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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251203T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251203T193000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20251119T155943Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251120T205455Z
UID:10000235-1764784800-1764790200@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:Violins of Hope Opening Event
DESCRIPTION:Hear from musicologist and UWM Music Professor Gillian Rodger as she provides an historical perspective for the Violins of Hope: Call and Response exhibition\, which spotlights Holocaust-era violins from Violins of Hope paired with documentary library resources and original art from the Jewish Artists Collective Chicago in response to the violins. \nBeyond the presentation from Dr. Rodger\, attendees of the Violins of Hope Opening Event can experience a musical performance on one of the Violins of Hope by the Director of the UWM String Academy Jamie Hofman. \nViolins of Hope is a traveling collection of stringed instruments that belonged to Jewish musicians and were played before and during the Holocaust. The instruments were restored by father-son Israeli violinmakers Amnon and Avshalom Weinstein. The Violins of Hope-Wisconsin residency extends through January 2026. \nPlease contact libspecial@uwm.edu for more information and accommodations for the Violins of Hope Opening Event.
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/violins-of-hope-opening-event/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Arts and Culture,Front Page Event,UWM Campus Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251121T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251121T153000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20251021T160456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251021T160456Z
UID:10000232-1763733600-1763739000@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:Slow AI: A Human Training Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Led by Jocelyn Szczepaniak-Gillece (English)\, Ann Hanlon (UWM Libraries)\, and Anne Pycha (Linguistics).\nPrompting isn’t just for ChatGPT. In this workshop\, we’ll return our attention to older ways of writing and thinking that get hijacked by – but are also prototypes for – contemporary productivity models.\n\nThe first ten attendees to register will receive a notebook and pen\, courtesy of the Center for 21st Century Studies Human Club.\n\nRegister here: https://uwm.edu/c21/event/slow-ai-a-human-training-workshop/
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/slow-ai-a-human-training-workshop/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Faculty and Staff,Front Page Event,Students,UWM Campus Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251030T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251030T173000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20250910T143857Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250924T192512Z
UID:10000217-1761841800-1761845400@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:2025 Morris Fromkin Memorial Lecture
DESCRIPTION:Register for Event \nGabriela Nagy\, UWM assistant professor of psychology\, will present the 2025 Morris Fromkin Memorial Lecture. The title of her talk is “Resilience\, Resistance\, and Rhetoric:  What Latino/a Immigrants Teach Us About Health and Humanity.” \nThis talk challenges the pervasive deficit lens through which Latino/a immigrants are often viewed\, focusing instead on their remarkable resilience and the protective factors that safeguard their mental and physical health despite chronic stressors\, trauma\, and systemic oppression. It offers insights into how Latino/a cultural values and practices can inform healthier\, more resilient ways of living for all people in the United States. \nAbout the speaker: \n \nGabriela Nagy\, Ph.D.\, is an assistant professor of psychology at UWM. She serves as the principal investigator for the EQUITY Research Group. She is a current research fellow with the UWM Center for 21st Century Studies. She is also an associate editor on the Journal of Health Service Psychology editorial board and a board member of NourishMKE Community Food Centers. \nShe has published extensively in her field with recent articles appearing in Psychology Services\, Behaviour Research and Therapy\, JAMA Health Forum\, Journal of Affective Disorders\, and other journals. \nBefore her appointment in 2022 to the UWM Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences\, Nagy served as assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Duke University School of Medicine and assistant clinical professor in the Duke University School of Nursing. She received her PhD in clinical psychology from UWM in 2017. \nDr. Gabriela Nagy’s research focuses on reducing the mental health care inequities experienced by minoritized communities. In this space\, she has worked most extensively with immigrants and refugees from Latin America. Dr. Nagy’s lab is focused on understanding social and structural factors contributing to health inequities; developing and testing psychosocial interventions to support the health of minority communities; and dissemination and implementation of strategies that hold promise for reducing health inequities. She utilizes community-engaged research methods\, mixed-methods\, and human-centered design approaches. \nPlease contact libadmin@uwm.edu for more information and accommodations.
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/2025-morris-fromkin-memorial-lecture/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Academic Dates and Deadlines,Alumni & Community,Arts and Culture,Faculty and Staff,Front Page Event,Public,UWM Campus Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251023T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251023T140000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20251007T162126Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251007T162126Z
UID:10000230-1761220800-1761228000@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:Scholarly Publishing With Springer Nature
DESCRIPTION:The UWM Libraries invite you to a workshop in which you will learn about the best practices for scholarly article publishing in Springer Nature journals. This year\, the UWM Libraries and Springer Nature signed a new “read and publish” agreement which allows authors to publish their articles through the open access program without paying processing charges while retaining their copyrights.\n\nIn this workshop\, the Springer Nature publisher will discuss how to choose the right journal for your manuscript submission\, what happens during the editorial and peer review processes\, how to respond to reviewer comments effectively\, and how to publish open access articles via the new agreement. In addition\, the UWM faculty authors will talk about their first-hand experiences of the scholarly article publishing and how they make decisions about what\, where\, and how to publish.\n\nProgram:\n12:00-12:30 pm: Lunch sponsored by Springer Nature\n12:30-12:35 pm: Introduction by Michael Doylen\, Associate Vice Provost & Library Director\n12:35-12:55 pm: Presentation by Rina Ghose\, Professor of Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering\n12:55-1:40 pm: Workshop by Morgan Ryan\, Executive Publisher\, Springer Nature\n1:40 -2:00 pm: Presentation by Alison Donnelly\, Professor of Geography\n\nPlease register by October 15 at this link: Scholarly Publishing with Springer Nature – UWM Libraries\n\nIf you have any questions about the event\, please contact Svetlana Korolev (skorolev@uwm.edu)
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/scholarly-publishing-with-springer-nature/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Alumni & Community,Faculty and Staff,Front Page Event,Prospective Students,Students,UWM Campus Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250410T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250410T170000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20250113T200028Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250313T190521Z
UID:10000195-1744300800-1744304400@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:Attentive or Absentminded: Habits of Mind in the Age of AI
DESCRIPTION:A lecture presented by Meghan O’Gieblyn\, author of God Human Animal Machine\, and the essay collection Interior States\, which won the 2018 Believer Book Award. \nAt a moment when we are outsourcing many intellectual and creative tasks to machines\, it’s worth thinking about the point of thinking itself. Is it a means to an end\, or an end in itself? Are humans just “stochastic parrots\,” mindlessly producing language in a way that is not so different from AI\, as some tech luminaries contend\, or is there something more going on in our minds? While these questions may seem new\, they harken back to older debates about the relationship between thought and language\, freedom and necessity\, and the fine line that exists between attention and automaticity. Long before the advent of digital technologies\, two twentieth century philosophers\, Hannah Arendt and Simone Weil\, wrote about some of these questions through the lens of the technologies of their times. Their writing anticipates many of the challenges of the age of AI and calls attention to the more ordinary and insidious ways that consciousness becomes ossified by social convention\, as well as the moral and political risks that arise when we fail to “think what we are doing.” \nGolda Meir Library Fourth Floor Conference Center\nApril 10\, 2025 | 4:00 -5:00 p.m. (refreshments at 3:30 p.m.) \nCo-sponsored by the Center for 21st Century Studies’ AI and the Humanities Collaboratory\, the UWM Office of Research\, and the UWM Libraries.
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/attentive-or-absentminded/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Front Page Event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250327T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250327T180000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20240828T151434Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T205131Z
UID:10000181-1743091200-1743098400@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:UWM Authors Recognition Ceremony
DESCRIPTION:The Libraries are hosting a celebration honoring UWM faculty and staff whose published monographs and recordings have been added to the UWM Authors Collection during the two years since the previous ceremony in 2023. The event is co-sponsored by the Office of Research. Faculty and staff who have written\, edited\, translated\, or illustrated a book; composed music for a published score or recording; or had a primary role in creating a commercially distributed film or video since the last event should fill out the UWM authors submission form. This will ensure they are included in this March 27\, 2025 event.
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/uwm-authors-recognition-ceremony/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Faculty and Staff,Front Page Event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241120T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241120T193000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20241119T233608Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241119T233952Z
UID:10000194-1732125600-1732131000@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:2024 Ettinger Book Artist Series Lecture:  Barbara Ciurej & Lindsay Lochman
DESCRIPTION:Collaborative photographers and books artists Barbara Ciurej & Lindsay Lochman have worked together on photographic projects and photo-based artists books for over 40 years. Ciurej is a Chicago-based photographer and graphic designer. Lochman is a Milwaukee-based photographer and former art lecturer at UWM. Together they create narrative works that engage the edge between the heroic and the commonplace through a confluence of history\, myth\, and popular culture. For them\, collaboration opens the possibility of moving beyond personal stories and into the realm of collective experience\, mirroring the fluid and mutable ways of storytelling traditions. \nBarbara Ciurej and Lindsay Lochman will present and discuss their work\, their collaborative process\, and the choice of the book form as one of their primary mediums. \nThe lecture\, free and open to the public\, is supported by the Ettinger Family Foundation. \nThe lecture will be held on Wednesday\, November 20\, 2024 at 6 p.m. in the fourth floor Conference Center of the Golda Meir Library\, 2311 E. Hartford Ave. \nFor more information or accommodations\, email libspecial@uwm.edu. \n  \n  \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/2024-ettinger-lecture/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Alumni & Community,Arts and Culture,Faculty and Staff,Front Page Event,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Public,Students,UWM Campus Events
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241030T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241030T153000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20240823T192445Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240823T193705Z
UID:10000180-1730296800-1730302200@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:Trick or Treat? AI Research Assistants Disrupting Information Discovery 
DESCRIPTION:The UWM Libraries invite you to a discussion in which we will examine emerging AI research tools\, their benefits\, and shortcomings from viewpoints of information content providers\, librarians\, and users. \nMany academic content providers\, including JSTOR\, are developing AI Research Assistants to improve the search experience for reliable scholarly sources and deliver more relevant results. Join us for presentations by a representative from JSTOR and two UWM faculty researchers to gain insight into current and potential strategies for literature searching and information evaluation by leveraging the “AI Research Assistant” technology. \nSpeakers \n\nJane Hetherington\, JSTOR Regional Director\, Western US and Canada\nPhilip Chang\, UWM\, Physics\, Professor and Department Chair\nBob Beck\, UWM\, Political Science\, Associate Professor\n\nLearn new tricks and enjoy spooky treats! \nDate: October 30\, 2024\nTime: 2-3:30pm\nVenue: Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library \nRegistration: https://forms.office.com/r/e5MFX03MYt \nIf you have any questions about the event\, please contact Kate Ganski (ganski@uwm.edu). \n 
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/ai-research-assistants/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Faculty and Staff,Front Page Event,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241024T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241024T210000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20241008T184924Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241024T002941Z
UID:10000189-1729796400-1729803600@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:Public Talk and Opening Reception of "Jewelry Speaks: The Voice of the Jill Wine-Banks Pin Collection"
DESCRIPTION:You are invited to the opening reception of the exhibit “Jewelry Speaks: The Voice of the Jill Wine-Banks Pin Collection\,” with speakers including Jill Wine-Banks\, curators\, and guest artists\, on Thursday\, October 24\, from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Fourth Floor Conference Center of the UWM Golda Meir Library\, 2311 E. Hartford Ave. \nJill Wine-Banks is a distinguished attorney\, former Watergate prosecutor\, General Counsel for the Army during the Carter Administration\, MSNBC Legal Analyst\, and podcast host. She’s also a specific kind of jewelry collector known for using the pin as a messaging device throughout her career in politics and media. \nThe exhibition features pins from Jill’s personal collection\, work by emerging and established artists and jewelers\, and artwork by UWM Jewelry & Metalsmithing students that acts as messaging devices and was inspired by items from the Special Collections. Curated by Erica A. Meier with Max Yela and Special Collections Graduate Intern Ana Hansa-Ogren. \nThe exhibit\, installed in the Fourth Floor Exhibition Gallery of the Golda Meir Library\, opens a week earlier on UWM Gallery Night\, Friday\, October 18\, 2024\, from 4 to 7 p.m.
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/opening-reception-jewelry-speaks/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Arts and Culture,Front Page Event,Public,Students,UWM Campus Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241017T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241017T173000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20240418T192850Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241017T161617Z
UID:10000161-1729182600-1729186200@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:2024 Morris Fromkin Memorial Lecture
DESCRIPTION:This lecture will be presented simultaneously in person and virtually. The Zoom link is here. \nThe 2024 Morris Fromkin Memorial Lecture will be presented by Nan Kim (Associate Professor\, UWM Department of History). \nWhat can offer resources for hope at a time of escalating ecological crisis and alarming nuclear dangers? This talk argues for approaching this question by looking to the historical and contemporary legacies of two vital public intellectuals: Rachel Carson (1907–1964) and Jonathan Schell (1943-2014). Credited with inspiring the modern environmental movement and the nuclear-disarmament movement respectively\, Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring (1962) and Jonathan Schell’s The Fate of the Earth (1982) were both landmark bestsellers of their time and remain exemplars of moral clarity as powerful interventions concerning critical issues of sweeping real-world impact. \nThis project explores the work of these authors as models of research-based interventions which helped to galvanize collective action for bringing about transformative change in the face of pressing global challenges\, despite profound uncertainty about the future. The talk also revisits the far-reaching influence of these authors’ writings as testament to the power of poetic language for overcoming paralysis and creating a renewed sense of urgency in response to ethical questions of intergenerational social justice. \n\nAbout the speaker: \nNan Kim\, Ph.D.\, is Associate Professor of History & Co-Director of Public History at UWM as well as an Affiliated Professor of Anthropology. She serves as Faculty Lead/PI for the Working Group on STS (Science & Technology Studies) at the Center for 21st Century Studies and is Core Faculty in the Graduate Programs in Public History and Museum Studies. Kim is also the Regional Editor for Korea on the Editorial Board for the journal Critical Asian Studies.  \nHer recent publications include “A New Kind of Tinderbox on the Korean Peninsula” in Current History (September 2024) and “South Korea’s Nuclear-Energy Entanglements and the Timescales of Ecological Democracy” in Forces of Nature: New Perspectives on Korean Environments\, edited by David Fedman\, Eleana Kim\, and Albert L. Park\, eds.\, and published by Cornell in 2023. \nKim’s book\, Memory\, Reconciliation\, and Reunions in South Korea: Crossing the Divide\, published by Lexington Books in 2017\, was the winner of the 2019 Scott Bills Memorial Prize from the Peace History Society. \nPlease contact libspecial@uwm.edu for more information and accommodations. \n 
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/2024-fromkin-lecture/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Faculty and Staff,Front Page Event,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Public,Students,UWM Campus Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20240425T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20240425T153000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20240409T213536Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240409T213732Z
UID:10000160-1714055400-1714059000@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:Craft Talk: Kimberly Blaeser and Laura Tohe
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a conversation with these two nationally-recognized writers about interdisciplinary practices and collaborations. Both poets have engaged in several inter-arts projects\, including Laura Tohe’s libretto and Kim Blaeser’s photography and picto-poems\, among others. Each also will read some of their poems during the conversation. Woodland Pattern Book Center will be present to sell books for the authors to sign. \nKimberly Bleaser\, an enrolled member of the White Earth Nation\, is a past Wisconsin Poet Laureate\, founding director of Indigenous Nations Poets\, an MFA faculty member at the Institute of American Indian Arts\, and a Professor Emerita of English at UW-Milwaukee. She is currently a Vassar College Tatlock Fellow and the 2024 Mackey Chair in Creative Writing at Beloit College. A recipient of a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native Writers’ Circle of the Americas\, Blaeser is the author of six poetry collections\, including Ancient Light\, published this past January by The University of Arizona Press. \nLaura Tohe is Diné\, Sleepy-Rock People clan\, and born for the Bitter Water People clan. She is Professor Emerita with Distinction at Arizona State University and is the current Navajo Nation Poet Laureate. A multiple award-winning writer\, Tohe’s published work include Making Friends with Water (chapbook); No Parole Today\, a book on boarding schools; Sister Nations: Native American Women Writers on Community\, co-edited with Heid Erdrich; Tseyí Deep in the Rock\, in collaboration with photographer Stephen Strom; and Code Talker Stories\, an oral history book with the remaining Navajo Code Talkers.  The Phoenix Symphony commissioned Tohe to write the libretto for Enemy Slayer\, A Navajo Oratorio\, which made its 2008 world premiere in France as part of the Phoenix Symphony’s 60th anniversary. \nSponsored by Special Collections\, UWM Libraries\, and made possible as part of the Woodland Pattern Book Center series Native Writers in the 21st Century\, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts.
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/craft-talk-blaeser-tohe/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Arts and Culture,Faculty and Staff,Front Page Event,Students,UWM Campus Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20240410T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20240410T193000
DTSTAMP:20260518T020732
CREATED:20240401T202410Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240408T202225Z
UID:10000159-1712770200-1712777400@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:"Living for the City: The Black Middle Class in Milwaukee" -- Community Forum
DESCRIPTION:A community forum in conjunction with the “Living for the City: The Black Middle Class in Milwaukee” oral history project will be held in the Fourth Floor Conference Center of the UWM Golda Meir Library on Wednesday\, April 10\, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. \nThis project is a joint effort between Marquette University’s Center for Urban Research\, Teaching\, and Outreach and UWM. \nJoin the project coordinators as they discuss the Black middle class in Milwaukee. Typically the narrative surrounding Black Milwaukee is one of poverty\, struggle\, crime\, but there are many Black residents who have achieved success and stability in Milwaukee. This is an opportunity to discuss whether you view yourself as middle class and for the team to share their research. \n“The Living for the City” project consists of over 70 interviews that are archived at the UWM Libraries. Watch some of the interviews at https://collections.lib.uwm.edu/digital/collection/lfc/search. \nA traveling exhibition featuring the project will be on view in the Daniel M. Soref Learning Commons\, located in the Golda Meir Library\, from Monday\, April 8 through Thursday\, April 18. \n 
URL:https://uwm.edu/libraries/event/living-for-the-city-forum/
LOCATION:Fourth Floor Conference Center\, Golda Meir Library
CATEGORIES:Faculty and Staff,Front Page Event,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Public,Students,UWM Campus Events
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