jan09c.indd Ann­Christe Galloway P e o p l e i n t h e N e w s A p p o i n t m e n t s Stephen Enniss has been named Eric Wein­ mann Librarian of the Folger Shakespeare Library. In addition to overseeing library operations and acquisitions, Enniss will lead digitization initiatives to expand access to rare materials in the Folger’s collections. During his 15 years at Emory University’s Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Enniss has led the library in acquiring important papers of major American, British, and Irish writers—among them Ted Hughes, Salman Rushdie, Alice Walker, Seamus Heaney, and Flannery O’Connor. He is the co­author of the award­winning exhibition catalog “No Other Appetite”: Sylvia Plath, Ted Hughes, and the Blood Jet of Poetry and has written for numer­ ous publications including the Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America and RBM: Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cul­ tural Heritage. He is a frequent speaker on the value of research libraries, and he has been interviewed on NPR’s “All Things Considered” and in the New York Times, the latter follow­ ing Emory’s acquisition of the 75,000 volume Raymond Danowski Poetry Library. Enniss is the recipient of a Leverhulme Visiting Fellow­ ship from the University of London. Lina Ortega has been named head of branch libraries at the University of Oklahoma. Ann M. Watson is the new library director at Ohio University Lancaster’s Hannah V. McCauley Library in Lancaster, Ohio. Rosalind Alexander is the new interim coordinator of the Moores School of Music Li­ brary at the University of Houston Libraries. Ed. note: To ensure that your personnel news is considered for publication, write to Ann-Christe Galloway, production editor, C&RL News, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611-2795; e -mail: agalloway@ ala.org; fax: (312) 280-2520. Genie Alvarado has been appointed Hawaiian resource specialist in the reference department at Kapiolani Community College Library in Honolulu. Laura Berfield is the new project ar­ chivist (part­time) for the Center for Public Service Archives for the Loyola University­ Chicago Libraries. Ian Chan is now the Web development librarian at the California State University­ San Marcos Library. Ming yu Chen is the new metadata coordinator at the University of Houston Libraries. Jane Currie has been appointed refer­ ence librarian/bibliographer for the Loyola University­Chicago Libraries. K. Matthew Dames has been named copyright and information policy adviser at Syracuse University. Deborah Green is now digital initiatives librarian at the University of Idaho. Kristin Henrich has been appointed reference/instruction librarian at the Uni­ versity of Idaho. Charlotte Hess is now associate librarian for collections and scholarly communication at the Syracuse University Library. Stuart Hinds is the new head of special collections in the University of Missouri­ Kansas City Libraries. Karen Holt has joined the Instruction and Information Literacy Program at the University of Houston Libraries. Jennifer Jacobs has been named interli­ brary loan librarian for the Loyola University­ Chicago Libraries. Eric Jennings has been appointed reference/instruction librarian at Univer­ sity of Wisconsin­Eau Claire’s McIntyre Library. Hans Kishel has been appointed refer­ ence/instruction librarian at University of Wisconsin­Eau Claire’s McIntyre Library. Yvonne Lev is now distance learning librarian at Goucher College. January 2009 65 C&RL News Helenna Li is now electronic resources specialist in the acquisitions department at Stanford University Libraries. Lindsey Loeper has been appointed special collections archivist, at the Albin O. Kuhn Library and Gallery, University of Maryland­Baltimore County. John Lovett has been appointed direc­ tor of special collections at the University of Oklahoma. Pearl Ly has joined the California State University­San Marcos Library as natural sciences librarian. James (Jamie) MacDonald has been appointed social sciences reference librarian in the Cudahy Library Reference Department at Loyola University­Chicago. Kerr y Magruder has been appointed Curator of the History of Science Collections at the University of Oklahoma. Elizabeth McDonald has been named head of cataloging at the University of Mem­ phis University Libraries. Kevin Merriman has joined the faculty of the University Libraries of the University of Memphis as head of collection management. Marilyn Myers is the new assistant dean for public services at the University of Houston Libraries. Kevin Mulroy has been named associate university librarian for academic services. the University of California­Los Angeles Library. Ai-Chin Oehlers is librarian in the refer­ ence department at Kapiolani Community College Library in Honolulu. Sunyeen Pai has been appointed digital initiatives librarian at Kapiolani Community College Library in Honolulu. Marla Peppers has been appointed associ­ ate university librarian at the California State University­Los Angeles JFK Memorial Library. Robert Perret has been named refer­ ence/instruction librarian at the University of Idaho. Shu Qian has been appointed science reference librarian at the Albin O. Kuhn Library and Gallery, University of Maryland­ Baltimore County. Margaret (Bess) Robinson has been selected as Head of Instructional Services at the University of Memphis University Libraries. Sher ri Saltzman has been appointed serials and electronic resources librarian for the Loyola University­Chicago Libraries. Christina Sheldon has been appointed instruction and reference librarian at Califor­ nia State University­Los Angeles, JFK Memo­ rial Library. Denise Shorey is now associate director for user services at the University of Notre Dame’s Hesburgh Libraries. K r i s t i n a S o u t h w e l l h a s b e e n a p ­ pointed assistant curator of the Western History Collections at the University of Oklahoma. Bryan Vogh has been appointed head of systems at the University of Wisconsin­Eau Claire’s McIntyre Library. Sean Walton has been appointed emerg­ ing technologies librarian at Ball State Uni­ versity in Muncie, Indiana. Scott Warren is now bibliographer for science and technology at Syracuse Uni­ versity. Geoffrey Wood is now catalog librarian at the University of Idaho. R e t i r e m e n t s Patricia L. Bril has retired from the library faculty of California State University­Ful­ lerton, after nearly 37 years of service. Be­ ginning her career as a reference librarian, Bril went on to become reference section co­ ordinator. Subsequent positions included chair of public services; col­ lection development of­ ficer; and, for 11 years, associate university li­ brarian, during which time she oversaw the library’s major build­ Patricia L. Bril C&RL News January 2009 66 ing and expansion projects. In pre­retire­ ment status for the last several years, Bril served as electronic collections librarian, leading the library’s rapid development of electronic resources. Throughout her ca­ reer, she participated in professional as­ sociations at the local, state, national, and international levels. Within ALA, Bril was most active in ACRL, including positions in the Instruction Section and as president of CARL, California’s ACRL Chapter. She was elected chair of ALCTS Collection Man­ agement and Development Section and served on numerous ALCTS committees and boards. Bril participated in IFLA and was a member of its Acquisitions and Ex­ change Committee. In addition, she held a number of positions on professional edito­ rial boards, including ten years on Research Strategies’ board. Her activities as a library consultant involved projects in England, Mexico, and the United States that empha­ sized organizational communication and cooperative collection development, the latter being the primary focus of her aca­ demic research, publication, and presenta­ tion. As an adjunct instructor since 1990, Bril taught courses in library administration as well as collection management for the San Jose State University School of Library and Information Science. Betty H. Day retired from the University of Maryland (UM) Libraries in July 2008, having spent her entire career as a librar­ ian in various significant roles at UM. Day’s career at UM progressed from service as a reference librarian to humanities reference librarian and bibliographer to the emerging field of electronic information resources, which she managed for 12 years for UM, the University System of Maryland and Af­ filiated Institutions Consortium, as well as the Maryland Digital Library. She achieved distinguished records of service and schol­ arly contribution in her two fields of study: American and English literature and wom­ en’s studies, and electronic resource acqui­ sition and management. Day chaired UM’s Library Assembly (2007­08). Day is second in the UM library faculty rank to be award­ ed emirta status. Bonnie Jo Dopp retired in January 2008 after 12 years with the University of Mary­ land’s (UM) Music Library and subsequently the Michelle Smith Performing Arts Library. Dopp held positions at the San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and Montgomery County (Maryland) public libraries prior to joining UM. She managed Special Collections in the Performing Arts and then served as a music and ethnomusicology expert for the librar­ ies. Dopp’s career was highlighted with participation in several national associa­ tions, including the American Musicologi­ cal Society, the Music Library Association, and ALA. Another career hallmark was the publication of numerous reviews of new books, recordings, videos, and multimedia materials in music and ethnomusicology. Day is the first in the UM library faculty ranks to be awarded emerita status. Advertisers American Scientific Publishers cover 4 Annual Reviews 10 Archival Products 61 Association of Research Libraries 64 Atlas Systems 26 Cambridge University Press 63 Choice Reviews Online 20 CyberTools for Libraries 51 Drexel University 57 Duke University Press 2 EBSCO 15 Education Week cover 2 Elsevier 55 Entomological Society of America 25 H. W. Wilson cover 3 Liberty Fund 68 Oxford Journals 1 Peabody Professional Institutes 14 Perry Dean Architects 31 Rittenhouse Book Distributors 5 R. R. Bowker 53 University of Oklahoma Libraries 19 January 2009 67 C&RL News Charles McNamara has retired as curator of rare books in the Wilson Special Collections Library at the University of North Carolina (UNC), a position he held since 1986. Before joining UNC, McNamara was associate rare books librarian and curator of the Arthur Dean Collections of French History and Literature at Cornell University Library (1978–86) and rare books cataloger and rare books librarian at the University of Rochester Libraries (1975–78). At UNC, McNamara regularly taught a seminar on rare books and special collections in the School of Information and Library Science. During his tenure at UNC, McNamara worked especially to build the Rare Book Collection’s holdings of English and Irish literature of the 19th and 20th centuries, American literature of the post­ World War II period, and popular culture ma­ terials of the 20th century. In the early 1990s, he was elected to three consecutive terms as member­at­large of the ACRL’s Rare Books and Manuscripts Section. Frieda Rosenberg has retired as head of serials cataloging at the University of North Carolina (UNC) after 28 years with the library. Rosenberg joined the library as a serials cataloger in 1980 and was promoted to head of the section in 1988. In addition to temporary work at the UNC Library, her previous library experience included processing and public service positions with the Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore, the librar­ ies of Ohio State and Stanford universities, and the Durham City and County Library. During her tenure at UNC, Rosenberg served as the UNC liaison to the CONSER Operations Committee and was a founding member in 1999 of the CONSER Publications Patterns and Holdings Task Force. As a consultant to the Library of Congress, she produced a day­and­a­half training course, “Serial Holdings Workshop,” and she regularly conducted serials training workshops around the country. In 2003, she won the Bowker/Ulrich’s Serials Librarianship Award for her many contri­ butions to the advancement and understanding of serial holdings, particularly the MARC21 Format for Holdings Data. In 2008, she received the dis­ tinguished alumni award from the UNC School of Information and Library Science. New and Forthcoming Titles from Liberty Fund The Fortunes of Liberalism: Essays on Austrian Economics and the Ideal of Freedom By F. A. Hayek Edited by Peter G. Klein January 2009. 6 x 9. 287 pages. Order any of these titles by February 28, 2009 and receive a 10% discount. Use keycode LFACRL19. Paperback only. ISBN 978-0-86597-741-9. $12.00. The Trend of Economic Thinking By F. A. Hayek Edited by W. W. Bartley III and Stephen Kresge January 2009. 6 x 9. 400 pages. Quality paperback. 978-0-86597-742-6. $12.00. Socialism and War: Essays, Documents, Reviews By F. A. Hayek Edited by Bruce Caldwell Available February 2009. 6 x 9. 280 pages. Quality paperback. 978-0-86597-743-3. $12.00. Two Books of the Elements of Universal Jurisprudence By Samuel Pufendorf Translated by William Abbott Oldfather (1931) Edited and with an Introduction by Thomas Behme Available February 2009. 6 x 9. Approx. 440 pages. Cloth 978-0-86597-619-1. $20.00. Paperback 978-0-86597-620-7. $12.00. The American Nation Primary Sources Available April 2009. 81/2 x 11. 616 pages. Cloth 978-0-86597-729-7 $27.00. Paperback 978-0-86597-730-3. $14.00. Phone: (800) 621-2736 (USA/Canada) (773) 702-7000 (South America, Central America, Caribbean) Fax: (800) 621-8476 (USA/Canada) (773) 702-7212 (South America, Central America, Caribbean) Email: orders@press.uchicago.edu Web site: www.libertyfund.org Keycode: LFACRL19 C&RL News January 2009 68 http:www.libertyfund.org mailto:orders@press.uchicago.edu