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Ice Box (arena)

1951 establishments in NebraskaBuildings and structures in Lincoln, NebraskaIndoor arenas in NebraskaIndoor ice hockey venues in the United StatesMidwestern United States sports venue stubs
Nebraska building and structure stubsSports in Lincoln, NebraskaSports venues completed in 1951Sports venues in NebraskaTourist attractions in Lincoln, Nebraska

The Ice Box is a 3,500-seat multi-purpose arena in Lincoln, Nebraska. It was adapted for hockey upon the Lincoln Stars' arrival in 1996. The Ice Box is located at 1800 State Fair Park Drive, on the former Nebraska State Fair grounds. The arena and fairgrounds existed simultaneously until the latter was bought and torn down by the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in 2010.

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Ice Box (arena)
Transformation Drive, Lincoln

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N 40.832777777778 ° E -96.697222222222 °
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The Icebox

Transformation Drive 1880
68588 Lincoln
Nebraska, United States
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Nebraska Innovation Campus

The Nebraska Innovation Campus is a public/private research campus being developed by the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. It is located in Lincoln, Nebraska on the 249-acre (1.01 km2) site of the old Nebraska State Fair grounds.Its purpose is "To encourage and incent the greatest amount of private/public research and economic development on this property thus allowing this site to become a preferred location for significant job creation in Lincoln and the State of Nebraska."The project is managed by the Nebraska Innovation Campus Development Corporation and is overseen by a nine-member board of directors appointed by the University Regents. The first projects will be related to agriculture and natural resources.The project was made possible by a 2008 state law which moved the Nebraska State Fair to Grand Island and turned the old state fairgrounds over to the university. Several citizens filed a legal challenge to the law, contending that it "created a special benefit" for some of the groups and people involved in the plan. However, in May 2010 the Nebraska Supreme Court rejected those arguments and upheld an earlier dismissal of the lawsuit. There was also an attempt to overturn the state law by referendum, but the petition drive failed to get enough signatures to qualify for the ballot.All of the State Fair buildings are to be demolished except the Arsenal and 4-H buildings, which will be remodeled and transformed into a focal point for the research campus. A group of activists is trying to save the 97-year-old Industrial Arts Building from the wrecking ball, and the Regents gave them until July 2010 to find a way to renovate and keep the building. One Wisconsin company submitted a bid to restore and renovate the building, but the university rejected it in August 2010 as too expensive. Later, the university approved a plan to repurpose the Industrial Arts Building, which included the addition of greenhouse space on the second floor.

National Center for Research in Economic Education

The National Center for Research in Economic Education (NCREE) was a non-profit economics research center located at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in Lincoln, Nebraska. It was established in 1984 under the direction of professor William Walstead as part of the school's College of Business Administration (now the College of Business). The NCREE's researchers were typically students in the College of Business seeking an advanced degree. The center's primary function was to assist researchers and other organizations with research, assessment, and evaluation projects in economics education. The NCREE designed, developed, and revised widely used standardized test instruments for assessing the economics knowledge of students at various stages of education, including the Basic Economics Test, Test of Economic Knowledge, Test of Economic Literacy, and Test of Understanding in College Economics. These tests are published by the Nebraska chapter of the National Council for Economic Education. NCREE housed the Research in Economic Education Data Base, a comprehensive data base of research and tests developed by the center. In 2024, the National Center for Research in Economic Education was eliminated in a wave of budget cuts across the University of Nebraska system. At the time of its closure, NCREE had no full-time faculty, and student interest had been limited for years. NU regents retained the option for College of Business students to undertake projects started by NCREE as a specialization or minor.