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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="3421" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/educ/posts/3421">
<Title>Women's Center November '10 Newsletter</Title>
<Tagline>Check it out!</Tagline>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">See what's going on in our community. <br></div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>See what's going on in our community.</Summary>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="4880" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/educ/posts/4880">
<Title>Database Trial:  Springer eBooks - ends 12/31/2010</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p>UMBC now has trial access to <a href="http://www.springerlink.com/books/" rel="nofollow external" class="bo"><strong>Springer eBooks</strong></a>.  The trial runs through December 31, 2010.</p>
    
    <p><strong>NOTE:</strong>  Trial access is only available for 2005-2010 copyright Springer eBooks from all collections.</p>
    
    <p>The Springer eBooks trial provides access to over 20,000 eBook titles in twelve subject collections:<br>
    * Behavioral Science<br>
    * Biomedical and Life Sciences<br>
    * Business and Economics<br>
    * Chemistry and Materials Science<br>
    * Computer Science (including the highly regarded Lecture Notes in Computer Science)<br>
    * Earth and Environmental Science<br>
    * Engineering<br>
    * Humanities, Social Sciences and Law<br>
    * Mathematics and Statistics<br>
    * Medicine<br>
    * Physics and Astronomy<br>
    * Professional Computing and Web Design </p>
    
    <p>Titles include textbooks, reference works, monographs, and book series.  All titles are fully searchable and hyperlinked.</p>
    
    <p>For off-campus access, please login via VPN first (<a href="http://vpn.umbc.edu" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://vpn.umbc.edu</a>). Then follow the link under "News &amp; Events" on the library homepage. For more info on remote access, see <a href="http://aok.lib.umbc.edu/services/remoteaccess.php" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://aok.lib.umbc.edu/services/remoteaccess.php</a></p>
    
    <p>Please let us know what you think. Leave a comment or send your comments to Janet Hack at <a href="mailto:jhack@umbc.edu">jhack@umbc.edu</a>.<br>
    </p></div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>UMBC now has trial access to Springer eBooks.  The trial runs through December 31, 2010.    NOTE:  Trial access is only available for 2005-2010 copyright Springer eBooks from all collections....</Summary>
<Website>http://www.umbc.edu/blogs/library/2010/11/database_trial_springer_ebooks_1.html</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="3344" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/educ/posts/3344">
<Title>Researcher of the Week: Chinhui Lin</Title>
<Tagline>Undergraduate researchers explore their interests!</Tagline>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><strong>Chinhui Lin, </strong>Biochemistry and Molecular Biology<br><br><p><br></p><p><br></p><p>"  Association between Parenting Goals and Parenting Practices among Chinese  Immigrants”</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p>Culture  plays a significant role in shaping parental values regarding 
    desirable and  undesirable long-term socialization goals and child 
    behaviors, as well as  optimal parenting practices. However, there is 
    limited research on Chinese  American parents’ long-term parenting goals
     for their children’s development  and their parenting practices. Thus, 
    the present study aims to examine: (1) the  major themes and the content
     of the long-term parenting goals for their  preschool children reported
     by immigrant Chinese mothers, (2) mothers’  endorsement of Chinese 
    indigenous parenting practices, (3) and the associations  between the 
    parenting goals and parenting practices of these mothers. Seventy  
    immigrant Chinese mothers will be interviewed regarding their long-term 
     socialization goals and asked to complete questionnaires about their 
    parenting  practices. The findings from this study will enhance our 
    understanding of how  these mothers achieve their long-term 
    socialization goals for their children in  the U.S. and contribute to 
    our promotion of the successful development of these  families.</p><p><br></p><p>For more information, check out the website! <br></p><br></div>
]]>
</Body>
<Summary>Chinhui Lin, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology         "  Association between Parenting Goals and Parenting Practices among Chinese  Immigrants”        Culture  plays a significant role in...</Summary>
<Website>http://www.umbc.edu/undergrad_ed/research/URA/10-11ScholarsAbstracts.html#ChinhuiLin</Website>
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<PostedAt>Wed, 03 Nov 2010 10:03:45 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="4881" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/educ/posts/4881">
<Title>In the Archives: Christopher Corbett</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p>Our final essay for the "In the Archives" series comes to us from English professor Christopher Corbett.  Corbett writes a monthly column for <em>Style</em> magazine in Baltimore and has been published by the New York Times, The Washington Post and The Philadelphia Inquirer.  His publications include <em>Vacationland</em>, <em>The Poker Bride: A Story of the Chinese in the American Goldfields</em>, and <em>Orphans Preferred: The Twisted Truth and Lasting Legend of the Pony Express</em>, which serves as the basis for his archival recollections.</p>
    
    <p><br>
    <u>How I Got That Story</u></p>
    
    <p>When I was still doing journalism I decided to ride a bus from Osoyoos, British Columbia to Tijuana, Mexico largely to prove that it was still possible to ride a bus from one border of these United States to the other without actually traveling on an interstate highway.  The bus company was called the Boise-Winnemucca Stage Lines – it descended from an honest to God stagecoach.  My plan proved more complicated than I had hoped it would.  But that’s another story.</p>
    
    <p>But that’s how I found myself in Reno, Nevada on a savagely hot summer weekend.  The bus had dumped me there.  </p>
    
    <p>Americans are not meant to be on foot.  I immediately rented a car.  And from my base at Fitzgerald’s Hotel, a venerable shrine to what would become Nevada’s reason for existence - gambling - I studied a map of the Silver State.  </p>
    
    <p>Virginia City, home of the fabled Comstock Lode, was only 20 miles away.  Eureka!  I drove down.  And from here, in the old boomtown that knew Mark Twain when he was still Sam Clemens, I again studied the map - and saw that I was near Fort Churchill – site of a Pony Express station. </p>
    
    <p>In the John Wayne film that plays in my head, Fort Churchill looked exactly like a Pony Express station should.  A cluster of adobe buildings on a wind-blown sward of sand in the Nevada desert with the distant snow-capped peaks of the Sierra Nevada, like a kind of Shangri-la, on the horizon.  </p>
    
    <p>I knew nothing about the Pony Express – which was actually called the Central Overland California &amp; Pike’s Peak Express Company during its brief and financially disastrous life – April 3, 1860 to October 26, 1861. </p>
    
    <p>Back East, I began to think about “the Pony” as old people in the West still called it.  I began to read.  One book led to another.  I poked around.  The books were wildly contradictory and many appeared to be the work of fantasists.  It took no time and little scholarship to realize that the story of the Pony Express was really a story of how something got to be a story – or in its case, an American whopper.  There had not been a book in half a century.  Eureka!  I got to work.  </p>
    
    <p>My research into the story of this story would take me to the fabled Huntington Library in southern California and to the Newberry Library in Chicago and on to the Library of Congress and to the historical archives of the eight states that the Pony crossed from Missouri to Kansas, to Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Nevada and California.   I went to the American Heritage Center at the University of Wyoming in Laramie and I went to the cellar of the library at Willliam Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri where packed away in some dusty boxes were the extensive papers of one of the few real historians to ever have a look at this tale, which one early chronicler called “a tale of truth, half-truth and no truth at all.”</p>
    
    <p>I am a big fan of libraries because of this pilgrimage.  It’s like fishing.  You don’t always get a bite but you can’t fish at home.  You have to get out there and do some legwork as the old denizens of Grub Street called it.  Shoe leather!  I found things that had never appeared in print before.  I tracked down stuff that went a long way toward explaining America’s appetite for what Bernard DeVoto called “the borderland of fable” that place where fact and fancy collide.  There’s a lot of that territory across the wide Missouri.</p>
    
    <p>This year is the 150th anniversary of the Pony Express and I am often asked to speak from Phoenix, Arizona to Nebraska City, Nebraska and points in between.  People ask is anything true?  Have you learned anything?  What can you tell us? </p>
    
    <p>I tell them that one day I drove to Topeka, Kansas – the state capital.  I had been there before.  I was rooting about in the vertical files and archives in the Kansas State Historical Society looking for bits of the story of the Pony Express.  I had reached the point where I thought I knew a lot - or at least more than I had known.  There I came across a yellowed index card in an old-fashioned card file that you see less and less nowadays.  It was a citation pertaining to an interview?  An old lady in Marysville, Kansas, the Marshall County seat, gave this interview in the 1930s to a local historian. On the reverse side of the index card someone had scrawled, “she saw the Pony Express.”</p>
    
    <p>I asked to see the manuscript, which some poor soul had painstakingly transcribed – typed on onionskin paper.  Here were the memories of an old lady who had come to Kansas when there were still wolves and Indians and immense herds of buffalo.  She was a German immigrant.  There were whole towns of Germans out there.  Towns with names like Bremen and Hanover.  She taught school for years and years.  And when she was a young woman, not much older than her students, she rode her pony overland 20 miles to a schoolhouse each week to teach the farmer’s children.  She carried a long barrel pistol in her waistband and remembered that although she never shot an Indian she shot at a few.  It was a hard world on the prairie.</p>
    
    <p>Her maiden name was Elizabeth Mohrbacher.  She was living in Marysville when the British explorer Sir Richard Burton – headed to have a look at the Mormons – hit town.  And she was there when they raised the flag when Kansas became a state.  And there too, when Sam Clemens, a recent Confederate army deserter passed through town headed for the territory ahead.  And she was there when the Pony Express arrived after a 100-mile dash from St. Joseph, Missouri.  She remembered it in wonderful detail.  This was no bar story.  This was no dime novel.  These were not the recollections of an established fraud like William Frederick Cody.  Here was an old lady on the Kansas plains who had seen America and lived a life out of a Willa Cather novel.  Here was perhaps the last living American to have actually seen “the swift phantom of the desert,” as Twain called the Pony Express rider.  </p>
    
    <p>On mornings like that - even in Topeka, Kansas - every bit of research is worth it and all the disappointments and the trips that seemed pointless and the leads that did not pan out don’t matter much anymore. I could not believe that I had found her.  She had been waiting for me for a long, long time. </p>
    
    <p>--<br>
    <em><a href="http://aok.lib.umbc.edu/specoll/archivesmonth" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Learn more about all of our Archives Month activities!</a></em></p></div>
]]>
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<Summary>Our final essay for the "In the Archives" series comes to us from English professor Christopher Corbett.  Corbett writes a monthly column for Style magazine in Baltimore and has been published by...</Summary>
<Website>http://www.umbc.edu/blogs/library/2010/10/in_the_archives_christopher_co.html</Website>
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<PostedAt>Thu, 28 Oct 2010 09:00:00 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="3226" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/educ/posts/3226">
<Title>Interested in Indigenous Media and Audiovisual Democracy?</Title>
<Body>
<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">UMBC undergraduate Stefanie Mavronis will be traveling to Bolivia in the spring to study the ways that indigenous populations utilize new media 
    technology to foster a de facto form of democracy and to build community. <br><br>To read more about her research go to: <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/undergrad_ed/research/ResearcherProfiles/StefanieMavronisProfile.htm" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">http://www.umbc.edu/undergrad_ed/research/ResearcherProfiles/StefanieMavronisProfile.htm</a><br></div>
]]>
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<Summary>UMBC undergraduate Stefanie Mavronis will be traveling to Bolivia in the spring to study the ways that indigenous populations utilize new media  technology to foster a de facto form of democracy...</Summary>
<Website>http://www.umbc.edu/undergrad_ed/research/ResearcherProfiles/StefanieMavronisProfile.htm</Website>
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<PostedAt>Wed, 27 Oct 2010 14:15:22 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="4882" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/educ/posts/4882">
<Title>In the Archives: Richard Byrne</Title>
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<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p>Richard Byrne is the editor of <em>UMBC Magazine</em> as well as a playwright whose work has been produced in Washington, D.C., St. Louis and Prague.  Staff of Special Collections at UMBC are most familiar with Richard visiting us to investigate a story relating to our campus history, but in today's essay he explores the impact that archival research has had on his life as a playwright.</p>
    
    <p><br>
    <u>The Baby Resting on a Skull</u></p>
    
    <p>Whether it’s digging into faded texts of Renaissance alchemy for a play that I’m writing, or excavating times gone by on the campus of our university for an article in <em>UMBC Magazine</em>, the thrill of chasing down knowledge in archives never goes away.</p>
    
    <p>Archives are a double affirmation. First, the archive affirms that there are substantive parts of our experience – our words and objects and images and artifacts – which are worth keeping, worth guarding, and worth tender and attentive care. And yet, despite that necessary emphasis on jealous care and preservation, the archives enact the delightful paradox of ensuring and promoting access – by researchers and the general public – to these materials.   <br>
     <br>
    My most exciting recent encounters in archives came as I was writing my play, <em>Burn Your Bookes</em>, about the 16th Century alchemist Edward Kelley and his step-daughter, the Neo-Latin poet Elizabeth Jane Weston. In the archives of Harvard University’s Houghton Library, the Folger Shakespeare Library and the Library of Congress, I gained access to books owned by Kelley’s employer, John Dee, held Weston’s books of poetry (printed in Frankfurt and Prague in the early 17th Century) in my hands, and read (with fascination and profit) an English translation of famous alchemist and physician Oswald Croll’s <em>Alchemical Basilisk</em> – which includes recipes for <em>aurum potabile</em> (“drinkable gold”). </p>
    
    <p>A playwright who writes about history always finds excitement in getting closer to his sources. The Folger Shakespeare Library, for instance, has a copy of a book owned by John Dee that has the Renaissance polymath’s copious marginalia scribbled in an essay on demonology. Seeing the deep grooves that Dee’s pen cut into the page of that book gave me a sense of the intensity of his character and his quest for occult knowledge. Comparing two different versions of Weston’s first book, <em>Poemata</em>, allowed me to examine at firsthand a discrepancy between the two editions noted by two scholars – Donald Cheney and Brenda Hosington. Cheney and Hosington discovered that the Harvard version of the book had a line on the cover giving imperial sanction to its publication intact, but that the version in the Folger had that line cancelled out. The discrepancy – and the obvious agency behind it – provided me with a key plot point in the play.  </p>
    
    <p>Indeed, the Houghton Library’s copy of Weston’s second book, <em>Parthenica</em>, also proved to be a revelation. Both of Weston’s books were published by a Silesian nobleman named George Martinius Baldhofen. <em>Poemata</em> was a small, plain book. But the <em>Parthenica</em> was a much more elaborate production – stuffed not only with Weston’s poems but with poems by literary luminaries and Weston’s correspondence with them. Weston did not supervise the edition, so the book is truly a window on the fascinating character of Baldhofen, right down to its fanciful frontispiece, with human figures and birds woven into an intricate pattern – and an infant reclining its elbow on a human skull! The fancy and extravagance married to morbidity that was only revealed by close examination of the book gave me strong material to write Baldhofen’s part in the play. </p>
    
    <p>--<br>
    <em><a href="http://aok.lib.umbc.edu/specoll/archivesmonth" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">Learn more about all of our Archives Month activities!</a></em><br>
    </p></div>
]]>
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<Summary>Richard Byrne is the editor of UMBC Magazine as well as a playwright whose work has been produced in Washington, D.C., St. Louis and Prague.  Staff of Special Collections at UMBC are most familiar...</Summary>
<Website>http://www.umbc.edu/blogs/library/2010/10/in_the_archives_richard_byrne.html</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="3096" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/educ/posts/3096">
<Title>Math-Bio Researchers Needed</Title>
<Tagline>Recruiting Students NOW!</Tagline>
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<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">NEW! Undergraduate Mathematics Biology Training 
    Program (<a href="mailto:ubm@umbc.edu" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">ubm@umbc.edu</a>). Sophomores and Juniors, apply by November 1 for a year-long research experience, including paid summer research. Looking for Bio and Math students interested in working in teams. We believe that modern scientific problems demand multidisciplinary 
    approaches, and that cross-disciplinary training will accelerate 
    discovery and prepare students to be scientific leaders in the 21st 
    century. Our innovative program will provide two years of research 
    training for undergraduates working on projects at the interface of 
    biology, mathematics and statistics.</div>
]]>
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<Summary>NEW! Undergraduate Mathematics Biology Training  Program (ubm@umbc.edu). Sophomores and Juniors, apply by November 1 for a year-long research experience, including paid summer research. Looking...</Summary>
<Website>http://www.umbc.edu/ubm/</Website>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="true" id="3084" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/educ/posts/3084">
<Title>Undergraduate Featured Researcher: Sabah Ghulamali</Title>
<Tagline>See what UMBC student researchers are interested in!</Tagline>
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<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content"><p><span>Sabah Ghulamali, </span><span>Gender  and Women’s Studies</span></p>
              <p>Reexamining  Burden: Describing Children Living with HIV Positive Adults in Kenya <br></p><p>This project analyzed the prevalence of children in Kenya residing in a household with an HIV positive adult across several household covariates, including residential area, wealth percentile, and number of household residents.<br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p>For more information about Sabah's research experience, visit the website. <br></p></div>
]]>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="3083" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/educ/posts/3083">
<Title>Current Events</Title>
<Tagline>A Legacy from Suicide due to bullying</Tagline>
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<![CDATA[
    <div class="html-content">An 18yr old transgender female committed suicide after years of bullying. At one point in her life she was a man but decided to become female. Days before her suicide, Chloe became depressed which eventually led to her suicide.<br></div>
]]>
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<Summary>An 18yr old transgender female committed suicide after years of bullying. At one point in her life she was a man but decided to become female. Days before her suicide, Chloe became depressed which...</Summary>
<Website>http://www.northcoastjournal.com/news/2010/10/14/chloes-legacy/</Website>
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<Sponsor>Office of Student Life's Mosaic Center</Sponsor>
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<PostedAt>Wed, 20 Oct 2010 10:24:33 -0400</PostedAt>
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<NewsItem contentIssues="false" id="3073" important="false" status="posted" url="https://beta.my.umbc.edu/groups/educ/posts/3073">
<Title>Summer 2011 NIST SURF applications are out</Title>
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    <div class="html-content"><p>Science, Engineering, Math, and Computer Science students check out the paid summer research fellowship at <a href="http://www.nist.gov/surfgaithersburg/upload/apchklst2.pdf" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">NIST</a>. If you are considering applying to this program,<strong> sign up now</strong> for more information by e-mailing <a href="mailto:mcglynn@umbc.edu">mcglynn@umbc.edu</a>. Ten <a href="http://www.umbc.edu/undergrad_ed/research/ResearchProfiles.htm" rel="nofollow external" class="bo">UMBC students</a> were research fellows at NIST last summer. Students in all years as well as graduating seniors may apply to this summer research program.  </p></div>
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<Summary>Science, Engineering, Math, and Computer Science students check out the paid summer research fellowship at NIST. If you are considering applying to this program, sign up now for more information...</Summary>
<Website>http://www.umbc.edu/blogs/oue/2010/10/summer_2011_nist_surf_applicat.html</Website>
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<Sponsor>Undergraduate Research</Sponsor>
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<PostedAt>Tue, 19 Oct 2010 09:15:02 -0400</PostedAt>
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