sept09c2.indd C&RL News September 2009 484 Ed. note: Send your news to: Grants & Acquisitions, C&RL News, 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611-2795; e-mail: agalloway@ala.org. The librar y at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign has received a $397,000 two-year grant from the National Digital Newspaper Program (NDNP) for its Illinois Digital Newspaper Project. The award will support the digitization of 100,000 pages of historically signifi cant Illinois newspapers dat- ing from 1860 to 1922. NDNP is a partnership between the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the Library of Congress to provide online access to U.S. newspapers. It is part of the “We the Peo- ple” program at NEH designed to promote the study and teach- ing of American his- tory and culture. The NDNP funding will be used to digitize Illinois newspapers selected by an advi- sory board based on their regional infl u- ence, their role as the “paper of record” at the county level, or their signifi cance for specifi c ethnic, racial, or other social groups. The digitized material will be deposited in Chronicling America, the browsable and searchable repository of historical newspapers digitized through NDNP. Chronicling America was launched in 2007 and currently contains more than 1.1 million pages of U.S. newspapers published between 1880 and 1922. For additional information about NDNP, visit www.neh. gov/projects/ndnp.html. To view newspa- per pages using Chronicling America, visit chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/. Acquisitions The papers of Robert Davolt (1958–2005) national columnist, writer, publicist, and edi- tor have been acquired by the Leather Archives and Museum at Northern Illinois University. The 25-box collection covers several decades of Davolt’s fi ction and nonfi ction literary work, including materials from his time as the fi nal editor of DRUMMER magazine from 1996 until 1999, signifi cant business correspon- dence and internal papers of Desmodus Publishing, and his erotic fi ction pieces, which appeared in Bound and Gagged magazine. Davolt was a major fi gure in the leather and levi counterculture of the United States. His online columns on l e a t h e r p a g e . c o m reached a global au- dience and were eventually published in 2003 as the anthology Painfully Obvious. A c o p y o f E u d o r a We l t y ’s f i r s t b o o k , A Curtain of Green, has been donated to a collection-in-progress at Mississippi State University (MSU) Libraries by MSU English pro- fessor and editor of The Mississippi Quarterly Noel Polk. Polk, both a Welty and Faulkner scholar, is currently working with Mitchell Memorial Library’s Special Collections depart- ment to create the Noel Polk Collection, which will feature books, papers, and memorabilia on Mississippi authors. This 1941 edition of A Curtain of Green, with an introduction by author Katherine Anne Porter, is signed by both Welty and Porter. Visit library.msstate. edu/specialcollections/index.asp for more information about the collections. G r a n t s a n d A c q u i s i t i o n sAnn-Christe Galloway Mississippi State University Libraries’ Lynne Mueller (left) accepts Eudora Welty’s fi rst book from Noel Polk to be added to Polk’s Collection at Mitchell Memorial Library. Photographed by Jim Tomlinson, MSU Libraries.