Nebraska
Showing June 9 in Kearney, ‘The Last Prairie’ highlights Nebraska Sandhills region – UNK News
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KEARNEY – The Nebraska Sandhills stand aside as one of many largest, intact grasslands and most unusual biophysical ecosystems in North America.
Its 20,000 sq. miles comprise the biggest space of stabilized sand dunes within the Western Hemisphere and the porous soils make the Sandhills the primary space of recharge for the Excessive Plains (Ogallala) Aquifer, the important thing supply of groundwater for Nebraska and a number of surrounding states.
Documentary filmmaker and Creighton College professor John O’Keefe explores this vitally necessary and breathtaking area in “The Final Prairie.” Accomplished in November, the movie presents an intimate portrait of the Sandhills, offered by the voices of three totally different communities: ecologists who examine the area’s biodiversity; individuals who dwell and work there; and Native Lakota folks whose ancestors had been killed to make method for American westward growth.
A screening of “The Final Prairie” is scheduled for 7 p.m. June 9 at The World Theatre, 2318 Central Ave. in downtown Kearney. The occasion, which is free and open to the general public, consists of question-and-answer classes with O’Keefe earlier than and after the movie. It’s sponsored by the College of Nebraska at Kearney Workplace of the Senior Vice Chancellor for Educational Affairs and Tye Household Basis.
“The Final Prairie” was created as a part of “On the Vary,” a place-based initiative launched by O’Keefe and fellow Creighton College college members Mary Ann Vinton and Jay Leighter, who got here collectively to review the Nebraska Sandhills as an interdisciplinary group.
O’Keefe is a professor of theology and director of the Middle for Catholic Thought at Creighton. His present analysis focuses on environmental theology and rethinking Christian attitudes towards nature. Since 2010, he has produced or directed seven movies, a number of of which have gained nationwide awards.
Nebraska
Southern Illinois Transfer Defensive Back Jamir Conn Commits to Nebraska
Kaleb Henry is an award-winning sports reporter, covering collegiate athletics since 2014 via radio, podcasting, and digital journalism. His experience with Big Ten Conference teams goes back more than a decade, including time covering programs such as the Nebraska Cornhuskers, Oregon Ducks, and USC Trojans. He has contributed to Sports Illustrated since 2021. Kaleb has won multiple awards for his sports coverage from the Nebraska Broadcasters Association and Midwest Broadcast Journalists Association. Prior to working in sports journalism, Kaleb was a Division I athlete on the Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville Track and Field team where he discussed NCAA legislation as SIUE’s representative to the Ohio Valley Conference Student-Athlete Advisory Committee.
Nebraska
Coach Mick Cronin Critiques UCLA’s Performance After Loss to Nebraska
The No. 15-ranked UCLA men’s basketball team suffered its first Big Ten Conference loss of the season, falling 66-58 to Nebraska on Saturday afternoon at Pinnacle Bank Arena. The defeat dropped the Bruins to 11-3 overall and 2-1 in the conference. Despite a strong defensive start, UCLA’s offense struggled, particularly from beyond the arc, where they shot just 4-of-28 (14.3%).
Coach Mick Cronin was blunt in his assessment of the game when he addressed the media postgame.
“We didn’t play well enough to win against a good team on the road.” he said. “That’s really all I have to say.”
Cronin didn’t mince words when evaluating the performance of his bench players.
“Dylan Andrews has got to play way better or Dominick Harris or Trent Perry got opportunities today,” he said. “They played a combined 17 minutes, neither one of them scored. I told them they were going to get an opportunity with Eric out. They played for 17 minutes and didn’t get a basket.”
The Bruins’ struggles from the floor were evident, as Cronin pointed out.
“If you shoot the ball as poorly as we did, the only chance you have is to take care of the ball,” he said. “You can’t give them 17 points off your turnovers. You’ve got no chance, can’t overcome it. It’s just math at the end of the day.”
UCLA’s poor shooting performance was highlighted by a drastic dip in their 3-point shooting percentage.
“We shot 42% from the three in the month of December as a team. Today we shot 14%,” Cronin said.
He explained that when the Bruins couldn’t hit their shots, Nebraska’s defense tightened, making it even harder for UCLA to score.
“They did a good job, but I got to be honest, we missed a ton of open shots,” Cronin said. “They just try to take the paint away from you, and what happens is, in Basketball, and this isn’t just this game, when you can’t make a shot, they pack it in even tighter. You start making shots, all of a sudden, their cutting, their laying it in because you’ve got to open your defense up. So, the floor gets real, real small and easier to defend when nobody can make a shot.”
Despite the tough loss, Cronin was quick to credit Nebraska for their defensive effort.
“Their players did a great job on the defensive end. They were the better defensive team today, and that’s why they won,” he said. “I don’t think environment has anything to do with anything, I just don’t. I think it makes it more fun for the players … somebody cheers so you play better? Not a big believer in that.”
Tyler Bilodeau led UCLA with 15 points, while Lazar Stefanovic added 10. Kobe Johnson contributed a career-high 11 rebounds, but it wasn’t enough to overcome the offensive struggles. Despite solid individual efforts, UCLA couldn’t find consistency as a team, especially from long-range.
The Bruins will return to Pauley Pavilion to host Michigan on Jan. 7. Cronin and his team will need to refocus and recover from this setback as they continue their Big Ten journey.
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Nebraska
Snow showers will stick around until early Sunday afternoon
NORTH PLATTE, Neb. (KNOP) – It’s really going to feel like winter as we go through the next week with highs falling through the 30s to mainly in the 20s. There will be lots of cloud cover this week, and we will be on the western fringe of a snow system that will give light to moderate amounts of snow and ice to the Central Midwest. For us, some could pick up 2-3″ of snow as it stays breezy from Saturday through Sunday.
Saturday we kept mostly cloudy skies with snow showers/freezing rain; it was breezy with highs in the lower 20s. Sunday snow showers taper off late morning/ early afternoon, then we keep the mostly cloudy skies; colder with highs near 16. We’re under a winter weather advisory until 6:00 pm Sunday.
Monday we will have partly cloudy skies with highs near 30. Tuesday brings mostly cloudy skies with highs in the low 20s. Wednesday we will have sunny skies; warmer with highs in the mid-30s.
Thursday look for partly cloudy skies, it will be breezy with highs in the upper 30s. Friday sunny skies and highs near 34. Next Saturday partly cloudy skies and highs near 43.
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