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Howard
and Judy Sacks, the recipients of this year's
second Ohio Heritage Fellowship for Community Leadership,
have dedicated their lives to the traditional arts and
have shared their knowledge to document, preserve and
present those arts to a wide audience. Howard Sacks,
a sociology professor and director of the Rural Life
Center of Kenyon College, and Judy Sacks, an affiliated
scholar in Kenyon's American Studies department, are
lifelong collaborators, folk music scholars, performers
(Howard on guitar, Judy on mandolin), co-authors of
the award-winning book Way Up North in Dixie: A
Black Family's Claim to the Confederate Anthem and
producers of the 1985 album Seems Like Romance
to Me: Traditional Fiddle Tunes from Ohio. Fixtures
at Kenyon College since 1975, Howard and Judy Sacks
directed the Gambier Folk Festival for more than 15
years and were deeply involved with the National Folk
Festival for several years. They continued that involvement
when Cityfolk brought the National Folk Festival to
Dayton for three years (1996-1998), with Howard serving
as main stage manager, and as Cityfolk launched the
annual Cityfolk Festival in 1999. Howard Sacks was selected
in 1994 as Kenyon College's first recipient of the National
Endowment for the Humanities Distinguished Teaching
Professorship.
Their
ongoing educational and community projects about traditional
foodways are models for small town and agrarian cultures.
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