| ALA American Library Association | Search ALA Contact ALA Login |
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
PEOPLE IN THE NEWSC&RL News, December 2004 by Ann-Christe Galloway Phillip M. Edwards, who is in the doctoral program at the University of Washington’s Information School, has been named winner of the Coalition for Networked Information’s Paul Evans Peters Fellowship for graduate study in the information sciences or librarianship. James Neal, vice president for information services and university librarian at Columbia University, has been appointed the U.S. representative to the Committee on Copyright and Other Legal Matters of the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA). His term will begin at the IFLA conference in August 2005 in Oslo, Norway. Appointments
Retirements Bonnie Biggs, assistant dean, coordinator for public services, and coordinator for university arts and lectures at California State University (CSU)-San Marcos, has retired. Biggs is one of the founding librarians for the 15-year-old university and is now working as tribal liaison for CSU-San Marcos. She served as president of the American Indian Library Association (1998) and chair of ALA’s Office of Literacy and Outreach Services Subcommittee on Library Service to American Indians (1999–2001). In 2000–01, Biggs conducted a tribal library census and needs assessment in southern California for the California State Library and, in 2003, organized the first Native Libraries Round Table of the California Library Association. Steve Meckstroth, humanities division head, fine arts librarian, special collection and rare books librarian at Illinois State University’s (ISU) Milner Library, has retired. Meckstroth joined the faculty at Milner in 1974 as fine arts librarian. In 1999–2000, he served as interim associated dean of university libraries. Meckstroth was co-curator of the ISU African Art Collection and researched and edited the ISU booklet Campus Art: A Walking Tour of Selected Artwork on the Campus of Illinois State University in 2004. Mary Ellen Templeton, one of the founding members of Emory University’s Goizueta Business Library, has retired after nearly 22 years of service with Emory. Templeton served as acting supervisor of business information services from 1992 to 1994 before the business library was established with its own director in 1994. In 1991, Templeton published Help! My Job Interview is Tomorrow, which guides readers in using the library for research on employers. Deaths James F. Govan, 78, university librarian emeritus at the University of North Carolina (UNC)-Chapel Hill, has died. In nearly two decades of heading UNC’s libraries, Govan oversaw the building of the Walter R. Davis Library, a stack addition to Wilson Library, and Wilson’s renovation for the housing of special collections. He led the preservation and conservation of UNC’s rare book collection and materials at risk. Govan spearheaded creation of the Triangle Research Libraries Network, a shared online system that gives scholars access to the library holdings of UNC, Duke University, and North Carolina State University. The UNC Library became a founding member of the Southeastern Library Network (SOLINET), and Govan served twice on the SOLINET Board, as chair in 1977. Active in the Association of Research Libraries, he was its president in 1983. Govan was on the Board of the Center for Research Libraries from 1984 to 1990, which he chaired in 1988. He was involved in other national and international library organizations, including the Commission on Preservation and Access and the Council on Library Resources. Anne Lipow, 69, retired University of California (UC)-Berkeley library information officer, has died. Lipow worked in the UC library’s acquisition, systems, and cooperative services department (1961–84) and was appointed director of library instructional services in 1982. She helped institute the Baker document delivery service, the Berkeley/Stanford Cooperative Program, and virtual reference service. When Lipow retired in 1991, she was awarded emeritus status, the first such award for a Berkeley staff member. For more than three years she served as an expert witness against using mandated filtering systems on Internet terminals in public libraries and helped bring United States vs. American Library Association case to the Supreme Court. During the 1960s, she was a founder of the UC Berkeley Librarians Union. She also wrote a report on discrimination again women in the UC Berkeley library system, which resulted in increases in librarians’ salaries. Lipow founded and directed the Library Solutions Institute and Press, which focuses on training, publishing, and consulting on library and technology management issues. 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. |
| ACRL is a division of the American Library Association |
| © 2008 American Library Association. Copyright Statement Last Revised: May 21, 2007 |