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The
SIGUCCS Hall of Fame
Awards for 2004
The 2004 inductees into the Hall of
Fame were honored at the SIGUCCS Fall Conference in Baltimore, Maryland.
These individuals are:
Inductees
for 2004
Note: The accomplishments
listed on this page are current as of Fall, 2004.
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Linda
Downing
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SIGUCCS
Board - Tutorial/Executive Seminars Chair 2002-2004
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SIGUCCS
Board - Information Director 1997-2002
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Newsletter
Editor/Information Director 1994-1997
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USC
Local Arrangements Chair - Long Beach 1988
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USC
Web Manager - Portland 2001 |
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USC Program
Committee - Denver 1999 |
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USC Conference
Co-Chair - Monterey 1997 |
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USC Co-chair
Publicity/Registration - San Diego 1993 |
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USC Program
Committee member - Seattle 1991 |
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USC Local
Arrangements - Reno 1984 |
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USC Tutorial
Co-Presenter - 1995 (St. Louis), 1996 (Chicago), 1999
(Denver), and 2000 (Richmond) |
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USC Co-Presenter/Panelist
- 1992 (Cleveland), 1989 (Bethesda), 1987 (Kansas City),
1985 (Toledo) |
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CSMS Co-Presenter
- 2003, 1998
Linda L. Downing graduated
with a degree in History and later received a master's
degree in Business Administration from California State
University, Sacramento (CSUS). She was hired by the
campus Computer Center (now University Computing and
Communications Services) and throughout the last 34
years has held positions of ever-increasing responsibilities
in the areas of faculty, staff, and student technology
support and services. After serving for many years
as Manager of User Services her job evolved into the
area of academic technology to support the growing
demand of online courses and Web support for campus
teaching and learning activities. Currently, Linda
is the Manager of Academic and Information Technology.
Linda has been active in SIGUCCS since
1983 when Penny Crane asked her to be a part of the 1984
Reno User Services conference. In the early years when
user support was just developing as a profession on campuses,
thinking that no one had a job quite like yours was common.
However, after attending her first conference in New
Orleans Linda discovered that there were others who understood
what she did and that SIGUCCS offered support, networking
opportunities, and new ideas to continue to grow in this
new profession.
Linda has co-presented several times at both the fall
and spring conferences, served on the Board (newsletter
editor, information director, member-at-large), recently
was the Tutorial Chair, and with Bonnie Brown presented
three tutorials at the fall conference (Pulling the Network
Together - Technical Networking for User Services (St.
Louis); Adult Learning - Putting Principles into Practice
(Chicago); and Building a Better Customer Support
Team (Denver and Richmond).
Penny Crane often said "SIGUCCS is what you do for
yourself." It is true. Being a member of SIGUCCS
and attending both the fall conference and the Computer
Services Management Symposium has presented opportunities
to meet colleagues and develop professionally through
the interchange of ideas and discussions with others.
When something new is happening or a new problem comes
up at work, you can contact your SIGUCCS colleagues for
advice, materials to help from re-inventing the wheel,
or even a sympathetic ear as you thread your way through
the ever complex maze of customer support. |
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M.
Lloyd Edwards (posthumously)
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SIGUCCS
Conference Chair - Kansas City, 1977
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SIGUCCS
Conference Chair - Kansas City, 1987
In
1958, Lloyd returned to his alma mater, Kansas State
Teachers College, to join the faculty of the Department
of Business. Prior to this, he was on the faculty
of Southwestern College, Winfield, Kansas, and then Oklahoma
City University.
Acknowledging
his interest in the emerging importance of data processing
and computing (the subject of his doctoral dissertation),
he was asked to build a data processing program that
not only would serve the administrative needs of the
college, but also add a new computer-related curriculum
in the Department of Business. At this
time, there was not a computer on campus.
From
this spartan beginning within the Department of Business,
the Computer Center evolved with Lloyd as the administrator
from its inception until his retirement in May, 1987.
During this time, it became a leading supplier of new computing
professionals to companies throughout the Midwest.
The
name of the Center has changed many times reflecting
its growth and scope. During Lloyd's tenure, Kansas
State Teachers College became Emporia Kansas State College
and finally Emporia State University.
During
his career, he received many awards, including a data
processing pioneer award from I.B.M. Lloyd
also served on the Board of Directors of the Lyon County
State Bank in Emporia for twenty-one years.
Lloyd
was an enthusiastic supporter of the User Services
Conferences when SIGUCCS started them, and was the
only person to chair two of them (both in Kansas City,
in 1977 and 1987). In 1977 he attracted
close to 400 people to that conference, setting a record
for registration that lasted for a long time.
He
never served on the board, preferring to help by being
active in the conferences. He also attended
all of the early Computer Services Management Symposia
in St. Louis, where he was one of the first people to
greet others who attended. Therefore, he and Penny
Crane became "fixtures" that everyone looked
forward to seeing each year at both of the SIGUCCS annual
meetings."
Lloyd held a Ph.D. in Education from Oklahoma University
as well as a M.S. in Business Education from the University
of Colorado at Boulder and a B.S. from Kansas State Teachers
College.
Lloyd
retired in May, 1987, after twenty-nine years of service
to the University. He passed away March
16, 2001 in Springfield, Missouri.
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Greydon
C. Freeman
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Grey Freeman is a Vice President in Applications
Development at Gartner, Inc.
Grey received his B.E. from Yale in 1965. The following year
he served as a Carnegie Teaching Fellow at Yale in Electrical
Engineering then joined the staff of the Yale Computer Center
in 1966. In 1970 he was appointed Director of the center.
During
his fifteen year tenure as Director, Grey played key roles
in the computer center's development of two widely used software
systems, VS/APL for TSO and the Yale ASCII Terminal Communications
System. The latter allowed colleges and universities to connect
their ubiquitous ASCII terminals more effectively to IBM
mainframes and even spawned two IBM products, the 4994 and
7171 communication controllers.
In the Spring of 1981 Grey and Ira Fuchs, then at CCNY, started
BITNET, which eventually grew to include some 1400 institutions
worldwide.
Grey was a regular attendee at the Annual SIGUCCS Management
Symposia in St. Louis and was Program Chair in 1984, when he
succeeded in getting Steve Jobs to be the closing luncheon
speaker.
In
1985 Grey left Yale for Gartner (then Gartner Group) where
he was initially responsible for the company's internal computing
services. In
1988 he moved to the Research and Advisory Services group at
Gartner where he started, and for several years ran, the company's
service for academic institutions. Since then he has held various
senior positions in the Gartner Strategic Technology Group. |
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Alan
Herbert
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Thea
Drell Hodge
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An active member of ACM and a cofounder of the Minneapolis chapter of the Association for Women in Computing, Thea paved the way for women in the computer science profession and mentored many women in academic computing.
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Highlights of Thea's career:
- Assistant to the Provost, New York University, 1943-44
- Assistant Director, Illinois Institute of Technology Computer Center, Chicago, 1960
- Systems Programmer, IIT Research Institute, Chicago, 1961-63
- Manager, User Services, IIT Computer Center, Chicago, 1965-67
- Research Assistant to the Chairman, Computer Research Institute, University of Chicago, 1967-68
- Assistant Manager, User Services, Vogelback Computing Center, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, 1968-71
- Manager, User Services, University of Minnesota Computer Center, Minneapolis, 1971-72
- Assistant Director, U of MN Computer Center, Minneapolis, 1972-1980
- Manager, Department of Compilers & Software Development & Maintenance, Cray Research, Inc., St. Paul, 1981-87
- Director of Program Development, Department of Computer Science, U. of MN, Minneapolis, 1987-90
- Retired, June 1990
Thea passed away peacefully on March 3, 2008, with her husband of 65 years and her younger daughter at her side.
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Lida
Larsen
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Presenter: User Services Conference, 2001 (2), 2000, 1997, 1996
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Co-Presenter: User Services Conference, 1998 (2), 1995 (2)
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Panelist: User Services Conference, 1998
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Poster Presenter: User Services Conference, 2001 |
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Conference
Committee: User Services Conference, 2000
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Conference
Coordinator: User Services Conference, 1989 |
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Program Chair:
User Services Conference, 1999
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Author: SIGUCCS Newsletter, 1990, 1997 |
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Co-Editor: SIGUCCS Conference Planning Guide, 2000-2004 |
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Board, Vice-Chair
and Conference Liaison, 2002-2004 |
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Marketing
Task Force, 2003-2004
Jennifer
Fajman introduced Lida to ACM SIGUCCS in 1988 when she
attended the Fall User Services conference in Long Beach,
CA, and still remembers hearing the now famous Penny
Crane advice there that "newcomers shouldn't
feel that they have to attend every session, and old-timers
should attend at least one." While she has learned
a lot through conference presentations over these past
16 years, it has been the integration into the SIGUCCS
community that has been the most significant. Fellow attendees
have become life-long contacts and fellow volunteers have
become life-long friends as well. She highly recommends
volunteering and becoming a part of the conference process.
It is a first step for many in their professional development
and, specifically, in the development of their leadership
skills.
Lida graduated from Purdue University with a B.A. in Educational
Media in 1968 and completed her master's degree in Library
Science at the University of Maryland in 1972.
In
1988, with twenty years of information services experience
in K-12, adult, and higher education, Lida moved to the
University of Maryland's Computer Science Center to assist
in the coordination of EDUCOM'88. That move began
her fourteen-year stay in the organization that eventually
reorganized into the Office of Information Technology. With
an eye for organization and detail she was responsible
first for the Workstations at Maryland program and then
coordinated the University of Maryland's Online Information
Resources that migrated from Gopher to the World Wide Web
and then to Campus-wide Web Services. In 1999, Lida
was appointed OIT's Assistant Director for Collegial Relations
and Information Services with responsibilities for Web
Services, Campus Computing Associates, Technology Associates,
and Public Relations. She remained in this position until
2002 when she moved with her husband to Pittsburgh, PA.
Her
work at the University of Maryland and in SIGUCCS confirmed
her belief that people are the most important resource
in an organization. She believes it is our job as employees
to ask for what we need to succeed and our job as managers
to give our people what they need to reach success. And
she believes, that as IT professionals, it is our responsibility
to partner with our customers to identify and provide
the critical services they need to be successful. Anyone
with big budgets can do great things, but it takes great
people working together with intelligence, motivation,
and innovation to do great things regardless of the health
of the budget and the current organizational structure.
Lida is now a member of the EDUCAUSE Staff in the Professional
Development unit and has responsibility for regional conference
programs. |
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Susan
Nycum
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Susan
H. Nycum serves as a neutral arbitrator and mediator
of high technology cases in the U.S. and internationally.
She is an attorney, and formerly a partner of the global
law firm, Baker & McKenzie. She is in charge of
the firm's world wide IT/IP practice group, as well
as a member of two of the firm's three regional boards
of directors (for the Americas and for the Asia Pacific.)
Susan is a fellow of the ACM, fellow of the American
Bar Foundation and fellow of the American Bar Association's
section of law practice management and trustee of the College
of Law Practice Management.
She
was a member of Council of ACM and Chair of the Legal
Issues Committee. She was an early participant
in SIGUCCS and worked on its early conferences.
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Stan
Yagi
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Co-Chairman
of ACM SIGUCCS 11 Conference held in Toronto, 1974
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Presenter:
ACM SIGUCCS November 1975 - Userbook: A Modular Approach
to the User's Reference Manual
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Presenter:
ACM SIGUCCS October 1979 - Single User Systems in a University
Environment
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Presenter:
ACM SIGUCCS October 1985 - Handling Microcomputers in
the University Environment
Stan Yagi joined the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
in August 2001, as Director of the Computing and Communications
Services Office, and as Assistant Chief Information Officer.
The 2002 reorganization resulted in a new organization
name - Campus Information Technologies and Educational
Services (CITES), and a new title for Stan: Assistant
CIO for Information Technologies. Stan heads four divisions
within CITES: Communications Technologies, Customer Support
and Information Services, Departmental Services, and
Systems and Technology Services.
Stan provides leadership for the computing, networking
and communications infrastructure for the campus. His
divisions are responsible for the design of the campus
networking and telecommunications infrastructure, serve
as the campus provider of many IT services, including
email, file storage, and Internet access, provide support
for these services through its Central Help Desk, and
for more general use of computing and networking technologies,
through its highly successful Departmental Services (CITES-DS)
division. Stan's Assistant Chief Information Officer
designation emphasizes his critical role as an advocate
for the campus community.
Prior
to accepting his current position, Stan served as the Director
of Information Technology Services at Queen's University,
Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Stan brought to the U of I an
outstanding reputation as a leader and a partner to academic
departments, the library, and other groups in support of
teaching and research needs. He has a long and distinguished
career in Information Technologies and is active internationally
in the computing and communications arenas.
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