SEPT19

Page 1

THE GREAT DICTATORS

GENERAL LAWLESSNESS

Upcoming lecture examines similarities between wartime enemies Stalin, Hitler PAGE 5

Graduating law students face second year of dismal job prospects, study says PAGE 2

monday, september 19, 2011

volume 111, issue 021

DAILY NEBRASKAN dailynebraskan.com

story by riley johnson art by gabriel sanchez

Sports course teaches hands-on lessons

on a

roll

Broadcasting course gives pupils real-world experience

QUIRKY COURSES

During the past 10 years, some UNL colleges have seen enrollment skyrocket, while others’ headcount has dipped.

T

he College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln made the largest undergraduate student growth in the past 10 years, according to recent university census fig-

ures. Since fall of 2002, undergraduate student enrollment at the College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources (CASNR) jumped 44.7 percent to 1,938 students from 1,339, according to Institutional Research and Planning. Steve Waller, the college’s dean, said the growth came across the board, not just in farming areas. “CASNR is more than production agriculture,” Waller said. “We’re preparing our students for careers in everything from animals to plants, soil to climate, golf to business, mechanization to leadership and food to forensic science.” Waller said the college also looks to attract more students with a joint microbiology major shared with the College of Arts and Sciences starting next fall. It’s all a part of increasing enrollment numbers to match UNL Chancellor Harvey Perlman’s goal of 30,000 students on campus by 2017, Waller said. Looking ahead, Waller and other UNL deans said size will make teaching and scheduling adjustments necessary, but the move to be big doesn’t mean a bad education for future students. “Big is important and big is a challenge,” said Marjorie Kostelnik, dean of the College of Education and Human

Sarah lambert daily nebraskan

ENROLLMENT TRENDS OVER THE YEARS

The sports broadcasting class offered through the College of Journalism and Mass Communications at the University of NebraskaLincoln is one of a kind. It is an elective class for students of junior status and above that allows pupils to broadcast on the radio through the university’s radio station, 90.3 KRNU. The students broadcast commentary and play-by-play events for all sports. The sports broadcasting class could even be considered a large lure for the journalism college, professor Rick Alloway said. Josh Peterson, a senior broadcasting major from Omaha, said it was one of the reasons he came to the

Undergraduate enrollment at the College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources surged over the past 10 years, increasing 44.7 percent since the fall of 2002. The deans from several colleges said future enrollemnt increases will present new challenges.

50%

Agriculture and Natural Resources 44.7%

40% 30% Arts & Sciences 12.8%

20%

Education & Human Sciences 21.6% Engineering 10.8%

10% 0% -10% Architecture -20.7% -20%

Business Administration -1.8%

Fine & Performing Arts -1.9%

-30%

Journalism & Mass Communication -9.0%

class: see page 3

SOURCE: INSTITUTIONAL RESEARCH AND PLANNING

enrollment: see page 2

bea huff | daily nebraskan

Athletics OKs Love of volunteering sparks new club club’s collection of recyclables clubs

Frannie sprouls daily nebraskan

University of NebraskaLincoln Recycling has been given permission to collect recyclables after football games again. The group opened an email from Nebraska Athletics on Sept. 12, which allowed them to once again collect recyclables inside Memorial Stadium after football games. Fewer than 10 volunteers showed up after Saturday’s game, however. The group was hoping for 30 to 40 volunteers. With two weeks until the next home football game, Neil Tabor, a senior environmental studies major and president of Sustain UNL, will work with UNL Recycling to create flyers and spread the word. Tabor is not sure if in-stadium recyclable collection will happen after the Ohio State homecoming game on Oct. 8. “We’ll see how things go

Jones page 4

“We’ll be at the Michigan State game for sure. The rest will depend on support and coordination.” neil tabor

senior environmental studies major

and see if there is student interest,” Tabor said. “We’ll be at the Michigan State game for sure. The rest will depend on support and coordination.” Recycling pickup inside the stadium after the Michigan State game on Oct. 29 will be a part of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Game Day Challenge, a competition to promote waste reduction. The system for in-stadium recycling will be the same as the Game Day Challenge used in 2010.

recycling: see page 3

New student organization offers services to communities locally, nationally Danielle Rue daily nebraskan

There’s a newcomer in the extra curricular arena here at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and the club is ready to change the world one service project at a time. UNL Service and Leadership was founded on the idea of fostering student’s relationships with the community through service, leadership and networking. The club was conceived after a volunteer trip last year. “We all went to the Alternative Service Base to New Orleans through the Service Learning here on campus,” said Liz Allen, a senior hospitality, restaurant and tourism management major and a co-chair of the club. “When we got back, we wanted to continue volunteering here in Lincoln.” She said she wanted to create a club that continues

literature page 5

gabriel sanchez | daily nebraskan

volunteering beyond the trip and get more people involved. Allen co-chairs UNL Service and Leadership with Danny Martin, a senior environmental studies major. Sarah Kalhorn, a senior English and psychology major,

runs communications coordination. The club’s first official meeting was during the last weeks of school last spring, but with a new school year underway, UNL Services and Leadership hopes to gain more momentum.

football page 8

clubs: see page 3

Weather | sunny

Women aren’t priced objects

Mightier than the sword

Finding the end zone

columnist reflects on deifying and idealizing women

Kwame dawes to read at ‘poets for change’ event

Nebraska’s offense hangs 51 points on Washington

@dailyneb | facebook.com/dailynebraskan

“We decided we’d really start getting our group going this (fall),” Allen explained. “Right now we’re focusing on recruitment; our goal is

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