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The Lyrical Word by the Westcoast Calligraphy Society
“Lyric” derives via Latin lyricus from the Greek λυρικός (lyrikós). The differences between poem and song may become less meaningful where verse is set to music, to the point that any distinction becomes untenable. This is perhaps recognised in the way popular songs have lyrics. The Lyrical Word is an exhibition that examines the truth of calligraphy through the works of artists who spell out their ideas and expressions through brush strokes and ink.
The Westcoast Calligraphy Society is an enthusiastic group of artists with a common bond–a love of all things calligraphic. Members share knowledge of design, colour, illustration, bookbinding, paper making and our other talents with everyone interested in the art of letters with more experienced members teaching beginning and more advanced calligraphy throughout the Lower Mainland.
The Society began life in September 1978 as the Society for Italic Handwriting, B. C. Branch. As the Society grew and its members’ interests expanded, the focus broadened to all types of calligraphy and in June 1986, the name was changed to Westcoast Calligraphy Society.
Artists: Renee Wilkins,Lindsay McArthur, Margot Ferris, Margot Cottle, Kaylie Lee, Brigitte Stermann, Barb Cowan, Carolynn Dallaire, Martin Jackson, Wendy Cowley, Lily Spaeth, Violet Smythe, Lindsay McArthur, Muriel Dyson, David Ma, Lily Spaeth, Margot Ferris, Jan Janovick, Jane Woolnough, Pat Williams, Kathy Guthrie.
Recommended Resources for more information:
Whalley, Joyce Irene. The Student’s Guide to Western Calligraphy: An Illustrated Survey. Shambhala, 1984.
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre | Z43 .W53 1984
Henning, William E. An elegant hand: the golden age of American penmanship and calligraphy. Oak Knoll Press, 2002.
Koerner Library | Z43 .H53 2002
Knight, Stan. Historical scripts: A handbook for calligraphers. Taplinger Publishing Company, 1986.
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre | NK3600 .K55 1984
Show-Case Exhibition – The Chapman Learning Commons
The Chapman Learning Commons and the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre presents a Show-Case created by the CLC Assistants.
The CLCAs share original artwork capturing the nuances of Chapman Learning Commons lending equipment, campus study spaces, mascot, and projects. Including a collaboration with the Coaches Corner, the display showcases peer academic coaching where you can get inside scoop on best study and student practices. Highlighting just some of the services available to the UBC community, each display case features how the Chapman Learning Commons can help you with your academic success.
Come to the IKBLC Level 3 Information Desk to learn more about the display and meet the artists, the Chapman Learning Commons Assistants!
Margaret Blair – Making The Hard Call: The Unheralded Role of Corporate Boards of Directors
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by the Faculty of Law. It has become part of the accepted corporate governance wisdom in the U.S., as well as in numerous other countries, that boards of directors of publicly-traded corporations should include some, and perhaps a majority of “independent” directors. Yet to-date there has been no consistent evidence that adding independent directors to boards improves corporate performance. Many problems in corporations require a complex balancing act, a weighing of competing interests. Because such problems, by their nature, involve trade-offs and huge uncertainties, we should expect that the calls that directors make will deviate from some hypothetically optimal values in a more-or-less random way, sometimes leading to higher sales growth sometimes not, sometimes producing higher share value, and sometimes not. Research on the role of directors almost universally starts from the premise that corporate boards are supposed to be the “agents” of shareholders, whose job is to maximize the share value of the companies. This principal-agent approach, however, leaves out because no one can be certain they will get what they want if the decision gets bumped “upstairs.”
Select Articles and Books Available at UBC Library
Hartogs, N., Weber, J., & Greater New York Fund. (1974). Boards of directors: A study of current practices in board management and board operations in voluntary hospital, health, and welfare organizations. Dobbs Ferry, N.Y: Oceana Publications.
Vance, S. C. (1964). Boards of directors: Structure and performance. Eugene: School of Business Administration, University of Oregon.
Waldo, C. N. (1985). Boards of directors: Their changing roles, structure, and information needs. Westport, Conn: Quorum Books.
UBC Library Research Guides
Richard Arias-Hernandez – Co-construction of Information Systems Designs and Social Values: An Ethnographic Study
Scholarly work usually characterizes engineers as politically and socially conservative individuals; instruments of the expansion of capitalism and neoliberalism. It also portrays them as supporters of both the State and the big corporations that employ them. This talk reports on an ethnographic study that documented the work of a group of information technology (IT) engineers in Colombia who decided to create a space of exception to neoliberalism in the form of a Non-Governmental Engineering Organization (NGEO). These engineers found that running their own NGEO provided them with some degrees of freedom to pursue social justice goals in their IT work in ways not usually found in the corporate or neoliberal governmental worlds. However, these opportunities do not come without outstanding challenges, such as funding dependencies from a neoliberal government, which create contradictions that hinder the pursue of social justice goals in the construction of information technology.
Richard Arias-Hernandez is a lecturer at the University of British Columbia’s iSchool. He obtained a Ph.D. in Science and Technology Studies from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 2008. His research has centred around the study of the co-construction of information technology and society, especially those constructions that aim to advance social justice in capitalist societies.
Select Articles and Books Available at UBC Library
Fisher, B., Green, T. M., & Arias‐Hernández, R. (2011). Visual analytics as a translational cognitive science. Topics in Cognitive Science, 3(3), 609-625. doi:10.1111/j.1756-8765.2011.01148.x. [Link]
Arias-Hernandez, R. (2004). Learning communities that build appropriate technology. World Futures, 60(1-2), 81-90. [Link]
Arias-Hernandez, R. (2008). Engineering the network society: A social worlds/arenas analysis of engineering in government and non governmental organizations in Colombia. [Link]
Arias-Hernandez, R., & Fisher, B. (2013). The “tunnel vision” effect: Structuring of attention and use of digital technologies in emergency operation centers. Paper presented at the 195-198. doi:10.1109/CogSIMA.2013.6523847. [Link]
UBC Library Research Guides
UBC Health Information Series Presents Dr. Linda Siegel on Understanding Dyslexia and Other Learning Disabilities
Dr. Linda Siegel’s latest research in Understanding Dyslexia and Other Learning Disabilities addresses how our educational system has failed to identify many children with learning disabilities and calls for the adoption of straightforward diagnostic techniques so that treatment options can be implemented at a young age. Many children who struggle with learning become discouraged in the classroom and isolated from their peers. Many adults whose learning disabilities were not recognized in school suffer from deep feelings of inadequacy that often prevent them from developing close relationships, finding rewarding employment, or living happily.
In this talk, Linda Siegel challenges the use of complex and time-consuming testing that is currently used to diagnose learning disabilities. In their place, she outlines simple and pragmatic techniques for testing for disabilities in reading, mathematics, spelling, and writing. Dr. Siegel gives first-hand accounts of people living with learning disabilities, case studies from literature, and profiles of highly accomplished individuals who have achieved success despite their learning disabilities. Their stories encourage people with learning challenges and those who support them to recognize and nurture each person’s special talents. Understanding Dyslexia and Other Learning Disabilities implores families, teachers, and other educational professionals to provide resources and services for all those struggling with learning so that no more lives are compromised.
Speaker Bio: Linda Siegel is the Dorothy Lam Chair in Special Education at the University of British Columbia. Linda Siegel is an eminent psychologist and educator and is an internationally respected authority on reading and learning disabilities.
This event is now over. It took place at the Richmond Public Library (Brighouse Branch), 7700 Minoru Gate #100 Richmond, BC V6Y 1R8.
Partner
The BC Research Libraries Group Presents Denise Koufogiannakis MA, MLIS, PhD
- Coffee and refreshments will be served prior to the talk so be sure to arrive early for some mingling, and feel free to socialize after the talk as well.
- Register to attend in person HERE
- Participate online via webcast HERE
The Vancouver Institute Irving K. Barber Learning Centre Lecture Presents Dr. David Kessler on "The End of Overeating"
Dr. David Kessler, M.D. is an American pediatrician, lawyer, author, and administrator (both academic and governmental). He was the Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) from 1990 to 1997. He made the agency more efficient, cutting the time needed to approve or reject new drugs, including AIDS drugs, and more vigilant in protecting consumers against unsafe products and inflated label claims. It was also under his watch that FDA enacted regulations requiring standardized Nutrition Facts labels on food. Dr. Kessler is also known for his role in the FDA’s attempt to regulate cigarettes, which resulted in the FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. case. He was awarded the Public Health Hero award on April 2, 2008 by the UC Berkeley School of Public Health for his work in tobacco regulation. This talk is hosted by the Vancouver Institute, and is a Irving K. Barber Learning Centre Lecture.
Speaker Bio:
After graduating from Amherst College in 1973, David Kessler studied medicine at Harvard University, graduating with a M.D. degree in 1979. While at Harvard Dr. Kessler obtained a law degree J.D. in 1977 from the University of Chicago.[1] While serving his residency in pediatrics at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, he worked as a consultant to Republican Senator Orrin Hatch from Utah, particularly on issues relating to the safety of food additives, and on the regulation of cigarettes and tobacco. From 1984-1990, Kessler simultaneously ran a 431-bed teaching hospital in New York City and taught at the Columbia Law School and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
More Resources Available at UBC Library
Kessler, David A. The End of Overeating: Taking Control of the Insatiable American Appetite (2009) [Available at Okanagan Library – QU145 .K47 2009]
Eisdorfer, Carl, David A. Kessler, and Abby N. Spector, eds. Caring for the Elderly: Reshaping Health Policy. (1989) [Available at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre – WT30 .C3746 1989]
alumni UBC Book Club – They called me number one by Bev Sellars
Xat’sull Chief Bev Sellars spent her childhood in a church-run residential school whose aim it was to “civilize” Native children through Christian teachings, forced separation from family and culture, and discipline. In addition, beginning at the age of five, Sellars was isolated for two years at Coqualeetza Indian Turberculosis Hospital in Sardis, British Columbia, nearly six hours’ drive from home. The trauma of these experiences has reverberated throughout her life.
The first full-length memoir to be published out of St. Joseph’s Mission at Williams Lake, BC, Sellars tells of three generations of women who attended the school, interweaving the personal histories of her grandmother and her mother with her own. She tells of hunger, forced labour, and physical beatings, often with a leather strap, and also of the demand for conformity in a culturally alien institution where children were confined and denigrated for failure to be White and Roman Catholic.
Like Native children forced by law to attend schools across Canada and the United States, Sellars and other students of St. Joseph’s Mission were allowed home only for two months in the summer and for two weeks at Christmas. The rest of the year they lived, worked, and studied at the school. St. Joseph’s mission is the site of the controversial and well-publicized sex-related offences of Bishop Hubert O’Connor, which took place during Sellars’s student days, between 1962 and 1967, when O’Connor was the school principal. After the school’s closure, those who had been forced to attend came from surrounding reserves and smashed windows, tore doors and cabinets from the wall, and broke anything that could be broken. Overnight their anger turned a site of shameful memory into a pile of rubble.
In this frank and poignant memoir, Sellars breaks her silence about the institution’s lasting effects, and eloquently articulates her own path to healing.
Event Details
Meet and Greet:
Tuesday, March 04, 2014
7:00 – 8:00 pm
Book Discussion:
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
7:00 – 9:00 pm
Location:
Cecil Green Park House – Map (http://goo.gl/maps/oRYFB)
University of British Columbia
6251 Cecil Green Park Road
Vancouver, B.C.
Cost:
$10 per person. Light refreshments will be served.
Please RSVP online before Friday, February 25th, 2014. For more information, please contact Karolin Konig at 604-822-8939 or at karolin.konig@ubc.ca.
Please Note: Books will not be provided so please make arrangements to obtain a copy to read before the Book Discussion. Books are available at the UBC Book Store (www.bookstore.ubc.ca/home).
Sign up for your ACard and benefit from a 12% discount at the UBC Book Store. For more information on obtaining an ACard please visit (www.alumni.ubc.ca/services/acard/).
Parking: There is a limited amount of meter parking in the lot on Cecil Green Park Road, the closest parkade is the Rose Garden Parkade (for entry after 5:00 pm and on weekends, a flat rate of $6.00 applies).
Searching for Resources at UBC Library
With a rich and vast collection, UBC Library encompasses a number of books, videos, and other relevant resources on classical and ancient Greece. The easiest way to find this material is to use the UBC Library Catalogue (www.library.ubc.ca). One recommended search strategy is to use Subject search option. From the catalogue option, select Subject from the drop-down menu, and enter any of the following headings:
Shuswap Indians–Biography.
Indians of North America–British Columbia–Kamloops–Residential schools.
Shuswap Indians–Education–British Columbia–Kamloops.
By Bev Sellars at UBC Library
They called me number one : secrets and survival at an Indian residential school / Bev Sellars (2008). Winnipeg, Scirrocco. [Available at Koerner Library – E99.S45 S45 2013]
Scholarly Resources at UBC Library
Behind closed doors: stories from the Kamloops Indian Residential School edited by Agnes Jack. (2006). Penticton: Theytus Books. [Koerner Library – E96.6.K34 J32 2006]
Brotherhood to nationhood: George Manuel and the making of the modern Indian movement by Peter MacFarlane. [Available at Koerner Library – E92 .M35 1993]
Research Guides
Open Access Learning Resources
- City of Vancouver Archives
Moving image holdings
- Official Report of Debates, House of Common
These are the transcripts of debates in the House of Commons in Canada. Older content available in print at UBC Library.