Posts Tagged ‘program’

WSS Social

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Please join your fellow WSS members this Saturday, July 11 from 6:00-8:00pm-ish at BIN 36 wine bar (339 N. Dearborn near the House of Blues) for great conversation, delish appetizers, and all-around good times. We’ll be walking up there as a group after the General Membership Forum, but feel free to drop by as your schedule allows.

For our other events and meetings in Chicago, please see our conference information web page.

WSS Schedule of Meetings and Events at Annual

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Program Schedule

Date Time Meeting name Location
Saturday
July 11
1:30-2:30 Introduction to Women’s Issues McCormick Place West W-176b
3:30-5:30 General Membership Forum Palmer House Salon V
Sunday
July 12
8:00-10:00 Conference Planning Committee 2009 Palmer House LaSalle 4
8:00-10:00 Conference Planning Committee 2010 Palmer House Sandburg 2
10:30-12:00 Awards (closed) Palmer House Clark 09
10:30-12:00 All Committees Meeting Palmer House Wabash Parlor
3:30-5:30 Executive Board & Leadership Orientation Palmer House Salon VIII
Monday
July 13
8:00-12:00 Program: Gaming, Film, and Ephemera: Women’s Studies and Academic Collections

(The Awards Presentation will run from 8:00-8:30; program begins at 8:30)

McCormick Place West W-192b

Other meetings of interest

Date Time Meeting name Location
See also: Feminist Task Force (FTF) Conference Schedules @ http://ftfinfo.wikispaces.com/Conference+Schedules

WSS Program at Annual in Chicago

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

Gaming, Film, and Ephemera: Women’s Studies and Academic Collections
Monday, July 13, 2009
8:00-8:30: WSS Awards Presentation
8:30-12:00: WSS Program
Location: McCormick Place West W-192b

The panel will address mixed archival collections at the Schlesinger Library, the UIUC Gaming collection, and experiences conducting research on African American women and film. This program will address collection management and research strategies related to popular culture collections in academic libraries. Many collections directly relate to the history of women, gender, and culture, but they involve complex issues of access and preservation. Speakers will consider questions of how academic institutions collect and maintain these materials, as well as the experience of how researchers access and use them in scholarship.

Learn more at: http://libr.org/wss/conferences/2009program.html