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A panel of librarians will discuss how to navigate a career in academic libraries. Panelists will discuss some of the common pitfalls for new librarians, strategies for integrating into an organization, and mapping a career path. The panel is directed at library students looking at prospective careers paths, new hires who are just stepping into the field, or experience librarians starting employment in academic libraries.  Join us to hear four librarians engaged in lively and reflective discussion on navigating a career in academic libraries.

Panelists discuss some of the common pitfalls for new hire librarians, strategies for integrating into an organization, and mapping a career path, with comments drawing from their personal experiences. We hope this discussion will be of interest to a broad spectrum of librarians, from new hires to those in mid-career or those planning a move to another institution or sector. There is a Q&A period during the second half.

April 18, 2012 – 6.00PM to 8.00PM

Lillooet Room, 301, at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre

For more information:

Nick Josten, SLAIS

nickjosten@gmail.com

 

On Wednesday, March 21, 2012, the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre hosted a symposium called Addressing injustice: UBC’s Response to the internment of Japanese Canadians students, which examined UBC’s role and response to the internment of 76 Japanese Canadian students during the Second World War, and how those issues resonate today.  The March 21st symposium examined UBC’s role. Participants also examined related ethical issues to connect issues of justice and responsibility in what happened 70 years ago to issues that still resonate today. You can view the webcast here.    A 32 minute video directed by Alejandro Yoshizawa  featuring the stories of six Japanese Canadians who were UBC students in 1942 was shown.  Seventy years after Japanese Canadian UBC students were forcibly removed and exiled from the B.C. coast, UBC is examining its own role in this injustice with a symposium.

Although the Canadian government implemented the internment policy, the role and responsibility of UBC regarding its Japanese Canadian students remains an uncomfortable question. Many U.S. universities protested the inclusion of Japanese American students in the forced removal, tried to place their students at other universities or supported the completion of their degrees during the internment.

This was not the case at UBC. Even before internment, Japanese Canadian students in the university’s Canadian Officers Training Corps (C.O.T.C) had their commissions stripped by the university’s Senate Committee on Military Education. Two UBC faculty members, Henry Angus and E.H. Morrow, were among the few who spoke out against the injustice.

Symposium speakers included:

  • Mary Kitagawa, an active member of the Japanese Canadian community who led the campaign for UBC honorary degrees
  • Stan Fukawa, community historian, will speak about what life was like at UBC for Japanese Canadian students before the war
  • John Price, University of Victoria history professor, will speak about the larger contexts for the forced removal of Japanese Canadians in 1942
  • Henry Yu, UBC history professor, will address issues of justice and responsibility both in the past and present and why an awareness of history is a crucial element of citizenship and civic participation for all Canadians

World Poetry Call for Peace Poems for our International Peace Festival in May! 

Guidelines:

Poems need to be dedicated to peace or for peace.

One page only, two pages in another language

Deadline:  April 15th , 2012, Poems need to have copyright © and include the name of poet and country. All selected poems will be put on display at the Richmond Cultural Centre during the International Peace festival at the Richmond Cultural Centre, Richmond, BC, May 25-26  and at Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, University of British Columbia, May 1-31.

Selected poems will be read on the World Poetry Café Radio Show, CFRO, 102.7 FM in Vancouver British Columbia. If possible they will be included in the World Poetry Peace Poem  e-anthology.

Please send to ariadnes@uniserve.com  or astarte_sita@yahoo.com

70 years ago, 76 Japanese Canadian students who were attending UBC were forcibly removed and exiled from the B.C. coast. They were unable to complete their degrees or to graduate at convocation with their classmates. This symposium will examine UBC’s role in this injustice 70 years ago and raise questions about UBC’s responsibility. Participants will also examine related ethical issues to connect issues of justice and responsibility in what happened 70 years ago to issues that still resonate today.“With the presentation of this honourary degree, it feels like UBC has opened their arms and said, ‘You are part of our alumni, you’re welcome, come on in,’”said Sumiya, who was interned at 18 and not allowed to return to his studies at UBC. “It’s a great feeling of belonging.” The Ubyssey (2011, November 21)

RSVP to equity@equity.ubc.ca. Space is limited so RSVP early!
If you have a disability which requires accommodation, please let us know.Symposium will be held in the Lillooet Room (3rd floor) in the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre on Wednesday, March 21, 2012 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM

Sponsored by:UBC Equity Office
Office of the Provost & Vice President Academic
Office of the President
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
Faculty of Arts
St. John’s College

We have been featuring resources from Rare Books and Special Collections that relate to the place names used in the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre as room names. Sometimes we find it challenging to find a related resource; sometimes the challenge is in narrowing down our research!

Such is the case with Victoria. Victoria B.C., on the southern tip of Vancouver Island, is our province’s capital and hence the place of many events in the province’s history. Rare Books and Special Collections contains almost innumerable books, maps, documents, and photographs related to Victoria.  However, to rare books enthusiasts, there is one (or two) events from Victoria’s history that are of particular note: the publication of the first book (or books) to be printed in British Columbia.

What is largely accepted to be the first book printed in B.C. is Order in council constituting the Supreme Court of Civil Justice of Vancouver Island and rules of practice and forms to be used therein, which basically amounted to a “rule book” for the Supreme Court in Victoria. It was printed at the Victoria Gazette in November 1858.

"Order in Council..."“Order in Council…”

The copy photographed above is particularly special: it was David Cameron‘s personal copy!  David Cameron was the first Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia- in other words, not only did he own the book, he wrote the book too. This copy was given to us by Dr. Wallace Chung, on the occasion of the re-opening of theChung Collection in Spring 2008. David Cameron’s signature can be seen on the cover, and on the Act to provide for the Administration of Justice in Vancouver’s Island, tipped in the front:

David Cameron's signatureDavid Cameron’s signature

So, first book printed in B.C.- straightforward story, right? There was some debate over the years regarding which came first: Order in Council or Alfred Waddington’s Fraser Mines Vindicated, or, the History of Four Months.:

"Fraser Mines Vindicated"“Fraser Mines Vindicated”

It may have had something to do with Waddington’s preface, describing itself as “the first book published on Vancouver Island.” However, even Waddington’s own fine print explains that, “When the above was written Judge Cameron’s Book of Practice had not yet appeared.”

"Fraser Mines Vindicated" preface“Fraser Mines Vindicated” preface

Apparently the Order in Council leapfrogged ahead of Fraser Mines by mere days. In Lowther’s A Bibliography of British Columbia, she explains that Order in Council “has the distinction of being the first book printed in the colony of Vancouver Island, coming off the press ahead of Waddington’s Fraser mines vindicated.”

In the Barber Centre, the Victoria Learning Theatre is room 182. This is a large lecture theatre and is often used for special events.

Victoria Learning Theatre, courtesy of UBC Library CommunicationsVictoria Learning Theatre, courtesy of UBC Library Communications
 The blog entry is cross-posted at UBC Rare Books and Special Collections
Image credit: World Digital Library

As part of the Learning Centre’s community information resources page, this week we are highlighting a fairly new open access resource, the World Digital Library (WDL) which is a multilingual digital portal with significant primary materials from countries and cultures around the world, containing a world map and a timeline, and organized by geographic regions.  This resource is useful for researchers, educators, history enthusiasts, particularly those who are interested in content-rare books, maps, manuscripts, photographs, prints, sound recordings, and films.  A large number of libraries, archives, and cultural institutions collaborated with the WDL in contributing their collections of cultural content.

Not surprisingly, the World Digital Library contains many cultural treasures.   One of them for example, is the Complete Library in Four Sections (Siku Quanshu), held at the National Library of China.  The Siku quanshu (Complete library in four sections) was compiled during Qianlong period of the Qing dynasty, was the largest collection of texts in pre-modern China and has an important historical place in the histories of cultural texts and academic thought in China.

Or how about the famous original watercolour drawing of “Retreat of Napoleon from Leipzig“?  An original 1813 watercolor drawing by John Augustus Atkinson, this digitize art piece shows Napoleon seated in a tent shelter, surrounded by soldiers and members of his staff.

To find out more about this impressive open access product, you can go to the World Digital Library.

In our ongoing series of blog posts featuring the B.C. places used in the Irving K. Barber Centre room names, this week we will take a look at Kitimat. Kitimat was established as a company town in the truest sense. It was established when the Aluminum Company of Canada (Alcan) built a hydroelectric dam and smelter in the area in the 1950′s.  Its entry in B.C. Geographical Names shows the name Kitimat was used for a village in the area in the early 20th century, but was rescinded mere years before Alcan established the new town.

Rare Books and Special Collections has an excellent source of primary materials related to the planning and establishment of Kitimat by Alcan in the Thomas McDonald fonds. McDonald was an urban planner who worked primarily in Greater Vancouver, but the fonds  also contains files that appear to be from the Alcan offices related to the establishment of Kitimat. As examples, the two images below show plans for the city:

Overall perspective of city center, Kitimat B.C., Thomas McDonald fonds file 2-5Overall perspective of city center, Kitimat B.C., Thomas McDonald fonds file 2-5

 

Master plan of townsite, Kitimat B.C., Thomas McDonald fonds file 2-5Master plan of townsite, Kitimat B.C., Thomas McDonald fonds file 2-5

The files also contain a wealth of textual records including agreements between Alcan and the Province of B.C., promotional material, and office documents regarding the plans for town development.

For help using our archival resources, check out our research guide for archival material.

In the Barber Centre, the Kitimat Lab is part of the School of Library, Archival and Information Studies, on the 4th floor.

Cross-posted at the UBC Rare Books & Special Collections.

Animal research is an intriguing yet controversial area of research in academia.  The IKBLC recently sponsored a webcast of this lecture, “Who Benefits From Animal Research?” hosted by Green College’s Thematic Series: Bringing the Collective Together: Nonhuman Animals, Humans and Practice at the University. This talk probes the questions of the value for humans of medical research on nonhuman animals, the value for nonhuman animals, and the role of culture and corporate interests in discourses on human disease and security. Each speaker will speak for 15 minutes followed by 30 minutes of discussion. This talk features: Fabio Rossi, Canada Research Chair in Regenerative Medicine, Medical Genetics, UBC; Bill Milsom, Zoology, UBC; Nelly Auersperg, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, UBC; Dan Weary, Animal Welfare Program, UBC.

Health Information Series Presents Dr. Roger Wong of UBC Faculty of Medicine

Live Webcast Link: http://tiny.cc/ikblcwong 

 

“Managing Dementia, Alzheimer’s and  Acute Care for Elders Units:” UBC Health Information Series Presents Dr. Roger Wong”

March 1, 2012 – 7:00-8:30pm at Richmond Public Library’s Brighouse Branch Library

Presented by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and Woodward Library, the Health Information Series is an ongoing public lecture series that take place in the Lower Mainland community.  Who is a geriatrician? Someone who is dedicated to the health and well-being of our nation’s elders; someone who is dedicated to medically complex patient care involving interacting medical, neurological, psychiatric and social problems; someone who is on the front lines in coping with the changes associated with the graying of our society…and more!   Dr. Wong is Clinical Professsor in the Division of Geriatric Medicine of the Department of Medicine, and is also President of the Canadian Geriatrics Society (CGS) — the first British Columbian to lead the organization in 20 years. As an expert on aging and geriatrics support, please join us as Dr. Roger Wong will bring a lively presentation and discussion to the community of Richmond, BC at the Brighouse Branch Library of the Richmond Public Library.

The IKBLC was featured on “This Week at UBC”, including a clip about the Live-in for Literacy initiative taking place at the Learning Center January 17 to 26.

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