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UNL Today Archive

Wed, Aug 16, 2006

 

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August 14-18, 2006


UNL Housing

ANSWERING YOUR QUESTIONS

Temporary Housing Information Website Launches

Due to University of Nebraska-Lincoln residence halls being over capacity for the first time in a number of years, university housing officials have informed students awaiting residence hall assignments that their first-choice residence may not be accommodated and that halls may be more crowded than usual.

To facilitate an easier transistion for students moving in this week, housing has created a website with more information for students and parents about the temporary housing situation and what to expect.

TEMPORARY HOUSING WEBSITE

 

Construction Time Again

CONSTRUCTION AND CONGESTION

Motorists Advised on Traffic From UNL Student Move-In

Back-to-campus time at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln will again see thousands of students moving in to their residence halls in the span of a few days. Visitors and Lincoln residents should be aware of minor traffic delays in the City Campus vicinity because of closing of lanes and some congestion from move-in traffic, in addition to changing traffic patterns from the ongoing Antelope Valley construction.

Because of continuing work on the Antelope Valley Project spanning the Bob Devaney Sports Center area, Holdrege and Vine streets, UNL officials advise motorists that it may be wise to steer clear of campus during the week of Aug. 14-19 as students move into their residence halls in preparation for the Aug. 21 start of classes. more...

TAKE A LOOK AROUND

UNL Website Gets a New Look

New UNL Web look

Starting today, the transition begins to a new version of the UNL website. Created through a collaboration between University Communications and the 160 members of the Web Developer Network, the redesign was also supported by 8,500 members of the campus community who shared their thoughts through web audience research in April. The site map for updated web pages was developed last spring by the Next Generation Web Committee, headed by Associate Professor of Music Brian Moore.

The new site will help our many audiences more quickly find what they are looking for. The new design also provides greater efficiency of operation. The design is compliant with all accessibility standards to the highest degree possible. The page you see today is a "work in progress" as we move toward greater alignment of format among all units on campus. Due to logistics, not all UNL pages can be transformed at one time, but this starting point is a significant milestone in moving forward to make the Web more user-friendly at the same time it uses our resources more efficiently. Submit any comments or feedback on the new design on the comments page.

Outside visitors to the UNL website will see the external home page.

WEB DEVELOPER NETWORK | UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS

 

MARY RIEPMA ROSS MEDIA ARTS CENTER

The War Tapes, Stolen Show at the Ross

UNL's Mary Riepma Ross Media Arts Center presents The War Tapes, and Stolen. Both films will be showing through August 17.

now showing a the ross

Straight from the front lines in Iraq, The War Tapes is the first war movie filmed by soldiers themselves. Funnier, spicier, and more gut wrenching than news reports, this is Operation Iraqi Freedom as filmed by Sergeant Steve Pink, Sergeant Zack Bazzi and Specialist Mike Moriarty. Steve is a wisecracking carpenter who aspires to be a writer. Zack is a Lebanese-American university student who loves to travel and is fluent in Arabic. Mike is a father who seeks honor and redemption. Each leaves a woman behind - a girlfriend, a mother and a wife. Through their candid footage, these men open their hearts and take us on an unforgettable journey, capturing camaraderie and humor along with the brutal and terrifying experiences they face. These soldiers got the story that 2,700 embedded reporters never could.

In 1990, in the early morning hours after St. Patrick's Day, thieves disguised as Boston police officers gained access to Boston's Isabella Stewart Gardner museum and successfully perpetrated the largest art heist in modern history. For those who loved these paintings, particularly a rare Vermeer, the theft felt almost personal. At the heart of the film is a very unlikely hero: Harold Smith, the most renowned art detective in the world. Despite his lifetime battle with skin cancer, the cunning and witty Smith has made this case his personal obsession. Now, with Dreyfus's camera in tow, Smith embarks on a final journey to crack a mystery that has confounded law enforcement officials for fifteen years. The mood is set through the reading by actors Blythe Danner and Campbell Scott of correspondence between the 19th century Grand Dame Isabella Stewart Gardner and her envoy to Europe, art aficionado Bernard Berenson. Their passion for great art, expressed in letters written during their pursuit of paintings for Gardner's great museum, is elaborated by contemporary art historians. Among them, Tracy Chevalier, author of Girl With a Pearl Earring, helps us understand the power and fragility of great art and appreciate just what the world has lost. Harold Smith's quest to recover the Gardner paintings takes him through the Boston criminal underground. It takes him to Ireland to investigate the theory that the Irish Republican Army, known to have a penchant for stealing Vermeers, may be involved. It takes him on wild goose chases, and precipitously close to the truth. Stolen takes the audience along on this thrilling journey through the worlds of art and crime, not only to solve a perplexing mystery, but also to understand the mysterious importance of art and beauty.

More information is available at the Ross website.

MRRMAC | THE WAR TAPES | STOLEN