoken advocate of the power of literacy. He is one of the center on Lower Level 1, of Trustees renames the The Political Science department principal supporters of the National Book Festival, organized 2007 opens in what had been special collections library in will move temporarily to the Renovations are completed for Perkins Lower each year by the Library of Congress. the Perkins basement. his honor. Gross Chemistry building, while Level 2 and the Deryl Hart Administrative Suite. Elected to the Duke University Board of Trustees in That level also becomes renovations are made to its the new home of the final home in the Old Chemistry 2003, Rubenstein currently serves as vice-chair. He is vice- Libraries’ Preservation building. chair of the Executive Committee, chair of the Committee and Shipping and on Trusteeship, and a member of the Institutional Receiving departments. Advancement Committee and the Committee on Honorary The Libraries’ technical Degrees. He has previously served on the Business and services operations move 2015 from Perkins Library to Target date for completing the library renovation. David M. Finance and Academic Affairs Committees, as well as the Smith Warehouse. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library will move into chairing the Committee on Honorary Degrees. its new home, completing the Perkins Project. 14 Duke University Libraries Fall 2011 15 Manuscripts and books that must be moved for the renovation of the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library: 32,500 linear feet Number of times that would reach the top of if you stacked it all up: 155

Find out more interesting facts in the Duke University Libraries Annual Report

16 Duke University Libraries Fall 2011 17 Rememberer-in-Chief: A Fond Farewell Say Hello to the New University Archivist From 2002 to 2011, Tim Pyatt served as Duke’s University Archivist. This summer, the Libraries bid Pyatt farewell as he left Duke to become the Dorothy Foehr Huck Chair and Head of the Eberly Family alerie Gillispie is Duke’s So what, exactly, does the Special Collections Library at Penn State. But before he left, we asked him to reflect on his time here new University Archivist, University Archives hold? For starters, as Duke’s official keeper of institutional history. the official keeper of any administrative, legal, fiscal, and Duke history, preserver of historical records that have enduring universityV records, and all-around font value for the Duke community, hirty years ago, on May vision for the Archives and gave me of institutional knowledge. She is only going all the way back to the school’s 10, 1981, I graduated valuable administrative experience. the third person to hold that office, 1838 Randolph County origins and from Duke after four following William King (1972–2002) continuing up to the present. You wonderful years During my second “tour of duty” and Timothy Pyatt (2002–2011). It’s can also find campus publications, studyingT everything from history at Duke, I have experienced a a big job, being the remember-in-chief audiovisual materials by and about to medieval German. The following number of personal and professional of all things Duke. But this native of Duke University, papers and selected day, I joined the library’s cataloging highlights. Space prevents me from Fargo, North Dakota, is no stranger to publications of Duke faculty members, department as a “pre-cataloger.” From listing them all, but touring incoming campus. records of student and employee there I went on to several different President and Mrs. Brodhead around “I first fell in love with Duke organizations, not to mention theses, positions around the library, including Trinity, North Carolina, in the summer

Alex Bajuniemi Alex as a graduate student,” Gillispie says. dissertations, final projects, and senior assistant in the Rare Book Room, of 2004 was truly special. They both Ever want to see the original She spent two years working here in honors papers produced by Duke where I had previously worked as an were kind and gracious, especially the University Archives as an intern students—all of it carefully cataloged, undergraduate. I left Duke for the first after learning it was the first tour blueprints for Duke Chapel? Or watch while earning a master’s degree in organized, and preserved for posterity. time in March 1985 and was fortunate I had ever given of Duke University’s a film of the legendary 1938 football public history from North Carolina There are even digital records, enough to return in March 2002 as birthplace. More recently, bringing

team (the “Iron Dukes”) defeat the State University and a second master’s including websites, video and audio University Archivist. im Pyatt the papers and records of James in library science from the University files, images, and multimedia projects. B. Duke’s only daughter, Doris, University of North Carolina 14–0? Or

of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. But Gillispie and her staff don’t During my time at Duke, I had Courtesy T “home” to join the records of imagine how snazzy you would look “I spent many hours learning about just collect things, although that’s the privilege of working for two her extended family and related wearing James B. Duke’s top-coat? Duke’s history as I worked with an important part of the job. The incredible library directors—David Ferriero and Deborah foundations helped complete the record of the university’s Valerie Gillispie can show you the the papers of Alice Mary Baldwin, University Archivist also participates Jakubs. With their support and guidance, I was able to founding family. On a personal level, since 2002 I have Edmund Cameron, and the Marine in the life of the university, welcoming expand the University Archives’ programs to include played in the Duke Pep Band during holiday breaks while genuine article. Lab Collection,” she says. “I had the freshmen and returning alumni, records management, electronic submission of theses and the students are away. In 2006 I got to live out my Duke sense each day when I walked in to sitting on university committees, dissertations, acquisition of born-digital records, and, most basketball fantasy when I rolled across the floor of Cameron work that I was entering a special leading tours on campus history and recently, harvesting and archiving university websites. Over with the Devil surfing on my back. That memory will place. So the opportunity to return as architecture, supporting the university the last nine years, access to the University Archives holdings be with me forever. Fortunately, the bruises have long University Archivist is a dream come administration, and providing has greatly expanded through such tools as the Libraries’ since faded. true.” guidance on records management for digital collections, Flickr, Wikipedia, and the Internet Archive. For the last five years, Gillispie offices all over campus (what to keep, In 2006 the University Archives merged with the Rare With the career opportunities and professional engagement has served as the Assistant University what to toss, and how to store and Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library (recently I have experienced over the last nine years, I feel like I am Archivist at Wesleyan University in transfer files safely). renamed the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript “graduating” a second time from Duke. I will greatly miss my Connecticut, another distinguished “I look forward to working with Library), which allowed us to offer more reading room hours colleagues and campus friends, but plan to continue my ties institution with Methodist roots and a everyone—students, faculty, staff, and and increased support for public programming and exhibits. with my alma mater through the Alumni Association and the rich academic history. But she’s excited alumni—to make sure we’re preserving The merger also gave me the opportunity to work closely Friends of Duke University Libraries. Duke will always be a to be back in the Triangle area, and Duke’s unique history,” Gillispie says, with associate university librarian Bob Byrd as I took on an part of me and a source for inspiration. eager to meet the students, faculty, “Even the history we’re making right expanded role as associate director of the Special Collections staff, alumni, and visitors who regularly now!” Library. His direction and leadership helped me develop my Tim Pyatt, Class of 1981, Duke Parent 2007 consult the Archives’ holdings.

18 Duke University Libraries Fall 2011 19 InRecorded Their Stories of America’s Own Jim Crow PastWords Now Available

One hundred oral histories of life in the Jim Crow South, complete with transcripts, have been digitized and made available on the Duke University Libraries website and iTunes U, a dedicated area within the iTunes Store.

From 1993 to 1995, dozens of graduate students at “I don’t care how prominent you were, Duke and other schools fanned out across the you were just Willie Brown,” said Wilson, a South to capture stories of segregation as part schoolteacher whose husband edited the Memphis of “Behind the Veil,” an oral history project Tri-State Defender, the city’s leading African- led by Duke faculty historians William Chafe, American newspaper. “You weren’t Rev. Willie Raymond Gavins, and Robert Korstad at the Brown, you weren’t Dr. Willie Brown, you weren’t Center for Documentary Studies. The students Professor Willie Brown. And then, if [they] sought to preserve the stories before the men and referred to your wife, she was Suzie. Not Mrs. women who survived Jim Crow passed away. The Suzie, just Suzie.” interviews— Wilson’s words were recorded in a July Listen to the Behind the Veil interviews online: some 1,260 1995 interview with a Duke student, but her story library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/behindtheveil in all—were never made the original project’s final cut. Now recorded her memories—along with the personal accounts Also available on iTunes U, on regular of scores of other Americans who lived through a dedicated area within the iTunes Store cassette tapes, the Jim Crow era—are among the hundred stories transcribed that have been digitized and made available for and archived in the John Hope Franklin Research free for researchers, genealogists, educators, Center, part of the Rubenstein Library. and others. Some of the interviews were included in Other interviewees describe loss of land, an award-winning book and radio documentary, educational inequity, and the terror of white Remembering Jim Crow: African Americans Tell supremacy. Another newly digitized story is told About Life in the Segregated South, produced ten by Ernest A. Grant of Tuskegee, Alabama, who years ago by the Center for Documentary Studies recounts how his mother had to flee town in the and American RadioWorks. trunk of a car after an insurance salesman made But many of the interviews never made it advances on her and she burned him with a into the book or documentary. hot iron. Take Imogene Watkins Wilson of These interviews capture the vivid Memphis, Tennessee, who tells the story of how a personalities, poignant personal stories, and group of African-American businessmen launched behind-the-scenes decision-making that bring to Counterlockwise from top left: Unidentified family photograph. Donated by Larry a boycott of that city’s largest daily newspaper. life the African-American experience in the South Henderson, Alabama (undated); Henry Hooten with mother. Troy, Alabama, c. 1925; Olivia during the late-nineteenth to mid-twentieth The year was 1957, and the men bought every Cook (center) with children, first husband (standing), and grandfather. New Orleans, 1940s; copy they could find of the Memphis Commercial century. Not only do they offer a window onto Elmer Bradshaw (Papa), donated by Bernice Caldwell, Charlotte, North Carolina (undated). Appeal and threw them in the Mississippi River. an important era of American history, but Photos from the John Hope Franklin Research Center They were protesting the paper’s policy of not they present that time through the words and using courtesy titles, like Mr. or Mrs., when experiences of the ordinary men and women who referring to blacks. lived it.

20 Duke University Libraries Fall 2011 21 Meg’s Picks New and Noteworthy Books for the Business-Minded Reader

Reviewed by Meg Trauner, Director of Ford Library at Duke’s

Joint Ventures: Inside commitment, this is a story about the philosophical differences between China America’s Almost power of an individual to be a force for and the U.S. and their different approaches Legal Marijuana good in the world. Hammond grew a two- to diplomacy, strategy, and negotiation. Industry person startup into a national nonprofit And he draws on personal experience to By Trish Regan (KaBOOM!) that builds playgrounds reflect on the future of this global power (Wiley, 2011) in disadvantaged neighborhoods. But in the twenty-first century. This important In the rolling the process of building the playgrounds book is destined to be a bestseller for years. hills of Northern is just as important as the end product. Graphic Content California is an KaBOOM! provides the tools, resources Start Something area known as the This mural outside the Gothic Reading Room is the work of Bill Fick, visiting and guidance, while the local community That Matters assistant professor of the practice of visual arts at Duke. It was created using a Emerald Triangle, provides the labor, organizes the project, By Blake vertical screen printing technique that allows artists to print dynamic and bold where land is expensive, jobs are scarce, and solicits funds. Since 1995, KaBOOM! Mycoskie images directly on walls. and politics are liberal. The weather is has raised $200 million and constructed (Spiegel & Grau, Fick used images taken from an assortment of comics found in the Edwin perfect for growing marijuana, which 2,000 playgrounds throughout the U.S. 2011) and Terry Murray Comic Book Collection in the Rubenstein Rare Book & accounts for two-thirds of Mendocino Without formal management training, In this highly Manuscript Library. The collection includes more than 67,000 comic books from County’s local economy. The Emerald Hammond explains how he developed a readable the 1930s to the 2000s and includes examples of virtually every genre, publisher, Triangle is only one place that Regan and style of comic. It is one of the Rubenstein Library’s most popular collections. business model, nurtured his organization’s account, takes the reader in this report about the expansion, standardized procedures, made Mycoskie tells “In the past four years I’ve been using the Murray Collection as a teaching tool profitable but risky cannabis industry. mistakes and learned from them. This the story of and resource for my Art of the Comic Book and Zines class,” Fick said. Some of In California and Colorado, medical the comics he used in creating the mural include Classics Illustrated: The Black engaging book offers practical points on TOM’S One marijuana is regulated by the state but is Tulip, The Mark of Zorro and Walt Disney’s Donald Duck. He also incorporated social enterprise. for One, a start-up footwear company images from more recent comics and graphic novels in Lilly Library. considered illegal at the federal level. Savvy that gives away one pair of shoes to poor industry insiders open shops on public On China children for every pair sold in a first-world streets yet maintain low profiles to avoid By Henry country. The story begins when Mycoskie, attracting attention. Regan interviews Kissinger on vacation in Argentina, notices that few growers, brokers, investors, and dispensary (Penguin, 2011) rural children there wear shoes. With no proprietors, interweaving their stories This dense yet experience in retail or the shoe industry, with facts about the marijuana industry. remarkable new he learns to design, manufacture, and sell She also looks at the black market side of book by the Argentine alpargatas (espadrilles) for the the business and analyzes the Portuguese first American U.S. market. The shoes quickly become experiment to decriminalize drugs. emissary to fashionable with young people, and after communist China five years over a million pairs of shoes KaBOOM! How have been given to impoverished children One Man Built a is part history Movement to Save and part memoir. Kissinger engineered in South America. Mycoskie encourages Play America’s 1971 opening to Beijing after readers to lead a life of meaning while By Darell decades of separation. Eventually he made also earning a living. He shares tips for Hammond more than fifty trips there and met with getting started and discusses principles for (Rodale Books, four generations of Chinese leaders. To sustaining a company. 2011) understand China is to understand its Written with long history, Kissinger argues. He provides passion and historical perspective while analyzing the

To read more of Meg’s Picks, or to find out what’s going on the Ford Library, follow the Ford Library blog at blogs.fuqua.duke.edu/fordlibrary.

22 Duke University Libraries Fall 2011 23 A New Way to Give (and Avoid the Tax Man) Duke University Libraries Donor List July 1, 2010 – June 30, 2011 That has been a constant throughout my life. Naturally, I have always loved libraries. Nitty-Gritty on the I can still remember when I was deemed old Charitable IRA Rollover Trinity Properties Gail T’74 and Robert T’74 Jarrow Ruth Ross WC’68 enough by my parents to walk to our public Timothy Warmath T’84 Jefferies Group, Inc Saladelia Cafe library in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, by Things to remember Lizabeth Weaver Nannerl and Robert Keohane Elizabeth T’84 and • You must be at least 70½ years old at Lizabeth Weaver Charitable Fund Aspasia and Kenneth Knoerr Michael T’84 Schoenfeld myself. That was a big day for me! I think Rebecca T’82 and Lynn T’86 and Todd Koorbusch Robin Shaffer and the time of your gift. Rhys T’83 Williams Bruce Kuniholm G’72 Dean Brenner T’82 it’s important to preserve the written word, Nancy Winkelstein and Robert T’68 and Barbara Laughlin Diana T’80 and Douglas Shanks whether it comes in a book, e-book, or any • You need to make your gift by Christopher Plaut T’84 Doris and Charles Leeper Alison and Thomas T’92 Sheehan Elizabeth Locke WC’64 Mary and James Siedow other form. There’s also just something December 31, 2011. The date of your $1,000 – $4,999 Walker T’79 and John Mabe Adam Silver T’84 about walking into a library that gives me a gift is the date that your check from Shirley Ada WC’55 Elizabeth T’76 and John McKeever Susan T’81 and Matthew and Nancy McKenna James T’81 Simpson good feeling. an IRA account is postmarked, not the Cherlyne and David T’62 Allen Herschel Anderson T’54 Lucy and John McKinstry Emily T’03 and Greg T’02 Skidmore Sara Brandaleone T’65 is a long-time date that you send transfer instructions Gilbert Baumann Laura T’92 and Henry McVey Karen T’82 and Timothy T’81 Slevin Q. Why was the option of making a gift Margaret Taylor Smith WC’47 and to your IRA administrator. Rebecca and Stephan Baumann supporter of the Duke University Libraries from your IRA attractive? David Beaning T’97 Sidney Smith Jr. T’43 and member of the Libraries Advisory • You can contribute a maximum of $1,000,000+ Lori T’84 and BE Charitable Fund Deborah Spears G’87 A. We got a card in the mail from my Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Douglas T’84 McNeely Mary and James T’59 Booher Mary and Albert Staton Board. She is retired from the investment Jennifer T’98 and John Stein husband’s alma mater, Princeton, notifying $100,000 from your IRA each year Martha WC’65 and Wistar Morris Eleanor and Benjamin T’54 Boylston $100,000 – $999,999 Deborah Norville and Karl Wellner Boylston Family Fund Virginia G’79 and business and lives in Chapel Hill with her through the rollover. David T’88 Steinmetz us about the giving option, which is still John and Kelly Hartman Foundation Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company Suzanne Braley T’73 and Victor Strandberg husband, Bruce. They have two children, Gary Davis of New York Richard EplingT’73 not widely known. When I looked into it, • Gifts must be made directly from an Sylvia and Barry T’67 Tarasoff both Duke grads, Christopher T’03 and Kristine Stiles Jeanne T’89 and Robert Savitt Brenda and Keith Brodie I found out that it was very easy to do. The IRA administrator to Duke University Simplistics, Inc. Mary Ann Brown Triangle Community Foundation, Jennifer T’07. Laurene T’78 and Scott Sperling Inc. Libraries. $50,000 – $99,999 Neil Brown T’97 best things about it are 1) it’s easy, and 2) Sperling Family Charitable Mr. and Mrs. William Brown Shawna Tunnell and This year, the Brandaleones took Joseph Burns Foundation Sally T’73 and Robert T’72 Byrd James Kanski T’87 you avoid paying income tax on the money David Burns advantage of a new law that allows them How to do it von der Heyden Foundation Elizabeth and Thomas T’67 Caine Constance Walker Julia Negley Estate you withdraw. You can give money straight Mary Ellen and Coastal Community Foundation Mary Walter • Request an IRA disbursement form Vanguard Charitable Endowment to make charitable gifts to the Duke Karl T’62 von der Heyden of SC Wells Fargo Foundation from your IRA. It never comes into income Program from your IRA administrator. Michel Weill Laura T’79 and Kevin Colebank Virginia WC’62 and University Libraries by rolling over funds Stewart Smith and and you don’t have to take the extra steps Susan Wilson Joel Colton* Maxine and Gerald D’61 Wilson Robin Ferracone T’75 from their individual retirement accounts. • Check the box indicating that you want William Wilson Macey and Michael Colvin Chester T’49 Middlesworth Ellen Wolf T’75 and to claim a deduction. In fact, many people Stewart Smith Charitable Fund In December 2010, President Obama signed to contribute to a nonprofit. Jesse T’74 and Gloria T’74 Colvin Middlesworth Endowment Richard Harris T’73 may come out ahead on their taxes. $5,000 – $9,999 Georgeann Corey Rete Mirabile Fund Judith Woodburn WC’65 Laura Ellen & Robert Muglia Judy Woodruff WC’68 and the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance • Return the form to your IRA $25,000 – $49,999 Betty WC’62 and Michael Corey T‘05 Family Foundation Albert Hunt Q. How difficult was the process? Eileen and Lowell T’89 Aptman Peter E’61 Bengtson Annie Cotton WC’45 Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of Rosemary Oates Patti-Marie T’89 and administrator and let us know your gift Sara WC’65 and Bruce Brandaleone Mary Duke Biddle Foundation Ann WC’65 and James T’65 Curry David & Lucile Packard Foundation David Young T’87 2010, which reinstated the charitable IRA A. It was super-easy. There’s a form that you Phyllis Haberman Mary Anne and Nanci and Richard Czaja is coming. Claire T’97 and J. P. Paquin Tobi and Evan T’99 Young Richard Haberman Charles T’81 Bobrinskoy Leslie Damasceno rollover through 2011. have to fill out anytime you withdraw funds Esther Pardue WC’62 and • It’s that easy! Cookie Anspach Kohn WC’60 and Jerry WC’62 and Deloitte Foundation Leonard Pardue III T’61 Donors who use this giving method from your IRA, and there’s a box on that Henry Kohn, Jr. Bruce E’61 Chappell Devonwood Foundation $500 – $999 Ruth and Leland Phelps Harsha Murthy T’81 and Maryann Esernio-Bruce T’82 and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dierks Ann Armbrister WC’63 can transfer up to $100,000 each year form that you check. One check and you’re Why to do it Estate of Margaret Phillips Caitlin Riley Ronald Bruce Walt Disney Company Foundation Michael Bailey T’93 Qualcomm Inc. from their IRA to qualified charitable done. It’s as easy as giving stock outright. It • Donors pay no federal taxes on the Victoria T’85 and Daniel Waters Arthur Fischer-Zernin E’07 Barbara and Michael Dugan Noel Baucom WC’65 Janet WC’58 and Albert T’56 Rabil Wunderman Lara Fischer-Zernin Robin Duke Carol Bilzi and David Scholl only took as long as filling out a form, and IRA withdrawal, and the gift decreases Amy Reid T’80 organizations, like Duke University, Harry Harkins, Jr. T’73 and Anne* and Robert Durden Teresa WC’70 and Nancy Risman the distribution was made the next day. your taxable estate. $10,000 – $24,999 Kenneth Stilwell Libby Edwards and Brent T’64 Blackwelder without increasing their gross income for Nancy and Robert Risman Ross Arnold III T’67 and Elizabeth Harper T’06 Clayton Owens T’70 Robert Bliwise G’88 Family Foundation the year and without ever paying taxes on Q. Would you do it again, or encourage • The withdrawal counts towards your Claire Arnold Susan and Robert T’76 Harper Eli Evans Bridget Booher T’82 and Mrs. Edward Rollins, Jr. WC’58 Douglas T’74 and Marsha and Steven T’77 Hively ExxonMobil Foundation Todd Jones T’80 the money. others to give through an IRA? required minimum distribution. E. T. Rollins, Jr. & F. P. Rollins Elise T’75 Beckstett Richard T’73 and Kathleen WC’61 and Thomas Eyles Steven Bressler T’07 Foundation We recently caught up with Sara A. Most IRAs involve a minimum • You will avoid taxes and may even save Merilee WC’62 and Patricia N’74 Jones Foundation for the Carolinas Linda and Kenneth Carder to find out more about the IRA giving Roy T’62 Bostock Bradley T’87 and Pamela Korman Debra and Curtis Freeman distribution. If you make a gift this way, it money, and if that isn’t enough… Bostock Family Foundation Steven and Jennifer Korman Geoffrey Freeman and provision, how it works, and why you don’t Stuart WC’64 and Steven Korman Family Foundation Marjie Findlay counts toward that minimum distribution. • You can support a cause that is have to be an investment guru like her to William L’64 Buice Patricia and John T’61 Koskinen Cavett WC’62 and It simplifies life and lets you do good in the important to you. Choices Women’s Medical Center, Irene McCutchen WC’62 and Barker T’63 French use it. way you want to do it! If this option is still Inc. William McCutchen, Jr. E’62 George Grody T’81 Q. Why do you support Duke University Cotswold Foundation Trust MaryAnne and John McGowan Elizabeth Grover T’79 available in the future, we will definitely Mary Dawson WC’53 Ellen WC’65 and James Myerberg Tom Hadzor and Susan Ross Libraries? Isobel Craven Drill WC’37 Eric T’81 and Linda Osserman Thomas Harman T’79 consider doing it again. Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Susan T’79 and Susan T’83 and Geoffrey Harris A. I have always loved books and reading. Questions? Stephanie and Lorenz Fischer-Zernin William T’77 Reinhardt Sara Harrison T’80 Contact Duke’s Office of Gift Planning Gretchen WC’68 and Edward* Fish Kirkwood Roland T’02 Margaret G’72 and Merle Hoffman Tatiana Smith and Richard G’62 Hodel To watch a video about making a charitable IRA rollover to 919-681-0467 Rita and Benjamin T’50 Holloway Earl E. T. Smith, Jr. T’76 Mary Hotchkiss T’76 Duke, visit giving.duke.edu/youtube Jan and David T’75 Ichel Mindy T’78 and Guy T’67 Solie The Huisking Foundation Inc. [email protected] Macy’s Foundation SunTrust Banks, Inc. Deborah Jakubs and Michael T’85 and Lisa T’85 Swotes James Roberts B’85

26 DukeDuke UniversityUniversity LibrariesLibraries Fall 2011 27 Jane Clayton T’73 Jason Walcott T’05 Stanford Brown T’92 William Freeman G’66 Gary Hawkins Victoria Lodewick T’89 and Grace Pilafian Jeanne Collins T’95 and Mary Ward T’77 Jackson Browning, Jr. T’70 Jane Friedman T’03 Amy T’94 and Andrew Herman Carl WeisnerT’89 Michael Plaisance Matthew Valenti T’95 Barbara Washburn WC’64 and Leslie Bruning WC’66 Maryellen Fullerton WC’68 and Lynn WC’63 and Thomas Herrick Demetria and Alton G’70 Loftis Sarah and George T’88 Podolin Shelia Creswell and William Murphey Caroline Bruzelius Thomas Roberts Jeralea Hesse and LaNelle WC’53 and Henry Porter, Jr. G’60 Jay Creswell, Jr. T’66 Richard Weintraub L’76 Katharine Bryson T’92 and Dale Gaddis WC’66 Robert Levine T’55 Charles T’53 Looper Caroline and Edward H’76 Pritchett C. & U. Poster Advertising, Co. Weintraub Family Charitable Fund Edwin Bryson Jr. T’58 Alison Gardner T’74 Jane WC’65 and Charles Hessler Elizabeth and David T’88 Lorry Dr. and Mrs. Glenn Quittell Kay and Mark G’66 Davis Mary WC’51 and Delaina and Albert Buehler Susan Garrett Audrey Hillyard T’89 and Michelle T’92 and Charles Lowry Robin Quittell-Ponticelli T’98 and Judith Dearlove Alan T’52 Whanger Ann Bushyhead T’73 and Madeline Gartner T’83 and Vincent Desiderioscioli Virginia WC’59 and Aron Ponticelli Sigrid Dedo Jennifer and Eric T’79 Wiebke John Valentine T’71 Mark Ahrendt Robert Hobson Richard MacEwen Michael Radulescu Lois Deloatch G’08 and Lucile Williams WC’69 and Barbara G’69 and Robert G’65 Cain Katherine T’99 and Stephen Hoffius T’75 Kate Mackenzie Phyllis and Dale Randall Edward Gomes Jr. Marion Williams Jr. T’69 Ansel Caine T’06 Stephen Geissler Henry Hoffman T’06 Donald Maddox G’69 James Ransom T’56 Faith T’84 and Warren Diamond Winston-Salem Foundation Eleanor Cannon T’89 and Donald Gentile T’75 Stephanie and Aileen and Randy Maddox Paula Rau WC’66 Rana DiOrio T’88 and Keith LeClaire Katherine World WC’72 Philip Cannon Jr. Frederick Getze T’73 William T’89 Hoffman Judith Maness G’83 and Hilary Raymond T’87 and Rose Etheridge and Anne Carroll WC’52 Susan Gidwitz Irving Holley, Jr.Marcia Field and Ronald Willacker Arthur Raymond III John Poe, Jr. T’66 $100 – $499 Jane Caserta Alexandra Gil T’05 Carson T’75 Holloway Andre Mann Linda and Edward Reaves Sharon Holthaus G’97 Greayer Mansfield-Jones, Jr. G’67 Christopher Reese T’04 Jonathan Feifs E’99 David Ackerman T’93 Diana and Ricardo G’91 Castells Virginia Gilbert and Norman Hoyle G’60 CoraLynn Marshall WC’46 Nick Register T’99 Mrs. David Friday WC’59 Bradford ActonD’11 Mary G’65 and Calvin Davis Kermit Gilbert Jr. Yue and Tizhi Huang Mavis Mayer Regulator Bookshop Sylvia T’00 and Ryan T’00 Fulton Heather T’96 and William E’60 Chambers Suzanne D’77 and Salle and Robert G’75 Gill Diana WC’64 and Barbara N’82 and Todd McCallister Karen Remmer and Gilbert Merkx Amy and David F’80 Turner Betsey Beamish WC’56 and Luck WC’50 and David Gambrell Geoffrey L’98 Adams Pamela Chastain and James Jarvis Jefferson M’80 Davis Susan Gladin D’82 and David T’62 Huggin Kyle McCarter E’05 Jonathan Rick T’05 Marcia Tuttle WC’59 Douglas Beamish, Jr. Stuart Gelfond T’91 Anne Alexander T’74 Karen T’79 and Robert T’79 Chatten May Daw WC’64 and Carl Daw Jr. Peter Kramer T’73 Carol Humphries WC’71 and Wendy McCorkle and Tammy and Neil T’89 Rigler Kirsten Travers-UyHam G’96 and Marguerite Bedell Nancy and Robert T’52 Gibbs Heath Alexander Martha Chernoch WC’53 Jacus De Beer B’07 Gale Glenn Michael Wilt Pope McCorkle III L’84 Carter Rila Estate John UyHam T’93 Katherine Bell Goldman Sachs & Company Emily Almas T’06 David Chi T’09 Leslie WC’62 and Martin Dillon Ruth Goslin Huron Consulting Services LLC Joyce McCusker-Schaal T’87 John Ringland N’78 Wanda Verreault G’95 Douglas Benson Ann Gravatt G’64 and Suzanne T’81 and James Almas Chong and Bup Choe Susan WC’62 and Edward Doherty Leslie Graves T’80 and Lindsay Ideson T’74 Kevin McDonough T’80 Carol WC’57 and Karsten Rist Cristina Villanueva-Aznar Sara T’91 and Claude Gravatt, Jr. G’66 David Chung T’02 Dominion Foundation John Fucigna Vladislav Ivanov E’99 Carol and James E’60 McKnight Mary Rivers Lise and Michael Wallach Alexander T’92 Berghausen Sara WC’69 and Charlotte T’79 and Jeff E’78 Clark Ariel Dorfman Avril Greene T’91 Mary WC’60 and Robert Jacobson James McNab G’69 Jill Roberts WC’58 Joanna Walsh Jennifer G’90 and William Graves T’67 Elizabeth Clark Rodrigo Dorfman T’89 Daniel Griffin G’14 Heather Jarrow T’06 Anne T’00 and Sima Robins T’04 Michael Weaver D’11 William G’91 Bernhard William T. and Sara S. Graves DAF Daniel Claster T’02 Margaret WC’65 and Del Dowling Julie E’86 and Warren Grill Brenda T’96 and Thomas Jenney Robert T’00 McWaters Carol Robinson and Tracey Weis T’77 and Thomas Ryan Bernice Bickell WC’40 Pickett WC’61 and Robert Guthrie Diskin Clay Elizabeth Doyle Mary Grossman and Joanne T’96 and Benjamin Johnson Dorothy Medlin Joseph Robinson, Jr. Aaron and Braden Welborn Beverly Biggs Jacquelyn Hall and Robert Korstad Robert Clayton, Jr. T’49 Cathryn T’77 and Thomas Grossman, Jr. T’76 Mildred Johnson WC’58 and Wendy T’85 and Andrew Melnick Kimberly Robinson James West III Brenda and Blake T’91 Bilstad Jacqueline Harper WC’48 Clear Light Fund Richard T’77 DuBow Chiquita WC’61 and Charles Johnson Jr. Robert Melton T’73 and Sally Robinson WC’55 and Heather and Carl T’89 Westman Connie WC’68 and Ethel G’69 and Myron G’68 Hedlin Cynthia Clopper T’99 Cassidy Dugan T’00 John T’61 Guglielmi Johnson Charitable Gift Fund Victor Cardell Russell Robinson II T’54 Joseph Westrick Douglas T’66 Bischoff Karen and Richard T’61 Heitzenrater The Coca-Cola Company Jane Edgerton WC’67 and David Guy T’70 Kristy and Jeffrey T’72 Johnston Christopher Meyer WC’71 and Robinson Donor Advised Fund Elizabeth T’84 and Marilyn WC’62 and Ellen T’81 and Douglas Hiemstra Barbara and Joseph Collie Thomas Reckford Victoria WC’68 and Alice and Kensinger Jones Gary Nicols Jackie and Marc T’83 Rubinstein Stephen Whitaker Reuben T’60 Rainey Larry G’93 and Thomas G’94 Hines Jeanette and William T’44 Combs Eli Lilly & Company Foundation William T’68 Guy Sarah WC’66 and Thomas Juntune Microsoft Corporation Fidel Rubio T’10 Kristen and Mark T’94 Whitaker Lisa Bonnifield T’08 Regina and John T’72 Howell Community Foundation B. W. T’74 and Jeffrey GuynnT’88 Abhisekh Kantha T’09 Marjorie and Edmond T’52 Miller Judith Ruderman G’76 Ann Wilder Christian Boutin Alesia and John T’67 Hoy of Western NC Charles G’76 Ellertson Robert Hadden T’89 Francine and Michael T’80 Kates Nancy Miller and Adrian Rule IV T’78 Pelham Wilder, Jr. Betty Jean WC’68 and Omar Idilby T’98 Andrea Constantinos T’03 Ann Elsner Juli Khoe T’88 and Steve Haegelin Martha Keels T’79 and Grayson Miller, Jr. T’65 Linda and Bruce T’80 Ruzinsky Christy Wilhelm T’99 William T’69 Boyarsky Tracy Jones Victoria and Peter T’75 Coogan Randi and Eugene T’73 Ely Jane and John T’74 Hahn Dennis Clements III H’76 John Mishler T’09 Helen and John T’70 Sacha Anne Williams and John Burness Mr. and Mrs. William Boyes Mark Kearney G‘69 Mary T’74 and Frank G’75 Almeda miriam cooke and Bruce Lawrence Katherine Emerson WC’48 Stephanie Haile and Grace Keffer WC’58 and Toril Moi and David Paletz Sage Publications Inc. 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28 Duke University Libraries Fall 2011 29 Deborah Fritz T’71 Brigitte Krause and Peter Olejar T’59 Francesca Tenconi T’06 Flora Garcia T’87 Donald Burkins T’72 Tanya Olson Robert Thomas General Reinsurance Corporation Nora and Ronald T’63 Kroll Alice O’Neal Edward Triplett G’14 Catherine Shreve Elena Geraci Richard Kunst Linda Orr WC’65 Marjorie Tuck WC’57 and Librarian for Public Policy and GlaxoSmithKline Foundation Debra Kurtz Leslie T’94 and Erik T’94 Owens Russell Tuck Jr. Political Science Jeannie Godbold and Sandra and Stanford Ladner Catherine and Michael T’68 Packard Diane Ty T’83 and Personal Librarian, Jarvis Residence Hall Stanly Godbold, Jr. T’63 Deborah Lane B’92 Keith Paxton T’00 Daniel Connors, Jr. Bleeds Duke Blue Doris Goldstein Maximilian Langley Kennetta Perry Emily Uhre T’05 Cheryl WC’66 and John E’65 Goody Deborah Langsam G’81 and Sarah Phillips Susanne Uno Louise Gossett G’61 Joal Fischer Susan Pietrzyk Robert Vance Elizabeth Graham WC’51 Kelly G’97 and Scott Lavis Anna Pishko T’04 Christine T’90 and Elaine Granmayeh T’96 and Kelley Lawton Claire WC’60 and Robert Pittman Robert E’91 VandeLinde Sherif Khalil Virginia Lee Keith Preble Cindy Van Dover Anne Gray T’02 Phoebe T’95 and Carol WC’60 and Cameron Vansant T’09 Jill and Michael T’92 Haas Richard T’96 Letocha Stephen E’59 Prevost Ridi and Thomas T’50 Van Zandt Margaret and David G’61 Hale Charles Lin E’01 David Puckett Sonya Vaziri T’81 Sarah Cress Sherry Hardin Peter Link, Jr. Deborah T’80 and Analise Vendittelli T’08 Camille Crittenden G’91 Ross Harris T’78 Roy Lisenby Timothy T’81 Pyatt Paula and Louis Vendittelli Shannon G’04 and James Hartigan G’79 Leonard Livak Gaston Rauch T’08 Jonathan Warner T’65 Jeremy G’04 Dahl Django Haskins Nancy Love Nan Rauch Linda and Robert T’61 Waters Catherine Daniel T’09 Jared Henson Amy and Donald Loveland Richard Reichard Joann Watson Donald Daniel Kristin Herzog Catherine and Lydia Watts T’06 William Davidshofer Katherine Higgins T’05 Matthew T’79 Robertson Robert Weinstein T’09 Christopher Davis Elizabeth Hill Patricia Robertson and Audrey Sherman T’91 and Joe Davis Terence Hines T’73 Horace Robertson, Jr. Darren Weirnick T’91 Mr. and Mrs. Laurence De Carolis Joseph Hoffman Susan Rogers D’79 Jonathan White E’08 Cleonice DeCherney Parma G’64 and Robert Holt Gregory Ross Lynn and Theodore G’76 Whitley Elisa and Michael T’73 Decker Wontack Hong Chris Rousse Katherine Wilder T’94 Leslie Dees WC’63 Virginia and Thomas G’64 Hood Michael Rudolph Jessica Wilkins Annette Deferrari Mr. and Mrs. David Hopp Galya and James Ruffer George Williams Mary Delegal WC’60 Andrea Houseworth T’03 Sharon T’81 and Joseph Russo Lannie Willie Delta Air Lines Foundation John Hsu Lynda Sagrestano T’88 and Steven Wilson T’91 John Denton T’05 Jeremy Huang T’07 Robert Yelle Brenda G’65 and Desco Annabelle and Jennifer T’98 and John Samoska Manfred Winnewisser Daryl Dichek and Kenneth Smith Stanton* T’51 Hudmon Brynda Saunders Maria Wise G’09 William Dietz T’94 Jane Hughes T’89 and Kurt Heil Victoria Scala T’09 Jean WC’66 and Curt Wittig Laura N’81 and Keith Dobbins Jennifer T’94 and Peter Hyde Jonathan Schafler T’07 Paul Womble T’99 Susannah D’Oench T’96 John Hyde III T’99 Mike Schlessinger Barbara Woodlief and Stephen Druesedow Bonnie Jacobowitz Derek Schubert E’96 Guy Woodlief, Jr. T’55 Elizabeth and Lawrence H’88 Dunn Philip Jacobs Alysia Lutz T’03 Linda Scott WC’69 Stefanie Wool T’99 and Christine Dyott T’05 Linda Jacobsen G’04 Christine Machemer Whitney T’02 and David Turetsky Yvonne Earnshaw Rita and Bhasker Jhaveri Paula and Paolo Mangiafico Daniel T’01 Seeburg Sharon Wright T’86 and David Eck G’13 Gabriel Jimenez-Medina Lauren Manley Thomas Segal T’09 Robert Wright Jr. Christine Ehrenbard Hernan Jimenez-Medina Heidi Hullinger T’04 and Caroline Seligman WC’65 and Yahoo! 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