‘SUNDAY WITH A SCIENTIST’
‘PUMP IT UP PINK’
Weekly series at Morrill Hall pairs researchers with community for casual discussion, family activities VIDEO ONLINE
Victoria’s Secret promotes new clothing line through free fitness classes at UNL PAGE 6
wednesday, september 21, 2011
volume 111, issue 023
DAILY NEBRASKAN dailynebraskan.com
Health center sees increase in patients conor dunn daily nebraskan
Just Jugglin’
Beau Poehlman, a freshman broadcasting major, displays his juggling skills outside of the Sheldon Art Museum on Sept. 19.
UNL student showcases self-taught skill around campus for fun, not fame story by Dylan Roberson | photos by Jon Augustine
O
ne might catch him in the Selleck courtyards or outside of the Kauffman Residential Center, practicing his craft on the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s campus. Beau Poehlman, a freshman broadcasting major, is a juggler – and an experienced one at that. Whether he is practicing old patterns or attempting to learn something new, Poehlman adds his own brand of talent to the UNL student body. He started juggling about five years ago, when he happened upon some juggling balls in an old trunk. On a whim, he decided to give it a try and see where it led. “I thought it would be a really cool thing to teach myself how to juggle,” Poehlman said,
juggling: see page 2
Poehlman said he does not juggle around campus to entertain, but more to practice and improve on his unique talent.
Food truck finds new home at Pi Kappa Phi fraternity ryan kopelke Daily Nebraskan
Down but not out, Heoya is back on campus and here to stay. After a brief absence due to an unforeseen limit on its permit, only allowing it to remain in one location for 10 minutes at a time, Heoya has found a new home in the driveway of the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity at 519 N. 16th St.
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“They told us about the permit on Friday, after they said it was the right one,” said Minh Nguyen, co-owner of the food truck. “Now they say that the right one does not exist so we offered organizations around campus 10 percent toward the charity of their choice if we could use their lot.” Happy to accept this offer, Pi Kappa Phi members quickly agreed to host
Heoya in their driveway. In exchange, 10 percent of the truck’s profits will be sent to Push America. “We had a pretty good relationship with them already,” said Alex Kolbo and senior art education major, Pi Kappa Phi president. “They were always so close to us and we even let them use our facilities a few times. All of the guys are really psyched about having them here.”
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Heoya and Pi Kappa Phi have launched a viral campaign on Twitter and Facebook to drum up support for their petition and to let students know of the truck’s new location. “I know we have a good product, the students love us, so until we change this ordinance, we are here to stay,” Nguyen said. ryankopelke@ dailynebraskan.com
It’s the beginning of the semester and illness is plaguing some University of Nebraska-Lincoln students. Since the semester began, there have been 1,579 total visits to the University Health Center. That’s 104 more visits than students made in September 2010. “Last year, each doctor saw about 25 patients a day,” said Jennifer Snyder, marketing coordinator at the University Health Center. “Now we’re seeing around 200 patients a day, which averages out to about 30 patients per doctor.” Students don’t usually flock to the health center in such high numbers so early, she said. “It’s strange to see so many patients this early in the semester,” Snyder said. “Most of these students come in with upper respiratory problems.” From the common cold to severe allergic reactions, the rise in sickness concerns students. Kayla Hass, a freshman preinclusive early childhood education major, has been sick since classes started. She went to the health center and a doctor prescribed her sinus infection medicine, giving her hope that her sickness would clear up soon. “I’ve had a headache, runny nose, congestion, earaches, a nasty cough and a sore throat,” she said. Taylor Anne Maass, a freshman advertising major, has also been struggling with a cold. “It’s getting everyone; my roommate and I both had colds like two weeks ago, and then my whole floor started getting sick,” Maass said. “At first I thought it was allergies or maybe just my throat hurting from screaming too much at the football game.” Freshmen like Hass and Maass are among the largest percentage of UNL undergraduate students using the health center this year. The clinic routinely conducts a patient satisfaction survey and freshmen were at 18.7 percent
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BRYAN KLOPPING DAILY NEBRASKAN
satisfaction. Seniors followed at 17.9, juniors at 11.4 and sophomores at 8.8 percent. About 40 percent of graduate students were reported as having used the health center, Snyder said,
health: see page 2
Student loan defaults rise overall, Neb. below average Dan Holtmeyer Daily Nebraskan
The share of students unable to pay back their loans jumped last year, even as student debt steadily rises, according to data released by the U.S. Department of Education last week. Students in Nebraska are less likely to default on their loans than the country as a whole, however. And when loan payments are too large for students to handle, default is only one of several possible options to make loan repayment more manageable. The report showed that 8.8 percent of student borrowers defaulted on their debt in
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the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 2010, up from 7 percent the previous year and the highest percentage since 1997. That rate was lower when limited to public institutions like the University of NebraskaLincoln: 7.2 percent of students at state colleges and universities defaulted in that time, up from 6 percent the previous year. At UNL, only 2 percent defaulted. The year before, that figure was 1.7 percent, putting UNL comfortably within the norm among its peer institutions
loans: see page 2
Weather | sunny
Huskers against profanity
If it ain’t got that swing
Going over the top
Athletics right to ban t-shirts with offensive language
local college grads don’t worry about money in their music
Bell Helping to revive Nebraska Receiving Corps
@dailyneb | facebook.com/dailynebraskan
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