Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Library Volunteer Meeting: Thursday, 12/3. For real.
When: Thursday, Dec. 3, from 5:30-6:30 pm
Where: in the CWC Carriage House.
We'll be wrapping up/taking stock of the fall semester and doing some planning for the spring. And there will be snacks. Looking forward to it!
Elissa
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Library Volunteer Meeting: let's reschedule
It already sounds like quite a few people have a conflict with the previously suggested meeting time. So let's reschedule, and apologies for the confusion. Please follow the link below to a scheduling poll. Once everyone weighs in, we'll go with the time that works best for the most people.
Would you please take a moment to take the poll by Monday? Thanks!!
http://www.doodle.com/yi8553qenh4wdriu
-Elissa
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Book of the Week!
I am going to start adding “book of the week” posts to the CWC blog. Please help me in selecting media from our collection. Take a look around and pick out 2 or 3 (or more if you’d like) books or DVDs that look interesting or that you know and love. Remember, these need to be FROM OUR COLLECTION, so just peruse the shelves around you.
Once you’ve made your choices, write a blurb (see below for examples). Tell me the title, author, and describe the item. For your description, you can write it yourself, or use what’s on the back of the book/box, or grab a review from online like amazon.com or imdb.com, etc (make sure you indicate where your info comes from). Then email it on to me so I can post it to the blog: ezell@email.unc.edu. This will be once a week so it may take a while to get to yours – but don’t worry, yours will soon be the featured selection, wooo!
Some past blurbs:
Outside the Box, by Lynn Sherr
(from Booklist)
Sherr, an ABC correspondent and pioneer in network news, offers a memoir as well as historical perspective on television news, the women's movement, and how the two came together in her long career. Sherr was part of a "mod squad" of young female reporters for the Associated Press sent forth to record the cultural shifts of the 1960s and 1970s, a time when she and other female reporters supported the "burgeoning new women's movement and other assorted rebellions," making them less than the objective observers the profession required. Of Jewish descent, but with the blond looks and Philadelphia Main Line background and Wellesley education that favored women making advancements in the 1960s, Sherr ventured into television journalism and defied the stereotypes about her sex and her looks. She covered politics and the U.S. space program, even as she suffered the criticisms of her dress and hairstyle made by network executives. Amidst recollections of touching stories and the competitive silliness that sometimes accompanies television journalism, Sherr also recalls the painful loss of her husband to cancer and, later, her own battle with the disease. Sherr is candid, amusing, and completely engaging in this look back over her life and a respected career.
The Age of Innocence, by Edith Wharton
(from the Random House online description)
Newland Archer saw little to envy in the marriages of his friends, yet he prided himself that in May Welland he had found the companion of his needs--tender and impressionable, with equal purity of mind and manners. The engagement was announced discreetly, but all of New York society was soon privy to this most perfect match, a union of families and circumstances cemented by affection. Enter Countess Olenska, a woman of quick wit sharpened by experience, not afraid to flout convention and determined to find freedom in divorce. Against his judgment, Newland is drawn to the socially ostracized Ellen Olenska, who opens his eyes and has the power to make him feel. He knows that in sweet-tempered May, he can expect stability and the steadying comfort of duty. But what new worlds could he discover with Ellen? Written with elegance and wry precision, Edith Wharton's Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece is a tragic love story and a powerful homily about the perils of a perfect marriage.
Brown Bag lunch
Our next screening is Wednesday, Nov. 4th at
1. Come to the actual screening. There will be snacks!
2. Email friends, professors, classes, campus organizations, groups who might be interested in the screening (see below info).
3. Put up these fliers. You can get tape in the main house – just ask, but do try to bring it back as we don’t have $$ to buy new office supplies (damn you budget cuts!!).
Info about the screening can be found on our facebook page or on the CWC’s homepage (the location is incorrect on the CWC site. Screenings are in Graham Memorial, not our Carriage House). Here’s the blurb from facebook:
Carolina Women’s Center Brown Bag Lunch Film Series
Fall 2009 Semester:
-New Location! Screenings will be held in Graham Memorial 039
-All screenings take place on Wednesdays from 12-1:30pm
-For more info please contact ezell@email.unc.edu
Wednesday,
An illuminating and compassionate look at the world of transgender identity, as seen through portraits of some of San Francisco's leading gender mixers. Whether by birth or by choice, sometimes with the assistance of hormones or surgical prostheses, we meet those who blur the lines of male and female.
For more info: http://www.firstrunfeatures.com/gendernautsdvd.html
If you can see this...
Anyway, all of you are authorized to be authors (is that redundant?). You can post anything you want, anytime. I'll be posting messages here about library stuff, as will Melody, our volunteer coordinator. I have also set up a listserv so I can email you directly with tasks and instructions. Any emails that go out over the listserv will be duplicated here.
Thus, the listserv will be for sending out instructions, tasks, etc, more of a one-way street. But this blog will be for receiving info, plus more fluid communication: getting to know each other, posting fun stuff, asking questions, making comments, suggestions, etc.