
News Release
| For immediate use |
Oct. 13, 2006 -- No. 480
|
Local angles: Chapel Hill; Los Angeles;
Herndon, Va.; Washington, D.C.
Knowledge Trust of UNC honors pioneers
in information, library science, technology
CHAPEL HILL - Five trailblazers in information and library science and information
technology were honored Thursday (Oct. 12) in the first Knowledge Trust Honors
ceremony.
The trust is a commitment by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
School of Information and Library Science to shape a critical role for 21st-century
knowledge professionals.
At the ceremony in Washington, D.C., the five Knowledge Masters were honored
for making a significant difference in education, exploration, innovation, next-generation
leadership and lifetime achievement.
The 2006 honorees are Gary E. Strong, university librarian at the University
of California, Los Angeles; Dr. Joseph Viscomi, James G. Kenan distinguished
professor of English at UNC-Chapel Hill; Dr. Paul Jones, director of the ibiblio
Web collection at UNC-Chapel Hill; Wes Cruver, chief creative officer and cofounder
of Kidz Online, based in Herndon, Va.; and Dr. Donald A.B. Lindberg, director
of the National Library of Medicine at the National Institutes of Health.
"As in all aspects of rapid change, there are those who easily adapt to
and excel in new environments -who rise above when they are told they cannot
succeed to prove that they can," said Dr. José-Marie Griffiths,
dean of the UNC school and founding chair of The Knowledge Trust and the Louis
Round Wilson Academy. "The Knowledge Trust Honors Program judges have selected
exemplars: pioneers and leaders who are standard-bearers of excellence in their
particular endeavors."
Academy members nominated candidates for each award. The academy, formed last
fall and based at the UNC school, includes world leaders in library and information
science and technology management. The honors program is designed to encourage
students and other knowledge professionals entering or already working in these
fields to look to these models as they plan their own careers.
The 2006 Knowledge Trust Honors Awards and recipients, with excerpts from their
award citations, are:
- The Education Award, for furthering the intelligence, integrity,
responsibility and reliability of successive generations of knowledge professionals,
creators and users.
Strong, of UCLA, has been a leader in the evolution of librarianship, working
as a librarian and library administrator, for more than 30 years. From 1980
through 1994, he was California State Librarian, helping to create the California
Research Bureau, one of the state's finest public policy organizations.
From 1994 until 2003, Strong was head of the Queens Borough Public Library
in New York, one of the nation's busiest, serving one of its most diverse
counties. The Queens system encompasses a central library, 62 community libraries
and six adult learning centers.
Strong believes in equity, quality, social service and appropriate use of
technology. The award recognizes his vision of the role of libraries in stimulating
and supporting education and learning in all its forms for the communities
they serve. His commitment to education and learning, and to the systems and
services that support an ongoing learning environment and culture, demonstrates
a long-term vision for individual empowerment through knowledge, tolerance
and understanding.
- The Exploration Award, for creating or compiling new knowledge, tools
and services. Viscomi co-edited and created the William Blake Archive, a hypertext
of Blake's poetry and art, based on approximately 5,500 images - two-thirds
from the illuminated books and one-third from Blake's paintings, drawings
and engravings - transferred to digital form.
Conceived and designed in 1993-95, and a free site on the World Wide Web since
1996, the award-winning archive is an international public resource that provides
unified access to major works of visual and literary art that are highly disparate,
widely dispersed and often severely restricted as a result of their value,
rarity and extreme fragility.
The Blake Archive has had a significant impact on teaching and scholarship
related to Blake's works. It also has challenged the traditional notion of
literary criticism by virtue of the ways in which elements of Blake's work
can be viewed, moved, modified and juxtapositioned.
- The Innovation Award, for furthering the creative and innovative
use of, and balanced access to, the world's recorded knowledge. Besides directing
ibiblio, Jones is a clinical associate professor in two UNC schools: information
and library science, and journalism and mass communication.
Since high school, he has been a master of both computers and poetry. He helped
establish the Internet Poetry Archive and has directed the Poets Exchange
at the ArtSchool in Carrboro, N.C. He also was a founding board member the
North Carolina Writers' Network. But it is for his work as founder, manager
and on-going director of ibiblio that he has become an Internet legend.
Jones was the architect of one of the first World Wide Web sites in North
America, SunSITE.unc.edu. Now known as
ibiblio, the site is home to one of the largest collections of collections
on the Internet.
ibiblio.org is a conservancy of freely available
information, including software, music, literature, art, history, science,
politics and cultural studies. A contributor-run, digital library of public
domain and creative commons media, ibiblio contains more than 1,600 collections
and expands daily. ibiblio receives more than 14 million requests per day.
- The Next Generation Leadership Award, for young people whose study,
innovation and independent thought shed new light on the world's recorded
knowledge. Cruver, now 25, was only 12 when he began what would later become
Kidz Online, a high-tech digital video production and distribution organization
that provides technology training to underprivileged students in inner-city
Washington, D.C.
Cruver and other volunteers use their technology skills and know-how to help
educate students on the basics of computers, navigating the Internet and creating
Web sites. This youth-teaching-youth approach, developed by Cruver, became
one of the key hallmarks of Kidz Online. Cruver is currently involved in training
students for the 14 high-growth industries highlighted by the President's
High Growth Job Training Initiative and the Department of Labor.
- The Wilson Prize for Lifetime Achievement, for a lifetime of accomplishment
in knowledge exploration, compilation and stewardship in service to society.
Lindberg has been called a trailblazer of medical informatics, pioneering
the concept of applying computer technology to health care as early as 1960.
Besides his career in pathology, Lindberg has made notable contributions to
information and computer activities in medical diagnosis, artificial intelligence
and educational programs. For 20 years, he has led the National Library of Medicine,
one of the premier organizations for medical information and computing. The
library is one of the largest and highly respected sources for health sciences
information used by physicians, researchers and others.
Lindberg has the foresight to anticipate major medical changes and the need
to store materials such as those associated with the Human Genome Project. He
was responsible for creation of the Visible Human Project, an image database
of the human body, which had been processed, scanned and stored for researchers
and physicians. Lindberg also fostered the development of MedlinePlus, a service
offered on the Web to the public.
For more information about The Knowledge Trust, the Louis Round Wilson Academy
or the Honors Program, please visit www.theknowledgetrust.org.
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To download photos of the event, click on:
- Photo URL: http://www.unc.edu/news/pics/faculty/awards/jmg&dm&Paul06.jpg
Caption: From left to right, Dan Morrow, member of the School of Information
and Library Science (SILS) Board of visitors; Paul Jones, director of ibiblio
and clinical professor at SILS and the School of Journalism; and Dr. José-Marie
Griffiths, dean of SILS and founding chair of The Knowledge Trust
- Photo URL: http://www.unc.edu/news/pics/faculty/awards/KTHonorsWinners06.jpg
Caption: The five winners, from left to right, Dr. Donald A. B. Lindberg,
M.D., director, National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health;
Wes Cruver, chief creative officer and co-founder of KidzOnline; Professor
Joseph Viscomi, James G. Kenan distinguished professor of English, University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Gary E. Strong, university librarian, University
of California Los Angeles; and Paul Jones, director of ibiblio and clinical
professor at SILS and the School of Journalism, University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill.
- Photo URL: http://www.unc.edu/news/pics/faculty/awards/viscomi&jmg.jpg
Caption: Dr. José-Marie Griffiths, dean of the School of Information
and Library Science and founding chair of The Knowledge Trust presents the
Knowledge Trust Exploration Award to Professor Joseph Viscomi, James G. Kenan
distinguished professor of English, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill.
School of Information and Library Science contact: Wanda Monroe, (919)
843-8337, wmonroe@unc.edu
News Services contact: L.J. Toler, (919) 962-8589