dec12_b.indd


C&RL News December 2012 716

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.

to that, she was director of libraries at the 
University of Massachusetts-Boston and has 
also served as an independent consultant 
for libraries and higher education focusing 
on assessment, innovation, and accessibil-
ity. In addition to presenting at numerous 
national and international conferences, 
Bostick has also written extensively on 
academic library consortia in the United 
States and information-seeking behavior in 
university students. She is coauthor of the 
book Library Anxiety: Theory, Research, 
and Applications.

Beatriz Betancourt Hardy has been ap-
pointed the dean of libraries and instruc-
tional resources at Salisbury University in 
Salisbury, Maryland. Since 2006, she had 
served as Marian and Alan McLeod Director 
of the Special Collections Research Center 
at the College of William and Mary. She 
previously was the France-Merrick Director 
of the Library of the Maryland Historical 
Society.

Rosemary M. Magee, vice president and sec-
retary of Emory University, has been named 
director of the univer-
sity’s Manuscript, Ar-
chives, and Rare Book 
Library (MARBL). Ap-
pointed vice president 
and secretary of the 
university in 2005, Ma-
gee has worked closely 
with Emory trustees 
and the president in de-
veloping and strength-
ening governance pro-
cesses across the university and in setting the 
agenda for the future. She is a member of 
various universitywide committees and chairs 
the Creativity and Arts Initiative of the Univer-
sity Strategic Plan. Previously, Magee served as 
senior associate dean of Emory College where 
she also chaired the Steering Committee for 

Nataly Blas is now the 2012–2014 diversity 
resident at the University of North Carolina-
Greensboro libraries. 

Arcot Rajasekar, professor in the School 
of Information and Library Science and 
chief scientist at the Renaissance Computing 
Institute at the University of North Carolina-
Chapel Hill, will lead one of eight research 
teams that have won a Big Data grant—a 
new federal funding initiative that aims to 
improve the tools and techniques needed to 
access, organize, and glean discoveries from 
huge volumes of data. The National Science 
Foundation (NSF), with support from the 
National Institutes of Health, awarded the 
eight research teams about $15 million six 
months after the White House announced 
the Big Data Research and Development 
Initiative. Rajasekar is principal investigator 
for a three-year project, “DataBridge—A So-
ciometric System for Long-Tail Science Data 
Collections.” The $1.5 million project funded 
by NSF will use sociometric networks similar 
to LinkedIn or Facebook but on a larger scale 
to enable scientists to find data and like-
minded research. 

A p p o i n t m e n t s

Sharon Bostick has joined the Illinois Insti-
tute of Technology (IIT) as dean of libraries. 
As the chief administrative officer of IIT’s 
libraries, Bostick’s responsibilities include 
the coordination and oversight of all library 
operations and services. Bostick previously 
served as dean of university libraries at the 
University of Missouri-Kansas City. Prior 

P e o p l e  i n  t h e  N e w sAnn-Christe Galloway

Rosemary M. Magee



December 2012 717 C&RL News

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the Arts at Emory. An artist-in-residence at 
both the Hambidge Center for the Creative 
Arts and Sciences and the Tyrone Guthrie 
Centre in Ireland, Magee has published es-
says, reviews, and short stories in a variety 
of journals and literary magazines. Among 
her publications are articles on several of 
the writers closely associated with MARBL, 
including Flannery O’Connor, Salman Rush-
die, Alice Walker, and others. She also has 
edited two volumes, both published by Uni-
versity Press of Mississippi: Conversations 
with Flannery O’Connor and Friendship 
and Sympathy: Communities of Southern 
Women Writers. Magee will continue to serve 
as secretary of the university for the coming 
year in order to identify a new vice president 
and secretary of the university.

Debbie Sibley has been appointed director 
of libraries at the Louisiana State University 
Health Sciences Center (LSUHSC) in New 
Orleans. Sibley has worked at the LSUHSC 
Library since April 2007 as associate director 
and since July 2008 as interim director. Prior 
to arriving in New Orleans, Sibley worked at 
Thomas Jefferson University as deputy uni-
versity librarian, University of Massachusetts-
Worcester as deputy director and associate 
director of the Regional Medical Library, and 
at LSUHSC in Shreveport as the collection 
management librarian. Her first library posi-
tion was library associate, evening supervi-
sor at the LSUMC Library in 1978.

Courtney Cunningham is now refer-
ence librarian and emerging technologies 
specialist at Franklin & Marshall College.

Sai Deng has been appointed catalog-
ing/metadata librarian at the University of 
Central Florida Libraries. 

Anne Elguindi is now the associate 
director for the Virtual Library of Virginia.  

Bethany Harris has been named re-
search librarian for Health Sciences at the 
University of California-Irvine. 

Jason Imbesi is now music librarian at 
the University of Michigan Library’s Music 
Library. 

Kelsey Keyes is now librarian/assistant 
professor at Boise State University’s Albertsons 
Library.

Sarah Loudenslager is now business/
instruction librarian at Salisbury University in 
Salisbury, Maryland.

Nandita Mani is now liaison librarian at 
the University of Michigan’s Taubman Health 
Sciences Library. 

Timothy McGeary has been appointed 
head of library systems at the University Library 
of the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill 

Elizabeth Ramsey is now librarian/as-
sistant professor at Boise State University‘s 
Albertsons Library. 

Giselle Simón has been appointed conser-
vator (senior librarian), Preservation and Con-
servation, at the University of Iowa Libraries.

Rob Van Rennes has been named interim 
head of acquisitions at the University of Iowa 
Libraries. 

Christopher Woodall is now technology 
librarian at Salisbury University in Salisbury, 
Maryland.

Michael Wright has been appointed 
interim associate university librarian for Col-
lections and Scholarly Communication at the 
University of Iowa Libraries.

Molly Olney-Zide is now content services 
librarian at Franklin & Marshall College.



C&RL News December 2012 718

R e t i r e m e n t s

Kathryn DeGraff has retired as head of 
Special Collections and Archives at DePaul 
University after 40 years of service. Both 
the founding head of Special Collections 
and Archives and DePaul’s first university 
archivist, DeGraff oversaw the integration 
of individual collections held at DePaul into 
a center for research and teaching in areas 
such as local history, Vincentian Studies, 
and the study of social justice. Over the 
past 20 years, DeGraff established enduring 
collaborative efforts with members of the 
community through the Lincoln Park Com-
munity Research Initiative and with teachers 
and students through the development of an 
active instructional program that was recog-
nized upon her retirement with the naming 
of an undergraduate research award given 
by the Department of History in her honor.

Sid Huttner, senior librarian, Special Collec-
tions and University Archives, at the Univer-
sity of Iowa Libraries, has retired.

Susan Marks, director of Human Resources 
and Diversity Programs at the University 
of Iowa Libraries for the last 11 years, has 
retired after 40 years of service. Most of her 
career was spent managing the Libraries’ 
Circulation/Access Services department. 
Marks conducted many national searches for 
librarians and other staff positions and was 
skilled at advising supervisors and staff on 
more effective and sensitive ways to man-
age personnel challenges. She was an active 
member of the Libraries’ Administrative team 
and the campus human resources group. 
Marks is a strong advocate for diversity, and 
she contributed to the library profession at 
a national level. 

Edward Shreeves, associate university 
librarian, Collections and Scholarly Commu-
nication, at the University of Iowa Libraries, 
has retired after 23 years of service. Under 
his tenure, more than 2.5 million volumes 
were added to the libraries. Thousands 

of electronic publications were also made 
accessible to the campus. Shreeves is well-
respected nationally for his knowledge of 
collection development, commitment to 
open access, and understanding of complex 
issues pertaining to scholarly publishing. 
Shreeves frequently was “in charge” of the 
University Libraries in the absence of the 
university librarian and was an adjunct fac-
ulty member in the School of Library and 
Information Science. 

D e a t h s

Mary M. Doak, 91, retired librarian at the 
University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL), has 
died. At the UNL Love Library, Doak was a 
librarian from 1946 to 1986 in various posi-
tions, including social studies librarian, public 
service librarian, chair of Humanities and 
Social Services Department. Doak retired as 
chair of the Humanities and Social Sciences 
Department with rank of professor. She also 
received special recognition as NE-JMRT Men-
tor of the Year and an admiralship in the Great 
Navy of the State of Nebraska. Doak was a 
member of ALA, UNL Emeriti Association, and 
University Place Art Center.

Elsie Viktoria Anna Von Raison Thomas 
91, has died. In 1954, Thomas began work-
ing part-time for the University of Nebraska 
as a library specialist, and she began full-
time employment in 1955. She remained 
in the employ of the university, working at 
both Donald Love Memorial Library and C. 
Y. Thompson Library for the next 37 years, 
finally retiring in 1992 at the age of 72. Dur-
ing her tenure, Thomas would often have 
students over for meals or have them stay at 
the house while the dormitories were closed 
for the holidays or the summer. Her last as-
signment was in the Special Collections of the 
University Archives, where she cataloged and 
translated the collection of Latvian President 
and Prime Minister Karlis Ulmanis, who at-
tended the university.