Arts Council of Moore County 25/26 Program Guide ~ Sep.- Feb. Issue
photo by Lisa Miyamoto
Life is Art, Live Yours In Color
At Penick Village, we believe every chapter of life should be vibrant, creative, and meaningful. As a faith-based nonprofit community for older adults, we inspire a lifestyle centered around wellness, personal enrichment, and joyful connection.
Nestled in Southern Pines, our welcoming campus offers maintenance-free living and the freedom to explore your passions. With an exciting expansion underway, now is the perfect time to discover spacious new residences and even more ways to live life to the fullest in comfort, security, and color.
Pinehurst Par Excellence
Photo by Tess Gillespie
Welcome to YOUR Arts Council
Thank you for your interest in the fourth edition of our program guide. We created this guide to share information about upcoming exhibits, opportunities for children, and high caliber artists. Our hope is that your curiosity is rewarded as you learn about our work throughout Moore County – thanks to our advertisers and patrons like you.
Founded in 1973, the Arts Council of Moore County is a nonprofit, charitable organization whose mission is to inspire and strengthen our community through the arts. Our offerings are reflective of our rich diversity, facilitating affordable access to the arts.
Our galleries and offices are at Campbell House, located in a picturesque 14-acre park at 482 East Connecticut Avenue in Southern Pines. For more than 100 years, Campbell House has been a beacon of culture, enhancing and influencing civic life. Once a part of the Weymouth estate, Campbell House is among our region’s most significant landmarks, listed on the National Register for Historic Places. In addition to the Arts Council, the manor is also home to the Boy Scouts of America, Southern Pines Garden Club, and Southern Pines Parks and Recreation Department.
The Arts Council hosts hundreds of artists annually, showcasing local, regional and national artists working in various media. Artwork changes frequently, making every gallery visit fresh and new, and a great place to find the perfect gift.
We serve over 15,000 children each year through our youth programs in every public, private, charter, and home school. Programs encompass visual and performing arts, scholarships to children pursuing their creative talents, and a partnership with ArtistYear, the first national AmeriCorps program for artists dedicating themselves to a year of service to our country.
Other programs include a chamber music series featuring world-class musicians, Artours to destinations of cultural interest, Autumnfest in partnership with the Town of Southern Pines, and support for local arts organizations with grants, ticket sales, and publicity.
This is YOUR Arts Council and we invite you to help sustain our work by becoming a member today. Joining is easy. Just visit www.MooreArt.org to learn more. Your support makes this a strong and beautiful community – resilient with the arts at its core.
Your gift will make a world of difference.
Arts Council Membership Form
Name:
Address:
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Phone: E-mail:
TO JOIN: Online at www.MooreArt.org • Call us at 910-692-2787
Mail to the Arts Council, P.O. Box 405, Southern Pines, NC 28388
Deliver to Campbell House, 482 E. Connecticut Ave., Southern Pines
$75 - Artist Circle (please visit ACMC website for details)
$125 - Donor
$250 - Sustainer
$500 - Patron
$1,973+ - 1973 Society
(Tribute to ACMC’s founding year)
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Campbell House photo by Tim Sayer
entanglements
September 5-26, 2025
Arts Council Galleries at Campbell House
By Corbin Weeks
The exhibition, entanglements, explores the intricate, often inseparable connections between humanity and the natural world. The word suggests complexity, interdependence and the ways in which living systems—human, ecological, emotional—are woven together. It also describes how the work of Jo Tomsick, Josiah King and Luke Huling comes together for the Arts Council’s September show, blending three distinctive perspectives into a common thread: nature and humanity do not exist in isolation. Instead, they are entwined in cycles of influence, conflict, harmony, and transformation.
The title also nods to the tension and beauty in these relationships. “Entanglement” can imply both struggle and intimacy—roots tangled underground, vines climbing walls, the push and pull between destruction and renewal. It reflects how our lives are caught up in ecological systems, whether through climate, culture, memory or material. In a time of ecological crisis and shifting global narratives, entanglements invites viewers to reflect on their own place within these intertwined systems—and to consider how art can illuminate the fragile threads
Jo Tomsik
Jo is an oil painter and illustrator originally from Cleveland, Ohio. Until recently, she lived in Moore County as an Army wife. “All roads lead back to Ft. Bragg,” she quips. She has always been around art; both of her parents were musicians and placed a big emphasis on creativity. Her family frequently attended museums, concerts and other performances throughout her childhood. Her own art was fostered in school during weekly art class.
A careful and deliberate artist, she creates pieces that express themes of philosophy, psychology, theology, and the sameness between the human and animal worlds. She says it's hard to articulate with words alone. She is fascinated by “common themes that crop up across cultures, time periods and religions.”
In the Arts Council’s 2024
Fine Art Festival, Jo won the Sara Wilson Hodgkins Best in Show award with her oil painting called The Wild Swan (photo above). Taken from a personal favorite fairy tale about a princess whose voice is taken by a witch, she says that the princess is a saint in the story, but imagines that a bevy of screaming, needy swans would be enough to make anyone lose their cool.
When asked about what advice she would give her younger self, she responds, “Keep making art as often as you can, and as poorly as you can. You have to make bad art for the good stuff to surface.”
More about Jo can be found on her website, JoTomsick.com.
Josiah King
Born in Leigh Acres, Florida, Josiah moved to North Carolina at a young age and considers himself a native. His medium is oil due to his love
(continued on page 7)
Josiah King working on details
The Wild Swan by Jo Tomsick
Jo Tomsick at work in her studio
for the tactility of the paint. His themes center on things that stop us in our tracks, anything that brings you pause – from large moments like sunsets to more quiet scenes that seem to “breathe” in his paintings.
Like Jo, Josiah’s artistic journey began at an early age with colored pencils and crayons. He began by sketching pictures of familiar childhood themes like Batman and Darth Vader, and cites his mother as a major artistic influence.
One particularily impactful experience was standing in front of a painting by Spanish painter, Antonio López García, at the North Carolina Museum of Art when he was a college freshman. The work, Sink and Mirror , depicts a sink with the usual stuff around it—toothpaste, toothbrush, soap, etc. “There was nothing special about the items of the setting,” he recalls, “but the way it was painted was so striking – the perspective and colors.”
His words of advice are, “you don’t have to be afraid to call yourself an artist, and remember that things that excite you are there for a reason. Get around people who are diving into art, beauty, and a truly fulfilled life.”
Josiah is the full-time art instructor at Sampson Community College in Clinton, NC. His work has been shown at the NC Museum of Art, US Capitol Building in Washington, DC, and the Erie Art Museum, PA.
To learn more about Josiah, visit JosiahKing.com.
Luke Huling
Luke is a sculptor originally from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He moved to Moore County to become an art professor at Sandhills Community College. His medium of choice is clay, which he loves for its malleability, “You can push, pull, add and subtract it into any shape you desire,” he says. Although clay is his primary medium, he also works with nonferrous metals.
He credits his mother for his discovery of art from such a young age. She was always taking him to camps and classes in his free time outside of school. He remembers how his brother was talented in athletics, but he struggled in that regard. Crediting his mother’s support, he says, “She really boosted my confidence and showed me that I could have an outlet where I excelled.”
With unique style and mindset that sets apart his work, he often intentionally tests the boundaries of clay. “While I sculpt my figures representationally, I often place them in situations that are a bit uncanny.” He says that if he could go back and tell his younger self something, it would be, “take a deep breath in and out and don’t let your friends and family scare you about getting an art degree!”
Luke recalls that people were worried about whether he could have a successful career with an art degree. As a professor, he now advises his students to think about their future and encourages them to consider how they will be using the art degree and what type of job outlook the career has in coming years.
Learn more about Luke at LukeHuling.com.
The opening reception for entanglements will be Fri., Sep. 5 (6-8pm) at the Arts Council Galleries at Campbell House, and will be on display Sep. 5-26 (weekdays, 10am-5pm) and Sat., Sep. 20 (12-2pm). The exhibit is free and open to the public. Campbell House is located at 482 E. Connecticut Ave. in Southern Pines.
Corbin Weeks is a senior at Union Pines High School who is an avid runner and likes to play guitar. (continued
Sink and Mirror (1967)
By Antonio López García
Luke Huling poses with one of his works at SCC (Photo by John Gessner)
O’QUINN POTTERY
The Arts Council is excited to spotlight Sandra O’Quinn and Glenn McNeill of O’Quinn Pottery , two of the artists whose work is featured in the Sales Gallery at the Arts Council Galleries at Campbell House.
O’Quinn Pottery is located in an old log cabin on the historic Busbee Road in Westmoore, a community located in the northwest part of Moore County. They make a variety of handmade pottery, including dinnerware, serving dishes, cookware, bread baskets, vases, and decorative sculptures.
To learn more about O’Quinn, we asked them some questions...
Where have you lived? “I’ve always lived in Moore County and never more than two miles from where I live now,” says Sandra. Glenn says, “I’m from five miles away and only moved to Moore County after marrying Sandra.”
When were you first introduced to art? “I’m related to a long line of Moore County potters,” says Sandra. “Mom had a friend with a shop who taught me how to make pots, then I took night classes at Randolph Community College and opened my shop in 1989.” Glenn says, “After high school, I worked at Cole Pottery making clay balls for Virginia Shelton and helping unload kilns. After watching Sandra make pottery, I tried my hand at it and we’ve been throwing pots together since 1998.”
What is your favorite activity? Sandra says, “There is nothing that I’d rather do more than make pottery.”
What is your favorite place in Moore County? “The Westmoore community because of the people and potters,” says Sandra. “If you need any advice, everyone is always helpful.”
If you can’t make it to the Arts Council Galleries to see pieces made by Sandra and Glenn, and all the other great artists in our Sales Gallery, take the time to drive to O’Quinn Pottery located at 4456 Busbee Road in Seagrove. Sandra and Glenn enjoy talking with all their customers who visit their shop as much as they enjoy making beautiful pottery. They are open Monday-Saturday, 9am to 5pm, and their phone number is 910-464-5125.
Thank you, Sandra and Glenn of O’Quinn Pottery, for making the Arts Council a great community asset!
ANYTHING GOES
October 3-31, 2025
Arts Council Galleries at Campbell House
What do you get when you put four great artists with different styles in one art show? You get the Arts Council’s October exhibition, Anything Goes, and the knowledge that it will be amazing! The four artists in question are none other than Jane Casnellie, Jean Smyth, Jessie Mackay, and Alana Knuff.
Jane Casnellie
Jane's love of nature and animals began as a child growing up in Nottingham, England where she spent the first 20 years of her life. She then moved to southern Spain where she lived for two years before moving to the US in 1969. When her husband, Gene, retired they left behind their busy lives in New York City and Princeton, NJ to move to Pinehurst.
A chance meeting with fellow equestrian and artist, Jessie MacKay, led Jane to become an artist some 30 years ago. She began painting in oils and more recently watercolors. Each medium offers a different outcome and a different thought process. For Jane, nature is the common thread that binds the two.
Jane owned Hollyhocks Art Gallery in Pinehurst for 20 years where she taught, displayed her art and represented other local artists. Nowadays, her commissions keep her busy and she enjoys donating work to local fundraisers, especially those relating to animals and nature.
Learn more about Jane at JaneCasnellie.com and on Instagram at #CasnellieJane.
Jean Smyth
Jean was born into a family of teachers in the small Pennsylvania town of Mansfield. Although interested in art as a child, the ability to “earn a living” was instilled in her from her Depression and WWII-era parents.
She earned degrees from Mansfield University in Elementary Education and a Master’s degree from SUNY Cortland. She dabbled in painting from time to time, but not until after retiring from a successful 30-year teaching career in New York did Jean turn to a love of drawing and watercolor. “I have always admired the beauty and simplicity of watercolor. When paper, pigment, brush, and water come together in the right way, these elements transform into ethereal beauty and power. Not every painting works, but is part of the journey to the next one,” she says.
Jean is an active member and instructor at the Artists League of the Sandhills in Aberdeen and has taught watercolor classes at Sandhills Community College. Painting trips to France, Italy and Ireland have provided inspiration. Paintings from those trips have sold internationally and have found a home in many private collections across the US. Her painting, Rachel’s Hat , hangs at the Clara Mclean House in memory of a dear friend from the Healing Garden volunteers. She also designed and painted Market Square in the Snow , utilized by the Village of Pinehurst for its successful 2018 Christmas ornament and cards.
(continued on page 13)
Winter’s Gift | Jean Smyth
Jane Casnellie in her home studio
S top in and visit our 34 studios and enjoy the opportunity to talk with artists at work. While you are here, stroll through the studio area and view the hundreds of paintings in all mediums. We have the largest selection of artwork in the Sandhills!
Check out the art classes and workshops offered on our website.
Now is a great time to explore a new medium, brush up skills, and have a wonderful artistic time!
Many classes are suitable for beginners.
Gallery Hours: Monday - Saturday, 12 noon - 3 pm
129 Exchange Street in Aberdeen, NC
Ask Us About Becoming A Member www.artistleague.org • artistleague@windstream.net
105 McReynolds St Carthage, NC 28327 lisa@makana-photography.com (910) 603-1831
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Tel/Fax (910) 693-0011
jaykar@jaykarinc.com 140 W. Rhode Island Ave. Southern Pines, NC 28387
Jessie Mackay
Jessie has been painting full-time for 26 years. Eleven years prior to that, she had a management consulting business in England. “The serious painting began when I was consulting—working in an auto plant with assembly line workers,” she remembers. “The atmosphere was grim, and such an emotional experience for me that I started making drawings of them at night when my work was done.”
Born to British parents in Washington, DC, Jessie spent her early years mostly in England and Connecticut. Based in Pinehurst, NC, she now travels the world seeking inspiration for her next series of paintings. “Colour is what inspires me. When I look at a subject, the feeling I have is what determines the colours I use, not just what I see before me.”
Jessie graduated from Bay Path College for Women in Longmeadow, Massachusetts, Oglethorpe University in Atlanta, Georgia, and did coursework at the Jung Institute in Zurich, Switzerland.
She is a self-taught artist, and two summers ago she studied with Jullian Merrow Smith in France – her first art course! Not bad for an artist whose fans include the late contributing art critic for The New York Times, William Zimmer, who wrote: “A painting by Jessie Mackay will light up the room. The paintings have the aura of a fresh capture. Many of her landscape subjects are familiar, the country side in Tuscany for instance, but the freshness of the paint revivifies them, and makes the viewer see them anew.”
Jessie’s artwork has been exhibited in galleries across the country. Her paintings have been in Architectural Digest and on the walls of Mary Matalin and James Carville’s home in Alexandria, VA.
Learn more about Jessie at JessieMackayArt.com.
Alana Knuff
Alana was born in Akron, Ohio. She moved to Pinehurst because it was a quiet place that reminded her of New England where she raised her family.
She drew as a young child and her mother, also an artist, fostered her talent. However, she only began to paint after she retired.
Alana’s degree in math helped her with a career in Capital Project Management (CPM), working for Harvard University and the University of Texas. Her building projects were primarily scientific research facilities and restorations of historic structures.
In 2007, she joined a group of artists painting en plein air in Italy. The trip was a turning point and she soon retired to begin a career as a professional artist. What followed was daily painting, workshops, museums, and art books that helped her climb a steep learning curve. In 2011, she completed a month-long portrait workshop at the prestigious Florence Academy of Art in Italy, followed in 2013 with portrait workshops by Romel de la Torre and Michael Shane Neal.
In 2016, the American Society of Marine Artists honored her with Signature membership status, and in 2020, the Art Renewal Center honored her with the title of ARC Associate Living Master (ARCALM).
Alana works primarily in oils on a tight linen that she primes herself. “I paint moments and I love doing portraits and marine art.”
To learn more about Alana, visit AlanaKnuff.com.
The opening reception for Anything Goes will be Fri., Oct. 3 (6-8pm) at the Arts Council Galleries at Campbell House. The exhibit will be on display Oct. 3–31(weekdays, 10am-5pm) and Sat, Oct. 18 (12-2pm). The exhibit is free and open to the public. Campbell House is located at 482 E. Connecticut Ave. Southern Pines.
Jessie Mackay in her studio
Cousins | Alana Knuff
“Repetition draws us into music, and repetition draws music into us.” is quote from pianist and author Elizabeth Hellmuth Margulis could be about the 44th season of our Classical Concert Series, since we are repeating artists with something new to say, and presenting a new artist who combines music inspired by visual art. All four artists are incredible and deserve to be heard again and again.
Our season opens on Oct. 6, 2025 with pianist/composer, Seth Weinstein. He will perform e Chagall Suite, his piano piece inspired by artist Marc Chagall and commissioned by Chagall scholar, Vivian R. Jacobson, and her late husband, Ralph, in honor of their 50th wedding anniversary. e concert features projected images of Chagall’s artwork accompanying the music, making for a unique musical and visual experience.
Pianist Miki Sawada returns to CCS on Nov. 3, 2025 to present a concert as special as any other. Miki is founding director of Gather Hear Tour, where she travels with a piano in a rented van to perform in community spaces, connecting Americans across socioeconomic and political divides. Gather Hear has given 90+ free performances in seven states and created three lms. Miki will be joined on stage by North Carolina performer/composer, Chris ompson, as she embarks on her Gather Hear North Carolina Tour.
Our third series concert on Feb. 16, 2026 features the return of Windsync, a wind quintet whose performances cover vast musical ground – from revitalized standards to freshly inked works – o ering a compelling story about music history and our humanity. WindSync frequently eliminates the “fourth wall” between musicians and audience by performing from memory, creating an extraordinary connection – evident from the many requests for encore performances.
Rounding out our season, the award-winning Galvin Cello Quartet is back by popular demand on Mar. 30, 2026. ese four musicians transcend the possibilities of a cello quartet with their untamable desire to bring joy through music. Based on the response to their incredible concert at Sunrise eater in 2024, Galvin is well on the way to ful lling the group’s mission of establishing the cello quartet as a core part of the classical music world.
e 25-26 Classical Concert Series sponsors are Lin Huta ’s Pinehurst Realty Group (lead sponsor), Brownback & omasson CPAs, Philip Bailey & Charles Schwab, Nature’s Own, and e Je erson Inn of Southern Pines.
A subscription to all four concerts is $115 per person ($96 for Arts Council members) and available at the Arts Council Galleries (Campbell House, 482 E. Connecticut Ave., So. Pines) or by calling 910-692-2787. Individual tickets are $35 each and will be available after Sep. 5, 2025. All concerts will be presented at 7:30 p.m. at the Sunrise eater.
CCS Sponsors:
Seth Weinstein
Windsync
Galvin Cello Quartet
Miki Sawada Chris Thompson
ARTOURS: LUCKY DETOURS
An Arts Council’s ARTour can have its share of surprises – some by design, some not. These trips always provide memories for a lifetime, whether a trip strictly follows the itinerary or not. Just ask Katherine MacRae, who has been designing our tours since 1991. “The first ARTours were regional, but the program expanded as our travelers requested other destinations,” she says, “and no trip went exactly as scheduled.”
Every ARTour is a curated journey to domestic and international points of cultural interest. The trips can include special art exhibits, amazing concerts and theatrical shows, access to exclusive venues, culinary delights, and other behind-the-scenes experiences. “We strive to make each tour special and unique,” says Katherine. “We’ve had some amazing experiences, planned and unplanned.”
Call them “lucky detours” or “pleasant surprises,” an itinerary change is an opportunity to experience more while traveling. A few examples of “fortunate diversions” that made an ARTour even more special include:
• A dinner in a small Cambodian village with a touching performance by orphans from families affected by Agent Orange during the Vietnam War
• Enjoying two bonus days to explore Casablanca after the return flight from Morocco was cancelled
• Seeing Nathan Lane & Matthew Broderick’s last performance in The Producers on Broadway, followed by lots of cameras in our faces as we left the theater
• The remarkable quietness of New York City while visiting Ground Zero just six months after 9/11
• Spending quality time with a Russian family of four generations in their dacha (second home) outside of St. Petersburg, Russia
• Arriving at the Florence American Cemetery in Italy just in time for the flag lowering ceremony and the sounding of Taps
• Getting an authentic Cuban experience after the entire island lost power while enjoying some great music during dinner
To see where the Arts Council can take you, visit MooreArt.org or call 910-692-2787 to learn more.
Katherine (in white) & other travelers in Iceland crossing the Artic Circle
Enjoying dinner in a Russian dacha
All smiles in a Cambodian village
Owner of Debra Rhodes Fine Art Services Appraisers Association of America member since 1991 Resident of Pinehurst for 25 years
INTEGRATED ECOLOGICAL DESIGN
Glenn Bradley, LE PO Box 1463 Southern Pines, NC 28388 (910) 315-4466 www.inecodesign.com
Team Services: Landscape Architecture Architecture
Ecological Land Planning Permaculture & Native Design Construction Management
Sunday, December 14, 2025 at 7:00 p.m. Owens Auditorium at BPAC Sandhills Community College Spring Concert
Sunday, April 26, 2026 at 4:00 p.m. Owens Auditorium at BPAC Sandhills Community College
Missoula Children’s Theatre Returns!
Auditions: October 20, 2025 (3:45-5:45pm)
Rehearsals: October 20-24 (3:45-8pm)
Shows: Oct. 24 (7pm) & Oct. 25 (11am)
Location: Moore Montessori School Auditorium (395 E. Massachusetts Ave., Southern Pines)
e Tortoise Versus the Hare is Missoula Children’s eatre’s twist on Aesop’s classic and a hare-raising, ab-shell-lute whirlwind of fun!
Taylor Tortoise and Curly Hare’s competitive antics are getting out of control, and all the other animals in their little town outside of Cape Canaveral, Florida, get roped into the shenanigans. When a group of astronauts comes through town, Curly comes up with their kookiest stunt ever—to be the rst animals on the moon! Taylor and Curly race to build a rocket and beat the others to space, but will their rivalry drive away their friends in the process? Who will make it to the moon rst? And once they get to the moon…then what? e Tortoise and the Hare learn that winning isn’t everything; they can accomplish so much more by working together!
For 29 years, the Arts Council of Moore County has brought Missoula Children’s eatre (MCT) to Moore County in their little red truck for a week-long theatre residency. eir goal is to develop life skills in our children through participation in the performing arts. is unique program begins with an open group audition and ends in public performances for family, friends and the community.
All MCT shows are original adaptations of children’s stories and fairy tales—a twist on the classic stories that you know and love. Over 55 students are cast and rehearsed throughout the week, learning their lines, songs, and choreography to perform as an ensemble in a full-length musical. MCT provides all the scenery, costumes, props, make-up, and lighting—everything it takes to put on a show – except the cast.
Any child in grades K-8 is invited to audition. Participation is free and no theatre experience is necessary. ose auditioning should arrive promptly at 3:45pm on Oct. 20, wear comfortable clothes, and plan to attend the full two-hours audition. Immediately following the auditions, a rehearsal schedule for the entire week will be available and some cast members will be asked to stay for a rehearsal.
Save time at registration by bringing a completed audition form with you, available for download at MooreArt.org/Youth.
e public performances of e Tortoise Versus the Hare will be presented on Fri., Oct. 24 (7pm) and Sat., Oct. 25 (11am) at the Moore Montessori School Auditorium at 395 E. Massachusetts Avenue in Southern Pines.
Tickets to each show are $10 per adult and $5 per child (Arts Council members are $5 per adult and children are free). All tickets will be sold at the door. If you have any questions, please contact the Arts Council at 910-692-2787.
Aberdeen 105 S. Sandhills Blvd
Pinecrest Plaza 4 6 Pinecrest Plaza
Pinehurst South 5 Blake Blvd
Pinehurst Village 10 Chinquapin Road
Southern Pines 205 S.E. Broad Street
Seven Lakes 4295 Hwy 211
Contact our Facebook page for more details: https://www.facebook.com/SoPiG4V or visit us online at: www.maystreetbicycles.com/guitars-for-vets-g4v.html
FRAMING FORM
November 7 - December 20, 2025
Arts Council Galleries at Campbell House
Photography and pottery share a foundation in the pursuit of artistic expression and craftsmanship. Both disciplines require a keen eye for detail, an understanding of aesthetics, and a commitment to quality. Photographers capture moments that evoke emotion and tell a story, while potters create pieces that are not only visually appealing but can also serve a practical purpose. Both genres demand mastery of technique, whether it be the manipulation of light and composition or shape and glaze.
For our November-December exhibit, Framing Form, the talents of the Sandhills Photography Club members and potter Beth E. Roy will be on full view. Don’t miss how these artists celebrate creativity to transform raw materials into meaningful art.
Sandhills Photography Club
e club was started in 1983 as a means of improving members’ photographic skills and technical knowledge with lectures, eld trips, club activities, competitions and the exchange of information. eir goal is to develop membership potential and public interest in the art of photography.
Every other month, members have an opportunity to compete in a local photography competition. Often, these competitions include renowned judges who o er valuable constructive criticism. e photographs are evaluated on impact, composition and technical skills. As they develop pro ciency, they move up the ranks into more competitive tiers (there are three tiers).
is year’s exhibit focuses on the themes of past competitions, such as Re ections, Worm’s Eye View, and Faces, just to name a few. Go to www.SandhillsPhotoClub.org for more information.
Beth E. Roy
Born in Jackson, MI, Beth discovered Southern Pines in 1983 when she was sent to Ft. Bragg and instantly fell in love with the area. In 2001, she moved here when her husband accepted a Dept. of Army job. “We moved here from Florida as fast as possible,” she says.
Beth was about 20 years old when she discovered oil painting. en in college, a friend opened a pottery studio near campus where she would watch her work at the wheel. Beth waited several years before borrowing a wheel at Ft. Rucker, AL, to teach herself how to throw (before YouTube or the internet).
She prefers working with medium- re stoneware clay because of its versatility to throw on the wheel and hand build. Most of her work is functional pottery that can be used every day or for special uses. Many of her glaze combinations have been inspired by animals she loved and lost. When asked what advice she would give to her younger self, Beth replies, “Try to pass your high school chemistry class. Pottery has so much chemistry involved in it.”
You can view Beth’s work at the Arts Council Galleries at Campbell House, ARTworks Vass, Mattie King Davis Gallery in Beaufort, NC, and online at www.BethERoy.com.
e opening reception for Framing Form will be Fri., Nov. 7 (6-8pm) at the Arts Council Galleries at Campbell House. e exhibit will be on display Nov. 7 – Dec. 20 (weekdays, 10am-5pm) and Sat, Nov. 15 and Dec. 20 (12-2pm). e exhibit is free and open to the public. Campbell House is located at 482 E. Connecticut Ave. Southern Pines.
Bynum Bridge | Photo by John German
Beth at her home pottery wheel
CALLING ALL ARTISTS!
January 9 – February 11, 2026
Arts
Council Galleries at Campbell House
What do artists envision when reflecting on the winter season? Do they experience the winter blues? The Arts Council is inviting all artists to submit their best interpretations for the upcoming juried show titled, The Winter Blues
A juried art show is one where artists submit work to be selected for display. For this show, all 2D and 3D artists, ages 16 and up, are invited to submit up to two pieces with creative interpretations of the winter season. Art can include winter landscapes, life influenced by the colors of winter, abstracts with colors and lines associated with winter, and any other creations that fit the theme.
All entries will be juried by the Arts Council Visual Arts Committee, which includes Kate Curtin, Stuart Fulghum, Katherine MacRae, Paula Montgomery, and Nanette Zeller. They will evaluate entries based on the quality of art and how well the artist’s interpretation meets the show’s theme. Selected art will be exhibited at the Arts Council Galleries at Campbell House from Jan. 9 to Feb. 11, 2026 and be eligible for cash prizes.
The art submission period runs Oct. 15 to Nov. 14, 2025, with the jury results posted on the Arts Council’s website by noon on Dec. 2, 2025. For eligibility, guidelines and timeline, visit MooreArt.org/WinterBlues.
Members of the public will have the opportunity to engage with the exhibit in multiple ways. In addition to enjoying the curated selections on display, they are also encouraged to participate in the voting process for the People’s Choice Award. By casting your vote for your favorite piece, you can play a role in recognizing and celebrating the outstanding work of these artists.
The Winter Blues also provides a unique opportunity for art enthusiasts to acquire a piece of art that resonates with them on a personal level. All artwork featured in the exhibit will be available for purchase, allowing visitors to bring a piece of local art into their own homes.
The opening reception for The Winter Blues is Fri., Jan. 9 (6-8pm) at the Arts Council Galleries at Campbell House. The exhibit will be on view Jan. 9 – Feb. 11, 2026 (weekdays, 10am-5pm) and Sat., Jan. 17 (12-2pm).
Pickup date for Unsold Artwork.....Feb. 12-13, 2026 (10a-4p)
To enter, upload digital images & pay entry fee, visit www.MooreArt.org/WinterBlues
The exhibit is free and open to the public. Campbell House is located at 482 E. Connecticut Ave. Southern Pines.
GOT TALENT?
Scholarships available for Middle & High Schoolers
One of the most rewarding duties at the Arts Council is recognizing talented children. We do this every March at our Young People’s Fine Arts Festival by displaying over 300 works by Moore County students. We also do it with applause after a great production directed by Missoula Children’s Theatre (See page 19).
The Barnes-Travis Arts Scholarship is one of our lesser-known programs that allows us to reward our children’s talents. The program was named for Cos and Harry Barnes and Vaud Travis III — arts lovers who were avid supporters of the Arts Council. Now in its 25th year, the program offers financial support to Moore County middle and high school students with a demonstrated talent in any arts discipline.
It is important to note that the program is not necessarily looking to discover the next Yo-Yo Ma or Picasso, but instead offers gifted children a chance to have fun and make new friends while exploring their interest in the arts. Over the years, this scholarship has benefited those who are working in the arts, along with individuals who are succeeding in other fields. For every dancer, musician and painter who won a scholarship, there are entrepreneurs, teachers and a myriad of other careers represented. “We want to help students enjoy their artistic interest before they become adults,” says Arts Council Executive Director, Chris Dunn. “There’s enough
Since the program’s inception, the Arts Council has awarded 219 scholarships and over $90,000. The winners have attended programs at the American Ballet Theatre, UNC School of the Arts, Parson School of Design, and taken private lessons in various arts disciplines. Others have had unique experiences, such as marching in a drum and bugle corps, and attending a summer program by the Rockettes in New York City.
If you know a talented middle or high school student who could benefit by attending a music camp or taking private art or music lessons, please encourage them to apply. The application deadline is March 5, 2026. The guidelines and application are available at the Arts Council Galleries (Campbell House, 482 E. Connecticut Ave., Southern Pines) and online at MooreArt.org.
If you would like to help more students pursue their talent and interest in the arts, consider giving to our scholarship fund. Call the Arts Council at 910-692-2787 or visit MooreArt.org.
Chris Dunn (left) presents a check to Pinecrest senior Maggie Bowman. Maggie was one of 15 scholarship winners in 2025.
The Arts Council of Moore County is grateful to the following donors. With their contributions they inspire & strengthen our community through the arts. ~ August 1, 2024 – August 1, 2025 ~
$20,001+
Pridie Ariail
Dale & JoAnn Erickson
Paul Hammock & Sandy Tremblay
Vivian Jacobson
North Carolina Arts Council
Katherine Pyne
Town of Southern Pines (in-kind)
WHH Foundation
Woodland Foundation, Inc.
$5,001 – $19,999
Vicki Bradley
Kea Capel & Bob McCann
Jane Clark County of Moore
CVB P’hurst, S. Pines, Aberdeen
Donald & Elizabeth Cooke Fdn. (Longleaf Ensemble)
Ernst Ludwig Timmel Family Endow.
Durant C. Holler III
Harlan McCaskill
Moore County Schools
Sofie D. Moyle
The Pilot
Alice & Wayne Robbins
Beth & Ted Franke Stevens
William Terry
$1,001 – $5,000
195 American Fusion Cuisine
Aberdeen NC Self Storage
Elaine Baillie
Judy & Clyde Biddle
Bryant Bozarth
Carolyn Brady
Brownback & Thomasson
Paula M. Caddell
Frances Campbell
Doug Champion & Susan Suggs
Charles Schwab
Teresa D. Daniels
Mary Fogarty
Fore Properties
The Foundation of FirstHealth
Eleanor Gallagher
Jocelyn B. Glynn
Cleon P. Hayes
Dr. Patrick Henderson
Ruth Hoffer
Lin & Phil Hutaff
James Creek Cider House (in-kind)
Little Insurance Agency
Isabel Malloy
Bill & Donna May
McSwain Trust (Longleaf Ensemble)
John & Evelyn Monroe
Moore Cty. Community Foundation
Nature’s Own
NC Community Foundation
Penick Village
People Helping People/Randolph EMC
Bob Pitts & Laura Auman Pitts
Shirley Potter
Realty World Prop. of the Pines
Sandhills Pediatrics
Southern Pines Garden Club
Linda Storm
Oliver & Wanda Sweeney Jr.
Claudia Vecchio
John & Jo Williams
Jo DeWitt Wilson
Kathy Wright
$501 – $1,000
Drs. Jeffrey & Lynda Acker
Ankle & Foot Podiatry Clinic
Artistic Kitchens
Artists League of the Sandhills
Audrey Wiggins Real Estate
Batson Associates, Inc.
Robert & Monika Brown
Cele Bryant
Marjorie Burgess
Carla & Alan Butler
Rita Byles
Chapman’s Food & Spirits
Jeff & Sue Clark
Ruffles & Bill Clement
Pat Cole
Liz Whitmore & Rex Connor
The Country Bookshop
Anne Crabbe
Roberta & Patrick Dewar
Bill & CC Edsel
Eye Candy Gallery
The Garden Club of the Sandhills
William & Mary Gozzi
Gulley’s Garden Center
Denise & Michael Gutschmit
Molly Gwinn
The Jefferson Inn
The King’s Custom Framing
Glenda Kirby
Kirk Tours
May St. Bicycles/G4V
Russell & Ann McAllister Jr.
Allison McCallum
Janeen
Driscoll & Patrick McKee
Michael Lamb Interiors
Paula & Bill Montgomery
Moore County Choral Society
Moubry Family Dentistry
The O’Neal School
Barbara Parks
Dana Pigford
Pine Gables of Aberdeen (in-kind)
Craig & Beth Pryor
Raven Pottery & Craft Gallery
Howard Schubert & Meridith Martens
Sam & Diana Self
Christian H. Smith
Debra Rhodes Smith
Southern Pines Brewing Co. (in-kind)
Ginny & Keith Thomasson
Richard & Sherry Upchurch
Michaelene & Richard Walker
Jack & Claudie Wells
$251 – $500
James Allen
Eric & Anita Alpenfels
Dave & Renate Andres
Andrews Physical Therapy
Kerry Arnold
Ashten’s Restaurant
Constance Atwell & Ron Schuch
Ed & Kim Auman
Bamboo Salon
Thomas Beddow
Judith Bender
Lane Bergstrom
Anne D. Bessette
Cynthia Birdsall
John & Nancy Bouldry
Manfred Buller
Kevin’s Creations
William & Trish Christina
Lucinda Cole
CORK Wine & Cocktail Bar
Jerry & Mitzi
Dare
Holly & Carty Davis
First Bank
James & Andrea Donoghue
David & Annette Frye
Stuart Fulghum
Marion Gaida
Jane Galan
Gwen Gepfert
John Gessner Photography
Douglas & Lydia Gill
Anne Gordy
Susan Greatorex & Paul Newnam
Soledad Griffin
Pat & Clark Groseth
Doris Gulley
HomeChoice Network
Barbara Huitzingh
Jeff & Severine Hutchins
Michael Hutson & Alana Knuff
Jane Jackson
Jay-Kar Contracting
Skip & Sally Kendrick
Trudy Koeze
Linnea Lockwood Norland &
Richard Norland
Makana Photography
Floreen Maroncelli
Mary & Elliott Wood Foundation
Kirby & Ted Mataxis Jr.
Michael & Barbara McGinnis
Kim McMann
McNeill Oil & Propane
Norman & Babette Minery
Bonnie Mirmak
Millicent Moats & Art Medeiros
David & Linda Mungo
Harry & Marilyn Neely
Virginia & Philip Notestine
Mary & John O’Malley
Walker & Judy Oldham
The Organizer
PC Housecalls
William & Mary Pierson
Poyner Spruill LLP
Elizabeth R. Rainoff
Margot Rawlings
Joyce Reehling
Robbins, May & Rich
Tony & Camilla Rothwell
Rubicon Farm (in-kind)
Patricia Rudovsky
Irene Russell
Rollin & Frank Shaw
Barbara Sherman
Joseph & Suzanne Sikes
Edward & Diane Silberhorn
Judith Silver
KC Sorvari
Kim & Todd Stout
Bill & Elizabeth Strickland
Sweet Basil
Texas Instruments Foundation
Aurele M. Timken
Kirk & Laurie Velett
Carol Wadon & Bruce Jaufmann
Paula Weiss
Whistle Stop Press
John Wiedmer
Larry & Frances Wilson
Sherrilyn Wright
Neal & Judy Yocom
Caroline McKissick Young
Thomas Zaleski
$101 – $250
Sally W. Adams
Barbara Ainsley
Maren Anderson
George Baehne
Leslie Bailey
John & Janet Baumeister
Bella Filati
Neil Bergman & Kasmin Davis
Larry & Betsy Best
Patricia Black
Joan Blair
Peter & Elizabeth Blick
Josephine Borthwick
Joyce & Robert Bramwell
Scott & Sonja Brewton
Bobbie Britt
David & Marin Brooks
Linda & David Bruening
Joan Bruno
Don & Marcia Bryant
Dr. Barry & June Buchele
James & Lucille Buck
Carolyn Burns
Nona M. Burrell
Darroll & Adele Buytenhuys
Douglas & Trish Campbell
Tom & Nancy Campbell
Mary Carubba
Jane Casnellie
Central Security Systems
Richard & Pidgie Chapman
Barbara M. Chope
Eric Christenson
Patricia & Anthony Cifelli
James & Mary Connell
Carol Conover
Charlie & Terry Cook
Josephine Cooper
Scott & Patricia Corbett
Ann Craigmile
Drew & Karen Croucher
Patricia Deerwester
Mary & Dell Dembosky
John & Evelyn Dempsey
Ann Dixon
Leann & Paul Dockins
Robert A Dore Jr
Ann Doster
Bob & Bonnie Dougherty
Carmen Drake Owens
Nicholas & Margo Drakos
Linda & Stuart Dunn
Bill & Jeanie Eastman
Cindy Edgar
Elliotts On Linden
Nancy & John Ellis
Paul Erickson
Jane Ethridge
Holly Floyd & Tyler Horney
Lori Foringer
Gordon Fung & Linda James
Kay Goulet
Vanessa Grebe
Elizabeth Griffin & Fred Garrett
Mary Griffith
Bobbie Jo Grissinger
Linda Wheeler Gurnik
Vicki Hancock
Paul & Kathy Harkness
Elizabeth A. Harper
John R. & Carolyn Hatcher Jr.
Barbara Hedin
Nancy S. Heilman
Judie & Pat Henry
Rob & Carole Hill
Marge & Thomas Holleman
Susan H. Huston
The Ice Cream Parlor
Susan I. Jaehne
Barbara E. James
Johnny O’s Awards
Kathryn E. Johnson
Ellen Jordan
Jeanne Joslin & David Miltenberger
Jugtown Pottery
Adam & Kimberly Kaplan
Michele & Steven Kastner
Karla L. Keating
Barbara Keating
Joanne & Kirby Kilpatrick
Rick & Dot Kimelman
Elizabeth Kimsey
John F. & Anne Krahnert Jr.
Maggie Langley
Leigh Lassiter
Stephen Later
Lory Lockwood
Hayden A. Luczka
Jessie Stuart Mackay
Katherine & Duncan MacRae
Wendy & Mike Malone
Rebecca Maness
Mary Wright Originals
Robert McCall & Pamela Guest
Lynn McCashin
Mack & Sue McClain
Dennis McCracken
Richard & Maryann McCrary
Denis C. McCullough
Tommy B McDonell
Carole McFarland
Lynn & Buck McGugan
John & Mary Margaret McNeill Jr.
Linda McVicker
Joan Meade
Steve & Julie Menendez
Charles Meyer
Cathy Milligan
Lisa Mitchell
Kamron & Clement Monroe
Timothy & Lynne Moore
Moore Cty. Chamber of Commerce
Jeffrey & Laura Morgan
Eleanor Morgan
Craig & Marianne Moulton
Pamela Munger
Tracy & Urs Nater
NC State University Crafts Center
John & Sarah O’Brien
Mary Murrill Oakes
Pat & Nancy Oakley
Ben & Lori Ann Owen
Paula & Donald Parke
Art & Ann Parker
Joe & Sarah Parrish
Sandra & Randall Phillips
Milton Pilson
Thea Pitassy
Gus D. Prince
Gil & Christine Pritchard
Stuart & Helen Probst Mills
Chuck & Janet Pruitt
$101 – $250 continued
Frank & Missy Quis
Taras Raggio
Maureen Reeves
Rick & Jeanie Riordan
Bennet & Joyce Sacolick
Andrea & Dale Schmidt
Eleanor Schutt
Dorothy Shankle
Betty Sherer
Bruce & Sally Shute
Sharyn Simmons
Dale & Darlene Skinner
Jean Smyth
Stephen & Carleen Sparks
Sarita Stevens
Donna & Tom Swantkowski
Edward T. Taws Jr.
Caitlin Terry
Molly Thomas
David & Sandy Thomas
John Tinghitella
Martha & George Tournas
Donna Traylor
Stuart & Natalie Tuffnell
Geraldine Turk
Barbara Vainio
Julie Van Camp
Ashley Van Camp
Donna Verrilli
Ellen & Thatcher Waller
Walter Hines Page Book Club
Yun Wang
Jean Webster
John & Elizabeth Webster
Bill & Janet Wheaton
Jennie A. Whitehead
Deborah B. Whitley
Beth Whitman
David & Carolyn Womble
Nancy Workman
Susan Saylor Yeary
Zen Ponds & Gardens
Rae-Lynn & Steve Ziegler
Bob & Jeanne Zimmerman
$100 & under Ellerbe First Presbyterian Church
Christine Abbott
Anne & Richard Agnew
David & Rebecca Ainslie
Ellen Airs
Ross Allen
Judy Allen
Abbe Allen
Annice Alt
Margaret Andersen
Pat Anderson
Robert & Lynn Anderson
Rich & Linda Angstreich
Robert & Jane Asdal
Margo Ashford
Judy Auch
Vickie Auman
Simone Ayers
Noah & Kasey Bagwell
Alyson & Ben Bahr
Barbara Bailey
Camille Bailey
Todd Baker
Beth Bale
Cynthia Ballantyne
Eliza Knox Barker
Larry & Jane Barnett
Larry & Ann Baucom
Wendy S. Beaver
Elizabeth & Allan Beck
Bonnie L. Becker-Jones
Maureen & Larry Behning
Timothy & Rebecca Beittel
Belle Meade
Susan Bender
Charles & Suzanne Bennett
Sharon Berkshire
Lesley Berkshire Bradley
Susan Beveridge
Jill W. Bingham
Beverly Bizzell
Lindsay Blackwood
JoAnn Blair-Adams
Carole Blaney
Libby & Ramsey Blanks
Cynthia Boals
Molly Boggis
Maureen Morales Bozovich
Evie Brassie
Annie Brechtelsbauer
Gabrielle Bridges
Chalk & Kara Broughton
Roderick Brower
Jury & Susan Brown
Jenny Brown
Frieda Bruton
Greg Buch
Janet Burdick
Suzanne Burgess
Ruth Harris Burgin
Ellen Burke
Ellen Burke & Steve Leggett
Margaret Burnett
Janell Burns
Janice Burton
Susan Kay Byerly
Sue Byrd & Glenn Bradley
Lyn Cagle
Anne & Bill Callison
Ellie Cammer
Mitch & Patricia Capel
Brittney Carbone
Dr. & Mrs. Edward Carey
Jeanine Carfagna
Dawson & Bertha Carr
Michael & Jan Carter
Cathy & David Carter
Alfred & Wendy Carter
Norman Cathell
Richard Cavedo
Marjory Cecka
Jan & Bill Chalker
Nila Chamberlain
Betty H. Chandler
Ann Cheek
Maura Chilson
Nickolas Christopher & Bonnie Gillman
Annette Christy
Catherine Church
Gary Clark Davis & Kim Clark
Mary Ann & Ward Clark
Baxter & Taylor Clement
Suzanne Sanchez Coleman
Ellie Collins
Kimball Collins
Elizabeth Comstock
William & Sandra Conklin
Jill & Ty Connett
Rich & Sara Conti
Sara Copeland
Robert & Rosemary Corcoran
Ashleigh Corsino
Patrick & Judy Corso
Valerie Corwin
Sallie Cosgrove
Robert Costello
Andrea Cox
Valerie Cox
Alva “Chip” Cromartie
Nancy Crossett
Jerrilyn Crowell
Charlie & Nancy Cunningham
Nancy Currie
Kate Curtin
Melody Curtis
Holly & Robert Daane
Gloria Dackor
Robyn Dadig
Ingeborg S. Dahl
Frank Daniels
Annette Daniels
Yvonne Daniels
Gisela Danielson
Bob Darst
Jim Davis
Chuck & Sue Davis
Sean & Donna Davis
Bonnie Davis
Kay Dawson
Ken & Maureen Deceuster
Marie Dee
Anne DeKeyser
Anne Doxey & Jerry Dellas
Sharon Demmon
Laura Dendy
Jessica Dennis
Philip H. DeTurk
Susan Deutsch
Martha DeVault
Myron & Barbara Dice
Russell & Cheryl Dierking
Maria DiStefano Alioto
Mr & Mrs Mike Doares
Corrie Dodds
Sandy & Jeff Donovan
James & Pamela Dougherty
Debbie Douglass
Laura Douglass
Pinky Doyle
Chris & Rebecca Dunn
Shari Dutton
Barbara Dvorozniak
John Earp
Harriet B. Ecker
Ben & Caroline Eddy
Johanna & George Edens
Elise & Bill Ellis
Donna Engelson
Mary Enroth & Leo Reddy
Mark Epstein & Julia Latham
Kathy & Gary Evans
Bucky & Jan Evans
Katherine Ewing
Jane & Ken Fairbanks
Jack & Doris Fairfield
Georgene Fayssoux
Patricia Feister
Dr. & Mrs. Homer Ferguson
Monica Fesq
Arthur & Joan Fish
Jenifer Fisher
Scott & Penny Fithian
Hartley C. Fitts
Gerald Fitzgerald
Debbie Fleece
Susan Fletcher
Jeff & Cindi Fogle
Christine & Sam Fowle
Frank Maser & Company
Marie French
Robin Lynne Frye
Gina Frye
Aldena Frye
Mark & Louise Futrell
Susan W. Gaines
Billiegene A. Garner
Steve & Elizabeth Gaydica
Lauralee & Peter Gebhard
Margaret Gehan
Jeffery & Irina Geller
Mavis Gentry
Jane George
John & Marilyn Gerney
Sybil Gibbons
William & Sarah Giles
Tess Gillespie
Caitlin Gironda
Gail Gittleson
Give Lively Foundation
Janice Goldblum
Lynn Goldhammer
Jennifer Goldman
Jeanne Goldmann
Brandon & Molly Goodman
Carol Gradwohl
Adriane Gram
Sharon Granito
Pamela Griner
Miriam & Marvin Hage
Tish & Steve Hagler
Joseph & Sharon Hakas
Jim & Mary Ann Halstead
Kriss Ham
Sharon Hamilton
Ruby Hammond
David & Pamela Hampton
Lynn & Mike Hancock
Steve Harbour
Linda Hardison
Robert & Marjeanne Harling
Jane Harnum
Sharon & Michael Harrell
Gloria Hartley
Lisa & Richard Hatchett
Solita Hawes
John & Allison Haywood
Lynne & Fritz Healy
Mary Elizabeth Hedrick
Peter Helgesen
Melanie Henderson
Robin Hentz
Floyd & Courtney Herndon
Meredith & Mark Heywood
Grace Hill
Joseph Hill
Marjorie R. Hilton
Anne M. Hocutt
Anne Holmes
Lois Holt
Diane & Chuck Horne
Geneva Wilson Howard
Sandy Huberth
Kate Hughes
Marilee & Ken Huntley
Kam Hurst
Carole Huston
Rowen Hutchins
Fran Irvin
Mary Jackson
Susan Jacobsen
Jayne Jarvis
Arlene Jenkins
Lenore Johnsen
Gregg & Cynthia Johnson
Carole Johnson
Sarah & Trent Johnson
Sarah Johnson
Bill Johnson
Carolyn Jones
Dickey Jones
Lynne M. Jones
Bailey Jordan
Jessica Joseph
Nellie Judge
Roberta Kachel
Robert & Mary Kadarauch
Nancy Kaeser
Charles Kashner & Gary Wasserman
Judith Kaskel
Marcey Katzman
M J & Tom Keane
Sue Keenan
Trisha & Brian Killeen
Margaret Kinker
Gerald & Nancy Kinlaw
Amy Kinlaw & Scottie Davis
Laureen Kirk
Velma Kistler
Carl & Carol Knutson Jr
Dan Kohn
Mary Ann Korzick
Susan Kozar
Matt & Betty Kuhn
Clair Ann Kuhn
Robert Lacasse
Ann Lambrecht
David & Marilyn Lamon
Mitch & Erin Lancaster
Victoria Landers
Carole Landoll
Wilma Laney
Ann Langford
Marjorie Lavoie
Sharon Lawson
Ronald Layne
Rick & Cinnamon LeBlanc Johnson
Sue LeClair
Janet Lehman
Kathleen Leuck
Julie Lillie
Michelle J. Liveris
Janis & Bernard Loehr
Eva Loucks
Sharon Lowery
Janet Lowry
Kirstin Lowry-Sommers
Jan & Marjorie Ludwig
Katherine Luebke
Bill MacAdams
Holly MacDonald
Betsey MacDonald
Lissette Machin
Bridget Gibbons & Colin MacNair
Kathleen Madonia
Jane R. Maloy
Betty O. Mangum
Vilma Marania
Virginia Marcos
Mary Markell
John Martin
Kelly Martin
Susan Mason
Marian Massie
Martha & Richard Mathews
Susan & Michael Mauney
John May
Lanier Brown May
Cathy Mazanec
Pat McBride
Diane McCall
Rob McCullough
Ann McDermott
Barbara McGowan
Joy A. McGugan
Diane McKay
Sharon Ferguson McLeod
Judy McMurray
Linda B. McNeill
Robert & Linda McVay
Jeannie Mead
Mary & Charles Meier
$100 & under continued
Roey & Rob Mendel
Rita & Rob Menzies Peggy Miller Mary Miller
Ulrike Misegades
Cleta Mitchell
Ginger & Ed Monroe
Johanna Moran Earl & Suzy Morgan
Moriarty
Ray
Liz Murray & Mike Bartee Dorothy Myerson
Cornelia & William Neal
Bill & Linda Newman
Ralph & Judy Newsom
Deirdre Newton
Theresa Nguyen
Elizabeth Nhambure
Joe & Cathy Nogay Mary Novitsky Linda Nunez Nancy O’Connell Patti O’Day Penny O’Donnell
Elizabeth Ann Obrien
Beverly K. Offutt Jodi Ohl
Katy & Ric Ong
Wayne & Judy Osborne
Ouimette
Owen Andrew & Jenny Ownbey
Ozment Lorraine Page
Lynn Panto-Peterson George Parker
Amylouise Parks Perry Reagan & Linda Parsons
Sonja M. Pate
Risano
Rockett
Rogow & Carol Gemson
Romans-Hess
Roser
Alicia & Mike Rosser
Beth E. Roy Katie & Patrick Rucker
Sandy Rudolph
F. Rush
Natasha & Henry Russell
Donna & Gary Ryals
Cameron & Lincoln Sadler Rollie Sampson Janet Samuelson
Charlene Sazama Jutta S. Scheck
Schmid
Schran
Schreffler
Lori Thayer
Anne &
Peter & Pat Valenti Margaret Van Riper Henry & Sueson Vess