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Administration and Financial Services
Warm-Up to Work
Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 09/18/2012 - 9:00amUNI employees are invited to meet at the Campanile to Warm-up for Work. Merriam Lake, health promotion facilitator and certified trainer for Wheaton Fransican Health Care, will lead us in 12 stretches designed to warm-up our bodies for work. These only take minutes to complete. Please join us for one or all three! The rain location is set for University Room, Maucker Union.
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UNI Soccer vs. North Dakota State
Submitted by Anonymous on Fri, 09/14/2012 - 7:00pmUNI women's soccer vs. North Dakota State
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UNI Soccer vs. St. Ambrose
Submitted by Anonymous on Fri, 09/14/2012 - 7:00pmUNI women's soccer vs. St. Ambrose.
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P&S Council Meeting
Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 09/13/2012 - 1:30pmP&S Council monthly meeting. All P&S staff are welcome to attend.
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Tony Kushner: A Conversation
Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 09/12/2012 - 7:00pmIn “After Angels,” a profile of Tony Kushner published in The New Yorker, John Lahr wrote: “[Kushner] is fond of quoting Melville’s heroic prayer from Mardi and Voyage Thither (“Better to sink in boundless deeps than float on vulgar shoals”), and takes an almost carnal glee in tackling the most difficult subjects in contemporary history – among them, AIDS and the conservative counter-revolution (Angels In America), Afghanistan and the West (Homebody/Kabul), German Fascism and Reaganism (A Bright Room Called Day), the rise of capitalism (Hydriotaphia, or the Death of Dr. Browne), and racism and the civil rights movement in the South (Caroline, or Change). But his plays, which are invariably political, are rarely polemical. Instead Kushner rejects ideology in favor of what he calls “a dialectically shaped truth,” which must be “outrageously funny” and “absolutely agonizing,” and must “move us forward.” He gives voice to characters who have been rendered powerless by the forces of circumstances – a drag queen dying of AIDS, an uneducated Southern maid, contemporary Afghans – and his attempt to see all sides of their predicament has a sly subversiveness. He forces the audience to identify with the marginalized – a humanizing act of the imagination.”
Kushner is the recipient of a Pulitzer Prize for Drama, an Emmy Award, two Tony Awards, three Obie Awards, an Oscar nomination, an Arts Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the PEN/Laura Pels Award for a Mid-Career Playwright, a Spirit of Justice Award from the Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders, and a Cultural Achievement Award from The National Foundation for Jewish Culture, among many others.
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Movie: Showbusiness: The Road to Broadway
Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 09/11/2012 - 7:00pmDreams are centrally located on Broadway, in a twelve-block strip in the city’s mid-section, bordered on the south by the Nederlander Theater on West 41st Street and on the north by the Broadway theater on West 53rd. Within that narrow stretch of skyscrapers and cement, they land in droves, season after season, generation after generation – dreamers of any age, armed with unbridled and unprotected hopes of making their own individual statement on the theatrical stage. “Showbusiness: The Road to Broadway” examines the annual influx of ambitious, star-crossed hopefuls, scrambling for the high-board to make their big leap into everlasting limelight. It could be any season, because this phenomenon continues as faithfully and ritualistically as swallows’ return to Capistrano.
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UNI Volleyball vs. Northern Illinois
Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 09/11/2012 - 7:00pmUNI volleyball vs. Northern Illinois.
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UNI Football vs. Central State
Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 09/08/2012 - 12:00amUNI Football vs. Central State
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Isabel Wilkerson, Author of The Warmth of Other Suns
Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 08/22/2012 - 7:00pm- Isabel Wilkerson, the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, is author of The New York Times’ bestseller, The Warmth of Other Suns.The book brings to life one of the greatest underreported stories of the 20th Century, a migration that reshaped modern America. Wilkerson interviewed more than 1,200 people, unearthed archival research and gathered the voices of the famous and the unknown to tell the epic story of the redistribution of an entire people. She chose to tell the story through three unforgettable protagonists as they make the decision of their lives.
Warmth won the 2010 National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction, the 2011 Anisfield-Wolf Award for Nonfiction, the 2011 Hillman Book Prize, the 2011 Lynton History Prize from Harvard and Columbia universities, the 2011 Heartland Prize for Nonfiction, the Stephen Ambrose Oral History Prize, the Independent Literary Award for Nonfiction, the Horace Mann Bond Book Award from Harvard University, the NAACP Image Award for best literary debut and was shortlisted for the 2011 Pen-Galbraith Literary Award for Nonfiction and the Dayton Literary Peace Prize.
Wilkerson won the Pulitzer Prize for her work as Chicago Bureau Chief of The New York Times in 1994, making her the first black woman in the history of American journalism to win a Pulitzer Prize and the first African-American to win for individual reporting. Wilkerson has also won the George Polk Award, a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, and she was named Journalist of the Year by the National Association of Black Journalists.
Wilkerson has spoken on the topics of migration, social justice, urban affairs and 2oth Century history at universities across the country and in Europe. She has appeared on national programs such as CBS’ 60 Minutes, PBS’s Charlie Rose, NPR’s Fresh Air with Terry Gross, NBC’s Nightly News, MSNBC, C-SPAN, and others.
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P&S Council Meeting
Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 08/09/2012 - 1:30pmP&S Council monthly meeting. All P&S staff are welcome to attend.
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