Central University Libraries Southern Methodist University • PO Box 750135 • Dallas TX 75275-0135
Cen t ra l Un ive r s i t y L ib ra r i e sSouthe rn Me thod i s t Un ive r s i t y • PO Box 750135 • Da l l a s TX 75275-0135
2008-09
CUL
Southe rn Me thod i s t Un ive r s i t y • Cen t ra l Un ive r s i t y L ib ra r i e s Annua l Repo r t
Contents
Unbooked and Unbound 2Support for Central University Libraries is an essential part of SMU's capital campaign "SMU Unbridled: The Second Century Campaign." New and longtime friends are helping the libraries meet the sophisticated needs of the digital age and preserve the important legacies of the past.
Rich with Resources 4From a forgotten painting of the first president of the Republic of Texas to historic photographs of everyday Texans, new library acquisitions are ripe for researchers. The number of digital academic journals accessed through JSTOR has doubled and opera lovers can find their favorite aria in the extensive Wilson Snodgrass Opera collection.
Gifts and Gatherings 8SMU library lovers listened to favorite authors, traveled to important libraries and, with their gifts, planted the seeds of knowledge for current and future scholars.
Staff Achievements and Awards 10Selected Statistics 13Donors 14
On the cover:Wood-carving detail from DeGolyer Library portico
Inside cover: Fayette County, Texas, 1895, albumen print, Lawrence T. Jones IIITexas Photography Collection, DeGolyer Library
Striving for successwithout hard work . . .
Plant More Seeds!An article in the June 2009 issue of Harvard BusinessReviewmade the suggestion that, in order to have moretomatoes, one first had to plant more seeds!That piece
of advice describes CUL’s modus operandi for the
year. Why do we need more meta phoric tomatoes?
Because if SMU’s libraries are to sustain their levels of
excellence while growing to meet the increasingly
sophisticated needs of the digital age, they must imple-
ment innovative and aggressive approaches.
In fall 2008, SMU launched its capital campaign—
SMU Unbridled:The Second Century Campaign. CULis an integral part of the University’s bid to stretch
itself to the next level of academic prestige and
accomplishment. The CUL Campaign Committee, one
of 17 committees overall, is chaired by SMU Libraries
Executive Board members Ann Brookshire’77 and Tav
Lupton ’79. This group is charged with raising money
specifically for library objectives. This first year, we
focused on creating infrastructure, networking and
building our base.
The CUL development team members are now in
place, led by Paulette Mulry ’83, director of develop-
ment, assisted by Tom Greene ’06 and Amy Carver
’94, director of Friends of the SMU Libraries/
Colophon and her assistant Cindy Ruppi. A smooth
and fully staffed operation paved the way for a joint
meeting with SMU’s New York City Campaign Com -
mittee, with more such occasions planned for 2009-
2010. The CUL Campaign Committee met twice in
2008-09 with some members joining the Libraries
Executive Board in New York City for the fourth
annual library field trip. Progress was celebrated
in April with a reception featuring Sen. Kay Bailey
Hutchison as the speaker and recognizing the women
who have been honored so far in the Remember theLadies! campaign. More than $600,000 has been raised
. . . is like trying toharvest where youhave not planted.David Bly
toward the $1 million goal to endow an archivist posi-
tion for the Archives of Women of the Southwest.
At the same time, CUL has been making good on its
promises from last year. The strategic planning process
was completed, with the final plan—Unbooked andUnbound: Central University Libraries for the SecondCentury—presented to library staff on October 2
smu.edu/cul/stratplan/unbooked.pdf. More than
6,000 digital images are available in the CUL digital
library and its use continues to grow. Since September
2008, we have received 27,219 visits and 131,069
page views from users all over the world. DeGolyer
Library made its most significant acquisition to date by
purchasing the Lawrence T. Jones III Texas
Photography Collection—the most com -
prehensive and valuable gathering of Texas-
related photography in private hands. New
online resources include a major expansion
of the JSTOR database that more than
doubled the JSTOR journals to which wehave full-text access.
But, to return to our theme of planting more
seeds.To create an abundant harvest, it takes
a lot of seeds, many farm laborers, fertile
soil and fortuitous weather conditions. The
leadership efforts of our campaign co-chairs, Ann
Brookshire and Tav Lupton, have been instrumental
in helping us till the soil and begin the planting process.
For a successful harvest, we need your help. Ann and
Tav will be expanding our networks and bringing
people together to brainstorm—finding work for
everyone according to their talents. If you have a
talent—or some seeds—please join the collective!
My thanks to all of you for your support this year,
Gillian M. McCombsDean and Director, Central University Libraries
CUL Capital Campaign Co-chairs Ann Brookshire and Tav Lupton; Dean and Director of Central UniversityLibraries Gillian McCombs
2
If SMU’s libraries are to sustain
their current levels of excellence
while growing to meet the
increasingly sophisticated
needs of the digital age, they
must implement innovative
and aggressive approaches.
— G I L L I A N M C C OM B SDean and D i re c to r ,
C en t ra l Un ive r s i t y L ib ra r i e s
Unbooked and Unbound Campaign keeps SMU’s heart healthySupport for SMU’s Central University Libraries is an
essential part of the University’s Second Century
Campaign—which seeks to “dramatically advance”
Southern Methodist University among the ranks of
United States institutions of higher education, says
Tavenner “Tav” C. Lupton III ’79, co-chair of the
CUL Capital Campaign Committee.
Lupton and co-chair Ann Brookshire ’77 say that the
strength of SMU’s library collections and services are
at the heart of SMU’s goal of becoming a leading
research institution. A high-tech, 21st-century
library system with a robust collection is an essential
component of SMU’s commitment to scholar-
ship and is critical to creating an active learn-
ing environment for students and faculty,
Brookshire says.
“The campaign will provide money to upgrade
for today’s technology,” Lupton says. “But books
are not dinosaurs. We also are renovating to
make more physical space for books. Another
important goal is to make the library a destina-
tion spot on campus—a place where students want
to spend time.”
As an active volunteer at SMU, Brookshire also knows
what a vital role SMU libraries play at the University.
Laura Bush Promenade, Fondren Library Center
Vice President for Development andExternal Affairs Brad Cheves, HonoraryCo-chair of Campaign SteeringCommittee for Houston and LEBmember Sue Trammell Whitfield andGillian McCombs at the CampaignRegional Kickoff for Houston.
“The more I’ve learned about SMU libraries, the more
impressed I’ve been,” she says. “The health of these
libraries is critical to the welfare of the University.”
Books show the Prothro legacyOpen a book from Fondren Library and check to see
who paid for it.
If it’s a recently purchased book, there’s an even
chance that the bookplate will show that it was bought
with money from the Prothro Endowment General
Book Fund.
“Elizabeth Perkins Prothro and her family have been
major supporters of the SMU libraries,” says Curt
Holleman, deputy director of Central University
Libraries. “During the past 10 years, we have used
their endowment fund to buy more than half of all
of the new books we have purchased in Fondren
Library. Their support has been critical in building
our collection.”
The Perkins Administration Building, the
Perkins School of Theology and Perkins
Natatorium are named in honor of Joe and
Lois Perkins, the parents of Elizabeth
Perkins Prothro. Elizabeth Perkins
Prothro Hall will open in Septem ber
at the Perkins School of The ology
where Bridwell Library houses the
Elizabeth Perkins Prothro Galleries.
Elizabeth Perkins Prothro also was
a founding member of the Friends
of the SMU Libraries/Colophon and
served as its president for two years
during the 1970s.
3
The Archives of the Women of the Southwest includes
letters, diaries, documents and photographs of more
than 150 women as well as the records of women’s
organizations such as theYWCA.
Elizabeth Perkins Prothro
believed that a strong library
is central to the success
of a liberal arts university.
Elizabeth Perkins Prothro, who died May 23, “was an
avid reader and always interested in libraries,” says her
daughter-in-law Caren Prothro, a member of the SMU
Board of Trustees. “She believed that a strong library is
central to the success of a liberal arts university.”
Campaign remembers the “ladies”Sara Isadore Callaway, the first women’s editor of the
Dallas Morning News, called for free kindergartensand suffrage. Judge Sarah Hughes swore in Lyndon
B. J ohnson as president on Air Force One. MamieMcKnight founded Black Dallas Remembered, Inc.
Contributors to the Archives of Women of the South -
west “Remember the Ladies!” campaign now have
honored almost 90 women, some who are household
names and some who are not so famous.
Campaign organizers celebrated in April when they
hung a plaque with the names of these women in
DeGolyer Library and announced that they have
raised more than $600,000 of their $1 million goal.
“I am so proud of SMU for doing this to honor the
women who have done so much in our history,” said
Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, the campaign’s honorary
chair, at the celebration. “This collection of archives
will be a part of the history… of where we have
been. It will help us know where we can go.”
The library will use the money to endow an archivist
position for DeGolyer’s Archives of the Women of
the Southwest.
An archivist will make the collection “much more
accessible and easier to use,” says Russell Martin,
director of the DeGolyer Library. “An archivist has the
training necessary to collect important materials, to
process and organize them and to make them
accessible for teaching and research.”
U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, honorary chair of the Rememberthe Ladies! Campaign, Gordon Hosford and Mary Moore Free Hosford
Nell DeGolyer and her daughter,Virginia,as May Queen, Archives of Women of theSouthwest, DeGolyer Library.
Left: Holly Prothro Philbin, ElizabethProthro's granddaughter; CarenProthro, and Elizabeth Perkins Prothroat the 2007 Tables of Content. Caren Prothro served as honorary chairin honor of her mother-in-law.
Plant(plant) to establish or implant,as in ideas or principles.
Rich with Resources The rescue of Sam HoustonDorothy Garland ’46 knew immediately that she had
discovered a treasure even though the old oil-on-
canvas painting was torn and dirty.
She recognized Sam Houston, the first president of
the Republic of Texas. He is standing in a stately pose,
wearing a dark suit and a Cherokee blanket, in the
life-size portrait that was propped against the wall in
the Bridwell Library basement.
Garland also recognized the artist. Henry Arthur
McArdle’s paintings of the Alamo and the Battle of
San Jacinto hang in the Texas Capitol, says Garland, a
collector of early-Texas art and a member of the SMU
Libraries Executive Board.
“This is a treasure,” Garland told James McMillin,
associate director of the Bridwell Library, who had
invited her to see the portrait. “We have to get it out of
this basement. I’m going to raise the money to restore
this painting.”
And that’s what Garland did. With the help of a com-
mittee, she obtained donations from Frost Bank,
Thompson & Knight LLP, the Texas Historical Foun-
dation, the Texas Commission on the Arts, the Texas Art
Collectors Organization, Friends of the SMU Libraries/
Colophon and more than 60 individuals.
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Germinate(jûr´m nat´ ) to begin to grow or develop; to cause to comeinto existence or create.
e
The restored Sam Houston portrait now hangs in a
place of honor at DeGolyer Library, sharing space
with copies of Houston’s letters and speeches.
Wilson Snodgrass lovedthe operaWilson Snodgrass collected
operas on CD with a passion.
“I promised myself that I would
never collect more than five
recordings of any one opera,”
he once told his friend Tinsley
Silcox, CUL director of public
services.
Snodgrass, who died
Novem ber 19, 2008,
started work at Fon -
dren Library in 1959
as a cataloger and re -
tired as the Central
University Libraries
director of technical services in 1997.
In addition to CDs, he collected a wealth of opera mag-
azines, brochures and annual reports which he donated
to SMU’s Jake and Nancy Hamon Fine Arts Library.Left: Detail from 95-by-66-inch Henry McArdle canvasdepicting Sam Houston
Russell Martin, director of DeGolyer Library; Sam HoustonIV, great grandson of Sam Houston; and Dorothy Garland
5
The Jones collection of historical photos “is one of
the most comprehensive and valuable Texas-related
photography collections in existence,” says Anne
Peterson, curator of photographs at DeGolyer. “The
Below: Texas 1900, gelatin silver print.Inset: woman’s portrait, Travis County,1855, ambrotype, Lawrence T. Jones IIITexas Photography Collection
collection will make SMU a destination point
for anyone writing about Texas history.”
Not only does the collection include rare
portraits of famous names in history books, it also
includes thousands of photos of ordinary Texans—
including a cowboy branding cattle and a farmer
taking his produce to town in a wagon.
“The Jones collection is simply one of those land-
mark collections that come along once in a genera-
tion,” says Russell Martin, director of DeGolyer
Library. “Larry Jones has given all of us who care
about Texas history a tremendous resource. This col-
lection truly is a unique window on the past.”
The Jones collection is a significant addition to
DeGolyer’s already substantial collection of more
than 500,000 historic photographs, including valu-
able photographs of the American West, Mexico, rail-
roads and transportation worldwide.
Larry Jones has given all of
us who care about Texas
history a tremendous resource.
This collection truly is a
unique window on the past.
— R U SS E L L M A R T I Nd i re c to r , DeGo lye r L i b ra ry
String band, Hayden, Texas, 1900, gelatin silver print
The Wilson Snodgrass Opera Vertical File is a fine
tribute to an opera lover and a rich resource for
students, faculty and researchers who want to learn
about opera and its history, Silcox says.
“He was a quiet man who cared about this library and
the people in it,” he says. “He had a passion for his work
and for his music. He loved, loved, loved the opera.”
The best Texas photo collectionLarry Jones still remembers the day in the mid-1980s
when he bought a tintype of Cynthia Ann Parker at a
book show in Austin.
“I paid $2,000 for that photo,” he says. “Everyone
laughed at me for paying that much money.”
No one is laughing now. The photo is the only origi-nal photograph of the Texas pioneer who was kid-
napped by Comanche Indians when she was 9.
It’s just one of more than 5,000 photos in the Larry
T. Jones III Texas Photography Collection, which
DeGolyer Library recently purchased from Jones,
using funds from its endowment.
Foote lives on at DeGolyerMarion Castleberry enjoyed a 30-year
friendship with Horton Foote, the
Pulitzer-winning playwright who died
in March 2009. He is the author of
three books about Foote and co-founder
of the Horton Foote American Play -
wrights Festi val. Castleberry spent one
month analyzing the Horton Foote archives at
DeGolyer Library as the recipient of a Clements
Center DeGolyer Library Research Grant.
“The Horton Foote collection at DeGolyer is
remarkable,” says Castleberry, professor of theatre
arts at Baylor University. “There are hundreds of
books, letters, scripts and reviews. Pretty much, his
life is in that library.”
“I read everything,” he says. “I am very thankful for
my grant. My research at DeGolyer will make a huge
difference in my work.”
Castleberry is writing a literary biography that ex -
plores the root of Foote’s “methods, ideas, content
and style.”
6
Foote is a dominant figure in American theater,
Castleberry says. “He writes about the American
people and our everyday struggles and how the ordi-
nary American is extraordinary. He does that better
than anyone else.”
The Clements Center for Southwest Studies and
DeGolyer Library give research grants to visiting
scholars to encourage their use of the resources at
DeGolyer Library, says Russell Martin, director of
DeGolyer Library. “Providing these grants supports
advanced research and scholarship.”
CUL presents the first Weil awardJudges unanimously agreed that Ashley Bruckbauer
’09 was the winner of the first Larrie and Bobbi Weil
Undergraduate Research Award for her paper on
artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.
“Her paper represented a level of research and criti-
cal thinking one would expect of a first-rate graduate
student,” says Janis Bergman-Carton, chair and asso-
ciate professor of art history.
Bruckbauer, an art history and advertising major,
wrote her paper “Flanerie and the Lesbian Gaze:
Female Spectatorship in the Work of Toulouse-
Lautrec” for Bergman-Carton’s class Modern Art andMedia Culture.
Foote writes about the
American people and our
everyday struggles and
how the ordinary American
is extraordinary.
— M A R I O N C A S T L E B E R R YHor ton Foo te f e s t i va l co- founde r
Dean and Director of Central University Libraries Gillian McCombs and Ashley Bruckbauer
Horton Foote
federal employees of the National Archives and
Records Administration.
“At the Baker center, I discovered how wonderful it
can be to work with a great university,” Lowe says.
“One of my priorities is to create a strong partner-
ship with SMU.”
“We’re just beginning,” Lowe adds. But he already
has had several meetings with Dean and Director of
Central University Libraries Gillian McCombs.
“She has been wonderful at reaching out to us,” he says.
Lowe looks forward to the day when SMU students
and faculty will be using the George W. Bush presi-
dential archives for research and some students will
be working as interns at the library. He also is plan-
ning for exhibits and programs, some sponsored with
the SMU libraries, that will benefit students, faculty
and the community.
“Bobbi and I established the award because we wanted
to reward students who use SMU libraries for research,”
says Larrie Weil, a member of the SMU Libraries Exec -
utive Board. “Today, when you can find an answer on -
line in three minutes, we want to encourage students
who are doing thoughtful research.”
Research is an important part of undergraduate edu-
cation, says Bergman-Carton. “Serious undergradu-
ate research requires intellectual flexibility, creativity
and self confidence that prepare a student for any
field of endeavor.”
Bruckbauer plans to spend the 2009–2010 school
year teaching kindergarten in Shanghai, China, and
improving her Chinese. Eventually, she plans to earn
a doctorate in art history and specialize in 17th-
century Chinese art.
Preparing to open the Bush libraryFederal archivists from the temporary site of the
George W. Bush Presidential Library in Lewisville,
Texas, visited the campus in February and gave a
program about their work to library staff.
They are sorting through 49,000 cubic feet of mate-
rials, including 27,000 cubic feet of archives and
40,000 presidential gifts.
The tour was part of a new relationship being forged
between Bush Library staff and SMU library staff.
“I want to be sure that SMU knows that we are here
to be a resource for them,” says Alan Lowe, director
of the George W. Bush Presidential Library. “I want us
to work together as a team.”
Before becoming the director at the new Bush library,
Lowe worked six years as founding director of the
Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy at
the University of Tennessee. He and his team are
I remember many of my favorite
professors at SMU, including
my favorite literature professor,
Dr. Harryette Ehrhardt, who’s
still a friend of mine. Her
children’s literature class inspired
me to become a librarian.
— L A U R A B U S H2009 Commencement Spee ch
7
Growth (groth) development froma simpler to a more complex stage;gradual increase.
8
JSTOR offers a number of
advantages—including powerful
search and printing capabilities,
access from many locations
and availability for two
or more researchers at once.
How JSTOR comes to the rescueWhen the World Bank in Washington, D.C.,asked Tom
Fomby, professor of economics, to help write a paper
about “The Growth Implications of Natural Disasters
in Developing Countries,” he needed a little help.
“I am an expert in time-series econometric tech-
niques but know little about theories in development
economics, in general, and the implications of
natural disasters on economic development, in par-
ticular,” he says.
Fomby first consulted the Central University
Libraries extensive journal resources. He used
JSTOR as one resource to find articles on develop-
ment economics and natural disasters in “very short
order,” he says. “I was able to complete my review of
the literature in a matter of days as compared to
several weeks that would have been required in
former times.”
JSTOR has become “a basic way” of doing research
for many professors and students, says Curt Holleman,
deputy director of the Central University Libraries.
JSTOR offers a number of advantages—including
powerful search and printing capabilities, access
from many locations and availability for two or more
researchers at once.
CUL has purchased the remaining available segments
of JSTOR, an electronic archive of more than 1,000
core journals in the humanities, social sciences and
sciences. This purchase, funded by a grant from the
Friends of the SMU Libraries/Colophon, more than
doubles the number of JSTOR titles that were avail-
able at SMU one year ago.
Left: Tom Fomby, professor of economics
Harvest(här´v˘st) the result or consequence of an act, process or event;to gain.
The University Park Library andCentral University Libraries teamedup for “Paint the Town Red, Read,” a story time at Fondren Library.
Gifts and Gatherings Literature lovers line up for eventsWhy was an SMU law professor interviewing a
Scottish author who writes mysteries about a female
detective in Africa?
For two good reasons, says Fred Moss, associate pro-
fessor of law, who nominated Alexander McCall Smith,
author of the popular series The No.1 Ladies’ Detective
Author Alexander McCall Smith (left) accepted an honoraryDoctor of Humane Letters from SMU President R. Gerald Turner.
9
Agency, for an SMU honorary Doctor of HumaneLetters degree and moderated a May symposium with
the writer. The Friends of the SMU Libraries co-
sponsored the symposium.
First, Smith, who excelled as an international author-
ity on biomedical ethics before he became a full-time
writer, worked as a visiting professor at SMU’s
Dedman School of Law in the late 1980s and then
again in the fall of 1998. He co-authored a profes-
sional book with Daniel Schuman, professor of law,
and dedicated the first book in the Ladies Detective
series to Joseph W. McKnight, professor of law, and
his wife, Mimi.
Second, he and millions of other people enjoy
Smith’s books, Moss says. “And he is one of the most
delightful human beings you have ever met. He has a
wonderful wit.”
The Smith symposium exemplifies the diverse events
for literature lovers offered by Central University
Libraries in partnership with other SMU schools and
departments. The Friends of the SMU Libraries
hosted book signings and lectures by author Jim
Dent, Ebby Halliday and archaeologist Fred Wendorf.
DeGolyer Library hosted the annual Literary Festival,
sponsored with the SMU Department
of English, and the Brown Bag Lecture
Series, presented by the William P.
Clements Center for Southwest Studies.
“These stimulating and entertaining talks enhance our
understanding and expand our range of interests,”
says Judy McMillin, president of Friends of the
SMU Libraries.
Friends give welcome supportEvery year, the Friends of the SMU Libraries/
Colophon provides support with grants that are
funded by its Tables of Content event.
“These grants help the libraries purchase vital
resources and provide services that enrich the
University and our community,” says Judy
McMillin, Friends president.
“These grants always are a valuable resource
for all of the SMU libraries,” says Amy Carver, Friends
director. “This year, when our budgets were slimmer
because of the economy, the grants were particularly
appreciated.”
Friends of the Libraries/Colophon gave $45,986 in
one-time grants for 2009.
• $21,000 for the archival fee for JSTOR’s Arts and
Sciences Collections
• $9,920 for Economics, Econometrics and Finance
backfiles.
9
Lindsay Wellington, SMU junior; Donna Wellington,Tables of Content chair and vice president of Friends of SMU Libraries/Colophon, and Samantha Cosgrove,SMU sophomore, at Tables of Content.
Real estate legendEbby Halliday charmedguests at the booksign-ing for Ebby Halliday,the First Lady of Real Estate (BrownBooks, 2009)
“Billie” by Merritt Mauzey is one of 226 Mauzey prints from theJerry Bywaters Special Collections atHamon Art Library that will berestored thanks to the support of aFriends grant.
Mauzey was a contemporary of theTexas regionalist artists of the1930s and 1940s and known for hisinterpretation of rural farmingscenes, particularly that of the cottonindustry in Texas.
10
Friends of the SMU Libraries/Colophon Officers and Board of Directors
Judy McMillinPresident
Donna WellingtonVice President
Mary Helen BradfordSecretary
Curt HollemanTreasurer
Toni Terry Past President
Valentina CollinsJoan GosnellLyn HarperKaren MortazaviDarwin PayneJoanne PrattPat SpillmanHaroldW. StanleyPolly York
Ex Officio
Amy CarverGail DalyGillian M. McCombsRoberta Schaafsma
• $3,750 to Bridwell Library for special collections
material in areas including theology, church
history, liturgy and Methodism.
• $2,500 for partial funding of the new complete
works of Italian composer Claudio Monteverdi.
• $2,500 for a challenge grant for a CUL
telemarketing campaign.
• $1,716 for three volumes of The NewHollstein: Dutch and Flemish Etchings,Engravings, andWoodcuts,1450-1700.
• $1,000 to add to the Colophon
Collection of modern American
literature.
• $1,000 to purchase Civil War
photographs.
• $1,000 for the conservation of works of art
by noted Texas regionalist Merritt Mauzey.
• $600 for the Encyclopedia of Psychology andReligion.
• $500 for partial production costs of the 2009
issue of the Horton Foote Review.
• $500 for development of an online exhibition of
the Colophon Moderns Collection.
Friends of the SMU Libraries also approved annual
grants to assist in the funding of the CUL annual report
and to support two Library School Scholarship Awards,
the Effective Use of Information Technology Staff
Award and the Employee of the Year Staff Award
CUL AchievementsCindy Boeke, digital collections developer, and
Robert Walker, director, both of the Norwick Center
for Digital Services, published “SMU Central Uni-
versity Libraries’ Digital Collections: Creating a
Standardized Approach for Disparate Collections,” in
Microform and Imaging Review.
Joan Gosnell, university archivist, wrote “Univer -
sity Milestones: A Timeline” as a chapter in FromHigh on the Hilltop: MarshallTerry’s History of SMUwith Various Essays by His Colleagues (DeGolyerLibrary and Three Forks Press, 2008).
Michelle Hahn, music cataloger, published “As
Advertised: A Preliminary Look at Compiling and
Comparing Title Lists from Music Article Indexes,”
Music Reference Services Quarterly 11(1): p. 33-36.
Also, her summary of a presentation at the joint
OLAC/MOUG meeting in September was pub-
lished in the MOUG and OLAC newsletters, as
well as in Cataloging & Classification Quarterly.
Jon Haupt, music and media librarian, along with
Alisa Rata Stutzbach presented “The Texas Com -
posers Database: from Book to Screen,” at the
annual conference of the Texas Chapter of the
Music Library Association. Additionally, he pre-
sented “Twitter: Is it a Helpful Tool or a Colossal
Waste of Time?” as part of a panel, “Search, Hack,
Mix, Create, Innovate, Communicate: Technology
Solutions for Music Libraries,” at the annual confer-
ence of the Music Library Association in Chicago,
IL. He also had the article “All This and Tenure
Too?” published in Music Reference Services Quar -terly and the article, “Committees Present Panel
The New York library tour by past and current members of theSMU Libraries Executive Board and the Friends of the SMULibraries Board featured a tour of Columbia University specialcollections
11
Exploring the Potential for Copyright Reform,” in
the MLA Newsletter.
Curt Holleman, deputy director of Central Univer-
sity Libraries, published “British Academic Books:
Average Prices and Price Indexes,” in The Libraryand Book Trade Almanac, 2009.
Russell L. Martin III, director of DeGolyer Library,
wrote a short history of SMU libraries, “’An Excel-
lent Beginning Has Been Made’:The SMU Libraries”
in From High on the Hilltop: Marshall Terry’s Historyof SMU withVarious Essays by His Colleagues (De -Golyer Library andThree Forks Press, 2008). He also
wrote “Newspapers & Journals” in The Old West:History and Heritage (Marshall Cavendish, 2009),edited by Edward Countryman, SMU Uni versity
Distinguished Professor of History.
Gillian M. McCombs, dean and director of CUL,
was appointed to the board of Texas Women in
Higher Education for a three year term. She served
on the Southern Association of Colleges and
Schools (SACS) reaffirmation team for Shenandoah
University, and represented the United States on
the Academic and Research Libraries Standing Com -
mittee at the International Federation of Library
Associations meeting in Quebec, Canada, in
August, 2008.
Ellen Buie Niewyk, curator of Bywaters Special
Collections, presented “Jerry Bywaters, Lone Star
Printmaker” in conjunction with the exhibition
Jerry Bywaters – Lone Star Printmaker at the WichitaFalls Museum of Art (prints on loan from Bywaters
Special Collections, Hamon Arts Library). She also
presented an evening lecture, “Taking the Mystery
Out of Ancient Metal Techniques,” in conjunction
with the exhibitions From the Temple and the Tomb:
Etruscan Treasures from Tuscany and New Light onthe Etruscans: Fifteen Years of Excavation at PoggioColla at the Meadows Museum. In April, she pre-sented an ancient jewelry demonstration in con-
junction with the exhibition Tutankhamun andthe Golden Age of the Pharaohs at the Center forCreative Connections at the Dallas Museum of Art.
In May, she presented an “Update on Bywaters
Special Collections” about Otis Dozier at the annual
meeting of the Center for the Advancement and
Study of Early Texas Art in Austin.
Anne Peterson, curator of photographs at the
DeGolyer Library, curated and wrote the text for
Jack Kilby: The Eye of Genius. Photographs by theInventor of the Microchip (Meadows Museum and
DeGolyer Library, 2008).
Sam Ratcliffe, head of the Bywaters Special Col-
lections, presented “The Jerry Bywaters Collection
on Art of the Southwest: An Intellectual Biography
in 3-D” in conjunction with the exhibition JerryBywaters – Lone Star Printmaker at the Wichita FallsMuseum of Art. In April, he led a tour of the art
collection at the home of Ray Washburne for
SMU’s 21st Century Council, Dallas. In May, he
presented “Small Towns, Big Visions: An Overview
of 19th Century Texas Art,” at the annual meeting
of the Center for the Advancement and Study of
Early Texas Art in Austin.
Tim Silcox, director of public services in the Central
University Libraries, was elected member-at-
large, University Library Section, Association of
College and Research Li braries.
SMU Libraries Executive Board
Becky L. SchergensChair
James E. BrooksAnn Warmack BrookshireMichael H. CollinsCelia Whitfield CrankM. Janis Calvin CravensMarjorie Lucas CurreyGary A. EvansDennis A. FosterDorothy Jackson GarlandJames A. GlasscockJuli Callan HarrisonMichael V. HazelFred HeathMary Moore Free HosfordNicki Nicol HuberGene C. JonesFredrick S. LeachTavenner C. Lupton, IIIVictoria Thomas MannesThomas H. McConnellJudy B. McMillinLudwig A. MichaelBarbara D. MiercortH. Winfield Padgett, Jr.Sarah Fullinwider PerotJames R. PrattCarolyn M. RainerJeff Taylor RiceLarry D. SallJudith Garrett SeguraAnne Lund StewartLynn S. SuttonGeorge E. TobolowskyLarrie A. WeilSue Trammell WhitfieldRichard J. Wood
12
Ex Officio
Brad E. Cheves Gail M. DalyEllen F. Jackofsky Paul W. LuddenGillian M. McCombs Sandal L. MillerPaulette P. MulryRoberta A. SchaafsmaCarl SewellR. Gerald Turner
Alisa Rata Stutzbach, director of the Hamon Arts
Library, has been elected vice-president/president-
elect of the Texas Chapter of the Music Library Asso -
ciation. At the Society for American Music annual
conference in Denver, she chaired a session entitled,
“Highlights of the Colorado and Rocky Mountain
Region Collections from the American Music
Research Center,” in her role as the Research
Resources Interest Group chair. Along with Jon
Haupt, she presented “The Texas Composers Data -
base: From Book to Screen,” at the annual confer-
ence of the Texas Chapter of the Music Library
Association in her role as the chair of the TMLA
Database Committee.
Amy Turner, film, theatre and communications librar-
ian, served on a preservation panel for the Columbia
University and Lincoln Center program, “Faded
Glory: Oscar Micheaux and the Pre-War Black Inde -
pendent Cinema in February.
Dawn Youngblood, curator of the Foscue Map Library,
published “ACase Study in Proactive Develop ment:
Harvard University’s Curator of Maps,” in Journalof Map and Geography Libraries 5(2) 2009. She alsopublished “Harvard’s Curator of Maps: An Inter -
viewwith David Cobb,” in Baseline,May/June, 2008.She was also a member of the Fort Worth Public
Library Foundation Board, a standing committee
member of the International Federation of Library
Association’s Geography and Map Libraries Sec -
tion, and chair of the Car tography Specialty Group
of the American Asso ciation of Geographers.
Library Staff AwardsJim Quevedo,was named Employee-of-the-Year
Jon Speck, Bridwell Library, received the Outstanding
Achievement Award.
John Milazzo, Center for Information Processing,
received the Continuing Excellence Award.
Yan (Patricia) Silong, Business Information Center,
received the Outstanding Student Assistant Award
Christine Asberry Milazzo, Library Information Tech -
nology and Digital Initiatives, received the Effective
Use of Technology Award.
Cindy Gautreaux, CUL Public Services, and Tyeson
Seale,Norwick Center for Digital Services, received
the Dean’s Eureka Award for installing large flat screen
televisions throughout the Fondren Library Center
complex to provide marketing of library events and
services, provide broadcast coverage of significant
national events and emergency notification. Emily
George Grubbs, Hamon Arts Library, Bywaters Spe -
cial Collections, and Dawn Youngblood, Foscue Map
Library, received Library School Scholarship Awards.
The CUL Team Recognition Award was presented to
the CUL Cookout Committee for planning and exe-
cuting the second annual National Library Week cook -
out. The event promoted library services while CUL
staff cooked and served more than 2,500 hot dogs
to the SMU community. Committee members include
Carol Baker, SMU-in-Taos library, Cindy Gautreaux,
CUL Public Services, Michelle Hahn, Center for Infor -
mation Processing, Terre Heydari, Library Informa -
tion Technology, Christine Milazzo, Library Infor -
mation Technology and Digital Initiatives and John
Milazzo, Center for Information Processing.
Jim Quevedo, IIS, Science andEngineering Library, Employee-of-the-Year
13
2007/2007 2008/2009(preliminary)
Student enrollment 10,829 10,965
Undergraduate 6,176 6,240
Graduate and Professional 4,653 4,725
Collections
Total volumes 2,138,431 2,162,485
Volumes added 30,605 24,054
Books 1,216,704 1,244,889
Current serials 9,856 11,275
Microforms held 620,389 621,970
Government documents 692,158 685,969
Electronic databases 4,180 4,200
Holdings in Volumes, by Library
DeGolyer Library 126,459 132,813
Fondren Library Center 1,871,005 1,881,252
Hamon Arts Library 140,967 148,420
Access Services
Circulation transactions 117,007 116,616
Interlibrary loans sent to other libraries 9,429 9,864
Interlibrary loans received 8,513 9,726
Total hours open (per week, regular session) 168 168
Personnel (full-time equivalent)
Professional positions 37 37
Support positions 44 42
Total 81 79
Total Library Expenditures $8,372,977 $ 8,822,612
2008-2009 Selected Statistics
Acquisitions
Salaries
Automation
Other
CUL Expenditures 2008-2009*($8,822,612 total)
46%
9%5%
40%
* This is a preliminary report; final numbers will vary.
14
DonorsD O N O R S TO T H E C E N T R A L U N I V E R S I T YL I B R A R I E SCommitments received from 6/1/08to 5/31/09
($50,000 and above)Linda Cumber Marcus ’59
($10,000 to $49,999)Lawrence Hyman Budner ’51 +Berry R. Cox ’77 and Jeanne Tower Cox ’78
Charles A. Inge ’49, ’71 andDominique Cranmer Inge ’83
Sandra Plowman Kraus ’76Vernon E. Morgan ’72 and Ruth P. Morgan
Larry E. Myers and George Anne Myers
H. Winfield Padgett, Jr.John N. Rowe, III ’59W.Thomas TaylorTexas Instruments Incorporation
($1,000 to $9,999)Henry M. Billingsley and Lucy C. Billingsley
Bradley W. Brookshire ’76 and Ann Warmack Brookshire ’77
Victor E. Casad ’72 and Mary Bracken Oliphint Casad ’77
William P. Clements, Jr. ’39 andRita C. Clements
Norma Jean Cleveland ’51Lea F. Courington ’74William L. Cravens ’70 and M. Janis Calvin Cravens ’70
William A. Custard ’57 and Linda Pitts Custard ’60, ’99
Elisabeth Bayless McCord ’79Ernst & Young FoundationH. Mathews Garland ’44, ’51 + and Dorothy Jackson Garland ’46
Mary E. GreenPerry B. Hall ’77 and Margaret Schloss Hall ’80
Gayle K. Hamilton ’49Lee HansleyRobert D. Harrison ’70 and Juli Callan Harrison ’70
John K. Healing ’70 and Patricia L. Johnston
James K. Hopkins and Patricia Ann LaSalle
Gordon Hosford ’53 and Mary Moore Free Hosford ’53,’81, ’87, ’89
Caroline Rose HuntMary M. JalonickJohn A. Kinsey and Becky L. Schergens ’62
Bob Law and Charlene LawMartha A. Madden ’59, ’63Margaret Marsh Mebus ’64Ludwig A. Michael and Carmen Miller Michael ’45
Clifford R. Miercort and Barbara D. Miercort
Beverly B. MillerElizabeth Jeffett Norman ’83Edwin P. Ornish ’45 and Natalie Ornish
John M. ParkerAvelinoF.Segura and JudithG.SeguraWilliam Elliott Smith +Willard SpiegelmanSusan G. Komen Breast CancerFoundation
Texas Instruments FoundationW. Tack Thomas and Diane ThomasRobert D. Whaley ’78Liz WilliamsEdward B. Winn +David B. Winn ’75 and Becky Oberthier Winn ’78
($100 to $999)James E. Abernathy ’09Lindalyn Bennett Adams ’52Gilbert L. Adams and Lynne Bulter Adams ’64
A. A. Armstrong, Jr.Marcia Seligman Benedetto ’61Michael Bentson and Anne E.Peterson
Paul R. Bergstresser and Rebecca B. Bergstresser
Darlene P. BirkesLottye S. BrodskyGary M. Cadenhead ’62 andHeather L. Cadenhead
William Campbell and Mary Jo Steuernagel Campbell ’68
Tom C. Caperton and Patricia Landers Caperton ’71
Caterpillar FoundationBarbara R. ChamberlinJohn H. Chiles and Marie ChilesLeslie D. Coble and Elizabeth P’Pool Coble ’86
James E. Coleman and Margaret Coleman, Jr.
Kathryn Marshall Covert ’83Charles S. Cristol and Geraldine P. Cristol
Robert N. Crossman, Jr. ’54Daughters of the Republic of Texas,James Butler Bonham Chapter
James W. Davis, Jr. and Susan E. Davis
Betsy A. Dillard ’02John R. Dresser ’79Sam E. Dunnam ’54 and Valerie Sellors Dunnam ’54
The Ermance Book Review ClubDavid R. Farmer and Carol FarmerBernard FedermanPeggy Bankston Fisher ’75Ann Jacobus Folz ’50Edward C. Fritz ’40 + and Eugenia D. Fritz
William M. Fry, Jr. ’76Diane Coffman Garvin ’68L. R. Bob Gibson, Jr. ’48 and Nancy C. Gibson
Lee R. Gibson III, ’78 and Susan Gibson
Ezra Greenspan
Keith Gregory and Barbara GregoryRonald A. Guest ’79 and Connie Guest
John R. Hart ’63 and Anna Jane M. Hart
Michael Elliot Stern and Katherine L. Heizer Stern ’83
Robert W. Heller ’76 and Nancy Wheeler Heller ’76
Lisa A. Hembry ’75Harriet Hopkins Holleman ’63James H. Holmes III ’57 and Judy Ryman Holmes ’63
Edwin P. Jenevein and Jane B. Jenevein
Nina JohnsonAmy E. JohnstonEmil J. Joost and Carolyn JoostLionel L. Kinney and Vilma Valentine Kinney ’52
John R. Knott ’73 and Janis W. Knott
Beverly S. LidePayson W. LowellElvis L. Mason and Joan Baker Mason ’60
Richard O. McCall ’69 and Leslie H. McCall
Gillian M. McCombs and Richard S. Halsey
John H. McElhaney ’56, ’58 andJackie Masur McElhaney ’62
H. Neill McFarland ’47 andCorinne McFarland
Joseph W. McKnight and Mildred P. McKnight
William Casey McManeminB. Frank McWilliams ’62Meadows Foundation, Inc.Norman R. Medlen ’65 and Linda J. Medlen
Marc A. Moore ’51 and Mary D. Moore
Randall E. Mulry and Paulette Pittman Mulry ’83
National Society of Daughters of theAmerican Revolution
Nationwide FoundationDavid Nethery and Jeannie Scott Nethery ’70
Leonard. Northrup, Jr. ’40 andMerlyn M. Northrup
Jack T. Norton ’51Ronald W. O’Connor and Sharon Hamby O’Connor ’65
Charles C. Pierce Jr. and Jane H. Pierce ’65
Susie Waddell Roberts ’68Emily Desobry Rodgers ’50Dudley L. Rouse and Eloise M. Rouse
Gretchen Kreager Ruddy ’83John L. Schoellkopf ’60 andCatherine H. Schoellkopf
Carole McIntosh SikesNan Snow ’75Mario Soto and Margarita SotoEarl M. Stahl and Tomiko StahlThe Standard Club of DallasAdam P. Stoermer ’04 and Jamie Stoermer
David L. Stovall ’95Marshall Terry ’53, ’54 andAntoinette Barksdale Terry ’54
Martha Tiller ’61Bruce M. Treut ’74 and Susan Riber Treut ’84
R.Gerald Turner and Gail O. TurnerLaura A. Turner ’90Jean Dunlap Wallace ’59Richard L. Walton and Carolyn Hopkins Walton ’53
Myron H. Watkins and Barbara Lord Watkins ’78
David J. Weber and Carol B. Weber ’88
Larrie A. Weil and Bobbi W. WeilClayton E. Whitney and Elizabeth Leachman Whitney ’78
Christopher B. Whorton andBarbara Branch Whorton ’66
Toni WirthNicole L. WrightGerry D. York ’58 and Polly Mitchell York ’95
(Up to $99)James S. Alley ’47 and Gloria Bryant Alley ’49
Joyce Cook Barron ’53Mary Miller BartholowBradley W. Bayer ’03Frances Beresford Bearden ’44Charles M.Best andGertrude S. BestStephanie L. Black ’89Diana BrinerRichard J. Burggraf, III ’07C. Vance Campbell, Jr. and Susan T. Campbell
Citigroup FoundationJohn B. Clayton IIICharles C. Clymer ’67, ’70 andFrancais Lambert Clymer ’64
Lee Coggan, Jr. ’58 and Pat CogganWilliam CollierAdrian H. CollynsLandon A. Colquitt, IV ’75 andNancy M. Colquitt
Eddie G. Cone ’60, ’61 andRoberta B. Cone
Robert O. Cooper and Deborah A. Cooper
Rody P. Cox and Bonnie S. CoxTruett Cox and Merilyn Rosen Cox ’53
Betsy CullumJ. T. Davis ’61 and Karol Hargis Davis ’60
Margaret Rohlfs Decker ’68Nancy W. DolphBarry D. Drees and Ann DreesSue T. DuffyMary Kay Jackson Ellisor ’52John A. Elmore ’82 and Ruth Ann Hicks Elmore ’82
Gene H. Emery and Charlotte Emery
William P. Faulkner, Jr. ’54 andFredericka Rahm Faulkner ’52
William R. Fisher ’54Lee H. Ford
James L. Fortner ’64 and Kathy Hander Fortner ’64
Charles C. Foster ’63Katherine Harris Gann ’65David M. Goetschius and Carol Wallis Goetschius ’62
Brendan M. GoldenDeborah F. GorinThomas B. Greene, IV ’06Amy K. Hackett ’63Mary Jane Murphey Harmon ’46Marjorie E. HendersonEloise Evans Hoffman ’40William F. Holmes and Jean Taggart Holmes ’54
Paul G. Hook ’64 and Gloria Davis Hook ’71
Afsha R. Ibrahim ’06Amelia L. IsaacPhil G. John and Sue P. JohnBillye M. JohnsonJessica J. JohnstonCharles A. Kehoe and Mary Lide M. Kehoe
Allan J. Koenig and Katy Cumiskey Koenig ’93
Charlotte Corley Kuser ’67John H. LawrenceBruce Levy and Beth S. NewmanChandler R. LindsleyPeggy Nance Lyle ’67Eleanor J. Maclay ’50Kristen A. Marcis ’07Robert J. Marshall, Jr. and Mary Ann Marshall
Russell L. Martin, III ’78, ’86 andJanet Kennedy Martin ’73, ’90
Nancy Nicol Martinez ’75Mallory J. McCallDouglas A. Means ’68 and Pam Means
Sarah A. Monning ’00Mara M. Morhouse ’07Jane E. Morris ’67Love Garwood Nance ’48Claude S. Nichols ’51Charles G. Northrup ’53JohnM.Payne and Mary B.Payne ’01James E. Perry and Susan Martin Perry ’68
Benjamin A. PettyPatricia Price Pfluger ’56Ernest Poulos ’47 and Carol Kirkpatrick Poulos ’47 +
Cristina Maria Ana Richards ’06Cleon RobertsRobert W. Robinson and Maurine Hanby Robinson ’55
William J. RyanAudrey M. Schlichenmaier ’07Harter B. Schmid and Joycelyn Harper Schmid ’60, ’72
J. Kenneth Shamblin, Jr. ’65 andPamela Fleming Shamblin ’65
Donna ShearerBruce Shuman and Ann C. ShumanCharles M. Sloan, III ’47 and Sue Howell Sloan
George Slover, Jr. and Jane Grayson Slover ’52
Tillman A. Smithey ’49
Sidney Stahl ’54, ’56 and Susan Herring Stahl ’61
Bettye Morris Sutton ’55Suzanne Marie Sweazy ’98, ’08Milton H. Thomas, Jr. ’52 and Ruth N. Thomas
Robert H. Thomas and Suzanne H. Thomas
William E. Turner and Jean Cullum Turner ’48
Robert Ulatt and Katharine Ann White Ulatt ’56
Kenneth W. WaltonJames E. Wiley, Jr. and Karen K. Wiley
H. Harrington Williams ’55 andJoyce Walker Williams ’53
Gene WilsonKay Kunkler Wilson ’64Mary Smith Witt ’44Christina M. Woodard ’06Jane YagerAnthony S. Yano and Judith Canady Yano ’68
B.P.Young and Mary Jane Brownfield Young ’62
F R I E N D S O F T H E S M UL I B R A R I E SMemberships from 6/1/08 to5/31/09
Honorar y MembersDavid R. Farmer and Carol FarmerNancy B. HamonAl LowmanRuth P. MorganRoss C. MurfinRobert W. Oram + and Virginia W. Oram
Maureen PastineCaren H. ProthroElizabeth Perkins Prothro ’39 +Judy SearlesWilson D. Snodgrass +Willie SparkmanW.Thomas TaylorR.Gerald Turner and Gail O. Turner
Sue Trammell Whitfield ’54
Life Member ($5,000 and above)Laura A. Turner ’90
Library Fellow ($1,000 to $4,999)William R. Bond ’79William P. Clements, Jr. ’39 andRita C. Clements
Benefactor ($500 to $999)Kenneth Z. Altshuler and Ruth Sharp Altshuler ’48
Craig B. Anderson ’90, ’93 andPamalla Calcote Anderson ’89
Ronald F. Bradford and Mary Helen Barksdale Bradford’63
Marilyn Marr Klepak ’56Joe Mannes andVictoria T. MannesJames A. McMillin ’94 and Judy B. McMillin
H. Winfield Padgett, Jr.Provincial FoundationWilliam J. Rainer ’68, ’70 andCarolyn Mattson Rainer ’67
Kenneth J. Thetford and Jo Ann Geurin Thetford ’69,’70
Patron ($250 to $499)Marc C. Bateman ’71 and Marcia Bunnell Bateman ’76
John C. Caruth and Linda F. CaruthMartha Chawner ’75Frank Harrison ’35Robert S. HendlerKenneth M. Jasinski and Jacqueline S. Jasinski
Jamie E. JenningsPamela Parker Lange ’71, ’73 andJohn H. Lange
Charles L. Lloyd, Jr. ’64 and Sandra C. Lloyd
Kaivon S. Mortazavi ’97 and Karen Merritt Mortazavi ’95
James R. Pratt and Joanne H. PrattAvelino F. Segura and Judith G. Segura
Alexandra S. StewartCharlotte TotebuschWhaley ’70,’76
Associate ($100 to $249)Virginia Richie Abdo ’54, ’69Akingbade R. AkinniyiPatricia BaldwinBank of America FoundationJohn R. Bauer ’66 and Kathaleen K. Bauer
Glyssie BerberianU. Narayan Bhat and Girija Maliye Bhat ’72
Ed Biehl and JulianneAddis Biehl ’72
Scott McCartney and Karen Frances Blumenthal ’90
Daniel D. Boeckman and Laura B. Boeckman
Duncan E. Boeckman + andElizabeth M. Boeckman
Sharon P. BrownLee BurkeHelen L. Bush ’08Randall W. Coil and Cydney J. CoilMichael H. Collins and Melissa A. Collins
Carrie CothrumRichard L. Covington ’80, ’83 andMary Culligan Covington ’81
Brent P. CramerJohn Cranfill and Elmira P. CranfillSarah E. CrismanRoy B. Culbertson ’83 and Grace Culbertson
Lee Brooks Cullum ’61Fred G. Currey and Marjorie Lucas Currey ’55
Josiah M. Daniel, III and Susan S. Daniel
John Davidson and Caroline A. Davidson
Martin J. Davidson and Patricia W. Davidson
Jack B. DenurJames A. Dewberry, Jr. ’47 andBarbara Calcote Dewberry ’79
William D. Dockery and Mary A. Dockery
James M. DonovanAnn M. EarlyRaymond A. Enstam and Elizabeth Enstam
Ann Jacobus Folz ’50Christina FulsomH. Mathews Garland ’44, ’51 + andDorothy Jackson Garland ’46
Phillip W. Garnett and Diann K. Garnett
L. R. Bob Gibson, Jr. ’48 and Nancy C. Gibson
James A. Glasscock ’60, ’75 andLois Kershner Glasscock ’74, ’00
Christopher GravesEzra GreenspanKeith Gregory and Barbara GregoryThomas S. Halsey and Elizabeth C. Halsey
Michael V. Hazel ’70Fred Heath and Jean HeathPaul HimmelreichJames G. Hoffman, Jr. ’86Nathan Hughes and Selma Leyshon Hughes ’70
William S. Hunter ’53 and Jean Hunter
Afsha R. Ibrahim ’06Charles A. Inge ’49, ’71 andDominique Cranmer Inge ’83
Lawrence J. Jackofsky and Ellen F. Jackofsky
Jackson Walker, LLPScott R. JacobsDonald R. Janak and Joan E. JanakAnn JeterHelen D. JohnsonL. E. Kehl, Jr.Stan Keith and Elizabeth H. KeithRusty Ketz ’68, ’71 and Elizabeth Ann Ketz
Arch Giles Kimbrough ’47John A. Kinsey and Becky L. Schergens ’62
Rina KirchgessnerOlin C. Lancaster, Jr. and Sally Rhodus Lancaster ’60, ’79
Teresa M. LemieuxIrvin L. Levy ’50 and Joan W. LevyJohn LopezCarolyn B. LoyDonald J. Malouf ’62 and Dian L. Malouf
Michael J. Marz and Marguerite F. Marz
Gillian M. McCombs and Richard S. Halsey
Margaret M. McDermottJohn H. McElhaney ’56, ’58 andJackie Masur McElhaney ’62
Clifford R. Miercort and Barbara D. Miercort
Cynthia Taylor Mills ’69Casey H. NelsonEdwin P. Ornish ’45 and Natalie Ornish
David T. OwensSudalaimuthu PalaniappanJohn M. ParkerRichard L. Pool ’64 and Barbara Youkers Pool ’67
Ernest Poulos ’47 and Carol Kirkpatrick Poulos ’47 +
Rama V. RamachandranDarrel A. Rice ’72 and Jeff T. RiceCharles T. Richardson and Twila Tucker Richardson ’67
Adam B. Ross and Tara B. RossRonald SchenkWilliam F. Barstow and Laurie C. Shulman
Roman SolodoffPatY. Spillman and Mary S. SpillmanRobert B. Spurgin ’71 and Sally DeWitt Spurgin ’74, ’78
Earl M. Stahl and Tomiko StahlHarold W. Stanley and Carolyn S. Cunningham
Alice StarnesJames Stockert and Ann StockertJohn A. Stoneham, II ’65 andHarriet H. Stoneham
Alice R. Swank ’76Eleanor Parker Swank ’72 +Charles C. Tandy and Rowena TandyMarshall Terry ’53, ’54 andAntoinette Barksdale Terry ’54
Keith F. Thompson and Jo J. Thompson
Ian ThorburnMary N. UgwonaliDavid M. Underwood, Jr. ’88 andChristine Underwood
Eldon R. Vaughan ’50Lorenzo Villarreal, II and Lora J. Villarreal
John C. Waugh and Kathleen D. Lively
Robert H. Wellington and Donna Kuhn Wellington ’89
Terry D. Westbrook and Vernetta A. Westbrook
John G. Whaley ’75 and Wendy H. Whaley
William R. Wiggins and Mary Lou Wiggins
Grover WilkinsKeith YellinGerry D.York ’58 and Polly Mitchell York ’95
Robert YoungB.J. Zimmerman ’54 and Patsy C. Zimmerman
Contributing ($60 to $99)Jack C. Allen and Norma AllenJane Davis Allen ’53William E. Barker and Mary Ann Tucker Barker ’77
Frances Beresford Bearden ’44
Thomas L. Case and Bonnie N. CaseJeff D. Chalk, III and Sarah S. ChalkVictor V. Contreras ’03John L. Cotton, Jr. ’64, ’71, ’90 andCarol S. Jordan ’68
Shirley DyessW. F. Goodman, Jr. ’55 and Loraine Goodman
Richard M. Hewitt ’63 and Karen C. Hewitt
Beverly J. HolmesLouise Kent Kane ’53Helen B. KelsoJames W. Kerr, Jr. ’65Harold B. Krom ’60Anna LibertyCarrie J. LoftisEleanor J. Maclay ’50Meadows Foundation, Inc.Nationwide FoundationDarwin Payne ’68 and Phyllis S. Payne
Nan Blackston Peterson ’49Robert S. Rendell and Martha M. Rendell
Carolyn McCoy Slaughter ’55Marvin H. StoneFrances Golden Ware ’44Kimball S. Watson and Bertha M. Watson
Danny Whitt and Amy Baggs Whitt ’92
SMU Faculty/Staff ($30 to $59)Bill Abbott and Judy AbbottCharles E. BalleisenMichael Bentson and Anne E. Peterson
Anne BrabhamJames E. BrooksDion D. Carver and Amy Kathryn Carver ’94
Dennis D. CordellMichael M. Dowling and Melissa B. Dowling
Curt Holleman and Ruth E. Holleman
Jennifer KolmesRussell L. Martin, III ’78, ’86 andJanet Kennedy Martin ’73, ’90
Joseph W. McKnight and Mildred P. McKnight
Patrick B. Miller and Sandal L. Miller
Jane E. Morris ’67Donald L. Niewyk and Ellen Buie Niewyk ’78
Benjamin A. PettyKenneth D. Shields and Joanna M. Shields
Norman M. Spencer, Jr. andMarilyn Schutt Spencer ’89
Marcella StarkJulia C. StewartDavid J. Weber and Carol B. Weber ’88
Edward J. Williams, Jr. and Martha Williams
Hal Williams
Friends of the SMU LibrariesEndowmentDion D. Carver and Amy Kathryn Carver ’94
Michael D. HeastonRusty Ketz ’68, ’71 and Elizabeth Ann Ketz
Jane E. Morris ’67Keith F. Thompson and Jo J. Thompson
Frances Golden Ware ’44
OT H E R D O N O R S TO T H E F R I E N D S($1,000 and above)Ebby Halliday AcersRonald F. Bradford and Mary Helen Barksdale Bradford’63
Fred G. Currey and Marjorie Lucas Currey ’55
James A. McMillin ’94 and Judy B. McMillin
Caren H. ProthroPatY. Spillman and Mary S. SpillmanMarshall Terry ’53, ’54 andAntoinette Barksdale Terry ’54
Kenneth J. Thetford and Jo Ann Geurin Thetford ’69, ’70
Laura A. Turner ’90Robert H. Wellington and Donna Kuhn Wellington ’89
Charlotte Totebusch Whaley ’70
(Up to $999)Virginia Richie Abdo ’54, ’69Frances Beresford Bearden ’44Michael Bentson and Anne E. Peterson
U. Narayan Bhat and Girija Maliye Bhat ’72
Alan R. Bromberg and Anne R. Bromberg
James E. BrooksJohn C. Caruth and Linda F. CaruthMartha Chawner ’75William P. Clements, Jr. ’39 andRita C. Clements
Michael H. Collins and Melissa A. Collins
John Davidson and Caroline A. Davidson
John A. Elmore ’82 and Ruth Ann Hicks Elmore ’82
Ann Jacobus Folz ’50Everett E. Gantz and Ann C. GantzH. Mathews Garland ’44, ’51 + andDorothy Jackson Garland ’46
David H. GibsonJames A. Glasscock ’60, ’75 andLois Kershner Glasscock ’74, ’00
Craig A. Reynolds and Joan GosnellWilliam Gray and Mateel M. GrayTruman E. Harper and Carolyn Chapman Harper ’69
Michael V. Hazel ’70Elizabeth W. Hennessy
Lawrence J. Jackofsky and Ellen F. Jackofsky
Helen D. JohnsonLester J. N. Keliher, III ’88 andMargaret Coleman Keliher ’90
Rusty Ketz ’68, ’71 and Elizabeth Ann Ketz
Marilyn Marr Klepak ’56John R.Knott ’73 and Janis W.KnottJennifer KolmesOlin C. Lancaster, Jr. and Sally Rhodus Lancaster ’60, ’79
Pamela Parker Lange ’71, ’73 andJohn H. Lange
Charles L. Lloyd, Jr. ’64 and Sandra C. Lloyd
Donald J. Malouf ’62 and Dian L. Malouf
Russell L. Martin, III ’78, ’86 andJanet Kennedy Martin ’73, ’90
Gillian M. McCombs and Richard S. Halsey
John H. McElhaney ’56, ’58 andJackie Masur McElhaney ’62
Kaivon S. Mortazavi ’97 and Karen Merritt Mortazavi ’95
Randall E. Mulry and Paulette Pittman Mulry ’83
Joe Redwine Patterson ’48, ’51, ’54Darwin Payne ’68 and Phyllis S. Payne
Charles C. Pierce, Jr. and Jane Harrell Pierce ’65, ’71
Ernest Poulos ’47 and Carol Kirkpatrick Poulos ’47 +
James R. Pratt and Joanne H. PrattWill Pryor and Ellen S. PryorRichard S. Rogoff ’77 and Christine S. Rogoff
William C. Seabaugh ’75Avelino F. Segura and Judith G. Segura
Norman M. Spencer, Jr. andMarilyn Schutt Spencer ’89
Willard SpiegelmanHarold W. Stanley and Carolyn S. Cunningham
Lynn S. SuttonAlice R. Swank ’76Eleanor Parker Swank ’72David M. Underwood, Jr. ’88 andChristine Underwood
Kevin Vogel and Cheryl Westgard Vogel ’76
Frances Golden Ware ’44Kimball S. Watson and Bertha M. Watson
Larrie A. Weil and Bobbi W. WeilEdward J. Williams, Jr. and Martha Williams
Gerry D. York ’58 and Polly Mitchell York ’95
+ deceased
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Every effort has been made to accurately include all our friends and donors. If you feel an error or omission has been made, pleasecontact us (see page 16).
Let Us Know What You Think
We welcome your feedback on this report as well as on our collections, services, and events.Please feel free to drop us a note, give us a call, or send us an e-mail.We look forward to hearing from you.
Gillian M. McCombsDean and Director, Central University [email protected]
Curt HollemanDeputy Director, CUL Director, Collection Developmentand Management214-768-2324 [email protected]
Amy CarverDirector, Friends of the SMULibraries Director, CUL Marketing andExternal [email protected]
Paulette MulryDirector of [email protected]
Central University LibrariesSouthern Methodist UniversityPO Box 750135Dallas TX 75275-0135
Council of Library DirectorsGillian M.McCombs, Dean and Director, Central University LibrariesGail Daly, Associate Dean for Library and Technology and Associate Professor of Law (chair 2008-2009)Roberta Schaafsma, Director and J.S. Bridwell Foundation Endowed LibrarianSandal Miller, Director, Business Information Center Joe Gargiulo, Chief Information Officer, Office of Information Technology Ellen F. Jackofsky, Associate Provost for Faculty and Administrative AffairsMary Queyrouze, Director, Library IT and Digital Initiatives
CUL Executive CouncilGillian M.McCombs, Dean and Director, Central University LibrariesTinsley Silcox, Director, Public Services, Fondren LibraryBill Dworaczyk, Director of HR and FacilitiesCurt Holleman, Deputy Director, CUL, and Director, Collection Development and ManagementRussell Martin, Director, DeGolyer LibraryJennifer Kolmes, Director, Center for Information ProcessingMary Queyrouze, Director, Library IT and Digital InitiativesAlisa Rata Stutzbach, Director, Hamon Arts Library
CUL Dean’s Policy GroupGillian M.McCombs, Dean and Director, Central University LibrariesTinsley Silcox, Director, Public Services, Fondren LibraryBill Dworaczyk, Director of HR and FacilitiesCurt Holleman, Deputy Director, CUL, and Director, Collection Development and ManagementJennifer Kolmes, Director, Center for Information ProcessingMary Queyrouze, Director, Library IT and Digital Initiatives
Produced by Central University LibrariesProject Coordinators: Amy Carver, Curt Holleman, Central University Libraries; Nancy George, Joy Hart, editors; Hillsman Jackson, photographer; BeckyWade, designer
This publication is underwritten by the Friends of the SMU Libraries.
Southern Methodist University will not discriminate in any employment practice, education program, or educational activity on the basis of race, color,religion, national origin, sex, age, disability, or veteran status. SMU’s commitment to equal opportunity includes nondiscrimination on the basis ofsexual orientation. The Director of Institutional Access and Equity has been designated to handle inquiries regarding the nondiscrimination policies.
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Inside back cover: Family on porch of house, Austin, Texas, 1905, gelatin silver print,Lawrence T. Jones III Texas Photography Collection