NOVEMBER 1, 7 PM, PHILADELPHIA SOUND AND VISION at INTERNATIONAL HOUSE

Monday, November 1 · 7:00pm – 9:00pm Ibrahim Theater @ International House 3701 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, PA Temple University Libraries, Urban Archives presents a look at hidden stories of music and sound in Philadelphia. It features some of the more distinct characters, traditions and venues in the city’s recent history. The screening will feature: free-jazz performer Sun Ra and his Arkestra, David Bowie visiting Veterans Stadium, synthesizer expert Gerson Rosenbloom, Philadelphia International soul legends McFadden & Whitehead, punk/…new wave stalwart Ken Kweeder at the Hot Club, the organist at the Spectrum sports and entertainment venue, jazz-vibraphonist Khan Jamal, Mummers new years string bands, the original Electric Factory concert venue and more! The program consists of unique footage from the Urban Archives’ collections including unaired news footage, television broadcasts, news magazines and documentaries from local networks WPVI 6 and KYW 3. This highlights recent preservation and digitization work done on our film and video holdings. Open to the general public and FREE! Bowie4.png Jamal2.png SunRa5.png

October 27, 3:30 PM, N+1 AND PUBLISHING PERIODICALS TODAY

@ Paley Library Lecture Hall, Ground Floor, 1210 Polett Walk n+1 editors Marco Roth and Keith Gessen will discuss what it takes to start a print literary journal, survive the battle of ideas with other magazines (and the internet), and even get some writing done on the side. n +1 is a twice-yearly print journal of politics, literature, and culture. Jonathan Franzen has said of the publication, “Just when you’re thinking you’re intellectually alone in the world, something like n+1 falls into your hands,” and A.O. Scott raved in the New York Times magazine that the periodical offers “[p]ointed, closely argued and often brilliantly original critiques of contemporary life and letters.” Gessen is an essayist, novelist, and translator from Russian. His first novel, All the Sad Young Literary Men, was published in 2008, and he has written for the New Yorker, the London Review of Books, and other print and web-based periodicals. Roth lives here in Philadelphia and is a 2009 Pew Fellow in the Arts. His essays have appeared in Dissent and the Nation; his memoir, Reverse Transcription, will be published by Farrar Straus and Giroux in 2011. Avant_Garde.png n+19.png

October 26, 5:30PM, EMILY GOULD ON JOURNALISM, FEMINISM, WEBISM AND YOUTUBING

@ Paley Library Lecture Hall, Ground Floor 1210 Polett Walk A Conversation hosted by Rachel Blau DuPlessis Emily Gould is a journalist and commentator, known for her probing, personal essays and books. Rachel Blau DuPlessis is a pre-eminent poet and Columbia-educated scholar who now teaches at Temple University. These two accomplished women will join together at Paley Library for a lively conversation you don’t want to miss. Join us as Gould reads from her new book, And the Heart Says Whatever, then discusses with Blau DuPlessis her opinions on online journalism, feminism, the media, publishing, food, cats and dogs, and answers audience questions. Gould is a former editor of the groundbreaking blog and online magazine, Gawker.com. She then became a household name with the publication of Exposed in the New York Times magazine. This feature-length article recounted her experiences at Gawker, and sparked controversy and generated abundant commentary on the Times website. Gould now shares her thoughts on eclectic topics from feminism to social media at Emily Magazine, a popular blog, and recently published her first full-length memoir, And the Heart Says Whatever (Free Press, 2010). She is also the host of the web-program Cooking the Books, a literature and foodie talk show, and continues to write for periodicals both in print and online, such as Slate.com and the New York Times. Blau DuPlessis is a writer, poet, critic and feminist scholar. She received her PhD from Columbia University in 1970 and has been teaching and writing ever since. She received the 2002 Pew Fellowship in the Arts and a 2008-2009 Fellowship at the National Humanities Center and published over 15 books of original poems, scholarship and criticism.

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October 21, NOON, TEMPLE BOOK CLUB READS EMILY GOULD’S AND THE HEART SAYS WHATEVER

@ Paley Library Lecture Hall, 1210 Polett Walk Come discuss…… And the Heart Says Whatever (Free Press, 2001), by Emily Gould. The book club discusses the first full-length work by columnist, essayist and blogger-extraordinaire, Emily Gould. She tackles all manner of subjects in her insightful, tightly crafted debut memoir.

October 15, 2PM, DELTA SIGMA THETA EPSILON DELTA CHAPTER/CHARLES L. BLOCKSON AFRO- AMERICAN COLLECTION OPEN HOUSE

@ The Charles L. Blockson Afro-American Collection, 1310 Polett Walk, First Floor of Sullivan Hall Explore history in the Blockson Collection this October, with members of the Delta Sigma Theta Epsilon Delta Chapter, which got its start at Temple 50 years ago this fall. Explore the exhibition on the Deltas, and discuss it with collection curator, Dr. Diane D. Turner.

October 13, 4PM, CLIMATOLOGIST MICHAEL MANN ON THE SCIENCE AND POLITICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE

October 13, Paley Library Lecture Hall, 4:00 PM Dire Predictions: Understanding Global Warming Michael Mann, one of the nation’s leading climatologists, is the director of the Earth System Science Center and a professor at the Pennsylvania State University. He received his doctorate in Geology and Geophysics from Yale University in 1998. Mann met controversy in 2009 when documents and emails, written by him and other leading climatologists, were made public after the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit’s server was hacked. Skeptics seized on these communications, claiming they brought into question the legitimacy of global warming. The Pennsylvania State University cleared Mann of any wrongdoing, and independent reviews by FactCheck and the Associated Press said that critics misrepresented emails to support unfounded claims of scientific misconduct. “Climategate,” however, remains a potent example of the politicization of science. Temple University Libraries and the Center for the Humanities at Temple welcome Dr. Mann, as he discusses the discourse around science in today’s political climate. He will also focus on his book, Dire Predictions: Understanding Global Warming, and the science of climate change.

September 29, 5PM, YEVGENIY FIKS: POST-SOVIET WITHOUT SHORES

Temple Gallery, Tyler School of Art and Temple University Libraries Present: YEVGENIY FIKS: POST-SOVIET WITHOUT SHORES TEXT/POLITICS/ART—Lenin for Your Library?, Ayn Rand in Illustrations, and Communist Tour of MoMA Introduction by Temple Gallery guest curator Stamatina Gregory Russian-born Yevgeniy Fiks discusses the influence of text and politics on his art, which faces head-on the Post-Soviet dialog in the West. Fiks draws influence for many of his politically poignant works from book. Projects such as Lenin for Your Library? in which the artist sent V.I. Lenin’s Imperialism the Highest Stage of Capitalism to 100 corporate libraries, documenting and archiving the responses to his mailing, demonstrate this. A later project, Ayn Rand in Illustrations, attempts to add a visual component to three of the author’s major books: We the Living, The Fountainhead, and Atlas Shrugged. Join the Libraries and Temple Gallery, Tyler School of Art as this intriguing artist shares the process and product of his work. DISCUSSION follows at Temple Gallery, 12th and Norris Streets, 6:30 PM Following his lecture, Yevgeniy Fiks will participate in a public discussion about his work and its relationship to art and politics, Cold-War legacy, and more. Students from Topics in Contemporary Art, taught by Tyler’s Philip Glahn, will lead the discussion. This lecture is presented in conjunction with the exhibition Yevgeniy Fiks: Communist Conspiracy in Art Threatens American Museums, which runs from September 8-November 6 at Temple Gallery. Yevgeniy Fiks: Post-Soviet Without Shores is supported in part by the Friends of Temple Gallery, Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, and Temple University Libraries. templegallery_fiks_donderoinstallationSMALL.jpg Installation view of Tour of MoMA with Congressman Dondero, 2010 in the exhibition Yevgeniy Fiks: Communist Conspiracy in Art Threatens American Museums at Temple Gallery at Tyler School of Art, Temple University, September 8 – November 6, 2010. Image courtesy of Temple Gallery. templegallery_fiks_communisttourofmomaSMALL.jpg Communist Tour of MoMA: Marc Chagall, 2010 Digital prints on canvas 30 x 40 inches each Courtesy of the artist and Winkleman Gallery, NY.

A Juneteenth Celebration of Family History, June 17, 3-5PM

A Juneteenth Celebration of Family History June 17, 3-5 pm Blockson Collection, Sullivan Hall, 1310 Polett Walk A Juneteenth Celebration of Family History with Charles L. Blockson and Dianna R. Cassey Mr. Blockson and Ms. Cassey explore the methods and materials essential to family research hosted by Dr. Diane D. Turner, Curator. The Charles L. Blockson Afro-American Collection is proud to celebrate Juneteenth, the oldest nationally celebrated commemoration of the ending of slavery in the United States. From its Galveston, Texas origin, the observance of this date as African American Emancipation Day has spread across the United States and beyond.

Celebrate the Sixth Annual Library Prize for Undergraduate Research on May 5!

Wednesday, May 5, 4:30 pm Paley Library Lecture Hall Please join us Wednesday, May 5 at 4:30 p.m. in the Lecture Hall for the Sixth Annual Library Prize for Undergraduate Research Awards and Reception. This is one of our last events of the year, and it is always a wonderful time. Share the company of colleagues and get to hear about some truly interesting research being done by undergraduates here at Temple. The Library Prize for Undergraduate Research is made possible by the generosity of Jack H. Livingstone Jr., SBM ‘49.