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Collection

Q: Where Can You Find Info on Trade Associations?

Published: May 14, 2014

A: The Library has Two Sources for Trade Association Information

Trade and professional associations compile and publish useful and detailed information on the industries they represent. You can learn more about an industry, latest trends, key statistics and jargon.

 

Encyclopedia of Associations: National Organizations of the U.S.

Organized topic and/or industry, the Encyclopedia Associations is an extensive resource providing detailed information on nonprofit membership organizations worldwide. It also contains addresses and descriptions of professional societies, trade associations, labor unions, cultural and religious organizations, support groups and other groups. With our online subscription, you can search, print, e-mail or download individual listings to analyze data or create customized lists.
Available in print and eBook.

 
NTPA: National Trade and Professional Associations of the United States

The NTPA covers key national trade and professional associations, labor unions and professional and scientific associations. It provides information on association budgets, lists executives by name, and annual conference/meeting information.
Available in print.

 

 

 

Visit the Reference section on the second floor at Central Library to browse either series.

 

May 14, 2014 by Web Editor Filed Under: Collection

Q: How Can You Use the Washington Business Journal Book of Lists?

Published: April 21, 2014

A: To Answer Your Business Research, Job Search or Sales Lead Questions

WBJ Book of Lists header small

“Everything you need to know to do business in Greater Washington”

The Washington Business Journal’s annual Book of Lists uses reliable sources  in real estate, banking and finance, tech and media, and much more to survey, compile and rank metro-DC area companies. 

Metrics used to create the top rankings include revenue, profits, salaries, number of employees, deal values and even square feet.

Top lists include:

  • Bioscience employers
  • Corporate philanthropists, by giving and volunteer hours
  • Fastest-growing companies
  • Healthiest employers
  • Interior design firms
  • Lobbying firms
  • Meeting and banquet facilities
  • Most-admired CEOs
  • Restaurant groups, locally based
  • Security companies
  • Wealthiest ZIP codes
  • Women-owned businesses

Visit our Ask-A-Librarian/Reference Desk on the second floor at Central Library to browse the most recent issue, or visit the Magazine/Computer Help desk for the previous three years. Older issues are in the Center for Local History, on the first floor.

 

What useful information have you found in The Washington Business Journal’s Book of Lists?

 

April 21, 2014 by Web Editor Filed Under: Collection

Brush Up Your Shakespeare

Published: April 18, 2014

Start Quoting Him Now…

Or at least take his 450th birthday as a chance to learn more about his life, his work, and some of the many people he inspired – in good, bad and bloody ways:

And check out our Childrens Librarians’ post on Five Great Books for Introducing Kids to Shakespeare, too.

 

how to read and understand shakespeareHow to Read and Understand Shakespeare
audio lecture by professor Marc C. Conner

Build the skills to deeply comprehend Shakespeares transcendent poetic language, the spellbinding world of his great characters and stories, and his revelatory reflections on human experience.

 
Kiss Me Kate
DVD [1953]

In this film based on the play by Samuel and Bella Spewack, two squabbling, mid-20th-century ex-marrieds are cast as squabbling Renaissance romantics in a musical version of Shakespeare’s “The Taming of the Shrew.” The stars fight it out on stage and off, and two mob goons sing about wooing women with Shakespeare.

 

 

The Most  Excellent and Lamentable Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet: A Play by William Shakespeare
adapted and illustrated by Gareth Hinds

There are many excellent adaptations of R&J, but this is one of the most effective in translating the story for teens. Hinds makes the characters of African, Indian, and Caucasian descent in order to promote the universality of the story. The language is abridged but not adapted into contemporary English; footnotes explain words that could be confusing to young audiences. The use of lines and colorful watercolors is striking, especially when illustrating action such as dancing and sword fights.

 

 

shakespeare and the american musicalShakespeare and the American Musical
by Irene G. Dash

Dash argues that adaptations of Shakespeare were instrumental in the alteration of the musical theater formula from the stock plots and song forms of the 1930s musical comedy to the more organic “integrated musical,” where songs and dance sequences were used to advance the plot rather than break the action, as seen in “The Boys from Syracuse,” “Kiss Me Kate,” “West Side Story” and others.

 

 

The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged)
DVD [2003]

The three-man troupe perform all of Shakespeare’s plays in 90 comedic minutes. Forwards and backwards! Seriously funny.

 

 

 

The Shakespeare Thefts: In Search of the First Folios
by Eric Rasmussen

Rasmussen and his team of researchers were part of the global quest to catalog every extant copy of the 1623 First Folio. The team’s mission: to examine every surviving copy, and to track down the missing ones. Researchers study one with a bullet encased inside, attempt to determine whether blood or red paint stains another, document murders most foul, and explore the “dead within two years” fate that has befallen many folio owners.

 

 

Kill Shakespeare
by Conor McCreery and Anthony Del Col; art by Andy Belanger

When Hamlet’s ship is attacked by pirates, he escapes and is found by Richard III, who tells him that he is the one prophesied to free Richard’s people from the tyranny of the wizard (or perhaps god) called William Shakespeare. But Hamlet soon discovers that another faction, led by the rebel Juliet and her lieutenant Othello, worships Shakespeare and believes that the chosen one will bring Shakespeare out of seclusion to reinvigorate the land.

 

 

Shakespeare Uncovered
DVD [2013]

Six episodes combine history, biography, iconic performances, new analysis, and the personal passion of their celebrated hosts (Ethan Hawke, Jeremy Irons, Derek Jacobi, Trevor Nunn, Joely Richardson, and David Tennant) to tell the story behind the stories of Shakespeare’s greatest plays.

 

 

 

Loving Will Shakespeare
by Carolyn Meyer

In Stratford-upon-Avon in the sixteenth century, Anne Hathaway suffers her stepmother’s cruelty and yearns for love and escape, finally finding it in the arms of a boy she has grown up with, William Shakespeare.

 

 

 

Shakespeare Wallah
DVD [1965]

The real-life adventures of a traveling theater group in India during the final days of English colonial rule. They try to uphold British tradition by staging Shakespearean plays but can’t compete with the wildly popular Bollywood film industry.

 

 

The Boy Who Would Be Shakespeare: A Tale of Forgery and Folly
by Doug Stewart

William-Henry Ireland earned his footnote in literary history in the 1790s by crafting a series of forged letters, documents, and manuscripts all by or about William Shakespeare. In doing so he fooled many of England’s literary and other notables at a a time when literacy was rising in England, the gossip-filled newspaper business was booming, and the country was hungry for any artifact connected to the Bard.

 

 

Julie Taymor: Playing with Fire
by Eileen Blumenthal and Julie Taymor

Surveys Taymor’s innovative work using puppetry, masks, and dance movement in her theater, opera and film productions including “The Tempest,” “The Taming of the Shrew” and “Titus Andronicus.”

 

 

April 18, 2014 by Web Editor Filed Under: Collection

In the News: Falls Church News-Press Hails Center for Local History

Published: November 18, 2013

Arlington Columnist Finds Much to Like in History Collection

localhistory3From Nov. 13, 2013

The Falls Church New-Press “Our Man in Arlington” columnist Charlie Clark gives praise to Library’s local history operation.

 

 

 

 

 

November 18, 2013 by Web Editor Filed Under: Arlington Public Library in the News, Collection, News Tagged With: Central Renovations 2013, local history news

Some of the Best – and Worst – Thanksgivings on Film

Published: November 18, 2013

What’s your favorite film about Thanksgiving?

 

Planes, Trains and Automobiles
[1987]

An uptight businessman faces disaster after disaster as he tries to get back home in time for his family’s Thanksgiving dinner, and along the way is joined by an insane traveling salesman who will not leave him alone.

 

 

Hannah and Her Sisters
[1986]

A look at three sisters and the relationship they have with one another, and with the men in their lives.

 

 

 

Avalon
[1990]

The story of several generations of a family, from the arrival of Jewish immigrant Sam Krichinsky in the suburb of Baltimore called Avalon, down through his children and grandchildren. The family goes from poverty to prosperity as the world changes around them, but their love and humor hold the family together.

 

 

The Ice Storm
[1997]

Thanksgiving 1973. The climate is changing, both politically and physically. As the Watergate scandal unfolds in the background, the inhabitants of a small Connecticut town begin to slip into an existentialist void. Social taboos are shattered on whims and the line between adult authority and juvenile irresponsibility is practically nonexistant. When a self-centered husband’s relationships with his wife and mistress grow cold, it takes a wife-swapping ‘key party’ and a freak ice storm to clear the air – and change their lives forever.

 

Home for the Holidays
[2002]

A single mother looses her job and travels home to spend Thanksgiving with her family all on the same day.

 

 

 

November 18, 2013 by Web Editor Filed Under: Collection

Does That Recipe Look Wrong To You?

Published: October 24, 2013

Cookbook Errata: If Something Looks Odd, It May Be

cook in kitchen

In today’s fast-paced publishing world, editorial mistakes are not unheard of. We’ve all rolled our eyes at a spelling or grammatical error in an otherwise wonderful novel. Some of us have even torn out (or “frogged”) hours of knitting to fix a mistake caused by a misprint in a pattern.

And while mistakes in a knitting pattern can be frustrating and time consuming, cookbook mistakes can also be hazardous to your health.

So if your recipe seems wrong, the following tips should increase your odds of having a happy and healthy cooking experience:

  • Compare against similar recipes. Searching online makes this easy.
  • Become aware of general food safety rules. For a thorough list that covers everything from transporting a casserole to pressure canning, visit Virginia Cooperative Extension.
  • Start with materials that are published by reputable and reliable sources. The National Center for Home Food Preservation  provides extensive information on freezing, pickling, and canning, including many free recipes online. Recent articles include “Resources for Home Preserving Venison” and “Preparing and Canning Salsa.”

 

Recomended books:

Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving
edited by Judy Kingry and Aluren Devine

Recommended by the National Center for Home Food Preservation, this book includes 400 recipes, plus comprehensive directions on safe canning and preserving methods plus lists of required equipment and utensils.

 

 

Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking
by Nathan Myhrvold with Chris Young and Maxime Bilet

Volume 1 of this six volume set includes chapters on Microbiology for Cooks and Food Safety. You can read volumes 1-6 at the Central Library, and check out the easier-to-carry version, Modernist Cuisine at Home.

 

 

And if you’re still skeptical about a recipe, search online using the term “cookbook errata” or “cookbook errors” (or use the word “recipe” instead of cookbook), plus the title of the cookbook or recipe.  If the error you see has been found by other people, it may show up online.

 

We wish you happy – and safe – cooking this holiday season!

 

October 24, 2013 by Web Editor Filed Under: Behind the Scenes, Collection, News

Tools for Census Data, Even During a Shutdown

Published: October 16, 2013

Due to the ongoing Federal Government shutdown, many researchers have lost access to their usual source of census data – the Government Census Bureau’s website.

But with your Library card, BusinessDecision can help you get the information you need to keep working.

 

Census 2010 based reports in BusinessDecision

Census 2010 Profile

This report provides Census 2010 data in 2010 geography and includes population, household, and race variables. Data in this report was released in the Census 2010 Public Law (P.L.) 94-171 Redistricting release and the SF1 release from the US Census Bureau. Note that, in the 2010 Census, the definitions of some geographies have changed.

Demographic and Income Profile

This report reveals trends in population, households, families, age, income, and race/ethnicity for a specified area, using the latest Census and Census updates. This report summarizes current-year estimate of population, five-year forecast, and Census 2010 data. The report includes demographic variables illustrated with bar and pie charts to help you quickly quantify, analyze, and forecast market growth and change over time.

How do I access BusinessDecision’s Census data?

Login to BusinessDecision with your Library account number or username, and PIN.

Use the Express Login or create your own account, then:

  1. Create a New Project
  2. Define your area (e.g., 22201, Arlington County, Washington, DC etc.)
  3. Choose demographic reports that meet your interest or need
  4. Get your data

 

Have questions or comment? Contact the Business Librarian! 

 

October 16, 2013 by Web Editor Filed Under: Collection, News

A Burmese Origin Fairytale

Published: June 27, 2013

Book Bubble: Pyusawhti and the Four Great Beasts

With Special Guest Magdalena Serpa

[youtube]http://youtu.be/Rlp_CY-9S3E[/youtube]

 

If you enjoyed the story of Pyusawhti, check out these origin stories from around the world:

 

The Creation
by James Weldon Johnson

A poetic retelling of the Judeo-Christian creation story that also recognizes the modern African American oral storytelling tradition. Images of contemporary children listening raptly to their storyteller alternate with the panoramic visions of a newborn world that the storyteller paints in their minds.

 

Magic Words
by Edward Field

A collection of poems about Inuit myths that explore the origins of the earth, humans, weather, and celestial beings. The illustrations are collages of paintings on natural objects: wood, stones, bark, and even handmade papers.

 

 

When the World Was Young
retold by Margaret Mayo

Have you ever wondered why people do not live forever? Or why the sea is salty? Or perhaps what makes the moon appear at night? These retellings of folktales from around the world and throughout history answer many of life’s important questions.

 

 

The Earth Made New
by Paul Goble

In these creation stories of the Plains Indians, the Earth-Maker enlists the help of animals to create the world. Beautiful illustrations by the author also accompany the text.

 

 

Tales from India
by Jamila Gavin

This book has more than just origin stories, but it begins with the beginning: a lotus flower floating in a sea of milk.

 

 

The Fire Children
by Eric Maddern

A trapdoor in the earth, a godly sneeze, and small lumps of clay born of fire are the key ingredients in this West African origin story. Brilliantly colored illustrations accompany this take on the creation story.

 

 

 

Book Bubble is a co-production of Arlington Independent Media and the Arlington County Public Library, and is funded by the Friends of the Arlington Public Library.

 

See more Video for Kids from the Arlington Public Library.

 

June 27, 2013 by Web Editor Filed Under: Collection, News

What Does it Feel Like to Live with Autism?

Published: April 9, 2013

Raise Your Autism Awareness This Year

These stories – by people with autism, and by authors who write from the perspective of characters with autism – provide a window into the unique experience of living with autism:

 

Thinking in Pictures: And Other Reports From My Life with Autism
by Temple Grandin

Nonfiction: Temple Grandin, Ph.D., is a gifted animal scientist who has designed one third of all the livestock-handling facilities in the United States. She also lectures widely on autism—because Temple Grandin is autistic. Writing from the dual perspectives of a scientist and an autistic person, she tells us how the country of autism is experienced by its inhabitants, and how she managed to breach its boundaries to function in the outside world.

 

I Am Intelligent: From Heartbreak to Healing – A Mother and Daughter’s Journey Through Autism
by Peyton and Dianne Goddard

Nonfiction: A look into the lives of a mother obsessed with curing her child of autism and a daughter who retains full awareness of her situation and who finds her voice through Facilitated Communication.

 

 

London Eye Mystery

by Siobhan Dowd

Fiction: When Ted and Kat’s cousin Salim disappears from the London Eye ferris wheel, the two siblings must work together–Ted with his brain that is “wired differently” and impatient Kat–to try to solve the mystery of what happened to Salim.

 

Episodes: My Life as I See It
by Blaze Ginsberg

Nonfiction: Autistic teen Blaze Ginsberg creates titles and categories for the different periods and moments in his life, resulting in a list of episodes that exist in various stages of production as his life progresses and the days of his existence roll on.

 

 

Livvie Owen Lived Here
by Sarah Dooley

Fiction: Fourteen-year-old Livvie Owen has autism, and her family have been forced to move frequently because of her outbursts. When they face eviction again, Livvie is convinced she has a way to get back to a house where they were all happy.

 

 

Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night
by Mark Haddon

Fiction: Despite his overhwhelming fear of interacting with people, Christopher, a mathematically-gifted, autistic fifteen-year-old boy, decides to investigate the murder of a neighbor’s dog and uncovers secret information about his mother.

 

 

Colin Fischer
by Ashley Edward Miller & Zack Stentz

Fiction: A boy with autism teams up with the high school bully to get to the bottom of a cafeteria crime.

 

 

 

Autism: The Musical
DVD [2008}

Nonfiction: This documentary profiles five children with autism, their parents, and acting coach Elaine Hill as they take on the enterprise of a full-length stage production.

 

 

Anything But Typical
by Nora Raleigh Baskin

Fiction: Jason, a twelve-year-old autistic boy who wants to become a writer, relates what his life is like as he tries to make sense of his world.

 

 

 

Scholars with Autism: Achieving Dreams
edited by Lars Perner

Nonfiction: There’s a common myth that having autism implies severe disability, failure or worse: institutionalization. This anthology challenges those notions with autobiographical stories about living on the autism spectrum and refusing to let a diagnosis identify them.

 

 

Marcelo in the Real World
by Francisco X. Stork

Fiction: Marcelo Sandoval, a seventeen-year-old boy on the high-functioning end of the autistic spectrum, faces new challenges, including romance and injustice, when he goes to work for his father in the mailroom of a corporate law firm.

 

 

Find out more about autism and Autism Awareness Month from the Autism Society, or  research autism using one of our online premium sites.

 

April 9, 2013 by Web Editor Filed Under: Collection

17 Fun Films for Foreign Language Practice

Published: January 16, 2013

Brush up on your French, practice your Chinese, polish your Spanish or strengthen your Arabic!

Whether you turn the subtitles on or off, pause, rewind, or play it again and again, these movies offer great stories – as well as the chance to explore another culture along with another language:

 

The Swimsuit Issue
Swedish [2011]

A botched prank gives Frank, a divorced dad, the idea to mold his motley buddies into Sweden’s only all-male synchronized swimming team. Mayhem ensues as they strive for the World Cup finals in Berlin.

 

 

The Girl Who Played With Fire
Swedish [2010]

The second installment in Steig Larssen’s trilogy. On the eve of publisher Mikael Blomkvist’s story about sex trafficking between Eastern Europe and Sweden, two investigating reporters are murdered.

 

 

Amelie
French [2002]

Amélie, a young woman who had a decidedly unusual childhood, didn’t attend school with other children, but spent most of her time in her room, where she developed a keen imagination. She has a whimsical, romantic nature, taking it upon herself in adulthood to step into the lives of others around her to help them out.

 

 

Queen to Play
French [2011]

Lovely, repressed, and quietly intelligent, French chambermaid Helene comes upon a couple engaged in an intense chess match, and discovers she has a knack for the game. This becomes an obsession, much to the chagrin of her husband and teenage daughter. She seeks the clandestine tutelage of a reclusive American doctor, a liaison that radically transforms both of their lackluster lives.

 

Like Stars on Earth
Hindi [2010]

Eight-year-old Ishaan can’t seem to get anything right in class and gets into more trouble than is parents can handle. They pack him off to boarding school where his art teacher, Nikumbh, realizes that something is wrong and sets out to discover what it is.

 

 

Guzaarish
Hindi [2011]

Ethan Mascarenhas is one of the greatest magicians of his time. Presently hosting a radio show that spreads magic, hope, and laughter through his wit and humor, it is hard to imagine that he has been immobilized with a spinal injury for the last 14 years.

 

 

Eat Drink Man Woman
Chinese [1994]

A retired master chef and widower is worried about the future of his three unmarried daughters who are skeptical about marriage. Yet he himself surprises them with his secret love affair with a young woman many years his junior.

 

 

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress
Chinese [2002]

Set in the early 1970s during the later stages of China’s Cultural Revolution, two city-bred teenage best friends are sent to a backward mountainous region for Maoist re-education.

 

The Motorcycle Diaries
Spanish [2005]

An inspirational adventure, based on the true story of Ernesto Guevara and Alberto Granado, whose thrilling and dangerous road trip across Latin America becomes a life-changing journey of self-discovery.

 

 

All About My Mother/Todo Sobre Mi Madre
Spanish [1999]

Manuela is the perfect mother. A hard-working nurse, she’s built a comfortable life for herself and her teenage son. But when tragedy strikes and her son is killed in a car accident, her world crumbles.

 

 

Under the Bombs/Sous les Bombes
Arabic [2007]

“During a cease-fire in the Lebanon-Israel conflict of 2006, Tony, a Christian taxi-driver, brings Zeina, a Shiite woman from Beirut, to the heart of the conflict in the country’s south. While they scour the rubble of local towns for Zeina’s son, they discover that despite their very different backgrounds they have much in common.

 

 

The Human Resources Manager
Hebrew [2010]

The Human Resources Manager of Jerusalem’s largest bakery is in trouble. He is separated from his wife, distanced from his daughter, and stuck in a job he hates. When one of his employees, a foreign worker, is killed in a suicide bombing, the bakery is accused of indifference.

 

 

Italian for Beginners
Danish [2000]

Several students of an Italian language class find romance in their studies of the language of love

 

 

 

Bread and Tulips
Italian [2000]

When a harried housewife is accidentally left behind while on vacation with her family, she decides to take a holiday of her own in Venice. She becomes charmed by the city and her newfound freedom.

 

 

 

Quill: The Life of a Guidedog
Japanese [2012]

The story of a yellow lab retriever guide dog for the blind named Quill. We follow Quill from the litter, his selection to become a guide, and his life with a foster family until his first birthday, followed by highly specialized schooling in guiding the sightless. He is paired with a blind man who is at first reluctant to rely on Quill. But Quill’s great patience, gentleness, and skill eventually win him over and they become inseparable friends.

 

Shall We Dance
Japanese [1996]

A middle-aged businessman’s dull life takes an interesting turn when he signs up for a ballroom dance class just to meet the beautiful dance instructor.

 

 

The Story of the Weeping Camel
Mongolian [2003]

A family of nomadic shepherds assists with the births of their camel herd in the South Mongolian Gobi Desert. One of the camels has an extremely difficult delivery, but with help from the family, delivers a rare white colt.

 

 

 

January 16, 2013 by Web Editor Filed Under: Collection

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