?4 W Weather Partly cloudy and mild today with light southeasterly winds. Expect a high of 77. Partly cloudy tonight with a low of 63. A gradual warming trend will set in with highs on Wednesday expected in the lower 80s. Barb BrandsDally Ntbraskan Husker freshmen beat Cyclones 56-0 Sports, pcgo 6 ime artist Berky clowns around world Arts and Entertainment, page 9 mi r imJ7j- Jk' r . . a ... W'L) j ))' .Daily 1 September 10, 1985 University of Nebraska-Lincoln Vol. 85 No. 11 aw admissions reported still competitive By Jane Campbell Staff Reporter Admission is still competitive at the NU College of Law, despite a nation wide decline in the number of students applying to law schools, according to Ruth Witherspoon, assistant dean of the college. "This year we had more than twice as many applications than we had pla ces in the (entering) class," Withers poon said. Enrollment in the entering class is nine less than last year," Witherspoon said. Last year, 452 students were enrolled in the college, she said. While this year's official count is not yet final, she said she expects enrollment to be about 450 students. Seventy-seven percent of the enter ing class are Nebraska residents, she said. Last year, 83 percent of the class were residents. "Residents have some advantage (for admission)," Witherspoon said, "but we don't give preference to UNL stu dents as opposed to Kearney students." Most graduates find employment in Nebraska, but alumni are employed throughout the country, she said. Some graduates serve or have served as state senators, governors, judges, deans and faulty members of various law schools, Witherspoon said. Nebraska Supreme Court Chief Justice Norman Krivosha, graduated from the law col lege, she said. Other well-known graduates include Clayton Yeutter, foreign trade repre sentative; Evelle Younger, former Cali fornia attorney general; and Ted Soren son who served as President Kennedy's chief adviser. The College of Law, on East Campus since 1975, has 29 full-time faculty members and 10 adjunct professors who are either practicing attorneys or judges. Krivosha and Chief Judge Warren Urbom, of the United States District Court, are among members of the adjunct faculty, Witherspoon said. The Sherman S. Welpton Jr. Court room, dedicated in 1983 to Welpton, a law college graduate who made the largest single cash donation in UNL history, is a fully equipped trial courtroom. It has a jury room, a confer ence room, judge's chambers and a law office classroom for the college's clini cal education program, Witherspoon said. The law office classroom is set up as a legal clinic, she said, with a reception area, conference rooms and a small library to do legal research for cases. Nebraska Legal Services refers peo ple who qualify for free legal services to the college's legal clinic, Witherspoon said. Senior law students serve as student attorneys under supervision of two faculty members. The courtroom is used as a class room, but also is used for actual jury trials, Witherspoon said. Last year the college scheduled UNL College of Law enrollment 'National enrollment trend 1 T 2,1 Drop 1.2 Drop Z Z 7 A A ( 474 I Source: American Bar Association I '452" I f 1984 3 450 11985 Phil TsalDally Nebraskan legislative hearings and trials heard by class to watch the hearing. College and at Creighton's law school judges, she said. "Anyone i3 free to sit in (on a hear- in Omaha, Witherspoon said. An administrative judge held hear- ing) anytime," she said. The Supreme Court is scheduled to ing in the courtroom last year, she said, The Nebraska Supreme Court holds hold court at the NU Law College on and invited the administrative law court one day a year at both the NU Law Feb. "28. Fraternity makes comeback Low membership caused by the Vietnam War closed the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity in 1972, but the organization is making a comeback with a new house, new members and new traditions. Walt Price, president of the fra ternity, said two representatives from the national organization spent last November in Lincoln reorganiz ing the house. After three weeks, 68 men had pledged. Elections were held before Christmas and weekly meetings also were scheduled. When members started renovat ing the house, which originally belonged to the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity, it was a mess, Price said. With $70,000 from the sale of the fraternity's former house at 17th and P streets, the fraternity bought new windows, rewired the entire house, fixed the plumbing, built a deck and restructured the interior. Furniture and carpeting will use up the rest of the fund. Five members worked on the house this summer, Price said. Other members pitched in when school started. The fraternity reopening provided a unique opportunity for the group to play a part in initiating tradi tions, one member said. Please see FOATEn!TY on 5 Y David FchtosonDSi'y Nebraskan Gtika V"!scn, a rrssrr.Ssr of Pi Kippa Phi fraternity, hsSps with renovation by dssn!ng ths ldg sbeve the front doorwsy of the rt Kleis UNL'sRobe earns Washington post By Stephanie Zink Staff Reporter Robert Kleis, UNL executive dean for the office of international affairs, has been appointed executive director of the Board of International Food and Agricultural Development in Washing ton, D.C. Richard Lonsdale, director of the UNL Institute for International Studies and professor of geography, will become acting executive dean in Kleis' absence. BIFAD is a seven-member group appointed by President Reagan. The group looks at the international devel opment efforts of U.S. universities through federal grants and contracts under Title XII of the Foreign Assist ance Act of 1975. The bqard is a div ision of the U.S. State Department. In terms of conscience, challenge and opportunity, Kleis said his appoint ment "Is not to be shied from." Kleis has been the Title XII program officer for UNL since 1976, when he was appointed dean of International Agri cultural Programs. He was appointed to his current position in 1984, when the international affairs office was established. UNL is one of about 12 universities involved with BIFAD projects. These include a large dryland agricultural research program in Morocco and edu- i .) v'(V' Kleis . cation projects in South America and Africa. "We have a heavy obligation (to pro vide development assistance to foreign countries)," Kleis said. "But the U.S. also has a strong self-interest in terms of our own economic, political, cultural and technological health and welfare." Kleis will assume his new post on Oct. 1.