Leung Ping-kwan - Literary Adaptation and Cultural Negotiation in Hong Kong Cinema of the 1950s

Human Orrery Astronomy Experiment

Human Orrery Astronomy Experiment

Human Orrery Astronomy Experiment

In the Human Orrery, people play the role of the moving planets. The model provides an accurate map of the orbits of the six naked-eye planets – Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn – and shows their motions around the Sun. The exhibit also explores the Solar System beyond Saturn to Pluto, Eris and the most distant, man-made object in space. Join us in an interactive exhibit presented by the class of Astronomy 310 – Exploring the Solar System as part of the Carl Wiemen Science Education Initiative at UBC.

The public session will take place on Wednesday, Oct 12 – 2:00-3:00pm.

 

Online Resources

Newbury, Peter.  Exploring the Solar System with a Human Orrery.  The Physics Teacher — December 2010 — Volume 48, Issue 9, pp. 573

 

UBC Journals

Sky and telescope.  I.K Barber Learning Centre – QB1 .S536 [Online is also available] – 1941-Present

Timothy Taylor author reading webcast online

Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and as part of the Robson Reading Series. Timothy Taylor is a Canadian novelist and short story writer. The Blue Light Project, his most recent novel, was published in 2011. Born in Venezuela, he was raised in West Vancouver, British Columbia and Edmonton, Alberta. Taylor’s short story “Doves of Townsend” won the Journey Prize in 2000. He had two other stories on the competition’s final shortlist that year, and is to date the only writer ever to have three short stories compete for the prize in the same year. His debut novel, Stanley Park, nominated for the Giller Prize and chosen to be the 2004 One Book, One Vancouver, was followed by Silent Cruise, a collection of eight stories and one novella. (September 29, 2:00-3:00pm, Chilcotin Board Room, Room 256, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre)

Worlds of Wonder: Weather and Other Phenomena by Willa Downing

The Worlds of Wonder: Weather and Other Phenomena art exhibition by artist and Emily Carr University’s instructor Willa Downing is front and centre at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre.  For photography of this exhibit, please find them on our Facebook page.

The exhibit will be from October 1 to November 30, 2011.

As Willa Downing asserts of this exhibit:

To make sense of the universe, we use a combination of disparate faculties that give us different forms of insight. As a scientist and artist, Willa Downing can view the world through profoundly different lenses. A powerful way of looking at Nature, science can reveal the immense complexity and extravagant beauty of natural phenomena down to the level of atoms and molecules. However, art’s connection is more primeval and evocative. Downing’s work reflects an intellectual and visceral response to the natural world. Although different, art and science share some characteristics. Both are creative. Fed by a sense of wonder, intuition and imagination play important roles. The ‘spaciousness of wonder’ creates new possibilities for the imagination, new geographies for the creative process. This body of work, about the weather and other related phenomena, includes box assemblages and mixed media on wood panel.

The ‘boxes of curiosity’ are inspired by Cabinets of Curiosity from the16th-17th centuries. Popular before modern science became prominent, these displays of natural and man-made objects reflected the interests, whims and idiosyncrasies of the collector. This spirit of wonder, serendipity and playfulness inform this work. Other pieces in this exhibition include maps of weather phenomena such as solar wind, heat islands, and storm clouds. Downing hopes to create work that accommodates feelings and intellectual ideas, work that will enrich one’s perspective of our natural world. (Artist – Willa Downing – www.willadowning.ca)

To sign the virtual guest book, please click here

SBA Events for Small Business Month 2011

October is Small Business Month , and this year, the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre’s Small Business Accelerator will be out hosting and participating in a number of major events. Here’s a rundown of where (and how) you can connect with our program in October.

October 17
Join SBA at UBC Robson Square (Vancouver) on Monday, October 17th 2011 for two compelling speakers, Paul Cubbon: Marketing Instructor at UBC’s Sauder School of Business and George Moen: President of Blenz The Canadian Coffee Company. They will be speaking on start-up success, and will be taking audience questions. This engaging speaker event is FREE to attend – and can be attended live via webcast if you aren’t in the lower mainland – but be sure to RSVP to attend very soon (before October 13), as seating is limited. For full details on Smart Business, Small Business: An SBA Speaker Series – Vancouver follow this link: http://www.sba-bc.ca/biztalk or view the full EVENT POSTER.

October 19
Join us in Kelowna at the UBC-O campus (Arts Atrium) for Smart Business, Small Business: An SBA Speaker Series – Okanagan. This event will run from 5:30 – 7:30 and will feature two exceptional small business speakers: Norine Webster and Scott Coleman, a Q&A session and a networking session to close. More detailed information for this event will be released very shortly.

For more information, please contact Community Engagement Librarian (Business Services) Aleha McCauley.

Featured Place at Learning Centre: Mackenzie Seminar room

This week, our featured room in the Irving K Barber Learning Centre, is the Mackenzie Seminar Room, room 112, located in Rare Books and Special Collections. The Mackenzie seminar room is a bit different from the other rooms in that it is not named after a place, but an explorer: Sir Alexander Mackenzie.

Sir Alexander Mackenzie (1764-1820), completed the first recorded transcontinental crossing of North America by a European north of Mexico. On July 20, 1793, Mackenzie and his party arrived at Bella Coola, where he first reached saltwater at South Bentinck Arm, an inlet of the Pacific Ocean.

Image credit: Alexander Mackenzie painted by Thomas Lawrence (c.1800), courtesy National Gallery of Canada.

In Rare Books and Special Collections, we have many historical maps documenting Mackenzie’s explorations. For example, in the Dr. Andrew McCormick map collection, there are a number of maps that illustrating Mackenzie’s travels. For example, McCormick map 106, A map of America, between the latitudes 40 and 70, and longitudes 45 and 180 West, exhibiting Mackenzie’s Track from Montreal to Fort Chipewyan & from there to the North Sea in 1789, & to the West Pacific Ocean in 1793 (London: Alexander Mackenzie, 1801). On this map, Mackenzie’s exploration routes of 1789 and 1793 are highlighted in red and yellow, respectively.

Image credit: Dr. Andrew McCormick collection, mccormick_106
In Rare Books and Special Collections, the Mackenzie seminar room is a multi-functional space.

Image credit: UBC Library

The reference collection (e.g. bibliographies, dictionaries, city directories, encyclopedias, etc) is arranged on the shelves in the room. As well, Rare Books and Special Collections librarians and archivists use this space to teach students, faculty, staff and community members about our collections. Since it is a room connected to the Fort Fraser Reading Room, we are able to bring out a variety of material and examples for class participants to use. If you are interested in arranging a class or tour using materials from Rare Books and Special Collections, please send an email to Rare Books and Special Collections.

 Cross-posted at Rare Books and Special Collection at UBC Library