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&so much more
UN
IVE
RS
ITY
OF
MA
RY
LAN
D L
IBR
AR
IES
AN
NU
AL
RE
PO
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01
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A R C H I T E C T U R E L I B R A R YA R T L I B R A R Y
E N G I N E E R I N G A N D P H Y S I C A L S C I E N C E S L I B R A R YH O R N B A K E L I B R A R Y M C K E L D I N L I B R A R Y
M I C H E L L E S M I T H P E R F O R M I N G A R T S L I B R A R Y P R I D D Y L I B R A R Y AT S H A D Y G R O V E
W H I T E M E M O R I A L C H E M I S T R Y L I B R A R Y
The number, diversity and availability of books has long been
the measure of a great academic research library.
But as the needs of students and faculty change, so do libraries.
We now provide an increasing array of services and tools to
support teaching, learning and research.
Librarians offer expertise in areas ranging from digital publishing
to data visualization. We build communities that allow research
to flourish. We provide spaces that allow students to accomplish
their work.
Books continue to define us, and they are more widely available
now than ever before.
And yet: we are so much more.
Patricia A. Steele, Dean of Libraries
When you
think of libraries,
chances are you
think of books.
2
&NOT ONLY are our own collections
growing, but our partnerships with
Big Ten colleagues and others put
almost anything our users need
within easy reach.
Our users have access
to more books now
than at any time
in our history.
3
&More people
stream through our
doors now than ever
before, but most are
not looking for books.
Instead they find
so much more.
4
tools
LUKE JOHNSTON, a sophomore studying
mechanical engineering, has turned his
interest in 3-D printing into an outlet for social
good. He volunteers for E-nabling the Future,
an international volunteer organization that
creates prosthetic hands for children. Johnston
demonstrates to sophomore Hannah Willetts a
mechanical hand he created using a 3-D printer,
as she records a video of it with Google Glass.
Opened in September 2014, the John and Stella
Graves MakerSpace in McKeldin Library provides
these tools to students of all majors. The space is
offered jointly by the University Libraries and the
Academy for Innovation and Entrepreneurship.
n EXPERTISE IN emerging areas such as data management, statistics and GIS support the diverse research needs of faculty and students.
n THE POPULAR equipment loan program continues to expand its impact with high-end DSLR and GoPro camcorders.
n TABLETS, laptops and chargers are in high demand and now available in some branch libraries.
n A NEW PROGRAM now provides faculty the infrastructure and support to publish digitally.
&Students and faculty
of every major or
discipline are accessing
tools to explore, create
and innovate.
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People think of 3-D printing as something out of Star Trek. The MakerSpace makes it more accessible and shows that it can help people in a usable and understandable way.“ ”
n3 n4
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n MORE THAN 110 million books are now available from Big Ten libraries, thanks to the interlibrary loan service known as UBorrow.
n HUMAN CAPITAL remains our greatest investment.
n EXPENDITURES support the current and future curriculum and research enterprise of the university. They also reflect faculty demand and the transition of academic and scholarly publishing. We spend much more on digital resources than print, consistent with previous years and national trends.
n TEXTBOOKS for the 50 campus courses with the highest enrollment are now available for students to borrow.
n A CAMPUSWIDE fund initiated by the University Libraries now incentivize faculty to publish their research in open-access journals.
services
CHARMAINE WILSON-JONES, like so many other students, feels the
burden of the high cost of textbooks.
A scholarship student herself, she is also
Vice President of Academic Affairs for the
Student Government Association.
Librarians advocate for the use of open-
access textbooks and education resources,
freely available on the Web. Faculty
can now find hundreds of open-source
textbooks and educational materials
curated by librarians.
&We work hard
to give students
and faculty access
to the information
they need, no
matter what.1
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nn2
LIBRARIES OPERATING BUDGETFiscal Year 2014
Collections $ 11,273,726Equipment & Software 991,445Storage 234,739Other Operating Costs 2,248,616Salaries & Wages 12,323,260
7
It’s my job to ensure that students have what they need to be successful. I’m not doing that if I’m not championing textbook affordability.
“”
$1M $2M $3M $4M $5M
Journals $816,162
E-Books $483,648
Books $701,411
E-journals $5,550,510
n3 n4 n5FY 2014 EXPENDITURES: BOOKS & JOURNALS
8
n PLANNING for the Library Media Commons advanced and the unit began offering workshops in multimedia production.
n CONCERNED students and faculty engaged with librarians to propose new models for the Art Library and Architecture Library.
n STUDENTS value spaces where they can work independently or together — or both at the same time.
n MORE THAN 5,000 people stream into McKeldin Library on an average day.
n RENOVATIONS to areas such as this fifth-floor lounge in McKeldin Library provide spaces students need to get their work done.
&spaces
Environments can
foster interaction,
promote learning
and inspire
important work.
SPACES SUPPORT LEARNING. This newly equipped instruction room in the
Engineering and Physical Sciences Library
has tables and chairs that can be easily
reconfigured to accommodate group work,
a rolling oversized monitor, and laptops for
in-class use.
Alex Carroll, librarian for agriculture and
natural resources, knows that good outreach
addresses a need. That’s why librarians like
Alex work with faculty to teach students how
to use and evaluate information resources
and to integrate this instruction within the
curriculum. The goal, he says, is to increase
student success. “We help students unlock
their curiosity for learning.”
n1 n2 n3 n
4
5
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2
3
9
We’re helping educate a better-informed citizenry. We’re producing students who, when they see a news story, will evaluate the sources and ask questions.“ ”
n4 n4 n5
10&treasures
Collections prized
for their rarity or
format distinguish
the university and
make Maryland
Maryland.
UNIVERSITY ARCHIVIST Anne Turkos,
center, has funded an endowment with a seven-
figure gift to support graduate assistantships
in her unit. It’s the first such gift on campus
and a way for her to ensure one of the most
meaningful aspects of her work—mentoring
students—continues far into the future.
Jason Speck and Gail Rupert, former graduate
assistants at the University Archives, have
benefited from that mentorship and now work
at the university. The three show off archival
items in Turkos’ office, filled with her personal
collection of turtles.
n A NEW WEBSITE launched by university scholars extends an ongoing effort to digitize and make freely accessible the university’s collection of rare historic French pamphlets.
n NEH AWARDED $290,000 to digitize more historic Maryland newspapers.
n AN EXHIBIT in Hornbake Library highlighting Bladensburg, Maryland, site of an historic battle with the British, was part of region’s celebration of the War of 1812.
n 2015 MARKS the 50th anniversary of the International Piano Archives at Maryland.
n A HEIGHTENED partner-ship with the Library of American Broadcasting will increase visibility of this rich resource.
n ONGOING digitization efforts make special collec-tions broadly available. Since 2012, we have digitized more than 314,000 pages and images and 4,300 hours of audio and video materials.
n1 n2 n3
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Students gain professional-level experience they can put on their resume. And the Archives gains professional assistance.“ ”
n4 n5 n6
12&We are partners
in ways that are
mutually enriching.
Together we do
more.
community
DEAN PATRICIA STEELE
knows that libraries today are part
of an interrelated network that can
serve their communities only by
partnering with others.
Communities take many forms,
from the students who study
together for motivation to the
international partnerships that
help libraries accomplish their
work.
n THE UNIVERSITY’S membership in the Committee on Institutional Cooperation (Big Ten), leverages purchasing power to acquire new resources, including many related to the STEM disciplines, worth nearly $2 million if purchased independently.
n THE GRADUATE Writing Center formally opened in McKeldin Library, showcasing a continuing partnership with the Graduate School.
n A PARTNERSHIP of some of the nation’s leading university libraries is creating an open-source, community-based library software system known as Kuali OLE. Maryland is a founding member.
n WE STRENGTHENED partnerships and provided space and expertise to campus units such as the Teaching and Learning Transformation Center; Academy for Innovation and Entrepreneurship; and the Division of Information Technology, which operates a help desk and technology store in McKeldin Library.
n1 n2 n3
4
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2
3
13
teaching & learning transformation center
As centers of community, libraries are also forums for democracy. We serve all students equally and provide safe spaces for interaction, reflection and work.“ ”
n4 n4 n4
14
&you
T H E F O U N D E R S L E G A C Y C I R C L E
We invite you to learn about the Founders Legacy Circle, which recognizes individuals who support the University of Maryland through bequests, planned gifts, gifts of property, and other assets. For information,
please contact the Office of Gift Planning at www.giftplanning.umd.edu, (866) 646-4UMD, or [email protected]. Inquiries are kept strictly confidential.
Franklin E., Jr. ‘67 and Barbara Angier ‘67
Donald R. Brown
Jackson R. Bryer
John F. Cahill
Ralph M. Hamaker ‘53
James ‘59, ‘66 and Mary G. Holland
Janice L. Flug ‘75
Marlyn B. Lemon ‘73
Patricia A. Leppert ‘79
Margery Morgan Lowens*
Lee Luvisi
Steven L. Permut ‘74
James A. Ruckert ‘53
Vernon R. Tate, Sr. ‘61
Roy and Carol Thomas
Anne S. K. Turkos
Bruce D. and Geraldine L. Wilson ‘76
Edmund Witkowski
*Deceased
15
youG I F T S T O T H E L I B R A R I E S
F I S C A L Y E A R 2 0 1 4 (July 1, 2013 - June 30, 2014)
DISTRIBUTION OF GIFTS Gifts in Kind $ 756,989
Planned Gifts 482,018
Friends of the Libraries 47,711
Other Gifts and Pledges 906,157
TOTAL GIFTS $ 2,192,875
U N I Q U E D O N O R S including 275 new or first-time854 2012
740
780
820
860
2013 2014
TOTAL DONORS by Fiscal Year
0
$2 Million
$1 Million
TOTAL GIFTS by Fiscal Year
2012 2013 2014
THE NAMES on the following pages represent a year
of progress and innovation at the University of Maryland
Libraries. The individuals listed in this report have made
a donation that helps us provide services, environments,
and collections that support every student at the univer-
sity. Each gift is important and greatly appreciated.
This list recognizes all donors to the University of Maryland
Libraries from July 1, 2013 through June 30, 2014. To add
your support, please visit us at http://ter.ps/makeagift
or call us at 301.314.5674. While every effort is made to
ensure accuracy, errors do sometimes occur. In that event,
please notify Heather Foss, Director of Development, at
301.314.2579.
Fearless ideas deserve
fearless support.
16
Dorothea V. Abbott ‘91
Frank A. Absher
Irving and Angela B. Adler
The Honorable Arthur M. Ahalt, Jr.’64
Louis C. Ahanotu
June S. Ailin Sewell ‘76, ‘77 and Scott Sewell
Diana G. Akers ‘75
Linda J. Allen
Gary C. Allentuck
Anna C. Allison
Melvyn R. and Toby L. Altman
Ruth M. ‘77,’80,’90 and Roy D. Alvarez
Diba Naureen Alvi ‘08
Mahyar Amirsaleh
Edward P. Anania
Clinton G. Anderson ‘81
Hilary E. Anderson ‘92
Franklin E. Jr. ‘67 and Barbara H. Angier ‘67
William C. ‘85 and Lisa K. Arbelaez
Caroline Arlington
Brian L. Armstead ‘80
Karyl R. Arnold
George H. ‘51, ‘54 and Elizabeth Arscott
David A. and Barbara B. Aughenbaugh
Drury G. Bagwell, Jr.
Ronald Anthony Baraloto ‘66,’69
Gregory Barrett
Joseph Augustus Jr. ‘72 and Ruth Kahl Barrett
Eric Bartheld
Alexander M. Bastow ‘10
Dianne P. Battle ‘74
Howell S. Baum
Gene Lee Baxter
James Baxter
James M. Baxter
Svetla Baykoucheva
Lynn R. Bayley
Christine A. Beard ‘71
Scott N. ‘95 and Amy Beatty ‘96
Walter Wolfe Beckerman ‘74
George W. Jr. ‘63 and Linda D. Beechener ‘68
Peter Beicken
Ronald B. Benjamin’ 73
Lawrence Bensky
Jerry Berg
Bruce S. and Fredericka N. Berger
Joseph T. and Susan A. Bergstrom
David H. and Mary S. Bernheisel ‘63, ‘83
William Berz
John A. Bigbee ‘63
Neal Edward Blair ‘75 and Sarah M. Pritchard ‘75
Andrew Bodiford ‘14
Raymond O. and Heather H. Bodiford
Diane L. Boehr ‘83
James D. Bolle
Steven M. Bookman ‘07
Louis ‘67 and Carol L. Borbi
Kevin D. Borneman ‘02
Kenneth O. Boulton ‘86, ‘97 and JoAnne E. Barry ‘89
Sarah R. Bourne ‘57, ‘76
Frederic Bowen
Kimberley J. Boyd ‘74
Karen Kohn Bradley
Robert J. Brennan ‘92, ‘94
Susan R. Bretz
Charles E. Brodine, Jr.
Virginia M. Brosnan Hazelett ‘76
Linda M. Browdy ‘80
Felicity Ann Brown
Lauren R. Brown
Phillipa Butler Brown
The Honorable Josef B. ‘57 and Gloria G. Brown ‘93
Peter H. and Judith B. Brown ‘81
Estate of Louise Este Bruce
Jackson R. Bryer
Christopher Buchanan
Nancy Wilkerson Buck ‘55
Francis Buckley
Pinny and Shelley Bulman
Todd S. Burroughs ‘94, ‘01
Deborah Byrd
Mary K. Cain
M. Clarke Calyer ‘61
Arch Campbell
Anna Limar Campos ‘72
Carroll A. Carter ‘89
Eric S. Cartier
Liz Castro
Andrea D. Castrogiovanni ‘94, ‘01
Tammy D. Cavin ‘88
Susanne Cerrelli ‘85
Marc and Janice B. Chapdelaine
Edward A. ‘54 and Joyce Bartlett Charron
Cynthia R. Chase
Nishi Chawla
Alexander Chernov and Victoria Chernova
Angela M. Chu ‘90
Yijen Lin and Arlene W. Chun
Susan Smith Church ‘86
Tamar ‘98 and David Chute
Kathleen Walsh Clark ‘70 and Stephen P. Clark
Suzanne F. Clewell ‘79, ‘81
Faye F. ‘51 and Sheldon S. Cohen
Patrick A. Condray ‘61, ‘72
Dolores W. Conger ‘78
James J. Conners ‘86
Brian J. Conroy
Mary K. Cook ‘71
Sharon R. Cook ‘74
Tina L. Coplan
David R. Cornblath
Marianne Allen Corradi ‘54
Patricia Cortes-Ortiz
Elisabeth V. Courtner ‘82
Patricia Jeanne Cowan
Karen S. Cowden ‘07
Karen Wantuch Cowell ‘73, ‘96
Richard ‘75 and Caren Cowhig ‘75
Robert C. Craig
Reverend David J. Crowley ‘75
Ernesto Cuesta ‘71
Lyn K. Culver
Mary L. Cumberpatch ‘99
Jean Trawick Curtis ‘71
Bruce B. Cwalina ‘74
Dieter Czerny
Victor J. Daidone ‘88
Mary D. Dalto ‘73
John H. Dammeyer ‘54
Erland Zygmuntowicz and Elizabeth A. Danforth
Robert Steven Daniel and Beth Ann Daniel
Georgia Mangos Darras
Nancy F. Daugherty ‘68
John Robert Davis ‘99
Carolyn B. Davis
Patricia A. Davis ‘78, ‘80
Judy Dawes
Maria Aguilar de Ancos ‘77
Donald L. ‘90 and Julie D. Deardorff
Carol D. DeCatur
Rosemarie DeDonato ‘73, ‘75
Thomas J. DeLio
Katherine DeLong
Priscilla E. DeLong ‘88
Eileen S. DeMarco
Lynn A. DeMeester ‘67
Alex Demers
Jane K. Demouy ‘78
Don W. and Gina Denny
Inez E. Dinwoodie ‘94
Kathleen A. Dolan ‘73
Michael J. Donaghue ‘71
Jane L. Donawerth
Joyce M. Dorn ‘78
Karen H. Dowling ‘75
Edward M. ‘52 and Loretta Downey
Wallace E. Downey, Jr. ‘58
Kathleen M. and Charles F. Downs II ‘68,’75
Bryan L. Draper
Lindsay M. Droll ‘12
Edward A. Duffy ‘81
Gina Genova Duffy
Rebecca W. Dukes
Paul M. Eckert ‘51
Jamyung A. Edwards
Jane O. Edwards ‘79,’80
Gunes N. Ege
Karen M. Eggert ‘84
Barry Eigen
Ronit Eisenbach
Jay S. Elvove ‘83,’86
Wilder Escobar and Reid Evans
Jose T. Esponosa-Jacome
Estate of Dr. Donald E. McGinnis
Kathryn F. ‘76,’79 and Tibor J. Eszeki
Jon E. ‘84,’88 and Alexandra Leavitt Evans ‘84
Karlie L. Everett ‘88
Joseph Fainberg
Elizabeth Falloon ‘77
Patricia H. Farr ‘80
Susan S. Farr
Helmuts and Elizabeth Feifs
Richard J. Feldman ‘73
Elizabeth M. Fellows ‘54, ‘67
Carol Fendler ‘77
V. Raymond Ferrara ‘70
Miriam L. Ferrell
D O N O R H O N O R R O L L — I N D I V I D U A L S16
17
Henry J. Ferry
Henry Ferry
Carolyn Headlee Fichtel ‘65
Ellie H. Fields ‘49
Joseph M. Finn ‘69
Gerald F. Fischbach
Mary Ellen Fise ‘77
Michael E. Fisher
Dina T. Fleming ‘75, ‘78
Peggy Fleming
Janice L. Flug ‘75
Thomas J. Flynn
Huei-Tsi S. Ford
Harold F. Ford ‘60
Jonathan T. Ford, Sr. ‘62
The Honorable Jennie M. Forehand
Richard Forman
Heather M. Foss
Jill M. and David R. Fosse
Robert E. Foster
Francis B. Francois
Michael Freedman
Charles ‘62 and Beverly Freeland
Linda R. ‘90,’96 and David H. Freeman
Robyn Fry
Michael C. Fu
William J. ‘84 and Jill A. Gaebl ‘82
Gustavo Garcia
Robert C. Garner ‘06,’11
John V. Garnett ‘90
Rick Garofalo
Edward L. Jr. ‘64 and Edith Gates ‘73,’79,’84
Donna M. Gawryck
Linda M. Gaylor ‘71
V. Lynn Gera ‘83
Philip C. Geraci ‘53
William Gilcher
Allen H. Ginsberg
George Glotzbach
Donald G. Godfrey
Juana C. Godinez
J. Douglas Gomery
Fidel Enrique Gonzalez
Azeem H. Gopalani ‘09
Timothy W. Gordon ‘66
Barry P. Gossett ‘62
John C. Graybeal ‘50, ‘62
Gayle P. Gregg ‘95
Harriet Gross
Helen M. Gryboski ‘71
Joseph R. and Evelyn Guerci
Susan E. Gunnells ‘82
Ted R. Gurr
Dennis M. ‘68,’72 and Carolyn S. Gurtz ‘70
David W. Guth ‘73
Michael Habermann
Timothy A. Hackman ‘02, ‘06
Francis R. Hagan, Jr. ‘57
Barbara Haggh-Huglo
Muhiuddin Haider
Grace Halifax
Ralph M. Hamaker ‘53
John S. Hanson ‘93
Janet L. Hargett ‘65
Emory A. Harman, Jr.
Richard D. Harrington
Dennis Hart
Robert M. Haskey ‘58
Warren and Janet Hawthorne
Robert K. Headley, Jr.
Robert K. Headley
James T. Henderson ‘70,’72
Janette L. Hendricks ‘78
Stephen Henry
Kathleen Henry
Paul W. Henry
Juanita M. Hepler ‘68
Paul S. Herrnson
Patricia J. Herron
Steven P. Hirsch and Elizabeth F. Blevins
Josephine P. Hochheimer ‘52
Richard D. Hodge ‘76
David H. Hofstad
Sallie L. Holder ‘62
James ‘59, ‘66 and Mary G. Holland
Pamela Spencer Holley ‘73
Ryan E. Holmberg
Richard H. Jr. ‘65 and Judith A. Holmes
Thomas C. Holtz
William A. Hook ‘53, ‘56, ‘65
Norma R. Hooks
Jeffrey Horlick ‘67
Joel K. Horwich
Joseph A. Behun, Jr. ‘73 and Peggy A. Hosey Behun ‘70
Sondra Wieland Howe
Irene Howland
Frank M. Hudson
Ronald W. Huffman
Susan E. Hughen
Raymond W. Humphrey ‘80
Jeffrey M. Hunt
Sandra Hupp ‘67
Bonnie J. Hurley ‘71, ‘93
John A. Hutchins, Jr. ‘57,’65
Richard N. ‘61 and Maria Hykes
Regina Igel
Don Irwin
Carleton L. Jackson ‘72,’77
Meridel M. Jackson
Malin L. Jacobs
Theodore A. Jacobson
Christian S. ‘03 and Jill R. James ‘04
Bayly E. Janson-LaPalme ‘79
Eldon Janzen
Thomas P. Jedele
James B. Johnston ‘66
Bobby Jones
Ruth E. Jones
Nancy S. Kader ‘05
Dolores H. Kaisler ‘81
Brian Douglas Kajutti ‘71
Avshalom and Amanda Kalichstein
Jack Kamerman
Laveen N. Kanal
Jonathan S. Kang
Thomas H. Kang
Barbara Jo Karen ‘68
Pankaj R. ‘89 and Sujata P. Karnik
Daniel Karr
Rose J. Katen
Stanley H. Katz ‘71
Amrita Jit Kaur
Ronald J. Kazmierczak
Marilyn M. Keesing
Geraldine S. Keipe ‘71
Charles M. Kelley ‘80,’84
Clifford M. ‘54 and Camille E. Kendall
Massoud Moussavi and Evelyn Kennedy
Angela D. Kerr
Jay F. Kimball ‘97
Edward W. ‘65 and Mary Kirk
Arlene F. ‘76 and A. James Klair
Cathy D. Knepper ‘93
Jennie L. Knies ‘94,’96
Kenji Kobayashi
Liesl J. Koch ‘81
James I. Koenig and Myra
Sue Baughman ‘81
Yeo-Hee Koh ‘72
Victor and Joan S. Korenman
Helen M. Koste ‘70
Joseph R. Kraus ‘95
Mollee Coppel Kruger ‘50
Jeanne R. Kuller ‘49
Rose Marie Kushmeider ‘78,’80
Michael J. and Nancy I. Lacy
Culver S. Ladd ‘53
Dorian A. LaFond and Anestine Theophile-LaFond
Peter N. Sterrett and Linette M. Landa
Marilynn M. Larew ‘78
Margaret B. Larsen
Camille A. Larson ‘96
Raymond and Michele LaVerghetta
Connie Lawn
Samuel A. Lawrence
Merrill E. ‘75 and Vickie Layton ‘75
Chang-Tao Lee ‘84
Hyunok Lee ‘86 and Daniel A. Sumner
Scott R. Leffler ‘90
Beverly Sue Lehrer ‘72,’90
Andres Lema-Hincapie
Barry L. ‘80 and Rachel O. Leslie
Daniel W. Leubecker, III ‘71
Christine A. Levine ‘84
Alan F. Lewis
Ivan Lieber ‘85
Katharine R. Lillie ‘72,’75
Jill A. Lion
Carroll T. Lisle ‘56,’69
Alice M. Litwinowicz ‘77
Kathleen G. Lolich ‘82
Richard J. Lolich
Sharon Longley
Yelena Luckert
W. Bernard Lukenbill
John M. and Geraldine M. Lyons
Linda Mabbs
Virginia B. MacEwen ‘83
Daniel C. Mack
Estate of Gordon S. Mackenzie
Margaret M. Maguire ‘72
George P. Majeska
Louise Mangos Mamalakis
D O N O R H O N O R R O L L — I N D I V I D U A L S 17
18
Mary K. Mannix ‘94
Steven A. Mansbach
Karla Mantilla
Joseph R.’53,’62 and Jean W. Marches
Julie A. Marcus ‘79
Michael L. Mark
Andrey Marra
George W. Martin
Elizabeth J. Mason ‘13
Mary P. Mathews ‘68
Michael Henry ‘11 and M. Marie Maxwell ‘99
William R. Mayer
Marlene J. Mayo and H. Eleanor Kerkham
Susan K. McAllister
Sophia J. McArdle ‘80
Rosemary L. McCloskey ‘57
Douglas P. McElrath ‘84
Donald E. McGinnis
Theodore and Courtney J. McKeldin
Terry M. McNeill
Gregory Stephen Metcalf ‘93
Jeannette F. Mickey ‘70
James C. Miller, II ‘72
David C. Miller ‘95, ‘00
George G. Miller, Jr. ‘79
Gerald R. Miller
Thomas B. Miller ‘77
Wayne R. Miller ‘67,’73
Wendy J. ‘79 and Robert Anthony Miller
Angela B. Miotto ‘85
Harriet Mogge
Lynne Mogilensky ‘06
Jean-Paul C. Montagnier
David C. Montgomery
Leslie S. Montroll ‘72
Charles A. Moore
Virginia Moore ‘70
Max Morath
Constance A. Morella
Mark S. Morrison
Douglas A. Moses ‘81
Lawrence K. Moss
Barbara Mujica
Yoshinari Mukai
Krishnendu Mukhopadhyay and Sangeeta Bhattacharya
Irene Munster
Linda G. Murphy
James R. Myers ‘65
Patricia E. Myers ‘65
David M. Narrow
James E. Nealis ‘79,’80
Antoinette C. Negro
Graciela P. Nemes ‘49,’52
Umberto Neri
Howard L. Newhouse ‘57
Daniel Nguyen
Nicholas C. ‘52 and Linda L. Nicholas
Yutaka Nishiyama
Joseph E. Jr. ‘58 and Elizabeth R. Noonan
Andrea D. Norris
Vincent J. ‘94, ‘98 and Elizabeth A. Novara ‘05
Mark F. O’Dea ‘78
Cary O’Dell
Paul F. ‘73 and Edith M. O’Donnell ‘72
Laurel W. Oliver ‘73,’74
Clopper Olmon
Carl P. Olson ‘92
Darlene M. Olson ‘77,’85
James E. and Pamela A. O’Neal
David and Heidi Anne Onkst
David M. and Glenna D. Osnos ‘80
David G. Ottalini ‘11
Frank D. and Gabrielle L. Page
Robert K. and Margaret J. Painter
Anne Paolucci
James Parish
Gregory S. Pavlakis ‘75
Katharine A. Pawelko ‘94
Perry J. Pepper ‘77
Steven L. Permut ‘74
Lowell W. Perry
William S. and Sylvia Holton Peterson
Juanita J. Peterson ‘77
Sylvia Petrie
Daniel A. Pfister ‘12
Harriette L. Phelps
Sara Elaine Phillips
Virginia Phillips
Jean P. Piske ‘56
Lynn T. Pittenger ‘70
Karen S. Pitts ‘75
David V. Pizzi ‘00
Doris Plummer
Mary W. Poole
Hedi Pope
Charles B. and Peggy K. Porter
Estate of Paul Porter, Jr.
Marcia L. Posner ‘88
Dolores S. Powell-Phillips ‘77
John E. Prevar ‘68
Catherine Prince
Rosemary F. Prola ‘71,’06
Robert C. Provine
Juan Carlos Quintero-Herencia
Scott D. Rabinow ‘81,’84
Martha Anne Ragan ‘73
Evelyn A. Rakow ‘53,’76
Steven T. Ratino ‘89
Therese Casadesus Rawson
Leon Reed
Charles A. Reiher
C. William Reilly, III ‘73
*Bennett Reimer
Allan J. Reiter
Hollis W. Renfrew
Warren W. Rhoads
Jane H. Richards
Judith H. Ricker ‘75
Edward M. Rider ‘47
William L. Rigoli ‘47
David Rivard
Kristy N. Robb
Alice Mae Robinson ‘72
Saul Rockman
Carol L. Rogers ‘98
Francis R. and Mrs. Maria C. Romero
Meriam L. Rosen ‘66
Jonathan M. Rosenberg
Michael B. Rosenzweig ‘65,’70,’74
Deborah M. Ross ‘99
Susanna Rowe
The Honorable Ida G. Ruben
Richard M. ‘77 and Ellen S. Rubin ‘72
Barry M. ‘83 and Carole Z. Rubin
Deborah A. Rudy ‘73
Jim Saah
Laura Reilly Salmon ‘86
Jeanne Tremonti Salvado ‘97
Jeannette K. Sanderson ‘76
Boden C. Sandstrom ‘02
Boyd Sarratt
Kurt Sayenga
Terry Ann Sayler
Ray Scannell
John M. Schalow
Judy Scharf
Thomas C. Schelling
Larry and Dorothy Schonfeld
Vera Mae E. Schultz ‘63,’72
Louise M. Schutz ‘49
John A. ‘55, ‘80 and Judith M. Schuyler
Nancy B. and Kenneth L. Schwartz
Margaret S. Sears ‘67,’70,’92
Antoinette G. Sebastian ‘76,’99,’08
Mark Sebastian
Isadore Seeman
Elaine L. Selby ‘87
William H. Sewell ‘63
Paul A. Shackel and Barbara J. Little
Eunice C. Shanks ‘50
Jean A. Sharland ‘69
Roney T. Shawe ‘53
Dorothea L. Shellow ‘66
Benjamin F. Sheppard, Jr. ‘58
Patricia M. Sherlock ‘72
Robert Sherman
Judith L. Shiffers
Cynthia W. Shockley ‘81
James A. Shoemaker ‘56
Sonya E. Shooshan ‘95
Carole E. Shorb ‘68
M. Paul Shore ‘92
Patricia R. Shrack ‘91
Bipin Shrestha ‘05
Lisa Shuggs
Jack Shulimson ‘91
Frank J. Shulman
Emmaline E. Silverman ‘13
Carolyn S. ‘95 and Jeffrey D. Silvey
Robert M. Simpson
Madhu M. Singh ‘13
Satinder P. and Paramjeet K. Singh
Ilene J. Sinsky Solomon ‘66
Jon A. Sjogren
John G. Smale Jr. ‘78, ‘85 and Joanne Guna Smale ‘00
Albert Harrison Small, Sr.
Joanne M. Smith ‘75 and Miles Drake
Matt Smolsky
Carol ‘85 and Alan Sokolski
Saul Sosnowski
Richard E. Spear
Jason G. Speck ‘09
D O N O R H O N O R R O L L — I N D I V I D U A L S18
19
Adam Spellman
Janet L. Spikes ‘99
Mike Spring
Steven C. ‘80 and Cheryl Sprinkle
Albert Squillace
Susan Stamberg
Irwin Starr
Patricia A. and Charles N. Steele
Arne Steinberg ‘67
Christopher Sterling
George F. Sterman ‘74 and Elise R. Frank
Aaron Stern
Yaron M. Sternberg
Thomas A. Stetz
Susan G. Stewart ‘69
Joan D. Stipetic ‘70,’76
Todd D. Stoffer
Sally Stokes
Gail Stotsky ‘77
Rupert Stow
Saul R. ‘00 and Karla L. Strieb ‘99
Allan J. Jr. and Kim Stypeck
Stephen J. Sutton ‘08
Keith Robert Swaney ‘07
Allan R. Taylor
Joan R. Taylor ‘73
Nedelina Tchangalova ‘04
Ruth F. ‘72 and Alvin J. Temin
Mark S. Tenney
CO R P O R AT I O N S , F O U N D AT I O N S & O R G A N I Z AT I O N S
AFL-CIO
The Merck Company Foundation
Naomi & Nehemiah Cohen Foundation
United Brotherhood Carpenters & Joiners of America
National Trust for Historic Preservation
Richard Eaton Foundation Inc.
Maryland Library Association Inc
United Jewish Endowment Fund
Community Foundation for the National Capital Region
Verizon Foundation
Clifford M. and Camille E. Kendall Family Fund
Towers Watson
IBM International Foundation
Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation
Faye F. and Sheldon S. Cohen Philantrophic Fund
Schwab Charitable Fund
Mount St. Mary’s University
ARSC
American Political Items Collectors
Library of American Broadcasting Foundation
Bank of America United Way Campaign
American Composers Alliance
Global Impact
Mid-Atlantic Regional Archives
Bob Fleigh Foundation Inc
CBS News Reference Library
Richard and Rory Hykes Charitable Fund
Marine Band
Vestige Audio Video
Appian Publications + Recordings LTD
Middle East Studies Institute of University of Miami
Dayton History
Independent Television Service
Roméo Records
National Federation of Community Broadcasters
US/ICOMOS
McGraw Hill Education
Page One Photography, Inc.
Share the World’s Resources
Preservation Action
Washington Art Library Resources Committee
Armenian International Women’s Association
PNC Foundation
Margaret C. Tessier ‘96
Marsha S. Thompson ‘85
Jerry J. Thornbery ‘77
Cheryl Thurber
Charles Timbrell ‘76
Geeta N. Tirumalai ‘92
Elizabeth M. Tobey ‘97,’05
Carl L. Todd
Candace J. Tomkiel ‘09
Susan Tomkiel
Robert G. Tonucci
David A. Trace ‘84
Regina Tracy
Mary K. Traver
Ronald J. Troppoli and Donna L. Kurc
Randi Lea Trzesinski ‘03,’08
James B. Tucker
Anne S. K. Turkos
Alan J. Turnbull, II
Jane L. Twomey ‘98
Edward S. and Elizabeth S. Tyburski ‘63
Norma Mitani Uemura ‘93
Helen Umana
Kathy V. Umbdenstock ‘74 and William T. Corey
Darlene H. Unrue
Deborah M. ‘83 and Hall G. Van Vlack, IV
Jane G. Van Wiemokly ‘74
R. Lindley Vann
Martha M. Vayhinger
Jiri Vecernik
Alan K. Virta ‘73,’74
Mikhail Volchok
Margaret Ann Wade
Dawn A. Walker
Frances W. Walker ‘54
Richard E. Walker
Sam Walker ‘71,’74
Karl A. Warner ‘76
Anne W. Warren
Edmund and Leslie L. Washuta
Amy Wasserstrom
Bruce Weber ‘64
Minghui Wei and Xiang Wang
Sherrie L. Weinstein ‘75
Susan A. Weinstein ‘81,’87
Jean S. and Paul E. Weitzel
Penny A. Welbourne ‘70,’73
Gunther Wertheimer
Andrea J. White
Gary W. White
Patricia T. White ‘93
Abigail B. Wiebenson
Jolie Wiggins
Mary E. Wiley ‘63
Ronald A. ‘55 and Patricia A. Willoner
Louis J. Wilmotte
Rebecca P. Wilson ‘11
Joseph Frances Wilson
Maurice Charles Wilson, Jr. ‘81
Pamela Wilson Quin ‘69 and Paul Quin
William G. Wilson
Barbara B. Wing ‘80
John Winslow
Calhoun Winton
Ted Wojtasik
Susan M. Woodcock ‘73
Gretchen S. Wright ‘85
Preston Wright
Lucy Wyatt ‘76
Taketoshi Yamamoto
Yukino Yamamoto
Jie Yang
Huiwen ‘95 and Long P. Yao
S. Derryl York ‘67,’69,’70
Laura Youens
Frank R. M. Young ‘72
Deborah A. Yow
Jessica Erin Zadjura ‘07
William A. Zagorski
Donald T. ‘89 and Aleksandra Zajackowski ‘95
Jack ‘60 and Judy Zane
Naum Panovski and Nevenka Zdravkovska
Annette M. Zehler
Thomas Zeller
Xiaoming Zhao
Laurence J. Zimmerman ‘65,’74
Robert K. Zimmerman ‘63
*DeceasedBold = University employee
D O N O R H O N O R R O L L — I N D I V I D U A L S 19
20
&I N T E R N AT I O N A L
Center for Research Libraries A consortium of libraries that acquires and preserves traditional and digital resources from a global network of sources.
Coalition for Networked Information A coalition to support digital information technology to advance scholarly communication and intellectual productivity.
Council on Library and Information Resources An organization that enhances research, teaching, and learning in collaboration with libraries and cultural institutions.
HathiTrust A community of more than 100 major research institutions and libraries creating a shared digital library to preserve and make accessible the cultural record.
Kuali OLE A community of libraries and vendors that is creating software to manage interrelated library transactions, from ordering and loaning books to managing digital collections. Kuali is the name for community-source enterprise software for higher education; OLE stands for Open Library Environment. UMD is a founding member.
National Diet Library of Japan A partnership to preserve and provide access to materials in the University of Maryland’s Gordon W. Prange Collection.
Text Encoding Initiative Consortium An organization to develop and maintain guidelines for the digital encoding of literary and linguistic texts.
N AT I O N A L
Academic Preservation Trust A national consortium—including regional counterparts such as Johns Hopkins and the University of Virginia—that is framing the next phase of digital preservation.
Association of Research Libraries A mem-ber ship organization of 126 top research libraries in North America.
BitCurator Consortium A coalition of uni versities dedicated to supporting the curation of born-digital materials through the application of open-source digital tools. UMD is a charter member.
CLOCKSS A joint venture of leading scholarly publishers and research libraries to ensure the long-term survival of Web-based journals.
Committee on Institutional Cooperation The academic counterpart to the athletic league of Big Ten universities.
Consortium of College and University Media Centers An organization for providers of media content, technology, and support for quality teaching and learning.
Digital Preservation Network A national consortium established to provide a federated approach to digital preservation.
DuraSpace An organization dedicated to developing open-source repository software, like that used to support Maryland’s own DRUM.
E-Science Institute A program to strengthen support for e-sciences, coordinated by the Association of Research Libraries and the Digital Library Federation.
Library Publishing Coalition A network of more than 50 academic libraries dedicated to supporting a diverse range of library publishing practices.
S TAT E A N D R E G I O N A L
Association of Southeastern Research Libraries A regional research library consortium.
Chesapeake Information and Research Library Alliance A regional organization of libraries that extends reciprocal, in-person borrowing privileges to graduate students from member universities.
Library of Congress A partnership to facilitate access to on-site Library of Congress collections for University of Maryland faculty and students.
Maryland Digital Library A gateway to electronic resources available to students and faculty at universities and colleges across the state of Maryland.
Maryland Library Consortium A consortium of school, public, and academic libraries in Maryland.
National Library of Medicine, Universities at Shady Grove, University of Maryland, Baltimore A partnership to support mutual interests in medical and health education, advanced training, and information dissemination.
Northeast Research Libraries A regional research library consortium.
University System of Maryland and Affiliated Institutions
P A R T N E R S H I P S & C O L L A B O R A T I O N S
& Produced by the University Libraries Director of Communications: Eric Bartheld
Graphic Designer: Rebecca Wilson Full-page photographs: Michael Morgan
Additional images by or courtesy of: Eric Bartheld, Blaze Buck, John Consoli, Historic Maryland Newspapers Project,
Kendall Reeves, Library of American Broadcasting, Michal Shafrir, UMD French Pamphlet Project,
University Archives, Rebecca Wilson.
Printed with soy-based inks on Rolland Enviro100 made from 100% post-consumer recycled fiber.
Printed in a union shop using 100% wind power.
Patricia A. Steele, D
ean of Libraries6131 M
cKeldin LibraryCollege Park, M
D 20742-7011
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the university.
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