Brice G. Hobrock is recognized for his leadership
in advancing library systems development and
administration with more than 31 years of work
in the field. His work with the development of
digital libraries has greatly enhanced adult
education as students are now able to access
scholarly information resources of libraries
from anywhere in the world. Dr. Hobrock served
as dean of libraries at Kansas State University
from 1982 through 2004. He provided leadership
in the evolution of an Association of Big 8 Universities
Library consortium to the Big12 Plus Library
Consortium to its current configuration today
as a 13-state, 30-library cooperative known as
the Greater Western Library Alliance.
While employed with Virginia Polytechnic University
and State University and later with the University
of Nebraska-Lincoln, Dr. Hobrock developed library
computer access systems that improved access
to library holdings from local and remote locations.
He administered four generations of electronic
access systems for Kansas State University, leading
to their Digital Library, known as CatNet, the
signature definition of digital libraries as “discovery
systems” where all databases, catalogs,
local unique documents, and commercial full-text
holdings are searched as a single action. The
prototype discovery system was developed at Kansas
State University under his leadership.
Fund-raising has been an important focus of
Dr. Hobrock's position, and the library completed
a $1 million National Endowment for the Humanities
Challenge Grant fundraising effort and a 30-month,
$30 million expansion and renovation of the main
library in April 1997. He founded the Friends
of K-State Libraries. Dr. Hobrock has been responsible
for all library operations in the main complex
and four branches. He served on boards of
directors of the Bibliographic Center for Research,
Denver, where he was president of the board,
and on the board of directors of the Center of
Research Libraries in Chicago.
Dr. Hobrock has been active in international
library projects, working with libraries in Paraguay
and Brazil. Most recently, K-State Libraries
has developed cooperative agreements with the
Chinese Agricultural University, and the Chinese
National Agricultural Library, both in Beijing.
He traveled to China on several occasions
to participate in international conferences on
information systems in agriculture and to work
with librarians in Beijing, Hangzhou and Guangzhou.