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The SIGUCCS
Hall of Fame
Awards for 2003
The 2003 inductees into the Hall of
Fame were honored at the SIGUCCS Fall Conference in San Antonio, Texas. These individuals are:
Inductees for 2003
Note: The
accomplishments listed on this page are current as of Fall, 2003.
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Patrick J. Gossman
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Prog Chair USC 1985 |
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Board Member 1991-1993 |
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Board Member 1993-1995 |
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Presenter USC 1978, 1981 |
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Tex Hull
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Presenter USC 1976 |
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Conference Committee, USC 1982 |
Although born C Hadlai Hull, he
is best known as "Tex". After receiving an MBA from Stanford in
1966, he became involved in the initial development of SPSS. He
maintained an involvement with SPSS from 1969 to 1976 while he was
an assistant director of the University of Chicago Computation
Center with responsibility for User Services. Since 1976, he has
been involved full time with SPSS, holding positions of decreasing
responsibility and increasing fulfillment ranging from founder to
vice president to principal software engineer. Tex attended every
User Services conference from the first in Chicago to the 1989
conference in Bethesda. He spoke at a few of the early conferences
when he was directly involved in user services, but mostly he
listened.
Tex and his wife, Susan, live in
an apartment in downtown Chicago from which he can walk to work.
Their leisure activities include sailing, SCUBA diving, rowing,
and trying to keep track of their two grown children. |
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Linda J. Hutchison
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SIGUCCS Board of Directors 1995-2001 |
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SIGUCCS Secretary-Treasurer 1997-2001 |
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USC Conference Proceedings 1987 |
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USC Program Chair 1995 |
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USC Webmaster 1995 |
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State Captain - Iowa 1996-97, 1999-2001 |
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USC Tutorial Presenter 1984, 1985, 1996, 1999, 2001 |
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USC Evaluations Chair 2003 |
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CSMS Tutorials Chair 1995 |
Linda received her degree in
Industrial Administration with an
emphasis in Finance and Management from Iowa State University and
has completed work toward her Master's degree at ISU in Industrial
Education and Technology with an emphasis in Training and
Development. Working in computing since 1972, she realized early
that every IT job boils down to providing service to the end
user. Linda currently is the Division Director for Customer
Relationship Management at Oregon Health & Science University in
Portland, Oregon where she leads a team that she describes as,
"the
most talented, diverse, and interesting group of individuals you
could ever hope to meet." Before moving to Portland in 2003, she
spent 27 years at Iowa State University, two years at Central
Missouri State University, and one year outside higher education
working for Pioneer Hybrid International.
Linda will tell anyone who will listen that SIGUCCS has been the
single biggest contributor to her continued interest and success
in her career. Encouraged by fellow SIGUCCS regular and then boss,
Phil Isensee, to present at the 1984 Fall User Services
Conference in Reno, she has made SIGUCCS a significant part of her
personal and professional life ever since. She has been involved
almost every year since as a tutorial or paper presenter (some
years
both, which she will tell you is insane), member of the steering
committee, state captain or session chair. She encourages all
attendees to extend their participation and move from being a face
in the audience to taking an active role in one or both of the
SIGUCCS annual conferences. "I've made my most valuable professional connections through
SIGUCCS, and some of my dearest friends are among my SIGUCCS
colleagues. My deepest appreciation goes to the association for
what you've given to me, and my heartfelt thanks goes to the
many talented and caring people for giving part of themselves to
make SIGUCCS such a success." |
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Leila C.
Lyons
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Co-Presenter, USC 1984, 1986, 1999 |
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Presenter, CSMS 1992 |
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Newsletter Co-Editor,
1991-1993 |
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Program Review Committee,
USC 1988, USC 2001 |
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Program Chair, USC 1989,
USC 2000, CSMS 2004 |
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Conference Chair
(Elect), CSMS 2005
Leila C. Lyons graduated from City University,
London, England in 1967 with a B.Sc. in Applied
Mathematics. After moving with her family to the
United States in 1974, she started working part-time
for the University of Delaware's Computing Center.
Since that time she has held positions of increasing
responsibility for evolving support services in
computing and information technology. She has been
Director of User Services in Information
Technologies since 1992. In this position she is
responsible for delivering high quality support
services for the University community in the
following areas: research data management; desktop
computing; computing site operation and departmental
computing; instructional support and information
services; and support for faculty use of technology
in teaching and learning.
Leila has been an active member of ACM SIGUCCS since
the early '80s when she was introduced to the
organization by Jane Caviness. She also served on
EDUCOM's Member Nominating Committee and was a
member of the Program Committee for the EDUCOM 1997
Conference. She strongly encourages her User
Services' staff to become actively involved in
SIGUCCS in order to learn from their peers, share
their experience, and extend their professional
network.
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Dennis Mar
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Conf Co-Chair USC 1997 |
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Committee USC 1993, 1998, 1999, 2000 |
If one gets out of life in
proportion to what one puts into it, then Dennis Mar must have put
a lot into SIGUCCS because what he got out of SIGUCCS was his wife
Susan. They met at the 1993 San Diego conference and were married
two years later (but not at the SIGUCCS hospitality suite!!)
Dennis became a SIGUCCS enthusiast because unlike other technical
organizations SIGUCCS people understood that computing was not
only bits, bytes and bandwidth. Computing has an equally important
human component that must be understood. For example, he once
heard in a session that software training classes for faculty
should not be called "software training classes" but "seminars".
Dennis co-chaired one conference and worked at others as a session
chair, newsletter editor and international attendee host. He
encouraged people to use the SIGUCCS listserv to exchange ideas,
agitated for ice cream socials, engaged in random conversations
with anyone standing alone, and distributed balsa gliders for the
fun of it.
Dennis worked in user services at the Naval Postgraduate School
from 1980 to 1999. He had a perfect conference attendance record
from 1984 (Reno) to 1999 (Denver). He holds a BA in mathematics
and an MS in statistics. Anything about computers he learned on
the job or SIGUCCS.
His advice to SIGUCCS newcomers is (1) remember Diane Jung's
admonition that "Heroic effort is not a sustainable model", (2)
expect to meet at least six professional colleagues you will feel
comfortable seeking advice from in the coming year, and (3) go to
sessions (especially Jerry Martin's), take back the ideas as your
own, and become a leader at work.
He only regrets that newcomers will never know the fun of meeting
Penny Crane.
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Beth
Ruffo
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Committee USC 1993, 1997, 1999, 2001 |
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Presenter USC 1988, 1991, 1994, 1999 |
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State Captains Chair (many years, she invented it) |
Beth Ruffo came to Syracuse
University in 1986 with experience and education in
Marketing/Business Administration. She was a key player in Faculty
Academic Computing Support Services (FACSS) in its various
permutations to its present form. Her talents and energy were
dedicated to helping faculty infuse computer technology into the
teaching/learning process at Syracuse University.
During her 16 years with FACSS Beth served as Events Coordinator,
multimedia trainer and consultant, project manager, Coordinator of
Consultants, and, finally, as Manager of FACSS. Her
professionalism was exemplary. An enduring event which she
coordinated for 14 years is the annual Teaching Tools Conference,
the purpose of which has been to share computing advances among
local academic institutions. As a consultant and trainer, Beth’s
cheerfulness, attention to detail, and her ability to pull
together just the right team to ensure faculty success with
technology made her a familiar and revered figure across the SU
campus. Most recently as Manager of FACSS, she spearheaded the
choice and adoption of the Blackboard e-Learning System at SU. Her
foresight and efforts have culminated in the implementation of
Blackboard 6 Enterprise across the entire campus.
For Beth, the annual ACM/SIGUCCS conference was always one of the
highlights of the year. Here too she grew from participant to
presenter to committee member. Whatever her role, she infused it
with her friendliness, humor, team spirit, energy, and enthusiasm.
Beth was irrepressible; she loved a good story, a good laugh, and
a good time. Above all, she had the grace of the common touch—she
was comfortable with everyone and made everyone else comfortable
in her presence. Her door stood open; she was always ready to lend
ear, heart, hand or tongue to help colleagues and friends. She was
a thoughtful manager, an inspiring colleague, and a loyal friend.
Her sudden death in November, 2002, elicited tributes from all
over the nation. The comments below are a representative sample.
"Beth was a singular and special person, who touched many of us."
"It was a privilege to have known her over the years and I will
always appreciate her thoughtfulness and dedication to the
university."
"Beth was wonderful and always went above and beyond the call to
help me. A bright spot lost for sure." |
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Vincent
H. Swoyer
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Editor 1973-74 |
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Secretary/Treasurer 1975-77 |
Vincent Swoyer was Vice
President, Corporate Systems, Sara Lee Corporation, from 1982
until retiring in 1994. From 1978 to 1982, he served as Vice
President, Ryder System corporation in Miami, Florida. In his
retirement, he has served as a consultant and research advisor for
IBM, EDS, and the Concours Group.
Prior to this business experience he was Director, Computing
Center, University of Rochester, from 1959 to 1978. He was also a
faculty member, teaching courses in statistics, numerical
analysis, and computer science. During 1961-62 he was on leave
from the university as an IBM Research Fellow at Harvard
University, during which time he developed a number of new
statistical systems in the areas of regression analysis and the
design of experiments, and was also responsible for establishing
Harvard’s computing center. During another leave in 1969-70, Dr.
Swoyer was a program director at the National Science Foundation
in Washington, D.C., awarding grants supporting computer
developments to more than 30 colleges and universities. He is
author of several books and reports on computer operations,
statistical applications, and computer usage in research, and
served on the computer advisory panel for the National Academy of
Science, and as a consultant to the Office of Management and
Budget.
He was active with the newly organized Association for Computing
Machinery in the late 1950’s, and was a founder of the Rochester,
NY chapter of the ACM and served as its second president. In
succeeding years he was an organizer of the ACM special interest
group for university computing centers (SIGUCC), served as editor
of its newsletter, and was a frequent speaker at SIGUCC meetings.
Because of research interest in early computer operations, he
co-authored a series of surveys of university computing centers
beginning in 1959, when there were only about 20 known to exist.
By 1963, the number of computing centers had grown exponentially
to more than 200, and the survey project became impossible to
conduct in the time available, and was passed on to an educational
agency. During 1990 and 1991, he conducted a study of the
viability of personal computers to supplant mainframe computing
activities, which was presented to a meeting of the international
Conference Board. It included a timeframe for anticipated
improvements in PC power and capabilities, and led to an annual
series of technology status reports and forecasts presented to
Conference Board members through 1999.
He now lives in Lake Bluff, Illinois, where he conducts research
and builds computers in his computer laboratory.
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J.
Michael Yohe
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Conference Chair CSMS 2003 |
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Program Chair CSMS 2002 |
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Program Chair CSMS 1996 |
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Program Chair CSMS 1989 |
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Presenter USC 1994, 1995, 2000 |
J. Michael "Mike" Yohe is currently Executive Director of
Electronic Information Services at Valparaiso University, a
position he has held since 1996. Prior to that, he served in
similar positions at the University of Northern Iowa and Bradley
University, and as Director of Academic Computing at the
University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire.
In his current position, he is responsible for strategic planning
and oversight of computing, data networking, the telephone system,
video services, and instructional media for the University.
Yohe began his computing career in 1957, when he was in the U. S.
Air Force stationed at the Pentagon. During graduate school, he
worked for the Mathematics Research Center at the University of
Wisconsin - Madison, where he began by writing computer programs
for research mathematicians and eventually managed the computing
operation for several years. He began his career in college and
university computing management in 1978.
Yohe holds a Ph.D. in theoretical mathematics from the University
of Wisconsin - Madison, and a Bachelor's degree from DePauw
University.
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