Archive for October, 2007

11/7 & 8 Workshops in Refworks Software

Sunday, October 21st, 2007

RefWorks Workshops at Gelman
To register for any of these workshops, please RSVP to refworks@gelman.gwu.edu

  • Wednesday, November 7 - 3-5 pm
  • Thursday, November 8 - 7-9 pm

Refworks is an online tool for organizing your research and creating bibliographies, brought to you by the Gelman Library. RefWorks allows you to store and file your references in different folders, add research notes or other information, and format your paper, dissertation, or other research project with the click of a button. Additionally, because RefWorks is an online tool, you have access to your account from any computer and you can easily locate the items using the Find-It button!

10/30 Vampirology 101

Saturday, October 20th, 2007

VAMPIRology 101 seminar— Vampires: reality or myth?!!!

followed by screening of a classic Vampire film: HORROR OF DRACULA

To be conducted by Dr. Mark Yoffe of Global Resources Center, Gelman Library
Brought to you by: Global Voices and Images program of Global Resources Center
DATE: Tuesday, October 30, 2007
TIME: 6:00 pm
PLACE: Gelman Library 207

The vampires we’ve come to know and fear are mysterious, dangerous, immortal. They arrive at night enveloped in an aura of romantic tragedy and melancholy. No other demonic entity enjoys such popularity with the U.S. public. But Vampires leapfrogged to this country from the Balkans in the 19th century and Balkan folklore is also abundant with tales of Vampires.

How do REAL folkloric vampires differ, if at all, from our popular culture ones?

Dr. Mark Yoffe, who taught an honors course on Vampires at GW, has conducted extensive research on Vampires in the Balkans. He will welcome your questions and comments.

Additional Study Space for Mid-Terms

Saturday, October 20th, 2007

We have heard your suggestions! Due to the high demand for study space for mid-terms, the 3rd Floor will remain open 24-hours during the following days:

Sunday – Thursday, Oct. 21-25 open 24-hours*
Sunday – Thursday, Oct. 28-Nov. 1 open 24-hours
Friday, Nov. 2 return to regular Fall schedule

*Please note that there will be no 24-hour study available on the 3rd floor, Friday through Saturday, Oct. 26-27.

10/25 Faculty Authors Reception

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

FACULTY AUTHORS SIGNING RECEPTION
Thursday, October 25, 2007
10:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon
The Gelman Library, Room 207

FEATURED AUTHORS:

Elias G. Carayannis, Professor of Science, Technology, Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Department of Information Systems and Technology Management

Knowledge Creation, Diffusion, and Use in Innovation Networks and Knowledge Clusters: A Comparative Systems Approach across the United States, Europe, and Asia, Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 2005
Leading and Managing Creators, Inventors, and Innovators: The Art, Science, and Craft of Fostering Creativity, Triggering Invention, and Catalyzing Innovation, Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 2007
Re-Discovering Schumpeter: Creative Destruction Evolving into ‘Mode 3′, Macmillan Press, 2007

Eric H. Cline, Chair of the Department of Classical & Semitic Languages & Literatures, Associate Professor of Classics and of Anthropology
From Eden to Exile: Unraveling Mysteries of the Bible, National Geographic Society, 2007

Sherrill Brown Wells, Professorial Lecturer in History and International Affairs
Pioneers of European Integration and Peace, 1945-1963: A Brief History with Documents, Bedford/St. Martin’s Press, 2007

The Gelman Library holds Faculty Authors Signing Receptions throughout the academic year in recognition of new books by faculty members of The George Washington University. Students, faculty and staff are invited to attend the receptions and enjoy opportunities to hear faculty members discuss their research and their books’ scholarly contribution within their area of study. Signed copies of new publications are added to the faculty authors’ collection in the Special Collections Department. For more information, please call Emma Mosby at (202) 994-6455.

10/19 Comics and Controversy Event

Monday, October 8th, 2007

Friday, October 19, 7:30 p.m.
Gelman Library, Room 301

Comics and Controversy: Contentious Cartoons Around the World

Please join us for a roundtable discussion examining the publication of the Danish Mohammed cartoons and other cartoon controversies around the world—featuring Malaysian graphic novelist Lat, The Economist editorial cartoonist Kevin “KAL” Kallaugher, and the Cartoonists’ Rights Network International’s Robert Russell.

Speakers:

Kevin “KAL” Kallaugher is the editorial cartoonist for The Economist and The International Herald Tribune. His work has appeared in more than 100 papers worldwide and won the Berryman Award; the Thomas Nast Award (twice); the Gillray Goblet; and many more. He has published four books—Drawn from the Economist (1988), KALtoons (1992), KAL Draws a Crowd (1997), and KAL Draws the Line (2000)—and is past president of the Cartoonists Rights Network International.

LAT (Mohammed Nor Khalid) is an internationally renowned cartoonist from Malaysia. While he was still in his teens, his comics Tiga Sekawan and Keluarga Si Mamat appeared weekly in the newspaper Berita Minggu. By 1974, he became the editorial cartoonist of the New Straits Times, Malaysia’s oldest newspaper. He is especially known for his autobiographical comic Kampung Boy and its sequel, Town Boy, both published by First Second Books.

Robert Russell co-founded the Cartoonists Rights Network International in 1992. After an earlier tour in the U.S. Peace Corps in India, “Bro” went into international development work to create innovative organizations that serve critical human needs. He has worked in Asia and Africa for more than 25 years and now runs workshops in free speech issues for cartoonists, and writes about human rights and cartooning. He and his wife Hemamalie live in Burke, Virginia.

Presented by the Gelman Library System in conjunction with the International Comic Arts Forum and the Government of Malaysia.

Reception to follow

The George Washington University
Melvin Gelman Library, Room 301
2130 H Street NW
(Foggy Bottom/GWU Metro Station, Blue and Orange Lines)

Free and open to the public—please bring photo I.D. to enter the building.