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UNL Today Archive

Mon, Aug 22, 2005

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August 22, 2005


First Semester
WELCOME BACK
First Semester Begins

First Semester 2005-2006 classes begin today. Late registration also starts today (a $25 fee will be charged).

CALENDAR
 
Building Abbreviations
BUILDING ABBREVIATIONS INDEX
The Long And Short of UNL Buildings

The start of the new school year also can bring confusion with locations for those not familiar with building abbreviations. For a list of City and East Campus building abbreviations and their locations on the UNL campus map, please follow this link.
 
 

THIRD UNL STUDENT TO WIN
Klein Wins Prestigious Interior Design Scholarship

 
Lynette Klein design project

Detail of Klein design project

The Angelo Donghia Foundation of New York City has announced that Lynette Klein, a senior interior design major at UNL, is one of only 10 students nationwide to receive the $30,000 Donghia Foundation Interior Design Scholarship.

Klein, who is from Lincoln, was nominated for the award by UNL College of Architecture faculty members and was required to submit a portfolio of her work. To be eligible for the competitive award, students must be nominated by faculty members from a professionally accredited school, meet GPA and portfolio requirements, and be a junior.

Klein is the third UNL student to win the scholarship, which covers tuition, board, books and required student materials. The Angelo Donghia Foundation Inc. focuses on the advancement of education in the field of interior design.


COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE
 
RESEARCH COMPUTING FACILITY
NSF Awards $2 Million to UNL for International Physics Experiment

 
Research Computing Facility

David Swanson (front), Ken Bloom (left) and Aaron Dominguez (right)

University of Nebraska-Lincoln scientists and facilities are playing a key role in one of the world's largest physics experiments and have received a five-year, $2 million grant from the National Science Foundation to support those efforts.

The experiment is the international particle-physics project known as the Compact Muon Solenoid, or CMS. The experiment will be conducted at the Large Hadron Collider, the world's largest particle accelerator, at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) near Geneva, Switzerland. Scheduled to begin in 2007, the experiment will explore the frontiers of energy, matter, space and time.

Although the experiment will be conducted in Switzerland, it will create so much data that dozens of supercomputers crunching 24/7 will take years to analyze all the information. To solve that problem, a "tiered" hierarchy of computing facilities is being created. UNL is a member of that hierarchy.

The data collected at CERN will be parceled out to computing facilities around the world in a hierarchical grid. Tier-0 is at CERN; several international labs serve as Tier-1 sites. Fermilab, a Department of Energy facility in Illinois, is the United States' Tier-1 site, which will distribute subsets of the data to seven associated Tier-2 sites in the United States, including UNL. Other universities collaborating on CMS will do much of their computing work at Tier-2 sites.

David Swanson, coordinator of the UNL Research Computing Facility and a research assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, is lead investigator for the grant, in collaboration with Ken Bloom and Aaron Dominguez, both assistant professors in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, and other department faculty. more...


RESEARCH COMPUTING FACILITY
 
MARY RIEPMA ROSS MEDIA ARTS CENTER
Continuing This Weekend at the Ross: Mad Hot Ballroom, Mysterious Skin.

UNL's Mary Riepma Ross Media Arts Center presents the fan favorite documentary Mad Hot Ballroom, and the newest film from director Gregg Araki, Mysterious Skin


now showing at the ross

Tango, foxtrot, swing, rumba, and meringue may seem to represent the last vestiges of a dying art to some, but director Marilyn Agrelo proves this is far from true in Mad Hot Ballroom. Agrelo reveals that the New York City public school system runs a ballroom dance program for fifth graders, in which these former preserves of the adult world are given a new lease on life by some enthusiastic little characters. The film follows students at three schools in the neighborhoods of Tribeca, Bensonhurst, and Washington Heights, with Agrelo training her cameras on the kids' lives both inside and outside of the classroom. The students are united by a zeal for the ballroom dancing lessons, which build over a 10-week period and culminate in a competition to find the school that has produced the best dancers in the city. One of 2005's most uplifting slices of cinema, Mad Hot Ballroom is a joyous, life-affirming experience.

"The summer I was eight years old, five hours disappeared from my life. Five hours, lost, gone without a trace..." These are the words of Brian Lackey (Brady Corbet), a troubled 18 year-old, growing up in the stiflingly small town of Hutchinson, Kansas. Plagued by nightmares, Brian believes that he may have been the victim of an alien abduction. Local Neil McCormick (Joseph Gordon Levitt) however, is the ultimate beautiful outsider. With a loving but promiscuous mother (Elisabeth Shue), Neil is wise beyond his years and curious about his developing sexuality, having found what he perceived to be love from his Little League baseball coach (played by Hal Hartley veteran Bill Sage) at a very early age. Now, ten years later, Neil is a teenage hustler, nonchalant about the dangerous path his life is taking. Neil's pursuit of love leads him to New York City, while Brian's voyage of self discovery leads him to Neil – who helps him to unlock the dark secrets of their past. Based on the acclaimed novel by Scott Heim, Mysterious Skin explores the hearts and minds of two very different boys who come to find the key to their future happiness lies in the exorcism of their collective demons.

More information is available at the Ross website.


MRRMAC | MAD HOT BALLROOM | MYSTERIOUS SKIN