UBC’s Asian Library, in collaboration with the Chinese Cultural Centre Museum and Archives,  presents Where Did the Immigrants Actually Come From? This exhibit, first shown in the Asian Library in 2010, was followed by a two-year project that involved mapping the villages and towns recorded in the Head Tax database.

The exhibit runs Tuesday to Sunday from 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. until July 3 at the Chinese Cultural Centre Museum in Chinatown (555 Columbia Street, Vancouver).

For more information, please visit here.

Hey hockey fans – are you feeling Stanley Cup fever? Then tap into some hockey history courtesy of UBC Library – and impress fellow fans with your knowledge of the Vancouver Canucks and insights into the Canada’s storied sporting pastime. From anecdotes to kids’ lit, biographies to bibliographies, we’ve got something for everyone who’s hot on hockey. So come in, check us out – and cheer on the Canucks!

Generation:1 is an exhibit at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre that showcases the artworks of local Asian Canadian artists. Since 1996, the Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Society has endeavoured to explore the diversity of Asian Canadian life and culture and promote the discussion of relevant issues and concerns within and beyond the Asian-Canadian community. 2011 marks the second anniversary of VAHMS hosting Generation:1 at the Learning Centre.

The exhibit, which runs in two “waves,” is on display through June 25. For more information, please visit Generation: 1.

UBC Library is excited to bring you our new monthly e-newsletter, LibFOCUS – a fresh, new way of providing information to our community subscribers.

Each month, we’ll deliver news and updates about UBC Library to your inbox. Hear about upcoming events, find out about new additions to our collections, discover which librarians are blogging and explore ways to connect with us.

You can view a copy of LibFOCUS here. We hope you enjoy this first issue – please let us know what you think by emailing library.communications@ubc.ca.

Read all about it: UBC Library is pleased to announce the acquisition of digital newspaper archives that chronicle life during past centuries in the United Kingdom and the U.S.

The 17th and 18th Century Burney Collection Newspapers digital archive features about 1,270 newspapers and news pamphlets from the United Kingdom. It totals nearly one million pages and includes titles such as the Daily Courant, the London Gazette, the London Chronicle and hundreds more.

The news sources, collected by the Reverend Charles Burney, represent the largest single archive of English news media from the 17th and 18th centuries available from the British Library. The original Burney volumes are now in fragile condition and have been restricted from ordinary reading room use.

Developed in partnership with the British Library and JISC, 19th Century British Library Newspapers offers full runs of national, regional and local 19th-century British newspapers, taken directly from the extensive holdings of the British Library. The collection includes the full text of 71 newspapers, totalling more than three million pages.

Released in two parts, the selection of predominantly liberal, left-of centre or radical publications in part one has been balanced in part two by the inclusion of two London newspapers, The Standard and the Morning Post. For most of the 19th century these represented conservative opinion.

Meanwhile, 19th Century U.S. Newspapers features full-text content and images from numerous newspapers based in urban and rural regions throughout the U.S. The collection encompasses the entire 19th century, with an emphasis on topics such as the American Civil War, African-American culture and history, Western migration, Antebellum-era life and more.

Good news for business researchers: the David Lam Library continues to enhance its Business FAQs database, which was launched in December 2010. The FAQs, designed to answer common questions about the David Lam Library and business research, can be searched by keyword or browsed by category. The database is based on the Business FAQs at the Lippincott Library at the Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsylvania.

There are currently six categories of questions, and business librarians will continue to add more during the spring and summer.

The categories include:

1.       Business Databases – general questions about accessing business databases

2.       Canaccord Learning Commons – facilities and services

3.       David Lam Management Research Library – facilities and services

4.       Labour – labour-related research, including collective bargaining, industrial relations and the labour market

5.       Management – management research, including human resource management, executive pay and recruitment

6.       Sauder School of Business – questions relating to Sauder publications

Click here to access the database. Your feedback is welcome – please send your comments and questions to Lindsay Ure.

To all of UBC Library’s users:

Please note that there will be changes to the Library’s opening hours over the Easter weekend and the remainder of April.

Click here for complete list of upcoming hours of operation at the Library’s branches and divisions. You can always find our current hours of operation on the UBC Library website.

UBC Library is pleased to present its Community Report, where you can find out about new spaces, our digital agenda, the Library’s community engagement efforts and more.

The report, an update on the first year of the Library’s Strategic Plan, highlights some milestones related to the plan’s five strategic directions: Enhance Student Learning, Accelerate Research, Manage Collections in a Digital Context, Engage with Community and Create an Exceptional Work Environment.

We’re happy to report on our progress, and excited about the opportunities ahead. You can view the Community Report here, and find out more information about UBC Library’s Strategic Plan here.

Community outreach is the theme of the second e-newsletter from Chinese Canadian Stories: Uncommon Histories from a Common Past, an initiative of UBC Library and Simon Fraser University Library.

Stories include updates on a community workshop at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, interviews with the Vancouver Sun and Fairchild Radio, and a Toishan letters workshop. Video clips of UBC Library’s Digital Initiatives Unit are also featured. You can view the e-newsletter here.

Chinese Canadian Stories is funded by Citizenship and Immigration Canada’s Community Historical Recognition Program.

Feeling social? Then connect with us to find out about news and events at UBC Library, the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and UBC.

Facebook

Friend us on Facebook – you can learn about upcoming events, ask questions about learning support…and maybe even win some prizes! Find out more here.

Twitter

Follow us on Twitter to get information about news, programs, services and events at UBC Library and beyond. You’ll also find updates on issues impacting the world of libraries, literacy, research and academia. Find out more here.

YouTube

The Irving K. Barber Learning Centre offers podcasts of its programs on its website and through YouTube.

Slideshare

You can view UBC Library presentations, notes, subject-specific resources and other material on Slideshare. Find out more at UBC Library and the Biomedical Branch Library, and get research tips from our Instructional Programs Librarian here.

Blogs

The Library and the Learning Centre feature a range of blogs that keep you in the know about our branches, collections, publicity and more. Check out our coverage here and here.

a place of mind, The University of British Columbia

UBC Library

Info:

604.822.6375

Renewals: 

604.822.3115
604.822.2883
250.807.9107

Emergency Procedures | Accessibility | Contact UBC | © Copyright The University of British Columbia

Spam prevention powered by Akismet