Things 2 Do @ the U
Today's events are displayed below. Click any bolded date in the yellow bar to see what's happening at UW-Parkside on that day. Move from month to month by clicking the month name. To see our events in a printable month-at-a-glance view, choose either block (calendar-style) or list views. You can also sort our events using the links to the left.
Sunday, November 8, 2009
| Start Time | End Time | Event Details |
| 12:00 PM | 1:30 PM | Junior Rangers Basketball Club |
| Sports & Activity Center | ||
| The UW-Parkside men’s basketball program welcomes boys and girls from kindergarten through grade six to the Junior Rangers Basketball Club. Club members can improve their basketball skills through instructional and game sessions. Kids get a Junior Rangers T-shirt (which, if they wear it to games, gets them free admission to every UW-Parkside home game) and a Junior Rangers basketball. Plus, kids get to show their stuff at halftime of the Dec. 29 game between UW-Parkside and Upper Iowa University along with a post-game pizza party. GO RANGERS! | ||
| Related link: Men's Basketball | ||
| 2:00 PM | 4:10 PM | Foreign Film: "The Class" |
| Student Center Cinema | ||
| Based on the autobiographical novel “Entre les Murs” by Francois Begaudeau, The Class is a drama that follows a year in the life of a French schoolteacher working with a group of hardened but vulnerable students in a junior high school on the outskirts of Paris. Ethnicities, cultures, and attitudes often clash in the classroom. Tenacious in his effort to teach his largely emigrant class the fine points of the French language, the dynamic, idealistic Begaudeau also sought to provide them with enough smarts to blend into a notably unwelcoming society. Astonishingly, director Cantet spent an entire academic year improvising, writing, rehearsing and filming with real-life students who had emigrated from Africa, Asia, Latin America, and other parts of the world. These inexperienced, exceedingly trusting actors dipped deep into the well of their experience and crafted fictionalized versions of themselves and, in the process, apparently learned liberating truths about their own lives. Not one of the budding, soul-baring actors here ever seems to be acting. Each is triumphantly real, funny, sad, and unforgettable. Equally amazing, the actor playing the teacher who attempts to balance the roles of disciplinarian and good buddy is author Francois Begaudeau, the man who called “The Class” to order in the first place! | ||
| Related link: Student Activities | ||
| 5:00 PM | 7:10 PM | Foreign Film: "The Class" |
| Student Center Cinema | ||
| Based on the autobiographical novel “Entre les Murs” by Francois Begaudeau, The Class is a drama that follows a year in the life of a French schoolteacher working with a group of hardened but vulnerable students in a junior high school on the outskirts of Paris. Ethnicities, cultures, and attitudes often clash in the classroom. Tenacious in his effort to teach his largely emigrant class the fine points of the French language, the dynamic, idealistic Begaudeau also sought to provide them with enough smarts to blend into a notably unwelcoming society. Astonishingly, director Cantet spent an entire academic year improvising, writing, rehearsing and filming with real-life students who had emigrated from Africa, Asia, Latin America, and other parts of the world. These inexperienced, exceedingly trusting actors dipped deep into the well of their experience and crafted fictionalized versions of themselves and, in the process, apparently learned liberating truths about their own lives. Not one of the budding, soul-baring actors here ever seems to be acting. Each is triumphantly real, funny, sad, and unforgettable. Equally amazing, the actor playing the teacher who attempts to balance the roles of disciplinarian and good buddy is author Francois Begaudeau, the man who called “The Class” to order in the first place! | ||
| Related link: Student Activities |

