‘MY BACKPACK IS KILLING ME’
DEMAND VS. SUPPLY
Wearing heavy bags a cause of back cramps, posture problems, health center says PAGE 2
UPC sells out Mac Miller tickets in less than two hours, leaving students frustrated PAGE 6
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2011
volume 111, issue 024
DAILY NEBRASKAN dailynebraskan.com
OUT COLD
New retention program targets freshmen
NEBRASKA UNION Dairy store TO close down because of poor sales Riley Johnson Daily Nebraskan
The UNL Dairy Store location inside the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s City Campus Nebraska Union will permanently close after Thanksgiving break this semester, according to Dairy Store and UNL officials. The Dairy Store and Nebraska Union mutually agreed to end the contract which would have ended June 30, 2012, said Charlie Francis, director of Nebraska Unions. Rolando Flores, director of the Food Processing Center at UNL, oversees the Dairy Store. Flores said the union location lost around $25,000 last year and has struggled to turn a profit since opening in 2008. Dairy Store staff wanted to bring a scoop of East Campus to City Campus, but Flores said his staff knew it would be a challenge. “There is a point when you have to explore a market, and we arrived at the point when the market is not there,” he said. Staying open meant making $150 per day, Flores said. The majority of the time revenue wasn’t even close, he said. The union did continue to collect rent from the Dairy Store, and the Dairy Store will absorb the loss, Francis and Flores said. The union will lose $10,000 in the closing, Francis said, but will divert money from other areas to cover that
loss. Students won’t have to pay for the closing, he said. Selling a seasonal product such as ice cream at a year-round location was a struggle, but Flores sees this closing as an opportunity for the Dairy Store to improve its product line and its 94-year presence in East Campus’ Filley Hall. “Be bold enough to try new things and smart enough to know when it’s not going to work,” said Steve Waller, dean of the College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources. Universities make bold moves and wise decisions, Waller said, just like the Dairy Store did with its satellite location. Waller helped establish the City Campus store along with Francis and Flores. While he said he’s sad to see it go, he said the ice cream market and union location don’t jive with the academic calendar. Flores agrees. He said with ice cream weather only in Lincoln for two to three months of the academic year, people don’t buy as much the majority of the time. An ice cream shop inside the union made sense for the beginning of the academic year, Francis said, but during the summer the business’ location made ice cream sales a struggle. With the union closing at 8 p.m., many people looking for ice cream couldn’t enjoy the Dairy Store’s ice cream
Haley Whisennand Daily Nebraskan
patrick breen | daily nebraskan
Brendan McNally prepares to take down the cones before closing the Dairy Store for the night. McNally has worked at the Dairy Store for two years and says he’ll miss it. because they couldn’t get to it. Francis said he still wants to make Dairy Store products available to students, faculty and visitors at Nebraska, so the Nebraska Union Board will look into cold storage space for future sale of the products. Flores said he’d like to have coolers for his product in the union as soon possible. But without an ice cream -server scooping the UNLmade product, Francis said selling ice cream in the union wouldn’t be the same. “I think it’s different when someone hand dips you a cone versus just buying one out of the freezer,” he said. Sarah Ward, a worker at the union location since
May, said she likes seeing customers sample the unique and new flavors before buying a scoop of vanilla. Behind the glass and ice cream tubs, Ward, a junior pre-inclusive early childhood education major, said she liked the easy business pace. Often working alone, Ward could set up the station how she liked and even do some homework in between sales. And the customers always brought a smile in exchange for a cone, she said. “You get to make everyone’s day,” Ward said,
dairy store: see page 2
The Academic Affairs department at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln purchased a new program last week allowing UNL advisers to maintain contact with students and track their progress in the classroom. Administrators hope Starfish Retention Solutions will help increase UNL’s retention rate of first-year students by giving advisers a chance to see how their students are doing in the classroom as early as next fall. UNL’s current retention rate sits at 84 percent, according to UNL Chancellor Harvey Perlman. While this number is moderately high for a national university, it still means 16 percent of incoming freshmen either transfer to another university or drop out of college completely. Perlman said the university needs to focus on its freshmen. “UNL is not as engaging with the incoming class year-round as other Big Ten schools are,” Perlman said at the Sept. 13 Faculty Senate meeting. Big Ten schools have an average retention rate of first year students of 91 percent, he said. UNL also had a lower six-year graduation average at 64 percent than the Big Ten average of 79 percent. At his State of the University address, Perlman
announced increasing retention rates as one of the university’s top goals. While there are no concrete signs indicating which students are at risk of not returning for a second year, Perlman said students who struggle academically through their first year should be the first to be confronted by advisers. The bulk of efforts made to increase retention rates at the university comes from the Office of Academic Affairs, which created a specific project this year to help increase the success of first-year students both academically and socially. This project — the Student Success Initiative — is in charge of overseeing firstyear support groups, advising, transfer credits and other programs including Starfish. Faculty will have the chance to ensure students have the support needed to keep them in school. “The Student Success Initiative that I’m helping to spearhead in this office takes sort of a broad look at all the different ways that students can be supported,” said Amy Goodburn, who heads the initiative and is associate vice chancellor of academic affairs. Starfish, a stand-alone company, would work in unison with the software
starfish: see page 2
Student senate fails to Cheating students misuse meet quorum for vote clickers in large classrooms Frannie sprouls daily nebraskan
The Association of Students of the University of Nebraska didn’t have enough senators present to hold its meeting Wednesday night. In order to vote on issues, ASUN needs twothirds of senators present at the meeting. Only 20 of 34 senators came to the meeting. “I am disappointed with the Senate tonight,” said Lane Carr, a senior history and political science double major and ASUN president. “We have too much going on to let the responsibility we signed up for slide.” The meeting, which started at 6:30 p.m., lasted until 7 p.m. Jeff Lopez, a senior chemical engineering major and ASUN internal vice president, went through as much as the meeting as he could allow. As long as a vote wasn’t necessary, it could be discussed. After making calls to senators, Emily Schlichting, a senior communications and
ben taleb page 4
We have too much going on to let the responsibility we signed up for slide.”
Lane Carr asun president
political science major, jokingly asked if any senators volunteered to be cut in half in order to make quorum. Schlichting deals with absence excuses, excusing senators if they are involved with an “immovable” event that cannot be missed. Most of the issues she has dealt with this year have been for academic reasons, like an exam scheduled during the meeting. “I generally try to be understanding,” Schlichting said. After the ASUN meeting, members of the executive board met to discuss ways to handle senator absences and how to put a stop to
ASUN
unexcused absences. Carr said it is up to the executive members to help nip the situation in the bud. “It’s unfortunate, but it’s not something that’s going to stop us,” Carr said. “This is a learning experience.” Both Schlichting and Carr are understanding of some of the absences, knowing the senators lead busy lives. “We have great senators who are really busy,” Carr said. “An example of that is coming into fruition with tonight’s meeting.” But Carr said he is not trying to excuse the senators who are absent. Until this meeting, ASUN has not had an issue with meeting quorum. “I’m not worried about it,” Schlichting said. franniesprouls@ dailynebraskan.com
performing arts page 5
Daniel Wheaton daily nebraskan
Grant Aslup had good intentions when he helped his friend cheat the attendance record for a science class at the University of NebraskaLincoln last spring. “My friend was recurrently sick and had unfortunate things happen to him, so I just kept his clicker,” said Aslup, a sophomore theater major. Aslup said he assisted his friend by using his clicker, in addition to his own, to answer quiz questions and report attendance. Misusing clickers has grown across campuses nationwide. In his class of about 85 students, skipping was an easy matter for those who wanted to. With the clickers, lying about attendance just requires the goodwill of a classmate. “In my Geology 101 course, many people skipped,” said Reed Felderman, an undeclared sophomore. “I remember one guy having five clickers.”
gabriel sanchez | daily nebraskan
As reported in the Sept. 9, 2011, issue of The Chronicle of Higher Education, students at colleges across the U.S. have been misusing the clickers to skip class or cheat. Some UNL students have admitted to misusing clickers and don’t see it as a major issue, but UNL administrators can’t tell how widespread the problem is because the issue hasn’t been investigated. “I’m an adult. I pay for classes,” Aslup said. “I can
volleyball page 10
cheating: see page 2
Weather | sunny
No clash of civilizations
Jacket required
Roaring start
tunisian student counters american islamophobia
Wesleyan theater stages lloyd webber’s “Joseph”
Huskers take down Penn State In Big Ten Conference opener
@dailyneb | facebook.com/dailynebraskan
choose if I want to go to class and deal with the consequences.” That attitude has faculty like Brad Buffum, an instructor at the Johnny Carson School of Theatre and Film, frustrated. Buffum has dealt with this issue, but has embraced the caveats of using the technology. Buffum said he
69°42°