Campus News

University Summer Exhibition

May 31st, 2012

Date: Saturday 16 June to Saturday
30 June
Venue: Djanogly Art Gallery, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: Free

 

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The Many Lives of DH Lawrence

May 31st, 2012

Memoir, legacy and biography revealed in the University’s DH Lawrence Collections
Date: Friday 4 May to Sunday
16 September
Venue: Weston Gallery Exhibitions, Manuscripts and Special Collections, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: Free

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Being Aldington

May 31st, 2012

Emeritus Professor and Lawrence biographer John Worthen
Date: Thursday 5 July
Time: 1pm to 2pm
Venue: Weston Gallery, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: Free

 

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DH Lawrence in Taos

May 31st, 2012

DH Lawrence in Taos
Chance to see an uncut version of a 1968 documentary of Lawrence’s contemporaries and early biographers in discussion about his life and legacy in New Mexico
Date: Monday 18 June
Time: 1pm to 2pm
Venue: Weston Gallery, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park
Admission: Free

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Art, Gendered Labour and Resistance

May 31st, 2012

Convened in collaboration with Angela Dimitrakaki

Date: Friday 15 June
Time: 2pm to 5pm
Venue: The Space, Nottingham Contemporary, Weekday Cross, Nottingham
Admission: Free

 

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The Many Lives of DH Lawrence: Memoir, Legacy And Biography Revealed

May 31st, 2012

Friday 4 May until Sunday 16 September, Weston Gallery, Lakeside Arts Centre, University Park. The gallery is open 11am-4pm, Monday to Saturday, and noon-4pm, Sundays and bank holidays. Admission is free.

DH Lawrence has proved an endlessly fascinating, and controversial, subject for memoirists, literary biographers and the public. Since his death in 1930, his legacy has been subject to continual re-evaluation in line with shifts in his literary reputation and changing perceptions of his impact on 20th-century culture. This exhibition traces the origins and development of the biographical preoccupation with Lawrence. The display draws on original manuscripts and correspondence, contemporary memoirs and other resources in the University of Nottingham’s nationally designated DH Lawrence Collections.

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Wheee! Lakeside’s International Children’s Theatre & Dance Festival

May 31st, 2012

 

The line-up for the 7th festival promises fantastic family entertainment and hands-on activities and workshops.

It will also premiere the EXXOPOLIS to help celebrate Architects of Air’s 20th anniversary. The Luminarium is always a massive hit with adults and children alike

Spanish dance and theatre company Aracaladanza will perform Nubes (Clouds); Canadian company Bunk Puppets will perform Swamp Juice – a mix of fiendishly clever shadow puppetry with a 3D finale; Crying Out Loud presents Kindur (Icelandic for sheep), an interactive show using stunning digital imagery. The Incredible Book Eating Boy (left) is based on the award-winning book by children’s author Oliver Jeffers.

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New model army

May 31st, 2012

In years gone by third-year students would fund their final fling through University with bar work or a ‘job on the bins’ — not so for the class of 2012.

More than 50 male and female current students have signed up to an innovative new business model which offers them a share of the limelight.

Model Students gathers intelligent, attractive and confident young people with an interest in working in the modelling industry. It’s the brainchild of Nottingham University Business School graduate Anna Gray (Management Studies), once a model herself. The idea came out of her entrepreneurship module.

“When I was in my final year I knew I wanted to set up my own company. I had worked as a model during my time at university so it seemed like a logical step as it was an industry I had experience in,” said Anna.

Most of the models are students from Nottingham’s two universities but applications are welcomed from other young people. They can earn anything up to £100 a day and have so far graced catwalks and completed adverts, video production work and music videos for the likes of Ted Baker, Debenhams, Bench and Boots.

“Model Students represents models who are not just attractive but healthy, bright and great communicators. In short everything you could want to represent a brand or company.”

If you want to book a model please contact: anna@modelstudents.co.uk or call: 0783 7238266. Visit: www.modelstudents.co.uk and www.nottingham.ac.uk/business.

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A decade of success

May 31st, 2012

The University of Nottingham is due to mark this major milestone of its flagship Developing Solutions programme by transforming it from its foundations as a scholarship programme to a broader scheme to promote the exchange of skills and knowledge from staff and students in the UK with their peers from developing nations.

The enhanced scheme will also provide further funding towards travel and living expenses to ensure that the most talented overseas students have the opportunity to study at Nottingham regardless of their financial circumstances.

Director of The University of Nottingham’s International Office Vincenzo Raimo said: “Developing Solutions is an investment in the development and growth of nations through individuals. Our vision is for it to grow into a UK flagship scheme for international scholarships, recognised for its support of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals.

“A single scholarship has the potential to transform many lives. Graduates are encouraged to return to their home countries to share and use the skills they have learned. Developing Solutions scholarships not only promote international education; the beneficiaries can have a real impact in the development and prosperity of their home countries.”

The Developing Solutions programme was launched in 2001 to widen access to UK universities for students from developing countries and to promote international transfer of vital skills and to-date has helped in the region of 850 students from 32 nations.

Working with external organisations and partner institutions, the scheme aims to empower students through learning so they can make a real difference to the development and prosperity of their home country.

The scheme focuses on one-year Masters of Science (MSc) programmes that have development and sustainability at their core and sits alongside the Commonwealth Shared Scholarships, a joint initiative between the UK Department for International Development (DfID) and UK universities to support students from developing Commonwealth countries who would not otherwise have the chance to study in the UK.

The Developing Solutions Scholarship scheme will offer 105 scholarships in 2012: 30 which will cover 100% of the tuition fee, and 75 to pay for 50% of the cost. The Commonwealth Shared Scholarships, meanwhile, provide seven students each year with full tuition fee awards, airfare, maintenance and additional allowances to remove all financial barriers to talented students coming to Nottingham to study.

Najabat Ali Khan from Pakistan, a beneficiary of a Developing Solutions scholarship, said: “I chose to study an MSc in Computer Science and Entrepreneurship because it is unique and highly valued in the software industry. With the current credit crunch, it can be really hard for students or their parents to bear the financial cost associated with higher education. Scholarships can play a vital role to eliminate the issue of funding as a barrier to education for brilliant minds.”

However, almost one-third of successful scholarship winners are forced to decline the award due to financial constraints. The enhanced Developing Solutions programme will aim to provide greater assistance with travel and living expenses to more students through the support of the University’s Impact Campaign, which is aiming to raise £150m over the next five years to support a series of high-impact projects on the local, national and global stage.

The scheme is also expanding to incorporate two further strands — Developing Futures and Developing Horizons.

Developing Futures offers 20 bursaries of up to £1,000 each to fund or part-fund visits by University staff supporting capacity development or research activities at a partner institution in Africa.

Dr Sheila Greatrex-White, a lecturer in the School of Nursing, Midwifery and Physiotherapy, visited the University of Zambia where she led a project setting up new nursing collaborations and further research on the impact of HIV and AIDS prevention initiatives.

Dr Greatrex-White said: “This new research project is perhaps the first collaboration of its kind in the country and we hope to make a real difference to finding out what works and the challenges involved in mobilising people and communities to prevent and mitigate HIV and AIDS in rural Zambia.

“AIDS-related deaths lead to children losing their parents, a community losing its backbone and a country losing its economic activity.”

Developing Horizons allows students at Nottingham to exchange with students from African partner institutions to broaden their cultural understanding and global outlook. Formal exchange agreements with universities in Botswana, Ghana and South Africa are due to be approved by the end of this year.

The 10th anniversary of the Developing Solutions programme — and the successes of past and current scholars — was celebrated with a conference at Nottingham on April 30.

The Hon. Jeremy Browne MP, Minister of State for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, gave a keynote speech and Dr Christine Humfrey, former director of the International Office at Nottingham, gave a talk on the origins of the scholarship programme.

Scholars who have benefited from the scheme shared their experiences and the new Developing Futures and Developing Horizons programmes was officially launched.

More information is available at: www.nottingham.ac.uk/internationaloffice/developing-solutions/index.aspx.

 

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Mike’s having a wild time…

May 31st, 2012

Fans of the BBC’s The One Show will know him the minute they set eyes on his mischievous face.

Mike Dilger (Botany 1988) is the wildlife face of the show — one day capturing footage of badgers feeding in the middle of a suburban lawn and the next snorkelling with basking sharks. But behind the showbiz presentation there’s a passionate broadcaster and naturalist with an encyclopaedic knowledge of British flora and fauna and an expertise of the ecosystems of South and Central America.

He’s been back to the University both to film and to speak to students and he’s one of an ever-growing band of wildlife and natural history experts who are leaders in their field.

“I came back to Nottingham to do a One Show film about money spiders with research geneticist Dr Sara Goodacre, who set up the unique SpiderLab in the School of Biology,” said Mike, who holds the world record for keeping the most snails on his face for a minute (37).

“And there we were on prime-time television, Sara and myself, banging on about money spiders for five minutes to an audience of between four and six million people, people who were just a little bit wiser about the natural world because they watched The One Show. And that’s important, it’s natural history for people who are not going to be bothered to watch Springwatch or The Human Planet.

“I was at Nottingham from 1985-88 and I was distinctly mediocre as a student. I got a 2:2 in Botany and a first in socialising. I was a regular frequenter of the Buttery Bar, I spent a small fortune in the Happy Return in Lenton and I was frequently so hung-over I had to lie down on the seats at the back of the very lecture theatre where I recently addressed students.

“I was classically what people would call a late developer but I had a terrific time at Nottingham and finally met other birders and people who loved natural history so I went twitching a lot, tried to get myself invited into Florence Nightingale, Florence Boot and Cavendish Halls after hours and occasionally turned up at lectures. It was an amazing time.”

After leaving the University Mike worked for the British Trust for Conservation Volunteers at Burton Joyce, then got a contract with the Notts Wildlife Trust and later with the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB).

On his many trips to the tropics Mike collected an impressive array of diseases such as malaria, leishmaniasis, ringworm and septicaemia, which led to the nickname of Britain’s Most Diseased Man. He returned from the tropics in order to recover and got into television work as a wildlife film researcher, working for Bill Oddie.

“I don’t know how I got into wildlife. I went through quite a few hobbies when I was about seven years old before I hit on birding. I was given the Blandford Colour Series Guide to Birds and each page had two oil portraits of 256 species of birds commonly found around Britain. And I remember holding a torch under the bed covers at bedtime and reading the names of these fantastic birds — Montagu’s Harrier and Red-backed shrike. I wanted to see them all and to this day there’s only one I haven’t yet seen.”

Environmental historian, birdwatcher and friend, The University of Nottingham’s Dr Rod Lambert says of Mike: “He is engaging, he has an encyclopaedic knowledge, he’s one of our best communicators about nature and people, he’s passionate and I really do believe that he’s one of the finest examples we’ve got of presenters coming through who enthuse people and get people fired up about our glorious, complex and diverse natural world.”

Mike can be seen regularly on The One Show and will be appearing at the British Birdwatching fair at Rutland Water from 17 to 19 August. His new book, My Garden and Other Animals, is published in July.

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