Nov 3 2016

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2 • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2016

THE DAILY NEBRASKAN

LETTER FROM THE EDITOR Dear reader, I transferred to the University of NebraskaLincoln almost entirely on a whim, applying from the drifting campus of Semester at Sea, where the pay-per-minute wifi made it impossible to really research the school I’d chosen. At the time, I reassured myself that anything north of the Mason-Dixon line would be an improvement over my previous college, the private, swanky-and-Southern Texas Christian University. As long as I went somewhere with a good journalism school and a more downto-Earth student body, I’d be upgrading. UNL met both requirements, plus I had several friends in the College of Journalism and Mass Communications, so I said “heck with it” (or something slightly less printable) and submitted my application to join the Husker family. Even after returning to the states and rediscovering the luxury of having internet wherever I went, I didn’t do any more research on my new school. I told myself my visit the previous fall had told me all I needed to know about UNL and Lincoln before starting my new life there.

When I did finally make it to Lincoln, I immediately realized how little I actually knew about this place. Yet even then I didn’t care. I told myself I didn’t need to know all the campus traditions, didn’t need to learn the town’s history, in order to get the journalism degree I’d come here for (in retrospect, this mindset seems especially delusional for a journalism student to adapt, but that’s neither here nor there). In my willful ignorance of my new school, I would even go so far as to deride both college and town. More than once I was scolded for making small-town jokes about Lincoln (because after growing up in Kansas City, attending school in the Dallas-Fort Worth area and sailing around the world, it did seem like a very small town to me), and I was constantly drawing ire from football fans who could not understand my reluctance to support the Huskers on the gridiron. But for all the times I embarrassed myself by not knowing basic facts about my new home, or offended others by making fun of it, I still told myself I didn’t need to embrace this place.

Then I met a girl. This girl had also come here somewhat randomly, also drawn here mostly by the journalism college. But unlike me, this girl had spent four years in Lincoln, Nebraska, and had come to see the beauty in this place that I was still so willfully blind to. One day, after I’d made one too many small town jokes about Lincoln, that girl stopped me. She said something then that I’ll never forget: she said that if I chose to see Lincoln and UNL as places where nothing important or interesting ever happens, then that said more about me and the experience I would have here than it did about the town or the university. That if I convinced myself that this place wasn’t worth investing in, that nothing was here for me except a journalism degree and maybe a few friends, then that’s exactly what I would find here. Then she flipped it, changed tone, offered me the alternative. She told me that if I just opened my eyes for a change and looked for the good in this place, I’d find a place that was impossible not to love, just as she had. She told me that this was a place of humble

joys and humbler people, a place that might not look like much, but would always surprise me if I let it. Above all, that girl told me how happy she was to have spent her four years in this surprisingly lovable place, and how much she’d miss it after she graduated. When she was finished, I felt guilty, snobbish, ignorant. At last, I realized what I’d overlooked, even ignored about this town and this college: that it is a good place with good people, a rare corner of the world where good things come in small, quiet packages. Ever since that day I’ve had my eyes wide open to the joys of my new home. It hasn’t disappointed me yet.

Matt Hanson

Matt Hanson WEB EDITOR

front page file photo by cahner olson | dn A student adjusts a mask during last year’s Dia de los Muertos celebration event. This year’s UNL celebration will be held Friday, Nov. 4.

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2016 DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM

Students with Children RSO creates support system Jessica Larkins dn staff writer

The stress of finals week was getting to Lindsey Steele. Her life was hectic enough having numerous exams to study for last fall semester, but Steele had an additional commitment most full-time students don’t. Right then it was riding in the backseat of her car, sick, as she was driving to the pediatrician. As her eyes drifted to the rearview mirror, she saw her daughter finally sleeping in the backseat. In that moment, Steele remembered exactly why she was getting her degree — that little girl. “She doesn’t really understand why I’m doing it,” Steele said. “I’m doing it knowing that no matter what happens, I will be able to provide for her.”

Steele said this is one example of some of the pressures that student parents have to manage in addition to attending school. She knew that if she was struggling as a student parent, then others were too. She saw an issue that wasn’t getting much attention and decided to do something about it. Steele is a senior psychology major at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and mother to six-year-old Abby Potter. With the help of the Women’s Center, Steele developed Students with Children, previously known as the Student Parents Association, and is the primary programmer of the organization. Jan Deeds, the director of the Women’s Center and the associate director of Student Involvement at UNL, gave Steele all of the support she needed to develop the program a little over a year ago.

The organization was created in the hopes that any student parent could go to the Women’s Center with problems they had. It’s also a place where student parents can meet others who are facing similar struggles. Steele wants to create more events on campus that are family friendly, ones like the Greek Street Trick-or-Treat. Many events on campus concentrate on traditional students, Steele said. She hopes student parents and their children always feel welcome, and UNLsponsored events can do just that. Students with Children is also working with OpeN Shelf, a UNL initiative administered by the Lutheran Center to help UNL students in need. Steele is trying to get diapers and other products that parents might need on the shelves in addition to food and hygiene products that OpeN Shelf already offers.

alanna johnson | dn Lindsey Steele, the Students with Children coordinator, majors in psychology with a minor in women’s and gender studies. Steele cofounded the organization in 2015 with Jan Deeds, the director of the Women’s Center.

Abby is school-aged now, but when she was younger, Steele said finding childcare was a challenge. Developing a better child care system for student parents is a huge focus of the organization. The UNL Children’s Center does offer childcare for students, but Steele said it’s expensive and there are a limited number of openings available. Anyone who enrolls their child into the center must also pay for every week of care, regardless of attendance. Most student parents like Steele don’t require the childcare service every day of the week. Steele has a night class and child care services during this time would be beneficial. However, the Children’s Center only operates from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m., well before her class gets out. Balancing her time between work, school and Abby is the most difficult part of being a student parent, Steele said. “I have the same work load that traditional students have,” she said. “And yet, I have to go home, pick up my child from school and help my child with her homework. I maybe get three hours a night to study.” Deeds said that most people don’t understand the struggles of a student parent and just see children as a burden. “What people don’t understand is that they’re fun,” Deeds said. “You want to be with them. You love them and you enjoy spending time with them. And when you’re doing that but you’re thinking, ‘But this paper is due tomorrow,’ that’s the challenge.” Students with Children realizes that each student parent has a unique situation and therefore, unique challenges. Deeds said the organization is always open to new ideas on what it can do to help student parents overcome these challenges. She wants students to know that if they care enough about an issue, they can create real change at UNL. Students with Children is a testament to that. For Steele, earning a degree and creating Students with Children is all for Abby. “I want to instill in Abby independence, confidence and knowing that she can do things even when barriers are in front of her,” Steele said. “She knows that mommy works hard and ... she knows that I’m integral here at the Women’s Center. You can tell that she’s proud of me.” NEWS@DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM


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Artificial intelligence has potential to teach Elizabeth Rembert DN STAFF WRITER

Students in a computer science class at the Georgia Institute of Technology didn’t have to worry about their teaching assistant Jill Watson. It was never a concern for Watson to be unresponsive, biased or inaccurate. Because Watson was a computer. Ashok K. Goel, the professor of the class, pranked his students when he used artificial intelligence to handle questions from his class. In the end, students said they had their suspicions. Goel’s experiment exposes the reality of the influx of practically applied artificial intelligence. By 2021, AI will eliminate 6 percent of jobs, a 2016 Forrester study reported. The replacement will happen mostly in customer service and transportation, but the success of Goel’s experiment indicates AI could pervade higher education as well. University of Nebraska-Lincoln professor of engineering and computer science LeenKiat Soh said AI already has its place at the university. Soh is involved in the research and

pha nguyen | dn

development of artificial intelligence at UNL, and said artificial intelligence at UNL takes place in intelligent agent tutoring systems and computer-supported collaborative learning systems. Intelligent agent systems provide students with an artificially intelligent tutor accessible and responsive 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The software materials look at the clicking and browsing behavior of students and track eyeball movement to process how students digest information. The tutor can correct mistakes in quizzes and homework and give students remedial or more challenging coursework. “It’s an innate way to help bring students along,” Soh said. “To make sure they have a successful completion of each lesson.” Computer-supported collaborative learning systems gives information to professors. The program analyzes student activity within group projects. It observes how fast students respond, how students collaborate online and where the professor needs to intervene for assistance. Professors can see a measure of the

ROBOTS: PAGE 6

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2016 • 5

Students respond to Dakota Access Pipeline

C O U RTESY P H OTO

Noah Johnson dn staff writer

On Oct. 23, the 11 Nebraska State Troopers sent by Gov. Pete Ricketts arrived in North Dakota in response to protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline. Hundreds of protesters have been arrested on the site, including 141 activists on Oct. 28. Still, protesters remain at the site – including some students from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Adam Fenton, a University of NebraskaLincoln senior and president of Sustain UNL, called the DAPL protests “peaceful” and “prayerful” rather than violent. “The worse thing that could happen during these protests is violence,” Fenton said. “It doesn’t justify the amount of force given by police.” Taylor Gage, the governor’s spokesperson, said in an email that the deployment of

the state troopers was at North Dakota’s request. “Two weeks ago, the Governor’s Office approved a request to provide resources to North Dakota under the Emergency Management Assistance Compact,” Gage said. “Since then, the Nebraska Emergency Management Agency has been working with North Dakota to formalize the request.” Gage said all expenses are paid by the requesting state, and there is no cost to Nebraska taxpayers. Additionally, Gage said Nebraska has utilized resources from other states under EMAC in the past when the state faced wildfires. Members of Sustain UNL have traveled to the pipeline protest, and Fenton said the DAPL activists do a good job of policing themselves. Before people enter the camp, they are asked if they have drugs, alcohol or weapons on them, he said. “Being a group that has not been treated

well in the past, they try very hard not to allow violence to erupt,” Fenton said. One of the major factors in the protest are the ecological hazards that could result from the construction of the pipeline. The Dakota Access Pipeline would transport crude oil from the Bakken and Three Forks oil facilities in northwest North Dakota to Patoka, Illinois, via a 30-inch diameter pipeline, which Fenton said concerns Sustain UNL. “It is very well-documented that a lot of pipelines in the United States leak,” he said. “If the pipeline were to leak, we’re worried that it could contaminate the Missouri River, which could impact up to 15 to 20 million people in the Midwest.” In 2013, ThinkProgress reported that a pipeline leaked more than 20,000 barrels of crude oil into a North Dakota wheat field. According to an analysis conducted from the Center for Biological Diversity, there have

been more than 8,000 incidents such as the North Dakota pipeline leak since 1986. The analysis said these incidents have resulted in more than 500 deaths, 2,000 injuries and more than $7 billion in damages. “I’m not the only one who doesn’t agree with this decision,” Hams said, “There are thousands of people across the state who are concerned about this.” “No amount of profit should outweigh human life,” Fenton said. “No person should be reduced to a number.” Joe Hams, a senior psychology and Spanish major, has also voiced his disapproval on the pipeline’s construction. He created a petition entitled “Demand that Gov. Ricketts bring back our State Troopers from North Dakota” that has garnered close to 10,000 signatures since Friday.

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NEWS

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work students are contributing to their class, and they can provide praise or encouragement accordingly. Soh is excited about the possibilities of artificial intelligence in education, but even with the potential between his research and Goel’s experiment, he doesn’t think artificial intelligence could supplant teaching. “Teaching requires a lot of dominant expertise,” Soh said. “We use it all the time: observation through language, body language, eye contact. Can you capture all this just by looking at online interactions with students?” Soh shook his head and chuckled. “No.” Soh said after observation, teachers make a diagnosis based on the student’s symptoms, then choose how to intervene. Soh said it would be hard for artificial intelligence to ever understand and respond to the complicated nuances of human expression. “We’ve seen AI tutoring prove to be effective, but never as good as humans,” Soh said. Soh said artificial intelligence could be useful in a small context. With artificial intelligence grading assignments or answering mundane questions about due dates or grading scales, professors can emphasize career advice or lifelong learning in their classrooms. “If the problem is small, then the artificial intelligence doesn’t have to observe too many things,” Soh said. “It could be really successful there.” Soh said for now, artificial intelligence is inhibited by its inabilities to observe and empathize. Without those abilities, Soh said

students would likely feel disengaged and unmotivated by an artificially intelligent tutor. “There is an area in AI called emotional artificial intelligence — the ability to empathize and interact with students and users,” Soh said. “Interacting, monitoring and observing motions is difficult, but for me, that’s reachable. I can see AI in that stage sooner or later, just not in my lifetime.” David Geschwender is a graduate student researcher with the Constraint Systems Laboratory and a volunteer TA for the foundations of constraint processing course. Geschwender said he sees the value behind using artificial intelligence in education. “If anything, I think it enhances the role of teachers,” Geschwender said. “It allows the teachers to spend more time on higher-level, conceptual topics the AI cannot address. Meanwhile, the AI is free 24/7 to answer all the student’s more basic questions.” Geschwender said he doesn’t feel his TA job is threatened by artificial intelligence, and Soh agreed. “Humans should learn how to work and use technology to our benefit as technology advances,” Soh said. “But the human factor should always be there — and will always be there.” NEWS@DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM

PIPELINE: FROM PAGE 5 Hams said he has attempted to meet with Ricketts to discuss the petition and was turned away. He said he would keep trying, but was not optimistic that the petition itself will sway the governor. “With this governor, I don’t think 100,000 signatures would change his mind,” he said. If Hams does get the chance to speak with Ricketts, he said there are several questions he wants the governor to answer. One question points out a possible financial tie between Ricketts and the pipeline, he said. According to a Lincoln Journal Star article, the investment bank TD Securities has given more than $360 million in both loans and credit to the pipeline. The parent company of TD Securities partly owns TD Ameritrade, a

company that was founded by Ricketts’ father. “Why is he sending troopers to attack protesters when he seems to have a financial stake?” Hams said. Fenton said the bottom line for him was that safety should come before finances. “While a profit in America is enticing, the future of us, as a society and people, is much more important than any amount of money that can be made from a pipeline or any amount of energy independence that can be gained,” he said. “All it takes is one leak for so many millions of peoples’ lives to be ruined.” NEWS@DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM


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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2016 DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM

No•Getter leads Nebraska’s DIY music scene Sam Crisler dn staff writer

For Jordan Maly, having the opportunity to play music for others is therapeutic. Maly fronts the Omaha indie rock band No•Getter, which formed less than a year ago but has already risen to become a leader in the Nebraska DIY scene. Maly is accompanied in the band by guitarist Alex Brown, bassist Tommy Hanlon and drummer Clayton Annan who meld their influences from emo, punk and math rock to craft songs that remain both aggressive and accessible while incorporating frequent starts and stops. Through their music, they hope to reach people like them who can connect with their songs. According to their band description on Facebook, No•Getter is “just some stumbling twenty-somethings, hoping you can relate.” The band members met through a network of friends and discovered mutual admirations for indie and emo artists like Weatherbox, The Get Up Kids and Cap’n Jazz. And they all knew that they wanted to start a project in the vein of those bands. “We just started hanging out,” Maly said. “And then we were like, ‘Dude, let’s do this.’” No•Getter formed on the heels of Maly’s solo project of the same name, which laid the groundwork for some of the songs No•Getter would produce. “It was good momentum to start with cause we immediately had a batch of like five or six songs,” Annan said. Since forming in late 2015, No•Getter has taken that momentum to opening slots on

“We wanted the natural chemistry,” Maly said. “We wanted it to sound natural and real.”

KAYLA S OLORZ ANO | dn

bills with touring artists like Laura Stevenson and one of their favorite bands, The Hotelier. No•Getter released a short, three-song demo EP on Bandcamp in March of this year but are now gearing up to drop their official debut EP in early December. The record is called “Fitting,” which is a title the band said they feel appropriately captures the intentions the band had of making the record relatable. “I think it’s a good representation of what we sound like and where we’re all at,” Maly said. They also appreciate how the title can be interpreted in a myriad of ways. It could be understood as a reference to fitting in or fitting the pieces of a puzzle together, for example. “It’s so ambiguous, but it’s so applicable to many different things, both positive and negative,” Brown said. The record was tracked live over the span of one weekend, which presented a challenge for the band. But they said it was worth it for

them to be able to capture their energetic live show in the recorded music. “We wanted the natural chemistry,” Maly said. “We wanted it to sound natural and real.” No•Getter plans to drop “Fitting” at a joint album release show with fellow Omaha indie band Bed Rest, who have a new EP as well. But the bands are not making their music with the intentions of coming away with profits. Instead, the proceeds from ticket and album sales at the show will go to support RAINN, an organization aimed at combatting sexual violence. Brown said that everybody wins this way. “It’s going to be a great, nice, big show and all the proceeds go to people that need it,” he said. The band is confident the show will be able to make an impact with the considerable turnout they expect from the supportive local music community. Maly said he thinks of the

music scene as a big support system. Although the beginnings of a band can be difficult, Maly said No•Getter used its connections to get itself off the ground. The band was able to land gigs and build a name for itself with the help of other area bands, like Timecat and Idlefox whose members run a DIY music venue called Lucy’s. And they have had help from other DIY spaces as well, specifically Milk Run in Downtown Omaha. “When we started was right when Milk Run was opening up,” Maly said. “And Sam Parker (Milk Run’s co-owner) has always been really good to anything I’ve been involved in.” Through numerous No•Getter shows at Milk Run, Parker said he’s seen the development of the band. “They have definitely progressed in not only sound, but also as musicians separately

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CRISLER: ‘Stadium Arcadium’ shaped me Mari Crisler DN STAFF WRITER

Red Hot Chili Peppers were the soundtrack to the most uncomfortable years of my life: middle school. For years, I had been immersed in the blissful apathy of Top 40 radio; I knew every lyric to Leona Lewis’s “Bleeding Love” (and I could probably still recite it by heart). I had a brief but intense passion for Justin Bieber beginning in sixth grade and lasting until the next summer. My walls were plastered with double-sided posters from Tiger Beat; there wasn’t a spot in my room that wasn’t covered with Justin’s beautiful prepubescent face. I was content with this lifestyle of listening to “My World 2.0” on repeat everyday for my entire life. It could have gone on that way indefinitely, but I had a divine intervention. My mom was on a ladder, painting the hallway outside my room. Her iPhone 3GS was playing this funky, melodic tune that lured me out of my room. It was “The Adventures of Rain Dance Maggie,” the latest release by the Red Hot Chili Peppers at that time in the fall of 2011. Their new album “I’m With You” had just been released and my mom had bought it

MIC HAE L JOHNSON | dn

after hearing the lead single on 89.7 the River. In the next months, I bought all their albums off of babysitting money, allowance and birthday gifts. This was the beginning of a new era for me. I began to collect all the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ albums, singles, books, etc. I wanted to know everything about this band, and I learned it. Like Leona Lewis’s lyrics, I could still spout off hundreds of facts about RHCP if prompted, albeit somewhat shamefully. My newfound obsession with this band was a little too extreme, looking back. So extreme that I remember throwing Skittles at a friend who said she didn’t like their music. That’s middle school. “Stadium Arcadium” was given to me in reindeer wrapping paper on Christmas 2011. This ended up being one of the most influential gifts I have ever received, only after my first bass guitar the previous year. Immediately following our Christmas morning festivities, I popped my new album in my CD player. I studied the lyric insert and the pictures of the band members, trying to learn who was who and the meanings of the songs as I listened to them for the first time. This activity became common for me, and in no time I had

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2016 • 9

DAVENPORT: Culinary Underground nails brunch Margaret Davenport dn staff writer

Sunday brunch is the perfect meal of the week that allows you to sleep in without having to worry about missing breakfast. Culinary Underground, located at 803 Q St. #150 in the Haymarket, is hoping to break into the Lincoln brunch scene with their brunch buffet on Sundays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. After hearing raving reviews from friends and family, I was excited to visit the restaurant for the first time. I checked out the brunch menu available on the restaurant’s website and everything sounded amazing. The menu ranged from authentic enchiladas to french toast. Culinary Underground’s brunch menu is available every Sunday for a set price of $15. The buffet was set up in the back of the restaurant next to the bar. There was an entree station, a dessert station and a salad station. I began with the entree station and worked my way around. On my first trip to the buffet, I filled my plate with scrambled eggs, bacon, sausage, biscuits and gravy, roasted rosemary red potatoes, macaroni and cheese and mushroom tortellini. Everything was very tasty, but a bit room temperature. However, I would like to state we arrived a little after noon, so two hours after the brunch had began. Despite being a little cold, the roasted rosemary red potatoes and mushroom tortellini blew me away. The tortellini was very creamy and there were not too many mushrooms that distracted from the pasta itself. I loved the tortellini so much that on my second trip, over half of my plate was made up of the pasta. The rest of the plate contained fruit salad from the salad station. The other salads available included a broccoli salad and tossed greens that you could add additional vegetables such as cucumbers or carrots to the salad. The last trip I made was to a dessert station. I tried a small muffin with a type of fruit in it that I could not place, a raspberry cheesecake bite and a miniature creme brulee. The

MARGARET DAVE NPORT | dn

Culinary Underground is a restaurant located in the Haymarket at 803 Q St. creme brulee was impeccable and was the cherry on top of a good meal. The hard caramel layer on top of the custard wasn’t too hard or too soft, and it worked perfectly with the custard beneath it. Our waiter was very kind and made sure not to check in too few or too many times. We never felt pressured by him and if anything, I would be willing to say that he was one of the best waiters I have ever had. The environment of Culinary Underground is open and rustic. Avant-garde paintings line the wall above the booths and the ceiling is made up if ex-

posed pipes, vents and paneling. I particularly enjoyed the skylights in the ceiling that made the restaurant feel very open and bright. I also would like to add that there weren’t televisions everywhere like so many restaurants in the Haymarket seem to have, and for that I was grateful. I do wish I had gone earlier to the brunch so that I could have gotten the food when it was fresh and hot, but regardless it was good. I hope to go back to the Culinary Underground so I could try out the standard lunch or dinner menu. Culinary Underground has a wide selec-

tion for brunch that ranges a little differently every week. I got to eat macaroni and cheese with raspberry cheesecake and bacon (not all combined at once), and it was spectacular. The waitstaff, or at least those that I interacted with, were very good and the atmosphere is pleasant. Who knows, maybe the restaurant is called “Underground” because it’s Lincoln’s best kept brunch secret. ARTS@DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM

NO GETTER: FROM PAGE 7 and as a whole,” Parker said. “Their sound continues to get cleaner, tighter and more well-rounded each time I get to see them perform.” Kelly Langin, who helps coordinate events at Milk Run, said she appreciates what No•Getter brings to Milk Run, too. “Milk Run is a space that is always willing to give them a place to play,” Langin said. “But honestly No•Getter helps out Milk Run

more because people are always so stoked to see them play, so that helps with attendance at shows.” No•Getter said they are impressed with the growth of the local music scene, and most recently the Lincoln Calling festival they played at this past October, which Parker was instrumental in organizing. “It’s another part of the scene growing,” bassist Tommy Hanlon said. “New people are

stepping up to make things like that happen.” The growth of the local music community allows No•Getter to do what they love, and Brown said they hope to soon tour in support of their music. But for now, they said they are content with playing shows in Nebraska. Either way, they get to share their music with other people who can relate and are able to shift their minds away from the headaches of everyday life.

Between songs at a recent No•Getter show at The Commons in Lincoln, Maly addressed a crowd of stumbling twenty-somethings and effectively summed up what playing music means to him. “Seriously, thank you so much,” he said. “This is therapy for me right now.” ARTS@DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM


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Culinary Underground offers locally-sourced food Johnny Keeley dn staff writer

Since rebranding in April, the Haymarket’s Culinary Underground has strived to be more than a fast, casual eatery -- and owner Mark Creglow said he feels the ever-changing menu and expanded catering services have done just that. Creglow’s said Blink!, his first restaurant at 803 Q St., struggled in the Haymarket’s entertainment district because it lacked a dinner menu . During the relaunch Creglow renamed the restaurant, added a bar and overhauled the menu. Creglow said during the relaunch the restaurant wanted to focus on craft food and drink. The new bar sells almost exclusively local beers from breweries like Zipline and Ploughshare. “You want to promote the local people,” Creglow said. “We’re not a chain, we’re a MARGARET DAVENP ORT | dn mom and pop shop”. However, Creglow said Culinary Underground is a restaurant located in he doesn’t want people to confuse the restaurant with a sports bar. Instead, they’re tryacres, and we want to expand that we’re we ing to appeal to a different type of crowd by all work on that and become a real farm to providing a high quality dining experience table,” Creglow said. without spending a lot of money. “Having beautiful products from the lo“You can get a good quality meal under cal purveyors really makes it fun,” Fraley said. $24,” said Creglow. “Getting in fresh pork that was just butchered Creglow also said Culinary Underground days before or fresh produce picked the day tries to source their food locally when possible. before is really an inspiration to the staff. It “Our ultimate goal is our Chef lives on 13 really teaches them to respect ingredients

the Haymarket at 803 O St. knowing it’s the local guys working hard to get these products to us.” He said the best part about using local farms in that those products then taste the best because they’re so fresh compared to products from national distributors which you’ll normally get weeks after they’re picked. Creglow described the chef Nick Fraley as being very creative, and comparing him to

be like Bobby Flay in his ability to take a normal dish and then make it his way. “The Underground kitchen is really a fun place to be, I try to keep everyone inspired with new products to keep creativity flowing,” Fraley said. The most popular dish at Culinary Underground according to Creglow is the meatloaf with mushroom gravy sauce, while the ever-changing menu features just about everything. The inside of the the restaurant is very open and there is a ton of space, about 4800 square feet. There are entrances in the front on Q street and also in the back alley which leads you straight to the bar. The bar area has plenty of TVs and seating, while the dining area in the front is more formal all the while keeping a very casual feel. Along with the restaurant, Culinary Underground’s catering business continues to grow. They’ve starting catering to businesses, sports teams, the University Nebraska-Lincoln and private parties. About a month ago, Culinary Underground took over a space across the street that used to be a bar and started doing private events there. Creglow said there is a lack of private event space in this city. “It’s the total package,” Creglow said about Culinary Underground. “And the level of touch we give the customers.” ARTS@DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM

THROWBACK: FROM PAGE 8 every song memorized in every way possible. Even with 28 songs and over two hours of music, I didn’t get bored. I was in awe of the band’s musicality and how different they were from the pop radio I had been listening to. “Stadium Arcadium” exposed me to different genres that expanded my taste in music. “Hump de Bump” is funky, “Readymade” is punk and “Hard to Concentrate” has latin vibes. Every song had enticing layers. They were the kinds of songs that had satisfying piano fills or horn accents that I didn’t notice until I listened for them. I sprinkled lyrics to “Slow Cheetah” into

my faith statement during confirmation. “Strip My Mind” soundtracked my first relationship. “Wet Sand” got me through the self-loathing and drama of middle school. My ringtone was “Tell Me Baby,” specifically the part in which Anthony Kiedis sings, “Life can be a little sweet or life can be a little shitty.” Of course, my phone went off in church, spewing vulgarities into the sanctuary. Every song on the album has a different story behind it and helped shape my development in different ways, but most importantly, “Stadium Arcadium” shaped me as a musician. I bought a book of tablature for the en-

tire album at Guitar Center and sat down for hours on end, trying desperately to get my fingers to move as quickly on the fretboard of my guitar as John Frusciante’s in “Snow (Hey Oh).” A beginning bass player, I declared myself the female Flea. I learned every single song on “Stadium Arcadium,” exercising my unrefined ability to play a song by ear. I was most certainly playing them all wrong, but I didn’t care. There is a very specific satisfaction that comes along with feeling the vibrations of the music in your hands, and that is all that mattered to me.

My attempts at replicating the sounds of these professional musicians is what pushed me to become serious in playing music. I am certain that I would not be passionate about music as I am without the influence of the Red Hot Chili Peppers. I really owe them a lot, and I don’t think I give them enough credit. I generally try to repress middle school, and therefore my time spent binge-listening Red Hot Chili Peppers. As cringe-worthy as my time with RHCP was, their music has allowed me to grow and learn how to express myself through art.


OPINION

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2016 DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM

STRASSBURGER: Plagiarism destroys credibility Emily Strassburger dn staff columnist

One of the first things we’re taught in high school is that plagiarism is the worst thing we can do as students. Yet plagiarism is still one of those things that many students don’t take seriously. Most students understand why stealing people’s’ ideas and claiming them as their own is, like, a bad thing. But even at the collegiate level, undergraduate students are plagiarizing work at ridiculously high levels. In a survey of over 63,000 undergraduate students in the United States 36 percent admit to copying sentences without proper citation, 14 percent self-reported fabricating a bibliography, and 7 percent of undergraduate students admitted they have turned in whole

works completely done by another person. There are several obvious reasons why plagiarism is wrong. Most importantly, stealing anything is unethical. The absence of a direct consequence does not make plagiarism any less immoral. People who plagiarize commit fraud and disrespect their peers and teachers. By plagiarizing, people show that they do not care enough for their class or job to take the time to do their own work. Many students turn a blind eye to the obvious ethical question with plagiarism and cheat anyway. If you have a paper due the next morning on a book you haven’t read, it’s tempting to succumb to the temptations of cheating. It seem like the easiest solution at the time, but there are several direct consequences to plagiarising.

When students go to college, they’re attempting to better themselves and develop their credibility in order to get a better job in the future. By plagiarizing, they jeopardize their credibility that they spend countless sleepless hours of late night studying to develop. Even if you don’t get caught immediately, which would result in failing classes or expulsion, plagiarism can still come back to haunt you in the future. For instance, Scott McInnis, a former candidate for governor of Colorado, was accused of plagiarizing articles for a foundation. Despite not having enough evidence to convict him of any ethical violations, he was forced to drop out of the 2010 gubernatorial primary race. This goes to show how significant plagiarism is even if you don’t recognize it at the

time. Plagiarism most affects the student’s credibility, which is a huge factor in college. Students go to college to better themselves, develop credibility, and eventually transfer this over to getting a “better” job. If a student is caught plagiarizing at the collegiate level, they are most likely going to be expelled, which would ruin their credibility as a student and make it increasingly difficult to get into a different University or a job in general. In addition, people who plagiarize often earn the titles of dishonest, unreliable, and disrespectful. Prospective employers will not trust anyone or their work if they are caught plagiarizing. It’s easy to understand an em-

STRASSBURGER: PAGE 14

KUKLINSKI: Ballot selfies encourage democracy Emily Kuklinski dn staff columnist

If we’re able to Rock the Vote, why shouldn’t we be able to snap it? In April, Gov. Pete Ricketts signed into law that Nebraskans could publicly publish pictures of their completed voting ballot anywhere without the fear of a $100 fine. This placed Nebraska in line with 18 other states who have no legislation prohibiting voters from sharing their ballots online or with friends. The debate over photographing ballots, however, rages on. Privacy, simultaneously, remains the most coveted right of American citizens while also being one we enjoy bypassing on social media. When the topic of ballot selfies gets brought up, there are two primary stances: either it encourages people to get out and vote, or that it’s unconstitutional. When we say “unconstitutional” though, what do we mean by that? Looking to states where photographing yourself at the polling booth is illegal, there doesn’t seem to be much of a defense for its unconstitutionality. When looking to states such as Alaska, the unconstitutionality of the matter lies in its lack of enforceability, according to Division of

Elections Director Josie Bahnke. Other states, such as South Dakota, tackle the stance by saying publishing your ballot could influence another person’s vote or force someone to show proof they voted. When looking at the other states’ views on ballot selfies, it seems they’re uncertain of how to introduce a modern outlook to an American civic duty that’s seldomly amended. It’s not an outwardly bad thing that states want to protect your security. There are laws prohibiting campaigns from housing themselves outside of voting booths for a reason. They don’t want you to feel pressured into voting for anybody, and especially with the poll watching campaign brought on by Trump, it’s acceptable that states should be nervous about having people pressure, or demean others, because of a picture. But if they were worried about these sorts of things, I’m sure they haven’t been watching TV for the last year and a half. There is no discretion about politics, not anymore. Look to Facebook, and you already know who your friends and family are rooting for. Anyone who was present for Thanksgiving dinner last year knows who your uncles are supporting. We live in a world where late night talk shows are political commentary

and you can literally throw candidates to the dogs by buying Hillary and Trump chew toys at Petsmart. If we truly cared about discretion, we wouldn’t live tweet presidential debates. Newspapers wouldn’t be coming out to endorse presidential candidates. Lightening the laws on ballot selfies does have its drawbacks. The fear about sharing your own voting records is real. But what various states, including Nebraska, are trying to do is support your right of free speech, not take it away. Although we’re adopting this new idea of public voting, the right to privacy remains intact. If you want to remain anonymous, there isn’t a law preventing you from doing so. In fact, there are laws set in place to ensure your discretion is enforced. In quite a few states that allow ballot selfies, there are also laws prohibiting other voters from photographing you without your consent. In states such as Minnesota and Rhode Island, their laws mandate the voter taking the selfie cannot show the picture to others in the voting location or include others in their selfie. Nebraska’s amended law states voters are allowed to voluntarily photograph and allow others to view their marked ballot, but still maintains it cannot be done involun-

tarily. This would mean that if someone tries to photograph your ballot or pressure you into sharing your vote in the state of Nebraska, they are breaking the law. In that case, the problem can be brought up to your polling volunteers who will work with you to resolve the issue. This allows you to upkeep your right to privacy. But for the rest of us, sharing a photo of our ballot can be rewarding. It fosters an environment where people want others to know they’ve voted, creating an online community where civic duty is seen as a likeable event. The truth of the matter is we already know who we’re voting for, and we know who our friends are voting for too. If you want to keep your ballot to yourself, more power to you. Worst comes to worst, when you share your ballot photos, you’ll just have a very disappointing Timehop in the November 8s to come. But regardless of your privacy settings, the importance of this election is to get out and vote. And if a selfie is what motivates you to do so, by all means, make your ballot box a photobooth. EMILY KUKLINSKI IS A SENIOR ENGLISH AND THEATER DOUBLE MAJOR. REACH HER AT OPINION@DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM OR VIA @DNOPINION.


SPORTS

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2016 DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM

Despite saftey issues, rugby continues growing Ron Petersen reporter

dn staff

A ball gets fed into the middle of a scrum and both teams jostle for position. Kansas State wins procession, and heads downfield. Boom. A Nebraska player tackles him, and immediately rolls over on the ground. He was kicked in the back of the head. “All that was going through my mind was, to get out of there so I don’t get kicked again or stepped on,” freshman Tyler Prosoki said. “That was the most serious concussion I had.” Prosoki is a member of the Nebraska rugby team and plays the loose-head prop, tight-head prop, inside center and outside center positions. He’s suffered three concussions playing rugby, including one against Kansas State. Yet, he doesn’t find the sport dangerous. “I have a love for the game of football, and I’m not able to play that currently. This is my way of being able to keep playing,” he said. Prosoki isn’t new to getting injured, suffered two concussions and hamstring when he played high school football. When he came to school, he didn’t know what he was getting himself into. “I honestly had no idea what rugby was

about until I started playing. All I knew about it was that you played with a bigger sized football on a soccer field and ran a lot,” Prosoki said. Rugby players don’t wear helmets, making the sport more dangerous with a greater chance of suffering serious injuries. “When I’m going to make a tackle, I really don’t have time to think. I just act in second nature from all my years of football,” Prosoki said. “The main thing is to get low and to keep my head up and finish the tackle on my feet. Proski’s teammate, 21-year-old Harlee Phillips isn’t new to head injuries, suffering 10 concussions over the course of his lifetime. Phillips began playing a year ago. Phillips said if you talk to any of his teammates, they would all say football is more dangerous than rugby. “I feel like football is more dangerous because there are a lot more high speed hits and higher tackles in football than rugby,” Phillips said. Like Prosoki, Phillips has the mindset to play hard and to keep on fighting in every game not thinking about getting hurt. “When I am about to make a tackle usually the only thing that goes through my mind is that I can’t let this guy beat me and when getting tackled I think about how I can’t get brought down and I refuse to quit,” Phillips said.

Coach Matt Ramirez has coached the last two years and has been happy with the team’s growth. “We have nearly doubled our number of athlete’s from last year,” Ramirez said. “Most of our players have two years or less playing rugby, but they have excelled since they started.” Ramirez has experience. He starting playing as a senior in high school and constituted play at UNL. He’s coached for the last 11 years. “As in any contact sport, we see our fair share of soft tissue and acute injuries that can keep a player out for a week or two,” he said. “The most serious injury we have seen was a broken collarbone last year, which was the result of an illegal tackle.” There have been three diagnosed concussions during Ramirez’s tenure. As a coach Ramirez teaches the players tackling techniques, he said two of the three concussions occurred from and illegal tackle and poor technique. “According to the rugby laws of tackling, ‘a player must not tackle (or try to tackle) an opponent above the line of the shoulders, even if the tackle starts below the line of the shoulders. A tackle around the opponent’s neck or head is dangerous play.’ The whipping motion caused our player to hit the back

FI L E PHOTO | dn

of his head on the turf. Play was immediately stopped, the tackler was sent off with a card, and our player was pulled from the field to be immediately evaluated,” Ramirez said. Nebraska’s coaches are certified through

RUGBY: PAGE 16

Coach’s legacy remains profound to goalkeeper

HA N NA H D E P R I E ST | d n

Aaron Hegarty dn staff writer

Despite his tragic death in a car accident in May of 2015, Peter Underwood’s impact on the Nebraska soccer team is still being felt this year. Freshman goalkeeper Aubrei Corder was introduced to the Huskers by Underwood, who was an assistant coach for Nebraska for four seasons. A decade ago, Underwood coached Corder with the West Virginia Rowdies for two seasons when Corder was about eight years old. At the time, Underwood was a graduate assistant with Marshall University. At the age of 31, Underwood was killed in a car accident near Atlantic, Iowa, while on a recruiting trip on May 16, 2015. The London native is survived by his wife Austin and two young children.

“It’s not like he’s gone, though. He’s still here,” Corder said. “He was an amazing part of my career so far and he continues to be.” Corder has “Peter” written across her cleats. On her gloves, she wrote some advice Underwood gave her: “Don’t go through the motions.” “I was so looking forward to coming here and playing for him again,” Corder said. “It was really hard, but that continues to drive me. I play for him every game.” Although he was Corder’s coach for just two seasons, she said Underwood had a great impact on her soccer career. “He was always there encouraging me and keeping tabs on me,” she said. “He was someone who really saw my potential and he really chose to invest in me. No matter how

far across the state he was, he was always investing in me.” Corder’s decision to come to Nebraska was also highly influenced by assistant coach Marty Everding, who worked with Corder at a summer camp in Nebraska. “He just made me see I have so much more potential than I even realized, and then I just fell in love with it out here,” Corder said. “It’s not the mountains, like West Virginia, but it’s still home.” Underwood left West Virginia and Marshall for the University of Montana, where we was an assistant coach for two seasons before coming to Nebraska in 2010. At the same time, Corder was also ad-

SOCCER: PAGE 16


THE DAILY NEBRASKAN

SPORTS

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2016 • 13

Buckeyes boast slew of talented players Zack Beyers DN STAFF WRITER

No. 10 Nebraska travels to Columbus Saturday for a primetime matchup with No. 6 Ohio State. OSU bounced back from its upset loss at Penn State two weeks ago with a narrow victory against pesky Northwestern last week. Here are the players to keep an eye on Saturday.

Quarterback J.T. Barrett

DA F F N I E R E A LP E | dn

Ever since taking over for Braxton Miller in 2014 as a freshman, Barrett has established himself as one of the Big Ten’s premier quarterbacks. Last season, Barrett led the league in touchdown scoring (11.0 points per game) and passing efficiency (162.6) during conference play. This year, Barrett has no competition for the quarterback spot from Miller or Cardale Jones, and has fully absorbed his opportunity as the star offensive player. Through eight games, he has completed 145 out of 227 passes for 1,675 yards and 17 touchdowns. The junior from Wichita Falls, Texas is also dangerous with his feet, rushing for 531 yards and six touchdowns this year.

Running back Mike Weber

Coming out of high school in Detroit, Weber was touted as one of the top running back prospects in the country. He was a four-star back who was considered by Scout.com to be the No. 1 player in the state of Michigan. After redshirting in 2015, Weber won the starting job this summer over fifth-year senior Bri’onte Dunn, and has done an excellent job of filling the void left by current Dallas Cowboy Ezekiel Elliott. Through the first eight games of the season, Weber has run for 770 yards and six touchdowns on 129 carries.

Running back/wide receiver Curtis Samuel

Samuel is one of the most experienced players on the Ohio State roster, with 27 games played in his career. What makes the junior from Brooklyn so dangerous is that he can play both running back and receiver extremely well. The Huskers will have their hands full Saturday with him in the backfield. So far in 2016, Samuel has run for 558 yards and five touchdowns on 71 carries. He’s caught 44

BUCKEYES: PAGE 14

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SPORTS

THE DAILY NEBRASKAN STRASSBURGER: FROM PAGE 11

ployer’s perspective. What employer would want someone who has cheated in the past to work for them? If a large number of students repeatedly plagiarized, the academic learning outcomes would be useless. A teacher’s role is to help students think for themselves and solve problems analytically, rather than showing them a simple black and white process and answer. The goal of the education shouldn’t be results driven, it should be a process that gets people to the results so that they can replicate it on their own. When students plagiarize, they are cheating themselves out of understanding the learning processes and material they needed to learn in order to be successful in the future. It’s not enough to look at the direct consequences, because there is a bigger picture as well. Plagiarism isn’t just wrong, dishonest, or unethical. These habits and traits people acquire from repeatedly plagiarizing will eventually transfer into their future workplace, too. If a student uses plagiarism as a quick-fix every time they can’t come up with an answer or an idea, they aren’t developing the skills necessary to be successful in the future. They’re using plagiarism as an easy out.

For example, in English classes students are taught how to write essays, not taught how to acquire a finished essay. When a student plagiarizes an essay, they’re developing the habit of getting the answer without the work. In the workplace, there is no such thing as an easy out, or an answer key. It’s like having all the answers to math problems, but not knowing how to do any of the work. We think we’ll be fine, and that we’ll be able to figure out how to do the work in the future or on the test itself. We all have been there. We all know how that game ends. Repetitive plagiarizers often hurt themselves more than anyone else. Plagiarizing may seem like a very quick and easy answer for their problems, but plagiarizing is more than destructive. Plagiarizing ruin a person’s credibility, character, and often cheats the student or person out of what they were supposed to be learning. Plagiarism is one of those things that we wish we didn’t have to address but nonetheless we have to. EMILY IS A FRESHMAN MATH MAJOR. REACH HER AT OPINION@DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM OR VIA @ DNOPINION .

BUCKEYES: FROM PAGE 13 passes for 539 yards and three scores. Samuel was named to the Sports Illustrated Midseason All-American team last week.

Offensive lineman Pat Elflein

Regarded by many as one of the top centers in the nation, as well as the toughest leader on Ohio State’s team, Elflein returns for his fifth year in the program in 2016 and his third consecutive year as starting center. The 6-foot-3, 300-pound lineman has started 29 out of 42 games and was the anchor of an offensive line that recorded the top two yards per carry averages in school history (6.8 yards in 2013 and 5.7 yards in 2014). This season, Elflein has led an offensive line that rushes for 272.4 yards per game and 22 touchdowns.

Linebacker Raekwon McMillan

McMillan has been a thorn in opposing team’s sides through his entire career. In

2015, he was named a Butkus Award finalist as well as a second team All-American with 119 tackles. This season, McMillan has recorded 18 solo tackles and 24 assisted. He poses a large threat to the Nebraska offense, and was named a midseason All-American last week by ESPN and Sports Illustrated.

Defensive end Tyquan Lewis

If you were to guess Joey Bosa, the third overall pick in the 2016 NFL Draft, as the Ohio State quarterback sack leader in 2015, guess again. Tyquan Lewis owns that statistic with eight in 2015. Lewis was named to the Bednarik Award watch list as well as a preseason All-American coming into this year. He is a highly touted NFL Draft prospect, with 28 career games, and has recorded 18 tackles, 5.5 tackles for loss and four sacks this year. SPORTS @ DAILYNEBRAS KAN . COM


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puzzle by stu ockman

33 Scarce, to

43 Spoken, as

53 Doesn’t strike

34 Actor who

45 Cry upon

54 Flag holder

Scipio

made his  film debut in  “Breakin’,”  1984 36 Señorita’s silver 39 “April Theses”  writer 40 Hosp. areas 42 Tracked down

evidence

walking in the  front door

47 “Taxi” worker 49 Like some

videos 51 Perfume  ingredient 52 Exhume

out in the end

55 She, in Seville 56 Fast pace 57 Center 59 “Fur Is Dead”

org.

62 Smoke

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.


RUGBY: FROM PAGE 12

SOCCER: FROM PAGE 12

USA Rugby to identify concussion symptoms. Dr. Art Maerlender, the Associate Director for the Center for Brain, Biology & Behavior at UNL and the coaching staff work together. During a game if any player has any signals of a concussion, the get assessed by at the University Health Center. If a concussion is diagnosed, the player is then sent to the Center for Brain, Biology & Behavior at UNL for evaluation on the severity of the concussion. The player then has to be cleared by doctors and has to participate in one non-contact practice before resuming full contact. In spite of concussions and injuries in the past year, the Nebraska rugby team has seen the start of five professional rugby teams in the inaugural year of professional rugby. “This is by far the most incredible year for rugby in the United States, and we are looking to keep that going,” Ramirez said. SPORTS@DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM

vancing her soccer career. She began playing for Ohio Premier in 2009, commuting three hours both ways to Columbus, Ohio, at the age of 11. During each of her six years prior to enrolling early at Nebraska this spring, Corder made the three hour trip from her hometown of Barboursville, West Virginia, for practices and games. “I love the game,” Corder said. “School was working out. I was getting my education. I was staying dedicated to that and also through the love of the sport it was worth it.” She was able to make the long trips each way work by being homeschooled. Her many hours spent on soccer seem to be paying off for the Huskers this season. Corder has played every minute in the goal this year, allowing just 18 goals in the regular season. Nebraska has not allowed as few as 18 goals in the regular season since 2002, when it allowed 17. 2002 is also the last time that only one goalie saw time in the goal. That season, Nebraska made the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA tournament and won the Big 12 tournament. Corder has collected shutouts in each of

the last six games, currently holding a streak of 510 minutes without allowing a goal. The Huskers are 2-0-3 over that stretch, but Northwestern eliminated the Huskers from the Big Ten Tournament in a 4-3 shootout Sunday. Corder had seven saves, tying her season high. On the year, Corder has 70 saves, 10 shutouts, and a .795 save percentage. If her save percentage of .795 holds until the end of the season, it would be Nebraska’s best team save percentage since 2004. “Aubrei has improved as the season has progressed and has been playing at a consistently high level through the majority of the conference season,” head coach John Walker told the Omaha World-Herald prior to a 1-0 win against Iowa on senior night. “She will just keep improving as she gains more experience. She is playing well right now.” Corder was recognized for her accomplishments near the end of the season. She was named Big Ten Freshman of the Week after shutouts against Illinois and Northwestern, in which she collected two saves. The following week, she was named both Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week and Big Ten Freshman of the Week for her per-

formance in a shutout at Rutgers. She had seven saves in the scoreless tie. “Keeping the goals against and shots against low has meant a lot to our defense,” Corder said. “The awards are just something extra that come with hard work.” Corder said filling in as a defensive leader as a freshman is going well. “I think that’s also been a challenge.... coming in as a 17-year-old, playing with girls like Caroline Flynn who have been here for so long,” she said. “It was a little bit intimidating at first, but just went into practices with the mindset that I was going to do what I could, and give it all, and then everything else would fall into place. Leadership came with that, and the confidence from my teammates and from playing.” SPORTS@DAILYNEBRASKAN.COM

THESE SCC BUSINESS CLASSES HAVE DIRECT EQUIVALENTS AT UNL Required for all CBA students:      

OFFT2120 Business Communication Strategies ECON2110 Principles of Macroeconomics ECON2120 Principles of Microeconomics ACCT1200 Accounting I ACCT1210 Accounting II SPCH2810 Business & Professional Communication

CBA Required, Continued     

MATH1180 Elementary Statistics MATH1400 Applied Calculus OR MATH1600 Calculus and Analytic Geometry I INFO1005 Microsoft Applications OR BSAD1020 Microsoft Applications II

Direct equivalents at UNL that will fulfill electives:    

ECON1200 Personal Finance BSAD1230 Visual Merchandising and Promotion BSAD2430 Marketing Communications ENTR1050 Introduction to Entrepreneurship

Downtown 11th & O Street | 88th & O Street | Online

402.323.3463

Southeast.edu/openregistration

Winter Term Starts

JAN 5!


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