Library Lines - The University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Transcription
Library Lines - The University of North Carolina at Pembroke
An Invitation To Join FRIENDS OF THE MARY LIVERMORE LIBRARY MEMBERSHIP FORM The University of North Carolina at Pembroke ―Without Libraries what have we? We have no past and no future.‖ - Ray Bradbury Please use this form to become a member of the Friends of the Library of The University of North Carolina at Pembroke. The form and your check, made out to UNCP, should be mailed to: Membership Chair, Friends of the Library Committee, Mary Livermore Library, UNC Pembroke, P.O. Box 1510, Pembroke, NC 28372-1510. phone 1.800.949.UNCP. Library Lines I would like to support the Friends of the Library of The University of North Carolina at Pembroke through the following ( Please check as appropriate): UNCP Student Membership……..$5.00 Patron Membership…………………….$100.00 Annual Membership…………..…$10.00 Life Membership………………..……..$1000.00 Contributing Membership……….$25.00 Corporate Membership……..………….$400.00 Sustaining Membership…………$50.00 Corporate Life Membership…………..$5000.00 Name Volume 20, Number 2 City/State/Zip Code Home Phone ALL CONTRIBUTIONS ARE TAX DEDUCTIBLE. Check here if you would like to serve on an FOL committee Check here if this is a new membership or a renewal This edition of Library Lines was edited by Karen S. Orr Fritts (karen.fritts@uncp.edu). Other members of the Publications Committee include Robert Arndt, Anne Coleman, Carl Danis, Dr. Elinor Foster (ex-officio), Gwen Locklear, Jean Sexton, Jessica Karpel, Susan Whitt, Melanie Wood, and David Young. Questions: call 910.521.6656, 1.800.949.UNCP or www.uncp.edu/library. Photos provided by Jessica Karpel unless otherwise noted. 325 copies of this document were printed at a cost of $1.18 per copy. Mary Livermore Library The University of North Carolina at Pembroke Pembroke North Carolina 28372-1510 by Anne H. Coleman The Mary Livermore Library always seeks to add to its online resources in order to provide patrons with a variety of ways to access library resources. Email Work Phone August 2011 Library Adds New Online Resources Dr. Mr. Mrs. Ms. (circle correct title) Mailing Address Mary Livermore Library Recently, the Library was able to add a very popular local resource to its online collections. In collaboration with the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center, the Library was able to make the University’s yearbooks from 1942 to 2010 available online. These pictorially historic documents are often used by students, faculty, and researchers to gather information on the University and on former students and personnel. They have also been used to supply information on local, and even national, history. Often researchers have requested photographs that document the history of the Lumbee people, but there have also been requests for pictures Photo of College ESSO Station from the Indianhead circa 1946 of the College Esso gas station in the 1940s and of traditional May Day activities, like the Maypole Dance, that were celebrated in different parts of the U.S. from the early 1900s and in Europe from the eighteenth century. Until recently, it was necessary to come to the Library and search printed copies of the yearbooks, titled Indianhead, to find the desired photos; however, in February 2011, library staff learned that the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center, a statewide digitization and digital publishing program, was working with North Carolina colleges and universities to get their historical materials, like college yearbooks, digitized and published online. The Center offered to scan all of UNCP’s yearbooks and make them available online via the Center’s website. UNC Pembroke became one of the first 30 institutions to participate in this effort, along with UNC Chapel Hill, Duke, East Carolina, Appalachian State, Elon, Fayettteville State, and many others. A quotation on the Center’s website states, ―Student yearbooks provide a window into college life in North Carolina from the 1890s to the present. From sports teams to sororities, fashions to hairstyles, these volumes document the changing attitudes and culture of college students year by year.‖ This invaluable window to UNCP’s history is now open and easily accessible online. The yearbooks can be accessed from the Library’s online catalog, BraveCat, and from the Library’s Special Collections webpage at the following URL: http:// www.uncp.edu/library/special/yearbooks/list.html. Online access has been established for part of another popular research collection: student theses. The Library routinely catalogs and houses copies of student theses from the Chancellor’s Scholars, the Esther G. Maynor Honors College, and the School of Graduate Studies. Electronic copies of the theses are now placed in the Institutional Repository (IR) and made available to researchers via the Internet. Rather than having to come into the Library to use a copy of one of the theses, researchers can access full-text versions of many of the theses by searching the Library’s online catalog or the University’s IR at the following URL: http:// libres.uncg.edu/ir/uncp/. Continues on page 3 Page 2 Library Lines Message from the Dean of Library Services August always brings the exhilaration that accompanies the start of the new academic year. New students and faculty members are welcomed and introduced to our outstanding library resources and helpful staff. Returning students and faculty are joyfully greeted as they visit the Mary Livermore Library and receive library updates and services as are suited to their preferences. Dr. Elinor Folger Foster Dean of Library Services Photo by Bobby Ayers Our community visitors are always important in planning for library programming as well. A series of discussions set for the 2011-12 academic year should be of interest to faculty, staff, students, and community members: the continuation of the Elmer W. Hunt Photograph Collection Identification and Discussion Series. Following up to the success of the programs held in 2010-11, the new series will continue the pursuit of information about the identification of persons pictured in the photographs and will also aid in publicizing the availability of this unique resource that is part of the Special Collections materials owned by the Mary Livermore Library. Information about the 2011-12 programs is contained in a related article by Robert Arndt. Page 11 Library Lines Virgil Oxendine, University Library Technician for Reference Services, presented on March 23 at the Chancellor’s Dining Room an update on the Beautification Subcommittee, for which he serves as Chair. Additionally, Virgil attended the Diversity in Higher Education conference, ―Equity and Inclusion: Vision, Strategies, and Actions for Higher Education and the Workplace,‖ which was held at the Washington Duke Inn in Durham, on April 27-28. June Power, Access Services/Reference Librarian, published two articles in the April-June 2011 edition of the Journal of Access Services. The titles are ―Training 2.0 – Library Assistants in the Age of Information‖ and ―III, ERes, and Ares: A Reserves Comparison.‖ Susan Whitt, Associate Dean for Collection Management, and Carl Danis, Collection Development/ Electronic Resources Librarian, attended the 20th annual North Carolina Serials Conference at the William and Ida Friday Center for Continuing Education in Chapel Hill, on March 10. Melanie Wood attended the Conference for Entrepreneurial Librarians on March 10, at Wake Forest University . She also delivered a presentation, ―Library Instruction Boot Camp: A Checklist for a Successful Information Literacy Session,‖ at the Metrolina Library Association Information Literacy Conference, which was held on the campus of Johnson & Wales University in Charlotte, on June 16. It will be my pleasure to coordinate with the sponsors of the Hunt series and other informational and entertaining programs, the Friends of the Library of UNC Pembroke. Returning as President in 2011-12 is Dr. Judy Curtis. Vice President/President-elect is Bob Fisher. Returning as Secretary is Anne Coleman; Susan Whitt will continue to serve as Treasurer. I appreciate their service and suggest that everyone who uses our excellent library join or rejoin the Friends of the Library. This support organization adds significant depth to the cultural and informational opportunities made available to faculty, staff, students, and community users of the Mary Livermore Library. And all of the above-named groups are welcomed back to UNCP as another stimulating academic year is launched. Message from the FOL President An Exciting Year to Push Forward A new academic school year is an exciting time both to reflect on past achievements and to set new goals for the future. The coming year at UNCP promises to be especially exhilarating as the budget uncertainties of the past few years have been faced and resolved, senior administrative positions have been filled and leadership stabilized, and programs have been conceived and implemented to improve student success rates. As you walk around campus, you can feel the hum of the whirring engine that is UNCP. All its parts are finely tuned and its momentum is propelling us forward. Every office, every department, and every member of the campus community play vital Dr. Judy Curtis, roles in our push forward. President, Friends of the Library of UNC Pembroke The Friends of the Library are eager for the new academic year to begin. As we reflect on past successful endeavors, we pledge to continue funds for the programs Photo provided by Dr. Curtis the campus relies on. We enthusiastically provide funds for student scholarships, audio books, photo identifications in the Hunt special collection, and faculty author recognition events. As we set new goals for the future, we anticipate adding additional monetary and technology scholarships for students, adding library materials that can circulate, inviting renowned speakers to campus, and more. Some say the Library is the heart of the campus; others say it’s where the intellect is inspired. Both views recognize the vital role of the Mary Livermore Library. Please take a moment as this exciting new academic year begins to join the Friends of the Library in supporting the Library as it propels the campus forward. Front row from left: Carlene Cummings, Robert Arndt, June Power, Anne Coleman, Virgil Oxendine Back row from left: Dr. Elinor Foster, Carl Danis, Robert Wolf, David Young, Melanie Wood Page 10 Library Lines New Beginnings, Recognitions and Scholarship Activities for Library Staff by David W. Young The entire staff of the Mary Livermore Library would like to take this opportunity to bid a fond farewell to one staff member, recognize two other individuals who have reached specific career milestones, and publicize specific staff scholarship activities. Brenda Bullock Photo from the 1972 Indianhead On June 30, Brenda Bullock retired after 41 years of dedicated service to the Library. Although born and raised in Lumberton, Brenda was ―transplanted‖ during her junior year of high school to Fairmont, where she continues to reside today. She started her career at the Library on June 1, 1970. During her years of employment, Brenda experienced many different developments which impacted workflow, including a major renovation of the Library in 1997 that replaced the open workBrenda Bullock 2011 station environment with a series of staff offices on the first floor as well as the transition from the old card catalog to BraveCat. Page 3 Library Lines Continued from front page The Library has also added the annual bibliographies of campus scholarship to its online collection. The Library has been compiling this bibliography since 1980. Library staff members believe that the accomplishments of UNCP faculty and staff are a significant part of the history of the University, so each year an attempt is made to identify, record, and archive as many of these accomplishments as possible. The bibliography was normally produced in print and copies kept in the Library. These scholarly documents have been digitized and made available to researchers online. Most of the documents have indexes that list each scholar by name and the page numbers for the scholar’s citations. The online version is also searchable by name or keyword. Like the yearbooks, the bibliographies from 1980 to 2011 can be accessed from the Library’s online catalog, BraveCat, and from the Library’s Special Collections webpage at the following URL: http://www.uncp.edu/ library/special/scholarship/index.html. Photographs from the Indianhead yearbooks During her spare time, Brenda enjoys crafting, sewing, pets, and travel. The entire staff wishes Brenda well as she enters a new chapter in her life. Lillian Brewington was recognized on April 11 as having received faculty emeritus status, the only librarian to ever receive such worthy distinction. She had been a permanent employee of the Library for over 36 years before her retirement on July 31, 2009. Currently, she works in the Special Collections area of the Library on a partLillian Brewington time basis. Lillian began her professional career on July 17, 1975. Students dancing around the Maypole Photo taken from the Indianhead 1957 Rob Wolf, Serials/Digital Operations Coordinator, received notification on May 4, 2011, that he had been awarded tenure, effective August 11, 2011. Rob joined the library staff on November 1, 2005. Rob’s main job responsibilities include the following: managing the selection, organization, and utilization of serials subscriptions; planning, coordinating, or managing digital library initiatives, and serving as the chief liaison with UNCP faculty or patrons concerning serials purchases and digital initiatives. Dr. Elinor Foster, Dean of Library Services, attended the Annual Meeting of the American Library Association in New Orleans, Louisiana, on June 24-27. Anne Coleman, Assistant Dean for Research Services, continues to serve as an associate editor for North Carolina Libraries and remains active as part of the editorial board for the Round Table for Ethnic Minority Concerns (REMCo) newsletter. Additionally, Anne and Robert Arndt, Reference/Instructional Services Librarian, compiled an annual bibliography of campus writing efforts, Campus Scholarship, 2010-2011: A Bibliography. Also, Anne, Robert, Carlene Cummings, Melanie Wood, and David Young attended the Librarians Association of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (LAUN-CH) conference, ―Staying Vital in a Time of Change,‖ which was held at the William and Ida Friday Center for Continuing Education on March 7, 2011. Finally, Anne compiled a comprehensive bibliography for the UNCP English and Theatre Department, English and Theatre Department Faculty Scholarship, 2006-2011: A Bibliography. Robert Arndt published a review of the David Hursh and Chris Goertzen book, Good Medicine and Good Music: A Biography of Mrs. Joe Person, Patent Remedy Entrepreneur and Musician, including the Complete Text of Her 1903 Autobiography, which was accepted for publication in the next edition of North Carolina Libraries, which is due out in early 2011. College football at Pembroke State College Photo taken from the Indianhead 1947 Page 4 Library Lines Library Updates by June Power Spring and summer brought a time of change to the Library. Several new items are now available for check out at the Circulation Desk for our patrons. The Friends of the Library purchased five iPads that are now available for student use. Introduced in late March, the iPads have already experienced great popularity. Students may check one out for 24 hours at a time, and often there is a waiting list for their use. Additionally, the Division of Information Technology as part of their reorganization transferred recording equipment to the Library for general circulation to UNCP patrons. As with the iPads, the video cameras, tripods, and digital voice recorders will circulate for 24 hours. These expansions of service have been met with great enthusiasm by those visiting the Circulation Desk. The Circulation Desk also dealt with change in spaces in the Library as additional shelving was added to the first floor near the media section. The Library for some time now has been struggling with space issues; the media section, especially, was overflowing its area. Three additional rows of shelving have greatly alleviated this crowding, and provide for some growth room for the next couple of years. However, this was the last remaining space in the Library where shelving can be added, so future growth issues are still expected. Another change in the Library is the addition of two Second Life capable workstations. The computer workstations were purchased from funds received in a LSTA technology grant through the State Library of North Carolina. The Library began offering services in the virtual world of Second Life last year, and will continue to provide reference, book clubs, instruction, and more. As the Second Life lab on campus is often used for classes, and the program requires a fairly substantial amount of computer graphics and power, the Library wanted to provide access within the building to this program which allows users to experience in 3D places and things they otherwise could not in other ways. Also, a destination guide service will be added to those already being provided in order to help guide people to places in Second Life that are useful and fun. Mary Livermore Library Book Sale by Carl Danis Every year the Mary Livermore Library receives a significant number of books and media as gifts. What happens to these items? After being checked for possible inclusion into the collection, those not added proceed to the book sale. Annually the Library has a book sale during National Library Week. The purpose of National Library Week is to draw attention to the contributions to and promotion of the Library. In addition to the promotion of National Library Week, the book sale brings in some money for the Friends of the Library of the University of North Carolina at Pembroke and it gives new useful life to books that may not otherwise have one. This past year the book sale had its best showing in five years. The difference this year was having a ―mini book sale‖ between the Thanksgiving and Christmas breaks. It allowed people to snag some good reading material to take on break with them. Assuming we have some nice material, the plan is to continue this tradition in the years to come. Page 9 Library Lines “A North Carolina Evening @ the Library” by Susan F. Whitt The Friends of the Library celebrated their tenth annual benefit held on April 8, 2011, at the Mary Livermore Library. This was a significant occasion that was celebrated by all attendees. The UNCP Guitar Ensemble directed by Derek Day, a faculty member in the Music Department, entertained guests while they dined from food stations that reflected an international variety of foods. During this time, guests were able to bid on silent auction items which included pottery, hand-made items, gift certificates, jewelry, and many more sought-after articles. The evening’s entertainment began with a welcome by Dr. Elinor Foster, Dean of Library Services. Dr. Judy Curtis, President of the Friends of the Library, presented Anne Coleman, who introduced the Friends of the Library scholarship winners (pictured below). This was a special highlight of the evening. Hannah L. Brumfield was awarded the $1,000 non-endowed Friends of the Library Scholarship; Courtney M. Stoker was awarded the endowed Friends of the Library Honors College Scholarship; Maria B. Hockaday was awarded the endowed Generalist Scholarship and Heidi L. Dingwell was awarded a non-endowed Generalist Scholarship; Andrea Collen, Briana Flores, Allona J. Frazier, Qi (Larry) Liu, Glenda J. Lowery, and Weitang (Chris) Pan were each awarded a $250 book scholarship. ―Tar Heel Tales and Tunes @ the Library‖ raised over $11,000 which will be used to support the Friends of the Library initiatives. Providing scholarships, sponsoring author appearances and reading programs, and funding of a book and a DVD lease program are among the projects made possible by the Friends of the Library fundraising activities. To learn more about the Friends of the Library, how to apply for their scholarships, or to join our Friends of the Library, please call the Mary Livermore Library at 910.775.4242 or go to the Library’s webpage at www.uncp.edu/library . The 2011 Scholarship winners were introduced by Anne Coleman. Back: Weitang (Chris) Pan, Qi (Larry) Liu, Glenda Lowery, Courtney Stoker, Hannah Brumfield, Allona Frazier, Anne Coleman Front: Andrea Collen, Briana Flores, Maria Hockaday, Heidi Dingwell Page 8 Library Lines Poetry/Short Prose Contest Winning Entries 2011 Emily McLamb Page 5 Library Lines History Professors Kick Off Faculty Author Showcase Series by Robert Arndt Jane Haladay Drive Climb onto Daddy’s lap. Put my tiny hands on top of his. There’s nothing but the road ahead And time We Drive The back roads With windows down And bright, wide eyes. I crane my neck to see The pine trees whizzing by. Those summer days with Dad I hope I never forget As now I drive on my own The highways With windows down And bright, wide eyes. I glance in the mirror to see Time whizzing by. Joshua Webb A Grand Going Away Party “What we long for and cannot attain is dearer than what we have already attained.” -Kahlil Gibran There’s the wind. She sings to me through her wind chimes of being an artist. How can this be? Prove it! She grabs her celestial brushes—a thousand Sakuras— painting the dawning sky pink and white: a thousand cherry blossoms are windsailing. The trees sway left and right, waving goodbye and gentle farewell kisses take flight between their limbs. Flying cranes are overlooking a grand going away party. The wind continues her singing: ―I’m painting your departing innermost longings, my dear; look again at the cherry blossoms windsailing.‖ Looking, I question the wind: ―In that case, will the cherry blossoms reach the land of fulfillment beyond my horizon?‖ She replies, ―Only you know the truth! As you hold your heartache with both hands as you do now, gazing at this vast ocean of desire, I see your reverence growing on this little island of ours.‖ It Would Be Enough (for Jack) This ritual of situation: cup of coffee, stack of ungraded papers. Reading glasses, clipboard, my cowboy hat to shade the beautiful new spring sun. I sit at the patio table preparing to get to work. Breeze echoes through the tall loblolly pines, the canary forsythia has begun her vibrant weeping. I discover I don’t have a pen. Pause. Look around. A black-capped chickadee flits into the still bare branches of the delicate dogwood who waits her turn to recite in snowy quatrains. Dark-eyed juncos and the family of Carolina wrens with their kabuki eyebrows pick through the humus of pine needles and seeds. I am neither too hot nor too cold. Not too rich nor too poor. Not too old nor too young, Neither too full nor too hungry. This moment is poised upon the tip of the pen that is not in my hand, the pen I will have to arise from this perfect place to retrieve. Wait. Lean back. Look up. Breathe in birdsong, Pine sway, and yellow. With nothing else before me or behind, with nothing in my hands, all this would be enough. The Mary Livermore Library will host a Faculty Authors Showcase on Wednesday, September 28, at 3:30 p.m. in the main reading room. Dr. Rose Stremlau and Dr. Charles Beem will be speaking about their books. Dr. Rose Stremlau photo by Raul Rubiera Dr. Stremlau will discuss her first book, Sustaining the Cherokee Family: Kinship and the Allotment of an Indigenous Nation. The book contains is a study of allotment, the subdivision and privatization of tribal land, in the Cherokee Nation. During the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century, the United States government forcibly allotted tribal land as a means to assimilate Indian people into American society. Dr. Stremlau notes ―By contextualizing the story of allotment into the larger fabric of Cherokee family life, I’ve brought order to the story of an important, misunderstood policy that continues to have an enormous impact on Indian communities today. The evolution of allotment was complicated, the administration of it was a mess, and the outcomes have been disastrous. Against that chaos, I emphasize the consistency of family life against great odds and explain how Cherokees adapted to remain a people connected by the values and behaviors associated with kinship.‖ Dr. Stremlau has been a member of the History Department since 2006. She won a University Teaching award in 2009 and has published numerous articles and essays. Dr. Stremlau was awarded an American Fellowship from the American Association of University Women that allowed her to complete the book she will be presenting September 28. Dr. Charles Beem will speak about his latest book, The Foreign Relations of Elizabeth I. One reviewer of Dr. Beem’s latest work notes, ―This is one of the most interesting books on Elizabeth I’s international relations to appear for some time. It introduces new material and takes our view of the Elizabethan regime’s diplomacy and Dr. Charles Beem cultural relations well beyond Europe, where enquiries to date have largely been photo provided by Dr. Beem contained.‖ Dr. Beem’s earlier works have included The Lioness Roared: The Problems of Female Rule in English History (2006) and The Royal Minorities of Medieval and Early Modern England (2008). The showcase is sponsored by The Friends of the Library of UNC Pembroke and is free and open to the public. Mary Livermore Library Receives a Grant The Mary Livermore Library recently applied for and was awarded an LSTA NC ECHO Digitization Grant from the State Library of North Carolina. This grant will allow the Library to employ a full-time, time-limited staff person to work exclusively with adding the Elmer Hunt photographs to CONTENTdm and making digital copies available online. This will allow the images to be accessed via the internet for everyone to view. Hopefully, many of the historic photographs that were displayed last year during a series of discussion and identification programs will soon be shared with researchers and family genealogists on the Library’s website. Page 6 Library Lines Page 7 Library Lines Elmer W. Hunt Photograph Identification and Discussion Series Returns Student Assistants by Robert Arndt by June Power Following the successful series of programs during the 2010-11 academic year, the Elmer W. Hunt Photograph Identification and Discussion Series returns with a November 1 program focusing on the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the military service of area residents. The format will be a panel discussion led by a moderator. Panelists for the November discussion will include Rudy Paul Locklear, James Arthur Jones, Jesse Oxendine, Delano Cummings and W.D. Oxendine. All these veterans were decorated for their services in combat. Rudy Locklear and Delano Cummings served in Vietnam. W.D. Oxendine served in Korea. Jesse Oxendine and James Jones served in World War II. This year the Library was proud to see witness the graduation of three outstanding student assistants who have been with us for the entire four years of their tenure at UNCP. To recognize their hard work and dedication to the Library, each student selected a book in which was placed a nameplate in their honor. The Library can’t thank these students enough for everything they have done, and are so proud of their accomplishments. They will be greatly missed. Below are statements they provided concerning the books they chose for the honorary nameplate placement. Jesse Oxendine was a member of the 82nd Airborne. He was also a part of the liberation of the Wobbelen Concentration Camp in Germany. Jesse Oxendine is now a retired pharmacist living in Charlotte. James Arthur Jones also fought in World War II and earned five Battle Stars. After the war Mr. Jones returned to Robeson County and served as a teacher and principal at Prospect School for more than 30 years. W.D. Oxendine served in Korea. After the war he returned to Pembroke and earned his degree at Pembroke State College. Mr. Oxendine taught school for six years and then served in North Carolina’s Department of Administration in the public relations department for 27 years. Rudy Locklear saw action in Vietnam where he was award the Purple Heart. He is currently commander of the Robeson County Chapter 47 of Disabled American Veterans. Delano Cummings served three tours in Vietnam. He later wrote Moon Dash Warrior about his experiences. I have loved working in the library and I appreciate the opportunity that you have given me these past couple years. My favorite book (for right now anyways) is Dear John by Nicholas Sparks. I love his books, but I'm a romantic at heart! Two other discussion and identification events are planned in 2012. The first will be held on January 24. The topic will be Strike at the Wind. Panelists will be Harvey Godwin, Carol Oxendine, Terena Nephew, Dr. Randolph Umberger, and Dr. David Oxendine. Thanks again for everything you and the rest of the library staff have done for me. The second program on March 20 will focus on the LRDA and Lumbee Homecoming. Panelists will be Lorna Ricotta, Florence Ransom, Hazel Perez, Dr. Cheryl Locklear, and Ken Maynor. Bethany Belk All the programs are sponsored by The Friends of the Library and will be held in the main reading room of the Mary Livermore Library beginning at 7:00 p.m. These programs are free and open to the public. Photo by June Power Circa 1971 Strike at the Wind circa 1984 Keon Pacheco Photo by June Power Lumbee Pow-Wow VFW circa 1973 The Black Christ & Other Poems by Countee Cullen is the book I choose. Countee Cullen was someone I had no knowledge about prior to my becoming an English major, and he was the topic of my first major paper. This book along with a few others was part of my research. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to work here. I picked First Impressions by Nora Roberts. She is my all time favorite author, and I have been reading her books since I was about 13. I picked this particular book because for some reason it just touched me when I read it. I do not know why. It was just a very good book. For plans after graduation, you know that I will continue to stay in the area and look for jobs, take a year off of school, and then try to get into graduate school here to get my master’s in Social Work or Counseling. I am getting married sometime this summer. I just want to thank you for giving me the opportunity to work here the past four years. I never thought that I would still be working here, that I would have met so many great people, and that I would have loved working here so much. Samantha Temple Photo by June Power Page 6 Library Lines Page 7 Library Lines Elmer W. Hunt Photograph Identification and Discussion Series Returns Student Assistants by Robert Arndt by June Power Following the successful series of programs during the 2010-11 academic year, the Elmer W. Hunt Photograph Identification and Discussion Series returns with a November 1 program focusing on the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the military service of area residents. The format will be a panel discussion led by a moderator. Panelists for the November discussion will include Rudy Paul Locklear, James Arthur Jones, Jesse Oxendine, Delano Cummings and W.D. Oxendine. All these veterans were decorated for their services in combat. Rudy Locklear and Delano Cummings served in Vietnam. W.D. Oxendine served in Korea. Jesse Oxendine and James Jones served in World War II. This year the Library was proud to see witness the graduation of three outstanding student assistants who have been with us for the entire four years of their tenure at UNCP. To recognize their hard work and dedication to the Library, each student selected a book in which was placed a nameplate in their honor. The Library can’t thank these students enough for everything they have done, and are so proud of their accomplishments. They will be greatly missed. Below are statements they provided concerning the books they chose for the honorary nameplate placement. Jesse Oxendine was a member of the 82nd Airborne. He was also a part of the liberation of the Wobbelen Concentration Camp in Germany. Jesse Oxendine is now a retired pharmacist living in Charlotte. James Arthur Jones also fought in World War II and earned five Battle Stars. After the war Mr. Jones returned to Robeson County and served as a teacher and principal at Prospect School for more than 30 years. W.D. Oxendine served in Korea. After the war he returned to Pembroke and earned his degree at Pembroke State College. Mr. Oxendine taught school for six years and then served in North Carolina’s Department of Administration in the public relations department for 27 years. Rudy Locklear saw action in Vietnam where he was award the Purple Heart. He is currently commander of the Robeson County Chapter 47 of Disabled American Veterans. Delano Cummings served three tours in Vietnam. He later wrote Moon Dash Warrior about his experiences. I have loved working in the library and I appreciate the opportunity that you have given me these past couple years. My favorite book (for right now anyways) is Dear John by Nicholas Sparks. I love his books, but I'm a romantic at heart! Two other discussion and identification events are planned in 2012. The first will be held on January 24. The topic will be Strike at the Wind. Panelists will be Harvey Godwin, Carol Oxendine, Terena Nephew, Dr. Randolph Umberger, and Dr. David Oxendine. Thanks again for everything you and the rest of the library staff have done for me. The second program on March 20 will focus on the LRDA and Lumbee Homecoming. Panelists will be Lorna Ricotta, Florence Ransom, Hazel Perez, Dr. Cheryl Locklear, and Ken Maynor. Bethany Belk All the programs are sponsored by The Friends of the Library and will be held in the main reading room of the Mary Livermore Library beginning at 7:00 p.m. These programs are free and open to the public. Photo by June Power Circa 1971 Strike at the Wind circa 1984 Keon Pacheco Photo by June Power Lumbee Pow-Wow VFW circa 1973 The Black Christ & Other Poems by Countee Cullen is the book I choose. Countee Cullen was someone I had no knowledge about prior to my becoming an English major, and he was the topic of my first major paper. This book along with a few others was part of my research. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to work here. I picked First Impressions by Nora Roberts. She is my all time favorite author, and I have been reading her books since I was about 13. I picked this particular book because for some reason it just touched me when I read it. I do not know why. It was just a very good book. For plans after graduation, you know that I will continue to stay in the area and look for jobs, take a year off of school, and then try to get into graduate school here to get my master’s in Social Work or Counseling. I am getting married sometime this summer. I just want to thank you for giving me the opportunity to work here the past four years. I never thought that I would still be working here, that I would have met so many great people, and that I would have loved working here so much. Samantha Temple Photo by June Power Page 8 Library Lines Poetry/Short Prose Contest Winning Entries 2011 Emily McLamb Page 5 Library Lines History Professors Kick Off Faculty Author Showcase Series by Robert Arndt Jane Haladay Drive Climb onto Daddy’s lap. Put my tiny hands on top of his. There’s nothing but the road ahead And time We Drive The back roads With windows down And bright, wide eyes. I crane my neck to see The pine trees whizzing by. Those summer days with Dad I hope I never forget As now I drive on my own The highways With windows down And bright, wide eyes. I glance in the mirror to see Time whizzing by. Joshua Webb A Grand Going Away Party “What we long for and cannot attain is dearer than what we have already attained.” -Kahlil Gibran There’s the wind. She sings to me through her wind chimes of being an artist. How can this be? Prove it! She grabs her celestial brushes—a thousand Sakuras— painting the dawning sky pink and white: a thousand cherry blossoms are windsailing. The trees sway left and right, waving goodbye and gentle farewell kisses take flight between their limbs. Flying cranes are overlooking a grand going away party. The wind continues her singing: ―I’m painting your departing innermost longings, my dear; look again at the cherry blossoms windsailing.‖ Looking, I question the wind: ―In that case, will the cherry blossoms reach the land of fulfillment beyond my horizon?‖ She replies, ―Only you know the truth! As you hold your heartache with both hands as you do now, gazing at this vast ocean of desire, I see your reverence growing on this little island of ours.‖ It Would Be Enough (for Jack) This ritual of situation: cup of coffee, stack of ungraded papers. Reading glasses, clipboard, my cowboy hat to shade the beautiful new spring sun. I sit at the patio table preparing to get to work. Breeze echoes through the tall loblolly pines, the canary forsythia has begun her vibrant weeping. I discover I don’t have a pen. Pause. Look around. A black-capped chickadee flits into the still bare branches of the delicate dogwood who waits her turn to recite in snowy quatrains. Dark-eyed juncos and the family of Carolina wrens with their kabuki eyebrows pick through the humus of pine needles and seeds. I am neither too hot nor too cold. Not too rich nor too poor. Not too old nor too young, Neither too full nor too hungry. This moment is poised upon the tip of the pen that is not in my hand, the pen I will have to arise from this perfect place to retrieve. Wait. Lean back. Look up. Breathe in birdsong, Pine sway, and yellow. With nothing else before me or behind, with nothing in my hands, all this would be enough. The Mary Livermore Library will host a Faculty Authors Showcase on Wednesday, September 28, at 3:30 p.m. in the main reading room. Dr. Rose Stremlau and Dr. Charles Beem will be speaking about their books. Dr. Rose Stremlau photo by Raul Rubiera Dr. Stremlau will discuss her first book, Sustaining the Cherokee Family: Kinship and the Allotment of an Indigenous Nation. The book contains is a study of allotment, the subdivision and privatization of tribal land, in the Cherokee Nation. During the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century, the United States government forcibly allotted tribal land as a means to assimilate Indian people into American society. Dr. Stremlau notes ―By contextualizing the story of allotment into the larger fabric of Cherokee family life, I’ve brought order to the story of an important, misunderstood policy that continues to have an enormous impact on Indian communities today. The evolution of allotment was complicated, the administration of it was a mess, and the outcomes have been disastrous. Against that chaos, I emphasize the consistency of family life against great odds and explain how Cherokees adapted to remain a people connected by the values and behaviors associated with kinship.‖ Dr. Stremlau has been a member of the History Department since 2006. She won a University Teaching award in 2009 and has published numerous articles and essays. Dr. Stremlau was awarded an American Fellowship from the American Association of University Women that allowed her to complete the book she will be presenting September 28. Dr. Charles Beem will speak about his latest book, The Foreign Relations of Elizabeth I. One reviewer of Dr. Beem’s latest work notes, ―This is one of the most interesting books on Elizabeth I’s international relations to appear for some time. It introduces new material and takes our view of the Elizabethan regime’s diplomacy and Dr. Charles Beem cultural relations well beyond Europe, where enquiries to date have largely been photo provided by Dr. Beem contained.‖ Dr. Beem’s earlier works have included The Lioness Roared: The Problems of Female Rule in English History (2006) and The Royal Minorities of Medieval and Early Modern England (2008). The showcase is sponsored by The Friends of the Library of UNC Pembroke and is free and open to the public. Mary Livermore Library Receives a Grant The Mary Livermore Library recently applied for and was awarded an LSTA NC ECHO Digitization Grant from the State Library of North Carolina. This grant will allow the Library to employ a full-time, time-limited staff person to work exclusively with adding the Elmer Hunt photographs to CONTENTdm and making digital copies available online. This will allow the images to be accessed via the internet for everyone to view. Hopefully, many of the historic photographs that were displayed last year during a series of discussion and identification programs will soon be shared with researchers and family genealogists on the Library’s website. Page 4 Library Lines Library Updates by June Power Spring and summer brought a time of change to the Library. Several new items are now available for check out at the Circulation Desk for our patrons. The Friends of the Library purchased five iPads that are now available for student use. Introduced in late March, the iPads have already experienced great popularity. Students may check one out for 24 hours at a time, and often there is a waiting list for their use. Additionally, the Division of Information Technology as part of their reorganization transferred recording equipment to the Library for general circulation to UNCP patrons. As with the iPads, the video cameras, tripods, and digital voice recorders will circulate for 24 hours. These expansions of service have been met with great enthusiasm by those visiting the Circulation Desk. The Circulation Desk also dealt with change in spaces in the Library as additional shelving was added to the first floor near the media section. The Library for some time now has been struggling with space issues; the media section, especially, was overflowing its area. Three additional rows of shelving have greatly alleviated this crowding, and provide for some growth room for the next couple of years. However, this was the last remaining space in the Library where shelving can be added, so future growth issues are still expected. Another change in the Library is the addition of two Second Life capable workstations. The computer workstations were purchased from funds received in a LSTA technology grant through the State Library of North Carolina. The Library began offering services in the virtual world of Second Life last year, and will continue to provide reference, book clubs, instruction, and more. As the Second Life lab on campus is often used for classes, and the program requires a fairly substantial amount of computer graphics and power, the Library wanted to provide access within the building to this program which allows users to experience in 3D places and things they otherwise could not in other ways. Also, a destination guide service will be added to those already being provided in order to help guide people to places in Second Life that are useful and fun. Mary Livermore Library Book Sale by Carl Danis Every year the Mary Livermore Library receives a significant number of books and media as gifts. What happens to these items? After being checked for possible inclusion into the collection, those not added proceed to the book sale. Annually the Library has a book sale during National Library Week. The purpose of National Library Week is to draw attention to the contributions to and promotion of the Library. In addition to the promotion of National Library Week, the book sale brings in some money for the Friends of the Library of the University of North Carolina at Pembroke and it gives new useful life to books that may not otherwise have one. This past year the book sale had its best showing in five years. The difference this year was having a ―mini book sale‖ between the Thanksgiving and Christmas breaks. It allowed people to snag some good reading material to take on break with them. Assuming we have some nice material, the plan is to continue this tradition in the years to come. Page 9 Library Lines “A North Carolina Evening @ the Library” by Susan F. Whitt The Friends of the Library celebrated their tenth annual benefit held on April 8, 2011, at the Mary Livermore Library. This was a significant occasion that was celebrated by all attendees. The UNCP Guitar Ensemble directed by Derek Day, a faculty member in the Music Department, entertained guests while they dined from food stations that reflected an international variety of foods. During this time, guests were able to bid on silent auction items which included pottery, hand-made items, gift certificates, jewelry, and many more sought-after articles. The evening’s entertainment began with a welcome by Dr. Elinor Foster, Dean of Library Services. Dr. Judy Curtis, President of the Friends of the Library, presented Anne Coleman, who introduced the Friends of the Library scholarship winners (pictured below). This was a special highlight of the evening. Hannah L. Brumfield was awarded the $1,000 non-endowed Friends of the Library Scholarship; Courtney M. Stoker was awarded the endowed Friends of the Library Honors College Scholarship; Maria B. Hockaday was awarded the endowed Generalist Scholarship and Heidi L. Dingwell was awarded a non-endowed Generalist Scholarship; Andrea Collen, Briana Flores, Allona J. Frazier, Qi (Larry) Liu, Glenda J. Lowery, and Weitang (Chris) Pan were each awarded a $250 book scholarship. ―Tar Heel Tales and Tunes @ the Library‖ raised over $11,000 which will be used to support the Friends of the Library initiatives. Providing scholarships, sponsoring author appearances and reading programs, and funding of a book and a DVD lease program are among the projects made possible by the Friends of the Library fundraising activities. To learn more about the Friends of the Library, how to apply for their scholarships, or to join our Friends of the Library, please call the Mary Livermore Library at 910.775.4242 or go to the Library’s webpage at www.uncp.edu/library . The 2011 Scholarship winners were introduced by Anne Coleman. Back: Weitang (Chris) Pan, Qi (Larry) Liu, Glenda Lowery, Courtney Stoker, Hannah Brumfield, Allona Frazier, Anne Coleman Front: Andrea Collen, Briana Flores, Maria Hockaday, Heidi Dingwell Page 10 Library Lines New Beginnings, Recognitions and Scholarship Activities for Library Staff by David W. Young The entire staff of the Mary Livermore Library would like to take this opportunity to bid a fond farewell to one staff member, recognize two other individuals who have reached specific career milestones, and publicize specific staff scholarship activities. Brenda Bullock Photo from the 1972 Indianhead On June 30, Brenda Bullock retired after 41 years of dedicated service to the Library. Although born and raised in Lumberton, Brenda was ―transplanted‖ during her junior year of high school to Fairmont, where she continues to reside today. She started her career at the Library on June 1, 1970. During her years of employment, Brenda experienced many different developments which impacted workflow, including a major renovation of the Library in 1997 that replaced the open workBrenda Bullock 2011 station environment with a series of staff offices on the first floor as well as the transition from the old card catalog to BraveCat. Page 3 Library Lines Continued from front page The Library has also added the annual bibliographies of campus scholarship to its online collection. The Library has been compiling this bibliography since 1980. Library staff members believe that the accomplishments of UNCP faculty and staff are a significant part of the history of the University, so each year an attempt is made to identify, record, and archive as many of these accomplishments as possible. The bibliography was normally produced in print and copies kept in the Library. These scholarly documents have been digitized and made available to researchers online. Most of the documents have indexes that list each scholar by name and the page numbers for the scholar’s citations. The online version is also searchable by name or keyword. Like the yearbooks, the bibliographies from 1980 to 2011 can be accessed from the Library’s online catalog, BraveCat, and from the Library’s Special Collections webpage at the following URL: http://www.uncp.edu/ library/special/scholarship/index.html. Photographs from the Indianhead yearbooks During her spare time, Brenda enjoys crafting, sewing, pets, and travel. The entire staff wishes Brenda well as she enters a new chapter in her life. Lillian Brewington was recognized on April 11 as having received faculty emeritus status, the only librarian to ever receive such worthy distinction. She had been a permanent employee of the Library for over 36 years before her retirement on July 31, 2009. Currently, she works in the Special Collections area of the Library on a partLillian Brewington time basis. Lillian began her professional career on July 17, 1975. Students dancing around the Maypole Photo taken from the Indianhead 1957 Rob Wolf, Serials/Digital Operations Coordinator, received notification on May 4, 2011, that he had been awarded tenure, effective August 11, 2011. Rob joined the library staff on November 1, 2005. Rob’s main job responsibilities include the following: managing the selection, organization, and utilization of serials subscriptions; planning, coordinating, or managing digital library initiatives, and serving as the chief liaison with UNCP faculty or patrons concerning serials purchases and digital initiatives. Dr. Elinor Foster, Dean of Library Services, attended the Annual Meeting of the American Library Association in New Orleans, Louisiana, on June 24-27. Anne Coleman, Assistant Dean for Research Services, continues to serve as an associate editor for North Carolina Libraries and remains active as part of the editorial board for the Round Table for Ethnic Minority Concerns (REMCo) newsletter. Additionally, Anne and Robert Arndt, Reference/Instructional Services Librarian, compiled an annual bibliography of campus writing efforts, Campus Scholarship, 2010-2011: A Bibliography. Also, Anne, Robert, Carlene Cummings, Melanie Wood, and David Young attended the Librarians Association of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (LAUN-CH) conference, ―Staying Vital in a Time of Change,‖ which was held at the William and Ida Friday Center for Continuing Education on March 7, 2011. Finally, Anne compiled a comprehensive bibliography for the UNCP English and Theatre Department, English and Theatre Department Faculty Scholarship, 2006-2011: A Bibliography. Robert Arndt published a review of the David Hursh and Chris Goertzen book, Good Medicine and Good Music: A Biography of Mrs. Joe Person, Patent Remedy Entrepreneur and Musician, including the Complete Text of Her 1903 Autobiography, which was accepted for publication in the next edition of North Carolina Libraries, which is due out in early 2011. College football at Pembroke State College Photo taken from the Indianhead 1947 Page 2 Library Lines Message from the Dean of Library Services August always brings the exhilaration that accompanies the start of the new academic year. New students and faculty members are welcomed and introduced to our outstanding library resources and helpful staff. Returning students and faculty are joyfully greeted as they visit the Mary Livermore Library and receive library updates and services as are suited to their preferences. Dr. Elinor Folger Foster Dean of Library Services Photo by Bobby Ayers Our community visitors are always important in planning for library programming as well. A series of discussions set for the 2011-12 academic year should be of interest to faculty, staff, students, and community members: the continuation of the Elmer W. Hunt Photograph Collection Identification and Discussion Series. Following up to the success of the programs held in 2010-11, the new series will continue the pursuit of information about the identification of persons pictured in the photographs and will also aid in publicizing the availability of this unique resource that is part of the Special Collections materials owned by the Mary Livermore Library. Information about the 2011-12 programs is contained in a related article by Robert Arndt. Page 11 Library Lines Virgil Oxendine, University Library Technician for Reference Services, presented on March 23 at the Chancellor’s Dining Room an update on the Beautification Subcommittee, for which he serves as Chair. Additionally, Virgil attended the Diversity in Higher Education conference, ―Equity and Inclusion: Vision, Strategies, and Actions for Higher Education and the Workplace,‖ which was held at the Washington Duke Inn in Durham, on April 27-28. June Power, Access Services/Reference Librarian, published two articles in the April-June 2011 edition of the Journal of Access Services. The titles are ―Training 2.0 – Library Assistants in the Age of Information‖ and ―III, ERes, and Ares: A Reserves Comparison.‖ Susan Whitt, Associate Dean for Collection Management, and Carl Danis, Collection Development/ Electronic Resources Librarian, attended the 20th annual North Carolina Serials Conference at the William and Ida Friday Center for Continuing Education in Chapel Hill, on March 10. Melanie Wood attended the Conference for Entrepreneurial Librarians on March 10, at Wake Forest University . She also delivered a presentation, ―Library Instruction Boot Camp: A Checklist for a Successful Information Literacy Session,‖ at the Metrolina Library Association Information Literacy Conference, which was held on the campus of Johnson & Wales University in Charlotte, on June 16. It will be my pleasure to coordinate with the sponsors of the Hunt series and other informational and entertaining programs, the Friends of the Library of UNC Pembroke. Returning as President in 2011-12 is Dr. Judy Curtis. Vice President/President-elect is Bob Fisher. Returning as Secretary is Anne Coleman; Susan Whitt will continue to serve as Treasurer. I appreciate their service and suggest that everyone who uses our excellent library join or rejoin the Friends of the Library. This support organization adds significant depth to the cultural and informational opportunities made available to faculty, staff, students, and community users of the Mary Livermore Library. And all of the above-named groups are welcomed back to UNCP as another stimulating academic year is launched. Message from the FOL President An Exciting Year to Push Forward A new academic school year is an exciting time both to reflect on past achievements and to set new goals for the future. The coming year at UNCP promises to be especially exhilarating as the budget uncertainties of the past few years have been faced and resolved, senior administrative positions have been filled and leadership stabilized, and programs have been conceived and implemented to improve student success rates. As you walk around campus, you can feel the hum of the whirring engine that is UNCP. All its parts are finely tuned and its momentum is propelling us forward. Every office, every department, and every member of the campus community play vital Dr. Judy Curtis, roles in our push forward. President, Friends of the Library of UNC Pembroke The Friends of the Library are eager for the new academic year to begin. As we reflect on past successful endeavors, we pledge to continue funds for the programs Photo provided by Dr. Curtis the campus relies on. We enthusiastically provide funds for student scholarships, audio books, photo identifications in the Hunt special collection, and faculty author recognition events. As we set new goals for the future, we anticipate adding additional monetary and technology scholarships for students, adding library materials that can circulate, inviting renowned speakers to campus, and more. Some say the Library is the heart of the campus; others say it’s where the intellect is inspired. Both views recognize the vital role of the Mary Livermore Library. Please take a moment as this exciting new academic year begins to join the Friends of the Library in supporting the Library as it propels the campus forward. Front row from left: Carlene Cummings, Robert Arndt, June Power, Anne Coleman, Virgil Oxendine Back row from left: Dr. Elinor Foster, Carl Danis, Robert Wolf, David Young, Melanie Wood An Invitation To Join FRIENDS OF THE MARY LIVERMORE LIBRARY MEMBERSHIP FORM The University of North Carolina at Pembroke ―Without Libraries what have we? We have no past and no future.‖ - Ray Bradbury Please use this form to become a member of the Friends of the Library of The University of North Carolina at Pembroke. The form and your check, made out to UNCP, should be mailed to: Membership Chair, Friends of the Library Committee, Mary Livermore Library, UNC Pembroke, P.O. Box 1510, Pembroke, NC 28372-1510. phone 1.800.949.UNCP. Library Lines I would like to support the Friends of the Library of The University of North Carolina at Pembroke through the following ( Please check as appropriate): UNCP Student Membership……..$5.00 Patron Membership…………………….$100.00 Annual Membership…………..…$10.00 Life Membership………………..……..$1000.00 Contributing Membership……….$25.00 Corporate Membership……..………….$400.00 Sustaining Membership…………$50.00 Corporate Life Membership…………..$5000.00 Name Volume 20, Number 2 City/State/Zip Code Home Phone ALL CONTRIBUTIONS ARE TAX DEDUCTIBLE. Check here if you would like to serve on an FOL committee Check here if this is a new membership or a renewal This edition of Library Lines was edited by Karen S. Orr Fritts (karen.fritts@uncp.edu). Other members of the Publications Committee include Robert Arndt, Anne Coleman, Carl Danis, Dr. Elinor Foster (ex-officio), Gwen Locklear, Jean Sexton, Jessica Karpel, Susan Whitt, Melanie Wood, and David Young. Questions: call 910.521.6656, 1.800.949.UNCP or www.uncp.edu/library. Photos provided by Jessica Karpel unless otherwise noted. 325 copies of this document were printed at a cost of $1.18 per copy. Mary Livermore Library The University of North Carolina at Pembroke Pembroke North Carolina 28372-1510 by Anne H. Coleman The Mary Livermore Library always seeks to add to its online resources in order to provide patrons with a variety of ways to access library resources. Email Work Phone August 2011 Library Adds New Online Resources Dr. Mr. Mrs. Ms. (circle correct title) Mailing Address Mary Livermore Library Recently, the Library was able to add a very popular local resource to its online collections. In collaboration with the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center, the Library was able to make the University’s yearbooks from 1942 to 2010 available online. These pictorially historic documents are often used by students, faculty, and researchers to gather information on the University and on former students and personnel. They have also been used to supply information on local, and even national, history. Often researchers have requested photographs that document the history of the Lumbee people, but there have also been requests for pictures Photo of College ESSO Station from the Indianhead circa 1946 of the College Esso gas station in the 1940s and of traditional May Day activities, like the Maypole Dance, that were celebrated in different parts of the U.S. from the early 1900s and in Europe from the eighteenth century. Until recently, it was necessary to come to the Library and search printed copies of the yearbooks, titled Indianhead, to find the desired photos; however, in February 2011, library staff learned that the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center, a statewide digitization and digital publishing program, was working with North Carolina colleges and universities to get their historical materials, like college yearbooks, digitized and published online. The Center offered to scan all of UNCP’s yearbooks and make them available online via the Center’s website. UNC Pembroke became one of the first 30 institutions to participate in this effort, along with UNC Chapel Hill, Duke, East Carolina, Appalachian State, Elon, Fayettteville State, and many others. A quotation on the Center’s website states, ―Student yearbooks provide a window into college life in North Carolina from the 1890s to the present. From sports teams to sororities, fashions to hairstyles, these volumes document the changing attitudes and culture of college students year by year.‖ This invaluable window to UNCP’s history is now open and easily accessible online. The yearbooks can be accessed from the Library’s online catalog, BraveCat, and from the Library’s Special Collections webpage at the following URL: http:// www.uncp.edu/library/special/yearbooks/list.html. Online access has been established for part of another popular research collection: student theses. The Library routinely catalogs and houses copies of student theses from the Chancellor’s Scholars, the Esther G. Maynor Honors College, and the School of Graduate Studies. Electronic copies of the theses are now placed in the Institutional Repository (IR) and made available to researchers via the Internet. Rather than having to come into the Library to use a copy of one of the theses, researchers can access full-text versions of many of the theses by searching the Library’s online catalog or the University’s IR at the following URL: http:// libres.uncg.edu/ir/uncp/. Continues on page 3