Council on Library and Information Resources

CLIR Annual Report: 1999 - 2000

CLIR annual report 1999-2000

 

Contents

Acknowledgments

Staff

Letter from the Chairman

Message From the President

Activities

Publications

Advisory Groups

Grants and Contracts

Financial Statements

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Directors

Betty G. Bengtson
University of Washington

Virginia Betancourt
Fundacion Romulo Betancourt

Christine L. Borgman
University of California at Los Angeles

Robert Bovenschulte
American Chemical Society

Jerry D. Campbell
University of Southern California

Stanley A. Chodorow
University of California

Billy E. Frye
Emory University

David B. Gracy II
The University of Texas at Austin

Nils Hasselmo
Association of American Universities

Paul LeClerc
New York Public Library

Klaus-Dieter Lehmann
Stiftung Preu§ischer Kulturbesitz

Deanna B. Marcum
Council on Library and Information Resources

Marilyn Gell Mason
OCLC

Charles Phelps
University of Rochester

Elaine Sloan
Columbia University

Winston Tabb
Library of Congress

Dan Tonkery
The Faxon Company

Sidney Verba
Harvard University

 

CLIR

The Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) grew out of the 1997 merger of the Commission on Preservation and Access (CPA) and the Council on Library Resources (CLR). Over the years, CPA and CLR, in partnership with libraries, archives, and other information providers, advocated collaborative approaches to preserving the nation's intellectual heritage and strengthening the many components of its information system. CLIR was founded to continue this tradition of support for a national information system and a seamless web of information resources, of which all libraries and archives are a part.

The convening role is central to CLIR's mission. CLIR brings together experts from around the country and around the world and asks them to turn their intelligence to the problems that libraries, archives, and information organizations face as they integrate digital resources and services into their well-established print-based environments.

CLIR urges individuals to look beyond the immediate challenges and imagine the most desirable outcomes for the users of libraries and archives—to be rigorously practical and to dream.


 

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