Nov 01, 2009

Mean Green set scoring record, earn second conference win
Posted by: Carolyn Bobo

The Mean Green matched a school scoring record and won its first 2009 Sun Belt Conference game with a 68-49 win over Western Kentucky Oct. 31 at Fouts Field.

UNT scored 68 points versus Youngstown State College in 1957.

Quarterback Riley Dodge, left, accounted for seven touchdowns (42 points) with four passing scores and three running scores.

The University of Louisiana at Monroe visits Fouts Field for a 3 p.m. game Nov. 7. Come early, wear green, be loud stay late.

 

Buy tickets for the Nov. 7 game, and the Nov. 21 game versus Army.
• Learn about the new football stadium.

 
Native American Heritage Month features films, dancing
Posted by: Carolyn Bobo

Celebrate Native American Heritage Month with films and a festival.

Nov. 5 - The documentary film Spiral of Fire, produced, directed and edited by Carol Cornsilk, right, lecturer in the Department of Radio, Television and Film, will be shown at 7 p.m. in Radio, Television, Film and Performing Arts Building, Room 184.

Cornsilk, an enrolled member of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, will introduce the movie and answer questions after the screening.

The movie is about the Eastern Band of Cherokees’ fusion of tourism, cultural preservation and spirituality that helps the tribe maintain its identity in the 21st Century. Spiral of Fire is the second part of Cornsilk’s Indian Country Diaries series. She produced the series with her company, Adanvdo Vision, in conjunction with Native American Public Communications in Lincoln, Neb., where Cornsilk was director of programming and production.

Nov. 9 - Drumming and Dancing, Native American Cultural Event will be at 12 p.m. in the University Union, One O’Clock Lounge. Presented by the American Indian Chamber of Commerce of Texas, the event will feature traditional drummers and dancers from Across Indian Country, a performing group. Left, a dancer at  the 2008 indigeneous student video conference held at UNT.

Nov. 10 - The film, Our Spirits Don’t Speak English: Indian Boarding School, will be shown at 4 p.m.
in the University Union, Multicultural Center Office, Room 216. Told from a Native American perspective, the documentary uncovers the history of the U.S. government’s policy toward Native Americans, which included taking children from their homes and families and forcing them into boarding schools. Former educators and students from these schools give voice to Native American children forced through a system designed to take away their culture, heritage and traditions.

After the screening, a discussion about the film will be led by Jonathan Hook, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation.
 
EcoArtTech founders kick off third biennial water conference
Posted by: Carolyn Bobo

The founders of EcoArtTech, a digital art program to call attention to environmental issues, will launch Fluid Frontier and WaterWays 2010 with a free lecture at 7 pm. Nov. 4 in the Environmental Education, Science and Technology Building, Room 125.

Cary Peppermint and Leila Christine Nadir will lead a discussion about their works; how digital art can be used to get the public to think about the relationship between nature and technology, and how art, literature, philosophy, ecocriticism, computer science and ecology can create interactive ecoart.

Fluid Frontier and WaterWays 2010 is a year-long exploration of the environment as a personal, geographical and cultural experience. WaterWays 2010 is the third international biennial water conference, organized by the UNT Philosophy of Water Project. The theme of WaterWays 2010 is rivers and cultures, with a focus on the Trinity River.

A major shared program is the hosting of visiting EcoArtTech artists who will be in residence at the College of Visual Arts and Design. The artists will focus on the Trinity River Basin in North Texas. Fluid Frontier and WaterWays 2010 will conclude March 3- 5 with an exhibition and conference.

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