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dailynebraskan.com
tuesday, february 12, 2013 volume 112, issue 099
Inside Coverage
Getting some exposure Check out A&E for entire Lincoln Exposed schedule
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One of a kind
Anthony Ainslie has been attending Nebraska women’s basketball games since he was 4. He used the excitement of cheering on the team in an alternate persona as a way to stay awake during the games, which he couldn’t understand as a kid. Now, Ainslie believes being a lively mascot devoted to fan participation in games is important for the players.
From the heart
Bucking the law school trend
2 U.S. must keep watchful eye on North Korea
4 Sixth straight win Women’s basketball team beats Iowa 76-75
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Karen Jardine reads her poetry at Crescent Moon’s Valentine’s Day poetry contest Monday night. Jardine and nine other poets performed their work in the Haymarket all with the common theme of love.
Poets wear their hearts on their sleeves at Crescent Moon story by Daniel Wheaton | photos by Allison Hess
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oses are red, violets are blue, some people write poetry and others perform it, too. Monday evening, roughly 20 people gathered at Crescent Moon Coffee, located at 140 N. 8th St., to perform poetry for the first-annual Poetry at the Moon: Valentine’s Day Poetry Contest and open mic. People were invited to perform any poetry or prose relating to love and heartbreak. The organizers of the event judged the performances. The poetry ranged from traditional rhyming couplets to narrative prose. Jennifer Gray and Dawn Bevans won the love poem contest. Karen Jardine and Morgan Mathis won the heartbreaking contest. “It’s not your smile, it’s your smiling at me that I need,” said Joseth Moore, a poet and contributor to The Lincoln Underground, a local literary magazine. “It’s not what you say or how you say it, it’s you saying it that I need.” Crescent Moon, nestled in the basement of the Apothecary Building in the Haymarket, is home to numerous artistic events. Melinda Martinson, manager of Crescent Moon, said her stage is home to live artists, poetry readings and other live events.
poetry: see page 3
Barbara Salvatore performs her poetry for an audience Monday night at Crescent Moon. Salvatore uses accents to dramatize her poems for the audience.
Student arrested on theft counts Accounting grad arrested on 29 charges of theft at Campus Rec Center
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A University of Nebraska-Lincoln accounting graduate student was arrested Friday under suspicion of 29 thefts from lockers inside the Campus Recreation Center, authorities said. The UNL Police Department arrested 26-year-old Mi Seon Lee last Friday and charged with 26 misdemeanor and three felony counts of theft by unlawful taking. “As we look at these cases, they involved people putting their stuff in a locker but not locking it,” said
thefts: see page 2
bethany schmidt | dn
Students walk past the lockers on the first floor of the Campus Recreation Center on Monday. Rec Center officials are considering installing more security cameras outside the locker rooms after police arrested a suspect on Friday for thefts in building.
Before the sun rose in Lincoln Monday morning, Pope Benedict XVI announced his coming resignation after nearly eight years at the helm of the Catholic Church. Claire Pohlen alerted her two sleeping roommates to tell them the news. “I woke up at 6 a.m.,” the sophomore psychology major said. “I was wired.” At a Vatican gathering of cardinals, 85-year-old Benedict said he was certain that because of his age, he no longer possesses the strength of mind and body necessary to exercise the ministry. His resignation will take effect Feb. 28. Benedict is the first pope to resign his position in six centuries, according to The New York Times. Cardinals elected him to his position in 2005 following the death of Pope John Paul II, who served for more than 25 years. “The pope took us by surprise,” Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi said in the Times article. University of Nebraska-Lincoln students had a similar reaction. “I had no idea it was going to happen, and it took a while to process,” said Maggie Skoch, a secretary at the Newman Center and sophomore family science major. “But I have complete and total faith in the pope’s judgment.” Controversies regarding child sex abuse and shifting common opinions on divorce and gay marriage abounded during Benedict’s term. Megan Shumaker, a sophomore communication studies and political science major, said she hopes the next pope will show a more liberal attitude. “It’s hard to accept that the world’s changing,” she said. “If we have a pope who is open to that, I’d be very supportive of that.” But Skoch said she and others at the Newman Center appreciated Benedict’s leadership style.
pope: see page 2
Study: Some foods may contain nanomaterials Melissa Allen DN
Elias Youngquist DN
@dailyneb
UNL students react to pope resigning Jacy Marmaduke DN
Enrollment dips nationally, but not at UNL Law
Propaganda video raises red flags
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Here’s some food for thought: A recent study by a nonprofit corporate accountability group, As You Sow, found that food packaging companies were using nanomaterials to preserve shelf life and to keep the food looking fresh. Nanomaterials are molecular particles found in packaged food. They’ve been a rising concern for consumers, as nanomaterials can go undocumented into food products, according to the As You Sow study. Because this technology and research is relatively new, research for how these particles affect health and the environment is just now get-
ting underway. “I think people are wise to start asking questions early on,” said Ron Burke, director of Housing and Dining Services for the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. “Are there nanomaterials in our food that are not mandated by the (Food and Drug Administration)? That’s something I don’t know.” According to As You Sow research, because nanomaterials can go undocumented in packaged foods, a primary concern for researchers is that too many nanomaterials in a food product may go unnoticed by the public. “Every food product we buy is regulated by the (Envi-
nanomaterials: see page 3