Greetings all,
I am trying to track down what is considered to be the the first Greek
newspaper in America was published in Boston/Cambridge in 1892. Its name
was Neos Kosmos and its publisher was an MIT student (1891-96, class of
1899) named Constantine Dimitrios Phassoularides. (Apparently he had
worked as a journalist in the Istanbul/Constantinople newspaper named
Neologos.) MIT has registration records for those years, but there is no
reference to a degree being awarded to him or to his newspaper. None of
the Boston area libraries or historical societies has a copy of the
newspaper. Can anyone help?
Many thanks!
Rhea
--
Rhea K. Lesage
Head and Bibliographer for Modern Greek
Modern Greek Section
Collection Development Department
Widener Library
Harvard College Library
Cambridge, MA 02138
(617)495-3632
FAX (617)496-8704
Dear Rhea, hello. I will pass on this information to my colleagues who know more about this. I hope all is well with you. Any news?
Maria
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Maria Georgopoulou
Director, The Gennadius Library
American School of Classical Studies at Athens
61 Souidias Street, 106 76 Athens, Greece
tel: +30-210-7210536, fax: +30-210-7237767
MGeorgopoulou.Genn(a)ascsa.edu.gr
http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/gennadius
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----Original Message-----
From: cohsl-list-bounces(a)lists.fas.harvard.edu [mailto:cohsl-list-bounces@lists.fas.harvard.edu] On Behalf Of Rhea Karabelas Lesage
Sent: Thursday, January 28, 2010 12:31 AM
To: listserv for the Consortium of Hellenic Studies Librarians
Subject: [Cohsl-list] Neos Kosmos
Greetings all,
I am trying to track down what is considered to be the the first Greek
newspaper in America was published in Boston/Cambridge in 1892. Its name
was Neos Kosmos and its publisher was an MIT student (1891-96, class of
1899) named Constantine Dimitrios Phassoularides. (Apparently he had
worked as a journalist in the Istanbul/Constantinople newspaper named
Neologos.) MIT has registration records for those years, but there is no
reference to a degree being awarded to him or to his newspaper. None of
the Boston area libraries or historical societies has a copy of the
newspaper. Can anyone help?
Many thanks!
Rhea
--
Rhea K. Lesage
Head and Bibliographer for Modern Greek
Modern Greek Section
Collection Development Department
Widener Library
Harvard College Library
Cambridge, MA 02138
(617)495-3632
FAX (617)496-8704
_______________________________________________
CoHSL-list mailing list
CoHSL-list(a)lists.fas.harvard.edu
http://lists.fas.harvard.edu/mailman/listinfo/cohsl-list
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University of Cyprus Library receives award
January 21, 2010
http://www.financialmirror.com/News/Cyprus_and_World_News/19066
The Library of the University of Cyprus has received the European
Foundation for Quality Management (EFQM) award “Recognised for
Excellence” with three stars.
The University of Cyprus Library is the first library in Cyprus or
Greece to be awarded this level of distinction.
The Library has achieved the distinction, as administrative unit. This
distinction is the second out of three EFQM award levels regarding the
administration and management of organisations or parts of them.
“This achievement is a great honor for the Library as well as the
University of Cyprus, however its greatest value lies in the fact that
many areas of improvement have been identified for which the Library
has either taken action or will do so immediately”, a University press
release says.
The Library was evaluated by a team of official EFQM assessors through
a submission report and during a site-visit that took place on 25 and
26 November 2009.
--
June Samaras
KALAMOS BOOKS
(For Books about Greece)
2020 Old Station Rd
Streetsville,Ontario
Canada L5M 2V1
Tel : 905-542-1877
E-mail : kalamosbooks(a)gmail.com
www.kalamosbooks.com
Yale Library Studies: Library Architecture at Yale
Published by Yale University Library; distributed by Yale University Press
December 2009; 160 pp
ISBN 9780300164770; $50.00
Yale University Library is pleased to announce the publication of the first
volume of Yale Library Studies, a new annual series that succeeds the Yale
University Library Gazette, which was published from 1926 to 2008. Taking
Library Architecture at Yale as its theme and subtitle, the first volume
features drawings, designs, and photographs of Yale libraries by James
Gamble Rogers, Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue, Paul Rudolph, Gordon Bunshaft, and
many other distinguished architects.
Essays by Robert A.M. Stern, Charles Gwathmey, Marjorie Wynne, Mark Simon,
Margaret K. Powell, Danuta A. Nitecki, Aric Lasher, and Laura Tatum explore
a of range of topics including library architecture history, space and
renovation planning, sustainable design, and Yale's architectural archives.
Library Architecture at Yale presents a unique record of the buildings that
have housed the Yale Library and its collections over the past three hundred
years. It was edited by Geoffrey Little, with an introduction by Alice
Prochaska.
Copies are available from Yale University Press and can be ordered online
at: http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/home.asp.
Future volumes of Yale Library Studies are being planned on the themes of
collections and the collectors who built them, and teaching and learning
with collections.
Geoffrey Little
Yale University Library
http://www.zencollegelife.com/2009/12/29/85-reasons-to-be-thankful-for-libr…
85 Reasons to be Thankful for Librarians
by jonathan on December 29, 2009
*1. *Librarians take care of libraries, which are still invaluable today.
*2.* Not all information is on the internet.
*3. *Older books still hold great cultural significance.
*4.* Libraries are still repositories for some of the most valuable works of
literature in the world.
*5.* Even with the internet, the library is still the best place to do
research.
*6. *Girls with glasses can still rock the “sexy librarian” look.
*7. *“Sexy Librarian” is still a popular costume at Halloween.
*8.* You can’t exactly find periodicals like The New England Journal of
Medicine in Barnes and Noble.
*9.* For that matter, looking at turn-of-the-century National Geographics is
still pretty entertaining.
*10.* Colleges need something to remodel every so often.
*11.* The library is still the best meeting spot for college students
working on group projects.
*12. *Libraries are where most colleges store some of their history (choir
CDs, videos of athletic matches, etc.).
*13.* A library is one of the few places people can have free internet
access.
*14. *This means some libraries even hold LAN parties during later hours.
*15. *Somebody has to help lazy people find what they want.
*16. *Even online collections of books usually connect directly to a
library.
*17. *“Librarian” is still a better career choice for spinsters over “School
Lunch Lady.”
*18.* Studies have shown libraries and librarians improve student test
scores.
*19.* They also have been shown to improve students’ individual learning
skills.
*20. *With their training in instructional design, librarians can help
teachers find resources for their curriculum.
*21. *Librarians also help teachers to use a variety of media in the
classroom.
*22.* Many libraries today offer enough DVDs to serve as a poor man’s
Netflix or Blockbuster.
*23.* Librarians often put together special programs to get children to read
early on.
*24. *While teaching children to use the library, librarians end up teaching
them valuable problem solving skills.
*25.* They also teach children to use multiple resources to form their own
original works.
*26.* If librarians were no longer around, kids wouldn’t understand the
opening scene from Ghostbusters.
*27.* Librarians know a lot about proper citation skills, as well as ethical
uses of information, in order to avoid plagiarism issues.
*28. *Libraries are still a cheaper place to make photocopies than FedEx
Kinko’s.
*29.* Despite the advances in computer technology, a human will still find
information better than a search engine.
*30.* Librarians can also find information better suited to the person who
needs it.
*31. *A library is much MUCH more well cataloged and organized than the
internet.
*32.* Libraries have much better quality control than the vast majority of
websites.
*33.* Who else is going to learn the Dewey Decimal System? You?
*34.* Seriously though, no one wants to learn the Dewey Decimal System.
*35.* For that matter, who else is going to show you how to use that
microfiche machine?
*36.* Experienced librarians often know exactly what resources students need
for particular courses.
*37.* Many libraries collaborate and offer book exchange programs, offering
users an almost limitless supply of books and media.
*38. *Librarians can help relieve some of the workload from teachers by
helping students to understand information better.
*39.* Some engineering teams have already explored the idea of a fully
digital library…and ended up designing a traditional library with some
advanced technology.
*40.* The copyright costs for digitizing all literature would be
astronomical without even factoring in distribution and storage.
*41.* Even without the costs, digitizing all books in existence would take
hundreds of years at the current rate.
*42. *The internet still mostly only holds information from the past 15 or
so years, compared with the hundreds of years of knowledge found in a
library.
*43. *Even though libraries themselves may be losing attendance, their
online archives and websites are still receiving plenty of visitors.
*44. *Despite the rising popularity of e-books, 80% of people surveyed say
they still prefer paper books.
*45. *The experience of reading an actual book is being preserved by
libraries.
*46.* Libraries provide one of the few places for anyone to find quiet area
to just read or study.
*47.* Sometimes, but not always, libraries have free coffee.
*48. *Sometimes there are even free snacks.
*49.* Unlike the internet, libraries are careful that the information they
contain is checked for usefulness before being included.
*50.* Also unlike the internet, libraries are much less influenced by
corporate interests.
*51. *They are also less likely to be manipulated by individuals, like
search engine optimizers.
*52.* Information on more specific topics can be much easier to find in
libraries.
*53.* Digital or not, a library still needs a human staff to run it.
*54. *The resources of a library are well indexed and will always deliver
reliable results (I.e. no “broken links”).
*55. *Many popular news publications still require subscriptions to view
their content online, but are still available for free at the library.
*56. *Libraries provide free and abundant knowledge to everyone (a privilege
people didn’t always have).
*57. *Not everyone can afford books, but everyone has access to the library.
*58.* Someone has to buy all those books that college professors write.
*59. *Public bathrooms in libraries are usually cleaner than most places.
*60.* A library can mold itself for the specific community it’s in, whereas
websites usually try to bring in everyone.
*61.* At libraries, you can take practice qualifying tests for almost any
profession.
*62.* You can always make suggestions to librarians for specific books you’d
like to see.
*63.* Many libraries also display original works of art or even have
separate galleries.
*64. *Some libraries also hold a limited number of free museum passes that
anyone can use.
*65.* If you don’t have a computer, you can always use the ones in the
library.
*66.* The same goes for certain premium software and special databases.
*67.* If your library offers wi-fi, it’s probably free.
*68. *Several libraries also offer programs that cater to senior citizens.
*69.* Believe it or not, studies show that libraries are good for their
local economy, since they make their community for attractive to potential
businesses and individuals.
*70.* Libraries are still a cornerstone for free speech and open access to
information.
*71.* When dictators like Hitler and Mao Zedong set out to eliminate a
country’s culture or history, they started by shutting down the public
libraries.
*72.* A library still provides a neutral environment for the free exchange
of ideas.
*73. *Public libraries are surprisingly cheap to maintain, but benefit
everyone in the community.
*74.* If you’re a comic book lover, you can probably find plenty at your
local library.
*75. *They might even have some of those expensive indie graphic novels
available.
*76. *We’re still an incredibly long ways away from a paperless world.
*77.* You might as well use the library, since you’re already paying for it
through taxes or tuition.
*78.* There’s less risk of getting carpal tunnel syndrome from reading
books.
*79. *A library is a great excuse to get out of the house (seriously, why
would anyone argue with you about it?).
*80.* Books are very portable and never need recharging.
*81.* With the economy these days, going to the library is a great source of
free entertainment.
*82. *You can “try before you buy” any number of books without spending a
dime.
*83.* Some libraries even have bookmobiles or mailing programs that deliver
books right to you.
*84. *Studies have repeatedly shown that reading improves your basic
vocabulary and just generally makes you smarter.
*85. *Regardless of what form a library takes, a librarian will always be
ready to guide you to the information you need.
--
June Samaras
KALAMOS BOOKS
(For Books about Greece)
2020 Old Station Rd
Streetsville,Ontario
Canada L5M 2V1
Tel : 905-542-1877
E-mail : kalamosbooks(a)gmail.com
www.kalamosbooks.com
From: Esin Sultan OGUZ [mailto:esinsultan@hacettepe.edu.tr]
Sent: 16 January 2010 08:59
Deadline extension for the 2nd International Symposium on Information
Management in a Changing World
Dear Colleagues,
Due to numerous requests from potential authors, the submission deadline foR
the 2nd International Symposium on Information Management in a Changing
World is extended to February 1st. You can submit your papers by using the
following address
http://by2010.bilgiyonetimi.net/paper_submission.html
Looking forward to your contributions to and participation in the Symposium
.
Y Tonta, Chair of the Organizing Committee
Serap Kurbanoglu, Chair of the Programme Committee
Hacettepe University
Department of Information Management
06800 Beytepe, Ankara, Turkey
Tel: 0312 297 82 00
Fax: 0312 299 20 14
E-mail: tonta(a)hacettepe.edu.tr
serap(a)hacettepe.edu.tr
Int’l Conf on Information and Knowledge Management
Communication, Database Engineering, by CFP.
http://cfp.org.ru
(CIKM 2010)
When: Oct 25, 2010 – Oct 29, 2010
Where: Toronto, ON, Canada
Submission Deadline: Jun 3, 2010
Notification Due: Jul 15, 2010
link: http://www.yorku.ca/jhuang/cikm10
Call For Papers
CIKM 2010 will take place in Toronto. Toronto is Canada’s largest
city. More than 60% of the US population live within a 90-minute
flight to Toronto. The city of Toronto is easily accessible from all
the major international cities in the world and Toronto Pearson
International Airport has non-stop or the same plane service to 42
United States cities and 56 other international cities such as Rome,
Paris, Frankfurt, London, Beijing, Tokyo and Warsaw.
Since 1992, the ACM Conference on Information and Knowledge Management
(CIKM) has successfully brought together leading researchers and
developers from the database, information retrieval, and knowledge
management communities. The purpose of the conference is to identify
challenging problems facing the development of future knowledge and
information systems, and to shape future research directions through
the publication of high quality, applied and theoretical research
findings. In CIKM 2010, we will continue the tradition of promoting
collaboration among multiple areas. We encourage submissions of high
quality papers on all topics in the general areas of databases,
information retrieval, and knowledge management. Papers that bridge
across these areas are of special interest and will be considered for
a “Best Interdisciplinary Paper” award.
The ACM Conference on Information and Knowledge Management (CIKM)
provides a leading international forum for presentation and discussion
of research on information and knowledge management, as well as recent
advances on data and knowledge bases. CIKM also has a strong tradition
of workshops devoted to emerging areas of database management, IR, and
related fields such as Web Information and Knowledge Managment.
Workshops vary from year to year.
Program Committee
CIKM 2010 Program Committee Chairs by Area
* Database (Nick Koudas, University of Toronto, Canada)
* Information Retrieval (Eugene Agichtein, Emory University, USA)
(Charles Clarke, University of Waterloo, Canada)
* Knowledge Management (Xindong Wu, University of Vermont, USA)
* Indusry (Kevyn Collins-Thompson, Microsoft Research, USA)
CIKM 2010 Database
Nick Koudas, University of Toronto, Canada
Meta-Reviewers (Track Chairs)
Peter Boncz, CWI, The Netherlands
Graham Cormode, AT&T Labs, USA
Juliana Freire, University of Utah, USA
Irini Fundulaki, ICS-FORTH, Greece
Carl-Christian Kanne, University of Mannheim, Germany
Nick Koudas, University of Toronto, Canada
Maristella Matera, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Atsuyuki Morishima, University of Tsukuba, Japan
Fatma Ozcan, IBM Almaden, USA
Wang Chiew Tan, University of California Santa Cruz, USA
Rebecca Wright, Rutgers University, USA
Program Committee Members
Ashraf Aboulnaga, University of Waterloo, Canada
Silvia Abrahao, Universidad Politecnica de Valencia, Spain
Eytan Adar, University of Washington, USA
Gail-Joon Ahn, Arizona State University, USA
Reza Akbarinia, University of Waterloo, Canada
Toshiyuki Amagasa, University of Tsukuba, Japan
Bernd Amann, LIP6, France
Yuan An, Drexel University, USA
Paul Aoki, Intel Research, USA
Marcelo Arenas, PUC Chile, Chile
Catriel Beeri, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
Omar Benjelloun, Google, USA
Sonia Bergamaschi, Universita di Modena, Italy
Enrico Bertini, University of Fribourg, Switzerland
Elisa Bertino, Purdue University, USA
Angela Bonifati, CNR, Italy
Luc Bouganim, INRIA Rocquencourt, France
Tiziana Catarci, Universita di Roma “La Sapienza”, Italy
Chee-Yong Chan, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Kevin C. Chang, University of Illinois, USA
Yi Chen, Arizona State University, USA
James Cheney, University of Edinburgh, UK
Junghoo (John) Cho, University of California Los Angeles, USA
Byron Choi, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Isabel Cruz, The University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Nilesh Dalvi, Yahoo! Research, USA
Alexander Dekhtyar, California Polytechnic State University, USA
Alin Deutsch, University of California San Diego, USA
Xin (Luna) Dong, AT&T Labs, USA
Amr El Abbadi, University of California Santa Barbara, USA
Marcus Fontoura, Pontifical Catholic University (PUC-Rio), Brazil
Juliana Freire, University of Utah, USA
Benjamin Fung, Concordia University, Canada
Ariel Fuxman, Microsoft Research, USA
Helena Galhardas, Instituto Superior Tecnico, Portugal
Floris Geerts, University of Edinburgh, UK
Michael Gertz, University of California at Davis, USA
Lise Getoor, University of Maryland, USA
Torsten Grust, Universitat Tubingen, Germany
Claudio Gutierrez, Universidad de Chile, Chile
Jayant Haritsa, Indian Institute of Science Bangalore, India
Sven Helmer, Birbeck University of London, UK
Jan Hidders, University of Antwerp, Belgium
Howard Ho, IBM Almaden, USA
Polly Huang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Panagiotis Ipeirotis, New York University, USA
Zachary Ives, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Vanja Josifovski, Yahoo! Research, USA
Grigoris Karvounarakis, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Bettina Kemme, McGill University, Canada
Krishnaram Kenthapadi, Microsoft Research, USA
Yannis Kotidis, Athens University of Economics and Business, Greece
Nick Koudas, University of Toronto, Canada
Georgia Koutrika, Stanford University, USA
Alberto Laender, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil
Paul Larson, Microsoft Research, USA
Kristen LeFevre, University of Michigan, USA
Ulf Leser, Humboldt-Universitat, Germany
Chen Li, University of California; Irvine, USA
Feifei Li, Florida State University, USA
Jie Liu, Chinese Academy of Sciences, UK
Jayant Madhavan, Google Inc., USA
Murali Mani, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA
Amelie Marian, Rutgers University, USA
Andrew McGregor, University of California San Diego, USA
Peter Mika, Yahoo! Research Barcelona, Spain
Gerome Miklau, University of Massachussets, USA
Paolo Missier, University of Manchester, UK
Prasenjit Mitra, Penn State University, USA
Mirella M Moro, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
Thomas Neumann, Max-Planck Institute for Informatics, Germany
Matthias Nicola, IBM Sillicon Valley Lab, USA
Moira Norrie, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Byung-Won On, University of British Columbia, Canada
Esther Pacitti, INRIA Nantes, France
Themis Palpanas, University of Trento, Italy
Stelios Paparizos, Microsoft Research, USA
Fabio Paterno, CNR-ISTI, Italy
Evaggelia Pitoura, University of Ioannina, Greece
Geert Poels, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
Neoklis Polyzotis, University of California Santa Cruz, USA
Sriram Raghavan, IBM Almaden Research Center, USA
Maya Ramanath, Max-Planck Institute for Informatics, Germany
Arnon Rosenthal, The Mitre Corporation, USA
Gustavo Rossi, La Plata National University, Argentina
Marie-Christine Rousset, University of Grenoble, France
George Samaras, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Monica Scannapieco, University of Rome, Italy
Jayavel Shanmugasundaram, Yahoo! Research, USA
Aya Soffer, IBM Research Haifa, Israel
Ioana Roxana Stanoi, IBM Almaden Research Center, USA
Jimeng Sun, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Egemen Tanin, University of Melbourne, Australia
Nesime Tatbul, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Dilys Thomas, Oracle, USA
Bhavani Thuraisingham, University of Texas at Dallas, USA
Frank Tompa, University of Waterloo, Canada
Agma Traina, University of Sao Paulo at Sao Carlos, Brazil
Panagiotis Tsaparas, Microsoft Research, USA
Kristin Tufte, Portland State University, USA
Jean Vanderdonckt, Universite Catholique de Louvain, Belgium
Yannis Velegrakis, University of Trento, Italy
Vassilios Verykios, University of Thessaly, Greece
Stratis Viglas, University of Edinburgh, UK
X. Sean Wang, University of Vermont, USA
Wendy Hui Wang, Stevens Institute of Technology, USA
Yuqing Melanie Wu, Indiana University, USA
Jun Yang, Duke University, USA
Man Lung Yiu, Aalborg University, Denmark
Cong Yu, Yahoo! Research, USA
Jingren Zhou, Microsoft Research, USA
CIKM 2010 Information Retrieval
Eugene Agichtein, Emory University, USA
Charles Clarke, University of Waterloo, Canada
Meta-reviewers (Track chairs)
Program Committee Members
CIKM 2010 Knowledge Management
Xindong Wu, University of Vermont, USA
Meta-reviewers (Track chairs)
Naoki Abe, IBM Research, USA
Paul Buitelaar, DFKI, Germany
Nitesh Chawla, University of Notre Dame, USA
Hsin-His Chen, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Dennis Decoste, Microsoft Live Labs, USA
Ryaid Ghani, Accenture Technology Labs, USA
Marko Grobelnik, Josef Stefan Institute, Slovenia
Joost Kok, Leiden University, The Netherlands
Henry Lieberman, MIT, USA
Wei-Ying Ma, Microsoft Research Asia, China
Alexander Tuzhilin, Stern School of Business New York University, USA
Program Committee Members
Sibel Adali, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Aijun An, York University, Canada
Michael Berthold, University of Konstanz, Germany
Mikhail Bilenko, Microsoft Research, USA
Jean-Francois Boulicaut, INSA Lyon, France
Andrei Broder, Yahoo! Research, USA
Greg Buehrer, Microsoft Live Labs, USA
Michael Burl, JPL/NASA, USA
Pablo Castells, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain
Rebecca Cathey, BAE Systems, USA
Edward Chang, Google Research, Cambodia
Ming-Syan Chen, National Taiwan Univiersity, Taiwan
David Cheung, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
David Cieslak, Notre Dame, USA
Alfredo Cuzzocrea, University of Calabria, Italy
Gautam Das, University of Texas at Arlington, USA
Ian Davidson, University of California Davis, USA
Luc De Raedt, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
Li Ding, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Martin Dzbor, Knowledge Media Institute, UK
Andre Falcao, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal
Wei Fan, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, USA
George Forman, HP Labs, USA
Vasco Furtado, University of Fortaleza (UNIFOR), Brazil
Johannes Furnkranz, TU Darmstadt, Germany
Aldo Gangemi, ISTC-CNR, Italy
Minos Garofalakis, Yahoo! Research and UC-Berkeley, USA
Amol Ghoting, IBM Research, USA
Natalie Glance, Google, USA
Eric Glover, searchme, USA
Shantanu Godbole, IBM Research, India
Nazli Goharian, Illinois Institute of Technology, USA
Fernando Gomez, University of Central Florida, USA
Joshua Goodman, Microsoft, USA
Robert Grossman, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Tom Gruber, Active Technologies, USA
Greg Hamerly, Baylor University, USA
Otthein Herzog, TZI Universitaet Bremen, Germany
Wynne Hsu, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Matthew Hurst, Microsoft Live Labs, USA
Arantza Illarramendi, University of Basque Country, Spain
Nathalie Japkowicz, University of Ottawa, Canada
Szymon Jaroszewicz, National Institute of Telecommunications, Poland
Rosie Jones, Yahoo! Research, USA
Lalana Kagal, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
George Karypis, University of Minnesota, USA
Elisa Kendall, Sandpiper Software Inc., USA
Eamonn Keogh, University of California Riverside, USA
Adam Kowalczyk, National ICT Australia, Australia
Stepen Kwek, Microsoft Corp, USA
Jure Leskovec, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Hang Li, Microsoft Research Asia, China
Ping Li, Cornell University, USA
Dekang Lin, Google, USA
Chin-Yew Lin, Microsoft Research Asia, China
Huan Liu, Arizona State University, USA
Chang-Tien Lu, Virginia Tech, USA
Marco Maggini, University of Siena, Italy
Mark Maloof, Georgetown University, USA
Stan Matwin, University of Ottawa, Canada
Prem Melville, IBM Research, USA
Rosa Meo, University of Torino, Italy
Bamshad Mobasher, DePaul University, USA
Shinichi Morishita, University of Tokyo, Japan
Ion Muslea, Language Weaver, USA
Olfa Nasraoui, University of Louisville, USA
Jennifer Neville, Purdue University, USA
Tim Oates, University of Maryland Baltimore County, USA
Terry Payne, University of Southampton, UK
Jian Pei, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Paulo Pinheiro da Silva, University of Texas El Paso, USA
Alexandrin Popescul, Yahoo!, USA
Katharina Probst, Accenture Technology Labs, USA
Shyamsudar Rajaram, HP Labs, USA
Zbigniew Ras, University of North Carolina, USA
Rajeev Rastogi, Yahoo! Labs Bangalore, India
Mirek Riedewald, Cornell University, USA
Kiril Simov, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Einoshin Suzuki, Kyushu University, Japan
Ernest Teniente, Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Spain
Junichi Tsujii, University of Tokyo, Japan
Anthony Tung, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Jeffrey Ullman, Stanford University, USA
Wei Wang, University of North Carolina, USA
Haixun Wang, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, USA
Takashi Washio, Osaka University, Japan
Ji-Rong Wen, Microsoft Research Asia, China
Xindong Wu, University of Vermont, USA
Hui Xiong, Rutgers University, USA
Jeffrey Xu, Chinese University of Hong Kong, China
Scott Wen-tau Yih, Microsoft Research, USA
Lei Yu, Binghamton University, USA
Osmar Zaiane, University of Alberta, Canada
Mohammed Zaki, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Jianping Zhang, MITRE, USA
Zhongfei Zhang, State University of New York at Binghamton, USA
Elena Zheleva, University of Maryland, USA
CIKM 2010 Industry
Kevyn Collins-Thompson, Microsoft Research, USA
Program Committee Members
Adam Beguelin, Independent, USA
Steve Beitzel, Telcordia Technologies, USA
Eric Burger, SIP Forum, USA
Serg Egelman, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Garry Faulkner, Harris Corporation, USA
Jan Gehrke, University of Bremen, Germany
David Grossman, Illinois Institute of Technology, USA
Jim Jansen, The Pennsylvania State University, USA
Eric Jensen, Summize, USA
Hagen Langer, University of Bremen, Germany
Greg Linden, Microsoft Live Labs, USA
Craig Murray, University of Maryland, USA
Diego Puppin, Google, USA
Kush SidhuKullabs, Kullabs, USA
Jianping Zhang, Mitre, USA
--
June Samaras
KALAMOS BOOKS
(For Books about Greece)
2020 Old Station Rd
Streetsville,Ontario
Canada L5M 2V1
Tel : 905-542-1877
E-mail : kalamosbooks(a)gmail.com
www.kalamosbooks.com